After a few years in the mines, Davis landed a job in the mining company store in
Dawson, Iowa, about five miles south of Rippey. Personable and hard-working, Davis showed a talent for the retail business. That led to a position as the manager of a local Farmer's Cooperative Association. Almost immediately thereafter, he became cashier at a bank in Rippey. At that time, the Cashier in a small bank could be more than what is known simply as a
Teller in the United States. A
chief cashier was a very high-level position, able to issue
cashier's checks against the bank's reserves. In view of his later career in banking, it seems likely that Davis attained that level of responsibility. It is known that, lacking much formal schooling, he also followed a program of diligent self-education. Two months after Davis left the governor's office, he was appointed as a special assistant to the Secretary of the Interior, to supervise the
United States Reclamation Service and served until 1924. He then served from 1924 to 1932 as director of finance for the Interior Department, and for a short time in 1931 as a special advisor to President
Herbert Hoover. After his service with the federal government, Davis returned to his Idaho banking interests and also expanded his investments in mining ventures in the Northwest. Governor David W. Davis died on August 5, 1959, and was buried at the Cloverdale Cemetery in Boise, Idaho. == Personal life ==