AUGUST 21, 1(11 5 The Commoner. How Wall Street Made the 1907 Panic Back in the early months of 1907, when pros perity wag universal in this country, John D. Rockefeller gave to the American press a state ment predicting that financial disaster would goon overtake the country's industry and com merce. From time to time, following his startling announcement, other Wall street financiers voiced the samo view. So great was the prosperity of the country that even this sinister warning did not immedi ately slacken the activities of honest business. Stranger still, it soon came to ho regarded hy men who usually possessed acute business judg ment as meaningless, save perhaps as a threat against the Roosevelt administration. With basic conditions sound, bumper crops and every forge and mill and factory so busy that unem ployment was practically nonexistent, the pessi mistic prophecy seemed Incredible. Our readers will recall how often then we assorted our belief that, owing to tho vicious national currency system, Wall street had the power to turn off the credit essential to legiti mate business to such an extent that a panic could be artifically produced. Wo reasoned also that Wall street, controlled by the Standard Oil and Morgan groups of banks and truBt companies, could make great profits out of a money panic. The history of specula tive banking gives overwhelming proof that banks with vast sums of money at command make their biggest profits when legitimate busi ness is being threatened or wrecked, for lack of usual accommodations. We pointed out then that prosperity had be come so widely diffused throughout every sec tion of the country that large profits were going into too many hands outside of the charmed Wall street circle to please the men who con trolled tho credit. If a money panic could bo precipitated, in evitably would the checking of legitimate busi ness in various' communities cause the accumu lations of the many to come back into the hands of the few. It seemed to us that, viewed from tho standpoint of Standard Oil and Wall street . generally, a money panic was by far the most profitable line of freebooting which could be Indulged in at that particular time. Wo recorded the movements of the artificially made panic as tho plot unfolded day by day. Despite all warnings, tho insiders continued to unload stocks upon the public at only gradually lessening prices, thus continuing to add to their war fund, after the death sentence of prosperity had been read to all the world. Soon after the Rockefeller prophecy of evil it became known to the New York Inside busi ness world that war had been declared against F. Augustus Heinze and Charles W. Morse. Heinze was an ancient, picturesque and ex pensive enemy of Standard Oil's Almalgamated Copper company. He never had been punctilious in his financial methods or morals otherwise 7 - never would'-have seen New York. In Mon tana he fought the devil with fire and won. The winning was his offense. Standard Oil was forced t6 a compromise that left Heinze with a dozen millions. Thereupon Standard Oil marked Heinze for destruction and bided its time. The time came in 1907. Charles Morse had made the mistake of fail ing to content himself with mastery of the Ice market. He had become a possible impediment to J. P. Morgan. He had made a merger of 'Atlantic coastwise steamer lines. Morgan was just about ready to perfect the railroad-trolley-water monopoly of New England transportation. Morse's boats provided undesirable competition Morse became a marked man. And both Heinze and Morse had come to New York and were dabbling in finance. The public was misled as to the real situa tion by skillful press agents keeping alive the fiction that the old business enmity between the Rockefeller-Harrlman group and the Morgan in terests still existed. Persistent, secret, united work led only to the finding that the intruders from Montana and New England were better fortified than tho masters of Wall street had supposed. After withstanding months of warfare they still had at their back financial institutions which were able to givo them protection, Just when, how or by whom the decision was reached to wreck the Heinze and Morse banks we do not know. But it now is history that those banks were wrecked, the first victim being tho Knickerbocker Trust company, subsequently proved thoroughly solvent. Of course, it must bo borno in mind that Hoinzo and Morso had been conducting their fight on illegitimate banking lines, although it is believed they differed little from the genoral methods of other Wall street proraotor-bankers. It was not until It was found necessary to wreck banks, by withholding from them clearing-house sanction, that tho scheme of tho steel trust to pillage the Tennessee Coal and Iron company became known. Tennessee Coal and Iron long had boon tho Naboth's vineyard coveted by tho steel trust. Its property, developed and undeveloped, was well nigh equal in value to that of tho stool corporation itself. It was better equipped than its more powerful rival with tho modern opon hearth process. It owned a wealth of hlgh grado ore, almost at tho doors of its furnaces, needing no such long shipments as from the northern lakes to Pittsburg or Gary. Right at hand was abundance of coking coal. Labor was plentiful and conditions of living in the mild climate cheap. And there was competition in transportation. It was a potentially formidable competitor of Morgan's pet "billion-dollar trust." Therefore in tho most fevered period of tho 1907 panic it happened that tho powerful Now York banks refused suddenly and utterly to continue loans unless United States Steel bonds were substituted for Tennessee Coal and Iron securities as collateral. It was believed that the trust company of America was a heavy holder of tho stock as collaterial, and was really tho strong financial powor which had enabled a Tennessee Coal and Iron syndicate to withstand so long the subtle attacks made upon it. Not until the trust company was forced to ask for mercy, after a wrecking run which tho presi dent now testifies was staTted by a statement of George W. Perkins, then a partner of Morgan, and after it had disclosed its assets, which in cluded less than $500,000 worth of Tennessee coal and Iron stock, behind loans otherwise amply protected, did other banks dare to como to its assistance. But tho panic was forced harder and harder until the really vulnerable spot was reached. And what followed Is told by John W. Gates, who, like Thomas Lawson, has done a public service, just onco in his life by turning state's evidence against one-timo accomplices who plucked him. Gates testifies that the result waB "a forced sale, in which the purchasers got all the best of tho bargain." Not a dollar changed hands in the transac tion, the absorbed company being paid for by securities issued by the Bteel trust, and not a dollar was added to the funds of the New York banks to check the progress of tho panic. It was all but so much manipulation for the direct profit of the financial combination headed by J. Pierpont Morgan, and the losses were all borne by the general public, including the legitimate business men of America, who are still paying the price. Meanwhile, in the most acute days of the panic, Theodore Roosevelt had been deluded into making the worst mistake of his career, with the best possible intentions. He trusted Mor gan's subservient tool, George B. Cortelyou. And through that stenographic taker of Wall street dictation he was persuaded to listen to the tales of woe of Frlck and Gary, of tho steel trust, and sanction that iniquitous merger, to prevent a predicted crash of credit and values that he was warned would wreck or cripple every legiti mate enterprise in the land. Once Tennessee Coal and Iron had fallen Into the grasp of the panic-makers, following tho crushing of Heinze and Morse, It was to their interest to stop the panic. By that time all tho money In Wall street had been absorbed by Mor gan and Standard Oil. Morgan sent for his handy man, George B. Cortelyou, unhappily for the country, secretary of tho treasury, and Cor telyou promptly dumped into wall street $25, 000,000 of the government's money. Morgan appeared in Wall street with his and the treasury's millions, stopped tho panic and was acclaimed hysterically by tories and fools as a savior and a benefactor. All these truths tho North American told from each dark day to day during all the deviltry of that needless distress to every honest American business man. Earnest as was our support of Roosevelt's policies and patriotic achievements, our readers must recall that our criticism of him at that timo was unspnrlng in our declara tions that with tho purout purposes ho was being "gold-bricked" and doluded to his own and tho country's hurt by unscrupulous conspirators. Wo beliovo that tho North Amorican was vir tually alono in showing with dally persistence that it was an artificial panic and that national prosperity was being wrecked In cold blood for the exclusive gain of two Wall streot groupH. We retell history today simply to cite tho latest proofs of a crimo that resulted in disaster to life, churactor and honest property proof provided In tho sworn testimony of John W. Gates, of tho Tennessee Coal and Iron company; Oakleigh Thorno, president of tho Trust com pany of America, and Justice Gerard, of tho su premo court of New York, formor director of tho Knlckorbockor trust. Philadelphia North Amorican (rep.) JUDGE WALTER CLARK OF NORTH CAROLINA William LlndBoy, Los Angeles California: In your editorial, "Avallablo Candidates for Democratic Nomination in 1912," a remarkablo knowledge and insight of tho "top cream" of tho party is shown. What an array of splendid men, men of raro ability and integrity; men who stand for the peoplo, as did Abraham Lincoln. Why is it that somo such man can not bo elected to tho presidency? In the light of past events, the merging of tho last administration into tho present, tho political intrigue, insincerity and total disregard for tho interests of tho masses of our popula tion; surely he can be. Tho sweat and blood of humanity will cry out from tho ground for a roal man a truo man. Tho peoplo wero fooled by tho voice of a Roosovolt, outwardly clothed with the policies of a Bryan, delivering tho same into the hands of a Taft, for non-oxe-cutlon. A wlso and safe delivery. The peoplo now see It. Tho graduating of a' twonty years' schooling. Tho culmination is at hand. Tho man who wins in 1912, regardless of party, vmust not only bo an advocate of tho Bryan, policlos, to which the people have been educated, (though a part of tho peoplo call said policies by another name), but ho must bo an embodiment of tho samo. A recommended candidate will not do next time.) No doubt many, If not all of The Commoner's list of "avallables," will meet this requirement, one of tho number wo happen to know, most as suredly does, viz., Judge Waltor Clark of North Carolina. What a memorable fight for tho cause of tho peoplo, whon ho wan a candidate for supremo court judge in his state. Arrayed against him was tho Simmons Southern Railway element, at that time, in the democratic party, tho American Tobacco company element In the re publican party, but tho peoplo of all parties wero for him, and a sweeping victory was achieved. He has made a great judge. Ho would make a groat president. All classes look alike to him, but tho trust barons and protected corporations know this too well, and when he, or any other truo representative of the peoplo is nominated, a life and death struggle by such "special interests," will bo on, as in tho memor able Bryan campaigns. AS THE STANDPATTERS SEE IT The Washington Post regards tho election of Mr. Vardaman to tho United States senate from Mississippi as a sure indication that the re public is tottering to its fall under the baneful influence of the primary election law. "Does not the defeat of Senator Percy indi cate," domands the Post, "that not even John Sharp Williams could have turned the tide against Vardaman?" And does not tho overwhelming victory for Vardaman indicate that the people of Mississippi wanted Vardaman to represent them in the senate? A condition which the esteemed Post and the rest of the standpatters would remedy by refusing to allow the people to choose their own representatives. The way to preserve the sacred Institution of representative government for the peoplo is to keep the people from naming their representa tives. That ought to be as plain as the noBe on your face. Kansas City Star. "THE PEOPLE ARE BRYANIZING" To the Editor of The World: Yes, indeed, Woodrow Wilson is Bryanizing. But the people will forgive him, for they too are Bryanizing. S. W. ROGERS. Washington, Aug. 8. I 4 !3 1 . . J -'L ;