Cfe s?o '4-1 MARCH 15M12 The Commoner. ili patch to the New York World: The United States Steel corporation is a gigantic monopoly in restraint of trade, making fabulous profits and false reports of thoso profits, and two of its leading officials under stated the magnitude of its control of the industry to President- Roose velt in 1907, according to the re port of Farquhar J. Macrae, an ex pert accountant, made public recent ly by the Stanley committee, which has been investigating the trust. J. P. Morgan & Co. made a cash profit of $69,300,000 out of the or ganizing of the trust, $02,500,000 for promotion and $6,800,000 com mission for a bond conversion scheme. The corporation earned $4,339, 140, or 100 per cent in eight years through its subsidiary, the Union Supply company, which sells goods to employes, is the conclusion Oi an ex hibit. Elbert II. Gary, chairman of the board of the corporation, testified last summer: "Where the Steel corporation has stores, and we have not very many, we made it certain that the goods were sold to the men at prices less than they could purchase the same things elsewhere." The trust refused to produce its books and the minutes of its meet ings before the house committee but offered to let an expert go over them. "The .Gary dinner arrangement," says the report, "whereat the so called independents are influenced to reduce their production conform ably to their estimate of the reduc tion in the demand existing, and to maintain prices, is objectionablo as far as it operates to exclude free com petition. The arrangement is de signed and Intended to operate, and has operated admittedly, as to stand ard steel rails, although it is claimed that the so-called independent par ticipants can cut prices without fear of penalty, except the dishonor of declaring in favor of a named price and then selling at some other price." Stress is laid in the financial sec tion of the report on the demonstra tion by figures that the corporation restrains competition by making the greater portion of its profits in raw materials and in plants producing semi-finished materials, while the finished product plants make very low profits. This operates to keep the price of raw materials, ore, coke and pig iron on a high plane, to the advantage of the corporation and disadvantage of the independent. "During the nine years from Jan. 1, 1902, to Dec. 31, 1910," the re port Bays, "the productions of the corporation In rolled and other finished, steel amounted to 79,267, 368 tons, and the adjusted net earn ings for the same period amounted to $1,029,685,389 or an equivalent of approximately $13 per ton. In order that an idea may be had of the net earnings in dollars per ton of the several operating groups of the corporation,. I have calculated these figures and find the approxi mate not earnings of $13 per ton of finished product to have been earned as follows: "By manufacturing companies $8.01 per ton. By coal and coke companies $0.70 per ton. By iron mining companies $2.12 per ton. By transportation $1.81 per ton. By miscellaneous companies $0.36 per ton. Total $13.00." In accounting for the discrepancy between the earnings claimed by the corporation, $980,000,311, and his estimate of $1,109,146,093, Mr. Mac rae restored to net earnings what had been eliminated by tho corporation In its accounting. Aa showing the result of -the policy Secrets of the Steel Trust Following is a Washington dis- j of the corporation to make tho bulk oi its proms in tho raw and semi finished material, Mr. Macrae sub mitted a condensed statement of the dividends paid by the subsidiary com panies to the Steel corporation and the interest paid by the Carnegie company on its collateral trust bonds, from April 1, 1901, to April 1, 1910, showing a total of $753,-124,386.53. "The income from the Carnegie company in dividends and bond in terest amounted to $305,239,537.49 or about 40 njr cent of the total. The American Bridge company paid the holding company dividends on its preferred stock during this period to the amount of $19,715,577.50, or 2 6-10 per cent of the total." The table of dividends for the nine-year period follows: The Carnegie Co. . .$227,280,000.00 Federal Steel Co., common 114,816,182.00 Federal Steel Co., preferred 31,157,128.50 National Tube Co., common 29,783,905.50 National Tube Co., preferred 27,299,737.50 American SteeJ & ' Wire Co. of N. J. common 51,110,460.25 American Steel & Wire Co. of N. J. preferred 27,299,158.25 National Steel Co., common National Steel Co., preferred American Tin Plate Co., common .... American Tin Plate Co., preferred . . . American Sheet Steel Co., common .... American Sheet Steel Co., preferred . . . American Sheet & Tin Plate Co., pre ferred 25,540,833.00 American Sheet & Tin Plate Co., common 12,00.4;804.00 American Steel Hoop Co., common 1,330.000.00 American Steel Hoop Co., preferred . . . 2,041.497.51 Amrican Bridge Co., preferred 19,715,577.50 Oliver Iron Mining Co 2,400,000.00 Lake Superior Cons. Iron Min. Co 66,689.969.03 Shelby Steel Tube Co., preferred . . . 2,224,995.00 Pittsburg Steamship Co 243,870.00 Clairton Steel Co... 4,235,000.00 Mtfft 13 6,400,000.00 3,779,153.00 7,419,690.00 3,634,372.00 3,184,948.00 5,573,568.00 property of the Bethlehem, Cambria, Colorado, Lackawanna, Pennsylva nia and Tennessee companies added to the capital stock of Jones & Laughlin (because statement of property is not available) amounted to $365,768,889, theoo companies be ing tho only important concorns in the steel business in tho United States outside of the United States Steel corporation. This amount added to that of tho United States Steel corporation equals a grand total of $1,811,606,339, of which tho property account of the United States Steel corporation amounts to $1,445,837,450, or about 80 per cent." The report concludes: "Competition between previously cbmpoting concerns was terminated by the concentration of the control of upward of 180 corporations into one security holding company known as the United States Steel corpora tion. "The corporation is merely a hold ing company, engaging in no business except tho control through stock ownership of the subsidiary com panies. "There were acquired a large num ber of major concerns' at much in flated valuations, succeeding several increases in the capitalization of pre ceding incorporations, due in some cases to the greater combination value or merger of the consolidation, in which, of course, the units com bined were restrained of any com petitive activity. Specific instances are given under this head relating to three processes of combination as follows: "The original combination of major concorns to eliminate all pos sibility of competition. "Other acquisitions in related lines of business for which no explanation has been offered and none appears except the visible consequence, the tho removal of such concerns from independent field. "Tho acquirement of a largo num ber of plants which never woro operated and so mo of them, dis mantled, being removed from tho competitive field." "Tho great possibilities for com petition possessed by tho Tennessee company" are given by Mr. Macrao as his Judgment of why It was acquired. The interlocking of direc tors of the steel corporation and tho purchase of stocks and bonds of other companies and various outsido trans actions of enqrmoiis size, the report discusses at length in support of tho claim of power of tho corporation In restraining competition. Tho control of ore by the Stool corporation, 76 per cent of competi tive ore In Minnesota, 500,000,000 tons In tho south, "In all 2,500,000 tons out of 4,462,940,000 tons of commercially available ore In tho United States Is an ownership and a control which must intorforo with competition." A BLUNDIOIUCIt "What you need, madam, Is oxy gon. Como every afternoon for your inhalations. They will cost you $4 each." "I. know that other doctor didn't understand my case," declared the fashionable patient. "He told me all T needed was plain fresh air." Washington Herald. NECESSITIES Smith "I didn't know you owned a motor-car; why these auto goggles?" Smyth "My wife has hatpins." Puck. ABSENT-MINDED "I want a dog-collar, please." "Yes'm. What size shirt does ho wear?" Life. $675,164,849.04 Interest pn the Car negie Co. col. trust bonds . 77,959,537.49 $753,124,386.53 "Percentages of the business done by the United States Steel corpora tion," the report says, "are deceiving and misleading unless segregated with reference to particular products. For example, Mr. Roosevelt refers to an estimate that the United States Steel corporation did not have above 60 per cent 'of steel properties' or steel holdings,' and when he was asked If Gary and Frlck (at the time of the purchase of the Tennessee Coal and Iron company) said any thing about the ore properties that they were buying at that time he answered 'They did not go Into de tails at all, and he also stated that ho understood they were going to buy the Tennessee' company s P "If" this estimate of 60 per cent refers to property and investment in tho steel business it may be noted In Sat year (1907) that the total Ropp's New Calculator and Short-Cut Arithmetic 8L REVISBD rcivi.AKGicn AND IAII'IIOVISI) KTJtMS 1 I i'&Sl wrrr!wrnvc&m2ZttttrT2Xr23?i2&2iA , IJ55 IOCS Trrt7VfX93fXM322SiirX2XCrlt m, WW fag-. m m.t timi-m n'T" 'i - -I'TT - vs-3-m .5a 5wv3wg&i2 ,m uzS&&ittTm rfifTivwr;T:ryTi''''':rT--,'rTT''i (100 Pages, Size GVix3) The correct insvrer Instantly found to all practical problems that occur la the Store, Shop, Farm, Banlc or Offlce. 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