wwTOm-, The Commoner 58H Doc. 5, 1 90 j. 3 yg apyapaagy jPicjCjC! K jCjjCjCjjOjCaaiJfJiJ 5 5 " '.aft in Gary's Idea of Competition. A Steel Trust Magnate Undertakes the In teresting Feat of Condemning flonopoly While Justifying the Methods of the Greatest Trust in tit Country. &&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&& & W iW V 'JUS Ik, .r,.J, -m J VT' 0 .j 14 AMES CREELMAN, tHo famous correspon- M .i nn-tnn a tho anopfnl rnnrnsRntJitlVQ of the New York Yorld, recently visited TCihnrf w. flarv. chairman of the execu- A-IAMW W V f Itive committee of the united states sieui uui- ration. Mr. Creelman says tnat it was Mr. ary who organized the Federal Steel company and that It was "his brain more than any othor Which limited fifteen great companies wnicn iorm mo Fnited States steel corporation with its stock and nd capitalization of $1.322,259,300 the most ipendous and far-reaching financial creation of iman ingenuity." Today he is the real director tfts policies and activities, one of the foremost of industry in the foremost century or I? .A Iptains idustry. !" With this description of the trust magnate, it ..&!fftrm be interesting to listen to what he has to say 'SS bis very interesting interview with Mr. Creel- lan. Mr. Gary pointed to what ho cans tne voiuu- iry advance in wages made by the Pennsylvania tilroad company and other large corporations as inly additional evidence that doing business a large scale is not Inconsistent with the inter- of labor. He seemed desirous of creating the Bpresslon. that these corporations were entitled : special credit because of this advance, in fges; and yet one may search in vain through tne intern 3 w to find any reference to the race m J.l-.. n II i iat wil'-in a very tew days auer luesu iuiuuu jirporations increased the wages of their em- t 9 . .iAtn1 I'M ployes, they made preparations -r u uinusiwi m- :ease in freight rates, thus shifting the burden 01 Rhcir generosity to..their employes from their own Shoulders to the shoulders of the shippers. In this interview Mr. Gary said that he could t apeak for the greatest corporation in the world,. that Is, the steel trust, in saying that 'our iirsc concern, is the welfare of our workingmen." "On this pdint Mr. Gary said: "Never for a moment do we lose sight of the Interests of the men who work our steel mills, mines, railways or boats. We have more than once voluntarily advanced wages. It is to our interest to be just to our employes. "No one understands that better than the men who are charged with the responsibility of carrying on this immense business. We em ploy 166,163 men and pay $120,727,241 annual ly In wages. We want to pay our. men well because .it is nece&sary to have the best labor obatlnable." It is not hypocritical to say that if the first concern of the steel trust magnates was In fact the welfare of their workingmen they would have given their employes a very much larger increase in wages than they ha,re yet done. A corporation that is able to pay its chief officers enormous salaries and after the payment of such salaries Is enabled to distribute handsome dividends to its stockholders, should also be able to pay its workingmen wages that would make their lot the envy of all other workingmen under present con ditions. But in spite of Mr. Gary's fine sentences, it is yet to be related that any considerable num ber of workingmen have given the steel trust ex traordinary preference in their search for an ideal employer. Mr. Gary said some things on the question, of monopoly that are of special interest. He said: "I am opposed to private monopoly. No decent man in America can defend it Private monopoly is not only wro.hg in principle, but it will not work in practice. The people and the institutions of this country are opposed to monopoly. It is an impracticable and uaL terly unsound idea in business. I know thaSfc'' jthere are men who have advocated it in the I industrial world, but they have been dis credited by experience. After a considerable experience in the largest affairs, of modern business I say without hesitation that all sound organizers of industry recognize tho absurdity of tho monopoly theory. No largo industry can last in America unless it is founded on the basis of competition, that Is, the survival of the fittest" . Now, this utterance of Mr. Gary's might soun J very reasonable to some opponents of monopoly. In fact somehow or other it reminds one of the republican platforms and tho reminder becomes all the more forcible when ono obtains from Mr. Gary an analysis of this statement After the steel trust magnate had declared against monop olies Mr. Creelman asked: "Do you mean to say, Mr. Gary, that tho United States steel corporation is not organ ized and conducted with a view to afepnoly of the steol industry of America, if not or tEe whole world?" Then, as though determined that he would not abandon the position ho had taken, Mr. Gary promptly replied: "I do. If the United States steel corpora tion, tho most poworful private institution in the world, is to succeed, it must not and can- not found its policy on a program of monopoly. , Its success Is due to the hignest form of com petition, competition in brains, in methods, in work." J But what is this "competition" to which Mr. Gary refers? He explains it in this way: "There is a tremendous competition going on all the time between our various mills, a friendly, good-natured rivalry, but none tho less eager. It is the kind of competition that is giving the industrial supremacy of the world Into the hands of America. "No, wo know very well that wo cannot win by the device of a monopoly. We must win by getting possession of tho best and most u economical raw products and by using the most concentrated and highly developed meth ods of production. This is a competitive, not a monopolistic, Idea. We win in the markets of the world because we deserve to win. We can do better work than our rivals. "And this plan of industry on a large scale not only brings better wages and greater op portunities to our workingmen, but it is raising the standard of American labor; it is training men to work with the best tools in the best methods in tho best -conditions. "No man need fear that monopoly Is mak .ing any headway in this country. A study of the United States steel corporation or of any ' other great and successful industrial organiza tion in the United States will show that it is the spirit of unsleeping competition a compe tition that avails itself instantly of every new idea or appliance that makes success. Wo not only compete with our outside rivals, but we compete with each other Inside the organ ization." It is difficult to deal patiently with a state ment like this when one understands that it was deliberately made with tho knowledge that it was to be presented to a presumably Intelligent peo ple. The requirements of tho "competition," which Mr. Gary says is essential to the well being of so ciety, are mot, according to this trust magnate, by the "competition" going on by the various mills and, among the various employes of a single cor poration, a competition which would not in any event benefit the public so far as the prices to the public are concerned. It is & competition between the various representatives of one business con cern, all eager for the favor of the powers con trolfing the establishment; and because there ex ists within the steel trust as there certainly does In every business establishment in tho country in more or less degree, this kind of a "competition," this steel trust magnato says that his institution is not a monopoly; and in spito of its charactor ho assumes that "no decent man in America can de fend a private monopoly!" In tho courso of this interview Mr. Creelman asked Mr. Gary: "And do you seo no signs of danger in this movement toward concentration? Can you find no signs of waknoss In it? Have you not alroady reached or ovon passed tho limits ,of working combination?" to which the trust mag nate replied: "No, there is no sign of weakness to bo found. This corporation is growing strong qr. Wo improvo in our methods every month. Wp are doing hotter work and increasing our earn ings." But Mr. Creolman, who la an observing man, appeared to bo insistent and ho asked, "Is thero no lino of peril visible?" Then this trust mag nato said: "Only one. It is tho cry for a change in tho tariff. If wo. are to bo tho dominant manufacturing nation of tho world wo must bo as fully protected aB any other nation. Wo must have a tariff that will at least mako up the difference in tho price of wages in Amori . ca and competing (-untrles. Take Germany, our strongest rival. Tho man who gets $1.50 a day in our mills gets only GO cents a day in Germany. Besides, Gormany has a system of government bounties paid on articles exported to foreign countries which enabloa her manu facturers to dispose of their sumlua nrodticta without loss. For many years my mind was open on the tariff question, but facts like theso have made mo a firm believer in protection. I do not say that tho tariff cannot bo altered ; and improved, but I do say that if sufficient t protection to equalize tho cost of Jabor is not retained in tho tariff tho result will bo disastrous. That is the only cloud on our horizon." Statements such as these require no comment in tho presence of Intelligent men. It is stranga that theso representatives of tho trusts imagine that they can palm off upon an intelligent people such things as these. This representative of the truste in tho United States In a statement which ho knows is to be presented to the public has the temerity to declare that no decent man in Ameri ca can defend a private monopoly; that tho peo plo and tho Institutions of this country are op posed to monopoly; that it is an Impracticable and utterly unsound idea in business; that although thero are some men who have advocated if in tho industrial world, they have been discredited by ex perience; and this trust magnato further declares that after considerable experience in the largest affairs of modern business he would say without hesitation that all -ound organizers of industry recognize tho absurdity of tho monopoly theory. According to this man no large industry can last in America unless it is founded on the basis of competition; and In tho same statement thja man proceeds to justify the methods of the steel trust and to tell tho people that tho requirements of tho competitive system aro met by a contest among the employes, of ono particular business concern, for the favor of tho employer! JJJ Revolt in Maryland. Tho Baltimore Sun, the most influential of the democratic dallies of Maryland, has sounded a ' note of protest against the democratic organiza tion in that state. This is the more significant when it is remembered that the Sun opposed the ticket in 1896, but returned and did yeoman ser vice In 1900. As tho organization of tho Btate Is in tho hands of men openly hostile to the Kansas City platform tho Sun's revolt would indicate that tha reorganizers are not strengthening the party by their methods. The Sun's editorial will be found on another page of this issue. 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