10 The Commoner. VOLUME 12, NUMBER 51 BEFORE TIIE MONEY TRUST IN VESTIGATING COMMITTEE (Continued from Pago 7.) "Is it not true that In this coun try, unlike other countries, it is difll cult to get the stockholders to take an active interest in their com panies?" "That is very true. That is the reason why a voting trust is so desir able," said Mr. Morgan. "That is the reason of this pater nalism on tho part of tho .financial gentlemen who reorganize the com pany?" asked the lawyer. "That is tho reason why, in reor ganizing a company, wo employ that method so that it can be pro tected," said Mr. Morgan. Tho activities of J. P. Morgan & Co. as fiscal agents for railroads and other interested corporations formed the 'basis for another phase of the examination. Mr. Morgan nlaced in the record tho agreements by which the firm handles the securities of the New York Central and the New York, Now Haven & Hartford railroads. The general policy of private banks handling big Issues of securities also was taken up. "Theso issues of securities of In terstate railway companies are in vast sums, are they not, running into tho hundreds of millions of dollars a year many hundreds of millions of" dollars?" asked Mr. Untermeyer. "Yes, sir," answered Mr. Morgan. "For tho different companies you issue many, many hundred millions of dollars a year, do you not?" "Yes, sir." "Do you not think it would be en tirely feasible that securities of such corporations should be openly mar keted and should be sold by com petition, just as securities of the United States government and state governments and city admlnistra- I An Ideal Gift Book There Is no gift more appreciated by the receiver, nor one that better reflects the tastes of the giver, than good books. The Influence of good literature can not be measured it lives and grows, long after ma terial things are for gotten. 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Enclosed find $2.25 for one 2 vol. set of Tke 3pefcckc ef William JcbhIbss Bryan, bound in cloth, and Tke Commoner fr one year. (If half leather edition Is wanted, send $3.25.), tions and municipal bonds of dif ferent kinds are sold?" "I do not," said Mr. Morgan. "Do you not think there should be some competition for them between the banking houses or between the original purchasers and the com pany?" "No, I should think not." "Do you not think the company should be in a position to have other banking houses compete for these securities and perhaps get a higher price than you might think they were worth?" Mr. Untermeyer asked. "I have no doubt that could be done occasionally, but it would not be often," said Mr. Morgan. "Do you not think it ought to be done that they ought to be open to that field?" "I do not; not for the interests of the company. There is another point about it," volunteered Mr. Morgan, "and that is this: You must remember that securities are issued and sold and do not always prove good. I do not say that that often happens, but it sometimes does." "The banking house assumes no legal responsibility for the value of the bonds, does it?" asked Mr. Untermeyer. "No, sir, but it assumes something else that is more important, and that is the moral responsibility, which has to be defended as long as you live." "Will you name any instance of a railroad bond issue by your firm that proved bad, where the property was reorganized and your company per sonally put up money to make the bond good, that it did not get bade?" J. VvU.ll UVJU ICViUU ClUjr UU IT , UU.U there are cases of that kind." Throughout the long period of the examination Mr. Morgan's daughter, Mrs. H. B. Saterlee, and his son, J. P. Morgan, jr., sat immediately behind the witness chair watching their father closely. At one time he turned to his daughter and aBked for a throat remedy, as continuous talking was wearing on his throat. His daughter supplied him from her handbag. Mr. Untermeyer said that if the financier was tired he would sus pend to nllow him to rest, but Mr. Morgan was anxious to continue. Within an hour after the hearing adjourned the Morgan party with its retinue of lawyers, was on a special train bound for New York.' BIG CONGRESS WILIi ACT ON RAILROAD EXPOSURE (Continued from Page 5.) preciate the value of the stock in the Blumpy market in Wall street ana tnere are those shrewd enough to understand the general workings of this band of financiers in certain properties who will shrug their shoulders and say that the gentle men named have enormous holdings concealed in the names of dummies. The writer is prepared to Btate unequivocally now, after an exhaus tive search through the long list of several thousand stockholders, that not one of the men in whose names these blocks of stock are usually placed secretaries, clerks and simi lar subordinates in banking houses of Wall street is a stockholder of tho New Haven. -Furthermore, there is not any man in whose name there stands a sub stantial block of stock whose identity is not fully set forth. And lastly, there is not a single man, save Lewis Cass Ledyard, in whoso name stands what could be termed a large block of stock, $1,000,000 or more. Led yard is the only dummy on the list. COL. ROOSEVELT'S REVOLVER Shortly aftor his inauguration as president, Colonel Roosevelt son fn. a number of Washington newspaper correspondents to discuss with them the rules governing, the hours and method of collecting news at tho White House. During the conversa tion reference was made to the as sassin of President McKinley, and Colonel Roosevelt explained: 4T11 bet he wouldn't have shot me twice'" The correspondents inferred from this and other remarks made by the colonel that he would have returned the assailant's fire with the quick ness of a gun-fighter of the plains. Washington newspaper men and many of Colonel " Roosevelt's close personal friends are sure that dur ing his seven and a half years as president he wa. never in the streets without a revolver in his pocket. All this is told by a Washington corres pondent of the New York Times, who goes on to relate a number of inci dents which show that the nominee of the progressive party never de ponded wholly upon a hired body guard for protection against assas sins: On the blustery winter day that Elihu Root quit the cabinet of President Roosevelt to return to the practice of law in New York, Colonel Roosevelt walked over from the White House to the Root residence to say good-by to his secretary of state, upon whom he had depended constantly for advice and assistance and in whose ability and common sense he had Buch faith. Mr. Root's house was in Jackson Place, the street forming the western boundary of Lafayette square, the park oppo site the White House. The residence which Mr. Root occupied was as sociated with Washington's most noted tragedy, with the exception of the assassination of Abraham Lin coln, for it was here that General Daniel Sickles was living with his wife when Sickles killed Philip Bar ton Key. General Sickles was said to have seen Mrs. Sickles signal to Key from a window of their home, Key being then in the Washington clubhouse across Lafayette square, a building that also has its tragic as sociations. It was there that Wil liam H. Seward was confined in a sick-bed when Payne, the associate of John Wilkes Booth, tried to stab him to death on the night that Lin coln was shot down by Booth, and it was in this house that James G. Blaine died twenty-eight years later. In spite of the cold wind Colonel Roosevelt wore no overcoat. As he sprinted across from the White House to the Root residence, a hun dred yardB aWay, the tails of his frock coat -fluttered in the breeze, exposing to the view of the cavalry men assembled to escort Mr. Root to the railway station the butt of a good-sized revolver. But if the then president knew that the weapon was showing he- gave no sign that he was bothered about it In those days Colonel Roosevelt was getting port ly, and the strain on the waist line of his frock coats had a tendency to make the tails spread apart. "Still another incident of the same sort marked a visit of Colonel Roosevelt, when president, to the Epiphany Episcopal church, in G street, between Thirteenth and Four teenth streets, in this city. He went there to deliver an address before the congress of mothers which was being held In tho church. Divesting himself of his overcoat in the ante room, the president went forward to the chancel. While he was address ing the audience one of the young women Berving as ushers put on tho president's overcoat and placed her hands into the deep pockets. A scream, from her startled her com panions.. The desiro of the young woman at that moment was to get out of the overcoat. When she had done this and her nerves had been quieted she explained that in one of the pockets of tha president's overcoat was a revolver. An inspec tion of the pocket provqd her asser tion. The revolver was loaded. Literary Digest ' i J