'v ;yif v - ntryt M v. 4 The Commoner . " yjtttu OCTOBER, 1919 www 9 it it would not have to consult anybody. In u way it could more quickly moot lt needs i rnvide for the wants of its people. 8DJhn Chairman. Outside of the trunk lines that .. oral government would take over under ur plan the states would take over the lines? itfr Bryan. Yes. The Chairman. I have just been casting up in v mind just what that might involve in a state nh Wisconsin. The average capitalization of the railroads of the United States, compiled by the interstate Commerce Commission just before the Sir was $66,000 per mile. There are in my state nossibly 6,000 miles of line. That would involve S39G 000,000, and if the state took that over the state' would lose the taxes, and one-third of our taxes prior to the war were raised from our nubile utilities, mostly railroads. Question: Could a state stand such a tremendous burden, notwithstanding your suggestion that it might take time to buy, and what is true of my state would, of course, be correspondingly true of other states, although it is easy to conceive of gome state with a large mileage and thin popu lation? Mr. Bryan. You had several questions in one? The Chairman. Yes. CAPITALIZATION AND TAXES Mr. Bryan. In tho first place, as to the capital ization, I am not prepared to say whether the capitalization of the railroads in your state aver ages as high as the average in the Nation, bo cause the total capitalization, you know, includes the cost of the land, the right of way, and the terminals which in the cities become very im portant items. It is possible that, if you take all the big citie's and tho cost. of building rail roads through them, and spread that, cost over the entire nation, it may make the average cost per mile higher than it would if you consider your own state alone. The Chairman. That is true. In some states the capitalization might be as low as $30,000. wr. urya.ii. me second uiiiig is uie tax. xl the state receives one-third of its taxes from the railroads, your people, of course, know that the railroads collect the tax .from. the people before they give it to. the .state.- Theroads have.no other fund from which to draw. The Chairman. We tax them as we tax the other properties In our state. . Mr. Bryan. I know; but they collect it from the people. '. The Chairman. It is probably reflected in the fare. Mr. Bryan. Of course. It could not be other wise. . ' . . Tho Chairman. It is an operating charge. Mr. Bryan. Therefore, if you take your taxes off, you can make that .up o the people in fares. If you collect an equal amount by some other form of taxes, you have not lost anything. Bui you have in it your power to collect, in addition teethe rates necessary to cover other costs, the ( amount paid in taxes. Youneed not lose it; it Is in your own hands. The Chairman. I would be if our state were isolated and not related to other states in the matter of interstate commerce, and -the decision of the supreme court in the Shreveport case is jo the effect that no state can fix intrastate rates mat will become an undue burden upon inter state rates. n ?fr1Bryan- 0f course, Mr.. Chairman, I would not think of entering into a contorversy with you on the details of tho .interstate commerce law, oecause you haVe made it your business, while i nave been doing other things; but it occurs to me that, If the federal government has a trunk une running into your state, the federal govern ment will fix its own rates on all produce coming lint nUr State over tliat trunlc line or Ing out uut the federal government would not "je as much interested as it is now in the rate you fixed W s that distributed your purchases after w en,tiered the state, or collected your produce before it went out of the state. thinCa?i?ot see that that Question would be any wmr as lmPortant as it is now, because, linQ federal government owning the trunk "ne and fixing the traffic rate, it would be a char v local importance what you -would S fore your 8tuff gt to the .boundary of Tite,.Sr after lt came in J!, , Present law, of course, it is a very serious thino- v ii - 1 i. j i aiiol enJe ow the joint rate is distributed,' and twit ? . controversy, as I understand it, is t J? distrlbtiqn of this joint rate. frnm t e r,th5t'whei1 I bought some curios m Japan I Paid just about half as much, for getting them from Omaha to Lincoln, as I nald S'onrtu!! loVT Yk0hama to Omaha! a 1 50 f i longhaul co,vcred an ocean and about lll IlGS of Ameri, with two mountain ranges to cross, while tho short haul was on level ground, and less than 75 miles. 1 ftSThf dl8ftr!butIon of the long and short .aul, the interstate and tho state rate, is a very important matter when private individuals do it, but I do not think it would be so important whon the government owns tho trunk lino. May I ask you, Mr. Chairman, how much your state contributed In bonds to tho $20,000,000,000 indebtedness? The Chairman. That would bo difficult for mo to state, because in tho early days quite a num ber pf the municipalities and the counties bought the bonds. Mr. Bryan. Oh, no. I mean the war loans, tho Liberty bonds. Tho Chairman. I was going to say $3G0,000 000. I would not be sure. Wo went over the top. Mr. Bryan. You think it was about the same that the capitalization would bo at the average rate? The Chairman. It would be somewhat less, but but it was over $300,000,000, in tho five loans. Mr. Bryan. Your people had no difficulty in raising in a year and a half's time enough money to buy government bonds sufficient to capitalise their railroads; It is likely that, If the people wanted to do it, they could capitalize their own railroads by furnishing the money with which to buy them. The Chairman. Yes. Wo were assured of 4 r-r cent when we bought the bonds. We are not sure of that percentage in the state buying the r . ids. - Mr. Bryan. The first issue, I think, was ZVz and not 4. Mr. Sims. You spoke of a trunk line to go t'ough a state, and then for all portions of that state not in the trunk lino to bo served by shorter or branch lines. It .will be a problem almost staggering to ask the states to purchase all the railroads, operating within their borders, except a' trunk line or two, but why would not this solve tho problem and practically attain all that you want to attain, to havo tho United States govern ment buy -all of thoso lines everywhere, in tho state and between the states, and issue its bonds in payment for tho same? It could get money lower than a state could, and then let tho govern ment lease to the states such of these lines a3 the states are willing to take charge of and operate, paying the government just what the government-paid for them? In other words, pay ing the interest on the bonds to the extent of tho purchase that the government would have to pay, and then have absolute complete state con trol of the roads so owned by. the state, and in case the government did not buy them and tho government wanted to lease them to private com panies making arrangement with the paramount owner of tho property and require by arrange ment in the contract for the same identical ser vice. What I have thought about for a good many vears is this, that the government will have to acquire the property of tho railroads, because the unearned increment keeps piling up, whether we take over the equipment or not. It seems to me the sooner this is done the better, because we are constantly increasing the security liabil ities of the railroads and not amortizing any. Could not your plan of theory be so modified as to reach the ends and objects that you have in mind without forcing the states or without hav ing to wait for tho states themselves to deter mine on doing so, and then let the states' take such parts ,pf the roads as they wish to pay for. Mi- Bryan. I think the plan that you suggest, Mr Sims, would be a vey great improvement over the nationallzrtion plan. Mr Sims. The single federal control? Mr' Bryan. Yes. That is, if you provide in vour law that any state may at any time pur chase orVoerate any part of .the general system that is in the state, excepting this trunk-line , S would to a certain extent protect fZtofJSL to take possession of local "Tut Tet alfyon further. I think i would have Uie objection of presenting an enorm ous problem nt tho beginning, which might ba jo nig as to provent tho adoption of nationaliza tion. That Is, 1 think if tho government had to put up the money to buy $20,000,000,000 worth of roads, It would not bo go apt to ontor upon uiiS8 U woul(l onljr ,,ava t0 Put four or flve billion. If you can raise tho monoy for national ization your amendment would go a long way toward reducing the danger that in Involved In centralization, because it would glvo tho remedy in tho law and tho states, as they likod, could tako tho railroads or not. Mr. Sims. It is my observation that whon a railroad comes to receivership and tho mortgage Is faroclosod and tho property Is sold out that some other railroad buys It, nnd there is practi cally nota dollar of monoy pasKos. Tho govern ment would not havo to colioct all of this volume of money, as a matter of courao a great doal of it would be an exchange of government bonds for railroad bonds at what they are worth. It would almost ruin tho commorco to lock up funds in that way. So that the hugonoss of the under taking itsolf would not bo so appalling, because of the fact that you aro only swapping your securities for those that tho railroads themselves own, and I believe that in the stato of Wisconsin, the state that tho chairman mentlonod, the peo ple would bo very glad Indeed to got tho govern mon' bonds, especially If they are froo from taxation. Mr. Bryan. To tho extent I havo said, I think it would bo an improvement to tho nationaliza tion plan, and relievo It to some extent of tho danger of centralization, which to ray mind Is tho groatost danger. Mr. Sims. No plan that has been presented contemplates tho amortization of railroad socur itios and indebtedness, -d I havo not looked upon government ownership from tho standpoint of theory or desire, but as an ahsoluto necessity. That Is tho way it strikes me, that wo havo .got to come to it, and your plan may bo best, I only suggest these matters. Mr. Bryan. My plan is only presented for con sideration, that it may be kept in mind whon tho people decide these questions. Mr. Sims. That s all I want to ask, Mr. Winslow. You mado a comprehensive statement and touched a good many high spots in regard to the railroad proposition, and many of them new. On tho other, you havo brought forward tho opportunity for questions In tho, way of comparison between your views and the other views wo have heard expressed. Thero are a number of questions here that I would like to ask that do not require long answers, but I would like to have the questions comldcred. Mr. Bryan. I shall be pleased to answer .any questions, so far as I can. Mr. Winslow. I would like to ask you in what respect you feel that the management un der federal diroctlon has heen improved, as con trasted with the management under private di rection. Mr. Bryan. In the first place, I said that wo were under such restrictions and limitations that we were not at liberty to Introduce Improve ments and economies as wo would bo If it wero a settled policy and the roads permanently in the hands of the government, but I think there is no question that some have already been in troduced. For instance, the joint use of tho ticket of fices. I have heard a great many people speak of that as being a great improvement, and one that would bo likely to remain, oven If tho roada went 'back into private hands. Mr. Winslow. That is, thero are small economies of that kind. -Mr. Bryan. Yes; and the fact that wo can now buy a ticket that is good over every lino in the country. I have been buying railroad tickets for a good while and sometimes we could buy a mileage book good in a certain section, say on lines west of Chicago, or on lines oast of Chicago, or on certain southern lines, but now I think they sell a book that Is good everywhere. Mr. Winslow. Could not most of those im provements be carried out under private owner ship as well as government ownership? . Mr. Bryan. They could be, but my observa tion Is that if you have private ownership lt la because you have In office people who believe In Jt, and it is very difficult for tho people who believe in private ownership to agree to any thing that the railroads do not want, and they do not want everything that is good. . Mr. Winslow. That. Is getting back to the legislative point, is It not? Mr. Bryan. Well, I do not think you can , Ignore. the- fac.t that a gigantic power like the N i r , -. T-ryi