summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
path: root/26330-h
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
Diffstat (limited to '26330-h')
-rw-r--r--26330-h/26330-h.htm21548
-rw-r--r--26330-h/images/fig001.jpgbin0 -> 327886 bytes
-rw-r--r--26330-h/images/fig001th.jpgbin0 -> 33607 bytes
-rw-r--r--26330-h/images/fig002.jpgbin0 -> 7763 bytes
-rw-r--r--26330-h/images/fig003.jpgbin0 -> 367057 bytes
-rw-r--r--26330-h/images/fig003th.jpgbin0 -> 54618 bytes
-rw-r--r--26330-h/images/fig004.jpgbin0 -> 211780 bytes
-rw-r--r--26330-h/images/fig004th.jpgbin0 -> 38465 bytes
-rw-r--r--26330-h/images/fig005.jpgbin0 -> 204265 bytes
-rw-r--r--26330-h/images/fig005th.jpgbin0 -> 42124 bytes
-rw-r--r--26330-h/images/fig006.jpgbin0 -> 208362 bytes
-rw-r--r--26330-h/images/fig006th.jpgbin0 -> 31458 bytes
-rw-r--r--26330-h/images/fig007.jpgbin0 -> 189593 bytes
-rw-r--r--26330-h/images/fig007th.jpgbin0 -> 37788 bytes
-rw-r--r--26330-h/images/fig008.jpgbin0 -> 275080 bytes
-rw-r--r--26330-h/images/fig008th.jpgbin0 -> 42579 bytes
-rw-r--r--26330-h/images/fig009.jpgbin0 -> 294394 bytes
-rw-r--r--26330-h/images/fig009th.jpgbin0 -> 41999 bytes
-rw-r--r--26330-h/images/fig010.jpgbin0 -> 107501 bytes
-rw-r--r--26330-h/images/fig010th.jpgbin0 -> 23755 bytes
-rw-r--r--26330-h/images/fig011.jpgbin0 -> 265164 bytes
-rw-r--r--26330-h/images/fig011th.jpgbin0 -> 45396 bytes
22 files changed, 21548 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/26330-h/26330-h.htm b/26330-h/26330-h.htm
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..5b60a72
--- /dev/null
+++ b/26330-h/26330-h.htm
@@ -0,0 +1,21548 @@
+<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN"
+ "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">
+
+<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
+ <head>
+ <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=iso-8859-1" />
+ <title>
+ The Project Gutenberg eBook of Frenzied Finance, by Thomas W. Lawson.
+ </title>
+ <style type="text/css">
+
+/*<![CDATA[ XML blockout */
+<!--
+
+ body {margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%;}
+ .frontend {text-align: center; font-size: 90%}
+
+ p {margin-top: .75em; text-align: justify;
+ margin-bottom: .75em;}
+ .indent1 {text-align: right; margin-right: 5%;}
+ .indent2 {text-align: right; margin-right: 10%;}
+
+ h1,h2,h3,h4,h5,h6 {text-align: center; clear: both;}
+
+ hr {width: 33%; margin-top: 1.5em; margin-bottom: 1.5em;
+ margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto; clear: both;}
+
+ img {border: 0;}
+
+ table {margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;}
+ td {vertical-align: top;}
+
+ .pagenum {position: absolute;
+ left: 92%;
+ font-size: 75%;
+ text-align: right;}
+
+ .blockquot {margin-left: 5%; margin-right: 10%; text-align: justify;}
+
+ .bb {border-bottom: solid 1px; text-align: right;}
+ .bbox {border: solid 1px; margin-left: 30%; margin-right: 20%;}
+
+ .center {text-align: center;}
+ .right {text-align: right;}
+ .smcap {font-variant: small-caps;}
+
+ .figcenter {margin: auto; text-align: center;}
+
+ .figright {float: right; clear: right; margin-left: 1em; margin-bottom: 1em;
+ margin-top: 1em; margin-right: 0; padding: 0; text-align: center;}
+
+ .caption {font-variant: small-caps;}
+
+ .footnotes {border: dashed 1px;}
+ .footnote {margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%; font-size: 0.9em;}
+ .footnote .label {position: absolute; right: 84%; text-align: right;}
+ .fnanchor {vertical-align: super; font-size: .8em; text-decoration: none;}
+
+ .poem {margin-left:10%; margin-right:10%; text-align: left;}
+ .poem br {display: none;}
+ .poem .stanza {margin: 1em 0em 1em 0em;}
+ .poem span.i0 {display: block; margin-left: 0em; padding-left: 3em; text-indent: -3em;}
+ .poem span.i2 {display: block; margin-left: 2em; padding-left: 3em; text-indent: -3em;}
+ .poem span.i4 {display: block; margin-left: 4em; padding-left: 3em; text-indent: -3em;}
+
+ .transnote {margin: 2em 5% 1em 5%; font-size: 90%; padding: 0.5em 1em 0.5em 1em;
+ border: solid 1px silver; margin-left: 20%; margin-right: 20%;}
+
+ // -->
+ /* XML end ]]>*/
+ </style>
+ </head>
+<body>
+
+
+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Frenzied Finance, by Thomas W. Lawson
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Frenzied Finance
+ Vol. 1: The Crime of Amalgamated
+
+Author: Thomas W. Lawson
+
+Release Date: August 16, 2008 [EBook #26330]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK FRENZIED FINANCE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Barbara Tozier and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+
+
+<div class="transnote">
+<h3>Transcriber's Note:</h3>
+
+<p>Obvious typographical errors have been corrected in this text. For a
+complete list, please see <a href="#transnote">the bottom of this document</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 315px;">
+<a href="images/fig001.jpg"><img src="images/fig001th.jpg" width="315" height="400" alt="THOMAS W. LAWSON AFTER TWELVE MONTHS OF &quot;FRENZIED
+FINANCE&quot;" title="" /></a>
+<span class="caption">thomas w. lawson after twelve months of &quot;frenzied
+finance&quot;</span>
+</div>
+
+
+<h1>FRENZIED FINANCE</h1>
+
+<h3>BY</h3>
+
+<h2>THOMAS W. LAWSON<br />
+<span class='smcap'>of boston</span></h2>
+
+<h3>VOLUME I</h3>
+
+<h2>THE CRIME OF AMALGAMATED</h2>
+
+<p class='center'>NEW YORK<br />
+THE RIDGWAY-THAYER COMPANY<br />
+1905</p>
+
+<p class='frontend'><i>Copyright, 1905, by</i><br />
+THE RIDGWAY-THAYER COMPANY</p>
+
+<p class='frontend'><i>These articles are reprinted from "Everybody's Magazine"</i><br />
+<span class="smcap">Copyright, 1904, by the Ridgway-Thayer Company</span><br />
+<span class="smcap">Copyright, 1905, by the Ridgway-Thayer Company</span></p>
+
+<p class='frontend'><i>All rights reserved</i></p>
+
+<p class='frontend'>TROW DIRECTORY<br />
+PRINTING AND BOOKBINDING COMPANY<br />
+NEW YORK</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h3>TO</h3>
+
+<h2>PENITENCE AND PUNISHMENT</h2>
+
+<h3>THIS BOOK IS DEDICATED</h3>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">To Penitence</span>: that those whose deviltry is exposed within its pages may
+see in a true light the wrongs they have wrought&mdash;and repent.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">To Punishment</span>: that the unpenalized crimes of which it is the chronicle
+may appear in such hideousness to the world as forever to disgrace their
+perpetrators.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">To Penitence</span>: that the transgressors, learning the error of their ways,
+may reform.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">To Punishment</span>: that the sins of the century crying to heaven for
+vengeance may on earth be visited with condemnation stern enough to halt
+greed at the kill.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">To Punishment</span>: that public indignation may be so aroused against the
+practices of high finance that it shall come to be as culpable to graft
+and cozen within the law as it is lawless to-day to counterfeit and
+steal.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">To Penitence</span>: that in the minds of all who read this eventful history
+there may grow up a knowledge and a conviction that the gaining of vast
+wealth is not worth the sacrifice of manhood, and that poverty and
+abstinence with honor are better worth having than millions and luxury
+at the cost of candor and rectitude.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_v" id="Page_v">[v]</a></span></p>
+<h3>TO MY AUDIENCE</h3>
+
+<h2>SAINTS, SINNERS, AND IN-BETWEENS</h2>
+
+
+<p>Before you enter the confines of "Frenzied Finance," here spread
+out&mdash;for your inspection, at least; enlightenment, perhaps&mdash;halt one
+brief moment. If the men and things to be encountered within are
+real&mdash;did live or live now&mdash;you must deal with them one way. If these
+embodiments are but figments of my mind and pen, you must regard them
+from a different view-point. Therefore, before turning the page, it
+behooves you to find for yourself an answer to the grave question:</p>
+
+<p>Is it the truth that is dealt with here? In weighing the evidence
+remember:</p>
+
+<p>My profession is business. My writing is an incident. "Frenzied Finance"
+was set down during the twenty-fifth and twenty-sixth hours of busy
+days. I pass it up as the history of affairs of which I was a part. The
+men who move within the book's pages are still on the turf. A period of
+twelve years is covered. So far, eighteen instalments, in all some
+400,000 words, have been published. The spigot is still running. I have
+written from memory, necessarily. While it is true that fiction is
+expressed in the same forms and phrases as truth, no man ever lived who
+could shape 400,000 words into the kinds of pictures I have painted and
+pass them off for aught but what they were. The character of my palette
+made it mechanically impossible to shade or temper the pigments, for the
+story was written in instalments, and circumstances were such that often
+one month's issue was out to the public before the next instalment was
+on paper. Considering all this, the consistency of the chronicle as it
+stands is the best evidence of its truth. In submitting it to my readers
+I desire to reiterate:</p>
+
+<p>It <i>is</i> truth&mdash;of the kind that carries its own bell and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_vi" id="Page_vi">[vi]</a></span> candle. Within
+the narrative itself are the reagents required to test and prove its
+genuineness. Were man endowed with the propensity of a M&uuml;nchhausen, the
+cunning of a Machiavelli, the imagination of Scheherezade, the ability
+of a Shakespeare, and the hellishness of his Satanic Majesty, he could
+not play upon 400,000 words, or one-quarter that number, and make the
+play peal truth for a single hour to the audience who will read this
+book, or to one-thousandth part the audience that has already read it in
+<i>Everybody's Magazine</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Such as the story is, it is before you. If in its perusal you fathom my
+intentions, my hopes, my desires, I shall have been repaid for the pain
+its writing has brought me. At least you will find the history of a
+colossal business affair involving millions of dollars and manned by the
+financial leaders of the moment. It is a fair representation of
+financial methods and commercial morals as they exist in America at the
+beginning of the twentieth century. As a contemporary document the
+narrative should have value; as history it is not, I believe, without
+interest. As a message it has had its influence. Indeed, it is not an
+exaggeration to say that no man in his own generation has seen such a
+crop come forth from seed of his own sowing since the long bygone days
+when the wandering king planted dragons' teeth on the Ph&#339;nician plain
+and raised up an army of warriors.</p>
+
+<div class="figright" style="width: 400px;">
+<img src="images/fig002.jpg" width="400" height="118" alt="Yours very truly
+Thomas W. Lawson" title="" />
+</div>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_vii" id="Page_vii">[vii]</a></span></p>
+<h2>FOREWORD</h2>
+
+
+<p>There will be set down in this book, in as simple and direct a fashion
+as I can write it, the story of Amalgamated Copper and of the "System"
+of which it is the most flagrant example. This "System" is a process or
+a device for the incubation of wealth from the people's savings in the
+banks, trust, and insurance companies, and the public funds. Through its
+workings during the last twenty years there has grown up in this country
+a set of colossal corporations in which unmeasured success and continued
+immunity from punishment have bred an insolent disregard of law, of
+common morality, and of public and private right, together with a grim
+determination to hold on to, at all hazards, the great possessions they
+have gulped or captured. It is the same "System" which has taken from
+the millions of our people billions of dollars, and given them over to a
+score or two of men with power to use and enjoy them as absolutely as
+though these billions had been earned dollar by dollar by the labor of
+their bodies and minds. Yet in telling the story of Amalgamated, the
+most brazen and voracious maw of this "System," I desire it understood
+that I take no issue with men; it is with a principle I am concerned.
+With the men I have had close and intimate intercourse, and from my
+knowledge of the means they have used, and the manner in which they have
+used them, and the causes and effects of their performances, I have no
+hesitation in stating that the good they have done, the evils they have
+created, and the indelible imprints they have made on mankind are the
+products of a condition and not of their individualities, and that if
+not one of them had ever been born the same good and evil would to-day
+exist. Others would have done what they did, and would have to answer
+for what has been done, as<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_viii" id="Page_viii">[viii]</a></span> they must. So I say the men are merely
+individuals; the "System" is the thing at fault, and it is the "System"
+that must be rectified. Better far for me not to tell the story I am
+going to tell; better far for the victims of Amalgamated not to know who
+plundered them and how, than to have them know it only to wreak
+vengeance on individuals and overlook the "System," which, if allowed to
+continue, surely will in time, a short time, destroy the nation by
+precipitating fratricidal war.</p>
+
+<p>The enormous losses, millions upon millions&mdash;to my personal knowledge
+over a hundred millions of dollars&mdash;which were made because of
+Amalgamated; the large number of suicides&mdash;to my personal knowledge over
+thirty&mdash;which were directly caused by Amalgamated; the large number of
+previously reputable citizens who were made prison convicts&mdash;to my
+personal knowledge over twenty&mdash;directly because of Amalgamated, were
+caused by acts of this "System" of which Henry H. Rogers and his
+immediate associates were the direct administrators; and yet Mr. Rogers
+and his immediate associates, while these great wrongs were occurring,
+led social lives which, measured by the most rigid yardstick of mental
+or moral rectitude, were as near perfect as it is possible for human
+lives to be. As husbands, fathers, brothers, sons, friends, they were
+ideal, cleanly of body and of mind, with heads filled with sentiment and
+hearts filled with sympathies; their personal lives were like their
+homes and their gardens&mdash;revealing only the brightest things of this
+world, the singing, humming, sweet-smelling things which so strongly
+speak to us of the other world we are yet to know. As workers in the
+world's vineyards, they labored six days and rested upon the Sabbath,
+and gave thanks to Him from whom all blessings flow that He allowed
+them, His humble creatures, to have their earthly being. And yet these
+men, to whose eyes I have seen come the tears for others' sufferings,
+and whose voices I have heard grow husky in recounting the woes of their
+less fortunate brothers&mdash;these men under the spell of the brutal code of
+modern dollar-making are converted into beasts of prey, and put to shame
+the denizens of the deep which devour their kind that they may live.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_ix" id="Page_ix">[ix]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>In the harness of the "System" these men knew no Sabbath, no Him; they
+had no time to offer thanks, no care for earthly or celestial being;
+from their eyes no human power could squeeze a tear, no suffering wring
+a pang from their hearts. They were immune to every feeling known to God
+or man. They knew only dollars. Their relatives of a moment since, their
+friends of yesterday and long, long ago, they regarded only as lumps of
+matter with which to feed the whirring, grinding, gnashing mill which
+poured forth into their bins&mdash;dollars.</p>
+
+<p>In telling the story of Amalgamated I hope to have profited by my long
+and intimate study of this cruel, tigerishly cruel "System," so as to be
+able to deaden myself to all those human sympathies which I have heard
+its votaries so many times subordinate to "It's business." I shall try
+only to keep before me how the Indians of the forest, as our forefathers
+drove them farther and farther into the unknown West, got bitter
+consolation out of the oft-chanted precept of their white brethren of
+civilization, "An eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth," reminding myself
+that whatever of misery or unhappiness my story may bring to the few, it
+will be as nothing to that which they have brought to the many.</p>
+
+<p>In asking for the serious, earnest consideration of the public, I shall
+be honest in giving to it my qualifications, my motives, and my desires
+for writing this narrative. For thirty-four years I have been actively
+connected with matters financial. As banker, broker, and corporation
+man, I have, from the vantage-point of one who actually handled the
+things he studied, studied the causes which created the conditions which
+made possible the "System" which produced the Amalgamated affair. In my
+thirty-four years of business experience I have seen the great fortunes,
+which are the motive power of the "System" referred to, come out of the
+far West as specks upon the financial horizon and grow and grow as they
+travelled Eastward, until in their length, breadth, and thickness they
+obscured the rising sun. At short range I have seen the giant money
+machine put together; I have touched elbows with the men who made it, as
+they fitted this wheel and adjusted that gear, while at the same time I
+broke<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_x" id="Page_x">[x]</a></span> bread and slept with the every-day people who, with the industry
+of the ant and the patience of the spider, toiled to pile in the
+pennies, the nickels, and the dimes which have kept the "System's"
+hopper full.</p>
+
+<p>At my first meeting with the creators of Amalgamated it was clearly and
+distinctly understood that under no circumstances would I enlist in that
+"System's" interests other than for such special services as, after due
+thought and investigation, I should decide to be such as I could in
+fairness to myself and my clients work for; and when I give the details
+of this first meeting in my narrative it will be evident to its readers
+that in telling the story of Amalgamated I am violating no confidence,
+nor in any way encroaching upon the niceties of that business code which
+is, and should be, the foundation of all legitimate financial dealings,
+nor in any way misusing knowledge which, if acquired under other
+circumstances, might be sacred.</p>
+
+<p>Amalgamated was one service the "System" asked of me. It was created
+because of my work. It was largely because of my efforts that its
+foundation was successfully laid. It was very largely because of what I
+stood for and because of the public's confidence in the fulfilment of
+the promises I made that the public invested its savings to an extent of
+over $200,000,000; and it was almost wholly because of the broken
+promises and trickery of the creators of the "System" that the public
+lost the enormous sums it did.</p>
+
+<p>My motives for writing the story of Amalgamated are manifold: I have
+unwittingly been made the instrument by which thousands upon thousands
+of investors in America and Europe have been plundered. I wish them to
+know my position as to the past that they may acquit me of intentional
+wrong-doing; as to the present that they may know that I am using all my
+powers to right the wrongs that have been committed, and as to the
+future that they may see how I propose to compel restitution.</p>
+
+<p>My desire in writing the story of Amalgamated, while tinged perhaps with
+hatred for and revenge against the "System" as a whole and some of its
+votaries, is more truly pervaded with a strong conviction that the most
+effective way<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_xi" id="Page_xi">[xi]</a></span> to educate the public to realize the evils of which such
+affairs as the Amalgamated are the direct result, is to expose before it
+the brutal facts as to the conception, birth, and nursery-breeding of
+this the foremost of all the unsavory offspring of the "System." Thus it
+may learn that it is within its power to destroy the brood already in
+existence and render impossible similar creations.</p>
+
+<p>In the course of my task I shall describe such parts of the general
+financial structure as will place my readers, especially those
+unfamiliar with its more complicated conditions, in a mental state to
+comprehend the methods by which the savings they think are safely
+guarded in the banks, trust and insurance companies, are so manipulated
+by the votaries of frenzied finance as to be in constant jeopardy. I
+shall show them that while the press, the books, the stump, and our
+halls of statesmanship are full to overflowing with the whys,
+wherefores, and what-nots of "tariff," "currency," "silver," "gold," and
+"labor"; while our market systems are perfected educational machines for
+disseminating accurate statistics about the necessaries and luxuries of
+life, the water and land carriers, real estate, and other material
+things which the people have been taught to believe are the only things
+that vitally affect their savings; that while they imagine they
+understand the system by which speculation and investments are
+controlled and worked, and that the causes and effects of this system
+are at all times get-at-able by them through their bankers and their
+brokers; there is a tangible, complicated, yet simple trick of financial
+legerdemain, operated twenty-four hours in each day in the year, and
+which the press, the books, the politicians, and the statesmen never
+touch upon&mdash;a trick by means of which the savings of the people and the
+public funds of the Government, whether in the national banks,
+savings-banks, trust or insurance companies, are always at the absolute
+service and mercy of the votaries of frenzied finance.</p>
+
+<p>Therefore, in the course of my story of Amalgamated will come a few
+kindergarten pictures of how the necessaries and luxuries of the people
+are "incorporated"; of how the evidences of corporation ownership are
+manufactured; of the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_xii" id="Page_xii">[xii]</a></span> individuals who "manufacture" them; of the
+individuals who control and make or unmake their values; of the
+meeting-place of these individuals, within and without the
+stock-exchanges; of some of the corporations and of some of the signs
+and tokens of corporation ownership; of some of their histories; of some
+of their doings, and of some of their contemplated doings. These
+kindergarten pictures I will endeavor to paint, not in that
+"over-the-head" verbosity or "under-the-feet" profundity and intricacy
+of the political economy pedant, which are as the canvases of the
+Whistler school to the masses; but rather will I use the brush of the
+artisan who in giving us our white fences, our gray cottages, and our
+green blinds sets off those things which make up the pictures the people
+really understand and dearly prize.</p>
+
+<p>In the last few years the public has heard many stories of this
+Juggernaut "System," which has grown to be the greatest private power in
+our land&mdash;greater almost than the power which governs the nation,
+because it is not only great within itself but by its peculiar workings
+is really a part of the power which governs the people. Particularly has
+it been told the story of Standard Oil by Mr. Henry D. Lloyd in his able
+work, "Wealth Against Commonwealth," and by Miss Ida M. Tarbell in her
+recent historical sketches; but however thorough these writers may have
+been in gathering the facts, statistics, and evidences, however
+relentless their pens and vivid their pictures, they dealt but with
+things that are dead; things that to the present generation are but
+skeletons whose dry and whitened bones cannot possibly bring to the
+hearts, minds, and souls of the men and women of to-day that
+all-consuming passion for revenge, that burning desire for justice,
+without which no movement to benefit the people can be made successful.</p>
+
+<p>In telling my story I shall, for I must, tell it fairly, and to make
+sure of this I pledge myself to keep to the exact facts as they
+occurred, not allowing myself to be overawed by their greatness into
+contracting them, nor to be tempted by their littleness into expanding
+them. In doing this I know, because of the peculiarity of the subject
+and my intimate relation to it, no other way than to do it in the first<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_xiii" id="Page_xiii">[xiii]</a></span>
+person. As I have already stated, I would prefer to deal with my subject
+through the principles involved rather than with the men concerned; but
+as I shall be compelled to call spades spades, I must, of necessity, use
+the names of men and of institutions fearlessly and without favor.</p>
+
+<p>In the beginning it will be necessary, for that clear understanding of
+the whole subject which is one of my principal objects, to treat at
+sufficient length the Bay State Gas intricacies and trickeries, in which
+in a certain sense Amalgamated had its being. This will compel me to
+devote a chapter to one of the most picturesquely notorious characters
+of the age, John Edward O'Sullivan Addicks, of Delaware, Everywhere, and
+Nowhere.</p>
+
+<p>The main part of my narrative must of necessity deal with the two real
+heads of Standard Oil and Amalgamated, Mr. Henry H. Rogers and Mr.
+William Rockefeller; and with the biggest financial institution of
+America, if not of the world, the National City Bank of New York, and
+its head and dominating spirit, Mr. James Stillman.</p>
+
+<p>An important chapter should be that devoted to the conception and
+formation of the United Metals Selling Company, which was specially
+organized to control the copper industry of the world without coming
+within the restrictions of the laws for the prevention or regulation of
+monopolies.</p>
+
+<p>I shall also deal at length with a notorious character, who, like the
+spot upon the sun, looms up in all American copper affairs whenever they
+appear in the full vision of the public eye&mdash;Mr. F. Augustus Heinze, of
+Montana.</p>
+
+<p>There will be a chapter of more or less length devoted to one of the
+most important episodes in Amalgamated affairs, wherein I shall describe
+one of Wall Street's most picturesque, able, and intensely interesting
+men, Mr. James R. Keene.</p>
+
+<p>I shall touch on a bit of the nation's history in which within a few
+days of the national election of 1896 a hurry-up call for additional
+funds to the extent of $5,000,000 was so promptly met as to overturn the
+people in five States and thereby preserve the destinies of the
+Republican party, of which I am and have always been a member.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_xiv" id="Page_xiv">[xiv]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>I shall draw a picture of two dress-suit cases of money being slipped
+across the table at the foot of a judge's bench in the court-room, from
+its custodian to its new owners, upon the rendering of a court decision;
+and I shall show how the new owners frustrated a plot having for its
+object their waylaying and the recovery of the bags of money.</p>
+
+<p>I shall devote some space to pointing out the evils and dangers of the
+latter-day methods of corrupting law-makers, and show how one entire
+Massachusetts Legislature, with the exception of a few members, was
+dealt with as openly as the fishmongers procure their stock-in-trade
+upon the wharves; how upon the last day of the Legislature, because
+their deferred cash payments were not promptly forthcoming, its members
+turned, and made necessary the hurried departure for foreign shores of a
+great lawyer and his secretary, with bags of quickly gathered gold, and
+all evidences of the crimes committed and attempted; how after the ship
+arrived at an island in foreign seas the great lawyer's dead body
+received hurried burial, and his secretary's was later dropped, with
+weights about its feet, to the ocean's depths; and how ever since the
+natives whisper among themselves their gruesome suspicions.</p>
+
+<p>I shall devote a chapter to the doings of certain financial reputation
+sandbaggers and blackmailers; show how through their agencies they hold
+up corporations and their managers for large sums, which upon being paid
+start into motion a perfected system for the false moulding of public
+opinion for the purpose of making more easy the plundering of the
+people. I shall photograph the men and draw accurate diagrams of the
+machinery through which their nefarious trade is carried on.</p>
+
+<p>My story will carry me down Wall Street, into the Stock Exchange,
+through its hundred and one or million and one open and hidden passages,
+and into State Street, that ever-hung hammock of financial somnolence,
+and into the courts of justice of New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania,
+Delaware, Massachusetts, and Montana, and into many other interesting
+abodes of justice and injustice, of trickery, fraud, and simple, honest
+trustfulness.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_xv" id="Page_xv">[xv]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>When my story is ended and the great American people, whose simple but
+proud boast is that they cannot be fooled in the same place by the same
+methods and the same instruments twice, know as much as I now know of
+Amalgamated and its relation to the "System" which has for years as
+boldly, as coarsely, and as cruelly robbed them as the coolie slaves are
+robbed by their masters&mdash;it will be for them to decide whether my story
+has been, because of the facts which entered into it, so well told that
+they will not be satisfied with the restitution of the vast sums which
+the Amalgamated took from them, which United States Steel took from
+them, and which other financial enterprises took in lesser amounts but
+by equally flagrant methods; but will demand the overthrow of the
+"System" itself. It will be for them to decide; and if their decision
+should be for a conclusive revolt, I shall be amply repaid for the pains
+and the miseries which must necessarily follow in the wake of a task
+such as the one I undertook when I decided to tell the story of
+Amalgamated.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_xvi" id="Page_xvi">[xvi]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_xvii" id="Page_xvii">[xvii]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CONTENTS</h2>
+
+
+<div class='center'>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="toc">
+<tr><td align='right'></td><td align='left'></td><td align='right'><span class="smcap">page</span></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'></td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Foreword</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_vii">vii</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td colspan='3'><b>PART I</b></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>CHAPTER</td><td align='left'></td><td align='right'></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>I.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">The Tortuous Course of Amalgamated</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_1">1</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>II.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">The "System's" Method of Finance and Management</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_5">5</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>III.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">The Men in Power Behind the "System"</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_13">13</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>IV.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">My Own Responsibility</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_23">23</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>V.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">The Power of Dollars</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_33">33</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>VI.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Construction of "Standard Oil's" "Dollar-Making" Mill</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_41">41</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>VII.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Juggling with Millions of the People's Money</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_52">52</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>VIII.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">"Standard Oil" Invests "Made Dollars" in Gas</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_56">56</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>IX.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">A Votary of the "System"</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_60">60</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>X.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Addicks Comes to Boston</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_67">67</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>XI.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">How Addicks Captured Boston Gas</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_71">71</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>XII.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Stock-Brokers not all Bad</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_79">79</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>XIII.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">The "System" versus Westinghouse</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_88">88</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>XIV.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">The Alliance with Addicks</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_93">93</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>XV.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">The Great Bay State Gas Fight</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_103">103</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>XVI.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Peace Negotiations with Rogers</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_110">110</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>XVII.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">A Memorable Conference</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_113">113</a><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_xviii" id="Page_xviii">[xviii]</a></span></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>XVIII.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">The Duplicity of Addicks</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_125">125</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>XIX.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Enter H. M. Whitney</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_133">133</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>XX.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">An Awkward Attack of Appendicitis</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_142">142</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>XXI.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Bribing a Legislature</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_149">149</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>XXII.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Plundered of the Plunder</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_162">162</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>XXIII.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Two Gentlemen of Frenzied Finance</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_170">170</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>XXIV.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Buying a Bunch of States</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_176">176</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>XXV.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Athletics of Finance</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_182">182</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>XXVI.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">The Circling of the Vultures</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_187">187</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>XXVII.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Court Corruption and Coin</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_191">191</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>XXVIII.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Peace at Last</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_195">195</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td colspan='3'><b>PART II</b></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>I.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">The Magic World of Finance</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_197">197</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>II.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">The "System" and the Louisiana Lottery Compared</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_202">202</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>III.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">The Fundamentals of Finance</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_208">208</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>IV.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">The Magic "Jimmy"</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_213">213</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>V.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">How the "System" does Business</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_217">217</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>VI.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">How Wall Street's Manipulations Affect the Country</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_223">223</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>VII.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Economics of Copper</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_226">226</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>VIII.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">My plan for "Coppers"</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_233">233</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>IX.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Birth of "Coppers"</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_237">237</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>X.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Rogers Grasps "Coppers"</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_245">245</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>XI.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">The Copper Campaign Opens</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_253">253</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>XII.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">The Buncoing of the Stockholders of Utah</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_261">261</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>XIII.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">The Trap in Finance</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_266">266</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>XIV.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Lawyer Untermyer Discovers the "Nigger"</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_274">274</a><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_xix" id="Page_xix">[xix]</a></span></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>XV.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Degrees in Crime</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_281">281</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>XVI.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Mr. Rogers Unmasks</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_283">283</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>XVII.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">"Extract Every Dollar"</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_289">289</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>XVIII.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">The Biters Bit</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_301">301</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>XIX.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">The Despoiling of Leonard Lewisohn</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_307">307</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>XX.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">The Christening of Amalgamated</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_311">311</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>XXI.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Fixing the Responsibility</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_320">320</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>XXII.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">The Responsibility Fastened</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_332">332</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>XXIII.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">The First Crime of Amalgamated</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_340">340</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>XXIV.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">The Subscription Opens</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_346">346</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>XXV.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Dollar Hydrophobia</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_351">351</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>XXVI.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Deviltry Afoot</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_359">359</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>XXVII.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">The Black Flag Hoisted</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_364">364</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>XXVIII.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">The Bogus Subscription</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_370">370</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>XXIX.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">The Aftermath</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_376">376</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>XXX.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">The Morning After</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_385">385</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>XXXI.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">I Walk the Plank</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_389">389</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>XXXII.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Perfecting the Double Cross</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_397">397</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>XXXIII.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">A Retrospect and a Moral</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_405">405</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td colspan='3'><b>LAWSON AND HIS CRITICS</b></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>I.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">The Insurance Controversy</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_413">413</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>II.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">The Enemies I Have Made</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_487">487</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>III.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Explanations</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_539">539</a></td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[1]</a></span></p>
+<h1>FRENZIED FINANCE</h1>
+
+<h2>THE STORY OF AMALGAMATED</h2>
+
+<h2><i>PART I</i></h2>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h2>CHAPTER I</h2>
+
+<h3>THE TORTUOUS COURSE OF AMALGAMATED</h3>
+
+
+<p>Amalgamated Copper was begotten in 1898, born in 1899, and in the first
+five years of its existence plundered the public to the extent of over
+one hundred millions of dollars.</p>
+
+<p>It was a creature of that incubator of trust and corporation frauds, the
+State of New Jersey, and was organized ostensibly to mine, manufacture,
+buy, sell, and deal in copper, one of the staples, the necessities, of
+civilization.</p>
+
+<p>It is a corporation with $155,000,000 capital, 1,550,000 shares of the
+par value of $100 each.</p>
+
+<p>Its entire stock was sold to the public at an average of $115 per share
+($100 to $130), and in 1903 the price had declined to $33 per share.</p>
+
+<p>From its inception it was known as a "Standard Oil" creature, because
+its birthplace was the National City Bank of New York (the "Standard
+Oil" bank), and its parents the leading "Standard Oil" lights, Henry H.
+Rogers, William Rockefeller, and James Stillman.</p>
+
+<p>It has from its birth to present writing been responsible for more hell
+than any other trust or financial thing since the world began. Because
+of it the people have sustained incalculable losses and have suffered
+untold miseries.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[2]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>But for the existence of the National City Bank of New York, the
+tremendous losses and necessarily corresponding profits could not have
+been made.</p>
+
+<p>I laid out the plans upon which Amalgamated was constructed, and, had
+they been followed, there would have been reared a great financial
+edifice, immensely profitable, permanently prosperous, one of the
+world's big institutions.</p>
+
+<p>The conditions of which Amalgamated was the consequence had their birth
+in Bay State Gas. To explain them I must go back a few years.</p>
+
+<p>In 1894 J. Edward Addicks, of Delaware, Everywhere, and Nowhere, the
+Boston Gas King, invaded the gas preserves of the "Standard Oil" in
+Brooklyn, N. Y., and the "Standard Oil," to compel him to withdraw,
+moved on his pre-empted gas domains in Boston, Mass.</p>
+
+<p>Late in 1894 a fierce battle was raging in Boston between Gas King
+Addicks and Gas King Rogers; the very air was filled with denunciation
+and defiance&mdash;bribery and municipal corruption; and King Addicks was
+defeated all along the line and in full retreat, with his ammunition
+down to the last few rounds.</p>
+
+<p>Early in 1895 I took command of the Addicks forces against "Standard
+Oil."</p>
+
+<p>By the middle of 1895 the Addicks troopers had the "Standard Oil"
+invaders "on the run."</p>
+
+<p>In August, 1895, Henry H. Rogers and myself came together for the first
+time, at his house in New York, and we practically settled the Boston
+gas war.</p>
+
+<p>Early in 1896 we actually settled the gas war, and "Standard Oil"
+transferred all its Boston gas properties ($6,000,000) to the Addicks
+crowd.</p>
+
+<p>In October, 1896, the whole Bay State Gas outfit passed from the control
+of Addicks and his cohorts into the hands of a receiver, and as a result
+of this receivership, with its accumulated complications, "Standard
+Oil," in November, 1896, regained all its old Boston companies, and in
+addition all the Addicks companies, with the exception of the Bay State
+Gas Company of Delaware.</p>
+
+<p>In 1896 I perfected and formulated the plans for "Cop<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[3]</a></span>pers," a broad and
+comprehensive project, having for its basis the buying and consolidating
+of all the best-producing copper properties in Europe and America, and
+the educating of the world up to their great merits as safe and
+profitable investments.</p>
+
+<p>In 1897 I laid these plans before "Standard Oil."</p>
+
+<p>In 1898 "Standard Oil" was so far educated up to my plans on "Coppers"
+as to accept them.</p>
+
+<p>In 1899 Amalgamated, intended to be the second or third section of
+"Coppers," was suddenly shifted by "Standard Oil" into the first
+section, and with a full head of steam ran out of the "City Bank"
+station, carrying the largest and best train-load of passengers ever
+sent to destruction on any financial trunk-line.</p>
+
+<p>In 1899, after the allotment of the Amalgamated public subscription, the
+public for the first time, in a dazed and benumbed way, realized it had
+been "taken in" on this subscription, and a shiver went down America's
+financial spinal column.</p>
+
+<p>In 1900, after the price of Amalgamated had slumped to 75 instead of
+advancing to 150, to 200, as had been promised, the "Standard
+Oil"-Amalgamated-City Bank fraternity called Wall Street's king of
+manipulators, James R. Keene, to the rescue, and under his adroit
+handling of the stock in the market Amalgamated was sent soaring over
+its flotation price of 100.</p>
+
+<p>In 1901 Boston &amp; Montana and Butte &amp; Boston, after long delay, drew out
+of the "Standard Oil" station as the second section of Amalgamated,
+carrying an immense load of investors and speculators to what was at
+that time confidently believed would be Dollar Utopia; and the price of
+the enlarged Amalgamated fairly flew to 130. These were the stocks which
+I had originally advertised would be part of the first section of the
+consolidated "Coppers," and which, after Amalgamated had been run in
+ahead of them, I advertised would follow in due course.</p>
+
+<p>In the latter part of 1901 President McKinley was assassinated, and the
+great panic which might have ensued was averted by the marvellous power
+of J. Pierpont Morgan.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[4]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Then the Amalgamated dividend, without warning and in open defiance of
+the absolute pledges of its creators, was cut, and the public, including
+even James R. Keene, found itself on that wild toboggan whirl which
+landed it battered and sore, at the foot of a financial precipice.</p>
+
+<p>This, briefly, is the tortuous course of Amalgamated, and it is along
+this twisting, winding, up-alley-and-down-lane way I must ask my readers
+to travel if they would know the story as it is.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[5]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER II</h2>
+
+<h3>THE "SYSTEM'S" METHOD OF FINANCE AND MANAGEMENT</h3>
+
+
+<p>At the lower end of the greatest thoroughfare in the greatest city of
+the New World is a huge structure of plain gray-stone. Solid as a
+prison, towering as a steeple, its cold and forbidding fa&ccedil;ade seems to
+rebuke the heedless levity of the passing crowd, and frown on the
+frivolity of the stray sunbeams which in the late afternoon play around
+its impassive cornices. Men point to its stern portals, glance quickly
+up at the rows of unwinking windows, nudge each other, and hurry onward,
+as the Spaniards used to do when going by the offices of the
+Inquisition. The building is No. 26 Broadway.</p>
+
+<p>26 Broadway, New York City, is the home of the Standard Oil. Its
+countless miles of railroads may zigzag in and out of every State and
+city in America, and its never-ending twistings of snaky pipe-lines
+burrow into all parts of the North American continent which are
+lubricated by nature; its mines may be in the West, its manufactories in
+the East, its colleges in the South, and its churches in the North; its
+head-quarters may be in the centre of the universe and its branches on
+every shore washed by the ocean; its untold millions may levy tribute
+wherever the voice of man is heard, but its home is the tall stone
+building in old New York, which under the name "26 Broadway" has become
+almost as well known wherever dollars are juggled as is "Standard Oil."</p>
+
+<p>Wall Street and the financial world know that there are two "Standard
+Oils," but to the public there is no clear distinction between Standard
+Oil, the corporation which deals in oil and things which pertain to the
+manufacture and transportation of oil, and "Standard Oil," the giant,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[6]</a></span>
+indefinite system which sometimes embraces all the "Standard Oil" group
+of individuals and corporations, and sometimes only certain of the
+individuals.</p>
+
+<p>This giant creature, "Standard Oil," can best be described so that the
+average man may understand it as a group of money-owners&mdash;some
+individuals and some corporations&mdash;who have a right to use the name
+"Standard Oil" in any business undertakings they engage in. The right to
+use the name is of priceless value, for it carries with it "assured
+success."</p>
+
+<p>Standard Oil, the seller of oil to the people, transacts its business as
+does any other corporation. It plays no part in my story and I shall not
+hereafter touch upon its affairs, but confine my meaning, wherever I use
+the name "Standard Oil," to the larger and many times more important
+"System."</p>
+
+<p>There are only three men who can lend the name "Standard Oil," even in
+the most remote way to any project, for there is no more heinous crime
+against the "Standard Oil" decalogue than using the name "Standard Oil"
+unauthorizedly. The three men are Henry H. Rogers, William Rockefeller,
+and John D. Rockefeller. Sometimes John D. Rockefeller uses the name
+alone in projects in which Henry H. Rogers and William Rockefeller have
+no interests. Henry H. Rogers or William Rockefeller seldom, if ever,
+uses the name in projects with which neither of the other two is
+associated. Sometimes, but not often, John D. and William Rockefeller
+use the name in connection with projects of their own in which Henry H.
+Rogers has no interest. Henry H. Rogers and John D. Rockefeller, I
+believe, never are associated in projects in which William Rockefeller
+has no interest. Henry H. Rogers and William Rockefeller frequently
+bring to bear the influence of the magic-working syllables in connection
+with joint affairs in which John D. Rockefeller has no interest&mdash;in
+fact, during the past ten years the name "Standard Oil" has been used
+more in their combined undertakings than in all others put together.</p>
+
+<p>There are eight distinct groups of individuals and corporations which go
+to make up the big "Standard Oil":<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[7]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>1st. The Standard Oil, seller of oil to the people, which is made up of
+many sub-corporations either by actual ownership or by ownership of
+their stock or bonds. Probably no person other than Henry H. Rogers,
+William Rockefeller, and John D. Rockefeller knows exactly what the
+assets of the Standard Oil corporation are, although John D.
+Rockefeller, Jr., son of John D. Rockefeller, and William G.
+Rockefeller, that able and excellent business man, son of William
+Rockefeller and the probable future head of "Standard Oil," are being
+rapidly educated in this great secret. In this first institution all
+"Standard Oil" individuals and estates are direct owners.</p>
+
+<p>2d. Henry H. Rogers, William Rockefeller, and John D. Rockefeller,
+active heads, and included with them their sons.</p>
+
+<p>3d. A large group of active captains and first lieutenants, men who
+conduct the affairs of the different corporations or sections of
+corporations in which some or all of the "Standard Oil" are interested.
+Many of these are the sons or the second generation of men who held like
+positions in Standard Oil's earlier days. Of these Daniel O'Day and
+Charles Pratt are fair examples.</p>
+
+<p>4th. A large group of captains retired from active service in the
+Standard Oil army, who participate only in a general way in the
+management of its affairs, and whose principal business is looking after
+their own investments. These men are each worth from $5,000,000 or
+$10,000,000 to $50,000,000 or $75,000,000. The Paynes and the Flaglers
+are fair illustrations of this group.</p>
+
+<p>5th. The estates of deceased members of this wonderful "Standard Oil"
+family, which are still largely controlled by some or all of the
+prominent "Standard Oil" men.</p>
+
+<p>6th. "Standard Oil" banks and banking institutions, and the system of
+national banks, trust companies, and insurance companies, of which
+"Standard Oil" has, by ownership and otherwise, practically absolute
+control. The head of this group is James Stillman, and it is when these
+institutions are called into play in connection with "Standard Oil"
+business that he is one of the "Standard Oil" leaders, second to neither
+of the Rockefellers nor to Mr. Rogers.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[8]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>7th. The "Standard Oil" army of followers, capitalists, and workers in
+all parts of the world, men who require nothing more than the order, "Go
+ahead," "Pull off," "Buy," "Sell," or "Stand Pat," to render as absolute
+obedience and enthusiastic cooperation as though they knew, to the
+smallest detail, the purposes which lay behind the giving of the order.</p>
+
+<p>8th. The countless hordes of politicians, statesmen, law-makers and
+enforcers, who, at home or as representatives of the nation abroad, go
+to make up our political structure, and judges and lawyers.</p>
+
+<p>To the world at large, which looks on and sees this giant institution
+move through the ranks of business without noise or dissension and with
+the ease and smoothness of a creature one-millionth its size, it would
+seem that there must be some wonderful and complicated code of rules to
+guide and control the thousands of lieutenants and privates who conduct
+its affairs. This is partially true, partially false. "Standard Oil's"
+governing rules are as rigid as the laws of the Medes and Persians, yet
+so simple as to be easily understood by any one.</p>
+
+<p>First, there is a fundamental law, from which no one&mdash;neither the great
+nor the small&mdash;is exempt. In substance it is: "Every 'Standard Oil' man
+must wear the 'Standard Oil' collar."</p>
+
+<p>This collar is riveted on to each one as he is taken into "the band,"
+and can only be removed with the head of the wearer.</p>
+
+<p>Here is the code. The penalty for infringing the following rules is
+instant "removal."</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>1. Keep your mouth closed, as silence is gold, and gold is
+what we exist for.</p>
+
+<p>2. Collect our debts to-day. Pay the other fellow's debts
+to-morrow. To-day is always here, to-morrow may never come.</p>
+
+<p>3. Conduct all our business so that the buyer and the seller
+must come to us. Keep the seller waiting; the longer he
+waits the less he'll take. Hurry the buyer, as his money
+brings us interest.</p>
+
+<p>4. Make all profitable bargains in the name of "Standard
+Oil," chancy ones in the names of dummies. "Standard Oil"
+never goes back on a bargain.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[9]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>5. Never put "Standard Oil" trades in writing, as your
+memory and the other fellow's forgetfulness will always be
+re-enforced with our organization. Never forget our Legal
+Department is paid by the year, and our land is full of
+courts and judges.</p>
+
+<p>6. As competition is the life of trade&mdash;our trade, and
+monopoly the death of trade&mdash;our competitor's trade, employ
+both judiciously.</p>
+
+<p>7. Never enter into a "butting" contest with the Government.
+Our Government is by the people and for the people, and we
+are the people, and those people who are not us can be hired
+by us.</p>
+
+<p>8. Always do "right." Right makes might, might makes
+dollars, dollars make right, and we have the dollars.</p></div>
+
+<p>All business of the gigantic "Standard Oil" system is dealt with through
+two great departments. Mr. Rogers is head of the executive, and William
+Rockefeller the head of the financial department. All new schemes,
+whether suggested by outsiders or initiated within the institution, go
+to Mr. Rogers. Regardless of their nature or character, he first takes
+them under advisement. If a scheme prove good enough to run the gantlet
+of Mr. Rogers' tremendously high standard, the promoter, after he has
+set forth his plans and estimates, hears with astonishment these words:</p>
+
+<p>"Wait while I go upstairs. I'll say Yes or No upon my return."</p>
+
+<p>And upon his return it is almost always "Yes." If the project, however,
+does not come up to his exacting requirements, it is turned down without
+further ado or consultation with any of his associates.</p>
+
+<p>Those intimate with affairs at 26 Broadway have grown curiously familiar
+with this expression, "I am going upstairs." "Upstairs" means two
+distinct and separate things. When a matter in Mr. Rogers' department is
+awaiting his return from "upstairs," it means he has gone to place the
+scheme before William Rockefeller, on the thirteenth floor, and laying a
+thing before William Rockefeller by Mr. Rogers consists of a brief,
+vigorous statement of Mr. Rogers' own conclusions and a request for his
+associate's judgment of it. William Rockefeller's strong quality is his
+ability to estimate quickly the practical value of a given scheme. His
+approval means he will finance it, and William Rockefeller's "say-so" is
+as absolute in the financing of things as is Mr. Rogers' in<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[10]</a></span> passing
+upon their feasibility. It does not matter whether it is an undertaking
+calling for the employment of $50,000 capital or $50,000,000 or
+$500,000,000, Mr. Rockefeller's "Yes" or "No" is all there is to it. He
+having passed on it, Mr. Rogers supervises its execution.</p>
+
+<p>The other "upstairs" is one that is heard every week-day of the year
+except summer Saturdays. At 26 Broadway, just before eleven o'clock each
+morning, there is a flutter in the offices of all the leading heads of
+departments from Henry H. Rogers down, for going "upstairs" to the
+eleven o'clock meeting is in the mind of each "Standard Oil" man the one
+all-important event of every working day.</p>
+
+<p>In the big room, on the fifteenth floor, at 26 Broadway, there gather
+each day, between the hour of eleven and twelve o'clock, all the active
+men whose efforts make "Standard Oil" what "Standard Oil" is; here also
+come to meet and mingle with the active heads the retired captains when
+"they are in town." Around a large table they sit. Reports are
+presented, views exchanged, policies talked over, republics and empires
+made and unmade. If the Recorders in the next world have kept complete
+minutes of what has happened "upstairs" at 26 Broadway they must have
+tremendously large fire-proof safes. It is at the meeting "upstairs"
+that the "melons are cut," and if one of the retired captains were asked
+why he was in such a rush to be on hand each day when in town, and if he
+were in a talkative mood&mdash;which he would not be&mdash;he would answer: "They
+may be cutting a new melon, and there's nothing like being on hand when
+the juice runs out."</p>
+
+<p>If a new melon has been cut&mdash;an Amalgamated Copper, for instance&mdash;it is
+at one of these meetings that the different "Standard Oil" men are
+informed for the first time that the scheme, about which they may have
+read or heard much outside, is far enough along for them to participate
+in it. Each is told what sized slice he may have if he cares for any. It
+is a very exceptional thing for any one to ask for more than he has been
+apportioned, and an unheard-of thing for any one to refuse to take his
+slice, although there is absolutely no compulsion in the connection.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[11]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>And here, perhaps, may not come amiss an incident which illustrates what
+may happen in a few minutes "upstairs."</p>
+
+<p>Before Amalgamated was launched, in bringing together the different
+properties of which it was composed I negotiated for the acquisition of
+the Parrott mine, the majority of whose stock was held by certain old and
+wealthy brass manufacturers in Connecticut. They had never seen any of
+the Rockefellers nor Henry H. Rogers, but we were several months getting
+the deal into shape before it was finally arranged, and they became
+familiar with the great "Standard Oil" institution. So much so that the
+chief of the owners&mdash;to whom was delegated the duty of turning over the
+securities to my principals&mdash;looked forward with much eagerness to the
+time when he must necessarily meet the mysterious and important
+personages who guided 26 Broadway's destinies. Finally the day came, and
+at precisely a quarter of eleven I let him into one of the numerous
+private offices which are a part of Mr. Rogers' suite. He had under his
+arm a bundle of papers representing the stocks which he was to exchange
+for the purchase money, amounting to $4,086,000, and I think he fully
+expected that in their examination, in the receipting for so large an
+amount of money, and in the general talkings over, which he thought must
+of course be a necessary part of the delivery, the greater part of the
+day would be taken up. It took me some six or seven minutes to get him
+located, and it was close on to five minutes of eleven when Mr. Rogers
+stepped into the room. I was well into the introduction, when out came
+Mr. Rogers' watch, and with what must have appeared to the visitor as
+astonished consternation.</p>
+
+<p>"I do hope you will excuse me," he exclaimed in the middle of a
+handshake, "but, my gracious, I am overdue upstairs," and he bolted.</p>
+
+<p>His place was taken fifty seconds after by Mr. Rogers' secretary, who in
+less than five minutes had exchanged a check of $4,086,000, made out to
+herself and indorsed in blank, for the bundle of stocks, and in another
+minute I was ushering the old gentleman into the elevator.</p>
+
+<p>When he came to on the sidewalk he got his breath suffi<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[12]</a></span>ciently to say:
+"Phew! I thought my trade was a big one, but that friend of yours,
+Rogers, must have had some other fellow upstairs who was going to turn
+in $40,000,000 of stuff, because he did appear dreadfully excited!"</p>
+
+<p>The success of "Standard Oil" is largely due to two things&mdash;to the
+loyalty of its members to each other and to "Standard Oil," and to the
+punishment of its enemies. Each member before initiation knows its
+religion to be reward for friends and extermination for foes. Once
+within the magic circle, a man realizes he is getting all that any one
+else on earth can afford to pay him for like services, and still more
+thrown in for full measure. Moreover, while a "Standard Oil" man's
+reward is always ample and satisfactory, he is constantly reminded in a
+thousand and one ways that punishment for disloyalty is sure and
+terrible, and that in no corner of the earth can he escape it, nor can
+any power on earth protect him from it.</p>
+
+<p>"Standard Oil" is never loud in its rewards nor its punishments. It does
+not care for the public's praise nor for its condemnation, but endeavors
+to avoid both by keeping its "business" to itself. As an instance, in
+connection with certain gas settlements I made with "Standard Oil," it
+voluntarily paid one of its agents for a few days' work $250,000. He had
+expected at the outside $25,000. When I published the fact, as I had a
+right to, "Standard Oil" was mad as hornets&mdash;as upset, indeed, as though
+it had been detected in cheating the man out of two-thirds of his just
+due, instead of having paid him ten times what was coming to him.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[13]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER III</h2>
+
+<h3>THE MEN IN POWER BEHIND THE "SYSTEM"</h3>
+
+
+<p>In the great Thing known to the world as "Standard Oil," the most
+perfect embodiment of a "system" which I will endeavor to get before my
+readers in later chapters, there are three heads, Henry H. Rogers,
+William Rockefeller, and John D. Rockefeller. All the other members are
+distinctively lieutenants, or subordinate workers, unless possibly I
+except James Stillman, who, from his peculiar connection with "Standard
+Oil" and his individually independent position, should perhaps be placed
+in the category of heads.</p>
+
+<p>Some one has said: "If you would know who is the head of a family, slip
+into the home." The world, the big, arbitrary, hit-or-miss,
+too-much-in-a-hurry-to-correct-its-mistakes world, has decided that the
+master of "Standard Oil" is John D. Rockefeller, and John D. Rockefeller
+it is to all but those who have a pass-key to the "Standard Oil" home.
+To those the head of "Standard Oil"&mdash;the "Standard Oil" the world knows
+as it knows St. Paul, Shakespeare, or Jack the Giant-killer, or any of
+the things it knows well but not at all&mdash;is Henry H. Rogers. John D.
+Rockefeller may have more money, more actual dollars, than Henry H.
+Rogers, or all other members of the "Standard Oil" family, and in the
+early days of "Standard Oil" may have been looked up to as the big gun
+by his partners, and allowed to take the hugest hunks of the profits,
+and may have so handled and judiciously invested these as to be at the
+beginning of the twentieth century the richest man on earth, but none of
+these things alters the fact that the big brain, the big body, the head
+of "Standard Oil," is Henry H. Rogers.</p>
+
+<p>Take station at the entrance of 26 Broadway and watch the different
+members of the "Standard Oil" family as they enter the building: you
+will exclaim once and only once:<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[14]</a></span> "There goes the Master!" And the man
+who calls forth the cry will be Henry H. Rogers.</p>
+
+<p>The big, jovial detective who stands all day long with one foot resting
+on the sidewalk and one on the first stone step of the home of "Standard
+Oil" will make oath he shows no different sign to Henry H. Rogers than
+to a Rockefeller, a Payne, a Flagler, a Pratt, or an O'Day; yet watch
+him when Mr. Rogers passes up the steps&mdash;an unconscious deference marks
+his salutation&mdash;the tribute of the soldier to the commanding general.</p>
+
+<p>Follow through the door bearing the sign, "Henry H. Rogers, President of
+the National Transit Co.," on the eleventh floor, and pass from the
+outer office into the beautiful, spacious mahogany apartment beyond,
+with its decorations of bronze bulls and bears and yacht-models, its
+walls covered with neatly framed autograph letters from Lincoln, Grant,
+"Tom" Reed, Mark Twain, and other real, big men, and it will come over
+you like a flash that here, unmistakably, is the <i>sanctum sanctorum</i> of
+the mightiest business institution of modern times. If a single doubt
+lingers, read what the men in the frames have said to Henry H. Rogers,
+and you will have proof positive that these judges of human nature knew
+this man, not only as the master of "Standard Oil," but also as a sturdy
+and resolute friend whose jovial humanity they had recognized and
+enjoyed.</p>
+
+<p>Did my readers ever hear of the National Transit Company? Very few
+have&mdash;yet the presidency of it is the modest title of Henry H. Rogers.
+When the world is ladling out honors to the "Standard Oil" kings, and
+spouting of their wondrous riches, how often is Henry H. Rogers
+mentioned? Not often, for he is never where the public can get a glimpse
+of him&mdash;he is too busy pulling the wires and playing the buttons in the
+shadows just behind the throne. Had it not been that that divinity which
+disposes of men's purposes compelled this man, as he neared the end of
+his remarkable career, to come into the open on Amalgamated, he might
+never have been known as the real master of "Standard Oil." But if he is
+missing when the public is hurrahing, he is sufficiently in evidence
+when clouds lower<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[15]</a></span> or when the danger-signal is run to the masthead at
+26 Broadway. He who reads "Standard Oil" history will note that, from
+its first deal until this day, whenever bricks, cabbages, or aged eggs
+were being presented to "Standard Oil," always were Henry H. Rogers'
+towering form and defiant eye to be seen in the foreground where the
+missiles flew thickest.</p>
+
+<p>During the past twenty years, whenever the great political parties have
+lined-up for their regular once-in-four-years' tussle, there would be
+found Henry H. Rogers, calm as a race-track gambler, "sizing-up" the
+entries, their weights and handicaps. Every twist and turn in the
+pedigrees and records of Republicans and Democrats are as familiar to
+him as the "dope-sheets" are to the gambler, for is he not at the
+receiving end of the greatest information bureau in the world?</p>
+
+<p>A Standard Oil agent is in every hamlet in the country, and who better
+than these trained and intelligent observers to interpret the varying
+trends of feelings in their communities? Tabulated and analyzed, these
+reports enable Rogers, the sagacious politician, to diagnose the drift
+of the country far ahead of the most astute of campaign managers. He is
+never in doubt about who will win the election. Before the contest is
+under way he has picked his winner and is beside him with generous
+offers of war expenses.</p>
+
+<p>When labor would howl its anathemas at Standard Oil, and the
+Rockefellers and other stout-hearted generals and captains of this band
+of merry money-makers would fall to discussing conciliation and retreat,
+it was always Henry H. Rogers who fired at his associates his now famous
+panacea for all Standard Oil opposition: "We'll see Standard Oil in hell
+before we will allow any body of men on earth to dictate how we shall
+conduct our business!" And the fact that "Standard Oil" still does its
+business in the Elysian fields of success, where is neither sulphur nor
+the fumes of sulphur, is additional evidence of whose will it is that
+sways its destinies.</p>
+
+<p>An impression of the despotic character of the man and of his manner of
+despatching the infinite details of the multitudinous business he must
+deal with daily may be gained<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[16]</a></span> by a glimpse of Henry H. Rogers at one of
+the meetings of the long list of giant corporations which number him
+among their directors. Surrounded though he be by the &eacute;lite of all
+financialdom, the very flower of the business brains of America, you
+will surely hear his sharp, incisive, steel-clicking: "Gentlemen, are we
+ready for the vote, for I regret to say, I have another important and
+unavoidable meeting at &mdash;&mdash;?" You look at your watch. The time he
+mentions is twelve, or, at the most, fifteen minutes away. There is no
+chance for further discussion. Cut-and-dried resolutions are promptly
+put to the vote, and off goes the master to his other engagement which
+will be disposed of in the same peremptory fashion.</p>
+
+<p>At a meeting of the directors of "financed" Steel, during the brief
+reign of its late "vacuumized" president, Charlie Schwab, an episode
+occurred which exhibited the danger of interfering with Mr. Rogers'
+iron-bound plans. The fact that the steel throne was many sizes too
+large for Schwab had, about this time, become publicly notorious, but
+Carnegie and Morgan on the surface, and "Standard Oil" beneath, were so
+busy preparing their alibis against the crash which even then was
+overdue that they had neither time nor desire to adjust themselves on
+the seat.</p>
+
+<p>In advance Mr. Rogers made his invariable plea for quick action on a
+matter before the board when Schwab, with a tact generated by the
+wabbling of a misfit Wall Street crown chafing a generous pair of ears,
+blurted out: "Mr. Rogers will vote on this question after we have talked
+on it."</p>
+
+<p>In a voice that those who heard it say sounded like a rattlesnake's hiss
+in a refrigerator, Rogers replied: "All meetings where I sit as director
+vote first and talk after I am gone."</p>
+
+<p>It is said, and from my knowledge of these and after-events I believe
+with truth, that this occurrence was the spark that started the terrific
+explosion in United States Steel, for not long afterward some unknown
+and mysterious power began that formidable attack on Steel stock which
+left Wall Street full of the unattached ears, eyes, noses, breastbones,
+and scalps of hordes of financial potentates and their flambeau
+carriers. Whether or not Mr. Rogers was the instigator of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[17]</a></span> this movement
+no man, of course, can positively state, but I can vouch for the fact
+that about this time he displayed, when talking "Steel" affairs with
+intimates, a most contemptuous bitterness against "King Charlie" and
+certain of his associates.</p>
+
+<p>At sixty-five Henry H. Rogers is probably one of the most
+distinguished-looking men of the time; tall and straight, and as
+well-proportioned and supple as one of the beautiful American elms which
+line the streets of his native town. He was born in Fairhaven, a fishing
+village just over the bridge from the great whaling port, New Bedford.
+He comes of stalwart New England stock; his father was a sea-captain,
+and his lot, like that of most of the sons of old New England seaport
+towns, was cast along those hard, brain-and-body-developing lines which,
+beginning in the red village school-house, the white meeting-house, and
+the yellowish-grayish country store, end in unexpected places, often, as
+in this instance, upon the golden throne of business royalty.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Rogers' part in the very early days of Standard Oil was that of
+clerk and bookkeeper. He makes no secret that when he had risen to the
+height of $8 a week wages he felt as proud and confident as ever in
+after-life when for the same number of days' labor it was no uncommon
+occurrence to find himself credited with a hundred thousand times that
+amount.</p>
+
+<p>All able men have some of God's indelible imprints of greatness. This
+man's every feature bespeaks strength and distinction. When he walks,
+the active swing of his figure expresses power&mdash;realized, confident
+power. When at rest or in action his square jaw tells of fighting power,
+bull-dog, hold-on, never-let-go fighting power, and his high, full
+forehead of intellectual, mightily intellectual power; and they are
+re-enforced with cheek-bones and nose which suggest that this fighting
+power has in it something of the grim ruthlessness of the North American
+Indian. The eyes, however, are the crowning characteristic of the man's
+physical make-up.</p>
+
+<p>One must see Mr. Rogers' eyes in action and in repose to half appreciate
+their wonders. I can only say they are red, blue, and black, brown,
+gray, and green; nor do I want<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[18]</a></span> my readers to think I put in colors that
+are not there, for there must be many others than those I have
+mentioned. I have seen them when they were so restfully blue that I
+would think they never could be anything but a part of those skies that
+come with the August and September afternoons when the bees' hum and the
+locusts' drone blend with the smell of the new-mown hay to help spell
+the word "Rest."</p>
+
+<p>I have seen them so green that within their depths I was almost sure the
+fish were lazily resting in the shadows of those sea-plants which grow
+only on the ocean's bottom; and I have seen them as black as that
+thunder-cloud which makes us wonder: "Is He angry?" And then again I
+have watched them when they were of that fiery red and that glinting
+yellow which one sees only when at night the doors of a great, roaring
+furnace are opened.</p>
+
+<p>There is such a kindly good-will in these eyes when they are at rest
+that the man does not live who would not consider himself favored to be
+allowed to turn over to Henry H. Rogers his pocket-book without
+receiving a receipt. They are the eyes of the man you would name in your
+will to care for your wife's and children's welfare. When their
+animation is friendly one would rather watch their merry twinkle as they
+keep time to their owner's inimitable stories and non-duplicatable
+anecdotes, trying to interpret the rapid and incessant telegraphy of
+their glances, than sit in a theatre or read an interesting book; but it
+is when they are active in war that the one privileged to observe them
+gets his real treat, always provided he can dodge the rain of blazing
+sparks and the withering hail of wrath that pours out on the offender.
+To watch them then requires real nerve, for it is only a nimble,
+stout-hearted, mail-covered individual that can sustain the encounter.</p>
+
+<p>I have seen many forms of human wrath, many men transformed to terrible
+things by anger, but I have never seen any that were other than
+jumping-jack imitations of a jungle tiger compared with Henry H. Rogers
+when he "lets 'er go"&mdash;when the instant comes that he realizes some one
+is balking the accomplishment of his will.</p>
+
+<p>Above all things Henry H. Rogers is a great actor. Had<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[19]</a></span> his lot been
+cast upon the stage, he might easily have eclipsed the fame of Booth or
+Salvini. He knows the human animal from the soles of his feet to the
+part in his hair and from his shoulder-blade to his breastbone, and like
+all great actors is not above getting down to every part he plays. He is
+likely also so to lose himself in a r&ocirc;le that he gives it his own force
+and identity, and then things happen quite at variance with the lines.
+The original Booth would come upon the stage the cool, calculating,
+polished actor, but when well into his part was so lost in it that it
+was often with difficulty he could be brought back to himself when the
+curtain fell. Once while playing Richard III. at the old Boston Museum,
+Richmond, by whom he was to be slain, made, at the ordained moment, the
+thrust which should have laid him low, but instead, Booth in high frenzy
+parried it, and with the fiendishness of the original Richard, step by
+step drove Richmond off the stage and through the wings, and it was not
+until the police seized the great tragedian, two blocks away, that the
+terrified duke, who had dropped his sword and was running for dear life,
+was sure he would ever act again.</p>
+
+<p>When in the midst of his important plays, it is doubtful whether Henry
+H. Rogers realizes until the guardians of the peace appear where the
+acting begins and the reality should end. His intimate associates can
+recall many times when his determination to make a hit in his part has
+caused other actors cast with him to throw aside their dummy swords and
+run for their lives.</p>
+
+<p>The entire history of "Standard Oil" is strewn with court-scenes, civil
+and criminal, and in all the important ones Henry H. Rogers, the actor,
+will be found doing marvellous "stunts." Standard Oil historians are
+fond of dwelling on the extraordinary testifying abilities of John D.
+Rockefeller and other members of the band, but the acrobatic feats of
+ground and lofty tumbling in the way of truth which they have given when
+before the blinking footlights of the temples of justice are as
+Punch-and-Judy shows to a Barnum three-ring circus compared to Henry H.
+Rogers' exhibitions.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[20]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>His "I will tell the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth,
+so help me God," sounds absolutely sincere and honest, but as it rings
+out in the tone of the third solemnest bell in the chime, this is how it
+is taken down in the unerring short-hand notes of the recording angel
+and sent by special wireless to the typewriter for His Majesty of the
+Sulphur Trust: "What I tell <i>shall</i> be the truth and the whole truth,
+and there <i>shall be</i> no truth but that I tell, and God help the man or
+woman who tells truth different from my truth." The recording angel
+never missed catching Henry H. Rogers' court-oaths in this way, and
+never missed sending them along to the typewriter at Sulphurville, with
+this postscript: "Keep your wire open, for there'll be things doing
+now!"</p>
+
+<p>At the recent but now famous sensational Boston "Gas Trial," Henry H.
+Rogers in the r&ocirc;le of defendant was the principal witness. I was in
+court five hours and a half each sitting as day after day he testified.
+I watched, as the brightest lawyers in the land laid their traps for him
+in direct and cross-examination, to detect a single sign of fiction
+replacing truth, or going joint-account with her, or where truth parted
+company with fiction; and I was compelled, when he stepped from the
+witness-stand, to admit I had not found what I had watched for. This,
+too, when I was equipped with actual knowledge and black-and-white
+proofs of the facts. Weeks before the trial began Attorney Sherman L.
+Whipple, one of the great cross-examiners of the time, had made his
+boast that he would break through the "Standard Oil" magnate's
+heretofore impenetrable bulwarks, and when H. H. Rogers entered the
+court-room for the first time and let his eagle eye sweep the lawyers,
+the laymen, and the judge until it finally rested on Whipple, the glance
+was as absolute a challenge and a defiance as ever knights of old
+exchanged.</p>
+
+<p>I followed Mr. Rogers on the witness-stand and was compelled to give
+testimony directly opposite to that which he had given, and at one time,
+as I glanced at the row of lawyers who were in "Standard Oil's" hire, I
+felt a cold perspiration start at every pore at the thought of what
+would<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[21]</a></span> happen if I even in a slight detail got mixed in my facts. Then I
+fully realized the magnificence of Mr. Rogers' acting, for not once in
+all the hours I had sat and watched him had I detected a single evidence
+of cold, hot, or lukewarm perspiration coming from his pores.</p>
+
+<p>Yet away from the intoxicating spell of dollar-making this remarkable
+man is one of the most charming and lovable beings I have ever
+encountered, a man whom any man or woman would be proud to have for a
+brother; a man whom any mother or father would give thanks for as a son;
+a man whom any woman would be happy to know as her husband, and a man
+whom any boy or girl would rejoice to call father. Once he passes under
+the baleful influence of "The Machine," however, he becomes a
+relentless, ravenous creature, pitiless as a shark, knowing no law of
+God or man in the execution of his purpose. Between him and coveted
+dollars may come no kindly, humane influences&mdash;all are thrust aside,
+their claims disregarded, in ministering to this strange, cannibalistic
+money-hunger, which, in truth, grows by what it feeds on.</p>
+
+<p>In describing one head of "Standard Oil," I have necessarily used many
+words because nature cast him in a most uncommon and chameleon-like
+mould. The other two require less of my space, for neither is unusual
+nor remarkable.</p>
+
+<p>John D. Rockefeller, however great his ability or worldly success, can
+be fully described as a man made in the image of an ideal money-maker
+and an ideal money-maker made in the image of a man. A foot-note should
+call attention to the fact that an ideal money-maker is a machine the
+details of which are diagrammed in the asbestos blue-prints which paper
+the walls of Hell.</p>
+
+<p>With William Rockefeller it is different. When I read in my Bible that
+God made man in His own image and likeness, I find myself picturing a
+certain type of individual&mdash;a solid, substantial, sturdy gentleman with
+the broad shoulders and strong frame of an Englishman, and a cautious,
+kindly expression of face. And that is the most fitting description I
+can give of William Rockefeller. A man of few, very few words and most
+excellent judgment&mdash;rather<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[22]</a></span> brotherly than friendly, clean of mind and
+body; and if I have not given you the impression of a good, wholesome
+man made in the image of his God, I have done William Rockefeller a
+greater wrong than an honest man can afford to do another.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[23]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER IV</h2>
+
+<h3>MY OWN RESPONSIBILITY</h3>
+
+
+<p>As to my personal responsibility for the crime of Amalgamated, right
+here, before proceeding further, I shall briefly explain the
+transaction, state my share in the deal, and point out how completely I
+was hoodwinked by the "System."</p>
+
+<p>The great Anaconda mine and affiliated properties, previous to the
+creation of the Amalgamated, were owned by J. B. Haggin, Lloyd Tevis,
+and Marcus Daly. The control of the properties and their operations were
+absolutely vested in Marcus Daly, and he alone knew where the lean veins
+ended and the fat ones began. For many years he had kept a close guard
+over the very fat ones, never letting his right eye know what the left
+one saw when he was examining them. For deep down in his mind Marcus
+Daly cherished a dream&mdash;a dream of immense riches, and it was to be
+realized in a simple enough way. He would get together the millions to
+buy out his partners on the basis of a valuation of the "ore in sight,"
+then in supreme ownership himself reap untold profits out of the milling
+of the plethoric veins he had been so careful to leave unworked. The
+immense natural endowments of the Anaconda rendered this easy enough,
+for even the lean veins "in sight" contained a vast store of copper and
+gold and silver.</p>
+
+<p>Just about the time the world awaited the first section of "Coppers"
+which I had advertised should consist of the rich Boston &amp; Montana, and
+Butte &amp; Boston properties, it "happened" that Mr. Rogers "met" Marcus
+Daly. The result of the conjunction of the two personalities&mdash;the
+whole-souled, trusting miner and the fascinating and persuasive master
+of Standard Oil&mdash;was decisive; the miner confided<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[24]</a></span> his dreams and his
+aspirations to the magnate, who at once magnificently undertook to
+realize them. The trade was almost instantly made. Mr. Rogers would buy
+the properties of Daly, Haggin, and Tevis, at "in-sight" prices, and
+Daly would be his partner, but the partnership must remain secret until
+the purchase was consummated.</p>
+
+<p>The ownership of the Anaconda Company at the time consisted of 1,200,000
+shares, and the purchase of a few shares over the majority at the
+"in-sight" lean-vein valuation of $24,000,000 would carry the turnover
+of the management and the control. It took but a very brief time to get
+together the other properties which were finally included in the first
+section of Amalgamated. They consisted of the Colorado, Washoe, and
+Parrott Mining companies and timber, coal, and other lands, and
+mercantile and like properties situated in the State of Montana, for
+which Mr. Rogers paid in round figures $15,000,000, <i>a total of
+$39,000,000 for what within a few days after purchase was capitalized at
+$75,000,000 in the Amalgamated Company</i>.</p>
+
+<p>No one but Henry H. Rogers, William Rockefeller, myself, and one lawyer
+knew the actual figures of the cost, although a number of the members of
+the different groups, including Marcus Daly, the silent partner, were
+sure they were in the secret.</p>
+
+<p>As soon as the properties were secured, they were capitalized for
+$75,000,000 as the Amalgamated Copper Company and were immediately
+offered for sale to the public. It will thus be seen that the profit on
+this section alone was $36,000,000, probably the largest actual profit
+ever made by one body of men in a single corporation deal, yet so nicely
+does "Standard Oil" discriminate in dispensing its generosity that in
+this case those who received the $36,000,000 profit refused to deduct
+from it $77,000 of expenses connected with the formation of the company,
+thereby compelling it to start $77,000 in debt. This was something
+Marcus Daly never forgave and to the day of his death he repeatedly
+referred to the act as the personification of corporation meanness.</p>
+
+<p>In the organization of the Amalgamated Corporation cer<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[25]</a></span>tain individuals
+and institutions, for various considerations, were entitled to some
+share in the profits of the deal. First there was Marcus Daly who knew
+what the major portion of the property had cost and was a silent partner
+in the winnings as he knew them. The Amalgamated Company was organized
+in and floated on the public from the National City Bank, and so James
+Stillman, its president and head, who is also one of the inner circle of
+"Standard Oil" chiefs, should participate. Something was due also to J.
+Pierpont Morgan &amp; Co., and to Frederick Olcott, president of the Central
+Trust Company of New York, who were on the board of directors. On the
+board of directors, too, was Governor Flower, of the banking and
+brokerage house of Flower &amp; Co., who had acted as fiscal agents for the
+corporation at its formation. Nor must I forget the Lewisohn Brothers,
+who had been compelled to turn in all their copper business at a
+fraction of its worth&mdash;or at just the aggregate of its cost and raw
+material&mdash;to be incorporated in the United Metals Selling Company, a
+part of the Amalgamated scheme, but not included in the corporation.
+Every one of these men had elaborate assurances that he was in on the
+cellar floor.</p>
+
+<p>This is what actually occurred. Before Mr. Rogers and William
+Rockefeller let any one at all in, they built a superbly designed
+water-, air-, and light-proof structure (particularly light-proof),
+consisting of five floors, each one being the exact duplicate of the
+$39,000,000 one upon which they, and they only, stood. Marcus Daly alone
+was ushered in on the first floor, elevated just a few million dollars
+above their own. James Stillman and Leonard Lewisohn, of Lewisohn
+Brothers, were admitted to the next one, the $50,000,000 floor. In other
+words, Mr. Stillman and Mr. Lewisohn were given an unnamed percentage,
+the percentage to be arranged later by Mr. Rogers, in all profits above
+actual cost, and such actual cost was called $50,000,000 and was arrived
+at by adding the $11,000,000 of secret profits to the actual $39,000,000
+cost. Then J. P. Morgan &amp; Co., Frederick Olcott, Governor Flower, and
+one or two of the dearest friends and closest associates, were let in on
+the $60,000,000 floor&mdash;were<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[26]</a></span> given an unnamed percentage, the percentage
+to be arranged by Mr. Rogers, in all profits above actual cost, and such
+actual cost was called $60,000,000, and was arrived at by adding
+$21,000,000 of secret profits to the actual $39,000,000 cost. Then
+selected ones from the eight different groups of "Standard Oil" were
+allowed to move in to the fifth, or underwriters' floor, which was
+affirmed to be $70,000,000 cost; and then, as a solid phalanx, all the
+different floor-dwellers marched upon the dear public to the tune of
+$75,000,000, in the front ranks of which were those of the eight groups
+of the Standard Oil army who had not already been admitted to any of the
+secret floors.</p>
+
+<p>Right here the crime of Amalgamated was born, not so much the legal
+crime but the great moral crime. In the ethics of Wall Street the
+heinousness of the transaction lies not in the fact that the public was
+compelled to pay $36,000,000 profit to a few men who had invested but
+$39,000,000&mdash;and, as I shall show when I approach this part of my story,
+the $39,000,000 did not even belong to them&mdash;but in the fact that Mr.
+Rogers and Mr. Rockefeller had given to their associates what, in the
+vernacular of "the Street," is termed "the double cross."</p>
+
+<p>The every-day people, the millions who do not know Wall Street, realm of
+the royal American dollar; Wall Street, its sidewalks inlaid with gold
+coin and paved from curb to curb with solid gold bricks; Wall Street,
+lined with huge money-mills where hearts and souls are ground into
+gold-dust, whose gutters run full to overflowing with strangled,
+mangled, sand-bagged wrecks of human hopes, to be poured, in a
+never-ending stream, into the brimming waters of the river at its foot,
+for deposit at the poor-houses, insane asylums, States' prisons, and
+suicides' graves, washed daily by that grim flood's ebb and flow&mdash;the
+every-day people, I am sure, will not take in the blackness of this
+transaction at this stage of my story, but before it is ended I will lay
+this and many more of an equally hellish nature before them in such A B
+C simplicity that all can read the portent as clearly as the Prophet
+Daniel read the writing on the wall in the banquet-hall of Belshazzar.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[27]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>When I consented to allow property which had cost only $39,000,000 to be
+sold to the public for $75,000,000, it was under a pressure which it was
+practically impossible for me to withstand. I do not think I use too
+strong a word when I say "pressure." For three years I had been
+advertising to the world the great merits of "Coppers," and for over a
+year I had announced that when the public was given an opportunity to
+participate in the consolidated "Coppers" it would be upon a basis most
+carefully worked out: that the properties included in the first section
+would surely be worth more than the price at which they would be offered
+to the public, and that all the power, capital, and ability of "Standard
+Oil" were behind the promises I made. I did this advertising openly and
+in the frankest possible way, and in all of my announcements, whether
+printed, oral, or otherwise, used the names of Henry H. Rogers, William
+Rockefeller, James Stillman, the National City Bank of New York, and
+"Standard Oil" as freely as I did my own, and in many ways led the
+public to believe that the very rich Boston &amp; Montana and Butte &amp; Boston
+companies were to be included in this section of "Coppers."</p>
+
+<p>At that time my alliance with "Standard Oil" was close. A business
+connection had developed into a strong personal relation between Mr.
+Rogers and myself. We were engaged, together with William Rockefeller,
+on a great financial deal which was based on certain conclusions I had
+worked out in regard to the copper industry. These men were to me the
+embodiment of success, success won in the fiercest commercial conflict
+of the age. Their position at the helm of the greatest financial
+institution in the world gave weight and importance to their judgment
+and opinions. Nor had aught occurred between us to suggest they would
+dare perpetrate the crimes they did. Besides all this, indeed an
+integral part of it, my personal resources were completely involved in
+the transaction, for the most part pledged with Mr. Rogers and William
+Rockefeller in stocks of the Butte &amp; Boston and Boston &amp; Montana
+corporations.</p>
+
+<p>This was, then, the nature of our connection when Mr. Rogers, suddenly
+and without previous intimation of his<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[28]</a></span> schemes, notified me of his
+purchase of the Daly-Haggin-Tevis properties, and practically ordered me
+to put them upon the tray which I was preparing and take them to the
+eagerly waiting public, who by this time were fairly howling for the
+good things we had been promising them.</p>
+
+<p>In support of this extraordinary change of plan Mr. Rogers urged the
+secret wealth of the Anaconda and the great value of the other
+properties which I myself had helped purchase, but I bitterly opposed
+the new proposition until there was nothing before me but these
+alternatives&mdash;to accept the change Mr. Rogers insisted on or break with
+"Standard Oil." The latter would mean that I must announce to the public
+that it was in danger of being tricked, and it was by no means certain
+that my warning would carry weight against the denials and assurances of
+"Standard Oil." However much influence I had obtained through my long
+years of dealings with the public, independent of "Standard Oil," I
+realized that "Standard Oil's" influence and prestige were much greater,
+for it must be remembered that at this time the public had not had the
+evidence since acquired of the "System's" cold-blooded trickery. If I
+took this course it would mean not only my own ruin financially, for Mr.
+Rogers and William Rockefeller could call my loans and wipe me out
+completely, but also the ruin of my friends and allies, who, under my
+direction, had invested their own millions in the properties concerned.
+On the other hand, I had the most earnest assurances from Mr. Rogers and
+William Rockefeller that the new properties were worth much more than
+the $75,000,000 at which it was proposed to capitalize them. They took
+me to task for my distrust of them, and went far to demonstrate to me
+the accuracy of their estimates. They not only gave me Marcus Daly's
+minute estimates of the values and legitimate possibilities of Anaconda,
+but consented to have these verified by outside experts in whom I had
+implicit confidence, and whose personal examination more than bore out
+Daly's appraisal. I have never yet had reason to doubt the correctness
+of the figures then shown me, although since I began this story
+"Standard Oil,"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[29]</a></span> in an endeavor to get me to abandon my efforts to
+secure justice for the thousands I assisted in duping, have stated for
+the first time that Marcus Daly deceived them and really, to use the
+words of their chief counsel, sold them a "gold brick."</p>
+
+<p>After this examination I felt convinced that the properties "Standard
+Oil" insisted on substituting for those originally intended for the
+first section of Amalgamated were such that the public, if honestly
+dealt with, could not possibly meet with loss in purchasing. But even
+then I only consented to go ahead with the flotation under a definite
+agreement which seemed to me completely to guard against all
+contingencies of jugglery or deception. This agreement stipulated that
+all the profits from the transaction should be taken by those to whom
+they were due in the stock of the Amalgamated Company, and no part of
+them in cash&mdash;that the public should be sold, at the flotation, only
+$5,000,000 of the $75,000,000, and that "Standard Oil" and all
+associated with "Standard Oil" in the profits should retain the
+remaining $70,000,000 until such time as it had been absolutely
+demonstrated to the public that the property behind the $75,000,000 of
+stock was worth more than the amount it had been capitalized for.
+Furthermore, I was also promised that the $5,000,000 cash to be taken
+from the public should be kept intact, and in my handling of the market
+it should always be available for the repurchase from the investors of
+what had been sold to them, at the price which they had paid for it.</p>
+
+<p>This was the basis on which I went on with Amalgamated. I would not have
+my readers understand me as asserting it would have been possible for me
+to have stopped the flotation had I attempted it. But, on the other
+hand, I would not have them think that I desire to be absolved from the
+disastrous results of the great mistake I made at this time in not at
+any cost doing that which after-happenings have shown would have been
+the most honest course for me to have pursued. Nor would I have them
+think I desire to be absolved from the consequences of many other
+mistakes which this one led me into&mdash;mistakes in temporizing with the
+situation<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[30]</a></span> and postponing action which I should have boldly and
+fearlessly forced, regardless of all consequences to the public, my
+friends, and myself.</p>
+
+<p>The subsequent proceedings, the manner in which Amalgamated was actually
+sold to the public, the flagrant disregard of the conditions of my
+agreement with Mr. Rogers and William Rockefeller, will, when fully told
+in their proper place in my story, show that the "System," by whose
+methods the public is as ruthlessly plundered as though the fruits of
+its labors were taken away from it by highwaymen, admits also of its own
+votaries being tricked and despoiled by their associates. The men who
+participated in the transaction I have just described are among the most
+astute financiers in the country and presumably possessed of invincible
+capacity to protect their own interests. But with all their knowledge of
+the "System's" tricks they were, in this instance, as shrewdly duped as
+the veriest tyro in the Wall Street game.</p>
+
+<p>My own experience with the "System" in this deal was different in degree
+but not in principle from that of these others, and it must be remembered
+that I was better equipped to protect my interests than any of them. I knew
+that the actual cost of the properties comprising the first Amalgamated was
+$39,000,000, and that when sold to the public at $75,000,000 there must be
+a profit of $36,000,000. I had every right to think I knew all the other
+details connected with the transaction, for as organizer and executant of
+the deal my share in the profits was to be equal to that of Henry H. Rogers
+and William Rockefeller respectively. We were each to have twenty-five per
+cent., the remaining twenty-five per cent. going to others. This was no
+gentleman's "leave-it-to-me-and-I'll-see-you-get-what's-coming-to-you"
+arrangement either, but a hard, cold, mutually satisfactory and
+settled-in-advance agreement. But when it came to the final accounting, the
+"System" had so regulated things that the participants on the various
+floors, except, of course, Mr. Rogers and William Rockefeller, must each
+accept without question the share finally handed over to him. Having no
+means of knowing how large the other interests<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[31]</a></span> were, or what the
+"extraordinary expenses" had been, they were in no position to question the
+payments made them, which represented sums below what they would have had
+if the business had been conducted as they thought it had been. When my
+final account was presented to me I was startled. Notwithstanding the
+"cleverness" of the "System," the deception was so obvious, so audacious,
+that the instant Mr. Rogers submitted it to me I exploded and denounced the
+transaction with such vehemence and conviction that within a few minutes
+there was forthcoming a second statement, revising the account, by which I
+was given just double the amount first tendered, and the figures in both
+accounts ran into millions; yet the amount in the second account upon which
+I settled was only one-half the share received by my equal partners, Henry
+H. Rogers and William Rockefeller, as I afterward learned.<a name="FNanchor_1_1" id="FNanchor_1_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a></p>
+
+<p>This is a fair statement of my own share in the first Amalgamated
+transaction. I have no desire to evade the issues suggested and raised
+by these revelations. My frankness should be absolute proof of that. As
+I promised, I shall hew to the exact line of fact, letting the chips of
+responsibility, legal and moral, fall where they may, though many of
+them stick to my own clothes. My own burden of error I am ready<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[32]</a></span> and
+willing to shoulder, but I decline any longer to take and carry
+responsibilities which belong absolutely to others. There should be a
+time-limit on martyrdom, and mine anyhow is up.</p>
+
+<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_1_1" id="Footnote_1_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_1"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> I know no better spot in my story than right here to set
+the public right on two vital points concerning Amalgamated, upon which
+they are and always have been greatly at sea:
+</p><p>
+John D. Rockefeller did not have before the Amalgamated Company was
+organized and floated, nor at its organization and flotation, directly
+or indirectly, a dollar's interest in its stock nor its affairs, and I
+have what I consider excellent reasons for believing he has not had any
+interest up to the time of this writing.
+</p><p>
+The disasters which have come to the Amalgamated stockholders did not
+occur, as has been so industriously and ingeniously advertised
+throughout the world, because of the inability of the "Standard
+Oil"-Amalgamated-City Bank fraternity to prevent the collapse of the
+price of copper, the metal, from the high price of seventeen cents to
+the low one of eleven cents per pound. "Cornering" the metal market,
+forcing the price to an abnormally high figure and maintaining it there
+had, notwithstanding the many emphatic statements to the contrary,
+absolutely no part in any of our original plans, and the success or
+failure of our project was in no way dependent upon any price for
+copper, the metal, other than the fair and legitimate price caused by
+legitimate supply and demand. In fact, as I shall demonstrate before my
+story is ended, forcing the price to extremely high points and the
+resulting collapse were all a part of the trickery by which the public
+was plundered.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[33]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER V</h2>
+
+<h3>THE POWER OF DOLLARS</h3>
+
+
+<p>At no time in the history of the United States has the power of dollars
+been as great as now. Freedom and equity are controlled by dollars. The
+laws which should preserve and enforce all rights are made and enforced
+by dollars. It is possible to-day, with dollars, to "steer" the
+selection of the candidates of both the great parties for the highest
+office in our republic, that of President of the United States. It is
+possible to repeat the operation in the selection of candidates for the
+executive and legislative conduct and control of every State and
+municipality in the United States, and with a sufficient number of
+dollars to "steer" the doings of the law-makers and law-enforcers of the
+national, State, and municipal governments of the people, and to "steer"
+a sufficient proportion of the court decisions to make absolute any
+power created by such direction. It is all, broadly speaking, a matter
+of dollars practically to accomplish these things. I must not be
+misunderstood as even insinuating that there are not absolutely honest
+law-makers and law-enforcers, nor that there are not as many of them in
+proportion to the whole body as there were at the creation of our
+republic. I believe there is at the present time as large a percentage
+of honesty among Americans as ever there has been, but it is plainly
+evident to any student of the times that at no other period in the
+history of the United States has honesty been so completely "steered" by
+dishonesty as at this, the beginning of the twentieth century.</p>
+
+<p><i>I shall go further and say that there to-day exists uncontrolled in the
+hands of a set of men a power to make dollars from nothing.</i> That
+function of dollar-making which the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[34]</a></span> people believe is vested in their
+Government alone and only exercised under the law for their benefit, is
+actually being secretly exercised on an enormous scale by a few private
+individuals for their own personal benefit. This, I am well aware, is a
+startling statement, but not more so than the facts which support it.
+Throughout the country we have all grown accustomed to the spectacle of
+men who, poor yesterday, to-day display more dollars than the kings and
+queens of olden times controlled. In flaunting this money these men
+proudly boast: "We made all this yesternight, and are going to multiply
+it five-or fifty-fold to-morrow night."</p>
+
+<p>The fact that there must be in this country some secret method of
+gaining vast fortunes gradually dawned on the minds of the people. This
+method, they argued, must be outside the laws of the land which they
+themselves had made, and they were confronted with the fact that the
+possessors of these fabulous fortunes were creating a power not
+recognized by their Government and which practically placed the
+Government in the hands of the fortune-owners. They realized that in
+some way the magic of this fortune-making was connected with, or seemed
+to be compounded in, institutions called corporations and trusts, and
+that among these the head and centre was a great affair called "Standard
+Oil." Wherever this "Standard Oil" was, all knew that strange wonders
+were worked. Within the sphere of its influence dirt changed to gold,
+liquids to solids, and what was, was not, and what was not, was. Whoever
+became a part of this mysterious "Standard Oil," at the same time was
+rendered "powerful"; as though touched by a fairy's wand, he changed
+from pauper to millionaire. But what was "Standard Oil"? The people knew
+that at the beginning it was only an aggregation of men, private
+individuals, who had accumulated much money by securing a monopoly of
+selling oil, and that these men were "Rockefellers," and that Standard
+Oil and "Rockefellers" had been cute and cunning in the conduct of their
+oil-selling to a degree greater than had been rival sellers of oil or of
+other necessities. And as time wore on much more was heard of the
+cleverness of Standard Oil and "Rockefellers," as the victims of the
+cuteness and the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[35]</a></span> cunning "hollered" in public places, and the
+newspapers and writers of books exclaimed against their practices and
+exactions. But many other things were happening simultaneously, and to
+the great bulk of the people it was interesting rather than portentous
+that there existed in the country a giant oil-thing whose owners were
+reputed the richest men in the world.</p>
+
+<p>It was not until the beginning of the twentieth century that the monster
+"Standard Oil" loomed up before the people as the giant of all corporate
+things and that its ominous shadow seemed to dwarf all other
+institutions, public or private. In multitudinous forms it was before
+the people.</p>
+
+<p>In awed whispers men talked of its mysterious doings and canvassed its
+extraordinary powers as though "Standard Oil" were a living, breathing
+entity rather than a mere business institution created by men and
+existing only by virtue of the laws of the land.</p>
+
+<p>About the time that the world had begun mistily to take in the
+tremendous forces which radiated from "Standard Oil," there occurred a
+financial crash, and the people saw their savings, invested in what they
+supposed were the legal and absolute titles of ownership in the material
+things of their country, suddenly decline in value and contract to
+prices representing a loss to them of billions of dollars. Throughout
+the misery and suffering this terrible collapse occasioned, "Standard
+Oil" remained undisturbed as before and amid all the confusion kept
+sternly on its dollar-"making" way. Indeed, it seemed to gain in bulk as
+other institutions diminished or disappeared. Then it was that the
+people first began to demand, what they are still to-day fiercely
+demanding, "What is this 'Standard Oil'?" "What is its secret?" "Whence
+came it?" and, "Can our republic endure if it, too, endures?"</p>
+
+<p>To-day "Standard Oil," the "Private Thing," is the greatest power in the
+land&mdash;more powerful than the people individually or as a whole, and its
+secret is the knowledge of the trick of finance by which dollars are
+"made" from nothing in unlimited quantities subject to no laws of man
+nor nature. The dollars that "Standard Oil" <i>makes</i> are<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[36]</a></span> of the same
+value as the dollars of the people as made by the Government, which
+dollars we know can be coined and put into circulation only in
+accordance with law and for the benefit of all the people.</p>
+
+<p>For the better understanding of those readers not versed in the
+technical phrases of finance and economics I shall in my narrative make
+use of certain terms of my own which will convey meanings readily
+grasped when the sense in which they are used is once comprehended. In
+speaking of "Standard Oil," for instance, I will speak of it as a
+"Private Thing." By that term I desire to typify the active, private
+identity of a corporation which comprehends, but exists independently
+of, its legalized functions. Some corporations have a real personality
+in addition to that which their name and the corporation laws prescribe
+for them, an inherent power, or individuality, which exists above and
+apart from their physical functions as sellers of oil, of coal, or of
+ice. This may be an incarnation of the power developed in the
+transaction of their legalized occupations, but the "Private Thing" is
+uncontrolled by any of the restrictions by which the law defines and
+curbs the corporation whose name it bears. Already I have distinguished
+between "Standard Oil" which wields all the powers of its subsidiary
+companies, and Standard Oil, the seller of oil. In the same way we have
+"American Sugar Refineries" and "United States Steel," the "Private
+Things" which are not one whit better than nor different from "Standard
+Oil," the "Private Thing." Though this narrative will deal only with the
+"Private Things," Bay State Gas and Amalgamated Copper, I have no
+hesitancy in saying that the methods employed and the results, good or
+bad, which accrued in the case of any of the other "Private Things" with
+which the public have had to do, differ only in details from those with
+which I shall deal in my story.</p>
+
+<p>In speaking of dollars brought into existence by the trick of finance I
+have referred to I shall call them henceforth "made dollars," to
+distinguish them from dollars coined by the Government and legitimately
+acquired by the individual or corporation. These "made dollars," it must
+be remem<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[37]</a></span>bered, are really "made" for all purposes of use as surely as
+if they had the Government's stamp, yet they are not made in the sense
+of the known volume of the people's money being added to. So, however
+many of these "made dollars" are brought into existence by this trick of
+finance, only the men who "made" them can know and profit by their
+existence. The people are no wiser nor can they adjust themselves to the
+change of conditions brought about by the creation of all this new
+money; yet if "unmade" or lost, the entire volume of the nation's wealth
+would be contracted.</p>
+
+<p>I can set before my readers better by an illustration than by any
+process of definition, the trick of finance by which "made dollars" are
+brought into existence. Let us suppose that the United States Government
+at Washington, the only power legally entitled to issue money for
+circulation among the people, puts forth a particular $10,000. All the
+conditions prescribed by law have been followed, and all the people in
+the country are benefited by the issue and circulation of this
+particular $10,000, each in the proportion the laws prescribe.</p>
+
+<p>"B," a Western farmer, tills his soil and receives, by the sale of his
+wheat, the particular $10,000, which he then deposits in <i>The Bank</i>.
+<i>The Bank</i>, being a part of the Government machinery, only receives,
+holds, and uses the $10,000 under safeguards provided for by the laws of
+the land, so hereafter "B's" material life is conducted on the basis
+that he is the full and actual possessor of $10,000. He knows, further,
+that his $10,000 cannot be expanded nor contracted, nor its relation to
+any of the other money of the people which is in circulation altered
+without his knowledge, because he knows such changes cannot come about
+except through the Government. I say he knows this&mdash;he has every right
+to believe he knows it&mdash;but, in fact, it is not so, because of the
+working of the secret financial device of the Private Thing. At this
+stage enters "C," the Private Thing.</p>
+
+<p>"C" purchases with $3,300 ("B's" money) which he borrows from <i>The
+Bank</i>, a copper-mine, depositing the title which he receives from the
+seller with <i>The Bank</i> as collateral for the $3,300. After purchasing he
+arbitrarily calls the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[38]</a></span> copper-mine worth $10,000&mdash;arbitrarily because
+his act is not controlled nor regulated by any of the laws of the
+land&mdash;arbitrarily because the actual cost, $3,300, is his secret and his
+alone. Then, arbitrarily, "C" organizes his $3,300 of copper property
+into the Arbitrary Copper Company, and issues to himself a piece of
+paper, which he arbitrarily stamps "10,000 stock dollars." This he takes
+to <i>The Bank</i>, and by loan or other device exchanges it for the
+remaining $6,700 belonging to "B," and thereafter "C" conducts his
+affairs on the basis that he is the possessor of $6,700, his "made
+dollars" in the transaction. At this stage there is actually in use
+among the people $16,700 where "B," the legitimate factor, and his kind,
+the people, suppose there is but $10,000&mdash;$10,000 which is recorded,
+known and legal, being used by the legitimate factors, "B" and <i>The
+Bank</i>, and $6,700 which is unrecorded and unknown to any but "C" and
+<i>The Bank</i>, being used by the illegitimate Private Thing "C."</p>
+
+<p>Right here is the secret device, the financial trick, by which the
+greatest power in the land has been created, and by which the people can
+be absolutely plundered of their savings for the benefit of the few.</p>
+
+<p>At this stage the two-thirds of "B's" $10,000, of which he later is to
+be plundered, has not been actually taken away, so he cannot possibly
+have any evidence yet of the process of pillage which has been begun, or
+that the volume of money which he supposes is all that exists has been
+tremendously expanded. The next step is where "C" sells his $3,300,
+stamped "10,000 stock dollars" (which, as already shown, he has
+exchanged with <i>The Bank</i> for the $10,000 deposited by "B"), to "B" for
+$10,000, which $10,000 "B" withdraws from <i>The Bank</i> by simply making
+out a check in favor of "C." ("B's" inducement to exchange his dollars
+for the stock dollars of "C" is the high rate of interest that they will
+return in the form of dividends, which rate is much larger than <i>The
+Bank</i> can afford to pay.) "C" deposits "B's" check with <i>The Bank</i> and
+hereby liquidates his $10,000 indebtedness to <i>The Bank</i>.</p>
+
+<p>At this stage "B" is still the possessor of $10,000, but it is "10,000
+stock dollars." "C" is the possessor of $6,700,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[39]</a></span> and "D," from whom the
+copper-mine was purchased, is the possessor of $3,300; but the two
+latter amounts make up the 10,000 real dollars, and <i>The Bank</i> remains
+where it was at the beginning of the transaction. The people, however,
+are no wiser; but they know, because they have been most carefully
+educated to such knowledge by "C's" agents, Wall Street, and the press,
+that their country is tremendously prosperous&mdash;that its great prosperity
+is evidenced by the $6,700 added wealth in the form of 6,700 new stock
+dollars. At the next stage the financial trick accomplished by the
+secret device is complete. "B," the farmer, who has contracted for new
+machinery and other necessities and luxuries to be paid for "next
+season," attempts next season to turn his 10,000 stock dollars into real
+dollars, and "C," the Private Thing, knowing their real value to be but
+$3,300, refuses to make the exchange, but instead, by proclaiming their
+real value, compels "B," who must have real dollars to meet his debts,
+to sell them for what "C," the Private Thing, is willing to pay. "C,"
+the Private Thing, is willing to pay their worth, which he alone knows
+is $3,300; he repurchases them at that price from "B," that he may
+repeat the operation at the return of the next "wave of the country's
+prosperity."</p>
+
+<p>By this operation "B," the farmer, has lost, as absolutely as though
+they had been taken away from him by a Government decree, $6,700 of his
+own making, and "C," the Private Thing, has "made," as absolutely as
+though the Government had allowed him to coin them for his own benefit,
+6,700 real dollars, and <i>The Bank</i>, created, regulated, and controlled
+by law, and existing because of the people's deposits of money, has been
+the instrument by which "C," the Private Thing, has deprived "B," the
+farmer, of his savings, because "C," the Private Thing, is at one and
+the same time during the operation I have outlined, himself and <i>The
+Bank</i>.</p>
+
+<p>A careful study of this illustration, by even laymen unacquainted with
+financial or corporation affairs, will clearly show that the foundation
+of this transaction was <i>The Bank's</i> putting in jeopardy $3,300 of "B's"
+deposited $10,000, and that if the $3,300, after being put in jeopardy,
+had been<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[40]</a></span> lost, "B" would have been the loser,<a name="FNanchor_2_2" id="FNanchor_2_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_2_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a> which, in turn, means
+that the compensation for the jeopardy in which the $3,300 was placed
+was the possibility of $6,700 profit; and that, therefore, the $6,700
+profit when made should have gone to the owner of the $3,300, "B,"
+instead of to "C," the user of it.</p>
+
+<p>It is therefore in this sense that I shall use the term "made
+dollars"&mdash;wherever they are "made" or "unmade" through one set of men
+using the dollars of another set of men without that other set knowing
+that their dollars are being so used; and wherever the result of such
+use is that when dollars are "made," they are "made" by the ones who use
+others' money, and where dollars are "unmade," they are lost by the ones
+who own the dollars which they don't know are being used.</p>
+
+<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_2_2" id="Footnote_2_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2_2"><span class="label">[2]</span></a> I say "B" would have been the loser because all money lost
+by a bank must eventually be lost by the depositors, the people, or the
+surplus or capital of the bank which belongs to the people, through
+their ownership of the stock in the bank. Of course the loss of
+individual amounts such as $3,300 would not come directly on the people.
+But when the aggregate of the money put in jeopardy by the four classes
+of institutions I name&mdash;national banks, savings-banks, trusts, and
+insurance companies&mdash;runs into billions and is lost, the loss <i>must</i>
+fall on the people, because the only other ones involved are the
+managers and controllers of these institutions, who always see to it
+that when the losses which would wreck the bank are actually made, they,
+the managers and controllers, have no deposits and none of the stock.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[41]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER VI</h2>
+
+<h3>CONSTRUCTION OF "STANDARD OIL'S" "DOLLAR-MAKING" MILL</h3>
+
+
+<p>I believe "Standard Oil" was the first to utilize this secret device for
+circumventing the safeguards which the law has erected to protect the
+savings of the people. It was the first practically to apprehend that, a
+large proportion of all the moneys in circulation, which belong to the
+people or the Government, being in the custody of the national and
+savings-banks and trust and insurance companies, it would only be
+necessary for a set of men to obtain control of sufficient of the
+principal national and savings-banks and trust and insurance companies
+to control practically unlimited amounts of such funds. Once in control
+of these funds dollars could be absolutely "made" at will by the three
+following steps: 1st. Using the money in these institutions to acquire
+properties. 2d. Consolidating such properties on an inflated basis, and
+selling them to the people (who, in fact, already owned them; because
+they owned the funds with which they had been purchased); and, 3d, by
+stock-market trickery scaring their owners into re-selling them at an
+enormous shrinkage from the price they had paid. To understand a
+situation with "Standard Oil" is to act, and twenty years ago it began
+to weave a net to secure control of the four classes of institutions I
+have named.</p>
+
+<p>Its first move was to establish a great corporation, the Standard Oil
+Company, and make its stock, 1,000,000 shares, sell at from $650 to $800
+per share, or $650,000,000 to $800,000,000. It kept its affairs
+mysteriously secret, it paid enormous dividends, and from time to time
+it caused to be published broadcast throughout the world the statement
+that<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[42]</a></span> it was held in such value by its creators, the Rockefellers,
+Rogers, etc, that they continued to own all but a few shares of the
+entire capital. To prove that there could be no doubt of such continued
+ownership, the public's attention was repeatedly called to the fact that
+the Standard Oil Company was the only great corporation which did not
+allow its shares to be traded in upon any of the stock-exchanges. As a
+matter of fact, though they are not traded in on the regular
+stock-exchanges, they are actively bought and sold daily on the New York
+"Curb."</p>
+
+<p>At the height of the recent financial storm word went round that the
+crafts of three over-night-made multimillionaires, men foremost in the
+seventh group of "Standard Oil" votaries, were in the trough of the
+financial sea and headed for the breakers, which were already strewn
+with the wrecks of the people's savings. Following closely on the heels
+of these stories came the astounding one that each of these enormously
+rich men had, in his endeavors to raise large amounts of cash, disclosed
+among his assets blocks of "Standard Oil" stock ranging from 5,000 to
+20,000 shares each. Hardly had the public heard this before all
+financialdom knew that the storm-tossed crafts had received succor, and
+that the crisis had passed. For one brief day the financial press of the
+country printed the item: "Standard Oil came to the rescue by buying for
+cash large blocks of Standard Oil stock which had long been held by this
+or that interest for investment," and no more was thought of the
+incident. Even the most alert financiers never suspected that the most
+important stock secret of the age had been on the verge of becoming
+public property.</p>
+
+<p>Planted deep in the minds of the public that watches the comings and
+goings of the Street is the conviction that Standard Oil is the holy of
+holies among stocks. The world has been taught to believe that the
+owners of Standard Oil regard the shares of the great oil corporation as
+their most precious, most sacred possessions. Yet while "Standard Oil"
+has been so scientifically spreading abroad the impression that the
+public would never be permitted to own Standard Oil stock, secretly it
+has been engaged in exchanging that<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[43]</a></span> stock for the securities of the
+people in the form of banks and trust companies, railroads, and other
+assets of definite value. So completely has "Standard Oil" pulled the
+wool over the eyes of the votaries of finance that there cannot be found
+in or out of Wall Street a single great financier who would not laugh to
+scorn the suggestion that "Standard Oil" is engaged in a campaign for
+the distribution of its Standard Oil stock to the public. Yet pin your
+great financier down to the facts, and he'll admit that he himself has
+quite a block of the stock, and that institutions of which he is a
+director include among their assets in one form or another good-sized
+parcels of the inestimable security. But so completely are these very
+wise men held by the spells woven over them when for this or that
+special reason they were allowed as a favor to acquire their holdings,
+and so impressively have they been shown that their ownership in
+Standard Oil stock must be kept secret, that no suspicion has ever
+entered their minds that they were playing the part of lambs in its
+purchase.</p>
+
+<p>Nor was the episode I have described above allowed to disturb their
+serenity. It soon became known to the innermost circle of Wall Street
+that the stock the three men had resold to "Standard Oil" represented
+the share of each in some of the gigantic deals to which he had been a
+party during the last ten years, and that with its acquirement had gone
+a pledge that it would always be kept in the purchaser's "tin box," and
+whenever inspected by "Standard Oil" would be free from "pinholes." And
+so, adroitly, dangerous deductions were prevented.</p>
+
+<p>For the uninstructed I may say that a capitalist's "tin box" is the
+receptacle for the stocks and bonds that largely represent his fortune,
+and pinholes in a stock certificate are in Wall Street conclusive
+evidence that such certificate has, at some period, temporarily passed
+into other's hands as collateral for loans, for there has been pinned to
+it a memorandum or note stating the details of the transaction in which
+its owner parted with it. Pinholed securities are looked upon by the
+upper crust of big financiers with much the same horror as that with
+which members of the American social<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[44]</a></span> upper crust look upon their No. 10
+boots and gloves&mdash;reminders of their peasant ancestry.</p>
+
+<p>But to return to "Standard Oil's" financial weavings: Their next move
+was to use Standard Oil stock as the basis for loans, that is, as
+collateral for money borrowed from the banks, trust and insurance
+companies, and treasuries of other great corporations and estates. The
+money thus acquired was paid out to purchase the control of banks and
+trust and insurance companies in all parts of the United States, the
+Standard Oil ownership being represented by dummy directors and
+officers.</p>
+
+<p>The next move represents another of the dazzling devices of finance in
+which "Standard Oil" is adept, and brings the process of artificial
+expansion still further along. Control of a certain number of these
+savings and national banks and trust and insurance companies having been
+acquired, the funds of each were so manipulated by depositing those of
+one institution with another, and the latter's in turn with the first,
+as to swell the deposits of all and create in all of them an apparently
+legitimate basis for increases of capitalization. At the same time there
+was shown an apparently legitimate necessity for the establishment of
+additional banking and trust companies, which were duly organized and
+their assets juggled around by the same process. The result of all this
+manipulation defies description. Throughout the series of correlated
+institutions loans and deposits are multiplied in such an intricacy of
+duplication that only a few able experts, employed by the "System"
+because of their mathematical genius, are able to unravel the tangle to
+the extent of approximating the proportion the legitimate funds bear to
+those which have been created by the financial jugglery I have
+indicated.</p>
+
+<p>When "Standard Oil" had gathered into its net sufficient of the
+important private institutions of finance there still remained the
+federal Government, the largest handler of money in the country. It was
+not hard for "Standard Oil" to introduce its expert votaries into the
+United States Treasury and thus to steer the millions of the nation into
+the banks subject to the "System's" control. This accom<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[45]</a></span>plished, the
+structure was complete and the process of "making" dollars proceeded on
+a magnificent scale.</p>
+
+<p>That there may be no possible doubt in the minds of those of my readers
+who are unacquainted with such matters that I am citing every-day, actual
+happenings, I will tell just how the Daly-Haggin-Tevis-Anaconda-Amalgamated
+transaction was worked out, showing that but for the existence of the
+National City Bank of New York, or a like institution of the people, it
+could not have been brought about.</p>
+
+<p>When Mr. Rogers and William Rockefeller "traded" with Messrs. Daly,
+Haggin, and Tevis for the Anaconda stock, and with others for like stock
+or other properties which I have already named, the price agreed upon
+was $24,000,000 to Daly, Haggin, and Tevis, and $15,000,000 to the
+others, or $39,000,000 in all. This was to be paid by "Standard Oil" and
+received by Daly, Haggin, and Tevis, and the others, but one of the
+stipulations in the "trade" was that instead of the money's being paid
+to Daly, Haggin, and Tevis, and others direct, it was to be credited to
+them on the books of the National City Bank of New York and was to be,
+by agreement, not withdrawn from the bank before a given time, the bank
+agreeing that the new owners of this money should receive interest at a
+low rate upon it while it so remained deposited. At the same time the
+bank agreed to loan Mr. Rogers and William Rockefeller the $39,000,000
+at the same rate of interest upon the collateral which the $39,000,000
+was used in purchasing. Therefore the first part of the transaction was
+as follows:</p>
+
+<p>The bank, having $39,000,000 on hand belonging to the public in the form
+of savings deposited, or having a fictitious $39,000,000 in the form of
+book-keeping accounts made possible by the deposits of the public and
+the manipulation of the funds in other banks and trust and insurance
+companies belonging to the public or the Government, caused an entry to
+be made in its books showing that this $39,000,000 had been loaned to
+Mr. Rogers and William Rockefeller, and that they, having transferred it
+to Daly, Haggin, Tevis, and others, were, upon the books of the bank,
+the real owners.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[46]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The second part was the summoning into the City Bank of certain
+"Standard Oil" lawyers, office-boys, and clerks, and the organization by
+them of the Amalgamated Copper Company. The lawyers drew up the papers
+and the office-boys and clerks signed them. First, the papers certified
+that "whereas we (the office-boys and clerks) are desirous of taking
+advantage of the corporation laws of the State of New Jersey, we (the
+said office-boys and clerks) do so take advantage of the said laws and
+form ourselves into the Amalgamated Copper Company, which will have a
+capital of $75,000,000, and which will be allowed by said laws to own
+copper-mines and other things, to mine copper and other things, to
+manufacture, buy, sell, and trade in copper and other things, and to do
+numerous and variegated other things; and that whereas we (the said
+office-boys and clerks) have now become the Amalgamated Copper Company,
+one of our number will purchase the entire capital stock of the said
+Amalgamated Copper Company for $75,000,000 cash, which $75,000,000 cash
+we herewith certify to have been paid in the form of a check for
+$75,000,000, herewith delivered to the treasurer, one of our number, by
+the clerk who drew it; and the treasurer, herewith certifying that he
+has received the $75,000,000, herewith delivers unto said clerk the
+$75,000,000 capital stock of the Amalgamated Copper Company, and we (the
+said office-boys and clerks) herewith certify that there is within the
+treasury of the Amalgamated Copper Company $75,000,000, and we (the said
+office-boys and clerks) vote that it, the said $75,000,000, shall be
+used in the purchase of certain stocks and properties, and said certain
+stocks and properties shall be the same stocks and properties previously
+purchased by Mr. Rogers and William Rockefeller, and now owned by them,
+and we (the said office-boys and clerks) herewith certify that we have
+paid from the treasury $75,000,000, that said $75,000,000 is in the form
+of a check, and said check is the one previously received, or its
+equivalent, by our treasurer, from one of our number, to wit, the clerk
+referred to earlier in these papers, and said $75,000,000 has been paid
+to Henry H. Rogers for his and William Rockefeller's use." Henry<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[47]</a></span> H.
+Rogers, now having $75,000,000, where formerly he had stocks and
+properties which had cost him $39,000,000, and being desirous of
+investing it, purchased from the clerk the $75,000,000 of Amalgamated
+stock which he, the clerk, had previously purchased from the treasury of
+the Amalgamated Company, Mr. Rogers promptly paying for said purchase
+with the $75,000,000 check or its equivalent, which has already done
+such yeoman service.</p>
+
+<p>The organization of the Amalgamated Copper Company of New Jersey now
+being complete, and the company being in possession of all the property
+which had formerly belonged to Mr. Rogers and William Rockefeller, and
+which had cost them $39,000,000, and the clerk having again come into
+possession of his $75,000,000 check, and Mr. Rogers and William
+Rockefeller being the sole owners of the $75,000,000 of Amalgamated
+stock, the second part of this transaction was completed. The third
+began by the office-boys and clerks resigning from their positions as
+directors and officers of the Amalgamated Copper Company of New Jersey
+in favor of the more responsible and better known "Standard Oil"
+votaries. Mr. Rogers and William Rockefeller then had the National City
+Bank of New York offer for sale to the public the $75,000,000 of stock
+in such a way that, although it was then the private property of Mr.
+Rogers and William Rockefeller, the public were led to believe it was
+the property of the Amalgamated Copper Company. Simultaneously, the
+National City Bank of New York offered to loan the public its deposits
+at the rate of ninety cents on the dollar, on any amount of the
+Amalgamated stock it, the public, purchased; whereupon the public,
+taking advantage of this offer, agreed to purchase from the National
+City Bank of New York the $75,000,000 of stock for $75,000,000, thereby
+enabling it to certify upon its books that the $39,000,000 it had loaned
+to Messrs. Rogers and Rockefeller had been repaid, and enabling Mr.
+Rogers and William Rockefeller, after paying said debts to the National
+City Bank of New York, to become the absolute owners of $36,000,000 of
+money, none of which they had owned before, and which they had "made" as
+absolutely as though<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[48]</a></span> they had coined it by permit from the Government
+of the people who had parted with it.<a name="FNanchor_3_3" id="FNanchor_3_3"></a><a href="#Footnote_3_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a></p>
+
+<p>The fourth part of the transaction began when months afterward the
+public, who had borrowed their money from the National City Bank of New
+York and other banks and trust and insurance companies to buy
+Amalgamated stock at 100 cents on the dollar, were compelled to repay
+it, and to do so were obliged to sell the Amalgamated stock which they
+had purchased at $100 per share for the best price they could get, which
+was $33 per share; and if we suppose for a moment that the "Standard
+Oil," after repurchasing it at $33 per share, at a later day repeated
+the operation of selling it for $100 per share, it will be seen that
+"Standard Oil," the "Private Thing," would thereby "make" an additional
+$50,000,000, as absolutely as though they had been allowed by the
+Government to coin it.<a name="FNanchor_4_4" id="FNanchor_4_4"></a><a href="#Footnote_4_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a></p>
+
+<p>This explanation is not the creation of an extravagant fancy. It is not
+romance, but reality. The thing described was a supreme manifestation of
+the "System," of the perfect working of that tremendous financial
+machine which reaps,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[49]</a></span> grinds, and harvests for its own benefit, the
+earned savings of the American people.</p>
+
+<p>In showing how these thirty-six millions were made in the brief space of
+this creature's (Amalgamated Copper's) life, I deal with reality and not
+romance; but let my readers for a moment give their imaginations play
+and picture to themselves one scene in this stupendous drama. A great
+room in the greatest banking house in America, if not in the
+world&mdash;silent, solemn&mdash;an atmosphere of impregnable rectitude&mdash;the solid
+furniture, the heavy carpets, the chill high walls, the massive desks,
+the impressive chairs, the great majestic table portentously suggestive
+of power. Presto! the dim calm is broken; the air vibrates as when an
+ancient church is invaded by a swarm of vampire-bats. Into the great
+room enter a group of men and a flock of youths, who settle in the
+impressive chairs round the majestic table. You wonder what is the
+motive of the assemblage. These grave lawyers, whose names are weighty
+in the nation's councils, and these gray-haired, dignified financiers
+might well be gathered to arbitrate a dispute involving empires; but why
+these office-boys and clerks, with their restless, surprised eyes and
+uneasy gestures? The flourishing of papers, the murmuring of voices in a
+confusion of "seventy-five million," "we buy," "we sell," "we are," "we
+will"&mdash;words, nothing but words; then silence as one reads from a stiff
+parchment certain resolutions which the suave gentleman with incisive
+steel-clicking manners, at the head of the table, puts to a vote. Then
+these youths, whose souls are afire with the hope of a director's $5
+gold fee, timidly sign the record, trembling the while lest a blot call
+down on them a scolding; a head clerk, whose fondest dream is a raise of
+salary as the result of coming under the Master's eye in a
+seventy-five-million-dollar deal, affixes a seal, and there is an
+exchanging of thin slips of paper&mdash;checks&mdash;dollars&mdash;magically "made
+dollars." Exit office-boys and lawyers.</p>
+
+<p>The door closes&mdash;silence again. Then the air vibrates with the sound of
+a hearty hand-slap and the genial, whole-souled greeting of the "Master"
+to his partner. "William, I feel as though I had done an honest day's
+labor! Thirty-<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[50]</a></span>six million dollars 'made' and no hitch, no delay!" Then
+follows the partner's mild answer: "Yes, Harry, but don't forget James'
+and the others' shares will shrink it up quite a bit."</p>
+
+<p>Thirty-six million dollars for <i>one honest day's labor</i>! Thirty-six
+million dollars&mdash;and Alaska cost us but seven millions and Spain
+relinquished to us her claims on the Philippines for only twenty
+millions. Thirty-six million dollars!&mdash;more than a hundred times as much
+as George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, and "Abe" Lincoln together
+secured for the patriotic labors of their lifetimes. And this vast sum
+was taken from the people to enrich men whose coffers were already, as
+the results of similar operations, so full of dollars that neither they
+nor their children, nor their children's children could count them&mdash;as
+the people count their savings, a dollar at a time&mdash;as thoughtlessly
+taken as are the apples that the school-boy steals after he has eaten so
+many that he can eat no more.</p>
+
+<p>A thousand times have I tried to figure out in my mind what worlds of
+misery such a sum of millions might allay if issued by a government and
+intelligently distributed among a people&mdash;and do my readers know that
+never in the world's recorded history has any nation felt itself rich
+enough to devote thirty-six millions to the cause of charity&mdash;even in
+the midst of the most awful calamities of fire, flood, war, or
+pestilence? On the other hand, I have had to know about the horrors, the
+misfortunes, the earthly hell, which were the awful consequences of the
+appropriation of this vast amount. I have had to know about the
+convicts, the suicides, the broken hearts, the starvation and
+wretchedness, the ruined bodies and lost souls which strewed the fields
+of the "System's" harvest.</p>
+
+<p>Pondering all these things, I have ceased to wonder at the deep murmurs
+of discontent that are rising, rising to my ears from all parts of the
+continent.</p>
+
+<p>Can it be that a just God suffers the sons and daughters of some of us
+to eke out a bare existence as the best reward of earnest effort and
+sterling worth, and at the same time rewards these other men with
+$36,000,000 for one day's<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[51]</a></span> labor? Is this the freedom which our fathers
+and our sons died on many a bloody, hard-fought field to preserve? I am
+conscious of a haunting fear that these men and women may not always be
+patient, may not always be put off with skilled evasion or slippery
+subterfuge, and for one brief moment I see visions of a marching people,
+bearing aloft grisly heads on gory poles, and hear above the low,
+bestial murmur of the mob the cry for bread and for revenge.</p>
+
+<p>And then I remember that this is <i>America</i>, not France; that our laws
+are strong&mdash;if but the people are aroused to see them obeyed; that our
+prisons are ample, even though they be for the present filled with petty
+rascals who can do but little harm though turned loose to make room for
+the real scoundrels who are undermining the foundations of our
+Republic.</p>
+
+<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_3_3" id="Footnote_3_3"></a><a href="#FNanchor_3_3"><span class="label">[3]</span></a> It must be remembered that the Amalgamated Company never
+owned all the capital stock of the Anaconda, but, on the contrary, only
+a few shares over 600,000, which represented the ownership of the
+Haggin-Tevis-Daly people, and which they had turned in for a lump sum
+before the market price had advanced. The control of the Parrott, owned
+by the Amalgamated Company, was purchased for a lump amount from
+Franklin Farrell and his associates for the sum of $4,000,000-odd, not
+$12,190,000. The Colorado Smelting and Mining Company was also purchased
+in a lumped batch of Senator Wolcott, not at $7,000,000, but for
+$2,000,000-odd, while the tremendous advance in the price of Anaconda in
+the market from 30 to 70 was due to the operations of Messrs. Rogers and
+Rockefeller for their private account, out of which they made a large
+additional profit.
+</p><p>
+There can be no possibility of mistake or successful misrepresentation
+of these figures: first, because the Anaconda figures are known not only
+to Mr. Rogers, William Rockefeller, and myself, but to J. B. Haggin, and
+to the estates of Tevis and Marcus Daly; the Colorado figures, to
+associates of Senator Wolcott and to his estate; and the Parrott
+figures, to Mr. Farrell who received the money, and to a large number of
+those to whom he had to account; and, further, these figures will all be
+demonstrated in open court in suits outside of any with which I have to
+do, which are now being brought or are pending.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_4_4" id="Footnote_4_4"></a><a href="#FNanchor_4_4"><span class="label">[4]</span></a> As a matter of fact, the people lost even more than
+thirty-six millions of dollars on this part of the Amalgamated
+transaction, because "Standard Oil" did not sell all the 750,000 shares
+at $100 per share ($75,000,000) at that time. They retained two-thirds
+of them, which at a later date they fed out to the public at $115 per
+share, and at a still later date they took them back at $33 per share.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[52]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER VII</h2>
+
+<h3>JUGGLING WITH MILLIONS OF THE PEOPLE'S MONEY</h3>
+
+
+<p>For the purposes of the transaction I have just described the machinery
+of a great bank or trust company was essential. The vast profit gained
+here was absolutely "made" through the instrumentality of the National
+City Bank of New York, but some other tractable institution would have
+been equally efficient. In order that my readers may focus such great
+financial concerns as this National City Bank, I give right here brief
+r&eacute;sum&eacute;s of its career and resources and of those of two of its
+affiliated institutions:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p class='center'>NATIONAL CITY BANK&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;New York City</p>
+
+<p class='center'><span class="smcap">James Stillman</span>, <i>President</i>.</p>
+
+<p>The "City Bank" was chartered by the New York Legislature in
+1812, and reorganized as a National Bank July 17, 1865. The
+capital paid in was $1,000,000. Moses Taylor held the office
+of president for thirty-four years, and died in 1892, when
+Percy R. Pyne, son-in-law of Moses Taylor, was elected
+president and held office until the election of James
+Stillman, of Woodward &amp; Stillman, cotton merchants, when the
+capital stock of the bank was increased to $10,000,000, and
+again increased to $25,000,000. The sworn report of the
+officers and directors filed with the Controller of the
+Currency shows that the condition of the bank, January,
+1904, was:</p>
+
+<div class='center'>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="resources">
+<tr><td colspan='3'><span class="smcap">Resources</span></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Loans and discounts</td><td align='right'></td><td align='right'>$114,507,919.20</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Overdrafts secured and unsecured</td><td align='right'></td><td align='right'>162.90</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>United States bonds to secure circulation</td><td align='right'></td><td align='right'>3,220,000.00</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>United States bonds to secure United States deposits</td><td align='right'></td><td align='right'>12,937,000.00</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>United States bonds on hand</td><td align='right'></td><td align='right'>60,120.00</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>United States bond account</td><td align='right'></td><td align='right'>4,450,000.00</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Premiums on United States bonds</td><td align='right'></td><td align='right'>1,354,013.00</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Stocks, securities, etc.</td><td align='right'></td><td align='right'>16,709,241.62</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Banking-house furniture and fixtures</td><td align='right'></td><td align='right'>200,000.00</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Due from national banks (not reserve agents)</td><td align='right'></td><td align='right'>4,727,461.12<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[53]</a></span></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Due from State banks and bankers</td><td align='right'></td><td align='right'>644,288.80</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Exchange for clearing-house</td><td align='right'></td><td align='right'>31,000,935.34</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Checks and other cash items</td><td align='right'></td><td align='right'>798,843.22</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Notes of other national banks</td><td align='right'></td><td align='right'>209,015.00</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Fractional paper currency, nickels, and cents</td><td align='right'></td><td align='right'>684.63</td></tr>
+<tr><td colspan='2'>Lawful money reserve in bank, viz.:</td><td align='right'></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Specie</td><td align='right'>$36,928,350.00</td><td align='right'></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Legal tender notes</td><td align='right'>7,100,000.00</td><td align='right'>44,028,350.00</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Redemption fund with U. S. Treasurer (5% of circulation)</td><td align='right'></td><td align='right'>161,000.00</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Due from U. S. Treasurer other than 5% redemption fund</td><td align='right'></td><td class='bb'>204,105.95</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Total</td><td align='right'></td><td align='right'>$235,213,140.78</td></tr>
+<tr><td colspan='3'><span class="smcap">Liabilities</span></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Capital stock paid in</td><td align='right'></td><td align='right'>$25,000,000.00</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Surplus fund</td><td align='right'></td><td align='right'>8,900,000.00</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Undivided profits, less expenses and taxes paid</td><td align='right'></td><td align='right'>8,503,038.26</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><i>National bank notes outstanding</i></td><td align='right'></td><td align='right'>3,180,000.00</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><i>Due to other national banks</i></td><td align='right'>$36,469,683.95</td><td align='right'></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><i>Due to State banks and bankers</i></td><td align='right'>5,903,473.87</td><td align='right'></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><i>Due to trust companies and savings-banks</i></td><td align='right'>29,210,461.00</td><td align='right'></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Provident reserve fund</td><td align='right'>30,000.00</td><td align='right'></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Dividends unpaid</td><td align='right'>519.00</td><td align='right'></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><i>Individual deposits subject to check</i></td><td align='right'>82,576,884.06</td><td align='right'></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Demand certificates of deposit</td><td align='right'>43,790.00</td><td align='right'></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><i>Certified checks</i></td><td align='right'>10,752,671.01</td><td align='right'></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><i>Cashier's checks outstanding</i></td><td align='right'>7,631,619.78</td><td align='right'></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><i>United States deposits</i></td><td align='right'>12,937,000.00&mdash;</td><td align='right'>185,556,102.67</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>United States bonds</td><td align='right'></td><td class='bb'>4,155,000.00</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Total</td><td align='right'></td><td align='right'>$235,213,140.78</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<p class='center'>THE NEW YORK LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY</p>
+
+<p>The company was incorporated by special act of the New York
+Legislature in 1841. It is the third largest insurance
+company in the United States. The assets of the company
+January 1, 1892, were $125,947,290, and income $31,854,194.
+In 1904 the assets were $352,652,048; income, $88,269,531.</p>
+
+<p class='center'>THE NATIONAL SHAWMUT BANK, OF BOSTON</p>
+
+<p>This institution was incorporated in 1898 with a paid-in
+capital of $3,000,000. In 1904 its total resources, also
+liabilities, were $63,471,639, of the same general character
+as those of the National City Bank of New York.</p></div>
+
+<p>A calm examination of these figures, illuminated by the explanation of
+the "System's" methods I have previously<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[54]</a></span> given, will awaken the
+American people to a comprehension of what use "high finance" makes of
+the savings of the public intrusted to it for legitimate investment.</p>
+
+<p>Nor must it be supposed for one minute that the insurance company and
+the Boston bank which I have used for illustrations differ in any way
+from scores and scores of their kind which are as absolutely "steered"
+in their operations by the National City Bank of New York as the
+National City Bank of New York is absolutely "steered" by its president,
+James Stillman, or as James Stillman is absolutely "steered" by
+"Standard Oil," the Private Thing, or as "Standard Oil," the Private
+Thing, is absolutely "steered" by its supreme heads, Henry H. Rogers,
+William Rockefeller, and John D. Rockefeller. And if any doubt remains
+in the minds of my readers of the absolute power of "Standard Oil," the
+Private Thing, to "make" dollars at will, or of the dead-sure working of
+their "heads-I-win-and-tails-you-lose" gambling game, I ask them
+carefully to analyze the above statements in connection with the facts
+in the Amalgamated transaction which just precede them.</p>
+
+<p>Fourteen years ago the National City Bank passed out of the legitimate
+management of old-fashioned business men of the Moses Taylor stamp and
+into the hands of the "System," the Private Thing. Then its capital was
+$1,000,000; it is to-day $25,000,000, and after having paid out millions
+in dividends and other profits it has, in addition, a surplus of
+$16,000,000, and it has the absolute power to juggle with a total of
+$235,000,000, $36,000,000 of which belong to other national banks,
+$6,000,000 to State banks and bankers, $29,000,000 to trust companies
+and savings-banks, $82,000,000 to individual depositors, $10,000,000 to
+the holders of certified checks, $7,000,000 to the holders of cashiers'
+checks, $13,000,000 to the Government directly, and $4,000,000 in
+Government bonds, to say nothing of scores of hundreds of millions more
+through its affiliated institutions. And all this juggling is done in
+such a fearless manner that we find it in the Amalgamated deal loaning
+in one transaction an amount so great that if it had been lost, the
+bank's entire capital would have been more than completely wiped out.
+That my<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[55]</a></span> readers may not base their conclusions upon this one
+transaction of this mighty engine of the "System," vicious as it shows
+on the surface and destructive as it really was to the thousands who
+were parties to it, <i>I will later in this story show the National City
+Bank in another section of the Amalgamated deal, doing things which in
+intention and in result were so much bolder and grosser that this
+transaction will by comparison appear pure and legitimate</i>.</p>
+
+<p>During the past thirty years the American people have become so used to
+enormous figures in connection with corporations and trusts that they
+have not stopped to discriminate between different classes of fortunes
+nor to figure out that fortunes of certain kinds are absolute
+self-evidence that they were acquired by illegal methods, and that if
+allowed to multiply the people will surely be enslaved and the republic
+destroyed. For instance, there are in New York City alone dozens of
+national and savings-banks and insurance and trust companies which
+control money enough to make them practically omnipotent in whatever
+direction their controllers exert their power. I will name but seven,
+showing what enormous amounts their managers control; and let it be
+borne in mind that all such institutions are linked together by the
+"System" as firmly and surely as any human things can be linked. The
+Equitable, Mutual, and New York Life Insurance companies have a combined
+capital of $1,200,000,000 of assets, a yearly income of $230,000,000,
+and $4,500,000,000 of insurance in force; the National City Bank, United
+States Trust, Mercantile Trust, and Union Trust companies $30,000,000
+capital, and $45,000,000 surplus, and they have the vast sum of
+$450,000,000 of the people's money to juggle with.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[56]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER VIII</h2>
+
+<h3>"STANDARD OIL" INVESTS "MADE DOLLARS" IN GAS</h3>
+
+
+<p>And now I shall have to go back a bit in my story. After "Standard Oil"
+had firmly established, through the agency of the curb,<a name="FNanchor_5_5" id="FNanchor_5_5"></a><a href="#Footnote_5_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a> the value of
+the 1,000,000 shares of Standard Oil, the corporation seller of oil, at
+between $600,000,000 and $800,000,000, and had used it as collateral in
+securing control of the four classes of money institutions I have
+named&mdash;the national and savings-banks and trust and insurance
+companies&mdash;it proceeded to use the funds thus controlled to manipulate
+the stocks of great public corporations for its own profit, forming them
+into trusts with capitals far beyond their values, represented by new
+stocks and bonds, which it sold to the public at prices aggregating a
+hundred to five hundred per cent. over the old capitalization. It then
+engaged in a wonderfully clever campaign to work off on the
+people&mdash;directly, the very rich people, but indirectly, the people as a
+whole&mdash;through institutions which exist because of the people's
+savings&mdash;the $600,000,000 to $800,000,000 of Standard Oil stock which
+had at this stage served<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[57]</a></span> the principal use for which it had been
+created. It must be borne in mind that while "Standard Oil" is grinding
+out "made dollars," its owners never for an instant lose sight of that
+dim, distant day of reckoning when the people will awaken to their
+losses. The "Rogerses" and the "Rockefellers" know well that the public
+cannot always be kept in ignorance of the methods of the "System" by
+which it has been plundered, and that once it is in possession of the
+secret of how the savings of the many have become the property of the
+few, there may be reprisals of such a nature as will compel the "System"
+to yield up its gains. They know that when that day comes it will not be
+best for them to have their enormous fortunes in such get-at-able
+property as real estate, in which so many of the legitimately acquired
+American fortunes are invested. In a quiet way, therefore, they have put
+the bulk of their "made dollars" into unrecorded forms, such as
+Government bonds; bonds and preferred stocks of what they consider
+non-duplicatable franchise corporations such as railroads, which require
+rights of way; into municipal public service enterprises, such as gas
+companies, the existence of which depends upon rights of way for pipes;
+and into the stocks of banks and trust and insurance companies, which
+they believe the people will never dare attack because their savings are
+largely deposited in them.</p>
+
+<p>I would not have my readers think that the principal motive actuating
+"Standard Oil" in parting with its Standard Oil stock is doubt of its
+present intrinsic worth, for such is not the case. The masters of
+"Standard Oil" are very able, far-seeing men, and they know that so
+thoroughly have the American people been educated to the crimes which
+created Standard Oil, the crimes by which it has existed and does exist,
+that no passage of time or "pious-ing" of latter-day methods, will ever
+blind them to its iniquities, and that when reprisal day comes, as come
+it surely will, the first thing the people in their frenzy will look for
+will be Standard Oil. This is the reason which, more than any other,
+influences them in selling to others an enterprise which has up to the
+present time not only enjoyed tremendous prosperity, but which has as
+yet met with no obstacle or hindrance.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[58]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Of all forms of tangible investment "Standard Oil" has looked most
+favorably upon gas stocks, and its secret devices have been worked
+overtime in consolidating gas companies throughout the United States. In
+a general way, as manufacturers of illuminating oil, "Standard Oil" had
+early become familiar with the problems of supplying large
+communities&mdash;cities&mdash;with gas light; and with the advent of water-gas,
+as sellers of petroleum they controlled an important factor in the
+production of that volatile commodity. All the talent of the "System,"
+trained in "handling" municipal authorities, came into play in this big
+new business of lighting cities&mdash;a business which perforce became a
+monopoly as soon as the powerful tentacles grasping it were recognized
+as "Standard Oil."</p>
+
+<p>At the time my story opens (1894) "Standard Oil" had already captured
+the gas-lighting corporations of certain of the great cities of the
+United States, including the immensely rich ones of New York (directly),
+Philadelphia and Chicago (indirectly); and for two years previously had
+been besieging the several independent Brooklyn companies for the
+purpose of consolidating them into a single gigantic corporation. This
+project it has since accomplished. Its intention is to weld this
+corporation with the great one that already holds the monopoly of
+Manhattan.</p>
+
+<p>The task of diagramming a territory for invasion is one after Henry H.
+Rogers' own heart. His campaigns are planned with Napoleonic power and
+foresight. When the capture of Brooklyn was decided on, the several
+corporations to be subdued were "sized up" as to their revenues and
+liabilities; the resources of their stockholders were studied out, and a
+plan of action organized to separate each one from his shares at
+"hard-pan" prices. In the "Standard Oil" armory there are many
+instruments of "persuasion," and he is indeed a hardy fellow who can
+resist the various "trying-out" processes to which mutineers are
+subjected. This obstinate capitalist will be summarily knocked on the
+head; that other inveigled into a dark corner by a strong-arm man;
+another group owe money to one of the "System's" banks and a brief spell
+on the financial rack will<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[59]</a></span> weaken their grip. Sooner or later all
+succumb. While such details as these were being attended to, lines were
+being strung here and there to bring about the passage by the city of
+Brooklyn and the Legislature of New York State of ordinances and laws
+which should allow this and compel that to be done, and so rivet the
+various links of the great venture.</p>
+
+<p>While in the midst of this campaign, to which Henry H. Rogers' genius,
+matured in many a hard-fought business battle, foresaw an early and easy
+triumphal termination, there came athwart his victorious path a
+financial guerilla, "balloony," mysterious, yet as sticky as a
+jelly-fish, who was destined to exert a most maleficent influence on his
+after-life. Fate hangs no red lights at the cross-roads of a man's
+career. No "pricking of his thumbs," no strange portents warned the
+Master of "Standard Oil" that the impudent Philadelphia swashbuckler who
+dared interfere with the execution of his plan to fetter the "System's"
+yoke to the necks of the citizens of Brooklyn was the factor that
+destiny had chosen to shape the ends that he had rough-hewn.</p>
+
+<p>The financial guerilla was J. Edward O'Sullivan Addicks, votary of
+rotten finance, perpetual candidate for the United States Senate,
+wholesale debaucher of American citizenship and all-round corrupter of
+men&mdash;J. Edward O'Sullivan Addicks, a corporation political trickster,
+who has done more to hold up American laws, American elective
+franchises, and American corporations to the scorn of the civilized
+world than any other man of this or any previous age.</p>
+
+<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_5_5" id="Footnote_5_5"></a><a href="#FNanchor_5_5"><span class="label">[5]</span></a> The New York "curb" is the latest invention in finance,
+coming closely upon the heels of the invention of trusts, and it holds
+the same relation to the New York Stock Exchange that Private Things
+hold to corporations. Before a stock can be bought and sold on the New
+York Stock Exchange, there must be submitted to the governors a
+description of what the stock is, which must be of such tangibility that
+any one who cares to investigate may find there every detail and
+particular of the property represented, set forth with the utmost
+exactitude. But on the "curb" stocks can be traded in without
+responsible sponsors or descriptions that mean anything. In other words,
+a stock may be bought and sold there, which is so vague and indefinite
+as to be little more than a name, and it is through the "curb" that the
+value of "Standard Oil" stock is established, for it is daily bought and
+sold there at the steadily held prices of 650 to 800, and the press of
+the world makes daily record of these prices.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[60]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER IX</h2>
+
+<h3>A VOTARY OF THE "SYSTEM"</h3>
+
+
+<p>The "System" has all sorts of votaries. About J. Edward O'Sullivan
+Addicks there is nothing that remotely suggests coworkers of the types
+of Mr. Rogers and William Rockefeller. A description that left him in
+any part a duplicate of either would do him and them a grievous wrong.
+Henry H. Rogers and William Rockefeller have two sides, their social
+side and their business side. Socially, they are good men; in business
+they work evil. J. Edward O'Sullivan Addicks is a bad man, socially, in
+business, in every way. The term "bad man" is used advisedly. My idea of
+a "bad man" is that like a bad dollar he is a counterfeit. A counterfeit
+has all the appearances of reality, and is yet devoid of its properties
+and virtues. So with Addicks. It is easy to find men who will declare by
+all that is sacred that Henry H. Rogers is one of the best fellows in
+the world, though as many more will as earnestly proclaim him the fiend
+incarnate. About Addicks, among those who know the man, there is but one
+opinion. I have yet to meet the man, woman, or child who would say aught
+of Addicks, after a month's acquaintance, other than, "Don't mention
+him! He is the limit." And it will be said with the calm of
+dispassionate conviction, as one might speak of a stuffed tiger in a
+dime-museum jungle.</p>
+
+<p>Here we have a man without a heart, without a soul, and, I believe,
+absolutely without conscience&mdash;the type of man who even his associates
+feel is likely to bring in after their deaths queer bills against their
+estates as an offset for what he owes them; the type of man whose
+promise is just as good as his bond, and whose bond is so near his
+promise as to make it absolutely immaterial to him which you take.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[61]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Exhibited in the side show of one of the great circuses some years ago
+was a strange creature which, for lack of a better name, its owner and
+the public dubbed, "A What Is It?" This freak had the semblance of
+humanity, and yet was not human. All its functions and feelings reversed
+the normal. Tickle it and it would cry bitterly; pinch or torture it and
+it would grin rapturously; when starved it repelled food, and when
+overfed it was ravenous for more. It had heart-beats but no heart. The
+public gave it up. The public would long ago have given up J. Edward
+O'Sullivan Addicks if he would have let them.</p>
+
+<p>Illustration is better than explanation, and perhaps I can more
+graphically set J. Edward O'Sullivan Addicks before my readers by a few
+incidents which show his contradictory characteristics in action than by
+verbal diagrams, however laborious.</p>
+
+<p>Once upon a time Addicks, entering Delmonico's for dinner, stumbled on a
+couple of newsboys at the entrance. One, broken-hearted, was being
+consoled by the other. Addicks, observing the deep sobs, asked: "What's
+the matter with you, bub?" The consoler explained that his chum had lost
+$2, his day's earnings and capital, and "His mudder&mdash;his fadder's
+dead&mdash;an' de baby'll git trun outter de tenement." Addicks, without more
+ado, slipped the suffering young news-merchant a bill which his friends
+supposed was $2 to replace the lost funds. As they were taking off their
+coats in the hall, however, the little newsboy pushed his way in with:
+"Say, boss, did yer mean ter guv me de twenty?" Addicks nodded a
+good-natured assent, and his friends registered silently a white mark to
+his score, and felt that, after all, somewhere beneath the surface he
+was more of the right sort than they had given him credit for being.
+After dinner, as they left, the newsboy again approached. "'Scuse me,
+boss, but me chum 'd like ter t'ank yer too. I'm goin' ter give him a V
+outter it." Addicks looked at the boy in his mildly cold way and said:
+"Let me have that bill. I will change it for you." The boy gave it up,
+and Addicks, after methodically placing it in his purse, handed him back
+a $2 bill with: "That's what you lost, isn't it? And you" (to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[62]</a></span> the
+second little fellow, who by this time had mapped out visions of new
+duds for the kids and a warm seat in the gallery of a Bowery theatre),
+"you didn't lose anything, did you? Well, both of you run along now!"</p>
+
+<p>His friends looked at each other, and from their slates wiped away the
+white mark and replaced it with a deep, broad, black one. And yet
+Addicks had made good the loss&mdash;done a good deed, but in an&mdash;Addicks
+way. I should perhaps remark that J. Edward O'Sullivan Addicks has never
+smoked, nor used a swear-word, nor taken liquor in any form.</p>
+
+<p>During the Addicks gas campaign in Boston one of his lieutenants
+demanded as his share of the deal a large amount of money, which he
+claimed Addicks was withholding from him. Addicks refused to pay.
+Friends and associates urged him to settle. While yet refusing, he
+agreed to meet this man at one of the leading hotels in the presence of
+counsel and lieutenants. The interview was a hot one. Addicks surprised
+all by his absolute fearlessness in the face of a savage attack, which
+culminated in the production of a document signed by certain
+Massachusetts legislators, wherein they receipted for the bribe money
+Addicks had paid for their votes. The man who claimed he was being
+cheated threatened this would be laid before the Grand Jury the
+following day. All the witnesses were dumfounded at the situation and in
+concert begged Addicks to hush the matter up by paying what was claimed.
+"Gentlemen," said this great financier, "my honor, my business and my
+personal honor, has been assailed, and rather than submit to this
+outrage I would die! I now ask you all to bear witness that under no
+circumstances will I pay to this man a single dollar!" And he
+indignantly left the meeting.</p>
+
+<p>While his counsel and associates were appalled at what might be the
+outcome, they admired Addicks' manly pluck, and asked themselves if they
+had not, after all, been mistaken in their estimates of his courage and
+principle. In the middle of the same night, the man with the document
+was surprised by a telegram reading: "Meet me in Jersey City to-morrow
+sure with paper; keep absolutely secret."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[63]</a></span> Next day in Jersey they met,
+and Addicks simply said: "There is the full amount. Give me the paper.
+You don't suppose I would compound a felony in the State in which it was
+committed, and before witnesses, do you?"</p>
+
+<p>In the national election of 1896 J. Edward O'Sullivan Addicks was a
+candidate for the United States Senate in Delaware, and for a variety of
+reasons was anxious to secure a Republican victory. Within the State,
+however, the real contest was not over national issues, but to obtain
+control of the Legislature which in the following January had to elect a
+United States Senator. There were three factions, the Democrats and two
+wings of the Republicans, the Addicks and anti-Addicks parties, the
+latter calling themselves "regulars." On Election Day Addicks used an
+even $100,000 buying votes, and that evening Delaware was safe for
+McKinley&mdash;both the "regulars" and the men whom Addicks' money bought
+having voted for a Republican President. But it was early bruited around
+that if the vote of Sussex County (there are three counties in
+Delaware&mdash;Newcastle, Kent, and Sussex) were allowed to stand as
+received, all Addicks' efforts to control the Legislature would have
+been fruitless and his "made dollars" expended for nothing. The ex-flour
+dealer of Philadelphia was not satisfied to accept the people's sacred
+verdict. He quickly called his lieutenants together, mapped out a
+campaign of almost reckless audacity and daring, and assigned his best
+men to its execution.</p>
+
+<p>The ballot-boxes with their contents were in the sheriff's charge and
+stored under lock and key in the court-house. The sheriff was an Addicks
+tool. At midnight he turned over his charge to one of the would-be
+statesman's trustiest lieutenants, who, with the aid of a lantern and a
+slip of paper containing the directions, sorted over the legal ballots,
+threw some out, and put in new ones. When another sun arose the
+dastardly outrage upon the American elective franchise had been
+completed, and Addicks was busily scheming to carry out the remainder of
+the plot. On the declaration which he or one of his associates would
+make, that there had been fraud in Sussex County, the Government at
+Washington must send on an investigating committee to whom it would<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[64]</a></span> be
+asserted that the voting lists had been doctored by the Democrats. To
+prove it the boxes would be opened, the ballots counted, and lo! the
+villany of the Democrats would be, beyond contradiction, demonstrated.</p>
+
+<p>But the scheme was an Addicks scheme. Had it been the plot of any other
+man with the brains, the nerve, and the lack of principle to concoct it
+and set it in motion, inevitably it would have been carried through to
+the designed conclusion. As it was, this is what happened: The
+lieutenant who had charge of the actual commission of the crime
+thoughtlessly chuckled over the details of it with another, and this
+other "in the presence of witnesses" laughingly congratulated Addicks on
+his plan's success. What was the astonishment of the group to hear the
+candidate for the Senate say: "Gentlemen, I could not countenance such a
+transaction. This is the first I have heard of it, and it is so
+outrageously criminal that I refuse to allow it to proceed further.
+There will be no investigation, and if it is a fact that those ballots
+have been changed in the box, the ones who changed them shall receive no
+benefit from their nefarious work. I have spoken."</p>
+
+<p>Mind you, every member of the group was a party to the scheme and had
+been carefully rehearsed in the part assigned him by Addicks himself,
+but alone, that is, without witnesses; nevertheless so earnest and
+apparently honest was the man in his protest that for an instant they
+doubted their senses&mdash;until they remembered it was Addicks.</p>
+
+<p>The investigation was never held, and to this day Addicks' lieutenants,
+especially he who did the midnight work and who still lives in the
+peaceful State of Delaware, turn with disgust when Addicks' daring is
+mentioned.</p>
+
+<p>It should be explained here that, whenever Addicks plans an illegal
+transaction&mdash;one for which he might be made civilly or criminally
+liable&mdash;he invariably coaches each of his accomplices alone, "without
+witnesses." And when it becomes necessary in developing the plot to have
+a confab, at which the several parties to the proceeding must meet,
+Addicks is most careful to preserve a legal semblance of ignorance of
+incriminating details. At intervals, when a danger-place in<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[65]</a></span> the
+discussion is approaching, he will get up from his seat and, moving to
+the door, will say: "Gentlemen, halt right there, until I step out of
+the room; tap at the door when you are over that bad spot, and I will
+return."</p>
+
+<p>Addicks' "Wait until I step out of the room" is as familiar among his
+coworkers as the "I am going upstairs" is among the "Standard Oil"
+family.</p>
+
+<p>Try to conjure before your mind's eye a picture of the anomalous
+character these instances suggest. I'll warrant your mental image as
+little resembles the original Addicks as Mr. Hyde did Dr. Jekyll in the
+story. He does not look the part assigned him here, nor any other part
+for that matter. I saw him coming toward me on State Street one summer
+day some years ago, a tall, wiry man, in a white-flannel suit, perfect
+in fit and spotless as snow, wearing a fine Panama hat. This was in the
+period before Panamas were commonly worn. He was to the life the elegant
+and luxurious Southern planter of ante-bellum days. Six months afterward
+in about the same place I saw approaching me a splendid person in rich
+sable outer garments who looked for all the world like an exiled Russian
+grand duke. It was Addicks in winter. You will not surprise his secret
+from that pleasant, rather ambiguous, but square-jawed face, nor from
+the mouth hidden under a long, drooping, gray, military mustache. His is
+a good-sized, well-shaped head, you might say, and the gray, shallow
+eyes that look out at you are almost merry in their glances. But they
+are inscrutable eyes which seem to have a challenge in their gaze, a
+sort of
+"look-me-over-as-long-as-you-like-and-you'll-never-guess-what's-under-the-surface"
+expression that is baffling and provocative. Yet this sybarite, this
+daring coward, this stingy prodigal, this sincere hypocrite, this
+extraordinary blending of contradictory qualities, is the man who from
+1887 to 1892 made Boston look like the proverbial country gawk at
+circus-time.</p>
+
+<p>Power the man certainly has, and of a distinct quality, yet his
+intimates cannot explain the reason of their obedience to him. After a
+brief acquaintance he is revealed as the very soul of insincerity&mdash;he
+"works" his friends, he pays toll to his enemies, he frankly shows
+himself without the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[66]</a></span> sense of moral obligation. I believe his talent
+resides in his capacity to select the proper type of man to "make rich"
+in the illicit schemes his abnormal mind conceives. These coworkers of
+his are of different grades; some have a super-abundance of cash; others
+a desire to get it&mdash;in common are their lack of principle and dearth of
+brains. Addicks cannot do business long with men of real ability, nor
+does he understand them, whereas he can read the minds of his ordained
+victims as if they were an open book. The big men who have encountered
+or been associated with Addicks are prone to characterize him as a
+mountebank, a joker, or a chump.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[67]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER X</h2>
+
+<h3>ADDICKS COMES TO BOSTON</h3>
+
+
+<p>J. Edward O'Sullivan Addicks was born in Philadelphia in 1841, and was
+in the eighties plodding along the ordinary, uneventful path of a seller
+of flour to the people of that city which since the death of William
+Penn holds the record for the highest and densest percentage of sleep
+per capita of any English-speaking community.</p>
+
+<p>In the eighties two things happened that changed the whole course of J.
+Edward O'Sullivan Addicks' life. Some one invented water-gas and "let
+in" Addicks on the invention; and the Philadelphia branch of the
+"Standard Oil," represented by Widener, Elkins, and Dolan, "trustified"
+the gas companies of the city of Chicago, which enabled Addicks to "hold
+up" the "trustification" until Dolan and Dolan's associates paid him the
+sum of $300,000 for the instrument with which he had done the holding
+up, $10,000 worth of the stock of one of the necessary Chicago
+companies.</p>
+
+<p>The law of compensation, which gets in its deadly work on all the
+prettiest plans of man, but decreed that what goes up must come down
+when it ceases going up. It has a shrewd trick of grafting sorrows on
+our joys, and of handicapping success with discomfiting conditions. The
+favorite of fortune whose feet have fallen in pleasant places sooner or
+later stubs his toe.</p>
+
+<p>Addicks' first "made dollars" certainly came easy&mdash;so easy, indeed, that
+those who watched his early career marvelled at his success; but nowhere
+on God's footstool is there to-day a more terrible illustration of the
+inevitable workings<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[68]</a></span> of the law of compensation than the present
+standing of J. Edward O'Sullivan Addicks affords.</p>
+
+<p>The thief whose first excursion into a wayfarer's pocket is rewarded
+with the equivalent of days and nights of honest labor will surely be
+convinced thereafter of the superiority of theft over toil as a means of
+money-getting. Invariably the manufacturer of "made dollars," after his
+first coup, forsakes forever after the cold arithmetic of commerce for
+the rule of guess, dream, hope, and "I will," which constitutes the
+mathematics of high finance. Addicks' first "made dollars" came with
+such magical ease that there awoke in his slumbering substitute for a
+soul a disgust for those prosaic pursuits at which one could never, try
+how one might, make more than four by the addition of two and two. He
+probably argued to himself: "Why should I work in the flour business
+when I know a way of getting overnight more than I can make out of flour
+in a lifetime? If people are so simple in guarding their savings that I
+can by a trick take away from them enormous wealth without the slightest
+danger to my own safety or my profit, even if detected, why should I not
+devote my life to such healthful and profitable occupation?" The logic
+of the proposition was convincing. Accepting its conclusions, J. Edward
+O'Sullivan Addicks, of Philadelphia, embarked on his career. Soon
+afterward he discovered gas in Boston.</p>
+
+<p>This was in 1887. Equipped with his "made dollars" for capital, his
+impressive name, sublime effrontery, and a pedigree free from anything
+suggestive of his new purpose in life, the ex-flour merchant "lit" into
+our everything-figured-out-ahead-and-every-promise-made-taken-at-par
+town of Boston. To appreciate the lights and shadows of this event, one
+should know Boston and, at the same time, Addicks. Every country boy
+will remember Tom Hood's poem beginning:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">I remember, I remember the house where I was born,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">With the little lattice window where the sun came peeping in at morn,<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>and can recall milking-time in July or August when, sitting on the
+rail-fence surrounding the barn-yard, he watched the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[69]</a></span> pigeons snipping
+up grain, the old hen scratching up worms for the chicks, the ducks and
+the drakes and the geese and the ganders proudly waddling back and
+forth, among and around the fluffy ducklings and goslings, and the
+bull-pup sound asleep by the side of the tortoise-shell cat. Probably he
+will think of some particular milking-time when the calm, contented
+serenity of the barn-yard was suddenly disturbed by the unexpected
+descent in its midst of a neighboring peacock, who, apparently
+unconscious of the consternation produced by his entry, proceeded
+proudly to spread his dazzling plumage to convince every one, from Uncle
+Cy, on the milking-stool, and mild-eyed Bess, down to the white
+fan-tailed dove, that he was&mdash;It.</p>
+
+<p>Conjure up the picture&mdash;the peacock at milking-time in the farm-yard;
+thus Addicks came to Boston&mdash;though it is far from my intention to
+identify the bucolic background I have drawn with the Hub of the
+Universe.</p>
+
+<p>Boston, up to this time, had been singularly free from the mushroom
+variety of millionaire which had sprung up overnight in such numbers in
+New York and Philadelphia. Proudly defiant of a product so alien to all
+her traditions, her citizens would have sworn that no votary of modern
+high finance could exist over one curfew-toll within her gates. For
+Boston had her own financial eminence, of a character in keeping with
+the chill conditions of conservatism and rectitude appropriate to the
+metropolis of the New England conscience. She had her Stock Exchange,
+her numerous great corporations, her scores of single and
+multimillionaires, and it was her boast that her capital had played the
+greatest legitimate part in the country's growth. She had furnished a
+large percentage of the money which had created our vast Western railway
+system; she had found and made the superb copper-mines of Michigan and
+Montana, and in all parts of the land branches of her sturdy
+institutions were vitally assisting the miracle of America's
+development. Notwithstanding what these wide-flung enterprises imply of
+commercial push and audacity, Boston, at the time Addicks discovered gas
+there, was one of the most trusting wealth-investing communities in the
+world. She had her simple rules of busi<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[70]</a></span>ness conduct which years of
+usage had consecrated into all-powerful precedent, but her brokers and
+capitalists, however fearful of all things quick or tricky, had never
+previously figured as candidates for what in Western parlance are
+described as "come-ons."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[71]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XI</h2>
+
+<h3>HOW ADDICKS CAPTURED BOSTON GAS</h3>
+
+
+<p>At the time Addicks "lit" in Boston that city numbered among her
+proudest possessions several extremely rich gas companies, and they were
+owned by her "best people." To do business with Boston's "best people"
+is no easy task, and up to the advent of Addicks, to do business with
+her "best people" without doing it through others of her "best people"
+who could absolutely vouch for you was an unheard-of thing. The manner
+in which the ex-flour merchant of Philadelphia managed to slip by the
+barriers and into the heart of our blue-blooded citadel affords the most
+unparalleled example of audacity of which I know.</p>
+
+<p>In many ways Boston is unlike other great American cities. Some of her
+institutions through antiquity or association have acquired a positive
+sanctity. Pedigree is important. The average inhabitant spends much of
+his time watching the grandson of his neighbor's father, to see the old
+man's characteristics crop out in him. The boy's failures will be
+remembered against his own offspring fifty years hence. It is a city of
+long memories and of traditions. In 1887 Boston, as now, consisted
+largely of her traditions, her blue-glass window-panes and her Somerset
+Club.</p>
+
+<p>Now the distinction, sanctity, and antiquity of the Somerset Club are
+quite beyond peradventure. Since Boston has been Boston she has had her
+Somerset Club, a club distinctively of grandfathers, fathers, and sons.
+The right to membership in the Somerset Club is as much the inheritance
+of a Somerset man's son as his name or as the proud title which always
+will be found affixed to his signature when he reaches man's estate, "of
+Boston." For a man to get into<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[72]</a></span> the Somerset without long years of
+waiting and intense scrutiny, not only of his own record but of his
+parents' before him, is a rare event. Yet the name of J. Edward
+O'Sullivan Addicks was up for full membership, with Boston's picked best
+for his sponsors, a few days after he "lit." How Addicks got upon the
+Somerset list Boston will never tell, and the mention of the fact
+nowadays within the club-house will empty its sideboard instanter.</p>
+
+<p>The campaign of arrangement for the advent of Addicks in Boston was more
+elaborate, more astute and expensive than was ever organized for
+exploitation of prima donna or great pianist. For months an advance
+agent had been preparing the way for his chief's arrival in a blaze of
+glory. There was talk in the papers and among the financiers about the
+wonderful water-gas process which enormously enhanced the profits of
+gas-making, and such rumor was always linked with the name of the
+brilliant Philadelphia Gas King, for so the press had already dubbed
+him. A wonder and magic immensely provocative of curiosity were woven
+about the identity of this J. Edward O'Sullivan Addicks, who it was said
+might be persuaded to visit Boston to work marvels with the stocks that
+had been "in the family" long before the present generation could
+remember. When it was sure that the great man was really coming the
+agent sought the advice of Boston's best in selecting quarters for him.
+In the Tudor, a beautiful family hotel adjoining the Somerset Club on
+Beacon Hill, a magnificent suite of apartments was taken, and though the
+great man could remain in Boston but a brief space, the furniture, the
+hangings, and even the carpets were all changed for him.</p>
+
+<p>Eminent financial tricksters have various ways of handling their
+victims. Some believe that the most skilful mode of attack is the slow,
+confident, dignified approach which allays the subject's fears by its
+solemn display of deliberation. Others (and Addicks is of this creed)
+are persuaded of the superior efficacy of the "rush-in-and-drag-out"
+method. The subject, they say, "gives up" more and quicker when the
+hurry call is sounded. It was a winter's day when Addicks "lit" in
+Boston, and circumstances had arisen, the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[73]</a></span> suave advance agent told
+various Boston's best, with whom he was in consultation, that would make
+his chief's stay much briefer than either had anticipated. So when the
+great man arrived at the club just before dinner, quite an array of
+important people were congregated there.</p>
+
+<p>Addicks ran the gantlet of the critical glances of as critical a group
+as you'll find on earth, and the word went round&mdash;no one could remember
+afterward who started it&mdash;"Typical Southern gentleman! Breeding sticking
+out everywhere!" So well had the astute advance agent done his work that
+a little dinner was arranged on the spot, and Addicks made such rapid
+progress with these reserved and conservative Bostonians that, by the
+time coffee was served, conversation had reached the stage where it was
+natural for him to send the waiter to the coat-room for his bunch of gas
+papers. The emissary returned bringing the fur overcoat with which
+Addicks always envelops himself in chilly weather. Addicks searched the
+pockets, and, apparently to his surprise, discovered that they did not
+contain the required documents, but where they should have been he found
+a small bale of 1,000-dollar government bonds, containing, one of the
+party said afterward, at least one hundred certificates. "How careless
+of my secretary!" said Addicks, nonchalantly replacing the packet in the
+pocket and motioning the waiter to take the overcoat away again.</p>
+
+<p>It was, of course, due to the admirable work of his advance agent that
+these Monte Cristo effects impressed the cultured little set who would
+have laughed to scorn such a display on the part of one of their own
+kind. In Addicks it was the dazzling eccentricity of the wonder-worker,
+and so excusable; and the free, flash, careless exhibit of wealth made
+the man's conversation and subsequent demands seem natural. Next
+morning, in discussing the work of the previous evening with his
+lieutenant, Addicks delivered himself of the wise remark: "Finance, my
+boy, like theatricals, is dependent for success on the staging, more
+even than on the actor. My experience has shown me that men the world
+over are alike&mdash;if you properly surround them, they will hiss at hissing
+time and clap at applauding time; yes, upon<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[74]</a></span> the way you stage your
+finance plays depends their success." The fact is that by no other
+method could this scenic artist of finance have set his plans moving so
+rapidly. The man had calculated to a nicety on the romantic cupidity he
+aroused.</p>
+
+<p>After dinner, Addicks at once "got down to business": "Gentlemen, my
+project is as simple as it is feasible and conservative, for I will
+touch nothing but conservative enterprises. Gentlemen, you have three
+great gas companies supplying this great city with light, the Boston,
+Roxbury, and South Boston. They are worth at the present time about five
+million dollars. I am going to buy them and spend three or four millions
+more on a new company; then I shall consolidate the four and turn them
+from coal into water-gas companies, which will sell gas to your people
+at less than they now pay, and at the same time make a lot of money for
+you and for myself. What do you say?"</p>
+
+<p>This was certainly quick action. Boston's best was breathless for a
+minute. Then some one suggested that in so weighty a matter it would be
+necessary for solicitors to investigate, for the families owning the
+stock to be consulted and agree before a proper basis could be arrived
+at on which to dispose of their holdings.</p>
+
+<p>Addicks' genius was equal to the occasion. "I regret, gentlemen, any
+seeming haste, but this is the situation: I am going to invest fifteen
+or twenty millions, or perhaps thirty or forty, in city gas properties,
+and as the project will require quite a bit of financiering, I have got
+to round it up at once, in time to slip over to London to lay it before
+my associates, &mdash;&mdash;, &mdash;&mdash;, and &mdash;&mdash;" (naming some of the great English
+lords of finance), "with whom you, gentlemen, are probably well
+acquainted. I think you will, after you have given the matter a little
+thought, agree with me that it would be a mistake to postpone the
+conversion of these magnificent Boston plants to the water-gas system
+until after other cities I have in mind are reconstructed. You see we
+can turn over but one city at a time, the system being new and competent
+engineers and builders few."</p>
+
+<p>The painful thought took shape in the minds of the dis<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[75]</a></span>tinguished little
+gathering that if they were not careful, Monte Cristo might actually
+slip out of their town without working any of the promised golden
+marvels.</p>
+
+<p>"Just what is your idea, Mr. Addicks, of how this gigantic piece of
+business could be done?" one asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Simple, simple"&mdash;the great Colonel Sellers of eye-water fame never
+looked more cool and unconcerned when calling attention to the facts,
+"100,000,000 of people, two eyes each, a bottle of my patent eye-wash
+for each at a dollar a bottle, and eye-wash made at a net cost of a dime
+a barrel"&mdash;"simple, simple; you name your price, I pay it, and the thing
+is done."</p>
+
+<p>Some one pointed out that the gas properties were valued very high. That
+in the Boston, for instance, the par value of each share was $500&mdash;and
+that it was improbable Mr. Addicks could buy it for less than&mdash;than
+eight hundred.</p>
+
+<p>"Of course, of course; I am not buying gas companies that are not well
+thought of by their present owners," returned Addicks. "I think you
+underestimate the value of the Boston Company's stock when you say $800.
+Naturally, as a conservative business man I wish to buy as reasonably as
+possible, but as I know what the future of your company will be under
+the water-gas change, I consider $1,000 a share cheap; and if you say
+so, will take it now&mdash;majority, minority and all&mdash;at that price."</p>
+
+<p>This was strong talk. In spite of their proverbial frigidness under all
+conditions, Boston's best began to get fidgety.</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed," went on the Monte Cristo from Philadelphia, "I'll do better
+than that. On second thought I will give you $1,200 a share. Think it
+over and we'll have another sit-down to-morrow."</p>
+
+<p>It took Addicks but a few days to trade, for at each sitting the staging
+was more enticing and the call from his associates in London more
+insistent. Minor difficulties were magnificently waved away. A number of
+scions of Boston's best families had good paying positions in the
+different companies; what would Mr. Addicks do with them?</p>
+
+<p>"Simple, simple," he replied; "double the time of contract<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[76]</a></span> and the
+salary; no favor to them or you; good men are very hard to get, you
+know."</p>
+
+<p>One episode that occurred about this time was allowed to get into print
+when the stocks and bonds were being floated, by way of showing what a
+tremendous fellow Addicks was. In a hired hack he had driven up to the
+club from State Street. A snow-storm was raging. After Addicks had been
+in the club a few moments word was brought in to him that the driver had
+found his sable overcoat inside the carriage. Addicks stepped into the
+vestibule to speak to the driver, and next day it was all over the
+club-house and through the "Street" that the prodigal Philadelphian,
+overcome at the thought of the unfortunate driver in his scanty clothing
+exposed to the cruel storm, had said: "My good man, take that coat as a
+present from me."</p>
+
+<p>For the truth of the story I do not vouch, nor for that other which
+explains that the door-boy who spread this tale of generosity said
+afterward, when discharged, that Addicks himself had told him what he
+had done, and at the same time had given him a five-dollar bill. He
+would have sworn the moment before that he heard Addicks tell the driver
+to take the coat to his apartments.</p>
+
+<p>Addicks got what he came to Boston for&mdash;the Boston, Roxbury, and South
+Boston Gas companies. He did what he said he would, built a new one, the
+Bay State of Massachusetts, and turned them all into the Bay State of
+Delaware, and the Bay State of Delaware turned them out on the public in
+exchange for their savings to the extent of $19,000,000 in the form of
+bonds and stock. Addicks, to use his own language, "cleaned up around
+$7,000,000," and turned to new fields, fields suited to his peculiar
+genius.</p>
+
+<p>As he looked over the United States he found but one great city which
+had not already been captured by "Standard Oil" or some of its
+disciples&mdash;Brooklyn, N. Y. To the present day Rogers swears Addicks'
+only reason for coming to Brooklyn was to hold up the "Standard Oil"
+"trustification." Addicks retorts with: "I saw it first." Whatever the
+facts, in 1892 Rogers in the midst of tagging the different companies
+was surprised and angered to find that<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[77]</a></span> Addicks had slipped in ahead and
+had secured one of those necessary to the success of his plan. He
+quickly served notice on the man from Delaware to "git," and Addicks,
+flushed with an unbroken chain of victories, as promptly returned the
+notice with, scrawled across its face, a variation of Rogers' pet
+phrase&mdash;for it must be remembered Addicks never "cusses"&mdash;"I'll see you
+in heaven first."</p>
+
+<p>If there is any one time when Henry H. Rogers is quicker of action than
+any other, it is when his notice to "git" in a stock deal has been
+returned with "sass."</p>
+
+<p>The ink was hardly dry on Addicks' answer before the Master of "Standard
+Oil" and his hosts were upon him, but not where the Philadelphian looked
+for them. While he awaited their attack in Brooklyn, N. Y., he received
+a series of hurry-up calls from his lieutenants in Boston. Rogers had
+bought the insignificant Brookline Gas Company, which supplied gas to
+one of the suburbs of Boston. It was only a $300,000 affair, but it
+possessed charter rights to come into any and all of the streets of
+Boston. This was a characteristic "Standard Oil" attack. It came out of
+a clear sky, and before the public had even a warning of it they were
+witnessing a war which looked as though it had been years in maturing.
+Rogers let it become public knowledge that the entire "Standard Oil"
+forces were to be brought to bear to crush Addicks and that untold
+millions would, if necessary, be spent in the effort. In reality he had
+most carefully mapped out a cyclonic campaign which he believed would
+not call for an expenditure of over $500,000, and which he was sure
+would in a few months drive Addicks out of Brooklyn, N. Y., and bring
+him to his knees in Boston. His fight began in earnest in 1894. Gas in
+Boston was $1.25 per thousand cubic feet, and the rate yielded a good
+profit to the Addicks companies. Rogers served notice that he would
+parallel with the Brookline Company every pipe of the different Boston
+companies and would reduce the price of gas to $1. Simultaneously he
+attacked the Addicks stocks and bonds in the market, his charters in the
+Legislature, and took away from him the contracts to supply the
+municipality of Boston with gas. For a time Addicks struck<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[78]</a></span> back
+savagely. Then, as the fight became hotter, he gave it up in Brooklyn,
+and concentrated all his resources on repelling the savage inroads
+Rogers was making in Boston. By this time the contest had grown to such
+proportions and so much bad blood had been engendered that Rogers
+declined to be mollified by Addicks' surrender in Brooklyn and refused
+to retire from Boston unless Addicks repaid "Standard Oil's" entire
+outlay and got down on his knees in public&mdash;a demand that called forth
+one of Addicks' sardonic smiles.</p>
+
+<p>Addicks had at this time additional difficulties to face. He had spread
+out his financial commitments, and now he found his stocks and bonds all
+declining. It was obvious to State and Wall streets that Rogers was in a
+fair way to drive the buccaneer from Philadelphia to the wall.</p>
+
+<p>It is at this stage that I come into the story.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[79]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XII</h2>
+
+<h3>STOCK-BROKERS NOT ALL BAD</h3>
+
+
+<p>Right here, before plunging deeper into the current of events which led
+to the organization of Amalgamated&mdash;for what has gone before is only
+that which I deem necessary setting for the story, necessary in order
+that my readers may clearly take in its meaning&mdash;it is only fair to them
+and to myself for me to say that my life has been spent in the
+stock-market for the purpose of gain. I have never in my stock
+operations set myself up for a philanthropist nor in any way posed as a
+reformer, nor pretended to be a bit better than the business I had
+chosen for a livelihood. From the first day until now I have endeavored
+to keep strictly to the principle that I would never knowingly deceive
+any man, woman, or child who, out of confidence in me, risked their
+money in speculation or investment. At the same time it should be
+remembered that the stock-brokerage business often makes queer
+bedfellows. Moreover, the true stock-operator is sometimes tempted to
+buckle on his armor and get into an exciting fight solely for the
+combat's sake, and then he may not be over-concerned about the rights
+and wrongs of the contention, if upon both sides are lined up
+professional captains of finance. The minister, the college professor,
+the dry-goods merchant, may exclaim against this, but they have never
+known the delicious tingle which, since the abolition of the tournaments
+of old, can be felt only on the great financial battlefields. If the
+critics of the stock-gambler could be put through a single minute of a
+thousand I have known they would be less brash in their denunciations.
+And let it be remembered that in these terrific dollar-wars there is as
+much opportunity for heroism, for generosity, for kindly deeds, as ever
+physical fighting affords. I<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[80]</a></span> read here in the papers of the noble act
+of a captain in the navy who has taken his life in his hands; in another
+place of a rich man who has given a million to create a charity. On the
+same page that these men are eulogized I will find references to "Jim
+Keene, the stock-gambler," etc., "heartless, soulless stock-sharp," etc.
+"Jim Keene, Stock-gambler," keeps no press agent to flaunt his kindly
+acts, but from the noble things I know he has done, and the things
+others with whom I am personally acquainted know he has done&mdash;men,
+women, and children saved from misery, pain, and death, at the risk of
+ruin to himself&mdash;I'll warrant the celestial scroll shows to his record
+as many deeds of mercy and noble daring as are credited to any soldier
+or philanthropist who has achieved worldly fame in recent years.</p>
+
+<p>The desire for sudden wealth is strong in all parts of our American
+community. Men want money, and women too, for a score of reasons&mdash;some
+good, some bad&mdash;and the stock-market is the magical place where miracles
+occur and dollars multiply themselves overnight. The agent for all the
+cupidity of the world is the stock-broker, and he sees life from a
+strange angle.</p>
+
+<p>Hundreds of letters come to me daily from all kinds of people, who have
+no other call upon me than their belief that, having at some previous
+time profitably followed my advice or advice credited to me, they have a
+right, when "the papers say" I am doing or going to do this, that, or
+the other thing in stocks, to come to me with their troubles. In 1899
+there reached me from a woman a picture of her husband, herself, her
+three children, and the aged father and mother of her husband. I wish I
+might print it, but I dare not through fear that they would be
+recognized. The letter accompanying it was one of the most touchingly
+pathetic I have ever read. I investigated the case. The statements made
+were absolutely true. The woman's husband was the cashier of one of the
+small national banks in one of the old towns in a New England State. His
+father's brother had been cashier before him. The family's past was
+thickly strewn with all those simple honors and good things which are so
+often the heritage of families of the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[81]</a></span> old, self-respecting,
+God-fearing, middle-class communities of New England and like
+long-settled sections of the country. On his death-bed the uncle
+confessed that for years he had carried upon the books of the bank a
+shortage which had arisen from mistakes. Her husband, to keep the
+family's name from stain, had continued to keep this buried, which was
+an easy thing to do, as when he was moved up from teller to cashier at
+his uncle's death the two positions were combined into one. The wife
+explained that her husband had let her into the fearful secret, and
+together they had carried it until it had eaten its way into their
+hearts. At last the man could no longer stand the strain. He had
+followed my printed sayings about the market, and now had made the fatal
+plunge. He had bought upon margin 2,000 shares of Sugar stock to see if
+it were not possible to make up quickly a shortage of over $20,000,
+because I had said Sugar was going right up; and then horror of worse
+than death had seized the wife and she had given me the awful secret,
+and a description, a word picture of what would happen if I had made a
+mistake.</p>
+
+<p>She could go no further. She did not need to. I read the letter. I saw
+the picture, and even I, who believed myself from long years of
+experience with such affairs immune&mdash;I, too, became horror-stricken. It
+was no affair of mine. I had not said Sugar was going up; as is often
+the case, some newspaper had printed what another operator had said and
+credited it to me. I was not even operating in Sugar, nor at the time
+particularly interested in it. I could not return the letter nor have
+any communication with these persons without in a way becoming their
+accomplice. The woman had said that with the purchase her husband had
+given orders to sell the stocks at twelve points' rise.</p>
+
+<p>Try as I might to look at the matter in a cold-blooded business way the
+picture haunted me&mdash;the old gentleman proud of his family's long record
+of sturdy honesty, the old mother's faith in her boy, the wife seeing on
+each of her children the brand of a felon father, and the husband
+watching each day's market prices to see whether they had brought him a
+verdict which meant State's prison or permanent re<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[82]</a></span>lief from the
+haunting fear which had become his never-absent shadow; and I read and
+reread the closing lines of the faithful wife: "Mr. Lawson, you will put
+Sugar up?&mdash;you surely will, just this once&mdash;and we will teach the
+children to pray for you and yours, and God answers this kind of
+prayers, you know He does."</p>
+
+<p>The picture haunted me; I saw it in the market prices; I heard the story
+in each tick of the ticker and each rustle of the tape; and every time
+my eye caught "SUG," the stock-exchange abbreviation for Sugar, I
+winced, as one does at the dentist's probe&mdash;well, I could not stand it.
+I determined to put up Sugar&mdash;that is, I determined to try. Little the
+woman knew what she asked when she wrote: "You will put up Sugar?" She
+had read that a stock operator works magic, but it had never entered her
+head that his wand was a stick of dynamite a thousand times
+concentrated&mdash;a stick of dynamite that the law of stock-market averages
+shows goes off in his hand nine out of every ten times it is handled,
+and that when it goes off there is nothing more for the handler but the
+minister, the flowers, and the head-stone; indeed, often the explosion
+leaves nothing with which to buy even a head-stone! Little she thought
+that it might strain the wealth of the Bank of England to move Sugar up
+twelve points. I moved it up, and it went so easy&mdash;oh, so easy!
+that&mdash;well, I will let the first description I pick from my scrap-book
+from among a hundred from the daily press tell the story:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p class='center'>[From the <i>Boston Journal</i>, March 17, 1899]</p>
+
+<p class='center'>LAWSON'S LUMP</p>
+
+<p class='center'><span class="smcap">his coffee sweetened with quarter of a million&mdash;made it in
+sugar thursday in two hours' trading</span></p>
+
+<p>A quarter of a million in a day!</p>
+
+<p>That was Thomas W. Lawson's record for March 16, 1899.</p>
+
+<p>The celebrated "Unthroned King of State Street" was on top
+of the Sugar market; that is the reason of it all.</p>
+
+<p>Sugar was the big card of stock speculation yesterday.</p>
+
+<p>Indeed, the stock had one of the wildest days in its
+history, and its high price&mdash;$170&mdash;reached amid great
+excitement&mdash;is the highest on<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[83]</a></span> record. The speculation was
+something tremendous, and it has been through the
+speculation that the people who have been under the
+impression that the markets were drifting into a dull and
+uninteresting condition have had a sudden awakening.</p>
+
+<p>From the opening it quickly advanced to 149, receded a point
+or more, and shortly after noon started sharply upward. The
+demand for it came so rapidly that the tape could not keep
+up with it, and the excitement grew as the demand increased.
+The scenes on the floors of both the New York and local
+boards were most exciting. Blocks of 500 and 1,000 shares
+changed hands frequently, and at one time the quotation in
+the Boston market was fully four points behind that of the
+New York list. The small army of shorts scrambled to get
+covered up, and everybody was in a fever of wild excitement
+over the marvellous movement. Before it had culminated the
+price reached 170, or a gain of twenty-nine points over the
+opening&mdash;the most remarkable display of strength in so short
+a period of time that this remarkable stock has ever shown.</p>
+
+<p>Broker Lawson did the buying, and while the excitement was
+running high he bought freely. He had taken 20,000 shares
+all told before the advance had fairly gotten under way at
+from 143-1/2 to 144. At 170 he gave an order to sell 20,000
+shares at a limit of 155, and obtained an average of over
+160, thereby netting an estimated snug profit of $250,000 or
+more within two hours. Asked as to whether the strength in
+Sugar meant a settlement of the Sugar war, Mr. Lawson smiled
+and said: "There has never been any Sugar war."</p>
+
+<p>The conservative people on the Street are disposed to regard
+the whole movement as a piece of clever manipulation.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p class='center'>[From the <i>Boston Herald</i>, March 16, 1899]</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Thomas W. Lawson was the mover in the deal, and his
+orders for 20,000 shares early in the day excited other
+buying, which encompassed the astonishing rise. What point
+Mr. Lawson had to trade upon is his own asset, if he had any
+point, and it would not matter so far as the event was
+concerned whether he had a point. The market was in a
+position to respond to orders of these dimensions, and it
+did respond.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p class='center'>[From the <i>New York Journal</i>, March 17, 1899]</p>
+
+<p>The frenzied brokers fought like madmen around the Sugar
+post. The wildest sort of excitement prevailed throughout
+the day. The rest of the floor was practically abandoned,
+and brokers crowded, pushed, elbowed, and yelled frantically
+in their efforts to fill orders. There was no warning. The
+sudden jump of the stock almost threw the brokers into a
+panic. Men became ferocious in their efforts to fill orders.
+Those on the outside made wild rushes to get into the
+whirlpool. Men who are generally calm fell over each other
+in their excitement. Scores of arms whipped the air, and men
+yelled themselves hoarse. So great was<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[84]</a></span> the din and so
+compact the yelling crowd that those on one side of the post
+did not know the bidding on the other. At one point Sugar
+was going at 159, and five feet away it was bringing 164.
+While almost at arm's-length farther away it was going at
+160, and farther around the post at 162.</p>
+
+<p>The excitement became general among the offices of
+stock-brokers as the news flew on the ticker. Members of
+firms who were not on the floor gathered about the tickers
+in excited groups and watched the pyrotechnic fluctuations
+of Sugar to the exclusion of all other stocks. The
+quotations came out at two and three points apart. One
+minute the stock was away up, and the next it seemed to fall
+hopelessly. Then it would as suddenly soar upward again. It
+reached 170, and in five minutes it was down to 152.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p class='center'>[From the <i>Boston Post</i>, March 22, 1899]</p>
+
+<p>Late in the afternoon Mr. Lawson was induced to give the
+following explanation of his movements in Sugar: "You know
+it is not conducive to the health of an active operator to
+talk on what he is doing, for if he expects to retain his
+hirsute adornment he must either keep jumping so lively that
+none of the expert scalpers who haunt the jungles of Wall
+Street can find him long enough in one spot to cut the floor
+from under him, or he must envelop himself in mystery so
+dense that all seeking for him will grow color-blind; but on
+this particular commodity&mdash;Sugar&mdash;I can depart from the
+standard formula.</p>
+
+<p>"I have been twenty-nine years dodging the scalping-knives
+of Wall Street Comanches, and, although I am still here, I
+have many places on my head where the hair refuses to grow,
+and, strange to tell, almost all the bare spots are labelled
+'Sugar.' I suppose that I have, during the past ten years,
+contributed money enough to Sugar to endow a fair-sized
+asylum for tailless bears. It has never seemed to matter
+whether I bought or sold, went long or short, the dollars
+which I secured by the employment of pick and shovel, brawn,
+muscle or gray matter, all seemed to follow one another into
+the relentless maw of that modern Saccharine Titanotherium.</p>
+
+<p>"Way back in 1890 I invested the profits of my Lamson
+deal&mdash;$700,000&mdash;in 10,000 Sugar at 84, and in a few days,
+amid brilliant fireworks, I bade it adieu, when it
+gracefully dropped below 50. Again, four years ago, I
+decided I could make no better long-time investment of
+$700,000 or $800,000 Electric profits than to short Sugar
+from 61 to 70. In eleven days it took $1,500 more than my
+profits to even up my accounts.</p>
+
+<p>"Thinking these things over of late, I determined to make a
+final demand on astute and relentless Wall Street for my
+accumulated deposits&mdash;a kind of
+please-give-me-back-my-losses demand. I carefully loaded up
+two weeks ago to the extent of 20,000 Sugar in the thirties,
+and feeling the atmosphere was redolent of opportunities,
+last Friday I bought 20,000 more, the last 5,000 of which in
+a rather open and frank<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[85]</a></span> way that seemed but fair to my
+scalping New York friends. Well, you know the rest. It took
+fire. I cleaned up something over $700,000, and put out a
+short line of 30,000 shares, the last of which I have
+covered to-day at something over $350,000 profit. Strange as
+it may seem, I was quit. I have struck a balance with Sugar,
+and it gets no more of my money.</p>
+
+<p>"I am one of the few Bostonians who are contented to live in
+the knowledge that Wall Street is too big and bright and
+cute a metropolitan centre for country boys to monkey with,
+and you can say I am so tickled to get back my bait that I
+will never again, never, wander away from home. There is one
+moral that may be drawn by Wall and State streets from the
+last few days in Sugar. It is this: It is not necessary
+to-day, any more than it was in old days, to work deals with
+false stories or fakes. In doing what I did in Sugar I
+depended on no fakes nor stories. I simply followed Charley
+Osborne's old admonition: 'If you want to bull stocks, buy
+'em. If you want to bear 'em, sell 'em.' I bought 'em and I
+sold 'em. These are Sugar facts as far as my movements have
+affected them!"</p></div>
+
+<p>For years after, even up to to-day, this yarn turned up in the press in
+different parts of the world, and every time I read it I chuckled to
+myself, for I see a big manly fellow, president of a bank now and asking
+no odds of any, for he can buy 2,000 shares of Sugar at any time and
+draw his check to pay for it against a bank account honestly earned
+since the day his wife wrote that letter.</p>
+
+<p>And I see a grateful mother teaching three youths to say a certain
+prayer, and then I forget the critics' scathing sermons against stock
+gamblers. It does not pain me when my own children ask, "Why do they say
+such awful things about the stock operator?" I answer: "Oh, they mean no
+harm; they don't know the stock gambler they write about."</p>
+
+
+<p class='center'><span class="smcap">one of the system's shadows</span></p>
+
+<p>That my readers may not drop this chapter with a false idea of the
+results of the stock-broker's efforts to "live and let live," I will
+give them an illustration of one of the counterbalances of the law of
+compensations.</p>
+
+<p>In the same year with the Sugar transaction, in an evil moment my mail
+brought me the following letter:<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[86]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p><i>Dear Sir</i>: I have read with interest your proclamations
+about "Coppers." I am not a rich man, but I have about
+$20,000 lying idle which I should like to add to, and will
+put it into anything you advise.</p></div>
+
+<p>The writer received the following answer from my secretary:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Mr. Lawson instructs me to say he received your letter of
+&mdash;&mdash; and he knows no better investment than the stock of the
+Amalgamated Copper Company, which will be offered for public
+subscription next week. In the advertising which will
+accompany the offer you will note that it is to pay 8 per
+cent., is now earning 16, and should sell at $150 or $200
+per share. It will be offered at par. Not only does Mr.
+Lawson personally believe in every word in the
+advertisements, but they are vouched for by such men and
+institutions as the National City Bank of New York, Henry H.
+Rogers, William Rockefeller and others, whose names are
+synonymous with success in business affairs. Mr. Lawson does
+not hesitate to advise you to invest your $20,000 in this
+stock, provided you are not looking for an investment that
+is absolutely safe, that is, one that should not, in these
+times, pay you over 3-3/4 or 4 per cent.; but if you are
+looking for a semi-speculative investment, that is, one that
+will pay you over 6 per cent., and where the chances are
+good for large profits, he recommends this stock.</p></div>
+
+<p>Later I received the following:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Upon your advice I purchased 200 shares of the Amalgamated
+stock at $100 per share. When the stock dropped to 80,
+remembering your strong advice I purchased 300 shares more,
+and after it had advanced to 120, thinking it was surely
+going to the 150 or 200 you mentioned, I bought 1,000,
+putting up my 500 shares as margin. It has now dropped back
+to 100, and the many stories I read in the papers are
+causing me much anxiety. Do you still believe as you first
+wrote me?</p></div>
+
+<p>To which he received the following answer:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Mr. Lawson instructs me to say he received yours of &mdash;&mdash;.
+His faith in the Amalgamated property, the men who control
+and manage it, and the stock is the same as it always has
+been. He, like yourself, added to his holdings at 120, and
+as high as 129, and knowing what he does about the property,
+and what the men who control and manage it, and with whom he
+is intimately associated, say to him, he cannot believe the
+yarns which are appearing in the press are other than the
+vaporings of those stock-market critics who must write their
+opinions of prominent stocks even though they have no means
+of actually knowing anything about them.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[87]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>While Mr. Lawson regrets that you have spread yourself out,
+as you say in your letter, he can only answer your question
+by the above, to wit, his faith in Amalgamated is the same
+as from the beginning.</p></div>
+
+<p>Later I received the following from one of the penal institutions of the
+country:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>You will observe by the postmark on this letter my present
+place of residence. You probably knew that before, as the
+press has had much to say about me of late.</p>
+
+<p>I trust you and your associates are satisfied with
+yourselves when you observe the hell you have caused others.
+When I first wrote you about the Amalgamated stock I was an
+honest, prosperous man. I had never committed a crime nor
+done any great wrong to my fellow-beings. Relying upon what
+you said publicly and the well-known record of the
+Rockefellers and their partners, I committed acts which I
+now know to my everlasting sorrow I should not have
+committed. I had no intention of doing wrong, but when I saw
+ruin staring me in the face I used, as I supposed only
+temporarily, funds intrusted to me to protect my stocks from
+being slaughtered at declining prices by the sharks of
+brokers whom I dealt with. The rest is the old story. My
+wife and children are disgraced and oppressed with poverty,
+and I am serving a five years' sentence in this institution,
+buoyed up only with the hope that I may live to face you and
+your kind, that you may have the pleasure of seeing the
+wreck you have wrought&mdash;in the hope that I may satisfy a
+desire which night and day gnaws at my very soul, a desire
+to say to you, face to face: "Look upon a man who, although
+a branded criminal, is as much better than you and your
+associates as it is possible for one to be," and to ask you
+how your wife and your children enjoy the luxuries they have
+when they know at what price they were secured, for I shall
+surely, if I live, insist upon your wife and children
+hearing from my lips what agonies a wife and children, who
+are as dear to me as yours are to you, have suffered because
+of your baseness.</p></div>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[88]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XIII</h2>
+
+<h3>THE "SYSTEM" VERSUS WESTINGHOUSE</h3>
+
+
+<p>In 1894 I had just wound up one of the most strenuous and successful
+financial campaigns I ever engaged in. This was the Westinghouse deal,
+of which the papers were full at the time. George Westinghouse, to whom
+the world owes the air-brake and countless improvements in electrical
+machinery, having surmounted the difficulties that clog the early steps
+of the inventor who would be his own master, had taken rank, some years
+before, among the prominent public figures of the day. The various
+corporations in America bearing his name had prospered amazingly; his
+ingenious appliances had displaced home products in the European market;
+and titles and decorations had been conferred on the inventor, though
+these last, like the sturdy American he is, Westinghouse had put aside.</p>
+
+<p>This great success was wholly the fruit of George Westinghouse's
+personal endeavor. It owed nothing to extraneous influences. It had been
+accomplished along those manly, independent, Yankee lines which have
+made that name synonymous with hustle and success in every part of the
+civilized world. Above all, the man had organized and developed his
+companies without the aid of the "System" or without truckling to its
+votaries. In consequence he had incurred the deadly hatred of some of
+its lords paramount.</p>
+
+<p>In the business world Westinghouse's great rival was the General
+Electric Company. To mention "Westinghouse" and "General Electric" in
+the same breath was to speak of a thing and its antithesis. Everything
+George Westinghouse was or had been the General Electric was not and had
+never been. The General Electric had been and was by leave<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[89]</a></span> of the
+"System"; in fact, was one of the very foremost examples of its methods.
+Its high-priest was J. Pierpont Morgan; its home, Wall Street; its
+owners, the principal votaries of the "System." It had grown because of
+their favor and by means of the rankest exhibitions of
+knock-down-and-drag-out methods of consolidation of all competitors
+but&mdash;Westinghouse.</p>
+
+<p>Just previous to 1894 Westinghouse had rejected a dazzling scheme of
+uniting the two institutions on an immense capitalization which would
+have absorbed millions and millions of the people's savings and earned
+millions in commissions for its projectors. Wall Street's indignation at
+his hardihood knew no bounds, and at the time of which I write the
+yegg-men of the "System" were laying for him with dark-lantern and
+sand-bag.</p>
+
+<p>To appreciate the story of what the "System" tried to do to George
+Westinghouse and what he withstood, one must know the man. He embodies
+in many ways the conception of what the ideal American should be. His
+remarkable six feet and odd of physique and his fertile, powerful brain
+are the admiration of all true men with whom he comes in contact. In
+spite of his unparalleled success and the accumulation of a great
+fortune, he retains the same simplicity of manner and conduct that
+characterized him when working at the bench for weekly wages, and with
+all his shrewdness and force of character he has preserved a simple,
+honest, childlike belief in humanity. Single-handed he conducted all his
+great enterprises on a plain, patriarchal basis, using their revenues
+for extensions, and depending on his faithful and well-satisfied
+stockholders for such further accessions of capital as the business
+might in his judgment need. About the time General Electric was most
+anxious to bolster up its jerry-built structure with the solid
+Westinghouse concern, the latter institution had begun the erection of
+some big new plants which required immediately several millions
+additional capital. Westinghouse prepared to apply to his stockholders
+for the required funds, and the announcement was to be made at the
+annual election soon due. Suddenly the financial sky became overcast.
+The stock-market grew panicky and money<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[90]</a></span> as scare in Wall Street as rain
+in Arizona in May. It was just such a situation as the "System" might
+have brought about to accomplish its fell designs had it possessed the
+power to work miracles.</p>
+
+<p>And the "System" took care of its advantage. At a tense moment in that
+soul and nerve trying period, with Wall and State streets full of talk
+about General Electric's probable absorption of Westinghouse, General
+Electric being then at its highest price, $119 per share, the
+Westinghouse companies held their annual meetings and the big inventor,
+confidently facing his stockholders, quite regardless of conditions
+which he thought could have no possible bearing on his concern's
+splendid prospects, came forward with his demand for the millions
+required to complete the projects already under way. This was the
+signal. From all the stock-market sub-cellars and rat-holes of State,
+Broad, and Wall streets crept those wriggling, slimy snakes of bastard
+rumors which, seemingly fatherless and motherless, have in reality
+multi-parents who beget them with a deviltry of intention: "George
+Westinghouse had mismanaged his companies"; "George Westinghouse,
+because of gross extravagance, had spread himself and his companies
+until they were involved beyond extrication unless by consolidation with
+General Electric"; these and many more seeped through the financial
+haunts of Boston, Philadelphia, and New York, and kept hot the wires
+into every financial centre in America and Europe, where aid must be
+sought to relieve the crisis. There came a crash in Westinghouse stocks,
+and their price melted. From amidst the thunder and lowering clouds
+emerged the "System." "Notwithstanding the black eye the name of
+everything Westinghouse had received, it would stand by and consolidate
+and save the day!" But the "System" and its
+everything-gauged-by-machinery votaries had reckoned without their host.
+George Westinghouse was too strong a man to be thus easily shaken down.
+He threw back his mighty shoulders, shook his big head, and flung his
+great private fortune into the market to stay the falling prices of his
+securities. The movement was too strong against him at the moment, and
+his millions were but a temporary help. He got on the firing-<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[91]</a></span>line
+himself and did a thousand and one things that only a brave, honest, and
+democratic Yankee would or could do&mdash;everything but accept the cunning
+aid offered him by the "System" or its votaries. He knew too well that
+the friendly mask concealed a foe and that the kid-gloved hand extended
+him had a dagger up its sleeve.</p>
+
+<p>These were the conditions when I, as an expert in stock-market affairs,
+was called in for assistance. Here was this sound, sturdy institution
+standing for everything that was best and self-supporting in American
+finance adrift on the Wall Street shoals, and it seemed almost a
+hopeless task to attempt its rescue. But it was a task eminently worth
+while, and I undertook it with all the energy I could command.</p>
+
+<p>The problem was to restore the Westinghouse stocks to their former high
+price, and, confidence being re-established, to sell the new treasury
+stock at such a figure as would pay for the plants and other projects
+the company had under way. The completion of these meant greatly
+increased earnings and such an advance in facilities and economy of
+manufacture as would surely seal the fate of General Electric if it
+competed with Westinghouse under the new conditions. Small wonder
+"Standard Oil's" whole strength was bent to force the alliance.</p>
+
+<p>My fight had hardly begun when I saw it was to be opposed by all the
+forces of General Electric and the "System," and I concluded defeat was
+sure unless by a counter movement on their stock I could keep them so
+busy that they would have no time to interfere with Westinghouse.
+Thereupon I laid out that attack on everything connected with General
+Electric which created so much consternation at the time. To this day,
+if my enemies are asked to name the act which most conclusively
+justifies their hatred of me, they will point to my terrible General
+Electric raid. They will tell you I broke the stock from 118 to 56 in a
+day, and thereby caused one of our most disastrous panics; that I
+continued to hammer it to 20, that I compelled reorganization, and then
+did not let up. They will show you that the misery and ruin I wrought
+were beyond calculation. I will only say that, of any of the things I am
+proud of having done, I am proudest of what I<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[92]</a></span> did in General Electric,
+and, willingly, I would give over five years of my life to go through
+the experience again.</p>
+
+<p>It was a most arduous campaign, and our fate trembled many times in the
+balance. By dint of hard, overtime work, and what my enemies were
+pleased to call rank manipulation, we drove Westinghouse stock back to
+its former price, after which a strong syndicate was formed to take the
+new stock, and the righted institution at once magnificently swept on
+its international career which to-day is at its height.</p>
+
+<p>Though I had taken up the Westinghouse cause as a business venture and
+its successful termination was most profitable to me, I had entered into
+the campaign with the ardor of a lawyer defending a client unjustly
+accused of a heinous crime. But there was this difference&mdash;if in spite
+of his efforts the lawyer fails to convince the jury of his client's
+innocence it means no detriment to his fortune or his reputation,
+whereas all I had and was were involved in this stock-exchange struggle.
+The great rewards that are the guerdon of success in financial fights
+are balanced by the terrific consequences of defeat. The broker general
+engaged in surrounding his enemy requires every dollar he and his
+principals can pledge or beg, and where great forces are in conflict
+millions are burnt up to seize any vantage, as Kuroki sacrifices a
+regiment to gain a hill. I had won for myself as well as for
+Westinghouse, but if the fortunes of the war had been on the other side,
+I must certainly have been wiped out.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[93]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XIV</h2>
+
+<h3>THE ALLIANCE WITH ADDICKS</h3>
+
+
+<p>It was part of my method of conducting my stock-brokerage business to
+expose through the medium of the press or through market letters the
+stocks of corporations I thought rotten. It was also my way to work up
+bull campaigns in stocks that seemed to be selling for less than they
+were worth. With Addicks or the "Standard Oil" I had no connection. I
+had watched the Philadelphian's operations and had my eye marketwise on
+his bonds and stock, particularly on his stock, which was 100,000 shares
+of the Bay State Gas Company of Delaware, of a par value of fifty
+dollars each, and which became very active in the market shortly after
+it was created, at just under par. I thought I saw in the scheme the
+ordinary, cold-blooded, stock-jobbing, unloading-on-the-public affair. I
+had heard recounted the man's wonderful doings, particularly his
+recklessness in the purchase of the Boston companies; I "sized up" his
+mighty effort to be the tremendously rich good fellow as inspired by the
+idea and the purpose of giving his "stuff" in the stock-market a good
+send-off; and from the start I had put his property on my "to-be-watched
+memoranda" as one I might at the proper time let daylight into.</p>
+
+<p>I was tearing large strips from its values when Addicks' bankers, who
+happened to be business friends of mine, sought to enlist me on their
+side of the gas war. I remember expressing frankly my opinion about the
+contestants and their contest at the time, stating that so far as
+morality, fairness, or justice went I could see little to choose between
+Addicks and "Standard Oil." I continued to "bear" the stock until one
+day my banker friends brought me an earnest request<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[94]</a></span> from the Delaware
+financier that I go to New York and talk things over with him.</p>
+
+<p>On reaching New York&mdash;the two bankers and myself&mdash;we went directly to
+Addicks' apartments at the Imperial Hotel. Although the fortunes of war
+were rapidly crumbling this worthy's brilliant financial structure,
+there were as yet no outward signs of disintegration. His beautiful
+estate at Claymont, Del., his stock farm in the same State, his
+town-house in Philadelphia, his $30,000 apartments in the Knickerbocker
+on Fifth Avenue in New York, and the superbly furnished suite in the
+Imperial, close by, all seemed to testify to the man's boundless
+prosperity.</p>
+
+<p>Memorable though this meeting was destined to be to both of us, my chief
+sensation in approaching it was a certain curiosity as to the
+personality of Addicks, whom I had seen, but had never spoken to. I knew
+him to a "T" in my mind, but here was my opportunity to compare my
+mental "sizing-up" with the real man. The apartment into which we were
+ushered was of the low-burning-red-light, Turkish pattern. Addicks rose
+from a great divan disturbing a pose which his white cricket-cloth suit
+and the scarlet shadows made so stagy that I guessed it was for my
+benefit. I looked him over, and he returned the inspection. After the
+introduction he at once unlimbered his business gun.</p>
+
+<p>"Let's get right down to business, Lawson," he began. "I wanted to meet
+you to see if we could get together on any satisfactory basis."</p>
+
+<p>I told him that that was my understanding of our meeting. Then he wanted
+assurances that I had no connections with "Standard Oil" and that I was
+free, sentimentally and commercially, to enlist in his fight. I replied
+that I was a stock-broker and operator, and was looking for
+opportunities; no one had strings on me, and provided he made
+satisfactory terms I was free to join him; further, that when it came to
+enlisting in a fight between two such financiers as Addicks and Rogers,
+sentiment seemed to me out of place.</p>
+
+<p>"That's right," he said. "That's what I like to hear. Now, Lawson, will
+you take this fight of mine against 'Standard Oil'?"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[95]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"If you meet my terms, yes."</p>
+
+<p>Addicks looked at me. "What do you want?" he asked. "Perhaps, though,
+you'd first like to have me tell you how my affairs stand."</p>
+
+<p>"I know sufficiently where you stand," I replied, "to name my terms
+right now. If they are acceptable, I'll hear you tell where you stand
+afterward. I'll take your fight for a cash commission of $250,000 and a
+cash capital of $1,000,000, to be used in the market on joint account,
+we to divide the profits of all operations."</p>
+
+<p>Addicks smiled. "You are too high," he said. "I'll pay you $50,000
+commission and give you $250,000 capital, and after I show you in what
+good shape my fight now is and how near I am to victory, you'll agree
+that the terms I offer are good pay and fair."</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Addicks," said I, "I have just time to get dinner, look in at the
+theatre, and catch the midnight back to Boston. It is my business to
+keep posted on such scrimmages as you are engaged in. If you and your
+affairs are where I believe they are, the terms I offer are
+exceptionally low. If your affairs are as you would have me believe, you
+need no one to captain your fight."</p>
+
+<p>Addicks asked where I thought his affairs stood, and I answered: "I
+don't think&mdash;I know, or, at least, I feel quite sure I do. You are at
+the end of your rope and are practically bankrupt."</p>
+
+<p>At once Addicks grew indignant. "You are absolutely wrong," he asserted.
+"I'll admit I have had a hard fight, and that it has cost me, so far,
+considerable money; but I give you my word I'm worth between six and
+seven millions clear and clean right now."</p>
+
+<p>I bade him good-night and left. Our interview had consumed not over
+twenty to twenty-five minutes. I said to his bankers:</p>
+
+<p>"Addicks is the Addicks I have sized him up to be, only worse."</p>
+
+<p>We got back to Boston next morning, and at the opening of the Stock
+Exchange I sailed into the Bay State stock in earnest, for I felt surer
+than before that Addicks was near<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[96]</a></span>ing his finish. A few minutes after
+the Exchange opened, Addicks' banker rushed into my office and said the
+Delaware financier begged that I would return to New York at once, and
+whispered to me that in a conversation just held on the telephone
+Addicks had stated that he would accept my terms. I informed the banker
+I was not anxious for the job, but as he urged his own interest, I
+jumped on the noon train and in the evening was again in New York.</p>
+
+<p>It was a warm day and I was pleased to get a wire on the train from
+Addicks asking me to meet him at the pier, as we should hold our
+conference on his yacht, the <i>Now-Then</i>, at that time one of the fastest
+steam-yachts afloat.</p>
+
+<p>It was a night of memorable beauty. In the golden light of a dazzling
+sunset we flew up the majestic Hudson. From under the awning I watched
+the serried edges of the Palisades as we slipped swiftly by them to the
+broad reaches of tinted waters above Yonkers. Every natural influence
+conspired to make acute to me the warning whisper of my soul, which
+flashed the caution as I crossed the gang-plank, "Watch out!" But, as I
+said before, Fate hangs no red lights at the cross-roads of a man's
+career, and I plunged recklessly into the toils my Mephistophelian
+companion so artfully wove around me.</p>
+
+<p>The <i>Now-Then</i> was hardly in mid-stream before Addicks had got down to
+business. His demeanor had changed since the previous evening. All his
+bravado had disappeared; he was simple, frank, direct, and, in the
+manner of one who has made a mistake and regrets it, he commenced
+without any delay:</p>
+
+<p>"I didn't think last night I'd pay your price, Lawson. It staggered me a
+bit, but I gave it considerable thought after you left, and when this
+morning's prices showed me you were again on the war-path, I saw my
+error."</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Addicks," said I, "let's have no fooling about this matter. If we
+do business together, it will only be after there is some
+plain&mdash;brutally plain talk between us. It will do no good to trick,
+because some one will get slaughtered when the trickery is discovered,
+as it surely would be, after we hitched up together."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[97]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Then, straight from the shoulder, free from all attempt to gloss over
+the raw truth, I detailed to him the things I knew he had done to his
+former associates, and it was a tale of unbroken duplicity and
+double-dealing on his part, loss and misery for his lieutenants, and
+profits and curses for him. I ended by saying: "If we get together,
+Addicks, it will be upon my terms, and I'll see to it that you never put
+me in the position in which you have put all the others you've been
+connected with. I don't trust you and I'll watch you all the time."</p>
+
+<p>When I had finished Addicks looked at me sadly with a wounded,
+"how-this-man-has misjudged-me" expression in his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Lawson," he said, "you were never more mistaken in your life, but it's
+a matter I don't want to argue about. You'll tell me you were all wrong
+after you know me better. I'll do business with you&mdash;yes, and I'll allow
+you to make your own terms. I'll agree to them whatever they are, and
+I'll live up to the very letter of them, however hard."</p>
+
+<p>I may mention that it is a peculiar characteristic of Addicks that one
+may talk to him as though he were a pick-pocket, and he will not resent
+it, if it is "business." Where H. H. Rogers would flash into a Vesuvius
+of wrath, the Delaware statesman only smiles.</p>
+
+<p>Addicks by no means convinced me of his sincerity. I decided I would
+test him pretty thoroughly before I went further. So I said: "This seems
+the proper time for a clean statement from you as to just where you and
+your companies stand."</p>
+
+<p>I did not believe this man could make an absolutely truthful statement
+on any subject of importance, but I knew enough of his real position to
+protect me from being fooled. What was my surprise, therefore, when in
+the most open way possible he calmly spread before me a condition of
+affairs far worse than the worst I knew. He was, indeed, bankrupt and
+his corporation was in little better shape.</p>
+
+<p>As soon as I could catch my breath I said:</p>
+
+<p>"No wonder you refused my proposition last night. If your bankers had
+dreamed of this state of affairs, they would<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[98]</a></span> have had a receiver
+to-day. You cannot meet my terms. You cannot even carry out the ones you
+yourself offered."</p>
+
+<p>Addicks leaned back on the cushions of his chair in the easiest, most
+<i>insouciant</i> way imaginable. He grinned. "That's true," he replied, "but
+I never give up a ship till I feel her bump the bottom, and I am sure
+that, bad as things are, you and I can pull them out and whip Rogers to
+a standstill."</p>
+
+<p>It was a remarkable situation. Here was one of the most ruthless
+financial schemers of the age cornered for slaughter, and he had put
+himself absolutely at the mercy of the man who had bitterly fought him
+and whom he knew hated his kind. Yet he was as cool and collected as a
+bunch of orange blossoms at a winter's wedding.</p>
+
+<p>The man's supreme nerve astounded me, yet I could not help admiring him.
+I saw through his game, yet his assurance fascinated me. I thought a
+minute. I said to him: "Addicks, I'm really sorry for you, and I'll
+promise you here now to keep what you've told me sacred. What's more,
+I'll stop fighting you. I'll cover my shares and without doing any one
+any harm I'll help make prices a bit better for your securities."</p>
+
+<p>He smiled, said "Thank you!" and continued looking at me as though he
+awaited something further, a quizzical, expectant smile on his face.</p>
+
+<p>There was an interval of silence. Finally I said to him&mdash;and there were
+neither red lights nor warning intuitions to signal my peril: "Just what
+do you expect me to do, Mr. Addicks?"</p>
+
+<p>"Whatever you think best," he replied in a mild tone. Then, rousing
+himself a bit, he went on: "They say in the market that you like a fight
+and the harder it is the better. Well, I certainly have an uphill fight.
+Do as you would have the other fellow do to you."</p>
+
+<p>After that I had no further doubts of Addicks' slickness. I said to him:
+"You are certainly the shrewd man they describe you as. Now continue to
+be frank long enough to answer this one question: Did you figure this
+out as the last card to throw at me, knowing that the very desperation
+of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[99]</a></span> the case might warm me up and tempt me to tackle it for the sake of
+the fight there's in it?"</p>
+
+<p>Instantly Addicks knew his game was won. He straightened up and was the
+able, shrewd, and cunning financier who had tricked conservative Boston.
+His facts chased his figures in marvellously rapid succession, and he
+showed a knowledge of conditions, relations, and corporation tricks that
+dazzled me. For an hour he rushed on, and when at last he came to a stop
+I said to him:</p>
+
+<p>"It's unnecessary to say any more. I see the situation as you would have
+me see it, and it comes to this: If I refuse to link up with you it
+means another 'Standard Oil' victory and another wreck for Boston.
+Rogers' success means that New England speculators and investors will
+again, for the three hundred and thirty-third time, be robbed of their
+savings. If I get in, we may either avert all this or I may be ground up
+at the same time you are. However, it's too good a fight to miss, and so
+here goes. I'll link up."</p>
+
+<p>At some particularly hazardous halting-place in after-years Addicks and
+myself have often laughed as we have talked over that August evening on
+the <i>Now-Then</i>. I was easy, he asserts, and I must admit that he is
+right&mdash;I was easy. Yet no one knew Addicks better than I did then.
+Looking back along his extraordinary career, one is obliged to allow a
+certain magic as a factor in his men-and-dollar tussles. We had
+absolutely nothing in common, Addicks and I. We thought and felt
+differently about every relationship of life. A dozen other ventures,
+sure, easy, and promising infinitely greater profits, were ready at my
+hand&mdash;but he appealed to my sense of adventure, he promised me abundant
+and glorious fighting, and I forgot everything else and went with him.</p>
+
+<p>When the <i>Now-Then</i> touched her pier and I stepped ashore, it was as
+captain of Addicks' corporation and stock-market forces, with absolute
+power to wage war, make peace, and use in whatever way I thought best
+such resources of his as I could lay hands on. I lost no time. Within
+forty-eight hours of my return to Boston I had mapped out my campaign,
+reconstructed Addicks' broken lines, and gayly<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[100]</a></span> set forth on about as
+forlorn a hope as ever operator or fighter tackled.</p>
+
+<p>Nothing more desperate could be imagined than the condition of the
+Delaware financier's affairs when I assumed control. All the resources
+of his companies were pledged for loans, and the constantly falling
+prices of his securities, coupled with the discrediting stories Rogers'
+agents kept in circulation, made it difficult to keep these going. To
+pay would mean ruin, for Addicks had no further thing of value to
+pledge. At the same time, Rogers' company, which had now paralleled many
+of the Bay State Company's pipes, had secured a large slice of that
+corporation's business, and had a corps of up-to-date solicitors working
+overtime to secure the balance. Boston, in the meantime, having decided
+that Addicts' star was of the shooting variety, and on its return trip,
+was throwing up its hat in the wake of the "Standard Oil" band-wagon.
+The city government and the Massachusetts Legislature had awakened to
+the enormity of Addicksism and were boiling over with that brand of
+virtue which the "System" and "Standard Oil" know so well how to rouse
+in American breasts by way of American pockets. By this time Rogers'
+investment in Boston had grown from the half-million he had in the
+beginning estimated as sufficient to annihilate Addicks to three and a
+half millions, a million and a half of which represented real property,
+and the balance, all kinds of expenditures made in the fight to crush
+the Delaware financier, a large part of it being invested in the votes
+and favor of State and municipal authorities.</p>
+
+<p>Chief among the enemies of Addicks at this period was the young and
+brilliant boss of Boston, its reform mayor, the Hon. Nathan Matthews,
+and thereby hangs a swinging tale. When the Addicks-Rogers gas-fight
+broke out in Boston this Nathan Matthews was at the zenith of his
+political career, and was rather a greater man than even reform mayors
+generally fancy themselves. He was at that state of development in the
+lives of aspiring persons which compels the average spectator to debate
+whether the swelling of the cranium should be met by a larger hat-band
+or by a sweep<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[101]</a></span>ing haircut. <i>En passant</i>, Addicks' Panama had had its
+fifth enlargement to accommodate the successive bulges of his brow.</p>
+
+<p>Now, the city of Boston's contract with the Bay State Company for gas at
+a dollar and twenty-five cents, which had run a long term of years, was
+just expiring. One bright June morning the mayor's secretary telephoned
+the secretary of the Mogul from Delaware that His Honor of Boston,
+desired converse with the Gas King. If those who overheard the dialogue
+can be credited, the parley was of this character:</p>
+
+<p>"This is the mayor of Boston, the Hon. Nathan Matthews."</p>
+
+<p>"This is J. Edward O'Sullivan Addicks, Gas King and United States
+Senator-to-be. What would you with me?"</p>
+
+<p>"I would hold converse with you in regard to a contract of much moment
+which will expire in a few days."</p>
+
+<p>"Well and good. My office is in West Street. Give your card to my first,
+second, or third secretary and I will not keep you waiting long."</p>
+
+<p>"The office of the mayor of Boston is at the City Hall and my first or
+under-secretary will make things agreeable while you wait. When will you
+call?"</p>
+
+<p>"I would have you understand, Mr. Mayor, that any one to talk gas with
+J. Edward O'Sullivan Addicks, Gas King and United State Senator-to-be,
+comes to his office."</p>
+
+<p>"Good-day to you, Mr. Gas King and United States Senator-to-be."</p>
+
+<p>"Good-day to you, Mr. Mayor."</p>
+
+<p>I do not, of course, guarantee that the conversation took exactly the
+form here given it, but no injustice has been done its substance, nor
+would it be possible to estimate in miles the breach it created. From
+that telephonic encounter date the earnest efforts of Matthews and
+Addicks to do up each other, in which both were successful to a degree
+that filled their hearts with Indian pleasure.</p>
+
+<p>A few days later public announcement was made that the Brookline Gas
+Company, Rogers' corporation, had been awarded the contract for lighting
+Boston, and that hence<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[102]</a></span>forth the legal price of gas to the consumer was
+to be $1 per thousand feet. This was due notice to all concerned that
+"Standard Oil" had captured City Hall, and Addicks realized his error.
+He sought the mayor's office, but the mayor had no time to see him. His
+companies met the new rate. There was nothing else for them to do.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[103]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XV</h2>
+
+<h3>THE GREAT BAY STATE GAS FIGHT</h3>
+
+
+<p>It was to this condition that I had to adapt my campaigning plans. I
+determined first to raise the market price of Addicks' securities; to
+turn the tide against the "Standard Oil" by that most potent of
+stock-market weapons, publicity; and then to attack Rogers from the rear
+through the City Hall. For Addicks to attempt to match pocket-books with
+Rogers and "Standard Oil" in corrupting city or State officials I knew
+would be useless; and besides a fundamental stipulation in the agreement
+with the Delaware financier on the <i>Now-Then</i> had been that under no
+circumstances should bribery or corruption be allowed to enter into any
+of our plans while I was connected with the enterprise. I had always
+held, do now, and always shall hold, that the meanest crime in the
+calendar of vice is bribery of the servants of the people. I felt pretty
+sure, moreover, that I could play a card that would more than offset the
+dollars of "Standard Oil." Nathan Matthews was on the high-road to the
+governor's chair, but I happened to know that, however ambitious he
+might be for political preferment, his temperament rendered him more
+avid for distinction in business. Addicks had within his gift the
+richest plum in all the Boston commercial world. As controller of the
+affairs of the Bay State Company of Delaware, which controlled the
+nomination and consequent election of the officers of the old Boston gas
+companies, he could award to any one he pleased the presidency of these
+corporations, together with the large salary that went with the
+office.<a name="FNanchor_6_6" id="FNanchor_6_6"></a><a href="#Footnote_6_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a></p>
+
+<p>My plans in shape, I rushed to the firing-line. I began with a statement
+to the investors of New England and the gas consumers of Boston brimming
+over with facts and fig<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[104]</a></span>ures. Then I fired a volley of candid details as
+to the manner in which city and State officials had recently betrayed
+the public's interests. Lastly, I discharged at "Standard Oil" a
+broadside which my attorneys and friends assured me meant jail on a
+libel charge. I put my banking-house and my personal guarantee behind
+the old and new loans, and proceeded to roll up my sleeves in the
+stock-market. I got results at once. A change became apparent in public
+sentiment&mdash;the rottenness of Addicksism was overcome by the stench of
+"Standard Oil." The prices of Bay State stocks and bonds shot up; loan
+funds were offered freely and at lower rates of interest.</p>
+
+<p>There were, however, reprisals. Rogers met my onslaught by a man&#339;uvre
+new in "Standard Oil" tactics. He came into the open, issuing a
+proclamation over his own signature which gave me the lie, at the same
+time tearing off a yard or two of my skin and throwing on a bucket of
+brine to remind me I had lost it. This attack was just off the press
+when I was out with a rejoinder which he, in after-years, referred to as
+quite the hottest thing of its kind he had ever read. In it I calmly,
+but in that "chunk English" which those who really wish to convey the
+truth naked can always find handy, told him plainly who he was,
+explicitly what "Standard Oil" was, and exactly who and what I was. I
+opine that about either assault there was nothing dignified, generous,
+or refined, but in stock-exchange battles one has not time to scent
+shrapnel. The immediate result of this interchange of deckle-edged<a name="FNanchor_7_7" id="FNanchor_7_7"></a><a href="#Footnote_7_7" class="fnanchor">[7]</a>
+insults was to daze the public. "Standard Oil" attacked and actually
+replying; Rogers assaulting Lawson and Lawson sending back worse than he
+got&mdash;almost anything might happen next. It was right here I got to
+Rogers' <i>solar plexus</i>. I came out with another plain public talk, and
+gave him the choice of haling me into court&mdash;in which event I pledged
+him my word I would send him and his associates to jail for bribery and
+other crimes&mdash;or of acknowledging to the world he was licked and on the
+run. He was silent and I loudly claimed victory. The price<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[105]</a></span> of Addicks
+stocks quickly emphasized our success by a further advance.</p>
+
+<p>Thus far the campaign appeared to be working smoothly, and I turned my
+attention next to my rear attack. I began negotiations with Mayor
+Matthews for the withdrawal of his support from Rogers. It was a
+difficult task, but after much man&#339;uvring I landed my big fish. I
+promised him the presidency of the Boston, South Boston, Roxbury, and
+Bay State gas companies for the term of three years, at a salary of
+$25,000 per annum, with the explicit understanding that he was to allow
+me, as his vice-president, to see that the bargain between us was lived
+up to. When the trade was made it was understood that the fact of
+Matthews' change of base should be kept secret, and that he should not
+assume the office until the end of his term as mayor of Boston. With
+that agreement the deal was clinched, signed, sealed, and delivered.</p>
+
+<p>In order that my readers may comprehend the events that follow, it is
+necessary that they understand something of the complications in which
+Addicks' manipulations had involved that corporation.</p>
+
+<p>When Addicks purchased the several Boston gas properties he organized a
+company, the Bay State of Delaware, in which this ownership was vested.
+In order to facilitate the financing of the new corporation and for
+other manipulative purposes of his own, Addicks created an inner
+corporation, the Bay State of New Jersey, owned by the treasury of the
+Bay State of Delaware, to which he turned over the stocks of the Boston
+gas companies. These the Bay State of New Jersey transferred to the
+Mercantile Trust Company of New York as collateral for the twelve
+million Boston Gas bonds which had been sold to the investing public.
+While to all intents and purposes the Bay State of Delaware was owner of
+the subsidiary properties, the contract with the Mercantile Trust
+Company was made with the Bay State of New Jersey, and it was to the
+president of the latter corporation (Addicks) that the Trust Company was
+bound to deliver the proxies for the gas stocks in its possession, three
+days before an annual election. Knowledge of this subcutaneous
+corpora<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[106]</a></span>tion was confined to Addicks and his immediate associates, and
+the Delaware financier alone quite grasped its potentialities.</p>
+
+<p>Hitherto Addicks had used the proxies to elect himself president of each
+of the subordinate corporations, drawing the several salaries which went
+with the offices. To prevail on him to give up these places and their
+emoluments to a man he hated as bitterly as he did Matthews was a
+difficult task, but his situation was desperate. Finally, he agreed. I
+did not know till long afterward that this reluctant compliance was
+yielded only after Addicks had had a secret session with his Bay State
+directors, at which they voted him, by way of salve for his resignation,
+a sum equal to three years' salary, $75,000.</p>
+
+<p>The mayor, who was a lawyer, prided himself on his shrewdness, and was
+fully alive to the serpent strategy of Addicks. He determined that the
+prize he had secured should not slip through his fingers for lack of
+precaution. We had many legal pow-wows in which the most astute lawyers
+at the Boston bar were called in, and finally the directors of the Bay
+State made an iron-clad contract with Nathan Matthews, agreeing to
+deliver over to him whatever proxies it, the Bay State Gas of Delaware,
+received from the Mercantile Trust Company of New York, on a given day
+before the annual election, with which he, of course, could elect
+himself president. This contract was signed by Addicks and his directors
+and by all the officers of the Bay State of Delaware corporation, and
+was passed on and approved by the eminent law sharps both sides had
+retained.</p>
+
+<p>A few days after the document that made Nathan Matthews supreme boss of
+Boston Gas was conveyed to him, there came an explosion. Like the
+premature bursting of a bombshell at a Fourth of July celebration, the
+transaction "leaked," and the press announced in sable head-lines that
+Mayor Matthews had sold out, that Addicks was on top, and that Rogers
+and "Standard Oil" would surely be found beneath the <i>d&eacute;bris</i>. Matthews
+has always claimed that this "leakage" was a piece of Addicks' double
+dealing; Addicks declares it was a part of Matthews' and Rogers'
+deep-laid<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[107]</a></span> plan to give him the double cross. Anyway, as a hurrier-up of
+coming events the news was most successful, although its effect was
+somewhat of the nature of that produced by the throwing in of an
+overdose of soda at a candy pull&mdash;the pot boiled over, and the air for a
+time was permeated with the odor of burned sweets. In spite of all
+public and private criticism Matthews budged not a jot, and confirmed
+the reports. I made the most of our triumph over "Standard Oil," and for
+a few days the public took to it, too. Then came one of those return
+waves of sentiment which may always be counted on in any contest in
+which "Standard Oil" is engaged. From mysterious places and in
+untraceable ways the report became current that victory was really with
+Rogers instead of with our side; that the deal was a smooth piece of
+Machiavelian work; that Matthews when he took the helm was to steer our
+ship alongside one of Rogers' forts and perhaps drop anchor under a row
+of his concealed guns.</p>
+
+<p>This rumor alarmed me. I lost no time in running it to earth, and
+discovered to my consternation that Matthews had spent the night before
+he made the agreement to come over to us in New York, at the home of H.
+H. Rogers. Exactly what had occurred there, or what their programme was,
+I don't know. Long after this episode had slipped into gas history, at
+the time when Rogers and myself were doing business together, I asked
+him to enlighten me on this one point, and he did to the extent of
+saying, "Matthews only did what I approved of." This certainly redeemed
+Matthews in my eyes from the reproach of having sold out his friends.
+There is nothing more despicable than a man who, after having consented
+to be "put" will not "stay put"&mdash;even though the first "put" be of a
+questionable character.</p>
+
+<p>This new complication demanded immediate action. I called on Matthews to
+make public announcement that I was to be his vice-president, and thus
+set at rest the reports that were fast destroying the beneficial effects
+of our coup. I argued that such an announcement would convince the
+public that victory was with us and not with Rogers. My surprise may be
+grasped when the Mayor placed this icicle in my hot palm:<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[108]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Lawson, it has long been my ambition to show the public of Boston
+and gas consumers what I could do with this situation, and now that I am
+absolutely assured of gas supremacy, I would have you and all others
+distinctly understand I will run it as I deem best, regardless of the
+wishes of any one."</p>
+
+<p>Nathan Matthews was destined later to learn that in an Addicks edifice
+there are secret trap-doors and concealed passageways available for
+quick escape in emergency, and that the term "absolutely assured" is of
+relative value when used in high finance, with Addicks to interpret the
+relativeness. A few days after the mayor had shown his colors the annual
+election was "pulled off" in an unexpected manner. The Mercantile Trust
+Company delivered its proxies to the president of the Bay State <i>of New
+Jersey</i>, who promptly re-elected himself and his friends to their old
+offices.</p>
+
+<p>Next morning the public, the press, and the ex-mayor were alike
+surprised to learn that J. Edward O'Sullivan Addicks was still president
+of all the Boston gas companies; that General Sam Thomas, of New York,
+and Thomas W. Lawson, of Boston, were vice-presidents; and that the
+expected and widely heralded Matthews turnover to Matthews had been
+indefinitely postponed. There was a tremendous "towse" for a few days
+during which time I tried my hand at public-opinion moulding, and so
+successfully that all interested saw that the tide had really turned,
+and was running swiftly against the heretofore invincible "Standard
+Oil." Rogers tried to stem it by causing it to be known that Matthews
+was to carry the new complication to the courts, but we quickly disposed
+of this possibility by reaching a settlement with our man. This was
+brought about by the payment to Matthews of a number of thousands of
+dollars, which Addicks afterward informed me he had entered in the
+gas-books as "balm salary." From this event until August, 1895, it was
+one continuous running fire with Rogers and his crowd, with a constant
+gain to our side in public opinion, though final victory was still far
+off because of the unlimited money resources of "Standard Oil." In fact,
+it gradually became evident that, though we might hold out, it was
+impossible<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[109]</a></span> to whip "Standard Oil" to an open acknowledgment of defeat.</p>
+
+<p>The phase of the problem that gave me keenest cause for uneasiness was
+the possibility I recognized of treachery in my own camp. I had become
+painfully aware that Addicks was getting impatient and was ready at any
+favorable moment to make one of his quick Judas turns, which would land
+him safe with Rogers as the price of the slaughter of the rest of us.
+True, I had taken all possible precautions to safeguard my own and my
+friends' interests against his craft by securing from him and from the
+subsidiary companies iron-clad power to act for them without
+consultation. To get this I had had to use great pressure, for he had
+balked long and hard against giving it. This was the condition of
+affairs when I decided to stake everything on one move.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>* Certain of my critics have seized upon the transaction
+with Mayor Matthews, narrated in this chapter, to say: "He
+bribed the Mayor and is no better than other bribers."</p>
+
+<p>The fact is, that the only thing the Mayor of Boston could
+do in the gas war&mdash;take sides with Rogers, grant a permit to
+the Brookline company to open the streets and come in
+competition with our companies, thus compelling, in the
+interests of the people, a reduction in the selling price of
+gas from $1.25 to $1.00&mdash;the Mayor had already done. There
+was nothing more in his power, and the only object we had in
+securing his services was to put him between our companies
+and Rogers, in the belief that Rogers, owing to his former
+relations, would not dare fire through him.</p>
+
+<p>I never, directly or indirectly, bribed Mayor Matthews; but,
+on the contrary, only induced him to do what he had a moral
+right to do and I a moral right to ask him to do.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_6_6" id="Footnote_6_6"></a><a href="#FNanchor_6_6"><span class="label">[6]</span></a> See page <a href="#Page_109">109</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_7_7" id="Footnote_7_7"></a><a href="#FNanchor_7_7"><span class="label">[7]</span></a> Mr. Lawson's proclamations and market communications are
+invariably printed on the finest grade of deckle-edged paper.&mdash;<span class="smcap">The
+Publisher</span>.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[110]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XVI</h2>
+
+<h3>PEACE NEGOTIATIONS WITH ROGERS</h3>
+
+
+<p>Having made up my mind that the time had come for a final engagement, I
+decided myself to try legitimately to settle with Mr. Rogers, and
+prepared two letters which, if he were willing for us to get together,
+would pave the way for a meeting. These letters I sent by my secretary,
+Mr. Vinal, to Mr. Rogers at Fairhaven. My readers, in weighing this odd
+correspondence, must bear in mind what the relations between Mr. Rogers
+and myself had been. We had vilified each other in every imaginable way,
+and I knew, or at least I thought I did, that the "Standard Oil" magnate
+would not hesitate to use any written communication of mine that he
+could lay hold of to bring about a split between Addicks and myself. I
+had good evidence that he believed that in such a rupture lay his only
+chance of bringing home the quieting blow he had been trying to inflict
+on us. Letter I. read as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p><span class="smcap">Henry H. Rogers</span>, Fairhaven, Mass.</p>
+
+<p><i>Dear Sir</i>: My secretary, Mr. Vinal, will hand you this
+letter. If after reading it you are desirous of further
+communication with me, he has instructions, after you have
+returned this one to him, sealed in the enclosed envelope,
+to hand you another, which if after reading you return to
+him in another enclosed envelope, he will bring to me with
+whatever verbal answer you may care to send.</p>
+
+<p>My secretary knows nothing more of his errand or the
+contents of either letter. He can, therefore, give you no
+further information. If you do not call for the second
+letter, I will consider you do not care to pursue the
+subject further, which will lead me to notify you that the
+Boston gas war will end in a most sensational way next
+Wednesday.</p>
+
+<p class='indent2'>Believe me, sir,</p>
+<p class='indent1'>Yours respectfully,</p>
+<p class='right'>(Signed) <span class="smcap">Thomas W. Lawson.</span></p></div><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[111]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Upon his return from Fairhaven Mr. Vinal informed me that Mr. Rogers,
+after reading this letter twice, folded and placed it in the envelope I
+had sent and handed it without comment to him, whereupon my secretary
+delivered to him letter II., which was a type-written communication on a
+plain bit of paper, addressed to no one, signed by no one, and bearing
+no marks to identify the sender:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>There is a gas war now existing. Upon one side is the
+"Standard Oil." Upon the other the Addicks Bay State
+companies.</p>
+
+<p>After a fight has been begun there are but four things
+possible:</p>
+
+<p>"Standard Oil" can sell out to the Bay State.</p>
+
+<p>The Bay State can sell out to the "Standard Oil."</p>
+
+<p>They can come together by consolidation; or</p>
+
+<p>They can continue fighting until one or the other has been
+annihilated.</p>
+
+<p>Nothing else is possible. Therefore, one of these four
+things is to be the outcome of the present war.</p>
+
+<p>If you can be shown now that if one of the first three is
+not settled upon before next Wednesday the fourth will be
+impossible beyond that date, and that it is absolutely in
+the power of one man, without consultation with any one, to
+bring about the accomplishment of any one of the first
+three, you will meet that man before next Wednesday and make
+your selection.</p>
+
+<p>I can absolutely prove to you that this war will not
+continue after next Wednesday, and that it is absolutely in
+my power, without consulting any one, to do any one of the
+three things you signify you desire done.</p></div>
+
+<p>Mr. Vinal reported that Mr. Rogers also read this letter a second time,
+but slowly and carefully, as though he were weighing each word, and
+then, sealing it in the envelope, passed it back to him with: "Say to
+your employer I return to New York to-morrow, Sunday night, and shall be
+at my office, 26 Broadway, from 9.30 on Monday morning till five in the
+afternoon; that I shall dine at my house, 26 East 57th Street; that I
+shall be through dinner at eight o'clock, and that I go to bed at 10.30.
+Tell him that any man who has an important communication to make to me
+affecting a matter in which I have large interests will be welcome to
+call on me between the hours I have named, provided he notifies me a
+little while in advance."</p>
+
+<p>When my secretary, whose practice it was to give me the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[112]</a></span> minutest
+details of such affairs as this errand, had reported all that had
+happened, I at once sent a message to 26 Broadway stating that I would
+be at Rogers' house at eight o'clock on Monday night, and on the stroke
+I pushed his electric latchstring. His man had hardly taken my hat when
+Mr. Rogers himself came down the hall with outstretched hand.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[113]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XVII</h2>
+
+<h3>A MEMORABLE CONFERENCE</h3>
+
+
+<p>If the years of my life are protracted beyond the Psalmist's threescore
+and ten, even though the events that chance in the comparatively long
+future seethe and struggle as strenuously as those that befell in the
+eager, vivid procession of yesterdays which makes up my past, my
+memory's picture of this meeting will always hang where the lights cast
+their kindest reflections.</p>
+
+<p>I had left Boston on the noon train, and got down to my hotel, the
+Brunswick, on Fifth Avenue, by six o'clock. In those kind days of good
+memory when New Yorkers really lived instead of looping-the-loop through
+life, the Brunswick was head-quarters for Southerners and Bostonians of
+the old school. To-day its bricks and mortar and the picturesque iron
+balconies, from which two generations of America's celebrities reviewed
+the marching armies of peace and war, are heaps of refuse; for the old
+Brunswick has had to give place to yet one more of the twenty-storied,
+emblazoned hostelries, whose alabaster halls, frescoed walls, mosaic
+floors, and onyx and silver bathtubs are designed to minister to the
+comfort of our great and free people when they needs must wander from
+the luxury of their homes. When I had dressed I crossed over to the old
+Delmonico's opposite, and, in a secluded corner beside an open window
+which gave full view of the passing show on Gotham's great boulevard, I
+sat and listened to old "Philip," who, time out of mind, had been
+high-priest of the famous Frenchman's temple of appetite, as he posted
+me on the latest doings of the town where no one remembers further back
+than yesterday, and to-morrow doesn't count. Ordinarily I should have
+lingered for hours<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[114]</a></span> with "Philip" and his tidbits, but that night my
+mind was a mad steeplechase of memories and hopes, all starting and
+finishing at 26 East 57th Street, and I fear he must have thought he had
+failed in the plump little duck which I left unpicked, and in the bottle
+of Chianti which I hardly sipped.</p>
+
+<p>At 7.30 I lit my cigar and started for what I felt was to be the tomb or
+the forcing-house of all the air-castles I had cherished from boyhood.
+At last I was to meet the real champion; I was to tussle hand-to-hand
+with the head of the financial clan, the man of all men best fitted to
+test to the utmost the skill and quickness which I had picked up in the
+rough and tumble of a hundred fights on State and Wall streets&mdash;Rogers,
+wary, intrepid, implacable, the survivor of bloody battles in comparison
+with which mine were but pink skirmishes.</p>
+
+<p>I had carefully put aside that half-hour between dinner and the moment
+for my appointment to run up and down my mental keyboard under what to
+me are the most favorable conditions possible&mdash;an evening walk through
+the streets of a great city. Some men can invite their souls only in
+sylvan solitudes, but the flare of light, the clash of traffic, the
+kaleidoscopic procession of humanity, with its challenging contrasts
+shifting and seething on great metropolitan highways, breed in my mind a
+sense of calm, cool remoteness in which all the glitter and excitement
+of the spectacle suggests only its appalling transiency.</p>
+
+<p>From the gay carnival of Broadway I cut across through the brownstone
+gloom of 27th Street into Sixth Avenue, where the tired men and women of
+the toiling millions sat in their doorways or at their windows over the
+shops resting after the heat and travail of the day. Some watched the
+sidewalk antics of their children&mdash;perhaps speculating on the
+possibility that this or the other among that merry throng of urchins
+might rise to be an alderman or even a city boss&mdash;perhaps President of
+the greatest republic on earth&mdash;or&mdash;transcendent bliss&mdash;a Rogers or a
+Rockefeller.</p>
+
+<p>From 42d Street I turned up Fifth Avenue, lifting my hat and exchanging
+a word with Mr. and Mrs. Russell Sage,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[115]</a></span> and for an instant, as I left
+them, my wandering thoughts took a new twist, for Mrs. Sage had informed
+me that "Father and I are on the way to prayer-meeting"&mdash;early evening
+prayer-meeting in New York! For an instant I was in one of those tiny
+New Hampshire villages, a forgotten haven of rest and simplicity,
+innocent as yet of steam, machinery, or trolleys, for the sweet lady and
+the angular man with the pained gait which spoke in loud tones of the
+unbroken store-shoe could belong in no other than a rural place. But the
+image of the New Hampshire village only flitted across my mind's film,
+for my truant senses seized on a message over memory's telephone:
+"Russell Sage has $100,000,000." One hundred millions, and I was back on
+earth again, but as I walked the thought was buzzing in my brain: "Is it
+possible that that countryman has <span class="smcap">made</span> <i>one hundred million dollars</i>,
+when the expert carpenter who started at the birth of Christ to trudge
+the world until from his honest labors he had accumulated $1,000,000 by
+laying aside each day all the wage he was entitled to, one dollar, had
+at the end of 1,900 years only a little more than half that sum?"</p>
+
+<p>At last I turned the corner of 57th Street, and when I looked down Mr.
+Rogers' home-like hall and grasped his outstretched hand and heard his
+"Lawson, I'm glad to see you!" I would have sworn it was hours and hours
+since I left the little table in the corner of Delmonico's.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>The chief impression I recall of my experience that night is gratitude
+for Henry H. Rogers' unexpected kindness, and admiration for his
+manliness, ability, and firmness. When this memory rises in my mind I
+regret "Frenzied Finance" and all the consequences with which it is
+fraught for him and his connections. When the American people are
+aroused, as they surely will be, to demand restitution and are in the
+act of brushing, with a mighty sweep of indignation, back into the laps
+of the plundered the billions of which they have been robbed, and
+"Standard Oil" and the "System" break and fall like trees before the
+gale, I doubt, even if Henry H. Rogers be brought face to face with
+ruin, that he will feel half the pain I shall, for I know that the
+picture of that<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[116]</a></span> memorable night will surely come back to me with all
+the vividness of reality.</p>
+
+<p>But as my mind harks back, there clashes with this another, a hellish
+picture, which the same Henry H. Rogers painted with the brush of
+Amalgamated, and a procession of convicts and suicides trail slowly
+toward me out of the canvas. Then I realize that my pen is but the
+instrument of a righteous retribution and that no personal feelings,
+however tender, must be allowed to interfere.</p>
+
+<p>"Come this way," said my host, striding ahead of me along the hall. "In
+here we can have our talk and our smoke undisturbed." He led me into the
+big, empty dining-room and closed the door.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Rogers," I began, "it is kind of you to be so friendly after the
+mean things we have said of each other. Am I to understand you don't lay
+any of all that has passed up against me?"</p>
+
+<p>"Lay it up against you, my boy? Drop that all out of your mind. You
+probably know I talk to the point and mean what I say. If you had hit
+below the belt as that&mdash;Addicks has, I <i>would</i> lay it up against you and
+a hundred years would not make me forget it. I know what you've done and
+why you've done it, and it was as much your right to do it as mine to do
+what I have done. I have nothing against you, and if events place me in
+a position where I can do anything to make your job easier without
+hurting my own interests&mdash;mind that, without hurting my own interests&mdash;I
+will do it. You have my word for it."</p>
+
+<p>We sat within a few feet of each other, and I looked squarely into his
+eyes as he said, "You have my word for it," and they were honest
+eyes&mdash;honest as the ten-year-old boy's who with legs apart and hands in
+pockets throws his head back and says: "Wait until I am a man, and I
+will do it if I die for it!" I looked into them and I knew "My word for
+it" was all gold and a hundred cents to the dollar. For a minute we
+gazed steadily into&mdash;through each other, and I knew he was reading away
+into the back of my head. Inwardly I said: "If I do business with this
+man for a day or for a lifetime, I will never face him and give him my<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[117]</a></span>
+word for one thing and mean another," and in the years after when we did
+millions upon millions of business, with only each other's word for a
+bond of fair treatment, not once did I depart from the letter of my
+resolution. Up to the recent famous "Gas Trial," where our roads
+suddenly shot off at right angles, owing to a foul act of perjury, Henry
+H. Rogers never tired of meeting all his associates' attacks upon me
+with: "Lawson's word is gospel truth for me."</p>
+
+<p>When we dropped our eyes, both evidently satisfied, he said: "Now, what
+have you to say to me?"</p>
+
+<p>I spoke my piece rapidly and without interruption: "There are four
+things possible, as I wrote you&mdash;only four. I will take up the fourth
+first. I have absolute power to speak for all our local companies. If
+we, you and I, come to no settlement by to-morrow night, I will, without
+warning to any one, confess a default to the notes of our different
+companies and have a receiver appointed. As our stocks and bonds are
+held by our best investors all over New England, and as no such move is
+suspected, there will be a terrific rumpus. In the crash I shall go down
+with Addicks and the rest, for we have all put our personal resources
+behind the enterprise. I will see that the howl following the crash
+shall be such as all must hear, and I will call attention to the illegal
+acts of every one&mdash;your companies, Addicks' companies, and the city and
+State officials that have made such conditions possible. I don't think
+you will be able to stand against the cyclone this crash will raise; but
+even if you do, the receiver, having no interest to pay on bonds, will
+be in a position to smash the price of gas to seventy or seventy-five
+cents, and make it impossible for you to get possession of our companies
+for so long a time that the consumers will never allow you to get the
+price back to a profitable one. Have I made it clear that you cannot, as
+you were counting on doing, continue this fight till you have us tired
+out and crushed?"</p>
+
+<p>His answer came as clear, quick, and sharp as the click of a revolver:
+"Perfectly, provided you can do the thing you say."</p>
+
+<p>"I will prove to you I can."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[118]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"It is not necessary," he clicked back. "Do you give me your word that
+you can?"</p>
+
+<p>"Absolutely."</p>
+
+<p>"I am satisfied. Go on."</p>
+
+<p>"That leaves only three possibilities," I continued. "You buy us; we buy
+you; or, we consolidate. I will take the third first. Under any
+circumstances or conditions will you join forces and do business with
+us?"</p>
+
+<p>"Under no circumstances nor conditions will I do any business with
+Addicks. He has played me false, broken his word, and lied to me when
+there was no necessity for doing so, and no man who has done this once
+can ever do business with me a second time."</p>
+
+<p>I once stood by a mechanism through which passed a strip of metal.
+Click! 'Twas cut. Whir! 'Twas a cylinder. Click! Whir! Click! A corner,
+an edge, an end, and b-r-r-rr! It was dropped, a metallic cartridge, to
+do its part in peace or war. Even more fascinating was it to see this
+human machine eject the product of its whirring brain.</p>
+
+<p>"Then we have but two possibilities. Will you buy us out at the price we
+must have?"</p>
+
+<p>"What is the price?"</p>
+
+<p>"Sufficient to make good the promises that I have made to Addicks, my
+friends, and the public since I have been in command," I replied.</p>
+
+<p>"Pass that by as an impossibility."</p>
+
+<p>"Then, Mr. Rogers, we are down to this: You must sell and we must buy
+you out."</p>
+
+<p>"Right. Now, how do you propose to buy?"</p>
+
+<p>For months the ablest financiers and business men of Wall Street and
+Boston had striven to start up negotiations with Mr. Rogers with a view
+to settlement, and all had dropped them without even getting in an
+opening wedge, and here was I at the end of fifteen minutes of my first
+meeting, with my task half accomplished. I went on:</p>
+
+<p>"There is something more you must do, Mr. Rogers. You must assist us in
+buying, which means you must sell at the terms you and I agree are the
+only ones we can meet. Therefore I will run over our situation. You have
+certain<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[119]</a></span> property, consisting of the Brookline Company and miscellaneous
+investments in connection with it. What cost does it stand you?"</p>
+
+<p>Frankly, he went over what his Boston gas-war equipment consisted of and
+what it had cost, which, boiled down, amounted to $3,500,000. He then
+said:</p>
+
+<p>"Let us figure what it will be worth to you when, it being known you
+have won out, you will have additional prestige and no competition."</p>
+
+<p>We agreed upon $2,000,000 as representing the probable appreciation in
+what we were to acquire from him over and above any increase to our own
+securities.</p>
+
+<p>"I'll take cost, $3,500,000, if it is cash or the equivalent, or I will
+take $4,500,000 if it is to be credit of a nature that assures me my
+money eventually, and I will divide my profit of a million equally with
+you. This sum will of course be in addition to anything you may be paid
+by Addicks."</p>
+
+<p>Instantly, as if we had agreed upon it in advance, our eyes met&mdash;his
+cold, clear, and steely business&mdash;mine, I hoped, the same. For a second
+neither of us said a word. Then I said: "Thank you for the offer of the
+$500,000 profit, but we will cut all such offers out. My pay comes from
+my side. I never yet have known the man who could take pay from both
+sides and do his work properly." I slowly drew out the word
+"<i>properly</i>," and he in the same tone of voice said:</p>
+
+<p>"'Properly' is better than 'honestly.' You know, Lawson, there is much
+cant in these times of which 'honesty' is the refrain."</p>
+
+<p>"You and I will make no headway discussing moral ethics, Mr. Rogers,
+although we may in discussing business practices," I said, and I chalked
+up on my mental black-board: "Test One." Then I went on:</p>
+
+<p>"I agree that $4,500,000, in anything we can pay in, is as fair a price
+as $3,500,000 cash, provided we find a credit guarantee satisfactory to
+you; unless indeed you are willing to allow us the $500,000 you just
+offered me."</p>
+
+<p>"What I offered you was part of my profit. I will not allow any of it.
+My price is the same whether I pay you anything or not."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[120]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Very well, Mr. Rogers, then the situation is this: In any trade that is
+made it will first be necessary for you to turn your property over to us
+to manage in conjunction with our own. When the public see it in our
+hands, our securities will advance and we can, by issuing additional Bay
+State stock, sell it and secure whatever sum it will be necessary for us
+to have beyond what we can borrow on your securities. Do you agree with
+me?"</p>
+
+<p>He saw it as I did.</p>
+
+<p>"I imagine you will never consent to turn your property over to us on
+our say-so that we will later pay you for it?"</p>
+
+<p>"You are right there. I would not take J. Edward Addicks' guarantee in
+any form he could possibly put it. Once he got his hands on my company,
+for even thirty days, he would so far misuse it that he would
+deliberately default for the purpose of returning it to me in a damaged
+condition, and, in addition, would play some of those tricks which are
+second nature to him."</p>
+
+<p>"It will be necessary for us then," I went on, "to give you some forfeit
+bond so large that, even if we misuse your property while it is in our
+hands, you will be repaid for the damage done, and it must be at the
+same time something of such value to us that even Addicks will be
+compelled to play fair."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, what can you put up?" Mr. Rogers asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Addicks has a right, through the Bay State Company of Delaware, to
+issue, through the Bay State Company of New Jersey, a million and a half
+new bonds for the purpose of acquiring new property. He and I have
+discussed the scheme as a last resort should any settlement seem
+possible."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you mean to tell me there is anything Addicks can get his hands on
+which he has not yet used for his companies nor stolen for himself?"
+replied Mr. Rogers incredulously.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, he has time and again assured me of this, and he would not dare to
+lie to me under existing conditions."</p>
+
+<p>He arose from his chair and stood directly in front of me and
+straightened up for what I could see was to be an unusual effort. Then
+with the force and the fire which in all his<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[121]</a></span> supreme moments make Henry
+H. Rogers wellnigh irresistible he said:</p>
+
+<p>"Lawson, I have listened to you. Now listen to me. I have taken you at
+your word, and have talked frankly and shown you my hand as I have
+seldom shown it to a stranger. To do the business I want to do, I see I
+must talk even more frankly than I already have, and I want you to weigh
+carefully what I shall say to you, for it may have a great bearing on
+your after-life. How old are you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Thirty-seven," I replied.</p>
+
+<p>"I thought you were about thirty-seven," he said. "Well, I am fifty-six
+and in experience am old enough to be your grandfather, so you can
+afford to give weight to what I am about to say, especially as I give
+you my word that I speak for your benefit first and my own afterward. I
+watched you before you hitched up with Addicks, and always thought that
+if the opportunity arose, we might do business together. We, or as you
+and others like to call us, 'Standard Oil,' have money enough to carry
+through whatever business we embark on and we know where there is all
+the business to be had that we care to engage in. We have everything, in
+fact, but men. We are always short of men to carry out our
+projects&mdash;young men, who are honest, therefore loyal; men to whom work
+is a pleasure; above all, men who have no price but our price. To such
+men we can afford to give the only things they have not got, or, if they
+have already got them, to give them in greater quantities&mdash;I mean power
+and money. You made a great mistake when you joined forces with Addicks,
+because no man can afford to be associated with the kind of a rascal
+Addicks is, the lowest I have yet come across. He is the type of man who
+cuts his best friend's throat with as much ease and satisfaction as he
+does his worst enemy's, if not with more. I fully expected that by this
+time he would have sold you out. If he had, where would you have been?
+Now, here you are from sheer desperation driven to me to avoid utter
+failure. Suppose you can do all you hope to&mdash;get the bonds, put them up
+and secure my property&mdash;do you not suppose that by that time Addicks
+will have some mine dug under you which will blow you to destruction?
+But grant<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[122]</a></span> even that he plays fair, and you bring the Boston situation
+up to a paying place, what good will it do you? You surely have more
+sense than to believe a man of Addicks' make-up can be permanently
+successful?"</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Rogers halted. I had risen, and we stood facing each other. I felt
+that I was right here playing for that greatest of all stakes, my
+self-respect, the loss of which to any man, I had long before
+discovered, means ebon failure.</p>
+
+<p>"What do you want me to do?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Say you'll come with us, and we'll fix up the Boston situation in some
+way that will forever eliminate Addicks from our affairs&mdash;your and my
+affairs. I would not insult you by asking you to sell Addicks out. It is
+unnecessary. He has no real rights in Boston. You and I can figure out a
+scheme that will take care of every other interest, and we'll give
+Addicks a lot more money than he can secure in any other way and show
+him the door. As for you and me, we'll make a lot of money and make it
+fairly and above board. But I am not thinking so much of the immediate
+situation as I am of the possibility of you joining us and working on
+some of the deals we have on hand. I shall put you in a position to make
+more money and secure more real power than you could possibly obtain in
+a like time under any other conditions. You know corporations and the
+stock-market, and you can readily see what the combination of our money
+and prestige and your knowledge of the market and investors will mean."</p>
+
+<p>Heaven knows I could see what it all meant. I had even at that time in a
+chrysalis state those plans for destroying the "System" which now in a
+rounded out and matured form I intend to be the superstructure of my
+story of "Frenzied Finance." I had, a year before in Paris, outlined
+those plans to some of the brightest financial minds of Europe, and
+while they had marvelled at their radicalness, they had pronounced them
+sound, and had offered to furnish the hundred million of dollars
+required for their execution. Then I realized that to take this money
+from bankers would hamper me in the execution of my plans, and I
+postponed putting the project in force until I could furnish the
+necessary money<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[123]</a></span> through my own connections. Again, I had big ideas as
+to the copper situation&mdash;ideas that only awaited unlimited capital to be
+brought before the people, and which, if carried out, would do for them
+what had as yet never been done&mdash;give them tremendous profits upon their
+savings. And here were the unlimited capital and unlimited business
+prestige right at hand, but&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Rogers," I said, "don't! Please don't! I appreciate your
+proposition, and I thank you, but I can't accept. I agree with you about
+Addicks, the position I am in, and the mistake or foolish recklessness I
+was guilty of when I linked up with this Boston mess, but that doesn't
+alter the case an iota. I am enlisted with this man. I knew what he was
+when I consented to take charge of his affairs, and I should hate myself
+if I sold him out, even though I knew he would without hesitation sell
+me out. I must be true to myself."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Rogers remained silent. I went on:</p>
+
+<p>"This, if I accepted your proposal, I could no longer be, even were
+Addicks and Boston Gas out of it. The man who is 'Standard Oil' wears a
+collar, and if I did what you ask I should expect to wear a collar
+and&mdash;and&mdash;I can't do it." I stopped; I was not excited; it was
+impossible to be so with that calm figure, apparently cut from crystal
+ice, so near me, but I was very much in earnest. I wondered what would
+come next. Mr. Rogers raised his hand and held it out to me, mine
+grasped it, and without a word thus we stood long enough to put that
+seal on our friendship which none of the many financial hells we jointly
+passed through in the after-nine years was hot enough to melt.</p>
+
+<p>But that friendship is ended now. Henry H. Rogers' evidence in the
+Boston "Gas Trial" was the spark that kindled the dead leaves of the
+past into the conflagration which, now spread beyond the control of man,
+has brought to light the hidden skeletons of forgotten misdeeds and
+exposed them for all the world to see.</p>
+
+<p>He at last broke the spell. "Lawson, you're a queer chap; but we are all
+queer, for that matter, and we must work along those lines we each think
+best. I once stood, just as<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[124]</a></span> you do now, in front of a man whom I looked
+up to as all that was wisest and best. He made an earnest effort to
+induce me to choose the ministry for my life-work, but I chose dollars
+instead, and I sometimes wonder if I chose wisely; but, as I said, we
+all must select our pack and, as we are the ones who must carry it, I
+suppose no one else should complain."</p>
+
+<p>After a moment's pause I shot ahead into business again as though we had
+never left it. It took me but a short time to arrange the details of our
+trade. The Bay State of Delaware was to buy all of Mr. Rogers' Boston
+investments and to pay for the same $4,500,000&mdash;$1,500,000 in six
+months, $1,000,000 in a year, the balance in a year and a half, with
+interest at five per cent.; the Bay State was to put up, as a pledge of
+good faith, $1,500,000 new Boston bonds; and as soon as such deposit was
+made, Mr. Rogers was to transfer his securities and corporation to us. I
+was to go to Philadelphia that night and arrange all details with
+Addicks and report the following day.</p>
+
+<p>It was 10.30 o'clock when I left 26 East 57th Street. I hurried down to
+the Brunswick, where I had time only to shift my clothes and catch the
+"midnight" for Philadelphia. After breakfast next morning I tackled
+Addicks. It goes without saying that I was a cyclone of enthusiasm as I
+minutely ran through what I had done, beginning with my letter to Rogers
+and finishing up with my visit of the night before. I omitted not the
+slightest detail, and when I wound up with my request that Addicks get
+the lawyers together and prepare the necessary documents for the
+turnover of the bonds and acceptance of Rogers' properties, I felt that
+my share in the Boston gas war was almost ended.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[125]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XVIII</h2>
+
+<h3>THE DUPLICITY OF ADDICKS</h3>
+
+
+<p>Addicks looked at me in a cool, aggravating way, as though my enthusiasm
+was a joke.</p>
+
+<p>"Lawson, you have done a big thing, a big thing, but you put up too many
+bonds, altogether too many. It looks to me as though that old trickster
+had got the best of us at last."</p>
+
+<p>By this time I had learned all the moods of this man and knew that when
+he assumed that air of cold, saturnine jocularity it was safe to look
+for the uncovering of some vaporized trickery. My enthusiasm oozed. I
+hastened to ask:</p>
+
+<p>"What do you mean by 'too many bonds,' Addicks? I gave him all we had.
+Sorry it was not more. We are to pay him four and a half million
+dollars, and the sooner we do it the better. Now out with what you've
+got in your mind; I won't stand any trifling."</p>
+
+<p>Addicks continued to look at me with the same insolent, critical air. He
+said slowly:</p>
+
+<p>"The reason I say you've given too many bonds is that we haven't a
+million and a half to put up. Where in the world did you get the idea we
+had?"</p>
+
+<p>In an instant I realized that this sharper had tricked me into
+apparently tricking Rogers. I was boiling with rage.</p>
+
+<p>"You have told me over and over again that you retained the right to
+issue a million and a half bonds, that you had never parted with it, and
+relying on your assurances, I have done business with Rogers. Let's have
+the truth now at once."</p>
+
+<p>Addicks is a master in the management of just such tangles as had
+developed here. I had expected him to give way<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[126]</a></span> before my indignation.
+He looked me square in the eye and turned the tables on me. He got mad
+first.</p>
+
+<p>"You have taken too much on yourself," he began vehemently. "You had no
+right to go ahead without consulting me. Because I've given you full
+swing you think you are the whole thing, but you're not. And as for your
+rushing in on me without warning and expecting me to let you turn all
+the assets of this corporation over to your new 'Standard Oil' friend, I
+won't stand for it. You can't do this corporation's business that way."</p>
+
+<p>He poured on for five minutes without giving me a chance to interpose a
+word. He seemed to be consumed with anger and paced up and down the
+office. Then suddenly he stopped:</p>
+
+<p>"We cannot afford to have any trouble, you and I, Lawson. I'm sure you
+did only what you thought best, but the fact is, I pledged some of those
+bonds for our war supplies a few months ago, and though I'm not going to
+dispute it with you, I'd swear I told you at the time."</p>
+
+<p>As Addicks talked I had been mentally reviewing the situation in which I
+found myself. I saw myself dropped out of Rogers' consideration as the
+same kind of a financial trickster that Addicks was. For the moment, I
+had no fight left; I was knocked out.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't feel bad, Lawson. You got as far with Rogers as it is possible to
+get, and you are dead right when you say that once we get hold of his
+corporation so that every one knows we've licked him, we can easily sell
+stock enough to pay him in a few weeks." As he talked he was again the
+master financial trickster, full of device and strategy. Finally I
+answered:</p>
+
+<p>"Don't say any more, Addicks. Words won't help us. I've got to face
+Rogers as soon as a train can take me back to New York, and after
+that&mdash;then I'll have something to say to you." I started to go.</p>
+
+<p>"What are you going to say to him?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Say to him? What can I say to him? At my solicitation he gave me a
+hearing&mdash;at his own home&mdash;treated me best in the world. I told him
+certain things, and pledged my word they were truths, and I've got to go
+back and tell&mdash;&mdash;"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[127]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Tell what?"</p>
+
+<p>"That I'm either as big a liar as he says you are or a fool&mdash;a doddering
+fool."</p>
+
+<p>"You are going to do nothing of the kind," Addicks declared
+peremptorily. "You're going to tell him that you were not posted up to
+date, and that I, being pressed for money, had pledged some of the
+million and a half I had told you we had. That's all. He'll see it all
+right, and he'll trade for&mdash;for&mdash;what we have left."</p>
+
+<p>I suddenly remembered that he had not told me how many bonds he had on
+hand. Just a ray of hope in the fog.</p>
+
+<p>"How many free bonds have we to offer, Addicks, suppose he is willing to
+overlook this ugly piece of trickery?" I asked anxiously.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm not quite sure," he answered, "but I can find out from the books."
+He rang for Miller, his right-hand man, the dummy treasurer of the Bay
+State Company, and said to him: "Harry, Mr. Lawson has got mixed up
+about the bonds. He thought we had a million and a half. You remember
+we've pledged some in the loans. Just how many have we now on hand?"</p>
+
+<p>"Harry" looked it up and said: "Just $904,000 worth."</p>
+
+<p>"There you are, Lawson," cried Addicks. "There's plenty to assure Rogers
+we'll do what we agree to."</p>
+
+<p>Fool that I was, I did not see his game. No one ever does see Addicks'
+game till it is too late, for no one but a moral idiot would play the
+game Addicks plays, and, thank heaven, moral idiots are so rare in life
+that it is not worth while figuring out the formula from which they
+work.</p>
+
+<p>By one o'clock I was at Mr. Rogers' office at 26 Broadway.</p>
+
+<p>He greeted me warmly. "Well, Lawson, did you get things finished up all
+right?"</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Rogers, I have a most humiliating admission to&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Hold up right there. Cut out all explanations and excuses. Have you
+brought those bonds as you agreed to, or not?" His eyes were snapping
+and shifting from one color to another.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[128]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"No, I have not got them."</p>
+
+<p>"Why not?"</p>
+
+<p>Had I been a woman I should have clapped my hands to my ears and
+screamed, so sudden and bomb-like came those two words.</p>
+
+<p>"He had used some of them and has only $904,000 on hand."</p>
+
+<p>"Only $904,000!"</p>
+
+<p>It is impossible to convey the concentrated scorn and sarcasm Mr. Rogers
+infused into these words, and he continued to glare at me for fully a
+minute, his eyes as searching as <i>x</i>-rays. When that glare shifted I had
+a presentiment it would leave me forever a stranger to him, and I made
+up my mind to turn on my heel and leave his office without a word. I
+felt that he was in the right, and that if I were in his place I'd
+glare, too.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly the expression changed. He said peremptorily: "Lawson, get on
+the first train for Philadelphia and bring back those agreements
+executed and the $904,000 instead of the $1,500,000."</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Rogers," I began, but he stopped me with an imperative gesture.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't say a word, but do as I tell you. I warned you you were dealing
+with a dog, but you wouldn't have it. Now I'm going to put this trade
+through even if I make a fool of myself thereby. You've done your work
+and that whelp shall not keep you out of its results. I'm in this now,
+and we will see if Addicks can outplay me as well as you. Not another
+word. I understand the whole thing."</p>
+
+<p>I returned to Philadelphia deciding once and for all certain things in
+regard to Mr. Rogers and others affecting the future of J. Edward
+O'Sullivan Addicks; and that night Addicks and I "had it out." I shall
+not attempt to reproduce our talk. Suffice it to state that when I
+called for the bonds Addicks began to hem and haw, and then I realized
+that he had a second time lied to me. We were in his Philadelphia
+office, and it was night and we were alone. I demanded the truth, and
+finally he told me he had no $904,000<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[129]</a></span> of bonds. As a fact he had not a
+single bond. He had used them to the last one and had deceived me for
+months. In regard to this interview Addicks has always maintained that I
+laid hands upon him, and that he was on the verge of doing some awful
+thing, but this is false. What I did was to turn the key in the door and
+then, without undue regard to his sensibilities, draw a word-picture of
+the position he had placed me in. Also I said what I thought of him.
+That is all.</p>
+
+<p>The vast profits which the stock operator makes apparently overnight are
+often subjects for the world's wonder and envy. But if the gains are
+great, the road is muddy. If those who covet the golden rewards will
+participate in a deal or two, wallow in the filthy double-dealing which
+is an inevitable part of the cost price of success, they will quickly
+realize the dark side of the glittering game, and that the sacrifices
+are in proportion to the winnings. If I had been asked that night what
+price would recompense me for the hell Addicks' shabby deceit had
+stirred up in me, I should have said&mdash;that night&mdash;that no number of
+millions would pay for the bitterness of the experience.</p>
+
+<p>It was after midnight when I left Addicks' office, and as I walked to my
+hotel I was steeped in gloom and bitterness. Before me was the most
+humiliating ordeal with which Fate had ever saddled me. I had to confess
+failure a second time, and under such circumstances that Rogers would be
+justified in believing me either a swindler or a dupe unworthy of
+respect or consideration.</p>
+
+<p>I was at 26 Broadway by ten o'clock the same morning. Mr. Rogers was in
+his main private office. His secretary was with him. He was full of
+business, and, I thought, preoccupied. As I entered, and before a word
+of greeting passed, he gave me one of his keen, appraising glances.</p>
+
+<p>"Well?" was all he said.</p>
+
+<p>"Your estimate of Addicks was correct. He has no bonds," I said, giving
+him the worst of it at once. I was desperate and certainly in no mood
+for apology. Rogers looked at me. I thought he gasped. He
+rushed&mdash;whether he pushed or pulled me, or we both slid, or how we got
+there<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[130]</a></span> I don't know&mdash;but in an instant after I had said "He has no
+bonds" we were in one of the number of 8 x 12 glass-sided pens he calls
+waiting-rooms, but which the clerks have dubbed "visitors' sweatboxes."
+He put both hands on my shoulders and he yelled&mdash;fairly <i>yelled</i>: "Say
+that again! I did not get it."</p>
+
+<p>In after-years I became on rather playful terms with the extraordinary
+bursts of wrath to which Henry H. Rogers occasionally gives way, and
+which sweep through the "System's" shrine like a tornado; but this was
+my first experience, and it was a shock and a revelation. Just what was
+going to happen next I could not imagine. I remembered afterward that
+the most definite of the impressions that chased each other through my
+mind was that Henry H. Rogers would surely have a stroke of apoplexy.
+Then that he would "bust." However, I pulled myself together and began:</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Rogers, what's the use of getting excited?"</p>
+
+<p>I got no further. He jumped backward. The next second I was in the
+storm-centre. The room was small. Suddenly it became full of arms and
+legs and hands waving and gesticulating, and fists banging and
+brandishing; gnashing teeth and a convulsed face in which the eyes
+actually burned and rained fire; and the language&mdash;such a torrent of
+vilification and denunciation I have never heard, mingled with oaths so
+intense, so picturesque, so varied that the assortment would have driven
+an old-time East Indiaman skipper green with jealousy. I was horrified
+for an instant, then surprised, and after that, if it had not been for
+my position as the cause of it all, I should have been interested in the
+exhibition as a performance.</p>
+
+<p>I could hear a stirring and a movement outside. The clerks were
+evidently aware of the scene. Forms passed rapidly across the
+ground-glass walls. After a time Rogers controlled himself. Then he said
+to me in a voice still vibrant with passion:</p>
+
+<p>"Lawson, tell me&mdash;put it in short, plain language&mdash;do you mean to say
+that after coming to me of your own accord and agreeing to do certain
+things, and then returning here<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[131]</a></span> to this very office, admitting that you
+had tricked me; after my overlooking that breach of faith and agreeing
+to take half the collateral simply because it was all you could raise,
+and because I desired to assist <i>you</i>&mdash;do you mean to say you have the
+audacity to tell me to my face that the whole thing is a lie and you
+have imposed on me?"</p>
+
+<p>"I mean, Mr. Rogers, to tell you that Mr. Addicks has just proved to me
+that he has no bonds; that he is a liar and worse."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, he is, is he? But does that justify you in coming?&mdash;oh!&mdash;--"</p>
+
+<p>Again he was off. When he stopped for breath I raised my voice and made
+it loud and emphatic enough to convince even a man temporarily insane
+that my part as audience and victim had ended. I said:</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Rogers, I can't say more than that I apologize for the part I've
+been made to play in this transaction, and I'll leave your office
+prepared to take any kind of medicine, however harsh it may be, that you
+will deal out on account of all this. Not only will I take it, but I'll
+think you are right in administering it."</p>
+
+<p>Rogers once more got himself under control. I stepped toward the door.</p>
+
+<p>"One minute, Lawson&mdash;one minute. What are you going to do? Go back to
+your associate, that gentlemanly, square-dealing fellow in
+Philadelphia?"</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Rogers," I replied, "I ask no mercy at your hands, but there's a
+limit to the things a man will stand under the mess I'm laboring with.
+I'm going to do the best I can. What it will be I don't know. There's a
+deal of money at stake&mdash;my friends', the public's, my own&mdash;I'm
+responsible for it. I've made a terrible blunder. I am paying for it,
+but nothing that has happened has altered my idea of the duty I owe
+myself and others."</p>
+
+<p>He was about to say something sarcastic. Then he choked back the words.
+His manlier nature rose to the surface.</p>
+
+<p>"Lawson," he said, "I'm sorry for you. Upon my soul I am."</p>
+
+<p>"You needn't be, Mr. Rogers. It's all right; it's part of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[132]</a></span> the game, but
+I'm awfully sorry I came near you." I opened the door.</p>
+
+<p>"One second more, Lawson," he said, stopping me and putting out his
+hand. "I'm not only sorry, but I give you my word I have not a
+doubt&mdash;no, not a suspicion of your good faith throughout this
+business&mdash;and if at any time you see your way to open up negotiations,
+you're welcome. Do you understand? You're welcome to come in here or to
+my house at any time you think you see your way out."</p>
+
+<p>I said "good-by" and bolted before my feelings overcame me.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[133]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XIX</h2>
+
+<h3>ENTER H. M. WHITNEY</h3>
+
+
+<p>It is not surprising that there should now have ensued an interval of
+silence and peace in the Boston gas war. Disheartened, disgusted,
+disappointed, I had to take stock of our position. However enraged I
+might be at the new revelation of Addicks' extraordinary veniality, the
+other elements in the situation remained as before. I could see nothing
+for me to do but to resume the tactics I had employed previous to the
+meeting with Rogers. My friends' interests had to be protected, and to
+do that war must be waged until a vulnerable spot in Rogers' armor had
+been found. But it was some days before I could screw my enthusiasm back
+to fighting-pitch. In the mean time Rogers did nothing. He, too, was
+waiting for new developments.</p>
+
+<p>To this extent the situation had altered, however: I knew just where I
+stood with Rogers, and he realized the consequences of pressing us into
+a corner. I knew he would sell his company and retire from the field if
+I could find a way to pay him for so doing. He knew that if he turned
+the screws too hard I would as a last resort turn the tables by throwing
+Bay State Gas into bankruptcy. I tried many times and in many ways to
+find means to bring about a termination of the struggle, but to no
+purpose. Our extremity was such that it was impossible to do more than
+protect our companies from a receivership. To raise new capital to
+deposit as collateral with Rogers was out of the question, for the
+public, looking on at what was evidently most disastrous warfare, was in
+no temper to buy new stock.</p>
+
+<p>The lull in our hostilities was only a pause between battles. It
+suddenly came to an end January, 1896, when a new<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[134]</a></span> enemy appeared in the
+field. Henry M. Whitney, who had built up Boston's electric
+street-railway system, and who, from his frequent dealings with the
+Massachusetts Legislature in obtaining franchises, had the reputation of
+carrying that body in his waistcoat-pocket, came before this Legislature
+with a proposition for a charter for a new and independent gas company.
+Up to this time Whitney had had no relation with the gas public. He
+based his new departure on the claim that he had come into possession of
+a patented device through which it became possible to turn the low-grade
+sulphuric coal of Nova Scotia into coke without sacrificing either the
+valuable by-products, such as ammonia, tar, etc., or illuminating gas.
+This was a very remarkable pretension, for we had long ago eliminated
+these low-grade coals from consideration as material for gas-making; but
+if Whitney's device actually was what he claimed, undoubtedly he would
+be a dangerous competitor. Whitney's petition set forth further, that
+because of the exceedingly low price of this Province coal and its
+richness in by-products he could afford to sell gas to consumers at 50
+cents per thousand feet (the legal charge was then $1 per thousand
+feet), a price which would enable the great manufacturing institutions
+and all the steam and heating plants to use gas economically for fuel
+purposes.</p>
+
+<p>The thing was sprung one day and was all over town before night. There
+were interviews and pamphlets floridly setting forth Mr. Whitney's good
+intentions toward gas consumers.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Whitney was, and is, one of Boston's most important citizens, at the
+present time president of the Chamber of Commerce, and a brother of the
+"System's" most Machiavelian votary, the late William C. Whitney. The
+application, backed by his prestige, and the roseate dreams of cheap gas
+it conveyed, created a sensation in Boston. Evidently he intended to
+have it seem that the people were in favor of the new charter, for
+simultaneously there appeared notices in the press calling for three
+distinct citizens' meetings. There seemed to be general rejoicing that
+at last the odious Standard-Oil Addicks-Bay State Gas outfit with all
+its corruption<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[135]</a></span> and unwholesome wrangling was to be deposited outside
+the city walls.</p>
+
+<p>The experience of any man who has had to do with political and financial
+affairs invariably shows him that nothing ever happens of itself.
+Thunderbolts do descend from clear skies, but an enemy and not nature
+has hurled them. A clever tactician will always look for his
+antagonist's hand behind any isolated or detached fluctuation of public
+feeling which bears in the slightest degree upon his problem. In going
+over the circumstances, looking for the correct interpretation of the
+appearance in our field of this second Richmond, I took into
+consideration the fact that H. M. Whitney was deep in a speculative
+venture, Dominion Coal, which owned vast tracts of these low-grade coal
+lands in Nova Scotia, and it was known he had been trying vainly to
+utilize their products in the locomotives of the Boston &amp; Maine Railroad
+and several other ventures in which he was a controlling factor. In one
+way it seemed reasonable that if Whitney really had found a way to get
+something out of his coal, he was justified in making the best possible
+use of it. On the other hand, I could not but see how the new project
+brought about the very situation at which Rogers had so long been
+aiming. Selling gas at 75 or 50 cents, the new company would absolutely
+command the business; the old companies must go bankrupt, pass into a
+receiver's hands, and in due course would be absorbed by the Whitney
+corporation. That would leave but one gas company in complete control of
+the Boston field, and it would not be bound to continue the low prices
+when competition had disappeared, but would be legally free to go back
+to the old rates of $1 and $1.25. In a combination which so completely
+went Rogers' way, surely his fine slim Italian hand might be perceived
+at the throttle.</p>
+
+<p>Once I had made up my mind by what we were confronted, I lost no time.
+Inquiries revealed that Whitney's alleged control of the Legislature was
+not exaggerated. In fact, it seemed eager to do his bidding in any
+direction. There was no space for negotiation or deliberation, so I
+returned his bomb with another, which, exploding in his breastworks,
+created as much of a sensation as his own had done. I did<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[136]</a></span> not believe
+Whitney could do with Nova Scotia coal the things he claimed, but,
+whether or not, if he got his charter, Rogers' object would be
+accomplished. If he were absolutely bound, however, under heavy bonds to
+do exactly as he had promised, his proposition would be so loaded that
+it might go off in his own hands and blow him to pieces. The next day I
+went personally before the Legislature and agreed to pay the State of
+Massachusetts $1,000,000 for the charter Whitney had applied for, and
+offered to give bonds to do all the things Whitney would give bonds to
+do on receipt of it.</p>
+
+<p>This proceeding caused a halt. It startled the public and set the
+Whitney forces agape. My proposition was decidedly novel, and on its
+face absurd&mdash;the State could not under the law accept a million dollars
+or any other sum for its charter&mdash;but, on the other hand, it was the
+quickest-acting horse-sense producer that could possibly have been
+brought to bear. It was discussed everywhere. Men said: "Why not? If the
+State has a valuable thing to give away, why should it not go to the one
+who will pay the people the most money for it?" I had outflanked the
+enemy, and if he gave battle it would have to be on my conditions.
+Whitney was furious, and his privately owned Legislature cursed me for
+interfering with its plans; but he and they recognized my advantage, and
+that night I had a call from Mr. Whitney and his attorney, George Towle.</p>
+
+<p>"What are you trying to do, Lawson?" Whitney asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Only trying to protect from destruction the Boston gas companies of
+which I am vice-president and general manager," I replied.</p>
+
+<p>"But my proposition is a perfectly legitimate one," Whitney objected. "I
+have got hold of this invention, which enables me to utilize my Dominion
+coal in such a way that we can make coke out of it, and at the same time
+get all the gas. This coal is cheap to produce and costs little per ton
+to bring in. So I can sell gas cheaper than you can make it."</p>
+
+<p>"And we have a plant for the manufacture and distribution of gas which
+has cost us seventy years and millions of dollars to get together, and
+we have also the customers to whom you must sell your cheap gas," I
+returned. "If you<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[137]</a></span> can really do what you claim, why not go ahead, make
+your gas, and sell it to us? We will distribute it to the people and we
+will divide the profit, and you will make as much as though you did it
+all, for you will not have a fight on hand nor be obliged to build up a
+duplicate plant. That's all you can do now; you cannot get a charter to
+duplicate our plant, because whatever price you offer the Legislature
+for it we will go you a few hundred thousand better."</p>
+
+<p>We argued for hours. I showed him that if he finally prevailed and got
+what he was after, his charter would bind him to the absolute fulfilment
+of his promise under bonds that would make it unprofitable and
+dangerous. He finally made up his mind that such a victory was not worth
+winning, and he said to me:</p>
+
+<p>"What kind of a hitch-up can I make with you and your companies?"</p>
+
+<p>"Any fair one," I replied. "This is the situation as I see it, and I'm
+going to be frank: You say you have a good scheme, but you certainly
+have a Legislature, and you have evidently entered into a compact with
+Rogers whereby he is to utilize what you have, to knock us on the head.
+Now we have fairly checkmated you, and Rogers is out. Seems to me you
+owe it to us and yourself to give us the same chance you offered him.
+Let us utilize your plans to save ourselves and to knock Rogers on the
+head. But first, are you free to go on with us without explaining things
+to 'Standard Oil'?"</p>
+
+<p>Whitney assured me that his arrangement with Rogers was tentative,
+depending on whether he could get the charter and could carry out his
+other plans.</p>
+
+<p>After some further man&#339;uvring we agreed that we should withdraw our
+offer from the Legislature, that Whitney should secure the new charter,
+and that it should be so worded as expressly to allow his company to lay
+pipes, manufacture, buy or sell gas, and to consolidate any or all of
+the existing or new gas companies in the State of Massachusetts; and
+that when the charter was granted it should belong equally to the
+Addicks Boston gas companies and to Whitney. Upon their part the Boston
+gas companies would buy of the new com<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[138]</a></span>pany all the gas it produced at
+something less than it was costing them to manufacture it under the old
+process. That bound us to nothing dangerous, and we were not forced to
+take Whitney's gas unless he actually got the results he promised.</p>
+
+<p>At this time I knew nothing whatever of the workings or the
+wire-pullings of State legislatures. My business life had been engaged
+at the stock end of corporate transactions, and I had not troubled
+myself about franchises, or how they were obtained, being content to
+play my part with the manufactured product with which we dealt on the
+market. In a general way I knew political corruption existed. That
+Rogers had obtained favors for his Brookline Company through bribing
+officials I had good grounds to believe; I had read of strange doings in
+connection with H. M. Whitney's West End Railway franchise obtained from
+the Massachusetts Legislature amid an accompaniment of much public
+scandal; but being quite without personal experience I had no clear
+conception of how things were done and, innocently enough, I asked
+Whitney before we parted:</p>
+
+<p>"How is it possible for you to get this valuable charter from the
+Legislature, particularly with such a strong and honest man as Roger
+Wolcott in the governor's chair, when Addicks has been trying
+continuously for four or five years, regardless of expense, to secure an
+ordinary one under which he can combine our gas companies?"</p>
+
+<p>George Towle answered for Whitney:</p>
+
+<p>"Lawson, that part of the transaction is no affair of yours. Mr. Whitney
+will absolutely guarantee to deliver all those goods, and should it
+prove necessary to override the governor in getting them, he will
+guarantee to do that too. You can call all that done the minute we sign
+papers."</p>
+
+<p>There was no doubt the new combination was a winner for both of us. If
+Whitney got the charter, he would be in a position to make a lot of
+money out of his Dominion Coal stock, which would surely go up with a
+bound in company with Bay State Gas stock when it became known that our
+companies were in the new deal. Besides, all the talk he would make over
+the value of the charter would help create<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[139]</a></span> a market for new stock which
+we would issue for the purpose of obtaining funds to buy Rogers out.
+Later, if Whitney's invention was what he imagined, his own profit would
+run into millions and our properties, having the sole right to
+distribution, would be stronger than ever. That meant resuscitation of
+Bay State Gas, and that all the stocks and bonds held by my friends and
+the public would return splendid profits.</p>
+
+<p>I tested the scheme in all its aspects and found only one weak spot in
+it. We, the Boston companies, were to "go snags" with Whitney in the
+results of a legislative game in which he was to bear the expense of
+getting a charter, and as Whitney and Towle said it was to cost them
+$250,000 to $300,000 to get it, it looked as if there would be some
+nasty business done at the State House.</p>
+
+<p>I do not set up for a saint, nor to possessing exclusive virtues which
+distinguish me from the ordinary American citizen who does business for
+gain. In reiterating that the bribery end of our "hitch-up" with Whitney
+did not appeal to me, I am neither pluming nor crowning myself; I am
+merely stating a fact. This was an emergency, however, I could not
+regard as a mere personal concern. It was my duty to care for the
+interests of a great property which must not be endangered by my
+scruples, and I was willing to be advised by my business friends in the
+matter. I went round among my most conservative banking, business, and
+newspaper connections and put hypothetical questions to them bearing on
+my difficulty. In nearly all instances the replies were the same, and
+the subject seemed to be regarded as a joke&mdash;what were legislatures for,
+anyway, but to be "fixed"? All who did business with legislatures
+"fixed" them, and Whitney was certainly the star "fixer." I frankly
+stated that I considered bribing a legislator as a low-down crime and
+that I did not believe it was done in our strait-laced old Commonwealth
+as freely as they all seemed to imagine. Thereupon I was sarcastically
+referred to my Bell Telephone, New Haven, and Boston &amp; Maine Railroad
+friends, to the organizers of trust companies, and to many other
+representative pillars of social and business society who had had
+occa<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[140]</a></span>sion to deal with the State. I started at once a round of
+investigation among men who would talk frankly to me, and discovered
+that a most iniquitous condition existed. Massachusetts senators and
+representatives were not only bought and sold as sausages or fish are in
+the markets, but there existed a regular quotation schedule for their
+votes. Many of the prominent lawyers of the State were traffickers in
+legislation, and earned large fees engineering the repeal of old laws
+and the passage of new ones. Agents of corporations nominated candidates
+for office, and paid the expenses of their election in return for votes
+for a favorite measure and promises to "do business." The Legislature
+was organized on the same basis; its executive officers were chosen
+because of their subservience to certain corporation leaders; committees
+were rigged to do given things and prevent other things from being done.
+Above all, I learned that the chance of a citizen of Massachusetts
+obtaining a charter from the Legislature of his State, unless he had
+money to put up for it, was about as good as a hobo's of securing a
+diamond and ruby studded crown at Tiffany's by explaining that he wanted
+it. In fact, the citizen's request would be regarded by senators and
+representatives very much as Tiffany's would regard the hobo's&mdash;as a
+joke first, then as an impertinence.</p>
+
+<p>Right here I desire to say to my readers and especially to all those
+hypocritical and ignorant people who, imagining any strong statement
+must express a strong prejudice and not a fact, will cry, "He
+overstates! He exaggerates!" that in years after when I had full
+opportunity to study at close range the Massachusetts Legislature, its
+workings and those who worked it, all the impressions I had received at
+this time were absolutely confirmed. I do not hesitate to state, then,
+that:</p>
+
+<p><i>The Massachusetts Legislature is bought and sold as are sausages and
+fish at the markets and wharves. That the largest, wealthiest, and most
+prominent corporations in New England, whose affairs are conducted by
+our most representative citizens, habitually corrupt the Massachusetts
+Legislature, and the man of wealth connected with such corporations who
+would enter protest against the iniquity would be looked</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[141]</a></span> <i>on as a "class
+anarchist." I will go further and state that if in New England a man of
+the type of Folk, of Missouri, can be found who, after giving over six
+months to turning up the legislative and Boston municipal sod of the
+past ten years, does not expose to the world a condition of rottenness
+more rotten than was ever before exhibited in any community in the
+civilized world, it will be because he has been suffocated by the stench
+of what he exhumes.</i></p>
+
+<p>To return to my story, after my investigations I again saw Whitney and
+Towle, and they, not relishing my remarks on the subject of bribery,
+told me frankly to attend to my own part of the affair and leave their
+part to them. At this stage I called in Addicks, our corporation
+counsel, and some of the largest holders of Bay State bonds and stock,
+and put before them the bargain I had arranged with Whitney. They all
+agreed it was an excellent combination, and ratified the terms I had
+proposed to Whitney. It was further agreed that Whitney should make over
+to us one-half ownership in the new company, which we were to transfer
+to the Bay State Company after the charter had been granted.</p>
+
+<p>There was every reason at this stage in the deal to regard victory as
+assured, for it did look as though the flapping sails on our
+much-buffeted and battered craft were at last to be filled with a lusty
+breeze strong enough to carry us to the harbor we had so long been
+trying to make. Besides what we ourselves could do and had already done,
+we now had Whitney for an ally in the deal, and certainly he was a
+stock-selling power throughout New England. He had agreed to go before
+the Legislature and the public, and pledge his word that his scheme
+would do all the wonderful things he had promised for it.<a name="FNanchor_8_8" id="FNanchor_8_8"></a><a href="#Footnote_8_8" class="fnanchor">[8]</a> And when
+amid acclamation the charter was awarded and it became known that we
+were its beneficiaries, I could see our stock soaring.</p>
+
+<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_8_8" id="Footnote_8_8"></a><a href="#FNanchor_8_8"><span class="label">[8]</span></a> As a matter of fact, he did, later, in the peroration of an
+eloquent address before a public legislative hearing, electrify the
+law-makers with: "I here and now pledge my word, my fortune, and my
+sacred honor to the fulfilment of these promises."</p></div>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[142]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XX</h2>
+
+<h3>AN AWKWARD ATTACK OF APPENDICITIS</h3>
+
+
+<p>In no walk of life is that head-light axiom, "Man proposes, God
+disposes," so often flashed plump in the eyes of enthusiastic travellers
+for their bewilderment or befuddlement as in finance. At this very
+moment of success I was, without knowing it, on the brink of ruin, owing
+to causes and conditions which were beyond human power to calculate or
+foresee. Here is what happened:</p>
+
+<p>All the details of our bargain having at last been agreed upon verbally,
+it was proper the principals should get together and formally execute
+the documents which should bind the trade. We arranged to meet on a
+given Saturday at the beautiful stock-farm of Parker C. Chandler, Esq.,
+the Bay State's general counsel, and as secrecy was important, a special
+train was to take the party the twenty-five miles out of Boston. By an
+unavoidable accident I missed the train, and in driving over the road in
+a bleak rain-storm, caught a violent cold. I was about three hours late,
+but when I arrived we went to work with a will and by seven o'clock,
+shortly before dinner, our contracts had been dictated to the
+stenographers and would be typed, ready to sign, by the time we came to
+our coffee.</p>
+
+<p>That dinner was a thing to be remembered. No one in New England
+understands more admirably the art of dining than does Parker Chandler,
+and he gave us a feast worthy to celebrate the brilliant new combination
+which was to end all our troubles and lead us out of darkness into the
+light. As the cheese was being served I was seized suddenly with a
+terrible pain, which was followed by convulsions. They carried me to a
+bedroom; lawyers and capitalists went<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[143]</a></span> scurrying after doctors, and in
+the confusion the documents which were all ready awaiting execution were
+put aside. It was obvious that at that moment I could not O.K. them. At
+last specialists from Boston arrived and it was diagnosed that I was
+suffering from an aggravated attack of appendicitis. At two o'clock in
+the morning, after a prolonged consultation, the consensus of opinion
+was that my next field of operations would be in another world.</p>
+
+<p>It must have been some time a little later that I, awaking to a brief
+interval of consciousness, witnessed a tableau, the memory of which
+invariably rises to my mind's eye whenever I try to mitigate or subdue
+my feelings of hatred and disgust for Addicks. The room was dimly lit;
+the two doctors were at the foot of the bed; Addicks, standing beside
+them, was looking fixedly at me. I caught his eye; doped as I was with
+opiates I saw the cold, calculating expression of his face, which told
+me as plainly as words that he felt it was all up with me, that my
+usefulness to him was at an end, and that without a thought for my
+interests or a scintilla of regret, he was calculating how to turn my
+death to his advantage. An amused conviction of the man's heartlessness
+crept over me, and then I passed out into the land of dreams.</p>
+
+<p>From that night until one bright morning ten days later, I was visiting
+other worlds than those of finance and gas; but on the tenth day they
+told me I had eluded the grim ferryman and, barring accident, might get
+out into the world again in five weeks. A suspicion which owed its
+origin to that glimpse of Addicks on the first night of my illness
+awakened in my mind, and the following day I sent for my principal
+attorney and demanded an exact statement of what had happened in the
+interval of my illness. He had kept close track of all that had
+occurred, and the facts he revealed, calloused as I was to the thought
+of Addicks' baseness, horrified me by their cold-blooded villany. My
+associates had gone ahead with a vengeance, without waiting a minute to
+see whether I should live or die. My offer to the Legislature had been
+withdrawn; Addicks had substituted his name for mine in all the
+documents, and then he<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[144]</a></span> had traded with Rogers. It had been arranged
+between them that Whitney should go on and get the charter, which was to
+allow the company to sell gas at any price, for it was not to be under
+the supervision of the gas commissioners, who had pledged the public
+that the price of gas in Boston should not ever be more than $1 per one
+thousand feet. This obtained, a new corporation was to be organized,
+into which Rogers would merge his companies, and Addicks our Boston
+properties, in such a way as to leave Bay State stock and bondholders
+high and dry, while Addicks, Whitney, and Rogers reaped tremendous
+profits. These amiable plans were being hammered into shape at top
+speed, and unless I could get into harness at once, my friends and I
+would most certainly be ground up. Head-quarters had been opened at the
+Algonquin Club, and there Addicks, Whitney, Towle, and the lawyers and
+lobbyists were holding day and night sessions.</p>
+
+<p>There was but one thing for me to do, and I lost not a moment. I sent
+for my doctors and said: "I will devote to-day, to-morrow, and next day
+to getting well; but on the fourth day I will be moved in a special car
+to Boston and then to the Algonquin Club." I explained the situation and
+showed them that regardless of all consequences this must be done.</p>
+
+<p>I shall never forget the expression on the faces of these loyal
+associates of mine&mdash;Addicks, Whitney, and the others&mdash;when I dropped in
+upon their deliberations Saturday morning, four days later. My doctor, a
+nurse, and my lawyer accompanied me, and I was swathed in flannels and
+shawls. I got to a chair, dismissed my attendants, and launched in. What
+little I had to say would be brief, I told them, but "edgy." It was all
+that. I insisted that we should go right back to our old bargain exactly
+at the place we had left it the night I was taken ill. If they did not
+comply, I would make application for a receiver for the Bay State
+companies and give to the afternoon papers the inside facts of the
+affair from beginning to end. No one doubted either my ability or my
+determination to carry out my threat. We sent for the documents that had
+been prepared at Par<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[145]</a></span>ker Chandler's, and inside of three hours these had
+been substituted and the several agreements entered into with Rogers
+formally renounced. I retired to bed that night with a chuckle of
+self-satisfaction, and a convincing appreciation of the truth of the
+axiom I have referred to.</p>
+
+<p>The low-down treachery and double-dealing characterizing this
+transaction, the utter callousness to sacred obligations it exhibits in
+men of presumed high standing and personal honor, may surprise my
+readers. I assure them that several such episodes will be told in the
+forthcoming pages of this history. Indeed, among a certain school of
+eminent financiers, loyalty is no more than devotion to the opportunity
+of making the highest profit. If circumstances shift this from the side
+of their enlistment to that of an adversary, their arms and hearts go
+where their pockets lead. It must be remembered that the Hessian who
+"down-town" is steeped in perfidy, trickery, and fraud, may appear
+before the "up-town" world as a Christian citizen and an example of
+domestic virtue. The type is not uncommon nowadays of the pleasant and
+proper gentleman, prompt to knock down any one daring to asperse his
+veracity after five any evening and all day Sunday, but who considers
+himself free to engage in any dirty juggle or misrepresentation from 9
+<span class="smcap">a.m.</span> to 4.45 <span class="smcap">p.m.</span> In office hours you run no risk in calling him a liar,
+for then he'll laugh at the joke and tell you business is business.
+However, the foregoing episode was an experience that left an indelible
+impression on my mind, and the hatred and disgust it engendered
+precipitated events out of which in the course of years came the
+offences and injuries that are responsible for the story of "Frenzied
+Finance."</p>
+
+<p>The immediate results of my reappearance were not startling. Rogers
+raved at Addicks and especially at Whitney, but he was too old a student
+of men, and the monkeys Dame Fortune makes of them, to sulk over the
+facts he could not remedy. He soon resumed his former attitude of
+waiting for something to turn up, which indeed he had maintained ever
+since my unsuccessful effort to make terms with him.</p>
+
+<p>Fate had not yet tired, however, of playing shuttle<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[146]</a></span>cock with our hopes.
+The world learned one morning of a new gas called acetylene, clear,
+brilliant, cheap, and simply made from calcium carbide. It would surely
+revolutionize gas-making the world over, and the company which could
+secure the right to it would have those who could not at its mercy.
+Addicks moved like a flash to gather in the advantage, and the
+announcement that the new gas had been proved a success was coupled in
+the press with the news that the Bay State Gas had captured the
+invention for New England, and was to pay millions for it. This did give
+a boost to our securities, and for a time it looked as though we had
+clinched our success with another rivet. What Addicks had done was this:
+He had bought the right, subject to the test of a big public
+demonstration. For this demonstration a fine flare-up was arranged.
+Eminent mayors, counsellors, and gas magnates were to attend in
+multitude, and if the invention met its engagements, there would be such
+a blaze of publicity and congratulations that we felt sure our new stock
+would go off like hot cakes. The demonstration proved in a most
+sensational way that acetylene was a failure&mdash;a tremendous explosion
+occurred; three men were killed, many others injured, and next day back
+went our stock to its old figures.</p>
+
+<p>All this time I had sought most diligently for the real solution of our
+troubles&mdash;a method of purchasing Rogers' companies. A substantial
+guarantee there must be, not only for the performance of our financial
+engagements but to insure to Rogers the integrity of his properties
+while under the domination of Addicks. The difficulty was, in the
+weakened condition of the company, to put together any satisfactory
+guarantee. Others in our group had wrestled with the problem as
+strenuously as I had. Suddenly, a few days before May, 1896, the light
+came to me. All the time the solution had been in our hands, and, beset
+as we were, it had never occurred to any of us. We absolutely controlled
+the old Boston gas companies. They were intrinsically among the richest
+corporations in Massachusetts, and although their stocks were pledged
+for the $12,000,000 of bonds held by the public, they did not owe a
+dollar. Though<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[147]</a></span> the terms of the agreement between the Bay State Company
+and the Mercantile Trust, which held their shares, precluded them from
+contracting any debts, they were empowered, through us, their officials,
+to buy or sell gas, and all their great wealth was behind such
+contracts. If, then, we agreed on their behalf to buy gas of the
+Brookline Company for a term of years at such a price and in sufficient
+quantities to give the latter concern a profit equal to ten per cent.
+dividends on its stock, surely we had complied with the very letter of
+Rogers' exaction. Testing the idea in one way and another, I found it
+sound as a bell. The problem after that was to get into shape for the
+substantial issue of new stock we must make to pay for our purchase. The
+banks and trust companies were loaded up with our securities pledged for
+loans, and before there could be any conviction behind our prosperity it
+behooved us to get all our valuables out of pawn. I went to Mr. Rogers
+and frankly told him I had solved our problem and his by a financial
+invention of my own. I entered into the details of our plan, explaining
+it would not even be necessary for us to buy any gas of him, because we
+would turn over a sufficient number of our own customers to the
+Brookline Company to secure to it the required profit. He saw in an
+instant the scheme with all its far-reaching possibilities, and
+assented. Then I broached the rest of my plan&mdash;we would pay him four and
+a half millions in six months. To do this we must sell stocks and bonds.
+Before we could do that it was necessary that he help us still
+further&mdash;he must buy of us all the bonds now in pledge and the stock of
+the Dorchester Gas Company, another Bay State asset up for security, all
+for the sum of a million and a half dollars. For this amount these
+securities would at once be released and turned over to him. Then he
+should resell them to us together with the Brookline Gas Company for six
+millions of dollars. There would be a formal turning over of the
+management of his properties so the public should be convinced that we
+really were the victors in the strife. Mr. Rogers saw my point, quickly
+ran over the details in his comprehensive way, and closed the trade
+without further<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[148]</a></span> bargaining. That time, thank Heaven, it was not within
+Addicks' power to thwart me.</p>
+
+<p>On May 1st we made our settlement in compliance with the terms I had
+arranged. The six millions of dollars were to be paid November 1st. As
+the necessary options and sales could not legally run to our company,
+they were made to Henry M. Whitney, and he simultaneously transferred
+them to us, and we elected him a director of our different corporations.
+Rogers publicly resigned and turned over to us the control of the
+Brookline Company, and we elected our own management. To all intents and
+purposes we had won.</p>
+
+<p>The settlement was the sensation of the day in financial circles, and I
+was the recipient of many generous congratulations. I had neither time
+nor inclination to take care of bouquets at that moment, however. I was
+too keenly aware of the difficulty of raising six millions of dollars in
+the limited period at our disposal. Times have changed since 1896. Then
+six millions was quite a large sum, larger than sixty millions now. That
+was before the halcyon period of "Frenzied Finance."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[149]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXI</h2>
+
+<h3>BRIBING A LEGISLATURE</h3>
+
+
+<p>That six months between May 1st and November 1st was the most crowded
+period in all my experience up to that time. Events of consequence
+tumbled over one another in startling succession. We actually lived on
+sensations. In exercising the historian's right to choose the order of
+setting down incidents I am puzzled as to which to give precedence.
+Shall I begin with the sensational bribery of the Massachusetts
+Legislature which occurred within this period, or with the episode that
+was the exciting climax of that interval of trial? About this time, too,
+occurred the laying of the foundation of "Coppers" and Amalgamated, but
+that certainly requires a chapter to itself. However, as all are starry
+examples of what made "Frenzied Finance" possible, and as any one fits
+into my story as well ahead as behind the other two, I'll take them in
+the succession above set down.</p>
+
+<p>The Whitney machine for the manufacture and moulding of legislation was
+complex but efficient. It achieved its wonders in broad daylight.
+Considering all it did and how that all was accomplished, the
+astonishing fact is that no outcry to speak of was ever raised at its
+performances. It was vastly bolder than Tammany and made fewer excuses
+for its grabbings. It must be remembered, however, that its chief
+engineer was a leading citizen, and his assistants all gentlemen of
+great respectability and admirable antecedents, and, in Boston, social
+and civic distinctions are shields behind which much may be concealed.</p>
+
+<p>Corrupting a Legislature is not something a man may do with a fillip of
+his finger and thumb. However bold the operations, the convenances must
+be observed. When really large designs are entertained, the manipulator
+sets to before<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[150]</a></span> the preceding election and has his "lawyers" at work
+throughout the country interviewing candidates and ascertaining their
+feelings. Thus a certain percentage of votes are signed and sealed in
+advance, ready for delivery at the proper time. But there is always a
+crowd of new men who must be taken care of on the spot, and these must
+be approached with tact. Some amateurs have fanatical notions of honor
+which interfere with both their own and the interests of
+franchise-grabbers. To deal with all contingencies, to take care of
+captured votes and to shape legislative proceedings along safe lines,
+requires the services of almost an army of men.</p>
+
+<p>At the head of Whitney's forces was his lawyer, George H. Towle, big of
+brain, ponderous of frame, and with the strength of an ox. A man of
+terrific temper, he knew not the meaning of the word fear. Nothing
+aroused him to such frenzy as to have to do with a legislator who
+unnecessarily haggled over the price of his vote or influence. On
+occasions when a lieutenant reported that Senator This or Representative
+That would not come into camp, Towle, with an oath, would say: "Take me
+to him, and I'll have his vote in ten minutes or there'll be occasion
+for a new election in his district to-morrow!"</p>
+
+<p>Second in command was Mr. Patch, Towle's secretary and factotum, his
+exact opposite in every way. Where Towle was brutally straight to the
+point, Mr. Patch was as smooth an intriguer as ever connected himself
+with secrets by way of keyholes and transoms. It is a Beacon Hill
+tradition that for years Towle on final-payment day would have the
+members of the Massachusetts Legislature march through his private
+offices one at a time, and, handing each of them their loot, would
+proclaim: "Well, you're settled with in full, aren't you? That
+represents your vote on &mdash;&mdash; and on &mdash;&mdash;." Then he would loudly identify
+the bill and the particulars of the service, while behind a partition
+with a stenographer would be Mr. Patch, who after the notes had been
+written out would witness the accuracy of the stenographer's report.
+When the Legislature assembled again, old members, the same story goes,
+would be requested to call on Towle to renew<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[151]</a></span> acquaintanceship. Then he
+would allow them to look over his memoranda "just to keep them from
+being too honest," as he gently phrased it.</p>
+
+<p>Subordinate to Towle and Patch was a long line of eminently respectable
+lawyers known over the Commonwealth as "Whitney's attorneys." These men
+assisted at nominations, orated at elections, and took care of the finer
+preliminary details. The first line of attack was composed of practical
+politicians of various grades&mdash;ex-senators or representatives, and local
+bosses, who were known as "Whitney's right-hand men." Below these were
+the ordinary lobbyists, the detectives, and runners, who kept "tabs" on
+every move and deed, day and night, of the members of the Legislature.
+This was the Whitney machine, and it worked together with that fine
+solidity and evenness which can be attained only by constant practice
+and much success. In comparison with this competent organization, an
+average "Tammany Gang," a "Chicago Combine," or a "St. Louis Syndicate"
+would look like a hay-covered snow-plough in August.</p>
+
+<p>It is seldom the public is given an opportunity of seeing a picture,
+drawn to life, of the Legislature of one of the greatest States in the
+Union in the act of being bribed to grant the votaries of "Frenzied
+Finance," for nothing, those things which should and do belong to the
+people, and for which the "System's" votaries would willingly pay
+millions of dollars if they were compelled to. I shall dwell on the
+performance that ensued at this juncture of my story long enough to
+present an outline of such a proceeding.</p>
+
+<p>Head-quarters for Whitney's Massachusetts Pipe Line were opened at
+Young's Hotel&mdash;Parlors 9, 10, and 11, Rooms 6, 7, 8, second story front.
+Parlors 9 and 10 were the general reception-room, while 11 was reserved
+for the commander himself and for important and "touchy" interviews. The
+rooms 4, 5, 6, 7, 8 were used for educational purposes. In the morning
+the place was deserted, but at noon the parlors began to fill up with
+the different officers of the "Machine" and their friends, trustworthy
+members of the Legislature. A little later an elaborate luncheon would
+be served, the supernumeraries eating in one room, Towle and his chiefs<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[152]</a></span>
+and the legislators in the other. At table the gossip of the morning
+session at the State House was exchanged and the work laid out for the
+afternoon legislative and committee sessions. Another interval of
+silence and peace until at 5.30 the real business of the day began. Mr.
+Patch was generally on the ground first, carrying the books in which the
+bribery records were kept, for be it remembered that the efficiency of
+the Whitney machine was largely due to the thoroughly systematic manner
+in which its operations were conducted. Nothing was left to chance or to
+any one's memory. In turn, the subordinates presented careful reports of
+the day's transactions. At 6.30 Mr. Towle would go over these documents,
+"sizing up" the actual results for submission later to the chief
+himself. Between 7.30 and 8.30 the "Machine" dined; the remains of the
+feast having been removed, the doors were locked and the books brought
+out.</p>
+
+<p>If an outsider could possibly have obtained the entry to the
+head-quarters of the Whitney Massachusetts Pipe Line, say at nine
+o'clock any evening during the session, he might easily have imagined
+himself at the Madison Square Garden or at Tattersall's on the evening
+of the first day of an international horse-sale. This is what he would
+have seen: In Parlor 10, seated at a long table a dozen of Mr. Towle's
+chiefs, all in their shirt-sleeves, smoking voluminously; before each a
+sheet of paper on which is printed a list of the members of the
+Legislature; against every name a blank space for memoranda; at the head
+of the table Towle himself, frowning severely over a similar sheet
+having broader memoranda-spaces. One after another the chiefs call off
+the names of the legislators, reporting as they go along. The outsider
+would have heard droned monotonously: "..... from ..... not my man;
+..... from ..... my man and .....'s man; seen to-day, stood same as
+yesterday; ..... from ....., raised price $20, making it $150; agreed;
+$10 paid on account, total of $90 due; raised because ..... told him
+that he had got $20 more from ....."</p>
+
+<p>As each man reports the other chiefs and Towle discuss the details, and
+when a decision on disputed points is arrived at, Towle makes a
+memorandum on his blank, and the chief<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[153]</a></span> concerned records the order in
+the little note-book which each carries. All reports at last in, Towle
+retires to Room 11 and speedily returns with the "stuff," consisting of
+cash, stocks, puts, calls, or transportation tickets, which he deals out
+to the chiefs to make good their promises for the day. It would have
+been obvious to the outsider, as soon as he had learned what was being
+dealt in, that a large proportion of the members of the Great and
+General Court of Massachusetts had bargained with the different members
+of "the machine" to sell their votes not only in committee but in full
+session of the Legislature, and that the price was to be paid when the
+votes were cast, though something was invariably exacted on account, to
+tie the bargain. Payment was made in cash, calls on Bay State Gas or
+Dominion Coal, or transportation on any of the railroads in the United
+States or Canada. The latter appears to be a class of remuneration Towle
+favored, probably because it cost nothing.</p>
+
+<p>The conference seldom closed for the day without Towle admonishing his
+subordinates: "The old man's getting dead sore at the way his leg is
+being pulled, and if you fellows don't get those countrymen to play a
+more liberal game, they'll just drive the boss out of the business, and
+then there'll be a slump in prices that'll make them prefer to stay home
+and farm."</p>
+
+<p>You may ask here, Could such things happen without attracting public
+attention? Or are the citizens of Boston so habituated to the corruption
+of their Legislature that they could witness unmoved this wholesale
+bribing campaign conducted in full daylight from Young's Hotel? Thank
+Heaven, this is not so. There are in every American community honest,
+sturdy souls who can be depended on to come forward in emergencies and
+cry out aloud against a threatened political crime. Above the brute
+hubbub of a city's roar their voices are heard like the voice of
+conscience, and the hurrying throng pauses a second in its mad rush
+after dollars to listen to their tale of the Commonwealth's wrong. But
+what's in the air is not on earth. The practical politicians, whose
+affair it is to heed and counteract these honorable protests, laugh
+contemptuously at the vanity of any contest between<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[154]</a></span> theories and the
+"stuff." They know the overpowering logic of gold.</p>
+
+<p>There were public meetings in Boston; good-government clubs throughout
+the State met and "resoluted"; citizens' organizations howled robbery
+and malfeasance. For a few weeks all Massachusetts seemed wrought up.
+From the space the papers gave the protestants one might have imagined
+that there was a chance for virtue, but the results of the clamor were
+more apparent than real. Day by day, night by night, the "machine"
+ground away at Young's, and as its product fell into the hopper Whitney
+and Towle only smiled at the clamor and awaited the moment when, as
+Towle coarsely put it, "the reformers would have yawped themselves to a
+standstill."</p>
+
+<p>That day came at last. One by one, all in a perfectly orderly and
+methodical manner, the giving-bonds-to-compel-promises clauses,
+restrictive amendments and other people's safeguards had been voted down
+and the "Are you ready for the main question?" having been put in both
+houses, the Massachusetts Pipe Line Charter was duly passed and sent on
+to the governor. It required his signature to make the bill a
+hard-and-fast law, and that once appended, all Towle's "promises to pay"
+became due.</p>
+
+<p>As the campaign neared a finish Whitney had, a number of times, informed
+his chiefs, and they the members of the Legislature, that the governor
+had given personal assurance that if the bill passed both houses, he
+would sign it. On this score all interested had been relieved of doubt,
+and immediately upon the Senate's favorable action Bay State and
+Dominion Coal shares advanced in price. During the period the governor
+had the bill under consideration there was an active and rising market
+and a great volume of transactions on the Stock Exchange. Apparently the
+day of our peace and prosperity had dawned at last. But we were not yet
+out of a gnarled Fate's clutches.</p>
+
+<p>In the midst of a strenuous forenoon of trading, suddenly, without the
+slightest warning, both stocks began to sink in price like pigs of lead
+from a capsized boat. At once I was on the defensive. To prevent a wild
+market panic during<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[155]</a></span> the few minutes consumed in getting telephone
+connection with the State House, I had to purchase thousands of shares.
+I knew that something disastrous had happened, but was not prepared for
+the startling information that came over the wire: "The governor has
+vetoed the Whitney bill with a savage message." My informant told me
+that Towle and his men were making for head-quarters on a run. As I hung
+up the receiver, the bell rang again. In a second my telephone with
+Whitney's office was in the middle of a spasm.</p>
+
+<p>"Have you got the news, Lawson?"</p>
+
+<p>"Have I got it? The tape is screaming it.<a name="FNanchor_9_9" id="FNanchor_9_9"></a><a href="#Footnote_9_9" class="fnanchor">[9]</a> Bay State and your stock
+are racing for the bottom," I replied.</p>
+
+<p>"What shall we do? This is a thunderbolt."</p>
+
+<p>"Do?" I replied. "It's for you to say what to do. That's your end, not
+mine, but from now until three o'clock one thing you must do, or
+there'll be no further thinking on the subject&mdash;protect Dominion
+Coal&mdash;have your brokers on the floor every second and tell them to buy
+all that's offered. Beat a slow retreat if you must, but prevent a wild
+break. Things at the Exchange are bad now. I'll take care of Bay State.
+Look out for Dominion at once, and when you are through I must see
+you&mdash;where?"</p>
+
+<p>"At Young's in ten minutes."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[156]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"I'll be there."</p>
+
+<p>Ten minutes later I was in Whitney's head-quarters. There pandemonium
+reigned; all the cocksureness and bluster of the "machine" had vanished,
+and it was a horde of clamorous and excited men I found struggling round
+Towle and Whitney, who vainly sought to stay the panic. It was not
+disappointment at the governor's message that had so stirred these
+hardened practitioners of politics, but the terror of impending loss.
+The majority of the Whitney band, lawyers, lieutenants, and
+water-carriers had bought one stock or both on margin, and had assured
+their friends it was safe to plunge to the limit.</p>
+
+<p>On earth there is no more pitiable sight than the panic of a herd of
+novice stock-speculators suddenly awakened to a realization of their
+ruin. The ticker clicks a sort of death-watch as the merciless tape,
+without hitch or let up, reels off destruction. To such desperate beings
+the stock operator&mdash;the market-maker&mdash;is the straw to save them from
+drowning, and to him they turn as the one possible source of aid and
+hope. I only knew these men at sight's end, but they knew me and were
+sure in their abject plight that I could help them&mdash;by what wizardry
+they never stopped to think. They were terribly certain that unless the
+market turned, their brokers must have additional margin or their stock
+would be thrown overboard, sinking prices still lower and bringing down
+their friends' stock, and so on, like a row of falling bricks.</p>
+
+<p>From their comfortable viewpoint of out-of-temptation virtue, my readers
+may regard these lawyers, lieutenants, and water-carriers of Whitney as
+bad men, deserving of no sympathy, meeting here a righteous punishment;
+but, my word for it&mdash;and I know the world and the human ants and spiders
+who inhabit it&mdash;while they bore no marks of immorality, they were the
+average men one meets in one's journey over the bridge between the two
+unknowns.</p>
+
+<p>My talk with Whitney and Towle was brief and pointed. It was no time for
+pow-wow. It was the moment for action. Men who do things in
+stock-markets never waste time over milk that is in the gutter. How to
+get new milk to replace that spilt is their care.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[157]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"What are you going to do, Mr. Whitney?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>George Towle started to explain. I stopped him.</p>
+
+<p>"The market is bad," I said, talking quickly. "If time is dribbled, it
+will be worse, and&mdash;and Boston will be a warm place for you, Towle. It
+would not surprise me if it got warm even for Mr. Whitney, when the
+desperate men who are filling the brokerage shops and the corridors
+outside demand a reason why they were egged on to buy stocks on Mr.
+Whitney's word that the governor would sign. No excuses now; I want to
+know from Mr. Whitney just what he proposes to do. You both told me the
+legislative end was none of my business, and, thank Heaven, it was not.
+You said it was your business. Now, how about it?"</p>
+
+<p>Henry M. Whitney is a great general. He also can light his cigar, when
+the battle's on, with the friction of a passing cannon-ball.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm going to pass it over the governor's veto," he instantly answered.</p>
+
+<p>"Can you do it?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>"I can, for I must." He meant it. It needed but one look into his and
+Towle's eyes to see they both had read the message on the back of
+To-morrow's visiting-card.</p>
+
+<p>"All right," I said. "Let your people have the word, and it must have no
+doubtful ring; tell your brokers to buy Dominion Coal, and don't let
+them stand on the order of their buying. Dominion Coal must be put back,
+regardless of how much it costs or how little you want what you must
+buy. I will turn Bay State before three if it is necessary to trade in
+the whole capital stock to do it."</p>
+
+<p>As I came out of Parlor 11 to rush back to my office I said to the
+despairing men who crowded the corridor outside the head-quarters, and
+who had in their desperation thrown all caution or thought of
+concealment to the winds: "Coal and Gas look to me like good buys." The
+sudden revulsion of feeling was pathetic. In a minute the news had
+spread by way of them to their brokers and their suffering friends:
+"It's all right; Whitney and Lawson are buying stock." It got to the
+Exchange almost as soon as I did.</p>
+
+<p>We turned the market.</p>
+
+<p>That night Whitney and Towle's plans were mapped out<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[158]</a></span> to the army and
+their orders despatched with a vicious snap that plainly said: "Whoever
+attempts to put the Whitney machine in a hole will be shown no mercy."
+The morning papers announced that Whitney had picked up the gantlet
+Governor Wolcott had thrown at his feet, and&mdash;all roads led up Beacon
+Hill.</p>
+
+<p>It was a quick, sharp set-to. Every man was lined up with a jerk, and
+when the line was tallied up and tallied down and Towle had consented to
+the last raise in price of votes and given away to the final squeeze,
+the word went up and down the ranks that the Whitney bill would, on the
+approaching last day of the session, go flying through both Houses over
+the governor's veto with a vote or two to spare. Again the prices of the
+two stocks shot upward.</p>
+
+<p>Then, sharp and quick as a bolt of lightning, Fate, who apparently had
+been camped on the trail of Bay State Gas and Addicks from the first,
+let fly another of her quiver's contents. On the morning of the closing
+day of the session (the one selected for the Whitney coup), there
+slipped in and out amongst the Whitney legislative ranks a man with a
+story. As each legislator listened, his brow knitted and he nodded
+assent. The story was a simple one: In one of Whitney's former
+campaigns, desperate like this one, on payment-day Towle had gone back
+on his promises and forced the acceptance of a fifty-cents-on-the-dollar
+settlement; and, so the story now went, he, Towle, had put the saved
+fifty cents, a matter altogether of some $75,000, in his own pocket.
+Probably he was now going to repeat the operation on an even larger
+scale. In an hour there came to Young's Hotel a trusty messenger who
+delivered to Towle himself the ultimatum of the Great and General Court
+of the dear old Commonwealth: "Money in advance or no bill!"</p>
+
+<p>Consternation reigned. The army was quickly recalled to head-quarters,
+and despatched back to the State House to put through every man&#339;uvre
+known to the two veterans&mdash;but to no purpose. The Great and General
+Court stood its ground, openly defied the army and hurled back into
+Towle's teeth all his frantic threats. It was the last day, and the
+Great and General Court was intrenched inside the protecting walls<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[159]</a></span> of
+the State House, and it knew that before it could be compelled to come
+forth to face Towle he must come to a decision. A terrible dilemma,
+surely, for the amounts promised had run up to such an enormous
+aggregate that it was impossible to pay all in so short a time, even if
+such had been Whitney and Towle's intention. Yet to pay one or a few of
+the dangerous malcontents meant to pay every one; the gang had firmly
+banded themselves together.</p>
+
+<p>This was the real moment of panic. Even Whitney and Towle were at their
+wits' end. Finally, in desperation, and as a last resort, Whitney rushed
+to the governor, threw up his hands, and asked for mercy. "What would
+the governor sign?"</p>
+
+<p>Massachusetts' able and fearless Governor Wolcott, who seemed to have
+been expecting some such outcome of the battle, gave his answer clear as
+an anvil-blow:</p>
+
+<p>"You have told the people your company would give them cheap gas. Bind
+yourself to do it by amending the charter so that the highest price your
+gas can be sold at will be sixty cents. Then I will sign."</p>
+
+<p>There was nothing else to do.<a name="FNanchor_10_10" id="FNanchor_10_10"></a><a href="#Footnote_10_10" class="fnanchor">[10]</a> At the last minute the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[160]</a></span> amendment was
+inserted. The governor's representative gave the word that it was
+satisfactory, and it passed.</p>
+
+<p>I was in my office taking care of the market. Of the stampede I knew
+nothing. Suddenly came the word: "The Whitney bill has passed on the
+governor's recommendation." Both stocks started to jump; then a halt,
+then&mdash;I didn't try to stop the decline, for I saw something terrible had
+happened. In a few minutes the news was on the Street: "The charter was
+not worth the parchment upon which it was engrossed."</p>
+
+<p>The biter had been fatally bitten.</p>
+
+<p>The market closed with the tape and ticker fiercely, exultingly shouting
+"Ruin!" with each tick and slip: and that night Whitney's head-quarters
+was little better than a mob. Frantic men demanded money, money due to
+them for votes, money they had promised for margins to the brokers
+before the Stock Exchange opened the next day, and swearing desperate
+consequences to Whitney and Towle regardless of the effect upon
+themselves.</p>
+
+<p>Early next morning there came to my office two wild-eyed, desperate
+creatures, Towle and Mr. Patch.</p>
+
+<p>I had spent the night going over my accounts and those of which I had
+charge, and in addition to a quick, real loss of over a million dollars,
+I realized that the immediate future was so hung with dark clouds that I
+dared not anticipate what the coming day might mean to me and mine; but
+when I looked upon the big, powerful man, who had always seemed in any
+light in which I had heretofore beheld him to fear neither man nor
+God&mdash;when I looked and saw his plight I pitied him deeply, sincerely. He
+carried a large travelling-bag, and Mr. Patch two others.</p>
+
+<p>"Lawson, for God's sake, don't do what they are all doing&mdash;don't upbraid
+me! I've got to get out into the world and be dead to all I
+know&mdash;family, friends, every one. If I stay, it's State's prison or
+worse, and Whitney says I must<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[161]</a></span> go. I've got all the papers together and
+Whitney has given me what cash he had on hand, and this check of
+$10,000. Do me one last favor, get me gold for it. I know I have no
+right to ask any favors of you, but think if you were in my place. I
+have a wife and children, and&mdash;" and the great, strong man wept like a
+child.<a name="FNanchor_11_11" id="FNanchor_11_11"></a><a href="#Footnote_11_11" class="fnanchor">[11]</a></p>
+
+<p>I called my secretary, and in a short time George Towle with the $10,000
+in gold and the bags of "evidence" faded out of my life and into the
+gray mist of eternity.</p>
+
+<p>A few days after, a vessel dropped anchor off the island of Jamaica;
+George Towle's body was carried ashore and buried, and Mr. Patch was
+escorted back to the ship. A few days later, with weights of lead to
+carry it to its last resting-place at the ocean's bottom, the latter's
+dead body was dropped over the vessel's side. And somewhere floating the
+high seas are a venturesome sailor-captain and a crew, who when in their
+cups tell, 'tis said, strange tales of bags of gold and mysterious
+documents.</p>
+
+<p>As for the members of the Great and Good Court of the old Commonwealth
+of Massachusetts for the year of our Lord One thousand eight hundred and
+ninety-six, they received, none of them could tell from where, their
+promised vote-money in the form of a yarn that the "stuff" belonging to
+them had been delivered to George Towle, but that Towle had decamped
+with it to foreign shores, where he was living in luxury with Mr. Patch.</p>
+
+<p>'Tis writ that some crimes are so black and foul that they will not
+down, and when I read over what is written here, I wonder if there will
+not some day be another chapter of "Frenzied Finance" written by another
+pen than mine.</p>
+
+<p>I sent two police officials to the island of Jamaica, and had the
+contents of the coffin marked "George H. Towle" photographed. I could
+not photograph the contents of the ocean's depths.</p>
+
+<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_9_9" id="Footnote_9_9"></a><a href="#FNanchor_9_9"><span class="label">[9]</span></a> A stock operator's one reliable source of information is
+his ticker and tape. For the benefit of those of my readers who are
+unacquainted with the paraphernalia by which stock-markets and financial
+operations are conducted, I would say that the ticker is a small
+printing machine through which passes an endless paper tape. The machine
+is run by telegraph wires, and it prints upon the tape letters and
+figures which are abbreviations of the names and prices of all the
+stocks and commodities dealt in on the stock-exchanges and boards of
+trade throughout the world. The instant anything of moment happens
+anywhere, it is reflected by a rise or fall in the price of securities
+or commodities such as wheat, corn, pork, cotton, etc., that are dealt
+in in the different stock-exchanges or boards of trade. As soon as a
+share of stock or bushel of wheat is sold by one operator to another on
+the floors of the different exchanges, its price is within a second
+printed on the tapes in the different offices. Therefore what the ticker
+"ticks" out onto the tape is instantly read by operators throughout the
+world, and as "the tape never lies," operators turn to it for their real
+information. When the ticker begins to increase its clatter and the tape
+to travel fast, an operator will tell you its activity means something
+unusual is happening. The ticker begins to talk at ten o'clock each
+week-day morning and finishes at 3 <span class="smcap">p.m.</span>, with the exception of Saturday,
+when the hour is 12 noon. These are the hours that the stock-exchanges
+are in session.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_10_10" id="Footnote_10_10"></a><a href="#FNanchor_10_10"><span class="label">[10]</span></a> The charter as originally passed had gone through by a
+fair majority, but to pass it over the governor's veto was another
+matter. That required a two-thirds majority of both houses, and in the
+brief time at the disposal of the conspirators the securing of the
+additional votes was wellnigh impossible. From the necessities of the
+case such votes must cost much more than those of the original
+supporters of the bill, for it may be taken for granted that most of the
+members of the minority had already withstood such temptations as the
+Whitney faction had cared to offer. It was therefore a case of bringing
+into camp the most honorable and the most expensive members of the
+legislature, and without opportunity for strategy or manipulation. The
+sole recourse was rank, flat bribery, and that in full view of a
+mutinous following ready at the suggestion of the slightest favoritism
+to the new men to become actively hostile. The task was altogether too
+fraught with peril, to be undertaken. When they realized how threatening
+the situation really was, Whitney and Towle decided to make terms with
+the governor. The charter once obtained, they calculated that the
+obnoxious clause might be amended out of it at a subsequent session (as
+a matter of fact this charter, with its 60-cent clause, was afterward
+made the nucleus of the present Massachusetts Gas companies which has
+just been floated on a basis of $53,000,000 capital). Besides, the state
+of feeling of the legislators and conditions in the stock-market had
+both to be taken into consideration. It was not the fault of the
+legislators who had voted for the charter that the governor had vetoed
+it, for they had been given to understand by Mr. Whitney that he would
+not oppose it. They had delivered their goods, and now, if the
+governor's sanction could be had under any sort of a compromise, they
+would certainly hold Towle and Whitney responsible for failure to make
+whatever arrangements were necessary.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_11_11" id="Footnote_11_11"></a><a href="#FNanchor_11_11"><span class="label">[11]</span></a> Towle told me, as he waited impatiently in my office for
+the gold, that in addition to the great losses the drop in price of the
+two stocks had inflicted on himself and his associates, there were
+losses on stocks held by legislators, who had plunged on assurances that
+the charter would go through, and that the amounts he would be called on
+to pay, if he remained, were far greater than could possibly be met.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[162]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXII</h2>
+
+<h3>PLUNDERED OF THE PLUNDER</h3>
+
+
+<p>So extraordinary a happening as the disappearance of George H. Towle and
+Mr. Patch, you think, should have furnished a national sensation. And
+this is the first you have ever heard of it. Bear in mind that here for
+the first time the facts of this case are set forth in their proper
+relation to one another, and without the fear or favor that has hitherto
+prevented them from being understood.</p>
+
+<p>In Boston after the adjournment of the Legislature, however bitter the
+feeling of the men who had sold themselves, and those others who had
+lost their all in the crash of stock values that had followed Whitney's
+defeat, their own complicity enforced silence and prevented outcry. It
+was given out that George H. Towle and Mr. Patch, tired by their labors,
+had gone to the country for a brief sojourn. On their return there would
+be a settlement. And with these assurances, both legislators and
+lieutenants had, perforce, to be satisfied. Gradually, betrayers and
+betrayed drifted back to their own homes and their erstwhile avocations,
+and when the strange story of the disappearance and death of the chief
+actors in the Whitney drama came from over the seas, it fell on the
+heedless ears of men who had written off a loss and desired to forget
+the experience. A conspiracy of silence is easily organized among
+accomplices.</p>
+
+<p>I myself was the greatest sufferer by the disaster. Banking on Whitney's
+assurance of success I had loaded up heavily with Bay State on my own
+account; and my customers pinning their faith to my predictions of a
+rise, had also bought heavily both of the gas stock and Dominion Coal.
+In my attempt to support the market when the first decline occurred, I
+had further increased my holdings, and, at the final break,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[163]</a></span> thousands
+of shares purchased for my clients were left on my hands. So my loss was
+very large, many times larger than Whitney's. Like the others, I said
+nothing, crediting the expense to education, while Whitney silently
+tucked his emasculated charter into a crypt already furnished with other
+corporation derelicts, to await some fair opportunity of legislative or
+other resuscitation; for the instrument, shorn though it had been of its
+immediate availability, was by no means without real value. Probably in
+view of prospective contingencies, perhaps with a sense of what his
+error had cost me, he said to me: "Lawson, the Pipe Line charter is
+worthless now, but if at any time in the future it becomes valuable, you
+or your company shall have half of it."</p>
+
+<p>If Henry M. Whitney had kept that promise, what a world of disaster and
+bitterness might have been averted. Generated in corruption, perhaps it
+is not strange that this charter has since been so fertile a breeder of
+dissension and ruin among all who have attempted to handle it. It may be
+accepted as an axiom of finance that double-dealing is as dangerous to
+the dealer as to his victim. The fierce conflicts that at intervals
+burst out in the financial world and like a cyclone spread dishonor and
+destruction broadcast, invariably are caused by some one man's
+treachery.</p>
+
+<p>To return to my story. To all appearances, the gas war was over. We bore
+the palm of victory, but looming up before us was the task of getting
+together the six millions which Rogers must have by November 1st. That
+paid, the companies became permanently ours. It was a period of
+unremitting effort, but the prospects of success were excellent. Addicks
+had got ready a new lot of Bay State stock, and I had prepared the
+public to take it. With the proceeds of this stock and the securities
+which Rogers would turn over to us, we should have money enough to meet
+our engagement, always provided no slip-up occurred. Since the May 1st
+settlement our relations with Rogers had been satisfactory&mdash;I should
+say, <i>my</i> relations&mdash;for he persistently kept Addicks and his crowd at a
+distance, refusing to have anything to do with them. But it's hard to
+keep a big pot boiling in the open without some intruder smelling the
+savor of your soup<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[164]</a></span> and sneaking up for a mouthful. Though secrecy had
+been solicitously preserved regarding the details of our bargain with
+the "Standard Oil" magnates, certain of the camp-followers of "Frenzied
+Finance" had nosed out the facts, and at the very moment when our
+position and prospects seemed most secure a plot was being laid, which,
+as after-events will show, came close to bringing about the destruction
+we had thus far managed to escape.</p>
+
+<p>As the time of settlement drew near, it became necessary for me to have
+frequent conferences with Addicks and his directors, and we opened
+head-quarters at the Hoffman House in New York. It was my habit to come
+over for a short time every week, when we got together, reported
+progress, and discussed future moves. It was at one of these gatherings,
+on Friday, October 16th, that we had intimation of our peril. I had come
+down on the midnight train from Boston and was brimming over with
+pleasant news and agreeable anticipations. The day and all other things
+seemed good to me. The air was crisp and the morning sun gleamed
+brightly on the red and yellow autumn tints of the trees in Madison
+Square. For a moment I stood on the corner beside the naval monument
+watching the down-townward procession of cabs and coup&eacute;s in which the
+spider aristocracy of finance makes its way to its webs in Wall Street
+and lower Broadway. In the parlor of Addicks' suite at the Hoffman the
+directors were gathered when I entered, and with them was Parker
+Chandler, the Bay State's general counsel. We got down to business at
+once. I told them how well our affairs were moving in Boston and
+listened to their tidings of progress elsewhere. We were all in the
+merry mood of success. The past was nothing but a bad dream; our
+thoughts were on the rich moments beyond November 1st when we should
+handle and know the real currency of our victory.</p>
+
+<p>The telephone bell rang. Some one wanted Addicks quick.</p>
+
+<p>Addicks stepped to the instrument. We all heard him say: "Hello."
+Then&mdash;"Is that you, Fred?" (Fred Keller was his personal secretary.)
+Then&mdash;"Yes, I hear you plainly. Repeat it." Then&mdash;a minute's wait while
+we listened. Then&mdash;"When will they get up there?" Then<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[165]</a></span>&mdash;"Send every one
+home, lock up and go over to the house, and call me on my wire." All
+this in his ordinary, well-attuned, even voice, without the emphasis of
+a word to show that the subject was a hair more important than any of
+the hundred and one ordinary messages which went to make up a large part
+of his daily life. The talk was so commonplace that we were none of us
+interested enough to even stop our chatter.</p>
+
+<p>Addicks stepped from the telephone and in a "bring-me-a-finger-bowl"
+tone of voice said: "Tom, come into the other room for a minute; I want
+a word with you."</p>
+
+<p>He passed ahead of me through a small parlor into his bedroom. I
+followed. He went straight to the bureau, took something from a drawer,
+slipped it into his pocket, turned and dropped upon a lounge. But a
+minute had elapsed since he had gone to the telephone. Could this gray
+ghost be the same man who a short time ago had been smiling so
+contentedly at Parker Chandler's last story? His face was the color of a
+mouldy lead pipe and seared with strange lines and seams. The eyes that
+met mine were dim and glazed, lustreless and dead as the eyes of a fish
+dragged from watery depths.</p>
+
+<p>Courage is not character; it is temperamental. There is an impression
+that the man truly brave is he who can face sudden, unexpected
+misfortune or calamity without a tremor or a flicker to suggest his
+hurt. That is but a single phase and indicative of physical rather than
+moral qualities; or, perhaps, merely the callousness born of long
+exposure to danger. One of the bravest men I've ever known stood
+watching the ticker one day during a downward run. Suddenly I heard "My
+God, I'm ruined!" and he fell in a faint on the floor. And a certain
+bank officer, whom I knew to be an arrant coward when arrested for
+stealing a million, smiled at the policeman who had tapped his shoulder
+and asked him for a light for his cigarette. Addicks had not turned a
+hair as he hung up the telephone receiver, and here he was cowering in a
+mortal funk, abjectly hopeless.</p>
+
+<p>"Lawson, the game's up," he said in a trembling voice. "That was Fred.
+He says Dwight Braman has had himself appointed receiver of Bay State;
+that he raided the Wilmington office immediately after he was appointed,
+broke<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[166]</a></span> open desks, and took all the papers he could find, and that in an
+hour or so he will be in Philadelphia and in possession of all my books
+and papers. He has a court order for the bank accounts and the right to
+take charge of our funds."</p>
+
+<p>"This is a startler," I said; "what are we going to do?"</p>
+
+<p>"The trap is perfect, and I'm in it. They've caught me with every bar
+down. Before, when they attempted to get a receivership, things were
+ready for them&mdash;books and papers packed for Europe and cash in charge of
+an unserved officer prepared at the first word to start for Canada. But
+now, a few days before election, when if I don't throw a lot of money
+into Delaware for my followers, they'll turn on me like wolves&mdash;they've
+caught me napping. It's a plot, sure&mdash;a receiver in possession,
+particularly Braman, and appointed in a way that shows deliberate
+calculation, proves it was done by some one who knows our situation to a
+'T.' It means ruin for me and the company. You know I won't have a
+friend left on earth, and enemies now will rise up like snakes before a
+prairie fire."</p>
+
+<p>It was indeed a stiff, tough turn, yet I was watching the man rather out
+of curiosity to note how he could take a reverse than out of sympathy. I
+don't believe there was another man on earth who, similarly placed,
+would not have aroused my pity; but Addicks&mdash;no man or woman has pity
+for Addicks.</p>
+
+<p>"Well," I repeated, "what are we going to do?"</p>
+
+<p>He did not reply for a moment. I continued to look at him. The eyes
+haunted me. I noted that the lines round the lids had deepened into
+furrows. He half raised himself from the lounge.</p>
+
+<p>"I've said they would never get me, and they won't." Instinctively his
+hand sought the pocket into which he had dropped what he had taken from
+the dresser's drawer. Then I knew. The yellow streak showed plain at
+last. I had guessed from the start it was there.</p>
+
+<p>The stock manipulator in common with the successful general must have
+the capacity to deal with the unexpected. The faculty to see a situation
+whole must be his, to focus instantly the lay of the land, the enemy's
+plans and strength,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[167]</a></span> his own resources, the strategic possibilities of
+his position; and instantly, if necessity demands it, he must be ready
+with a new plan of campaign fitted to the first emergency. The more
+rapidly his mind works the safer are the interests he is guarding. But
+if he has not this capacity, he can never be a market manipulator.</p>
+
+<p>For a moment I could not but pause to admire the devilish ingenuity of
+the trap that had been sprung on us. The state of affairs that Addicks
+revealed was about the worst imaginable. I had been on this particular
+war-path so long that my mind instantly grasped the possibilities of
+destruction that lay in this new attack. I saw November 1st&mdash;no money to
+pay Rogers; everything forfeited; Addicks in a nauseating scandal; and
+all those friends of mine who had put their funds into Bay State because
+of their confidence in my ability to win out slaughtered. No, it should
+not be if I could prevent it. Other storms we had met and weathered, why
+not this? Even if it were a tornado, we would "ride her out." Perhaps we
+should not be afloat when the rollers subsided, but at least we should
+be at rest&mdash;on the bottom. I turned to Addicks, who, heaped up on his
+lounge, was staring into vacancy.</p>
+
+<p>"Brace up, Addicks," I said. "We are not knocked out yet. At least let
+us find out what has struck us."</p>
+
+<p>I was some moments in arousing him from his condition of despair, but
+finally he pulled himself together, and piece by piece we went over the
+situation. I had to agree with him that he was in an
+end-to-end-center-pull trap. The cunning machinery he had set up to meet
+just such an emergency, now that it was in hostile hands, was rather a
+source of danger than of safety. There was but one way out of the
+complication&mdash;we must undo this receivership and release our properties
+and funds before November 1st. Addicks, when he got his thinking loom
+running, declared the receivership was all a "Standard Oil" plot to ruin
+him. I felt sure it was an independent operation, but there was no time
+for controversy.</p>
+
+<p>The telephone bell rang again. It was Fred Keller, talking from Addicks'
+house. We soon had all the details of the raid. This is what had
+happened. Dwight Braman, a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[168]</a></span> former Boston broker, now a New York
+capitalist and promoter, had suddenly appeared in Wilmington, Del.,
+accompanied by Roger Foster, a New York attorney representing Wm.
+Buchanan, one of the original holders of Bay State Gas income bonds. He
+held $100,000. They had gone before Judge Wales, and pleading that the
+interest on the bonds was in default and that Addicks was dissipating
+the assets of the company, had succeeded in inducing the judge to
+appoint Braman receiver. The whole performance was put through with such
+marvellous rapidity that not one of Addicks' innumerable henchmen had
+had a hint of it, and so no warning could be given in any direction.
+Braman, an adept in corporation try-outs, lost not a moment, for the
+instant his receivership appointment was signed he pounced down on the
+Delaware offices of the Bay State and seized everything they contained.
+He was waiting there for the first train to Philadelphia for the purpose
+of capturing the head offices of our corporation, which were located
+there, adjoining Addicks' private offices.</p>
+
+<p>It was the moment for rapid action. We had an hour before Braman and
+Foster could reach Philadelphia, and in finance in that time continents'
+have been submerged and oceans pumped dry. Addicks instructed Fred
+Keller to rush the books of the company into a trunk, together with all
+the private papers in Addicks' safe, and to come at once to New York,
+where he would be beyond the jurisdiction of the Delaware court. We
+returned to the large parlor and hastily explained to the waiting
+directors what had occurred. Addicks instructed the Bay State secretary,
+who was present, to connect with the trunk upon its arrival and
+disappear. In the meantime the company's counsel advised that Addicks
+and the other directors barricade themselves in their rooms at the
+Hoffman to frustrate any attempt to get legal service on them, for we
+well knew that Braman and Foster, as soon as they realized they were
+balked in Philadelphia, would go to the New York courts for additional
+powers&mdash;which afterward they did.</p>
+
+<p>This line of defence having been fully organized I hurried down town to
+26 Broadway. I felt certain that Mr. Rogers<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[169]</a></span> had nothing to do with the
+Braman-Foster affair, but to satisfy Addicks and make assurance doubly
+sure I determined to see him. After being with him for five minutes I
+knew I had not been deceived. Rogers agreed with me that the situation
+looked as though it had been made for his interest, for it threatened to
+leave us absolutely at his mercy with nothing to prevent his checkmating
+Addicks at his own game. As I pointed out to him, however, there were
+disadvantages in the position which he must take into consideration. His
+acceptance of the opportunity would work such losses to the public and
+to my friends that though the responsibility might be laid to Braman and
+Foster, I would fight so viciously that no one would be spared. Besides,
+between the Addicks scandal and that other which we agreed must
+unquestionably lurk in the hasty appointment of the receiver, the whole
+affair must eventually be ventilated in court. It is always hard for Mr.
+Rogers to forego an advantage, but by this time he was tired of the
+wrangle and wanted peace, and, moreover, he did not relish the thought
+of court proceedings, so he admitted that my reasoning was good, and
+promised to do anything in his power to assist us.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[170]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXIII</h2>
+
+<h3>TWO GENTLEMEN OF FRENZIED FINANCE</h3>
+
+
+<p>The enemy did not leave us long in suspense. Next day Braman and Foster
+arrived in New York, bursting with a noble wrath at the failure of their
+coup in Philadelphia. An outrage had been worked upon them, upon the
+public, upon the majesty of the law. To hear their ravings one might
+have supposed them the evangelists of Justice righteously denouncing a
+desecration of the sacred altar; or, that we had deprived them of an
+inalienable right they had possessed to our property. It would have been
+humorous if the conditions had been less tragic.</p>
+
+<p>No defender of property right is so vociferous as the financier who,
+having appropriated his neighbor's goods, argues that possession
+constitutes legal ownership. On a country road I once almost rode over
+two hoboes, who were so busy wrangling with one another that they had
+not heard my approach. I gathered that one of them, having filched a
+collection of laundry from a farmer's backyard, had placed it in charge
+of his mate while he went off for a second helping, and had returned
+just in time to stop the latter from decamping with the swag. The talk
+the original purloiner was giving his ungrateful assistant was one of
+the best expositions of virtue and honesty I've ever listened to.</p>
+
+<p>We met the following Monday and in reply to my request that we talk
+things over, Foster delivered himself of an exalted exposition of the
+rights of deluded stockholders, the majesty of the law, and the stern
+duties of Mr. Braman, who, for the time being, had departed his private
+self and, until further notice, existed only as a rigid arm of the
+court. Just as I had arrived at the conclusion that I had got into the
+wrong shop, Braman took up the lecture by informing me<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[171]</a></span> of things I
+already had made myself familiar with, to wit, how he had at different
+times occupied similar r&ocirc;les in other corporations' affairs and how
+relentlessly he had exposed mismanagement and peculation. I suggested to
+him that in most such cases the receiverships seemed to have been
+dismissed in favor of the former managers. He waved his hands and
+replied that in this particular case there was absolutely no chance of
+control being returned to Addicks, who had outrageously abused his
+trust; "although, of course (this as a sort of second thought) you know,
+Mr. Lawson, if Mr. Foster on behalf of his client should receive the
+amount of his claim and the proper fee, from whatever source, I should
+be powerless to prevent the dismissal of the receiver."</p>
+
+<p>Braman and Foster were a delightful combination. As the talented Chimmie
+Fadden would say: "Dey knew dere biz from de bar to de till an' from de
+till by de way of de cash register to de wine-cellar, so's dey could do
+de circuit wid dere lamps blinked and dere hands tied." With their
+corporation mix-up records I was familiar, and after a few minutes' talk
+realized that it would be impossible to do anything with them until they
+had kicked up against one or two of the bricks Addicks was now with
+renewed energy preparing to cast into their pathway. I left with an
+agreement to see them the following day, and a parting reminder that all
+natural history showed that unpicked ripe plums were in great danger of
+being blown from the tree with every passing breeze.</p>
+
+<p>I hurried back to Addicks. "It's the old game," said I; "they are on the
+box and have the lines, and know just how badly we need our coach, and
+it's only a case of how much 'inducement' we can stand."</p>
+
+<p>I left him and went down to 26 Broadway. I had not wasted time, but they
+had been there ahead of me.</p>
+
+<p>"Lawson," said Mr. Rogers, "this time Addicks is up against a real
+condition, and phenomenal work will have to be done or his race is run.
+Braman and Foster have been here and made a strong bid for a partnership
+with me, but I did as agreed and sent them away with a cold 'I'm in no
+way interested.'"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[172]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Foster and Braman secured an order from the New York courts to take
+possession of all property, money, papers, and books claimed by the
+company, and formally laid siege to Addicks' quarters in the Hoffman.
+There was considerable excitement for the guests and the newspapers.
+Doors were battered down, but the astute and slippery Addicks led them a
+merry chase until they finally caught him hiding in a freight elevator
+which he was using for a private staircase, only to find he had no
+books, papers, or money.</p>
+
+<p>The week that ensued was full of trouble and incident for all concerned.
+Addicks led an expedition to Wilmington in an effort to get the court to
+call off the receivership, but had his labor and the expense of his
+lawyers for his pains. Braman and Foster dragged us through a weary
+round of special hearings and demands of various kinds in the different
+courts, but by Tuesday night of the second week their ardor had cooled
+considerably and they were as puzzled how to let go of the bull they had
+captured as we were to find a way to make them do so.</p>
+
+<p>Bright and early Wednesday morning Braman called on me, and when he
+threw his coat and hat into a chair he must have dropped his
+receivership cloak too, for after he had carefully closed the door and
+made sure we were without witness he said:</p>
+
+<p>"If there's any business to be done in this matter it must be done
+quick."</p>
+
+<p>I admitted no one could possibly appreciate this more than I&mdash;but what
+could be done? After bluffing for an hour and exchanging honest views
+for fifteen minutes we agreed that the situation stood thus:</p>
+
+<p>If nothing were done before the coming Sunday, the 1st, the receivership
+would be permanent; the stock, which had fallen to $3 per share, would
+remain at that figure or go lower; my friends, the public, and myself
+would be tremendous losers; all the past of Bay State, the doings of
+Addicks and Rogers, and the appointment of the receiver would come in
+for thorough investigation; an awful scandal would be aired in public;
+every one would be covered more or less with mud; and no one could
+possibly be the gainer but<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[173]</a></span> "Standard Oil," for Braman agreed with me
+that the deal we had made with Rogers would probably stand in the
+courts.</p>
+
+<p>On the other hand, if an arrangement could be arrived at by which we
+could have the receivership discharged, the company returned to its
+officers, or our equities preserved, all would be gainers by the move,
+for it would be proof positive that whatever the obstacles, we could
+overcome them, and the stock would go flying upward again.</p>
+
+<p>After we had set out all the advantages, disadvantages, and
+possibilities of the situation, I bluntly plumped Braman with that
+inevitable question of all such "sit-downs": "What's the price?" And
+Braman as plumply and bluntly answered: "Buchanan, Foster's client, must
+have the face of his bonds and interest, $150,000, and we must have at
+least $150,000 for our trouble and expense."</p>
+
+<p>My long experience in corporation affairs, and my intimate knowledge of
+the practices which the "System" with its votaries has made habitual was
+such that I was proof against shock from anything that could possibly
+turn up in even extraordinary financial deals, but I was just a bit
+staggered by the business-like way Braman demanded for himself and
+Foster $150,000 and the coolness with which he further explained that
+they must divide their share with certain influential persons without
+whose hearty cooperation the tangling-up which had been so cleverly
+accomplished would have been impossible. He made no bones of showing me
+that once "we gave up" it would only be a matter of the number of
+minutes required to get details fixed before everything would be as it
+was before he had interfered. I dwelt upon the possibilities of the
+judge not following orders to the letter and the minute, but he only
+smiled and answered: "Leave all that to us; if we don't make good as
+agreed, we get no pay." He was fully alive to the dangers of the game,
+and he impressed upon me he would take nobody's word for anything. With
+him and Foster nothing but money talked, and it must not be of the
+marked-bill kind either, meaning he would not take anything which could
+be tied up by injunctions and lawsuits after the receiver had been
+dismissed. However, he would play fair. He would not ask us to pay<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[174]</a></span> on
+anything but the actual delivery of the goods. He also frankly told me
+that he had named the very low figure, $150,000, because he expected to
+invest what he received in Bay State Gas stock at $3 and, upon its
+jumping to $10 or $20, to make half a million.</p>
+
+<p>But this is outrageous, you say. You call the performance I have
+described by hard names! Surely our courts are not also the creatures of
+"frenzied finance"? you ask. I warn my readers that this narrative is no
+more than a record of events occurring within my own knowledge, and that
+dark and vicious as the pictures seem they are photographs of actual
+happenings. Nor should the public conclude that the dishonor and
+dishonesty revealed in connection with Bay State Gas are exceptional. On
+the contrary, such doings are the rule in the affairs of great financial
+corporations. Into the rigging and launching of almost every big
+financial operation in the United States during the last twenty years,
+double-dealing, sharp practice, and jobbery have entered; and, what is
+more, the men interested have participated in and profited thereby. To
+correct a popular fallacy I want to say that I am not referring here
+simply to moral derelictions but to actual legal crimes. If the details
+of the great reorganization and trustification deals put through since
+1885 could be laid bare, eight out of ten of our most successful
+stock-jobbing financiers would be in a fair way to get into State or
+federal prisons. They do such things better in England. During the past
+ten years three "frenzied financiers" have practised their legerdemain
+in London&mdash;Ernest Hooley, Barney Barnato, and Whitaker Wright. The first
+is bankrupt and discredited; Barney Barnato jumped into the ocean at the
+height of his career, and Whitaker Wright, after numerous attempts to
+escape, was hauled up before an English judge and jury, promptly
+convicted and sentenced, and committed suicide by poison before leaving
+the court-room. I will agree at any time to set down from memory the
+names of a score of eminent American financiers, at this writing in full
+enjoyment of the envy and respect of their countrymen and the luxury
+purchased by their many millions, whose crimes, moral and legal,
+committed in the accumulation of these millions,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[175]</a></span> would, if fully
+exposed, make the performances of Wright and Barnato seem like petty
+larceny in comparison.<a name="FNanchor_12_12" id="FNanchor_12_12"></a><a href="#Footnote_12_12" class="fnanchor">[12]</a> But freedom and equality, as guaranteed us by
+the Declaration of Independence, have recently been capitalized, and
+"freedom" now means immunity from legal interference for financiers,
+while the latest acceptance of "equality" is that all victims of special
+privilege are treated alike by those who control and exercise such
+privilege. If the judges and the public prosecutors of these United
+States were equal to the sworn duties of their sacred offices, this
+"freedom" would have been confined long ago, and throughout this broad
+land there would be jails full of "frenzied financiers" who had imagined
+themselves licensed to rob the public.</p>
+
+<p>But to return to Bay State Gas: "Braman," I said, "we see the situation
+through the same glasses, but before deciding as to prices let us see
+where the coin required is to come from. Until the receivership is
+dismissed not a cent can come from the Bay State treasury, so that
+eliminates Addicks. I, personally, am in such shape because of this same
+receivership that I can do nothing. So, as usual, it comes down to the
+man with unlimited money&mdash;Rogers. The question is, how to get Rogers to
+advance so large a sum in such a ticklish business? He does not want to
+get mixed up in a matter in which any one man's treachery might mean
+State's prison."</p>
+
+<p>"Somebody's word ought to be good," he commented.</p>
+
+<p>"Only two men's words would be of any avail," I interrupted&mdash;"yours and
+Addicks', and you have just made it clear that in this case neither
+would be worth the breath expended in pledging it."</p>
+
+<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_12_12" id="Footnote_12_12"></a><a href="#FNanchor_12_12"><span class="label">[12]</span></a> Since the above was published the American people have
+become aroused, and as this book is going to press, scores of the
+greatest financiers in America are having under oath confessions
+squeezed from them in a life-insurance investigation conducted by the
+State of New York&mdash;confessions which reveal such a condition of perjury,
+bribery, and habitual sequestration of funds, as to make my statement
+seem mild.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[176]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXIV</h2>
+
+<h3>BUYING A BUNCH OF STATES</h3>
+
+
+<p>I left Braman and went down to Mr. Rogers. After a careful canvas of the
+situation it was settled that the only way out was for Rogers to furnish
+the money to release the receivership, in consideration of which
+accommodation Addicks should forfeit the old Boston companies to him
+through Bay State's failure to comply with the terms of the May contract
+which matured the following Monday. Rogers would administer these
+companies in trust, applying their earnings to the liquidation of the
+bonds, and after these latter had been paid off, would turn them back to
+the Bay State Company for the benefit of its stock; or he would release
+the companies to us whenever we could raise the money to redeem them.
+Thus Rogers would make sure of the amount of his original investment,
+the million dollars profit the May 1st deal permitted him, while I
+should have secured for my friends and the public the amount of their
+investment in the property and a good profit for the stockholders to
+boot. To secure Addicks' consent to this arrangement would be the
+difficulty; but there was one consideration that would probably induce
+him to give way&mdash;his terrible plight in case the receivership became
+permanent.</p>
+
+<p>Having reached this point, the next problem was how to get the money.
+Rogers refused absolutely to be a party to any payment that could be
+traced back to him. He pointed out the sources of hazard; first, through
+treachery on the part of Foster, Braman, or Addicks, he might be accused
+of bribing a court officer, the receiver; Addicks might blackmail him by
+charging him with conspiracy, or a conspiracy charge might be brought by
+Bay State stockholders, and he be held<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[177]</a></span> for tremendous damages. He
+refused to put himself into any such trap. I put forward a dozen ways to
+meet the emergency, but he would have none of them. Finally he suggested
+a method which was certainly perfect of its kind. He began by letting me
+into the secret that the chances of a McKinley victory in the election
+the following week looked pretty bad, and that the latest canvass of the
+State showed that unless something radical were done, Bryan would surely
+win. Hanna had called into consultation half a dozen of the biggest
+financiers in Wall Street, and it was decided to turn at least five of
+the doubtful States. For this purpose a fund of $5,000,000 had been
+raised under Rogers' direction,<a name="FNanchor_13_13" id="FNanchor_13_13"></a><a href="#Footnote_13_13" class="fnanchor">[13]</a> to be turned over to Mark Hanna and
+McKinley's cousin, Osborne, through John Moore, the Wall Street broker,
+who was acting as Rogers' representative in collecting the money. It
+would be legitimate for the National Committee to pay out money to carry
+Delaware, and he, Rogers, would arrange it that the coin to satisfy
+Braman and Foster should come through this channel. Thus he would be
+completely protected.</p>
+
+<p>"Lawson," said Mr. Rogers, looking at me with intense and deadly
+seriousness, his voice charged with conviction, "if Bryan's elected,
+there will be such a panic in this country as the world has never seen,
+and with his money ideas and the crazy-headed radicals he will call to
+Washington to administer the nation's affairs, business will surely be
+destroyed and the working people will suffer untold misery. You know we
+all hate to do what Uncle Mark says is necessary, but it's a case of
+some of us sacrificing something for the country's good. Bryan's
+election would set our country back a century, and I believe it's the
+sacred duty of every<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[178]</a></span> honest American to do what he can to save his land
+from such a calamity."<a name="FNanchor_14_14" id="FNanchor_14_14"></a><a href="#Footnote_14_14" class="fnanchor">[14]</a></p>
+
+<p>The "System's" conscience has its own quaint logic&mdash;the logic of
+self-interest&mdash;and this is how it reasoned: "The election of Bryan would
+disturb our control of American institutions, therefore American
+institutions would be destroyed by Bryan's election. On us, the
+'System,' devolves the sacred if expensive duty of saving the nation,
+and, however abhorrent to our fine moral sense, patriotism compels us to
+spend millions in bribing and corrupting the electorate so that virtue,
+'Standard Oil,' and J. P. Morgan may continue the good work of caring
+for the public's interests as their own."</p>
+
+<p>As I listened to Rogers' exordium on the duties of a citizen in an
+emergency, I remembered the "Standard Oil" code&mdash;"Everything for God
+(our God); God (our God) in everything." It was so essentially "Standard
+Oil," this willingness to commit even that greatest wrong, subverting
+the will of the people in the exercise of their highest function&mdash;the
+election of a President&mdash;but only that good (their good) might come of
+it. It was no more than selfish greed tricked out in the noble trappings
+of morality, an infamous crime disguised as patriotism. Doubtless, the
+excellent, God-fearing, law-abiding citizens of the doubtful States who
+read this and learn how the "System" defeated their will at the polls
+will cry, "Monstrous! Can such things be in America?" and then will
+resume their interrupted occupation of "letting well enough alone."
+However, this is aside from my story.</p>
+
+<p>Having clearly set forth the political situation through which we should
+be saved, Mr. Rogers proceeded to map out my own programme. First, I
+must perfect an alibi for him by going to Foster and Braman, and
+impressing upon them the fact that he was absolutely out of the affair,
+and must under no circumstances be brought into it; next, I must
+convince Addicks to the same effect, and in addition tell him that Mr.
+Rogers had angrily refused to get into the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[179]</a></span> mix-up; I should then hold
+myself in readiness to meet John Moore and Hanna or Osborne as soon as
+an appointment could be arranged. That afternoon I got the word and went
+to 26 Broadway, and from there Mr. Rogers and I went over to John
+Moore's office, slipping in the private door from the rear street.</p>
+
+<p>"John," said Mr. Rogers, "I am going to turn this matter over to you and
+Lawson, and I am to have nothing further to do with it. What you two
+agree to will be satisfactory to me, and remember, both of you, every
+dollar that is paid is paid by the National Committee, but after it's
+all settled, and if there is no slip-up, I will look to Lawson for
+whatever is expended. Is it understood?"</p>
+
+<p>We agreed that it was, and Mr. Rogers left us.</p>
+
+<p>John Moore deserves more than a mere passing mention here, for he was at
+this time a distinguished Wall Street character and one of the ablest
+practitioners of finance in the country. During the last fifteen years
+of his life, John Moore was party to more confidential financial jobs
+and deals than all other contemporaneous financiers, and he handled them
+with great skill and high art. Big, jolly, generous, a royal eater and
+drinker, an associate of the rich, the friend of the poor, a many-times
+millionaire, who a few years before had been logging it on the rivers of
+Maine, his native State, John Moore well deserved his "Street" name,
+"Prince John." His firm, Moore &amp; Schley, transacted an immense brokerage
+business, and numbered among its clients great capitalists and bankers
+all over the country. Especially were Moore &amp; Schley famed for their
+discretion, and the highest proof of confidence reposed in the firm was
+the fact that it did the bulk of the stock speculating for what is known
+as "the Washington contingent." This is, perhaps, the most peculiar and
+delicate business that comes to "the Street." A big Wall Street house
+opens a Washington office and organizes an elaborate system of special
+wires, wires from which there can be no possibility of leakage. It is
+then ready for the patronage of members of Congress, United States
+Senators and national officials, whose honorable positions make them the
+custodians of national secrets<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[180]</a></span> of great commercial value. If, for
+instance, a new law is to be passed which must favorably affect a given
+stock, legislators who are on "the inside" often buy thousands of shares
+in order to reap the profit of the rise in value incidental to its
+passage. Or perhaps there is in prospect a law which will interfere with
+the special privilege of some other stock and reduce its price. Those in
+possession of advance information "go short" of that stock (sell for
+future delivery) to profit by the drop. There are many other
+opportunities the Washington "insider" of speculative turn may use to
+advantage. For instance, if a high official of the Government were about
+to issue a proclamation against a foreign nation, and should desire
+secretly to make a million or so out of the panic he knew must follow
+the announcement, he would cast about him for a broker who would
+preserve this sacred confidence. It would invariably be through the
+Moore firm that his secretary or confidential man would do the short
+selling. There are also the operations of lobbyists who, to affect
+important legislation for this great interest or the other, buy or sell
+stock for the benefit of legislators whose votes they desire to
+influence. Extreme caution is demanded in the execution of such orders,
+or all hands might by some slip-up find themselves wearing striped
+suits.<a name="FNanchor_15_15" id="FNanchor_15_15"></a><a href="#Footnote_15_15" class="fnanchor">[15]</a></p>
+
+<p>Such a catastrophe seemed imminent some years ago when the Sugar Trust
+was before the United States Senate for some legislation necessary to
+bolster up its monopoly. Its agents had either been less cautious than
+usual in disguising the raw bribery they were perpetrating, or this
+particular Senate was too brazen to take the usual precautions to hide
+its greed from the world. In any case, so great an outcry was made in
+the press of the country that some sacrifice to the people's wrath was
+called for&mdash;one of those familiar sacrifices which, at intervals of ten
+or fifteen years in this republic, our rulers make to the great god
+Integrity. An<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[181]</a></span> investigation was organized, and a Senatorial inquisition
+had before it eminent sugar capitalists and many other distinguished
+gentlemen who could by no possibility shed light on the transactions,
+and then, realizing that a show of earnestness, at least, was demanded,
+it was agreed that some member of Moore &amp; Schley's firm must go on the
+witness-stand, and, on refusing to tell which Senators had speculated in
+sugar, must be sent to jail. This grandstand play, it was calculated,
+and rightly, would so hold the attention of the American people that
+when the committee concluded its investigation with the usual loud
+acclaim of duty well done, its Draconian punishment of the unsubmissive
+broker would act as another ten years' stay against outcry.</p>
+
+<p>When this stratagem was decided on, John Moore announced that he as head
+of the firm should be the sacrifice. But the representatives of the
+"System" and the Senate firmly refused to assign him that r&ocirc;le, and
+instead, to his grief and anger, nominated for jail the associate member
+who had charge of Moore &amp; Schley's Washington business, whom they
+declared the logical victim. During the thirty days that his friend and
+partner spent behind the bars John Moore's hair whitened more than in
+all the years before, and from that time until his death he refused
+firmly to take part in his old line of work, or was ever again his old
+jovial self.</p>
+
+<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_13_13" id="Footnote_13_13"></a><a href="#FNanchor_13_13"><span class="label">[13]</span></a> Over a year after the publication of this statement
+startled the country, John A. McCall, President of the New York Life
+Insurance Company, and George W. Perkins, Vice-President of the same
+company and partner of J. Pierpont Morgan, were compelled to confess
+that they had contributed from their policy-holders' deposits, large
+amounts of money to a fund to defeat Bryan in 1896 and to the Republican
+campaign funds of the two following presidential elections, and that
+they gloried in it. At the same time Jacob Schiff, director of the
+Equitable Life and a partner in the great international banking-house of
+Kuhn, Loeb &amp; Co., admitted that funds belonging to the policy-holders of
+the "Big Three," the New York, the Mutual, and the Equitable, were used
+in a joint fund to influence the Legislature of every State in the
+Union.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_14_14" id="Footnote_14_14"></a><a href="#FNanchor_14_14"><span class="label">[14]</span></a> President McCall used almost the same language in
+September, 1905, in justifying his payment.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_15_15" id="Footnote_15_15"></a><a href="#FNanchor_15_15"><span class="label">[15]</span></a> The President was notified some few months ago that the
+cotton report was being juggled by employees of the United States
+Department of Agriculture in the interest of certain Wall Street
+speculators who were gambling in cotton. Investigation proved that it
+was the practice to falsify the report; and certain Government officials
+and brokers are now under indictment.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[182]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXV</h2>
+
+<h3>ATHLETICS OF FINANCE</h3>
+
+
+<p>Entirely apart from his relationship with Mr. Rogers it was a great help
+in this Bay State emergency to have the aid of a man of John Moore's
+wealth of vim and wide knowledge of men and affairs. Freely and frankly
+I explained our situation to him with its innumerable complications
+until he had mastered its intricacies. A tough job he pronounced our
+proposition, and he was the authority on the subject. After our talk was
+ended he called in Osborne, who had evidently already been talked to. He
+said to Osborne:</p>
+
+<p>"I've been over Addicks' affairs with Lawson, and there is no question
+in my mind and that of other friends of the party that he should have
+what is necessary to carry Delaware. You had better have the committee
+ready to put in between $350,000 and $400,000 if we call for it. I will
+see that it is kept down as low as possible."</p>
+
+<p>Osborne then spoke his piece and replied that the committee would do
+whatever was decided best, and asked me to send Addicks around next day
+to explain just how he was pushing things in Delaware. All this was
+play-acting for the benefit of Rogers' alibi.</p>
+
+<p>The next thing on my programme was to persuade Addicks to relinquish his
+hold on the old Boston gas companies, and this was likely to prove my
+most difficult task. I left John Moore, who agreed to hold himself in
+readiness at any hour to consult on and approve such settlement as I
+could arrange, and energetically started in on the Delaware financier.
+It was a trying ordeal. As soon as Addicks saw I had something to work
+on he began to demur and object. If he could not have things his way, he
+would do nothing. He knew that I had joined a conspiracy to ruin him;
+that I was in league<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[183]</a></span> with Rogers, who was in league with Braman and
+Foster, and that all were banded together to take all he had away from
+him. In the course of that two hours' wrestle I was tempted several
+times to throw up the whole affair, and there were some bitter and
+savage word-passages that left both of us heated. I could do nothing
+with him; he must hear from Rogers personally. Finally I got the
+"Standard Oil" wire, and Rogers talked so plainly and coldly as
+partially to sober him, but ended by agreeing to have his counsel talk
+things over with Addicks, which was a distinct concession. A little
+later Mr. Rogers' representative was at the Hoffman and he and Addicks
+had it hot and heavy. After about fifteen minutes of conference they had
+wellnigh come to blows. However, the hot exchanges had begun to tell.
+Addicks grew saner, but he insisted on seeing Foster and Braman. I
+warned him that he was fast getting our affairs into such shape that no
+one could patch them up, but to no avail. He must meet his enemies face
+to face if only to ram into their teeth that they were scoundrels.
+Finally, I got Braman on the telephone and explained that I was doing my
+best to quiet a crazy man, who would consent to nothing until after he
+had seen him and Foster and told them what thieves they were. I heard
+Braman chuckle. He said: "Bring him along to Foster's house at 10.30,"
+and added: "It wouldn't be a bad idea to have an ambulance along, too."
+This suggested further complications, for Braman has the reputation on
+"the Street" of being more eager to face a wild man on a rampage than a
+sick one in a plaster cast, while Foster, although a little bit of a
+fellow, was never known to side-step or duck trouble. I slipped word
+down to Moore at the Waldorf to follow along to Foster's place in a cab.</p>
+
+<p>There are several "spite houses" in New York. Foster's house was one of
+them. It is a narrow strip of a brownstone dwelling at 79 West 54th
+Street, built to express the enmity of one property owner for his
+neighbor who refused to pay an extortionate price for the land. It is
+about the width of a front door, and inside there is just about room to
+move around. It afforded a queer background for the scene enacted there
+that night.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[184]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Promptly at 10.30 Addicks and I were at the door, and by 10.32 the
+tunnel-like walls of the "spite house" resounded with as illuminating a
+verbal interchange of billingsgate biographies as I have ever listened
+to. At 10.35 I covered Addicks in a hasty but quite successful retreat
+which he beat to our cab. Thence to the Hoffman House, where I summoned
+Parker Chandler to aid in the calming of our raving associate. The next
+two hours were of the pulse-jumping, vein-tearing kind incidental to
+"frenzied finance," but they were not without avail, for Addicks finally
+agreed that he might consent to "something" provided the Bay State
+equities in the Boston companies were so preserved that he could
+eventually get them back into his hands by repayment to Rogers or by the
+redemption of bonds.</p>
+
+<p>Having got thus far, I again went after Braman and Foster, who were at
+the Hotel Cambridge. We repaired for further conference to the
+University Club, which was then in the old A. T. Stewart marble palace
+on the corner of Thirty-fourth Street and Fifth Avenue. I shall never
+forget that session. It was past midnight, but the three of us battled
+with our smoky problem, now good-naturedly, now bitterly. At times it
+looked hopeless because of this obstinate demand or that steadfast
+refusal. It must have been three o'clock in the morning when I left them
+and stepped into the Waldorf for a moment to relieve Moore's vigil. Then
+back again to the Hoffman, where Addicks, Chandler, and some Bay State
+directors were nodding. By this time I was in no mood to say more than
+that I would be over in the morning, and that Addicks should go early to
+the National Committee's head-quarters and explain the desperation of
+conditions in Delaware to Hanna, Osborne, and their associates. At last
+I was free to return to the Brunswick for a few hours' rest.</p>
+
+<p>In the country, cock-crow is the signal to be up and doing. In the city,
+the signal to be up and to do is a hoarse, metallic roar that would
+drown a million country cock-crows if each particular cock were as big
+as the mythical rooster of antiquity and could crow in proportion to his
+size. My readers who dwell on the hills and in dales and wheat-fields,
+and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[185]</a></span> who are unfamiliar with the wild, weird early morning din of the
+city, may not know that the metropolitan cock-crow is made up of the
+jingle and jangle of a million tin milk cans jolted over a million
+blocks of stone to the tune of thousands of steel-shod feet, the shrill
+cries of an army of butcher and baker boys and the groans and the moans
+of countless troubled and tortured human souls. Cock-crow in the country
+means "Awake to another day of life." Cock-crow in the city is a signal
+for the slaves of Mammon to arise to another interval of flight and
+pursuit.</p>
+
+<p>The great city cock was just getting ready to send forth his hoarse cry
+as I went to bed, and he was still on his roost a few hours later, when
+I awoke. I looked from my window of the Brunswick across the Square, now
+flooded with the pure sunlight of early morning, and all the kinks and
+quirks and hobgoblins which the rush and irritation of yesterday had
+generated seemed to have vanished, and I could not suppress a smile at
+the thought of the night before, when this battle&mdash;this puny,
+insignificant battle for a few dirty dollars&mdash;had almost raised feelings
+I now knew too well should only be aroused by real battles, battles in
+which noble principles were involved, and I felt better able to fight
+what I had thought, the night before, was going to be a hard battle.</p>
+
+<p>"Pshaw!" said I, as I looked away and beyond the park to the grand
+battlefields of my better imagination, "what will it matter a hundred
+years hence what name appears against victor or vanquished in the
+archives of fame or the records of infamy when the student reads, '<span class="smcap">A.D.</span>
+1896, Bay State Gas-"Standard Oil" war,'" for I saw that among the
+countless real deeds there would be no room for any record to mark the
+existence of any Gas or Dollar war.</p>
+
+<p>With these thoughts still in mind I sat down to breakfast with Parker
+Chandler, and as I listened to his cheerful gossip of yesterday, I
+inwardly resolved that whatever the result of the day's effort, I would
+take it with a smile.</p>
+
+<p>Thursday was another period of strenuous struggle and unceasing effort.
+I began early, and every moment was taken up with arguments, wrangles,
+pleadings! Chandler<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[186]</a></span> had agreed to see that Addicks kept his appointment
+with the National Committee and that a quorum of Bay State directors
+should be on hand in the Hoffman so that we could get quick action on
+any proposition that came up. This arranged I hurried over to see John
+Moore, then down for a last word with Mr. Rogers. Addicks came next for
+a spell; from him to Braman and Foster; back to John Moore; more
+interviews with lawyers and round the circle again. It seemed as though
+it were impossible to arrive at any agreement that some one of the
+principals interested would not kick over. At four o'clock Friday
+morning John Moore and myself ceased our labors for the day, both of us
+wellnigh exhausted. With all our efforts many of the vital points to our
+agreement were still in the air. A few hours' sleep and we were back at
+our task, and by six o'clock on Friday night the last obstacle had been
+overcome and the deal was completed.</p>
+
+<p>There remained now the tremendous business of putting all the
+arrangements concluded into execution. A multitude of legal documents
+had to be drawn up and executed, first by Rogers and then by the Bay
+State board of directors and officers. It was a pile of work, but not a
+second was lost, and by 11.20 that night we were ready for the third
+act, which was to be performed simultaneously by different sets of
+actors in Boston and Wilmington. For this our officers were split. With
+the directors of the Boston corporations, Chandler, and Mr. Rogers'
+attorney to supervise the legal end of next day's transaction, I left on
+a special car attached to the midnight train for Boston; while Addicks
+and the Bay State directors set forth on another midnight train for
+Wilmington, Del., to be followed in the early morning by my New York
+partner, John Moore's partner, Braman, Foster, and more counsel
+representing Mr. Rogers. This contingent was to carry the money.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[187]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXVI</h2>
+
+<h3>THE CIRCLING OF THE VULTURES</h3>
+
+
+<p>I don't believe there ever was before or since a financial operation in
+which so many things, each of vital importance, had to be done at one
+and the same time.</p>
+
+<p>Before I took the train for Boston, just after the last deed had been
+signed, Braman, Foster, and I had come to a complete understanding in
+regard to the manner in which the court proceedings the following
+morning should be conducted. It was understood that no one should take
+another's word for anything, and consequently that no money should pass
+until specific performance of all the required conditions. Immediately
+on the release of the receivership, Foster and Braman were to be paid
+their "fee," and they asked that the $175,000 cash coming to them should
+be arranged in separate piles of bills. The two packages containing
+Foster's and part of Buchanan's, and Braman's $50,000 were to be in the
+joint custody of John Moore's representative and my partner, who, with
+Rogers' counsel and Addicks, had been assigned to represent Bay State in
+the court.</p>
+
+<p>What would happen after the transfer of these several amounts was
+outside my jurisdiction. Addicks did not confide to me his own scheme of
+revenge, but of Braman and Foster's purposes I had a clear idea. As
+Braman had explained, the great winning of his adventure should be made
+in the stock plunge he and Foster contemplated in Bay State Gas stock,
+then selling at 3-1/2 to 4; but lest there be some slip-up in court,
+"buy" orders to their brokers were contingent on the word "go!" from
+Wilmington. To get this off at the right moment a clerk was taken along,
+whose only part in the play was to telephone this word "go!" They
+expected in this way to make at least half a million.<a name="FNanchor_16_16" id="FNanchor_16_16"></a><a href="#Footnote_16_16" class="fnanchor">[16]</a><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[188]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Addicks' intentions, as I afterward learned, were less exalted but much
+more direct. He had conceived a plan whereby without danger to himself
+he could punish Braman and Foster for the wrong they had done Bay State,
+and at the same time meet his election expenses at no cost to his own
+pocket. In the course of his electioneering campaign in Delaware,
+conducted as all the world knows how, Addicks had gathered to his cause
+as tough and rascally a set of "heelers" as ever waylaid aged woman or
+lame man on the highway. A lieutenant who had been despatched to
+Delaware early Friday afternoon, when it had become evident that we
+should get things settled up, gathered the sturdiest members of this
+precious troop together and solemnly told them that a serious hitch had
+occurred in Addicks' game and that it looked as though, owing to the
+receivership, there would be no "stuff" to put in circulation this year.
+The men responsible for this outrage were to be in Wilmington on the
+following day and from the appearance of things would get the money
+Addicks had destined for his followers. He understood they were to
+receive it in cash, too&mdash;$175,000&mdash;cash that really belonged to Addicks,
+who had intended it for his good friends in Delaware. The thugs,
+properly indignant at the wrong that had been done "the Boss," dispersed
+rapidly to discuss the information among themselves. That night a group
+of leaders got together and figured out a little plan of campaign to
+frustrate the robbery of their beloved master. Court proceedings to
+release the receivership could not take long, and they calculated that
+the train schedule would detain Braman and Foster at least two hours in
+Wilmington after the adjournment. What more easy than the organizing of
+a little scuffle on the station platform or on the street and in the
+rush&mdash;well, many things happen in a rush. This simple procedure
+commended itself to all concerned, and that night there was much
+rejoicing among the Addicks camp-followers at the pleasant things that
+should be pulled "off" at the flim-flamming bee next day.</p>
+
+<p>All these things were in the air when court opened in Wilmington on
+Saturday morning. A special telephone line<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[189]</a></span> had been run and
+arrangements made for a clear wire right into the directors' office in
+the head-quarters of the Gas Light Company in Boston. At the telephone
+in Wilmington sat my partner ready to communicate to me the exact course
+of the proceedings, so that I might simultaneously make the agreed
+transfers of our companies to Rogers. I knew my partner's voice; he knew
+mine. We, too, were taking no chances.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p class='right'>* <span class="smcap">New York</span>, February 21, 1905.</p>
+
+<p><i>Dear Mr. Lawson</i>: In your article in <i>Everybody's Magazine</i>
+for January, among other misstatements upon which I shall
+not now comment&mdash;since you have committed yourself too far
+to make it likely that you will withdraw them&mdash;you accuse me
+of having speculated in Bay State Gas stock with Mr.
+Buchanan's money; and of having subsequently been sued by
+him. I hold Mr. Buchanan's receipt for the money collected
+for him, which I paid him the night that I returned from
+Delaware. He has never sued me. Please inform me whether you
+are willing and agree to strike out these statements from
+your article when published in book form, and also whether
+you will agree to withdraw the same in your magazine. I
+tried to call on you and discuss the case when in Boston,
+January 21st; and I also tried to meet you on the day after
+last Thanksgiving; but apparently you were unwilling to see
+me. I remain,</p>
+
+<p class='indent1'>Very truly yours,</p>
+<p class='right'><span class="smcap">Roger Foster</span>.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 25%;" />
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Thomas W. Lawson, Esq.</span>,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Boston, Mass.</p>
+
+<p class='right'><span class="smcap">February</span> 23, 1905.</p>
+
+<p><i>My Dear Mr. Foster</i>: I received your letter of the 21st
+inst., and in reply will say, if I have done you any wrong
+in my story, "Frenzied Finance," or otherwise, it has been
+unintentional, and I regret it, and I seek this, the first
+opportunity, to give my regrets the same wide circulation as
+my original statements.</p>
+
+<p>As I wrote you previous to the publication of the magazine
+containing the parts you refer to, I try to exercise the
+greatest care in allowing nothing to appear in my story but
+facts&mdash;facts I know to be facts, and in addition only such
+facts as are absolutely necessary to my work, which is the
+portrayal of those events of the past essential to a proper
+understanding by the people of the evils that have been done
+them, and how they have been done, that they may do what is
+necessary to undo them and to prevent their repetition in
+the future, and, in addition, such facts as it is fair for
+me to use. I repeat what I said to you then: I have
+absolutely no feeling in regard to you other than an intense
+desire to do you exact justice.</p>
+
+<p>I dealt with you in the entire Bay State receivership affair
+in connection with Mr. Braman and I thought that I had every
+reason to believe that his Bay State Gas purchases were for
+your joint account; but now that you assure me they were
+not, I hasten to have such assurances chase my original
+story with the hope that they may speedily overtake it.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[190]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>My information that you had been sued by Mr. Buchanan came
+to me in a way that left no doubt in my mind of its
+correctness&mdash;no doubt until I received your letter. Papers
+were sent to me some time ago by reputable attorneys in a
+suit of Buchanan against Braman and, I understood, yourself,
+along the lines outlined in my story, with the request that
+I allow my deposition to be taken, so that Buchanan could
+get at the facts in his attempt to recover the moneys
+claimed.</p>
+
+<p>Your assurances to the contrary in regard to this matter I
+also hasten to start on the road you point out, and I will
+see that both statements are expunged from my book.</p>
+
+<p>You are in error in thinking that I did not wish to see you
+when you were in Boston. I did not know in either case of
+your desires until it was too late to see you. I certainly
+would have had a "sit-down" with you if it had been
+possible.</p>
+
+<p>Again assuring you not only that it is a pleasure to set
+forth the facts you have called to my attention, but that I
+am your debtor inasmuch as you have given me an opportunity
+to perform that duty which I owe to every individual my
+story treats of&mdash;to state facts and only facts with which
+they have been connected&mdash;believe me,</p>
+
+<p class='indent1'>Yours truly,</p>
+<p class='right'><span class="smcap">Thomas W. Lawson</span>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_16_16" id="Footnote_16_16"></a><a href="#FNanchor_16_16"><span class="label">[16]</span></a> See foot-note on pages <a href="#Page_189">189</a> and <a href="#Page_190">190</a>.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[191]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXVII</h2>
+
+<h3>COURT CORRUPTION AND COIN</h3>
+
+
+<p>The closing scene of this most significant drama was enacted on Saturday
+morning in the Wilmington Circuit Court-room. There was nothing in the
+cold formality of the proceedings to indicate that here was the
+<i>d&eacute;nouement</i> of a serio-comedy in which greed and ambition had clashed
+in a battle for millions; nor in the amiable indifference of the men who
+got within the enclosed space below the judge's desk to suggest the
+murderous passions and fierce hatreds raging beneath the surface of the
+prevailing calm.</p>
+
+<p>The <i>dramatis person&aelig;</i> were gathered in little groups representing the
+separate interests&mdash;Addicks and some of his lieutenants; my partner at
+the telephone; John Moore's partner and Rogers' counsel with their heads
+together; Braman and Foster nearer the judge, their eyes wandering
+toward two dress-suit cases piled before John Moore's partner, which, it
+was understood, contained the money. At a glance it was impossible to
+tell the one containing Buchanan's share from the other laden with the
+receivership loot, but each was tagged, and it was evident that
+possibilities of a mix-up had been carefully guarded against. Behind
+Braman was his clerk, and in the rear of the court-room sat as many of
+Addicks' thugs as could squeeze into the narrow space reserved for
+spectators. They, too, eyed the dress-suit cases avidly, for the
+information had been passed around that these innocent receptacles
+contained the "stuff," of which the "Boss" was about to be robbed.</p>
+
+<p>Court came to order. Foster rose, announced that the claims of his
+client had been satisfied, and made a formal motion to dismiss the
+receivership. The Court formally<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[192]</a></span> consented, and as the clerk was
+entering the dismissal in his minute-book my partner telephoned the
+facts to me. I sent back the word that my directors were resigning&mdash;had
+resigned&mdash;that Rogers' directors were being elected&mdash;had been
+elected&mdash;that the Boston gas companies were now transferred to Rogers.
+My partner whispered my words to John Moore's partner and Rogers'
+counsel. At once the two dress-suit cases, each loaded with currency,
+were slipped to Braman and Foster. At the same time the messenger who
+was to telephone to their broker rose and quickly left the court-room. A
+brief period was consumed in signing receipts, certificates, and other
+legal papers, and then the performance was over. Addicks rose and went
+out among his henchmen in the rear, who eagerly surrounded him. In the
+bustle Braman and Foster, each with his own booty, fled.</p>
+
+<p>Let us see what was happening at the Boston end of the wire while all
+this dumb show was being enacted in the Wilmington court-house. My
+directors and officials were lined up against the walls of the
+directors' room in the Boston Gas Light Company's office like so many
+members of young John D. Rockefeller's Sunday-school class, inasmuch as
+they were prepared to listen, sing, or shout "Amen!" at any time they
+received the nod of the class-leader. In an adjoining room Rogers'
+counsel had a similar line-up, with the difference that my men were
+about to shed the crowns which the others were waiting to receive, and
+which would transform them from humble business men into royal gas
+kings. Through the open wire I was in such close touch with the scene in
+the Wilmington court-room that I was almost sure I heard the subdued
+weeping of the blindfolded Lady of the Scales on the bills which
+occupied such a prominent part in the disreputable proceedings. Nothing
+now could impede the course of events, so I concluded to take Time by
+the headgear and secure what Bay State stock was in the market before
+Braman and Foster got in their work. Over another wire which was at my
+elbow I gave the word "go!" to my own brokers in Boston and New York,
+and when a few minutes later they told me they were securing thousands
+of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[193]</a></span> shares, and that the stock was climbing toward 10, I could not
+repress an inward chuckle at the thought that the money we had so
+reluctantly parted with would spread over only one-half or one-third the
+surface it was originally intended to cover.</p>
+
+<p>It was all over in a few minutes, and when my partner said, "It's done,"
+and "By Jove, there go Dwight Braman and Roger Foster on the dead run
+with a dress-suit case apiece!" I held my sides as Parker Chandler in
+his inimitable way bawled: "Tom, let's leave our straw hats on the pegs,
+for we'll probably be back next spring figuring out how to pump air
+enough through the gas-measuring meters to pay for that money we've just
+loaned Braman and Foster for a day or two."</p>
+
+<p>Braman and Foster, as I have observed before, knew their business. The
+danger to which $175,000 in currency would be exposed, in a territory
+controlled by Addicks, had appealed to their cautious instincts, and
+once outside the court-room they literally took to their heels and ran
+for a corner of the railway yard, where awaiting them was a special car
+and engine. They jumped aboard, yelling to the engineer: "Let her go."
+In the meantime eager-eyed ruffians searched the streets and hung round
+the hotels, looking for two men with dress-suit cases. A hundred of them
+were on the station platform, awaiting the departure of the regular
+train. Ten minutes before leaving-time one of the henchmen appeared
+among the gang, and passed round the word that the gents and the "stuff"
+had got off by a special, and it was no use waiting any longer. Later
+that afternoon, Addicks, to use his own words, in one of his rendezvous,
+"dealt out his own good money in place of that he had hoped would take
+care of the people's rights."</p>
+
+<p>It was a fierce session of the Stock Exchange that Saturday morning.
+Shortly before closing time a new set of brokers were frantically
+grabbing for Bay State stock round 10, and Monday morning, when all the
+world knew that the receivership had been lifted and our company was
+itself again, the same crowd continued to buy fiercely. To these eager
+purchasers I resold all that I had previously gathered,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[194]</a></span> and enough
+short besides, to compensate me for some of the losses I had previously
+suffered, for this latter I was enabled to repurchase at half price,
+when news came that another suit had begun against Bay State. This
+latter drop in price so shattered the nerves of Braman and Foster that
+they retired, having made up their minds that they did not know quite as
+much about one end of "frenzied finance" as they did about the other. As
+a matter of fact, nothing came of the suit in question, for it was
+evident when the transfer of the Boston gas companies to Rogers' control
+became known, that Bay State Gas receiverships had played their last
+successful engagement.</p>
+
+<p>My readers will not object if I again call their attention to the
+inevitable workings of the law of compensation. The losses occasioned by
+the market action of Bay State stock in these four days so mixed up
+Braman and Foster in their financial accounts that later they were sued
+by their client, Buchanan, who in court stated that he in turn was so
+confused as to what was done in connection with this business that he
+really knew less after it was over than before the suits were brought.
+But one thing was indelibly impressed upon his mind&mdash;that his bonds had
+disappeared in the whirl and he had not received anything for them. I
+think this suit is still pending.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[195]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXVIII</h2>
+
+<h3>PEACE AT LAST</h3>
+
+
+<p>When the curtain fell on the closing scene of the performance in the
+Delaware court there ensued a brief interval of quiet in the affairs of
+Bay State Gas. Rejoicing in the temporary diversion of public attention,
+the chief actors proceeded to assume their former r&ocirc;les, and soon
+affairs began to move at their old gait. Rogers took possession of all
+the Boston gas companies and patiently awaited the coming down the pike
+of some traveller with more money than brains. Having successfully
+corrupted the State of Delaware, Addicks was being measured for the
+senatorial toga, when accidentally the blind lady dropped her scales on
+his unprotected head, which catastrophe laid him out long enough to
+enable another to sneak the prize he had so long striven for. We are not
+at present concerned with the affairs of Delaware, and it suffices to
+say in passing, that after a heated contest one Richard Kenney was
+chosen to the senatorial seat Addicks had so long coveted, and that this
+man, a typical Delaware vote-rancher, after being sworn in as United
+States Senator, was brought back to Wilmington and tried for robbing a
+Delaware bank, his accomplices being some other heelers of Addicks. The
+disclosures made in the trial showed that the case in all
+characteristics conformed to the Addicks standard of indecency, for the
+bank officials, not satisfied with "blowing in" every dollar of deposits
+and capital the institution owned or controlled, had actually "lifted"
+in addition the building in which the bank was situated. One of the
+court functionaries who had heard the evidence tersely remarked: "Talk
+about stealing a red-hot stove: this is a case where they took the
+funnel with it to keep the draught going until they set it up in a new
+location!"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[196]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>But Delaware, as my readers have doubtless gathered long ere this, is
+its own kind of a country, and rewards and punishments are so perversely
+adjusted that it seems a sort of Topsyturvydom. In this instance certain
+of Addicks' heelers went to State's prison and death; Kenney returned to
+the Senate to help make laws for the great free people of America, while
+the chief conspirator, with a threat to sue the blindfolded lady for
+damage done, began to set out the pieces on the Bay State Gas chessboard
+with a view to trying certain new moves that had occurred to his
+perpetual-motion mind.</p>
+
+<p>The situation of Bay State Gas stock was fully understood by the public.
+While Rogers had possession of the Boston companies, he simply held them
+in trust, and must give them up whenever the parent corporation had coin
+enough to redeem them. The securities were still in the hands of the
+public and my friends, and my own duty to get Bay State Gas on its feet
+was plain. It was again a case of raising money, and to do this we had
+the issue of securities which we were preparing to float just before
+Foster and Braman swooped down on us. Addicks agreed that if I would
+undertake the marketing of this stock, he would issue only enough of it
+to redeem the properties from Rogers. His directors met and formally
+"resoluted" on this point, and I felt satisfied before going ahead that
+there was no danger of this money being put in jeopardy without actually
+stealing it. The company, for the nonce, had no other business but to
+pay office rent and clerk hire, and in spite of Addicks' financial
+immorality, all who knew him were aware he took no chances of ever
+getting himself sent to jail. So I began to sell the stock in the open
+market.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[197]</a></span></p>
+<h2><i>PART II</i></h2>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>CHAPTER I</h2>
+
+<h3>THE MAGIC WORLD OF FINANCE</h3>
+
+
+<p>Though this is the twentieth century and enlightenment is supposed to
+prevail throughout this broad land of ours, the majority of people still
+regard the world of finance as the world of magic. Within the fairy
+realm of finance the laws of nature apparently are suspended, and,
+overnight, wonders are worked. The ordinary mortal, wise in all other
+walks of life, sees the man who yesterday stood beside him at the plough
+or at the bench emerging from the mysterious portals bearing the fruits
+of the endeavors of a hundred or a thousand lives, although a moment ago
+he passed through them with nothing. Who can deny the magic that thus
+demonstrates its power, or fail to accord veneration to the magicians
+that work such marvels? No wonder the ordinary mortal feels that he has
+no license to enter the world of finance save on his knees, hat in hand,
+bearing tribute to the divinities enthroned within this enchanted
+territory.</p>
+
+<p>It is my purpose to do away with this extraordinary deception and to
+show it up as one of the artifices with which tricksters, since the
+beginning of the world, have imposed upon the people. There should be
+nothing in finance that any man or woman of ordinary intelligence and
+experience cannot understand, and I purpose to explain here the
+machinery of the "System" so that every one will exactly understand it
+from headlight to rear-end lantern. Many intelligent people have no
+clear idea of what a certificate of stock or a bond really is, and the
+words "money," "stock-exchange," and "finance" are mere terms which they
+glibly use without knowledge of their meaning.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[198]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>It is not difficult to understand the grocery or the dry-goods business.
+Standard articles of well-known form are sold by weight or measure over
+the counters for fair prices. The patrons of such businesses insist on
+knowing what they are buying&mdash;what they are to get in exchange for the
+money which is the fruit of their labor, and then, after they have been
+told, and they trade, they require that the goods be as described or
+they will know why not. The average American would consider it a huge
+joke should his grocer undertake to induce him to buy one hundred times
+more sugar than he could use, on the ground that he might find in the
+sugar bags when he reached home gold and diamonds. But would he not
+wrathfully seek the police if, after opening his sugar bag, for which he
+had paid $1, he found it contained only 50 cents' worth of sugar? He
+would tell you if you met him at this stage: "You can bet that chap on
+the corner cannot get away with any such trick as that&mdash;not in America.
+He might in Zanzibar or in the kingdom of the Sultan of Sulu, but I will
+show him he cannot rob Americans in these enlightened times." The grocer
+would be hustled to jail without a "by your leave," and thenceforward
+his name would be a by-word among all honest tradesmen.</p>
+
+<p>And so it goes in every business but finance&mdash;finance, the most
+important of all, the business into which is merged all other
+businesses, the business of taking and preserving the results of all
+other businesses, of all other human endeavor. Over our land to-day are
+big, able Americans, long-headed and experienced, adept at a jack-knife
+swap or a horse trade&mdash;industrious farmers, hard-handed miners, shrewd
+manufacturers, each in his own line a good business man, yet these
+sturdy traders, whom the "gold-brick" artist or the "green-goods"
+practitioner would never dream of tackling, come weekly into Wall
+Street, or into such branch shops as exist in every community on the
+continent, and are done out of their savings like the veriest
+"come-ons." Humbly they take, in return for the gold earned with the
+sweat of their brows, a piece of paper of a given value which they
+return later and exchange for half the amount the paper cost them
+originally. In the space between purchase and sale fifty per<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[199]</a></span> cent. of
+their investment has disappeared&mdash;has been filched away, but yet they
+have no resentment. They evince none of the feelings of the man whose
+pocket has been picked or whose till has been robbed. On the contrary,
+their sentiment is of admiration for the banker, the broker, the
+financier through whose agency their money has been lost.</p>
+
+<p>Take, for instance, the prosperous tanner who goes to his banker with
+$100,000, the fruit of ten years' success, and exchanges this sum for
+1,000 shares of Steel Preferred. Now, if he were to examine this
+security with half the thought or investigation he gives to a $500
+car-load of bark, he would learn that there was not 20 cents on the
+dollar of real value behind it. In six months the eminent tanner is
+again at the banker's offering for sale his thousand shares of steel. In
+the meantime it has declined in value and he has to part with it for
+$50,000. But he does not complain; indeed, he bows his way out of the
+palatial office of the great man and is full of sincere thanks when the
+banker promises to let him know the next good thing on the market.
+Suppose our tanner had purchased ten cars of tan bark and found that
+each car-load was short ten per cent. Would he not at once go to his
+attorney and exclaim emphatically that he would spend thousands rather
+than let the scoundrel who had tricked him get away with his swag?</p>
+
+<p>Suppose our grocer waxing rich invests his funds in the Sugar trust. He
+thinks he knows all there is to be known about sugar. The business of
+the trust is to make the sweet commodity and sell it to the people. No
+mystery or magic, surely, about this simple pursuit. Yet when our grocer
+invests his savings, the sugar stock is many dollars more valuable than
+when, scared into selling by fluctuations which he cannot see any reason
+for, he tries to get back his investment. So many times have investors
+been milked of their savings by this one trust during the past twenty
+years that in the coffers of its creators and jugglers are hundreds of
+millions of money that once belonged to the people for which they have
+received absolutely nothing in return.</p>
+
+<p>Both the tanner and the grocer must know, when they look up and down
+Wall Street at the great office buildings<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[200]</a></span> which tower into the sky on
+either side of the street, that these are huge hives of expensive bees
+who, from New Year's to New Year's, do not produce a dollar. They should
+realize that the hundreds of millions spent each year for the expense of
+running the "System's" game, and the millions which the game-makers
+flaunt in their faces, must have been derived from such as they&mdash;the men
+who produce.</p>
+
+<p>It is the phenomenon of the age that millions of people throughout this
+great country of ours come of their own free will to the shearing pens
+of the "System" each year, voluntarily chloroform themselves, so that
+the "System" may go through their pockets, and then depart peacefully
+home to dig and delve for more money that they may have the debasing
+operation repeated on them twelve months later.</p>
+
+<p>You may ask if I desire to convey the idea that the great financial
+institutions and trusts of this country, which have their head centre in
+Wall Street, are all concerned in a conspiracy to rob the people of
+their savings. You think, doubtless, that so sweeping a statement goes
+beyond the truth. I desire to go on record right here in declaring that
+all financial institutions which in any way are engaged in taking from
+the people the money that is their surplus earnings or their capital,
+for the ostensible purpose of safeguarding it, or putting it in use for
+them, or exchanging it for stocks, bonds, policies, or other paper
+evidences of worth, are a part of the machinery for the plundering of
+the people.</p>
+
+<p>This is a terrible charge, I am well aware, but it is based upon a
+thorough knowledge of the subject and made with a full appreciation of
+its gravity. I do not mean to say that all the men who handle and
+control the different institutions I mentioned have guilty knowledge of
+the bearing of their actions. Many of them are of the purest minds and
+most honest intentions, and are quite incapable of participating
+voluntarily in a conspiracy to wrong any one. They do not know, however,
+that the relation between their own minor institution and the general
+financial structure constitutes the former an agency for the "System,"
+which controls and has organized the general financial structure into an
+instrument for converting the money of the public to its own purposes.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[201]</a></span>
+In fact, the "System" has cunningly possessed itself of the financial
+mechanism of the country and is running it, not for the object for which
+the machine was devised, but for the benefit and personal profit of its
+votaries, and so the vast correlated organization of banks, trust
+companies, and insurance corporations which were brought into being for
+the safe handling of the people's savings has become an agency for
+transferring these savings to the control of unscrupulous manipulators,
+who take liberal toll of every dollar that passes through their hands.</p>
+
+<p>The duty of the American people is to unloosen the thraldom of the
+"System" on our financial mechanism; to pluck out of their high places
+the dishonest usurpers who have degraded the purposes of our financial
+institutions, and to restore those institutions to their legitimate
+functions. When the people are fully awakened to the condition I
+describe, surely they will arise in their wrath and sweep the
+money-changers from the temple.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[202]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER II</h2>
+
+<h3>THE "SYSTEM" AND THE LOUISIANA LOTTERY COMPARED</h3>
+
+
+<p>Years ago one of the greatest evils in this country was the Louisiana
+Lottery. Through that lottery millions and millions annually were taken
+from the people and transferred to a few unprincipled schemers, who soon
+found themselves in possession of enormous fortunes. Wise men called for
+the abatement of this awful drain on the savings of the nation, but the
+law-abiding, God-fearing people of the country met their plaints with
+"Why should we be bothered about this matter? If fools and knaves elect
+to gamble in such palpably fraudulent ways, let them gamble, and their
+losses are no affair of ours. It is none of our business." But presently
+these honest people had it pounded into their well-meaning heads that
+the principal instrument by which the swindle was conducted was their
+own mail service, one of the most important branches of their
+Government; that, in fact, in each and every city, town, village, and
+cross-road in all our virtuous land, Government officials were acting as
+distributing agents for this huge corrupter and robber.</p>
+
+<p>Then the people rose in their irresistible might, and between the rising
+of one day's sun and its setting this powerful machine went as goes the
+gum-drop on the red-hot stove cover at a pop-corn soir&eacute;e. It melted,
+leaving nothing but a faint odor and a thin stain, both of which
+disappeared in the next morning's scrubbing, and the Louisiana Lottery
+was as though it had never been. Yet during its reign its insolent
+votaries could prove to the absolute satisfaction of all intelligent,
+patriotic men that it was useless for any man or set of men to attempt
+the lottery's destruction, because they would be met with the
+accumulated resistance of the reckless spending of the vast amounts of
+festered dollars which had been stolen from the people. The argument of
+these comparatively petty<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[203]</a></span> thieves was: "No men nor sets of men can hope
+to 'stack up' against us, for their money comes hard, cents and dollars
+at a time; they are obliged to earn it, while we get ours in chunks by
+simply taking it. We can buy lawyers and can hire law-makers, and we can
+lease Government officials, and we can outbid any honest men, who are
+the only ones who object to our game. In the market for legislative or
+business talent you cannot get within touching distance of us." Yet the
+people had but to sneeze and this foul parasite was detached from their
+free and honest structure and was wafted away with the dead leaves and
+the dust to bottomless nowhere.</p>
+
+<p>In the height of its prosperity the Louisiana Lottery took from the
+people only a paltry ten or twenty million dollars a year, while to-day
+there are single groups of banks, trust companies, corporations, and
+trusts which take from the people by might, by trick, and by theft
+hundreds of millions each year; and there are scores of such groups. The
+Sugar trust has been the instrument of gathering, in one year, a hundred
+millions of the people's savings, and the Steel trust alone has robbed
+the people of over five hundred millions of dollars in a single twelve
+months.</p>
+
+<p>To-day the "System" and its methods are as clearly and as sharply
+defined in the tangibility of their relation to the people as was ever
+the Louisiana Lottery. On certain days the Louisiana Lottery sold its
+tickets, which the people bought with their savings. On a certain day
+the drawing took place, at which all those who had parted with their
+dollars expected to receive them back together with immense profits, and
+upon that day disappointment was spread broadcast among the many and
+unhealthy joy among the few. So with the "System." On certain days the
+public is sold their stock, bond, and insurance policy certificates.
+Upon other days they look for their savings and profits. On the
+contrary, they learn that their savings have decreased in value or have
+been wiped out, and that there never was any chance of profit. My
+critics will say that such a comparison cannot hold, for in the lottery
+nothing was dealt in but gambling tickets, whereas the stock or bond
+certificate represents an ownership in<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[204]</a></span> the material things of the
+country. This is the fallacy the "System" spends millions every year to
+foster and disseminate. Between the two the difference is in favor of
+the Louisiana Lottery, for both are gambles and the lottery game was
+square. Those who ran it had for their trouble a fixed percentage of the
+profits, an enormous percentage, it is true, but the general fund was
+never encroached upon by the controllers. Who is to say what percentage
+the votaries of the "System" take in their game? It depends on how much
+their victims have to lose. The public have been persuaded, too, that in
+purchasing stocks they do not gamble, but only invest, or, at the worst,
+speculate, so they are deceived as well as plundered. A few millions
+each year satisfied the lottery owners; the votaries of the "System,"
+among whom the "swag" must be divided, demand millions upon millions
+each. The tickets of the lottery had a definite value at all times until
+the drawing took place. The stocks and bonds of the "System" have no
+rigid or unalterable value when issued or at any other time, and do not
+represent a fixed ownership in all the savings of the people which have
+been paid for them.</p>
+
+<p>Morally, legally, or ethically, the Louisiana Lottery, with all its
+attendant curses, was a far better institution for the people to bump up
+against every month than is the "System" against which the whole people
+are now directly or indirectly dealing every working day of the year.
+Startling this statement may be, but not more startling than the facts.
+The records of the lottery company will show how many dollars it took in
+from the public; how many were returned in prizes and expenses; and how
+many went into the pockets of the owners. The records of the banks,
+corporations, trusts, and stock-exchanges will exhibit how many dollars
+were paid into the "System" by the people; how much they received back
+in return therefor; how much the expense of conducting the business was;
+and how much profit went to the votaries of the "System." Compare the
+two and it will be found that there is annually taken by the "System"
+from the people a hundred, yes, a thousand times more than the Louisiana
+Lottery ever obtained in the same period.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[205]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>This being the fact, for how long will the people allow such a monstrous
+wrong to be done? How long will they suffer a few men to siphon
+automatically the money of the many into their own pockets?</p>
+
+<p>It is only a matter of simple mathematics to ascertain the day, and that
+only a few years away, when ten men will be as absolutely and completely
+the legal owners of the entire United States and all there is of value
+in it, as John D. Rockefeller is the absolute legal owner of the large
+section of it of which he is to-day possessed.</p>
+
+<p><i>When that day is here, the people will legally be the slaves of these
+ten men.</i></p>
+
+<p>If this is so&mdash;and it is as surely so as it is that the Constitution of
+the United States of America guarantees to every man, woman, and child
+who is a part of it perpetual freedom&mdash;it is so because the legal
+interest alone to which the ten men will be entitled and which they must
+receive (or our entire structure will fall) will of itself bring to
+their coffers all the wealth in existence within a given time. If this
+is so, then why have the American people allowed themselves to reach
+this condition? Why are they to-day not only resting peacefully under
+this worse than death-bringing yoke, but assisting in the further
+riveting of this badge of dishonor and degradation?</p>
+
+<p>The reason is simple: They have been lulled to sleep by the "System" and
+its cunning votaries until they have but a dull appreciation not only of
+existing conditions but of their coming consequences. It is almost
+incredible that a people as intelligent as the American people, and as
+alert to that individual and national honor which they have bought with
+so much of their blood and their peace of body and mind, can be so
+deceived and juggled with. When one looks about, however, and notes
+happenings of which one personally knows, and the degradation and
+dishonor to which public opinion is seemingly indifferent, nothing is
+incredible.</p>
+
+<p>One sees a certain man openly displaying five hundred millions of
+dollars, a sum which represents the life earnings of 150,000 of our
+population, and knows that this man has secured this incredible amount
+during forty years of his life.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[206]</a></span> One sees the second highest and most
+honorable office in the nation, a United States Senatorship, openly
+bought for a few stolen dollars by a man who up to the very day of its
+purchase was a watch repairer in a small country town, and who had never
+done a single meritorious deed or been possessed of worldly goods to the
+extent of $5,000. One sees a wily adventuress secure from the banks,
+which exist only to safeguard the people's deposited savings, hundreds
+of thousands of dollars on her bare story that she was the possessor of
+some mysterious documents. One sees a $6-a-week office-boy of one of the
+"System's" votaries able to borrow for the "System," on his bare note,
+four millions of dollars from a New York institution which only exists
+to safeguard the people's savings&mdash;although the law says that such
+institutions shall not loan to any man on any kind of collateral, even
+Government bonds, one-tenth that sum. One sees two men, drunk with their
+success, gouging and tearing at each other's hearts in Wall Street, and
+sees their gouging and tearing bring about a panic which takes from the
+people in an hour over a billion dollars and drives scores to suicide,
+murder, and defalcation&mdash;the two men continuing meanwhile as ornamental
+pillars of society instead of wearing prison stripes. One sees a great
+railroad corporation, in which are millions of the trust funds of
+widows, orphans, and charitable institutions, caught "short" (having
+sold something it did not own) in the stock-gambling game and held up to
+the tune of ten million dollars by a reckless stock gambler, who says
+"If you don't settle to-night it will be twenty millions to-morrow"; and
+the toll is paid, while the great banker who conducts the release of the
+hold-up charges the further tribute of twelve million dollars for his
+services. And then one sees this twenty-two millions of "commission"
+tacked on to the capital stock of the great railroad which is
+subsequently capitalized into a "bond" and sold to great life-insurance
+companies as a first-class investment for their trust funds.</p>
+
+<p>When one sees these things and a hundred other as rankly fraudulent, one
+should not wonder at anything American connected with dollars.</p>
+
+<p>Such things occur because the "System" has so far been<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[207]</a></span> able to keep the
+public in ignorance of its doings. On the surface there is nothing to
+suggest that a set of vampires have captured the high places of finance
+and are sucking away the life-blood of the nation. Our banks and trust
+companies all present a fair exterior and apparently are the same safe
+and honorable institutions they were before the canker fastened on them.
+Only its votaries know what the "System" is, and their way is the way of
+silence and darkness. A tie, stronger and more effective than the oath
+of the Mafia, binds them to its service, and woe be to him who dares
+divulge its methods. He who is bold enough to enter upon a recital of
+these secrets must be strong indeed to withstand the bribes to silence
+which would be placed in his hands. The "System" can well afford to pay
+any price rather than be brought face to face with its past, with an
+enraged people for referee. And even if the being be found who will
+venture an expos&eacute; of the conspiracy, he will find it strangely difficult
+to get his story past the traps and pitfalls which will be placed
+between it and the people for whose enlightenment it is intended.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[208]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER III</h2>
+
+<h3>THE FUNDAMENTALS OF FINANCE</h3>
+
+
+<p>Finance is easy enough to comprehend if it be explained, but so long as
+an explanation is deadly to the interests of the men who control it, one
+can be sure none will be offered. There is no term more common to-day
+than "trusts," and we are surrounded by "trusts," institutions whose
+workings during the past twenty years have awakened intense public
+curiosity to know what a "trust" is. Yet there is not extant a
+definition of a "trust" which conveys to the rank and file of the people
+any real idea of what a "trust" is. So vague is the general
+understanding of the "trust's" functions and purposes that the most
+intelligent and honest statesmen struggle and hopelessly flounder when
+they attempt to define them, and we have at the present time the able
+chief of our nation talking of regulating them by law, when, as a matter
+of fact, a "trust" is, top, sides, bottom, outsides, and insides, an
+absolutely illegal institution, created outside the law, existing
+outside the law, and having for its purpose the performance of those
+things and only those things which the law says cannot be performed
+legally. Imagine our law-makers gravely meeting to make laws for the
+control and regulation of the pick-pocket or burglar or counterfeiting
+industry, or endeavoring to prescribe legally the times, places, and
+amounts of national bank defalcations, or the kind of ink, paper, and
+pens which must be used by forgers in the pursuit of their
+profession&mdash;imagine it!</p>
+
+<p>In entering upon an explanation of the workings of the "System," it is
+necessary to set forth plainly the fundamentals of finance, the few
+rules and inventions by and through which humanity regulates its
+affairs. In the beginning, of course, might was right and men supplied
+their<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[209]</a></span> wants by force, trickery, or cunning. In time the disadvantages
+of this became obvious, for while the stronger could overcome the weaker
+and satisfy desire, a combination of the weaker units acting together
+could always wrest the prize from the individual. To equalize things,
+the people got together and made for themselves rules and regulations
+governing the conduct of their lives and their relations with one
+another. This was invention No. 1: <i>Law</i>. Presently it developed that
+the physical barter of the commodities of labor was not a satisfactory
+basis of exchange; so to the statutes already in existence a new one was
+added providing an interchangeable token of value. This was invention
+No. 2: <i>Money</i>. The statute insisted that the money be of a fair and
+just standard, by which all the people should receive the equivalent of
+their labor, and no more. As conditions became more settled, there grew
+up a realization of the value of a man's life to those dependent on him,
+and of the fact that when he died his wife and his children were
+deprived of the livelihood his labor won for them. A new regulation was
+added to the code, providing that men contributing to a fund during
+their lifetime should be entitled at death to leave to their heirs a sum
+in proportion to the amount of their contribution to the fund, less the
+actual expense of caring therefor. This was <i>Life Insurance</i>&mdash;invention
+No. 3. But there were other calamities less distant than death to be
+guarded against, and a common fund, also based on the contributions of
+individuals, to aid and relieve in case of fire and kindred calamities,
+was organized. Hence invention No. 4: <i>Fire Insurance</i>.</p>
+
+<p>And thus the fabric of civilization grew, each addition to the structure
+being made to cover a want which experience developed. As time went on,
+some of the people accumulated the fruits of labor, money, in greater
+quantity than was requisite for their own needs, but which less thrifty
+or less fortunate brethren could so profitably employ in their own
+affairs as to be able to pay for its use a fair proportion of what it
+could be made to earn. Thereupon provision was made for a common place
+of safety for this surplus money, a place where experts in the handling
+and putting to use of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[210]</a></span> money could employ their talents, first,
+safeguarding it and, then, loaning it to others. And the law was made to
+say that all money put into this common place should be so guarded as to
+be ready for its owner when he demanded it; that its owner should
+receive all it earned less the necessary expense of holding it, and that
+the amount it earned should be only such as those who borrowed it could
+fairly make it earn. This was invention No. 5: <i>The Bank</i>.</p>
+
+<p>As the years followed one another, "the bank" became one of the most
+important of the people's institutions and grew in number and variety.
+There came to be many different forms of banks. For instance, <i>national
+banks</i>, which, under the control and regulation of the Government,
+became depositories for the circulation of the Government's money and
+were privileged to lend money to individuals or corporations with or
+without collateral. Funds confided by the people to these national banks
+had always to be ready for their owners. A second form was the
+<i>savings-bank</i>, which grew out of the requirements of small depositors
+and was governed by the laws of its community. The savings-bank used and
+safeguarded money confided to it in small sums, and these amounts could
+be withdrawn only by their owners in person, after an agreed term of
+notice. The savings-bank was allowed to lend only on real estate or
+certain other securities, the character of which was rigidly regulated
+by the law. In consequence, it could use its funds for long-time loans
+and mortgages, so it earned larger rates of interest than the national
+banks. The <i>trust company</i> was a third variation, coming somewhere
+between the national and the savings-bank, and was regulated, as was the
+latter, by the laws of the community in which it existed. The trust
+company, too, received deposits from the people, but was allowed a
+broader latitude in employing them. It was also authorized to engage in
+certain other business&mdash;for example, to act as manager for a deceased
+person's estate and even to buy and sell securities. Because of the
+extra-hazardous business in which it engaged and from which the other
+two institutions were legally debarred, the trust company earned and
+paid larger rates of interest to its depositors, and the men<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[211]</a></span> who
+handled its funds were allowed to take for their own remuneration
+profits in excess of those derived by the custodians of national and
+savings-banks.</p>
+
+<p>Another deficiency in the business structure growing out of the
+increasing prosperity of the people was next provided for. When an
+enterprise became so large as to necessitate several owners for its
+conduct, the prescribing and defining of the relation of these owners to
+each other and to the common property became a task of increasing
+difficulty. So the idea arose of welding the enterprise itself into a
+separate entity which could do all the things the individual might, and
+yet exist apart from the individual and independent of his personal
+dealings and comings and goings. His ownership should be an undivided
+interest in the whole represented by certificates of stock or bonds,
+which could pass from him to another without interfering with the
+enterprise. This was invention No. 6: <i>The Corporation</i>. The law then
+provided regulations for the creation and conduct of these corporations
+which compelled them to keep their affairs in such shape that all could
+ascertain of what each consisted.</p>
+
+<p>When these six organizations had been founded, the machinery for the
+conduct of the business of a civilized people was almost complete. But
+still one other want developed: with the multiplication of the
+corporation tokens of property, it became necessary that there should be
+some place where the worth of these might be ascertained either by
+purchase, sale, or loan under the regulation of experts. So there was
+created a common market-place, to which came all those who had
+corporation tokens of property to sell and those who desired to purchase
+them; and the prices these brought were announced to the world and
+became the measure of the value of the institution they represented.
+Rules for the regulation of the business of the market-place were
+gradually formulated, and invention No. 7&mdash;the <i>Stock Exchange</i>&mdash;came
+into existence.</p>
+
+<p>With this addition, the people's organism for safeguarding and
+economically handling the funds of their labor to the best advantage of
+all concerned and without interfering with<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[212]</a></span> the rights and privileges of
+individuals was fully equipped. Each separate institution had grown out
+of an actual necessity and had its own legal organic function, fully
+understood and defined. And there was no branch of human industry which
+could not be safeguarded, handled, and perpetuated through this
+organism, nor could evil come from the existence of any one of these
+seven components. The robber, the thief, and the pirate, as defences
+against whom they had been erected, could not seize any of them or the
+people's savings which they were created to safeguard, because the
+constitution of each provided adequate penalties for such a seizure. As
+long as the members of the organism performed their ordained functions
+the fabric of the people's fortunes was safe from plunder.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[213]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER IV</h2>
+
+<h3>THE MAGIC "JIMMY"</h3>
+
+
+<p>It was at this stage that the class which is now the "System"&mdash;of which
+the mighty robber of barbaric days was the prototype&mdash;began to cast
+envious eyes at the accumulated earnings of a prosperous people locked
+up and safeguarded against depredation, while the owners (the public)
+rested easy in the conviction that they had fully protected themselves
+against the spoilsman. The "System" reasoned: "If only a way could be
+devised to win control of the seven institutions so that all the
+benefits the people intend for themselves may revert to me and yet I be
+exempt from the punishment provided for those who attempt unfairly and
+dishonestly to secure such benefits, I can get a much easier and surer
+possession of the results of the labor of the people than I was wont to
+when I took them by might."</p>
+
+<p>A need defined is half relieved. Outside the treasure-house was the
+robber enviously surveying its strong walls and iron doors, its locks
+and bolts, specially designed to defy the felonious intentions of such
+as he. How safely to win his way in and possess himself of the piled-up
+gold was his problem. And as he waited and watched, the lawyer, at his
+solicitation, invented for him a magic "jimmy"&mdash;an instrument with which
+he could not only break through the outside door, but as easily force
+his way past the complex locks of the chambers inside. What was still
+better, this magic "jimmy" was also a license to enter upon and take
+possession of others' properties and use them for his own benefit. It
+conferred on its owner a legal privilege to steal. The robber was
+satisfied. The "jimmy" which the lawyer had brought him was the
+"trust."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[214]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>All this sounds very hyperbolical and far-fetched, perhaps, but it is
+exactly what a "trust" is. The "trust" may also be defined as a master
+key to the people's financial structure, which enables its owner to
+enter any or all of the separate institutions I have mentioned, and
+combine any or all of them, without affecting their respective
+organisms, into a new organization which possesses the potencies and the
+privileges of each, but is unhampered by the legal restrictions of any
+one of them. Like electricity, the exact nature of a "trust" does not
+admit of rigid definition, but it is a force which can be exerted only
+in conjunction with financial organisms, which it joins and yet
+releases, adds power to, and exempts from consequences. Let us suppose
+that two men are made into a "trust"&mdash;this human combine becomes at once
+free from the bondage of matter and the senses, sees out of the back of
+its head and passes in and out through solid walls. It has all the
+combined strength and more that the two men had and all their human
+privileges and possessions, but it evades nature's laws as to
+individuals, and the laws of man both as to individuals and other
+material things.</p>
+
+<p>To put the description in still another way, a "trust" is an institution
+which endows itself with the right to use any or all of the seven
+institutions of the people as the people use them, but so made that its
+user derives from the institutions the benefits the people intended for
+themselves, and yet is immune from the legal consequences of
+appropriating such benefits. Two or more men make a "trust" by
+combining&mdash;acquiring the control of&mdash;an insurance company, a trust
+company, and a savings-bank. The new organization <i>is</i> all of these
+institutions, performs the functions of all of them, yet can legally do
+with their incomes, capital, and surpluses things which, from the very
+nature of each, none of the institutions is allowed to do&mdash;the new
+organization is all of these institutions until the law attempts to
+bring it to book; then it evades being any one of them. The trust
+company is empowered to lend money on speculative ventures which the
+insurance company and savings-bank may not do, so the "trust" lends the
+insurance company's vast accumulations and the savings-bank's hoard
+through the trust company with<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[215]</a></span> great profit or tremendous loss and
+enjoys immunity from the consequences which should follow such
+disobedience of the law. Moreover, when the trust company shows a profit
+the "trust" appropriates it, and when a tremendous loss is sustained the
+insurance company or the savings-bank must bear it.</p>
+
+<p>An illustration: A, B, and C form a "trust." A and B are president and
+controller of a savings-bank and an insurance company respectively. They
+organize a trust company with $1,000,000 capital, of which the insurance
+company furnishes the majority; they then elect C president and
+controller of the trust company, and make him their associate or a
+dummy. The trust company receives $5,000,000 of the people's money on
+deposit. The insurance company deposits $5,000,000 of its surplus funds,
+and the savings-bank $5,000,000 more. The trust company now has
+$15,000,000 of the people's savings in its control with which by law it
+is allowed to do certain things; but what it does with the $5,000,000 of
+the savings-bank and the $5,000,000 of the insurance company the law
+specifically says neither one of the institutions can do itself. The
+"trust" then purchases for $5,000,000 the stock of an industrial
+corporation. It borrows the $5,000,000 and an additional $5,000,000,
+which represents its own first profit, from the trust company through
+irresponsible dummies, depositing the industrial stock as collateral.
+The "trust" next causes the trust company to issue bonds for
+$15,000,000. These bonds are based upon and secured by nothing of worth
+but the stock. The trust company offers these bonds for sale. The
+insurance company buys $7,500,000 of the bonds, and the trust company,
+through dummies, the other $7,500,000. By the operation so far the
+"trust" shows a profit of $10,000,000. After making this profit and the
+true worth of the bonds becoming known, these decline back to the
+original worth of the stock upon which they are based, $5,000,000, and
+there is the tremendous loss of $10,000,000 made. The trust company
+"busts," and there is a loss to its depositors of $10,000,000. This loss
+is divided as follows: $3,333,000 to the savings-bank, $3,333,000 to the
+insurance company, and $3,333,000<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[216]</a></span> directly to the people, less the
+small amount which will be recovered from the stockholders. (These
+losses will be affected in an unimportant way by the $1,000,000 original
+capital.)</p>
+
+<p>In this case the "trust" has done nothing for which those responsible
+for it can be held civilly or criminally liable. Neither has the
+insurance company, the savings-bank, nor the trust company, and yet, if
+there had been no "Trust" and any one of the three institutions had made
+the loss directly through its own actions, the officers of that
+institution would have been civilly and perhaps criminally held
+responsible.</p>
+
+<p>The utility and convenience of the "trust" having been demonstrated, it
+became a popular instrument for financiers desiring to accomplish all
+manner of illegal purposes. Especially was it an apt tool for the
+"System," which in the meantime was perfecting its control of the
+people's institutions. The owners of railroads running through the same
+territory, finding cumbersome and hampering the restrictions with which
+the community they served had safeguarded its interests, formed
+"trusts." Straightway there were valuable results&mdash;the combination was
+emancipated from the regulations which had bound its individual members;
+competition was eliminated and rates were raised.</p>
+
+<p>As time went on new "trust" possibilities were discovered and other
+institutions linked up&mdash;corporations of all kinds, insurance companies
+and national banks and savings-banks, were brought together for the
+benefit of the "System" and the detriment of the public. The end of the
+trustification of the institutions of the nation is not yet, but the
+people are to be shown a way by which the plundering process can be
+reversed and through which they can make their freedom complete and
+absolute by the complete and absolute enslavement of the "System"
+itself.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[217]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER V</h2>
+
+<h3>HOW THE "SYSTEM" DOES BUSINESS</h3>
+
+
+<p>To follow the various steps in the crimes of Amalgamated, my readers
+should know how the securities of a corporation are manufactured, how
+"put upon the market," how admitted to the Stock Exchange, how prices
+are made in the Stock Exchange, how fictitious and fraudulent quotations
+are created and disseminated, until the very shrewdest members of the
+Stock Exchange cannot distinguish those which are real from the
+fictitious in cases outside their own manufacturing. Then there is an
+elaborate and ingenious procedure by which public opinion is moulded,
+that is, by which people are made to believe that the prices at which
+they buy and sell the stocks and securities are bona fide; and this is a
+procedure as compact and as well understood by the "System's" votaries
+as are the methods of the bank-breaker or burglar&mdash;who sends his "pals"
+ahead to "pipe" the lay of the land&mdash;by felony's votaries. When I have
+shown these things, about which little is known to-day by the public, my
+readers will have no difficulty in comprehending what I shall lay before
+them of the actual robberies in the case of Amalgamated and other
+notorious enterprises.</p>
+
+<p>The underlying principle of the several organisms through which the
+commerce of the country is conducted is the protection at once of the
+interests of the individuals composing them and of the public with which
+they do business. Provided this principle is adhered to, no harm can be
+wrought to either. Most of the contemporaneous swindles through which
+the people have been plundered were perpetrated through the agency of
+corporations, and this organism has become a sort of synonym for corrupt
+practice. Yet the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[218]</a></span> original corporation invention as I have described it
+was devised to meet a real want of the people, and it has merely been
+diverted from its proper use by the lawless votaries of the "System."
+Consider the institution as we now understand it. Certain individuals
+decide to conduct their business in railroads, mines, manufactories,
+patents, etc., in the form of a corporation and apply to the
+community&mdash;the State Government&mdash;asking authorization to do so. They are
+compelled first to conform to the rules and regulations laid down by the
+State for the control of corporations, which say in one form or other:</p>
+
+<p>"We create you for the purpose of doing those things that are best for
+the many, not the few, and if we knew you would use our authority to
+oppress the many in the interest of the few we would not create you."
+The fundamental privilege of incorporation is the legal authorization to
+issue paper titles of ownership to the business just incorporated. These
+are in the form of stocks and bonds. Whoever owns these paper titles
+shall possess the property and the business as the individuals did
+before they incorporated, and the law presumes that they shall manage
+and control that business, receive the benefits which come from it, and
+suffer any loss arising from its conduct, and that all these benefits
+and responsibilities shall be as laid down in the law. It follows that
+no harm other than that the law expressly prescribes penalties to
+prevent can come to any one from corporations thus created, always
+provided the laws are what they appear and what the people intended them
+to be, and that they are enforced as the people intended they should be.</p>
+
+<p>It is most important to all concerned in a corporation that the paper
+ownership shall represent the real value of the property on which it is
+based, and no more. When the people exchange their savings for these
+authorized paper tokens, they should be able to rest confident in the
+State's guarantee that they are worth what they purport.</p>
+
+<p>There have probably been jailed in the United States during the past
+twenty years thousands and thousands of American citizens whose
+aggregate stealings do not amount to one-tenth the total taken from the
+people by either the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[219]</a></span> Amalgamated, the United States Steel, the American
+Tobacco Company, or a score of other fraudulently organized or
+fraudulently conducted corporations.</p>
+
+<p>There are various ways of organizing corporations and issuing their
+stocks and bonds. Sometimes a company is organized to acquire a
+property; individuals and institutions set down their names to take and
+pay for the shares or bonds. With the money thus obtained the property
+is purchased. <i>Or</i> the individuals who own the property which is to be
+the basis of the corporation exchange it for all or part of the stocks
+and bonds. In the latter event those original owners usually sell to the
+public the tokens thus acquired.</p>
+
+<p>Honest men in forming a corporation make publicly known the character
+and worth of the properties or enterprises they are organizing, what
+they have cost, what their profits are, and what may reasonably be
+expected by investors. The tricksters and the "System," with whom
+incorporation is generally but the first step in a conspiracy for
+plunder, surround the proceeding with an air of mystery and refuse
+information usually with: "We do our business quietly and in silence,
+and those who do not like our ways may keep out of this scheme." Their
+whole procedure is of that high and mighty order which impresses the
+ordinary mortal with a sense of confidence in the independence of its
+users and a conviction that their scheme must be so good that they do
+not care whether they sell or not. This is just the effect it is
+intended to produce.</p>
+
+<p>The next step is to lead the people toward the shambles. This is done by
+"moulding public opinion," and for this interesting function the
+"System" and Wall Street have an equipment of magical potency. Public
+opinion is made through the daily press, through financial publications
+of various kinds, and through "news bureaus." Every great daily has a
+financial editor and a corps of experts in finance who spend their days
+on "the Street" cultivating the friendship of the financiers. At night
+they are round the clubs and hotels where the brokers and promoters
+congregate, debating the events of the day and organizing those of the
+morrow. There are also the strictly financial papers&mdash;daily,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[220]</a></span> weekly,
+and monthly&mdash;whose corps of editors and news gatherers live on "the
+Street," and know and care for nothing but finance. And lastly, there
+are the news bureaus, with runners out everywhere to gather in items of
+news affecting stocks, Wall Street or finance. These are printed on
+small square sheets of paper, and delivered by an army of boys at brief
+intervals while the Stock Exchange is open at the offices of the
+bankers, brokers, insurance companies, and hotels; or the same matter is
+disseminated by means of an automatic printing machine called a
+news-ticker. For this service the offices pay the bureaus from $1 to $2
+a day. News bureaus form an important cog in the machinery for making
+stock-markets, as it is through the news they furnish to the Stock
+Exchange and to the offices where investors and speculators gather
+together that the big operators affect the market. A decision to buy,
+sell, or "stand pat" is often based on the <i>on dits</i> of these printed
+slips.</p>
+
+<p>The first step toward "moulding public opinion" is taken when the
+"System's" votaries send for the dishonest chief of a news bureau, a man
+usually up in every trick of the trade. I will later describe one of
+them, a scoundrel so able and experienced that, to use the vernacular of
+the gutter of "the Street," he can give cards and spades to the
+frenziedest of frenzied financiers. To this man the "System's" votary
+will say something like this: "We are going to work off blank millions
+of blank stock; it costs us thus and so, and we want to sell for so and
+so many millions." Nothing is kept back from this head panderer and
+procurer, for it would be useless to attempt to deceive him, and, to
+quote his always picturesque language: "Never send a sucker to fish for
+suckers or he'll lose your bait, so spread out your bricks and I'll get
+the 'gang' to polish up their gildings." After the quality and amount
+the "System" intends to work off in exchange for the people's savings
+are explained, that part of the plunder which is to come to the head
+news-bureau man is settled upon. The amount varies with the size and
+quality of the robbery to be perpetrated. In some cases as high as a
+million dollars in cash or stock or their equivalent has been paid to a
+"moulder of opinion" for simply so shap<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[221]</a></span>ing up a game that the people
+might be deceived into thinking one dollar of worth was four, six, or
+eight dollars.</p>
+
+<p>The head of the news bureau, having taken the contract to lay out and
+carry through the deceptive part of the scheme by which the people are
+to be buncoed, now begins operations. First, bargains are made with
+conscienceless financial editors of the daily and weekly newspapers,
+whereby for so much stock or for "puts" or "calls" or both,<a name="FNanchor_17_17" id="FNanchor_17_17"></a><a href="#Footnote_17_17" class="fnanchor">[17]</a> they
+agree to insert in their paper's financial column whatever yarns are fed
+them by the bureau man, regardless of their truth or falsehood. To
+justify the attention paid the subject by each editor, a certain amount
+of money is spent in advertising, in the newspaper that employs him, the
+merits of the enterprise. The financial journals are dealt with about on
+the same basis. In return for straight advertising or for "puts" or
+"calls" they agree to insert the manufactured news. The news-bureau man
+then puts his entire staff to work inventing fairy tales of one kind or
+another to excite the interest and attention of the people, and these
+tales must be so concocted that the public is drawn into believing that
+the statements disseminated represent actual conditions. I shall, later,
+give real instances of the working of this nefarious game of "moulding
+public opinion," and present it in the lime-light necessary for its
+appreciation. To show the extent to which this "moulding" process is
+carried, I know in one instance of a high-priced financial scribe being
+sent to live in St. Petersburg for no other purpose than to send certain
+"news items" to a confederate located in Germany, who would get these
+items to a reputable English banking-house through whom they were given
+out in London as news: the whole object of this complicated system being
+that the news items might be sent back to New York without Wall Street
+suspecting they were bogus.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[222]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>I must not be understood as meaning to say that all financial editors,
+news gatherers, or news bureaus are engaged in this, one of the lowest
+forms of swindling, for such is not the case. <i>On the contrary, there
+are many of them whom no amount of money or influence could make waver
+in their allegiance to the truth and to honest dealings.</i> With some of
+the others I hope to deal specifically later, and I shall not hesitate
+to set forth in detail certain transactions in which they have been
+engaged.</p>
+
+<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_17_17" id="Footnote_17_17"></a><a href="#FNanchor_17_17"><span class="label">[17]</span></a> A "put" is the right to sell to a certain firm or
+individual shares of stock at a stated price for a stated period, and a
+"call" the right to buy under the same conditions. The holder of the
+"put" or "call" is under no liability, as he can use the "put" as margin
+to buy stocks, or the "call" as margin to sell stocks, or he can hold
+them for the profit there may be in selling or buying the stock after it
+has declined or risen below or above the price named in the "puts" or
+"calls" he holds.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[223]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER VI</h2>
+
+<h3>HOW WALL STREET'S MANIPULATIONS AFFECT THE COUNTRY</h3>
+
+
+<p>What is the connection between the "System" and the minor financial
+institutions throughout the country which are owned and controlled by
+groups of sturdy men who know not Wall Street and its frenzied votaries,
+and who are ignorant of "made dollars"? Let us see. We will take five
+national banks in different parts of the country, each having a capital
+of $200,000 and deposits of $2,000,000. One is in the farming district
+of Kansas; another is in Louisiana in a cotton district; a third is in
+the orange groves of California; in the mining district of Montana is a
+fourth; the fifth in the logging and lumber country of Maine. These
+$10,000,000 of deposits represent savings earned by the type of men who
+have made America what it is, and who laugh when they read in their
+local papers: "Panic in Wall Street; stocks shrink a billion dollars in
+a day." "Fools and their money are easily parted," they say, "but Wall
+Street gets none of our honestly earned money." Now the officers of
+these five banks are honest men and they know nothing of the "System,"
+yet the day of the panic they each telegraph to their Illinois
+correspondent, the big Chicago bank, "Loan our balance, $200,000, at
+best rate." That day the Chicago bank with similar telegrams from
+forty-five other correspondents in various parts of the country, wires
+its New York correspondent, the big Wall Street bank, "Loan our balance,
+$2,000,000, at best rates."</p>
+
+<p>Thereupon the great New York bank sends its brokers out upon "the
+Street" to loan on inflated securities of one kind or another which its
+officers, the votaries of the "System," have purchased in immense
+quantities at slaughter prices the millions belonging to the Chicago
+bank and to other corre<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[224]</a></span>spondents of its own in Cincinnati and Omaha and
+St. Louis and other big cities. The decline is stayed, and then the
+world learns that the panic is over and that the stocks, of which the
+people have been "shaken out" to the extent of a billion dollars, have
+recovered in a day $500,000,000 of it, and that probably in a few days
+more will recover the other $500,000,000. Who has <i>recovered</i> this vast
+sum? The people who had been "shaken out"? No, indeed! The votaries of
+the "System" have made it&mdash;they and the frenzied financiers whose haunt
+is Wall Street, and whose harvest is in such wreckage.</p>
+
+<p>The part that the five little banks innocently played in this terrific
+robbery was unimportant. What is important is that it was the funds of
+their depositors and others like them which the "System" used to turn
+the Stock Market and make an immense profit out of the recovery of
+values. It is true the banks received but two and one-half or three per
+cent. for the use of their balances, and their officers would scorn the
+suggestion that they had put any of their money in jeopardy in a Wall
+Street gamble. But what I have outlined happened, and has happened many
+a time before and since, and goes to prove my assertion that every
+financial institution which is taking the money of the people for the
+ostensible purpose of safeguarding it or putting it to use for them, is
+a part of the machinery for the plundering of the people.</p>
+
+<p>Sooner or later, every dollar taken by the "System" through Wall
+Street's manipulation of stocks directly affects every man, woman, and
+child in the United States. Let us, for example, see how a stock slump
+in New York affects the owner of a small life-insurance policy in
+Wyoming. The shares of the American and English ocean steamship
+companies were bought up by the "System" at double their worth and
+converted into a "trust." New stocks and bonds to a number of times
+their value were issued and sold to the public. The great insurance
+companies bought many millions worth of these securities, using for the
+purpose the money they had collected from the policy-holders, a dollar
+at a time. This "investment," at the moment it was made, actually<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[225]</a></span>
+represented a loss to the purchasing insurance companies of millions of
+money, for millions more than the property was worth or could possibly
+be made worth had gone to the people who formerly owned the steamship
+properties, and many millions more to the "System" as its share of the
+swag. And it should be remembered that the men who organized the
+steamship trust were the men who invested the insurance company's money
+in its securities.</p>
+
+<p>The policy-holder in Wyoming knows about the steamship trust and about
+the terrible loss sustained by those who invested in its securities. He
+does not realize, however, that his insurance company has been buying
+such poor stuff, for he is persuaded it is a great and noble
+institution, and far above Wall Street and its rash gamblers. Even when
+he and his kind find their yearly dividends on their policies growing
+less and less and their premiums rising "because of the tremendous
+increase in the expense of doing business," they do not dream of
+connecting these misfortunes with the "System's" trustifications of
+inflated securities; nor do they associate them with the glowing
+accounts of the half-million-dollar seaside palace built by the
+insurance company's officer who entered the employ of the institution a
+few years before, with his salary for his fortune, and who is now
+pointed to as an example of thrift, being worth from ten to fifteen
+millions.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[226]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER VII</h2>
+
+<h3>ECONOMICS OF COPPER</h3>
+
+
+<p>A thorough familiarity with the facts and conditions set forth in the
+preceding chapters will help my readers to an understanding of the
+series of complicated transactions through which the snaky course of
+Amalgamated must be pursued. Its flotation was the most tremendous and
+public ever even attempted, much less successfully carried out, and in
+its market career the full resources of stock jugglery were exercised on
+its behalf. The crimes of Amalgamated are to the delinquencies of Bay
+State Gas as the screaming of eagles to the chirping of crickets. From
+its birth this great enterprise went hand-in-hand with fraud and
+financial dishonor, and the facts I shall proceed to reveal are so
+formidable in their indictment as to startle even those calloused to the
+trickery of modern stock deals.</p>
+
+<p>An armistice followed that last desperate battle of the gas fight in the
+Delaware court-house, and gave me time to turn my whole attention to the
+plans I had long been maturing in my mind in connection with quite
+another project&mdash;"Coppers."</p>
+
+<p>For sixty years past Boston had been the home of the copper industry.
+From it great fortunes had been derived, and there was in course of
+development a copper aristocracy which threatened the supremacy of the
+East India aristocracy that had so long lorded it in Boston society.
+Indeed, so far had the rival contingents progressed that there was a
+serious searching of the pretensions of any new-comer whose origin had
+to do with other enterprises. "Coppers" were respectable, were genteel,
+and, above all, were not "trade," for the average old-time Bostonian
+affects the Anglo-Saxon contempt for the traffickings of retail
+commerce.</p>
+
+<p>For the benefit of those in the outer darkness, to whom<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[227]</a></span> the ways of
+Boston are strange, it may be explained that the East India trade goes
+elsewhere under other less euphonious names, and consisted in the
+swapping of New England rum, made from molasses, water, and other
+things, for human cotton-pickers. It was a most profitable industry,
+with a spice of adventure to it, and in which at the time it flourished
+a gentleman might honorably engage. It may be said that with the
+paradoxical conscientiousness characteristic of the Puritan mind, the
+first outcry against the personal ownership of human chattels was voiced
+by New England, and her leading citizens generously devoted the incomes
+of the fortunes their forefathers had amassed in the slave traffic to
+releasing their colored fellow-creatures from bondage. That, however, is
+still another story.</p>
+
+<p>To return to "Coppers." In my young days in "the Street" in the early
+'70s, the first task I remember performing was making deliveries of
+copper stocks traded in by "the house" which was entitled to my
+twelve-year-old services in return for the three large dollars which I
+received each Saturday with far more honest pride than any three
+millions I have since handled. As I grew up I watched Calumet and Hecla
+advance from a dollar to 450 (it afterward sold at 900) because of its
+real worth, and imbibed the conviction, which all true Bostonians
+entertain, that money acquired through copper is at least 33 per cent.
+better than money from any other source. I sympathized with the State
+Street code which declares, or should: "Gold can be found in a day by
+any one with eyes, silver in a week by any one with hands, and money in
+a year by any one with sense enough to save it, but no man gets into
+copper without capital, fortitude, patience, and brains." As a matter of
+fact, it requires, even to-day, with all of to-day's facilities and
+rush, $5,000,000 in money and five years of spending it after a copper
+deposit has been found before it can be made to yield returns. Is it
+surprising that a project requiring so much money for so long a time
+should appeal to Boston's regard for endurance, expensiveness, and
+exclusiveness? Could there be found an enterprise better calculated to
+discourage the upstart?<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[228]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>My daily round of errands led me from broker to broker and from bank to
+bank, and always I heard talk of copper. It is not remarkable that my
+youthful mind became impressed with the profound importance of the metal
+and all pertaining to it. I picked up a great deal of information on the
+subject, which I fortified later with a careful study of copper the
+metal, copper the mine, and copper the investment. As I mulled over the
+immense returns obtained from their ventures by the men I knew had their
+money in copper, it struck me as extraordinary that this industry should
+be so much more profitable than others. Here was a great staple, a
+necessity of the people, which had been in use since men began to sit
+up, and would be needed until Father Time smashed his glass, that
+returned 100 per cent. gross profit on the business done in it, while
+the business done in any other staple did not return, gross, over ten to
+eighteen per cent.; which gross profit gave to the capital invested in
+copper a net profit of sixteen to twenty-five per cent., while that
+invested in the other staples returned a net profit of only three and
+three-fourths to four and one-fourth per cent.<a name="FNanchor_18_18" id="FNanchor_18_18"></a><a href="#Footnote_18_18" class="fnanchor">[18]</a> The value of money
+had decreased with the world's development; the cost of the great
+commodities of life had all come down with the decline in interest&mdash;all
+but copper, which kept its old places throughout all the changes that
+had occurred in the relations of capital to labor and business. I
+realized that copper, in that year, would afford a gross profit of 100
+cents on each $2 worth produced; that this great gross profit was
+legitimate, was not brought about through unfair restrictions or forced
+combination, or evasion of the country's laws, but was wholly natural,
+being founded on the fact that the supply was so limited that the demand
+prevented the price dropping below a certain figure, and that this under
+ordinary circumstances represented at least 100 per cent. of gross<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[229]</a></span>
+profit to the producer after he had paid for labor and material the
+highest ruling prices.</p>
+
+<p>No better illustration of the main facts about copper can be found than
+the condition of the industry to-day, in 1905. The metal is now fifteen
+and a half cents per pound, and the consumption so great that the price
+still advances, yet if through an agreement among the producing mines
+this sales-rate should be dropped twenty-five per cent., it would so
+increase consumption as to force back the price to a point that would
+again discourage consumption; and yet in the old mines the cost of
+producing the metal sold at fifteen and a half is but six to seven and a
+half cents, in some even lower.</p>
+
+<p>Compare these conditions with those existing in the steel industry.
+Therein unlawful combinations and unnatural restrictions are essential
+if those engaged would show a gross profit of even fifteen per cent. on
+their gross output. If more than fair or going returns are earned, then
+new capital flows into competition and the surplus again shrinks to an
+uninviting point. The same is true in wheat, corn, and cotton&mdash;big
+prices invite fresh investments and the planting of broader acreage.
+Hence the sorry spectacle of the cotton planter who, in 1905, will
+receive no more for his twenty per cent. increased crop, coming from
+over two millions increased acreage planted last year, than for his
+smaller one of the year before.</p>
+
+<p>That my readers may quickly, and once for all, grasp the point I wish to
+make, I will illustrate:</p>
+
+<p>The Steel trust in 1904 did a gross business of $432,000,000, upon which
+they made a profit of $71,400,000, and yet this vast amount was only
+five per cent. upon the trust's inflated capital of $1,400,000,000 odd;
+and as the "System," in regulating the capitalization, arranged that the
+preferred stock (and bonds), which represented the "System's" profit,
+should receive seven per cent., there was not a dollar in dividends for
+the $520,000,000 of common stock which had been sold to the people for,
+in round figures, $300,000,000.</p>
+
+<p>At the same time the Calumet &amp; Hecla Copper Company produced and sold
+over $10,000,000 worth of copper, upon<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[230]</a></span> which it earned, net, over
+$5,000,000, which enabled it to pay to the people who had invested in
+its 100,000 shares of stock (par value, $25), 160 per cent., or a total
+of $4,000,000, and, at the same time, carry an enormous amount to its
+surplus.</p>
+
+<p>In the commercial world copper occupies an impregnable position. To
+compete, it is first necessary to find a copper deposit; then to lock up
+a vast sum of money for a long term of years before returns begin to
+accrue. And new copper deposits are as rare and few and far between as
+Lincolns and Roosevelts in politics or Grants and Lees in war. In the
+last eight years, or since the metal has been prominently before the
+world of capital, but two great producers of copper have been
+created&mdash;the Copper Range at Lake Superior, Michigan, and the Greene
+Consolidated in Mexico&mdash;and these two mines have only, at the end of six
+years, after an immense expenditure of millions (Copper Range, with a
+capital of $38,500,000, 385,000 shares, par $100, which sold in the open
+market a few years ago at $6, now selling at $75, and Greene
+Consolidated, with a capital of $8,650,000, 865,000 shares, par $10, now
+selling in the open market at $25), reached the point of profitable
+production. Their combined output, while reaching the (for young mines)
+unprecedented amount of one hundred and odd million pounds of metal per
+annum, constitutes but a fraction of that which Mother Earth has given
+up during the period of their development, namely, 2,500,000,000 pounds,
+all of which has been disposed of and cannot again be used to satisfy a
+ravenous consumption.</p>
+
+<p>It seemed to me, then, a curious anomaly that, while capital was chasing
+investments which promised but four per cent., it eschewed copper which
+yielded from sixteen to twenty-five per cent., and my investigations
+told me that a producing copper-mine is the surest business venture a
+man engages in, for, by the time it begins to produce profitably, it
+must be so far developed that its owners are certain of ore to work on
+for decades ahead. A good copper-mine is really a safe-deposit vault of
+stored-up dividends, which cannot be stolen nor destroyed by fire,
+flood, or famine. Calu<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[231]</a></span>met &amp; Hecla, for instance, though it cost its
+first owners but a dollar a share, has paid out $87,000,000, or $870 per
+share, or 3,480 per cent. on its par value of $25, and while it has been
+paying dividends over thirty-five years, it paid last year $40 per
+share, and has more in sight than it has yet paid. And Copper Range,
+though but six years old, will be producing soon as much as Calumet &amp;
+Hecla, and has now in sight ore to keep it going fifty or sixty years.</p>
+
+<p>Having pieced together all the facts and circumstances in this
+connection, I was sure that I had grasped a principle of great
+commercial value, and I set about finding a cause why the world of
+capital should for so long have overlooked the tremendous potentialities
+of this industry. I found the cause in Boston herself, in the
+characteristics of the city, which was head-quarters for copper, and
+which had grown in financial power with the revenues her mines earned
+for her investors. Boston controlled and managed the copper industry,
+and had since the days when copper-mining was a hazardous pursuit, in
+which only bold and speculative souls dared engage. In the early days
+the canny Bostonian demanded for the honorable dollar his parent had
+earned&mdash;exchanging five-cent rum for human beings worth $1,000
+apiece&mdash;at least twenty per cent. interest, and having acquired this
+habit, it became a principle, and such principles as these are clung to
+in Boston with the zeal of a miser for his hoard or of a martyr to his
+faith. Looking back over the years, I still recall with chagrin the
+quiescent hilarity of the scion of a Back Bay family whose good father
+had been one of the most successful and most brutal of all the "East
+India traders," when I suggested to him that he was fortunate in
+obtaining twenty per cent. on some copper ventures about which he was
+grumbling. (My readers must not confuse a Boston grumble with the
+ordinary ejaculations of discontent indulged in by the inhabitants of
+other portions of the world remote from the Hub of the Universe. A
+Boston grumble consists of an upward movement of the eyebrow, a slight
+twitch of the mustache and a murmur cross-bred from "Deuce take it!" and
+"Scoundrelly!") "Young man," he said, "my father said that such a
+hazardous vent<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[232]</a></span>ure as copper should return at least thirty per cent. to
+be safe, and I feel if I receive but twenty per cent. that something is
+radically and unpardonably wrong with the management of the mine." I did
+not pursue the argument, for I knew he inherited with his fortune a line
+of Boston reasoning, and I remembered once having watched a country boy
+put his tongue on a frosty iron door-knob. I knew better than to invoke
+again that wintry Boston smile, which in a Western or Southern community
+would be used to <i>frapp&eacute;</i> mint-juleps or cold-storage hogs with.</p>
+
+<p>No better illustration of the attitude of the shrewd New York investor
+to "Copper" can possibly be given than to detail my first interview with
+H. H. Rogers and William Rockefeller on the subject. To-day Mr. Rogers
+is known throughout the world as the leading figure of the copper
+world&mdash;the copper Czar, so to speak; yet it was only nine years ago when
+I said to him at the end of a gas-talk:</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Rogers, would Mr. Rockefeller and yourself look into Copper?"</p>
+
+<p>"Copper?" said he in an amused way, "copper? What kind of copper?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why, copper such as we know in Boston&mdash;copper the metal, copper the
+industry, copper stocks."</p>
+
+<p>He burst into one of his jolly laughs. "Look into it? Why, I don't know
+a thing about copper other than that we had old copper kettles when I
+was a boy which were used to fry doughnuts in, but I suppose my plumbers
+would look at anything you wanted, for I remember I get big bills for
+copper tanks at the house."</p>
+
+<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_18_18" id="Footnote_18_18"></a><a href="#FNanchor_18_18"><span class="label">[18]</span></a> For those unacquainted with such business terms as "gross"
+or "net" profit: Gross profit on business done is that first profit
+which remains after deducting the first cost of producing the goods&mdash;in
+this case copper, the metal; and from this gross profit must be deducted
+other expenses, such as unusual development expenses, the expense of
+running the executive departments, interest, etc. This leaves the net
+profit which is available for dividends.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[233]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER VIII</h2>
+
+<h3>MY PLAN FOR "COPPERS"</h3>
+
+
+<p>The plan I had so carefully formulated in connection with "Coppers" was
+simple in application yet vast in scope. It was to buy up all the good
+producing mines at their market price, or double if necessary, to
+organize them into a new corporation and offer its stock to the public
+at a capitalization of double the original cost. By advertising the
+exceptional merits of the copper industry and the financial power of the
+men who were backing it, the public would become educated to a knowledge
+of the values of "Coppers." Under this education the world of capital
+would invest in copper shares until the price had advanced, because of
+so much capital seeking this form of investment, to a point where the
+net return was brought down to the going rate of, say, four per cent.
+This would mean that the old going prices of good producing Boston
+copper-mines would advance 100 to 200 per cent., which in turn meant
+that those who risked their money in the first venture (which I figured
+would require $100,000,000) would make $100,000,000 to $200,000,000,
+while at the same time the public would make $200,000,000 to
+$400,000,000. This seems like an "Aladdin-lamp" story when it is told,
+but, as a matter of fact, prices afterward did advance in this ratio,
+and 100 and 200 per cent. beyond, and many of them, notwithstanding the
+tremendous drops that have taken place since, still show from 200 to 300
+per cent. advance over the prices then in vogue. <i>Never in all the
+history of business was there afforded capitalists so fair an
+opportunity to make honestly and legitimately so vast a sum of money and
+at the same time to do so much for the people. Nor was there a more
+honorable undertaking nor</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[234]</a></span> <i>one which a man could be more justly proud of
+carrying to success.</i></p>
+
+<p>As time went on, this big enterprise was more and more in my thoughts,
+and I tested it in every way I knew, going over in my mind and trying
+out each successive step and link until I was certain the whole
+structure was unassailable. Then it became my purpose in life to launch
+the venture. The difficulties of the task were never for a moment
+overlooked, for I well knew that much money would be required, but with
+strong backing success was sure, and such a success was tremendously
+worth attaining. Next to putting in force my financial invention which
+would remedy the evils of the "System," this great copper project seemed
+the thing&mdash;the dollar thing&mdash;best worth doing in all the world. It was
+to execute this project that I allied myself with the "Standard Oil"
+party, for with their money and backing I knew I could carry through my
+plans on the lines I had so carefully mapped out.</p>
+
+<p>The chief indictment my critics brought against me when my series of
+articles appeared in <i>Everybody's Magazine</i> was that I had turned
+"State's evidence." Having been "in with" "Standard Oil" in their
+robberies of the public, it was not until we disagreed and "split" that
+I thought of taking the public into my confidence. The truth is, my
+relation with "Standard Oil" was different from that any other man ever
+had with that mysterious and reticent institution, and throughout the
+copper crusade I insistently blurted out our plans and purposes through
+every channel of publicity I could command. At no time was there the
+slightest secrecy. From the very first day of the campaign I told the
+story as I tell it here, and I told it from the housetops by newspaper
+interviews and advertisements, market letters and circulars frankly and
+freely explaining what I was about. The absolute truth of the foregoing
+is easily proved through existing records, for the press of the country
+contains an almost continuous story, beginning in 1896 and running up to
+date, wherein I have openly and fairly told what I knew about "Coppers"
+and detailed the progress of our plans. Time and again, during this
+period, financial<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[235]</a></span> writers commented on my frankness, quoting brokers
+and bankers to the effect that "Lawson will surely have his head dropped
+into the 'Standard Oil' basket if he keeps telling people all he knows
+in this fashion." For the complete realization of my project the
+public's interest was essential. The creation of the vast business
+structure that I had designed required the participation of the great
+mass of the people, and I was determined that no subservience to the
+selfish ends of my associates should swerve me from my plan. I saw the
+enterprise whole; saw that there was great profit for all concerned, for
+"Standard Oil," for myself, and for the public; but if the public were
+not taken care of or were discouraged from participation, then my
+institution would surely be only another combination of capitalists and
+I should fail in my ambition.</p>
+
+<p>This is why I so persistently kept in the open throughout my "Copper"
+campaign. I fully realized how anomalous my position was and how far I
+had departed from "Standard Oil" precedents; but my thought was to
+protect the integrity of my enterprise, and the best way to do this was
+to have the people partners in its conception and development. To be
+perfectly frank, the prospect of millions of profit counted for less in
+my calculations than the honor and prestige I foresaw in the success of
+my copper structure. As proof of this, witness how I voluntarily gave
+back the millions I had secured, to make good. To create a great
+institution, to erect a new and absolutely staple investment, and in
+doing so to make millions for one's partners, one's self, and the
+public, would be to live not in vain. The knowledge of my attitude will
+perhaps help my readers to comprehend the enthusiasm with which I
+entered into my "Copper" crusade; help them to understand how strongly I
+resisted, and how deeply resented, the perversion of my fair structure
+into a pitfall for those I had expected to benefit. My indignation
+against the "System" is that which any honest man would feel against
+ruffians who had used his best ideas and his most generous feelings to
+lure innocent and unoffending people into some den of vice and infamy.
+If I have not troubled to correct the misstatements of detractors<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[236]</a></span> who,
+in an attempt to discredit my facts, have tried to pillory me as a
+traitor, it is because I knew that when my complete story reached the
+public it would make plain how and what I had been doing. The succeeding
+chapters of this narrative will yield unimpeachable evidence that all my
+dealing in "Coppers" as an associate of "Standard Oil" were open and as
+much in the interests of the people as it was possible to have them.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[237]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER IX</h2>
+
+<h3>BIRTH OF "COPPERS"</h3>
+
+
+<p>Active upon the Boston market during my Bay State Gas operations were
+two copper-mining companies&mdash;the Butte &amp; Boston and the Boston &amp;
+Montana. Their properties were in Montana and both were large producers
+of the metal, that is, they were old and equipped mines. These two
+organizations form to-day the most valuable part of the Amalgamated
+Copper Company&mdash;in fact, more than three-quarters of all the real worth
+owned by that corporation.</p>
+
+<p>Butte &amp; Boston and Boston &amp; Montana were essentially Boston
+institutions, and were both officered and directed by the same set of
+men. It had come to my knowledge, in the course of my stock business,
+that there had been bought for the Butte &amp; Boston, with its money, some
+very valuable mines; instead of transferring these to that corporation,
+however, its directors at the last minute had turned the titles over to
+the Boston &amp; Montana. It is only fair to these men to say that up to the
+present this alleged fact has not been proven, although set forth in
+cases still pending in the courts. This curious proceeding was part of a
+plot the subsequent steps in which would be to run Butte &amp; Boston
+through the bankruptcy mill, and, by placing it in the hands of a
+receiver, to drop the stock to a nominal figure, at which it might all
+be gathered in from the public. I verified my information sufficiently
+to decide to act, and swung the red danger-signal in a public statement
+telling the stockholders and people in general of the coming move. At
+once there arose a chorus of denials and recriminations from the
+management, and the cry, "He's short of the stock and is working a fake<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[238]</a></span>
+to scare us into throwing over our holdings that he may buy them," from
+the Stock Exchange, stockholders, and the hireling moulders of opinions,
+the "News Bureaus."</p>
+
+<p>The r&ocirc;le of Cassandra is not more popular to-day than it was in ancient
+Troy. The swinger of the red danger-signal is seldom heeded, and is
+invariably suspected of interested motives by the human moths circling
+round the flickering flames of frenzied finance. When I gave my warning,
+Butte &amp; Boston was selling between 25 and 30. In accordance with their
+plan the insiders began to sell, and soon the price began to slide
+downward, for the great majority of the stock was held by the people.
+There was a halt when the denials of the management were heard, but only
+for a moment. The decline continued, growing swifter as it got lower
+until the stock struck $2 per share. At this stage, while the stock was
+on the way to $2, just as I had predicted, the property was cleverly
+slid into a receiver's hands by the very men who had so indignantly
+denied my statement that such would be their action. An assessment of
+$10 per share was next levied, and those who held on, hoping against
+hope, began to throw over their holdings for what they would
+bring&mdash;which was around a dollar.</p>
+
+<p>So far the scheme had slipped smoothly along the single-rail track
+constructed for it by those in the deal, and just as my information had
+led me to expect. At this juncture, however, the train struck an open
+switch, and with a painful jolt for the conductor and the engineers it
+slid out on a siding&mdash;it was my siding. From the time the stock struck
+$2 a mysterious purchaser took in all that was offered, and when it
+struck bottom he was still buying. Suddenly the schemers "tumbled" that
+the plums they were shaking off the tree were dropping into some other
+bag than their own, and they started into competition for the coveted
+fruit.</p>
+
+<p>Next day, and for several days afterward, there were strenuous doings in
+Butte &amp; Boston on the Boston Stock Exchange. The trading was heavy and
+the price pushed up from the bottom to 6-1/2. Soon, however, it was
+slammed to 2-3/4, then back to 6 again, down to 3-1/4, back to 5-3/4,
+and so on, until the middle of the fourth day, when the rival News<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[239]</a></span>
+Bureau to the "System's" favorite opinion-moulder sprang the following
+notice set forth on a double-leaded sheet:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"We have just solved the Butte &amp; Boston conundrum. The
+enormous blocks of stock purchased during the past few days
+have come in for transfer, and the management now know who
+owns the bag into which all the stock they have for months
+been planning to acquire dropped. We have unmistakable
+evidence that the bag belonged to Lawson, and that he now is
+in control of the Butte &amp; Boston Company. A hasty
+investigation amongst the leading floor brokers which we
+have just made brings out a consensus of opinion that there
+will now be music in Coppers."</p></div>
+
+<p>The announcement was calculated to interest a good many persons, and I
+was the target of a thousand inquiries. In answer to the innumerable
+calls for a denial or confirmation of the statement, I issued the
+following:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>'Tis true. 'Tis my bag, and there are 46,000 shares in it.</p></div>
+
+<p>It was not until the following morning that I realized what a rarely
+presumptuous thing I had done. I had invaded a valuable preserve. I had
+coarsely "butted into" a private copper domain without a by-your-leave
+to the natives who thought it belonged to them. I was an interloper, an
+intruder, an upstart. The prevailing opinion seemed to be that it now
+devolved on me to present what I had purchased to those who had been a
+bit late in getting to the bargain-counter, or that I should, at least,
+turn it over to the conscience fund of the Stock Exchange. The copper
+market reflected the indignation of the baffled schemers. It entered for
+once into an open competition with Donnybrook Fair, and to judge by the
+action and feeling developed in both individual and corporation classes,
+the Hub had Donnybrook jigged to a wind-up. In my various contests with
+the "System" I had accumulated a certain hardihood which now stood me in
+good stead. I had learned before this that breaking into a secluded
+treasure-trove is about as pleasant as taking the lining out of a steel
+furnace with the metal sizzling and the blower on.</p>
+
+<p>I stood to my guns for the time being and then charged<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[240]</a></span> into the ranks
+of the enemy. I issued the following statement:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p class='center'>TO MY FELLOW-BROKERS AND THE PUBLIC</p>
+
+<p>I have stumbled on the fact that the stock&mdash;capital 200,000
+shares&mdash;of the Butte &amp; Boston Copper Mining Company is a
+nugget. I bought about 46,000 shares of it at an average of
+something over 2-1/4, or, with the assessment paid, 12-1/4
+per share. I am going to hold it until I get over 50 for it.
+Barring accidents, I shall get it.</p>
+
+<p>I advise&mdash;strongly and unqualifiedly advise&mdash;all my friends
+and the public to load up with it at anything under that
+price. My friends and the public know whether or not I mean
+a thing when I say it. I pledge them that I not only mean
+this but that I shall fight it out, and shall not sell until
+there is an active and legitimate market for not only my
+stock, but for what they buy, at over $50 per share. All
+intending purchasers must bear in mind this is not a sure
+thing, for the men who are opposing, and will oppose me, are
+not conducting their operations from a graveyard, but are as
+lively and aggressive as Bengal tigers at raw-meat time; but
+they may rest easy in the knowledge that barring tripping
+over stumps or into bogs, I'll give whoever buy a run for
+their investments.</p>
+
+<p>Buy and watch Butte all the time, and, above all, pay no
+attention to what the fake "News Bureau" says.</p></div>
+
+<p>This was the formal declaration of war. State and Wall streets, familiar
+with my style of fighting, at once lined up and took sides. The papers
+entered the controversy. According to what one read, Butte &amp; Boston was
+either the greatest mine in the world or a hole in the ground. Feeling
+intensified; Geneva and Queensberry conventions were forgotten; it
+became a go-as-you-please scramble; mud batteries filled the air with
+liquid dirt, and both sides used Gatling guns to fire off their libels.
+It was altogether a lusty and vociferous contest, which meant
+destruction and death for the lame, the halt, and the slow-footed who
+got between the fighting lines. I was naturally the chief mark for the
+enemy, and was deluged with vilification. In the Bay State campaign I
+had learned the personal cost of antagonizing the "System"; the copper
+magnates showed me that they had terrors at command which might make
+even "Standard Oil" jealous. In those days I don't believe my bank
+account varied thirty-five cents without the news being passed around
+before the ink on the bank-book was dry, and my family,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[241]</a></span> down to my
+ten-year-old, received daily or weekly through the mails pictorial
+representations of their parent being hustled along to the realms where
+sulphur is the standard of all values. Here is a sample of my usual
+breakfast-table reading:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>C. W. Barron, the proprietor of the "Boston News Bureau,"
+feels it his duty to inform his readers, the banks and
+bankers and brokers and representative investors of New
+England, that that faking ass of State Street, that knave of
+knaves, Tom Lawson, is braying again, and such
+braying!&mdash;"Butte is to sell at 50, and going to be worth
+50." It would be such a joke that this conservative paper
+would be only too happy to circulate this scoundrel's
+vaporings, if it were not for the sad part of such schemer's
+work&mdash;if it were not that the poor and ignorant unfortunates
+who are unacquainted with this knave, may buy Butte because
+of his advertised lies at $14 or $15 a share and thereby be
+robbed of what they can ill afford to lose. There is no more
+chance of Butte &amp; Boston stock selling at $50, or even $25,
+than there is of Tom Lawson telling the truth; and this
+paper does not hesitate to say that if Butte stock ever does
+sell at 50, we will upon that day close up our office and
+forever leave Boston and our lucrative business of guarding
+investors against such knaves as this lying thief; for any
+man who would do what he is doing to fleece investors is a
+thief and should wear stripes, and it is surprising to us he
+has so long escaped.</p></div>
+
+<p>It was not so long after the above appeared that Butte &amp; Boston stock
+was selling at $130 per share, and that the same Mr. Barron was using
+his own and his "News Bureau's" best efforts to induce the people whose
+Butte showed them over $115 a share profit to exchange it for
+Amalgamated. At this latter time he was acting for "Standard Oil."</p>
+
+<p>It may be added that this same Butte &amp; Boston stock, which I was such a
+knave to advise the people to buy at twelve and fifteen, sells to-day in
+the form of a share of Amalgamated, for which it was exchanged at
+seventy-five to eighty-dollars, not cents.</p>
+
+<p>My chief weapon in this Butte &amp; Boston fight was publicity. Every
+morning while the battle waxed hottest I had huge, striking
+advertisements in the papers urging the public to buy and to hold on to
+what they had bought. My opponents responded in kind, and being
+intrenched in the management, told such alarming stories of the mine
+that it was<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[242]</a></span> often as much as I could do to prevent my followers from
+being scared into throwing over their holdings. The tremendous expense
+of this mode of warfare, together with the immense sums my market
+operations required, kept me hustling, and there were times when things
+looked distinctly blue. However, the value of victory is measured by the
+fierceness of the tussle, and far be it from me to complain of my
+opponents' energy. There was good fighting over Butte &amp; Boston.</p>
+
+<p>The more deeply I became interested in this struggle and the more
+familiar I grew with "Coppers," the more advantageous and profitable
+seemed the prospects of such a consolidation of copper properties as I
+had in mind. The large holdings of Butte &amp; Boston I had accumulated in
+the battle gave me a practical basis for my structure, for I could now
+afford to do all my own part of the work of organization for what I
+would eventually make when the consolidation was brought about, and I
+could get for my shares what I knew they were worth. It was at this
+stage I broached the subject of "Coppers" to Mr. Rogers, and discovered
+to my surprise that he knew nothing about it or its possibilities,
+notwithstanding that "Standard Oil" has a department for the sole
+purpose of keeping the "System" posted about what the world is doing in
+various directions. Indeed, both he and Mr. Rockefeller laughed when I
+informed them that we had been trading in copper stocks in Boston long
+before the Standard Oil Company received its birth certificate.</p>
+
+<p>Before I could get down to business on the subject I had to take
+advantage of five gas-talks, offering at each a few interesting and
+striking facts about the metal. One day Mr. Rogers said to me, laughing
+pleasantly: "Lawson, we're beginning to look for all your talks to taper
+off with, 'I wish I could get you to listen to Coppers!'"</p>
+
+<p>"Why don't you then?" I said. "It's the biggest opportunity in the world
+to-day."</p>
+
+<p>"I'll tell you what I'll do," replied Mr. Rogers. "If you will put
+through for us right away thus and so" (naming quite a difficult little
+bit of work in connection with the Brooklyn Gas Company), "and do it in
+good shape, I'll ask<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[243]</a></span> John Moore to run up to Boston next week and
+listen to your story. If he says it looks anything like good, I'll go
+over it with you to a finish."</p>
+
+<p>The Brooklyn job was done on time, and I began on John Moore in my
+office at my hotel in Boston just after breakfast one bleak, rainy
+morning the week following. I talked for five straight-away hours, and
+he listened. He was a good listener. On all stock things he was
+admirably posted, and it was not necessary to waste words. I wasted
+none. I knew my subject from the letter-head to "Yours truly," and I was
+playing for a stake that looked as big to me as the sun does to a
+solitary-confinement life prisoner. At the end of the five uninterrupted
+hours I agreed with Moore that I had nothing more to produce, and I
+looked for my verdict. Before starting I had felt sure of winning him;
+when I was half through I knew nothing could stand against my arguments,
+and when I had said the last word I felt satisfied that, being human and
+intelligent, he must be convinced. It took him only ten minutes to show
+me that I had been talking against ten-inch armor-plate, and that he
+meant it absolutely when he said, "Lawson, I want to see it your way,
+but I can't."</p>
+
+<p>It was John Moore's turn then, and he showed me the good thing in an
+industrial scheme he was floating at that time, and as he wound up he
+said pleasantly:</p>
+
+<p>"Lawson, we must do something to show for our long talk, so I'll put you
+down for $50,000 underwriting." And he did.</p>
+
+<p>If John Moore had seen "Coppers" as I tried to show them to him that wet
+morning he could not have made for himself less than three to five
+millions, for in the operation which hung on his decision I had expected
+to buy stocks that soon after doubled and trebled in value. Calumet &amp;
+Hecla then sold at 256, and later as high as 900, while Boston &amp;
+Montana, then 50, mounted to 520. On the other hand, the stock of which
+he had sold me $50,000 worth returned at the end of the year but a mere
+fraction of that amount, and was one of the worst failures of the
+industrial boom period. It cost John Moore not only an enormous amount
+of money,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[244]</a></span> but also prestige, and its miscarriage was one of the few bad
+disappointments of his brilliant career. Afterward, when "Coppers" were
+the rage and all Wall Street was green with envy at our success and his
+enterprise was trying to hide itself behind the garbage barrels, John
+Moore said to me:</p>
+
+<p>"Lawson, we all think we are the masters of our own fortunes, but we are
+not. We are only working on a schedule laid out by some One who does not
+take our desires into consideration."</p>
+
+<p>And it is so. The ablest Wall Street man is only like the burglar who,
+after working for weeks to loot a second story, is astounded to find,
+while lugging his swag by the police station, that the bag he thought
+full of dead sealskins contains a live parrot with a lusty vocabulary,
+"Police! Robbers!"</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[245]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER X</h2>
+
+<h3>ROGERS GRASPS "COPPERS"</h3>
+
+
+<p>The next day our gas business brought me to New York, and after Mr.
+Rogers and myself had threshed out the matter I had come about, he said
+with a smile:</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I've heard from John Moore. Are you satisfied now? Will you drop
+that copper will-o'-the-wisp?"</p>
+
+<p>"Far from it," I replied. "I'm surer than ever of my position. In going
+over the ground with Moore I got the whole business in perspective, and
+now I know I'm right. All his argument amounted to anyway was that it
+was impossible for so gigantic a thing to have lain out in the travelled
+highways all these years."</p>
+
+<p>I ran on vigorously for a few moments, in a way I felt might pique his
+curiosity, if it did not gain my point. Finally he said:</p>
+
+<p>"Well, Lawson, what more can I do?"</p>
+
+<p>"This," I answered: "go over the matter fully with me yourself. I will
+surely carry it through one way or another; if not with you, with
+others, and I cannot drop it with you until I have your personal
+judgment."</p>
+
+<p>Instantly came one of those flash decisions for which H. H. Rogers is
+noted among his business associates, the oft-proved correctness of which
+goes far toward making him the pre-eminent American financier of the
+day.</p>
+
+<p>"Lawson," he said, "be in New York next Sunday, and I will listen until
+you have run the subject out."</p>
+
+<p>That decision changed the face of the copper world.</p>
+
+<p>Sunday is Mr. Rogers' pick of days for a lengthy hearing, and returning
+from church, he came directly to the "stowaway" rooms at the Murray Hill
+Hotel, at which we fre<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[246]</a></span>quently met while the Wall Street world was
+trying to trace and keep track of our movements. I had been there for
+some time awaiting him and was keyed for the struggle.</p>
+
+<p>Of my ability to land John Moore I had felt confident, yet I had failed;
+but this time in advance I knew success was mine. Experience has taught
+me that in all dollar matters the man to "talk up to" is the actual
+owner of the dollars you are after, who when he hears your story and
+weighs your goods can deal out the <i>yes</i> or <i>no</i> which means business. I
+had discovered some years before that few bull's-eyes are scored
+shooting at a target by mail or messenger. One's finest word-pictures
+sound better than they read, and if you would have the next man see them
+in as vivid colors as they appear on your mind's canvas, you must paint
+them before his eyes. The enthusiasm of the artist, his love of the
+subject, the deep or high tones of his voice, the very movements of his
+hands, are all factors in aiding the other man's vision. When he sees
+what you do, you have won. Nowadays when I have things to sell, I engage
+the eyes as well as the ears of my purchaser. When the other fellow
+would make me his customer, he must first sell his goods to my
+secretary, who may, if he can, sell them to me. Thus I am always able to
+dispose of the only merchandise I keep in stock, honest goods, and I
+seldom buy chromos for oils.</p>
+
+<p>As I waited the coming of my most powerful customer, I could not keep my
+mind off the momentousness of the interview before me. I knew I was at a
+fork of the road, at one of those departure points from which coming
+events must date, and I thought of a dream I had had years before in
+which I found myself drifting with the grim ferryman across the brimming
+flood, the far bank of which is eternity. In my hand was a long staff
+with strange and irregular notches on it. And these represented the
+actions of my life. Some were shallow, others deep and wide, and as I
+ran my fingers up and down, I seemed to remember what each nick
+commemorated&mdash;the good things and the bad things, here a death, there a
+disappointment, this a victory, that an error. I wondered, as the
+circumstances of the dream came to my mind, what kind of marking this
+day's events would make on my<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[247]</a></span> life staff, and I felt a conviction that
+it would be both deep and wide.</p>
+
+<p>Then, as I heard Mr. Rogers' footstep outside my door, I forgot all
+about dreams and notches and plunged into my argument.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Rogers," I began, "you and your associates have unlimited money.
+You have not always had it. You have obtained it through business
+projects and you are using it in business projects to get more. There
+are two ways of adding new dollars to those in your possession: by
+taking them from others so they are losers and you the gainer, whereby
+you win at the cost of their happiness; or by expanding the world's
+wealth so that others gain when you do. You, I know, prefer the latter,
+that others should make money when you do, rather than that they should
+lose and suffer when you are benefited."</p>
+
+<p>I did not then know "Standard Oil's" and the "System's" religion as I do
+now. I had yet to learn the cruelly cynical principles that guide this
+financial Juggernaut in its relation with men and things. I imputed to
+it the generosity and freedom which seemed to characterize Henry H.
+Rogers' personality, ignorant that the man and the machine he served
+might stand for different things. The "System's" Big Book says: "A
+dollar honestly made makes another for some one else; but a dollar taken
+is two dollars, because it increases our power and diminishes the
+people's. Between the 'System' and the people must be eternal war, and
+it is the price of the 'System's' existence that all opportunities of
+weakening the people are sternly utilized."</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Rogers," I continued, "I have discovered in 'Coppers' an
+opportunity whereby you and your associates can, by the investment of a
+hundred millions of dollars, obtain these results: <i>First</i>, your money
+will be as safe as in anything you now have it invested in. <i>Second</i>, by
+indorsing this form of investment with the seal of your business
+success, you will make it known to all who have money and there will at
+once arise a tremendous demand for its securities. This demand will
+drive prices up until dividend returns are in normal proportion to the
+legitimate value of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[248]</a></span> the security, namely, four to six per cent., which
+is, as I can prove to you, a little more than can be got from anything
+else but 'Copper' with the same elements of safety. <i>Third</i>, when the
+advance I foresee occurs, your one hundred millions have doubled, and
+all those who have joined us in the venture or have held on to their
+stock will gain in the same proportion. As I estimate that we will have
+but a third interest in all the good American 'Coppers,' there should be
+something like $200,000,000 for the people, while we will have made
+$100,000,000. To bring this about I have planned a campaign which will
+make what you have done known from one end of the world to the other,
+and will persuade the people at large to look at 'Standard Oil' in a
+more favorable light than they do now. And, what is more, all this money
+can be made and all these benefits rendered without taxing any one a
+single additional dollar, for there will not be a penny a ton added to
+the price of copper the metal, nor a reduction of a mill a year taken
+from the wages of those who mine it or work it."</p>
+
+<p>Here I halted. I had made a beginning, and I was familiar with Mr.
+Rogers' system of diagnosis and treatment. Propositions placed on his
+operating-table are invariably dissected in parts&mdash;this is the winner's
+method; so if, under the probe of his keen mind, one section or limb is
+found stiff, dead, or unhitchable to that to which it belongs, he at
+once stops operating and the corpse is removed.</p>
+
+<p>"How is it the situation is as you outline it?"</p>
+
+<p>I drew the picture of copper Boston as I have given it in the early part
+of this chapter. It astonished him.</p>
+
+<p>"How do you prove that safety in this class of investment is more
+assured than in others?"</p>
+
+<p>I reeled off the facts: A copper-mine, from the very nature of the
+business, must be developed years and years ahead before it entered the
+ranks as a regular producer. The price of the metal being practically
+fixed within certain limits, the mine's value, present and future, could
+always be told to a certainty.</p>
+
+<p>He saw it. He put me through a thorough examination about my second
+claim that the price would advance 100<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[249]</a></span> per cent. I again astonished him
+by showing him what a market there was and had been for many years for
+copper stocks, and that it was simply a question of educating investors
+at large to their merits to advance them to the price my plans called
+for.</p>
+
+<p>When he came to the question of the amount to be invested and the
+aggregate amount of profit, he did not attempt to disguise his surprise
+when I showed him there were 150,000 shares of Boston &amp; Montana which
+had been selling at 20-odd and were now 50-odd, and could surely be
+bought between 50 and 100; and 200,000 shares of Butte &amp; Boston, 100,000
+outside of what I and those who had bought with me owned that could be
+had at an average of 20 or 25; that there were 100,000 shares of Calumet
+&amp; Hecla, selling at 250, large quantities of which could be gathered in
+between that price and 400, and so on through the list. Mine after mine
+I enumerated to him, all as sure dividend earners in the future as they
+had been in the past, to an aggregate, without touching any of the
+uncertain ones, which it would surely take one hundred millions to
+purchase, and as I called them off, he listened patiently while I gave
+him a full history of each.</p>
+
+<p>Then I outlined my sensational but never before attempted plan of
+campaign for educating the public, he vigorously questioning me as to
+details and particulars the while.</p>
+
+<p>It does not take Henry H. Rogers months, weeks, nor even days to grasp
+any plan, however vast, nor many minutes to come to a decision after he
+has grasped it. I believe he would, if the world were going to be
+auctioned off next week, be the first man on earth to decide upon a
+limit price that he would take it at, and three minutes after it was
+knocked down to him he would be selling stock in it at 150 per cent.
+profit.</p>
+
+<p>Just before lunch-time I saw that the effect of my arguments on Mr.
+Rogers was the exact opposite to that they had made on John Moore. When
+I had come to a finish, Mr. Rogers simply said: "It's curious, Lawson,
+why I have not listened to you before. I'll talk with William
+Rocke<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[250]</a></span>feller to-morrow. No&mdash;I'll make it this afternoon if I can get at
+him."</p>
+
+<p>And his eyes snapped a bit when, as I was helping him on with his coat,
+he said, "We must not lose a minute in getting to work."</p>
+
+<p>As he left the hotel and before I crossed the street to the Grand
+Central to take my train back to Boston&mdash;I suppose I should not say it,
+but I shook my own hand in self-congratulation. How many times since I
+have thought that had old Dame Fate but hung out a danger-signal for
+this faithful servitor of her behests, or had but given him a glimpse
+ahead through the years 1899, 1900, 1901, 1902, 1903, and 1904, instead
+of using his hands in cordial self-clasping he would have employed his
+feet in the more fitting task of kicking himself.</p>
+
+<p>If Henry H. Rogers had been slow at getting started on "Coppers," once
+in he made up for his early tardiness. After our Sunday interview things
+moved swiftly forward. Before noon next day he called me up on the
+telephone to say that both he and William Rockefeller were impatient to
+have my facts and figures verified, and would I at once send my data to
+start his experts on? I mailed him a bale of "pointers," and from that
+hour until the flotation of Amalgamated Mr. Rogers' enthusiasm on
+"Coppers" constantly grew until there actually came a time when it went
+beyond my own. It took him months to complete that rounding-up of the
+situation which is the absolutely necessary preliminary to the making of
+final decisions on any far-reaching and important project to which the
+magic name of "Standard Oil" is to be permanently attached.</p>
+
+<p>This period of waiting I duly improved by continuing my fight on Butte &amp;
+Boston, and by way of intensifying the campaign I included Boston &amp;
+Montana in the tussle, and led a fierce attack into the stronghold of my
+opponents. While this war was at its bitter height I received word from
+26 Broadway that at last reports were all in, and that they were ready
+to talk business. Next day I was in New York.</p>
+
+<p>"Lawson," said Mr. Rogers, "our experts have examined<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[251]</a></span> your plans step
+by step and have verified your conclusions. It is an exceptional
+situation, and one we are equipped to handle."</p>
+
+<p>Then and there we had a "to-a-finish-sit-down," and while I had in my
+time gone pretty thoroughly into the general subject of "Coppers," and
+thought myself well informed thereon, I was surprised at the
+completeness and detail of the reports that had been prepared for the
+"System's" master. In beautiful shape, concise, clear, comprehensive,
+the entire copper industry of the world was spread out before me. Every
+mine had its place and its history&mdash;not merely the mines of America, but
+those of Europe as well; and fully set forth were the extent and cost of
+the product of each, the profit it made, the men who owned it,
+and&mdash;miraculous "Standard Oil"&mdash;the standing, financial and otherwise,
+of the men who might have to be dealt with in our prospective trades.</p>
+
+<p>Rogers smiled watching my growing surprise as I ran over the
+extraordinary budget of facts he had collected. I said to him:</p>
+
+<p>"This is wonderful. You have here all there's to be known about the
+subject, and I marvel how you got hold of so much inside information."</p>
+
+<p>"'Standard Oil' has its own way of doing things," he replied. "You told
+us your copper plans would mean an investment of $100,000,000 of our
+money, and now's the time, not after we have parted with it, to find
+just what we are to get for it."</p>
+
+<p>The world has never yet heard of "Standard Oil" locking its barn door
+after some one has stolen its mule; for that matter, it is not of record
+that any one ever locked the gate after his barn had been visited by
+"Standard Oil." The reason is that, with the thoroughness characteristic
+of this great reaping-machine, it never fails to take the barn with the
+mule.</p>
+
+<p>At this meeting it was agreed that Henry H. Rogers, William Rockefeller,
+and myself should become partners in my plan of "Coppers," they to
+furnish the capital and to have three-quarters of the profit, I to have
+the remaining<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[252]</a></span> quarter. The campaign for the execution of the enterprise
+I agreed to work out and submit as soon as possible, and we parted.</p>
+
+<p>As I bade them good-by Mr. Rogers said to me:</p>
+
+<p>"Your baby is born, Lawson, and if you put the same kind of work on
+raising it you have in bringing it into the world, it will be a giant."</p>
+
+<p>From that day it was understood that we were together, and that all my
+dealings in "Coppers" outside Butte &amp; Boston were for the joint
+account&mdash;that is, they were to have the right to come into all my
+operations. Those they did not care to join in I had the right to put
+through alone. On the other hand, I must not undertake anything on their
+behalf without a specific understanding with them.</p>
+
+<p>Thus began Amalgamated, that extraordinary dollar-thing which shot up in
+a night and grew as grows the whirlwind, until even its creators
+wondered at its mightiness. It waxed greater and stronger while the
+world watched and waited, until finally there came that tremendous and
+unprecedented culmination when lines of investors fought round the
+portals of the greatest money mart in America, the National City Bank,
+for a chance to obtain the $100 shares of this $75,000,000 institution.
+And the world wondered indeed when it was announced that Amalgamated had
+been oversubscribed over $300,000,000.</p>
+
+<p>Thus began Amalgamated. It might have brought to all the world good-will
+and happiness, and to the men who made it much glory and the great
+regard of their fellows. Instead, it has wrought havoc and desolation,
+and its Apache-like trail is strewn with the scalped and mutilated
+corpses of its victims. The very name <i>Amalgamated</i> conjures up visions
+of hatred and betrayal, of ambush, pitfalls, and assassination. It
+stands forth the Judas of corporations, a monument to greed and a
+warning to rapacity. May the story that I am to tell so set forth its
+infamies and horrors that never again shall such a monster be suffered
+to violate and defile our civilization.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[253]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XI</h2>
+
+<h3>THE COPPER CAMPAIGN OPENS</h3>
+
+
+<p>My plans for the great copper campaign were most carefully diagrammed,
+then spread before Mr. Rogers and Mr. Rockefeller, who, before
+approving, tested every detail of them. The formal scope of our action
+decided on, it was agreed that I should be free to work in my own way,
+and it was understood that I should, as far as possible, carry the
+campaign on my own shoulders, using to the limit my personal capital and
+credit. "Coppers" was to be a Lawson operation on the face of it, and I
+was determined, for many reasons, to avail myself of "Standard Oil's"
+aid only in taking care of completed transactions and not at all in the
+preliminary negotiations. This was not always possible, but my attitude
+in the matter and my desire to make a brilliant showing explain the
+straits I was sometimes put to in conducting some of my deals. From the
+start I had a big personal stake in the success of my campaign, for at
+the time I first showed Mr. Rogers my hand I had 46,000 shares of Butte
+&amp; Boston, and my following among the public owned as many more. They had
+agreed that the profits on this stock, when it was taken into the
+consolidation, should be mine entirely in payment of my own work and
+risk.</p>
+
+<p>There was another transaction I had in mind which also fairly belonged
+to me. As I have stated, I had undertaken to dispose of Bay State Gas
+stock, and by this time I had succeeded in placing a large number of the
+shares. The proceeds, $2,300,000, were in the treasury of the company.
+Now the charter of Addicks' company permitted it to buy, sell, and deal
+in anything and everything, and I saw here a good opportunity to enable
+Bay State to earn the balance of the money necessary to relieve its
+indebtedness to Mr.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[254]</a></span> Rogers&mdash;between four and six millions of dollars.
+So I explained to Mr. Rogers that as soon as our copper deal had
+progressed to a point where there was absolutely no risk, and a large
+gain was assured, I would make a bargain with Bay State whereby for a
+part of the profits I would pilot the investment of the company's cash
+in Butte &amp; Boston. This proposition he considered fair, and he agreed
+that neither he nor Mr. Rockefeller would consider themselves "in" on
+that bargain, save as indirectly profiting by it through the successful
+winding up of their Boston gas investments.</p>
+
+<p>It is impossible for any great move to be begun in the stock-market
+without some suggestion getting into the air which notifies "the
+Street"<a name="FNanchor_19_19" id="FNanchor_19_19"></a><a href="#Footnote_19_19" class="fnanchor">[19]</a> that "something is up." Not long after my alliance with
+Rogers had been formally arranged, the atmosphere of State Street grew
+thick with rumors about "Coppers." Some of these announced that I had
+hitched up with "Standard Oil"; others denied it; between them all a
+movement was created, and the leading stocks became very active and
+increased rapidly in price.</p>
+
+<p>We had agreed that the first companies to go into our consolidation
+should be Butte &amp; Boston, Boston &amp; Montana, Calumet &amp; Hecla, Osceola,
+Quincy, Tamarack, and any other of the long-established properties of
+which we could get hold. It would be difficult, we knew, to purchase the
+control of the Calumet &amp; Hecla, for its owners thought too highly of
+their investment to part with it, but it was safe to buy whatever was
+offered, and if we accumulated less than a majority of the shares we
+could easily resell at a large profit. I began my operation with Boston
+&amp; Montana stock, buying cautiously and obtaining it at fair prices, and
+this transaction, though conducted quietly, added fresh fuel to the
+rumor blaze. Finally Boston became so excited over the situation that I
+came out with a public statement in which I frankly<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[255]</a></span> showed what I was
+trying to do. In all such affairs, however, the explanations of any man
+known in his business as a stock speculator or manipulator are never
+accepted as true. It is assumed that such announcements are merely
+blinds to disguise his real purpose; that they are feints or
+man&#339;uvres in his campaign. So when I declared that I was working out
+plans for the consolidation of all good Boston "Coppers," and that
+associated with me were the strongest capitalists in the world, a laugh
+went up from a goodly portion of "the Street." The hireling news bureaus
+shrieked at my presumption and the absurdity of my combination, and when
+after a hot day's operations I was quoted in the financial press as
+telling my followers that it was "Standard Oil" money which was to back
+"Coppers," Barron, whose News Bureau moulded opinion for the opposing
+copper magnates, came out with a statement:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Lawson is spreading in his peculiar underground ways that
+the Standard Oil crowd is looking into Coppers. Just enough
+countrymen swallowed his yarns to enable him to boost prices
+over six points to-day, but by to-morrow, when the
+Rockefellers or Rogers of Standard Oil put their foot down
+on his transparent lies, those who were foolish enough to
+listen to his ridiculous fakes will find they must sell at a
+loss. We can say, on a high authority in Standard Oil, that
+they have never bought nor contemplate buying a share of any
+copper stock."</p></div>
+
+<p>My enemies were numerous and powerful, and there were many other
+announcements of the same character as Barron's tending to cast ridicule
+on my movement and expose me as a falsifier. Indeed, notwithstanding the
+merits of the plan and the benefit it must confer on all copper
+properties, I was assailed as fiercely as though I had advocated anarchy
+or had prepared a scheme of wholesale plundering. In stock affairs
+innovations are resented and resisted even more fiercely than in other
+walks of life, and the Boston money crowd fought me tooth and nail. The
+titles I acquired in those days were varied and startling. For one set I
+was a "charlatan," "wizard," "fakir," an "unprincipled manipulator"; in
+another I was a "copper king" or a "prince of plungers." Feeling ran
+high, and prices rose and fell in the most erratic and extravagant
+fashion. Certain stocks ad<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[256]</a></span>vanced or receded from five to ten points in
+as many hours or minutes. Fortunes were made and lost daily. Many
+people, confused by the conflict of opinions and announcements, sold
+their holdings, only to repurchase at higher prices as prices continued
+to mount. So fiercely was I attacked that it almost seemed at times as
+if my enemies might prevail in spite of the great powers at my back.
+Indeed, there were tense moments when my fate as well as my plans
+trembled in the balance. Several times I was sent for by Rogers and his
+colleagues for a war council, and sometimes, as I detailed my lines of
+defence and enumerated my resources, I suspected that even these
+storm-seasoned warriors were tiring of the fray.</p>
+
+<p>The fiercest fighting at that early period centred round Butte &amp; Boston
+and Boston &amp; Montana. Many a spirited engagement we fought on the floor
+of the Exchange. Perhaps the fiercest of these began when, after a
+strenuous rush one morning, I rapidly carried the price of Butte up.
+This exploit so enraged my adversaries that they got together and
+organized a powerful combination against me. This included several of
+the leading banks and trust companies of Boston that held large amounts
+of stocks as collateral for my loans. At a given moment it was arranged
+that all these loans, aggregating millions of dollars, should be called;
+and further to intensify the complication they expected to bring about,
+a great friend in common attempted to scare Mr. Rockefeller and Mr.
+Rogers by informing them that the titles to the copper properties were
+defective, and that a man, then unknown, named Heinze, who had made
+himself very strong with the Montana courts, was about to make a move to
+confiscate them. There was a hurry call for me from New York, and this
+time the explanations had to be very full, for "Standard Oil" had an
+impression that while my general plan might be meritorious, it was
+possible that I had the details "skewed." However, I satisfied them as
+to the facts and then hurried back to tackle my own problem, for these
+individual engagements I handled myself, using my own personal resources
+to take care of them. The emergency that had developed thus suddenly was
+so serious as to be alarming,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[257]</a></span> and it devolved on me to act, and at
+once. Blows in finance are like those at sea&mdash;the most dangerous are the
+quick-come-quick-go kind. I recalled one I had run into a short time
+before on my sailing yacht. We were broad-reaching down the New England
+coast, close in, with a 20-knot sou'wester blowing. Suddenly, without
+apparent reason, my skipper put the wheel hard down and brought the
+craft up standing. A second later a "twister" from the hills hit us, and
+adroitly he headed her into it.</p>
+
+<p>"How in the world did you know that was coming?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>"I smelt her, sir," the old sea-dog replied, "just smelt her."</p>
+
+<p>For those unacquainted with the freaky ways of our New England coast
+winds it may be explained that when a "twister" off the hills gets ready
+to do business in a 20-knot sou'wester it sends no messenger boys ahead
+to distribute its itinerary handbills. You hear one shriek and the blow
+is upon you; and woe betide the unthinking skipper who attempts holding
+his craft to her course or paying her off till she catches it full. He
+is likely to have mourners at home if a married man, and "cussing"
+owners if the craft is not his own. As my old sea-dog afterward wisely
+observed: "When you smell a land 'twister,' act first and think
+atterwards, or your widow 'ill get blear-eyed watching for you to make
+harbor."</p>
+
+<p>In the stock-market it was decidedly a case of "act first and think
+atterwards." The "twister" was a fierce one, for not only were my stocks
+assailed, but the rumor machines were turning out all sorts of yarns
+affecting my credit, as the knowledge gradually filtered through the
+market that my loans had been called. My stocks broke badly, and when
+the market closed it really seemed as though I might have to verify the
+report that they would wind me up the next day.</p>
+
+<p>It was at this particular stage that the Bay State was let into the
+deal. I had a long consultation with Addicks that night and showed him
+my hand. He agreed that with what I already had of the stock and
+"Standard Oil's" backing, the venture came as near being an absolutely
+sure thing as<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[258]</a></span> could ever be found in stocks. My proposition was that I
+should secure for the Bay State Company 50,000 shares of Butte at an
+average of 20 to 25, and that I should have half the profits of the
+venture provided they aggregated over two millions of dollars. Coming to
+Addicks in this emergency was cold-blooded business on my part, and, it
+goes without saying, was frozen-blooded business on his, for he
+evidently saw then what I did not until later, that there was an
+excellent opportunity to practise his pet game&mdash;make money and
+double-cross his partner while doing so. We clinched the deal that
+night, and next day in the market I turned the tables, for I took every
+share my opponents offered for sale, and the stock, instead of dropping
+out of sight, became firm, then began to mount, and never after fell
+again.</p>
+
+<p>The Bay State's venture showed a profit afterward of four millions of
+dollars, but of my share of this large sum I was deprived, as I will
+detail later.</p>
+
+<p>At this juncture there occurred one of those strange and sad fatalities
+which with its attendant circumstances helps to explain why those of us
+who play with stock-markets grow superstitious. I have spoken of my
+secretary, Mr. Vinal, a man of admirable discretion and absolute
+loyalty, who was my right hand in executing the minuti&aelig; of the various
+operations I then was engaged in. In such affairs the fidelity of one's
+aides must be beyond all question, for if the merest detail of one's
+plans leaks out at the critical moment, one is undone beyond recovery.
+After my talk with Addicks I had laid out the campaign for the next
+day's engagement and called in Vinal to explain to him his own part. He
+was to attend to taking up and transferring the loans that had been
+called, and I armed him with my power of attorney and blank checks,
+instructing him to put these matters through without further
+consultation with me, for my entire time must belong to my brokers
+during the battle of prices which I knew must inevitably come with the
+stroke of the gong that opened the Exchange next morning at ten, and
+which would rage until its close at three. As I had anticipated, the
+assault was fierce. It was give and take, charge and retreat, all day. A
+few minutes after twelve, Vinal pushed through a crowd<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[259]</a></span> of brokers to me
+and said: "I'm about half through my shifting, but a telephone has just
+come from Mrs. Lawson saying that something has happened at the school
+and will I at once get a carriage and bring your daughters home. It will
+take half an hour. Shall I go?" I replied: "You had better, but get back
+as quickly as possible." A minute later a thought occurred to me, and I
+sent a boy to call Vinal back. He reported that my secretary had jumped
+into "Ben's" cab ("Ben" was a cabman whose stand had been in front of my
+office, 33 State Street, since my boyhood days). I returned to the fray.
+Fifteen minutes later the appalling message that startled all Boston at
+the time came over the ticker tape: "Terrible Explosion! Boston Gas
+Company's pipes in the Subway have blown scores to death." Then there
+floated in to me a rumor, vague, indefinite, that Vinal was a victim. I
+jumped into a cab and in a few moments was at the undertaker's to whose
+place the corpses were being removed. The undertaker stepped up to me
+and said: "Poor Vinal! Don't look at him, for it is frightful. He was on
+the very apex of the explosion, and he and 'Ben' were both instantly
+killed and are frightfully burned. The only thing recognizable is this
+envelope, which I found among the rags that were left of his coat." He
+handed me over the large envelope in which I had seen Vinal that very
+morning depositing the various documents, checks, and securities which
+he required for his day's operations. It was burned around the edges,
+but the contents were uninjured, and among the papers was a carefully
+prepared memorandum showing to a dot where my secretary had left off in
+his exchanges. He had evidently just finished making notes, for so
+carefully arranged were the contents of the envelope that all that was
+necessary to complete the business was to turn it over to Vinal's
+assistant. No further explanation was required. That envelope
+represented two millions of money and securities.</p>
+
+<p>Poor Vinal! Another victim of that soulless corporation hag, Boston Gas,
+to prolong whose life he had spent some of the best years of his own.
+Vinal was very dear to me. He had filled my canteen, held my ammunition,
+and carried my knapsack through many a hard-fought battle, willingly
+allow<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[260]</a></span>ing others to do the cheering in victory, but reserving to himself
+the right to suggest and console when the clouds lowered and we were
+left alone on the field of defeat or the dusty road of retreat. Poor
+Vinal! He was worth a hundred copper deals or corporation hags.</p>
+
+<p>Between death and life, success and failure, what a hair's-breadth after
+all. If Vinal had stubbed his toe, or had been able to take the first
+cab he found; if he had heard my call which would have brought him back;
+if he had tarried a moment longer in the Young Men's Christian
+Association where he had stopped to deliver a message, he would have
+escaped. The thought did not occur to me at the moment, for Vinal's
+death was too keen a personal sorrow to allow me to estimate my own
+narrow escape, but if that envelope, so miraculously preserved, had been
+burned as were the other papers in my secretary's pocket, there might
+have been no Amalgamated. "Coppers" must have dropped back to the lowly
+place from which Rogers had lifted them, for I should have been
+financially ruined.</p>
+
+<p>To show the marvelous workings of Him who tempers the wind to the shorn
+lamb: At the same moment that I was called away from my guns, the
+commanding general of the opposing forces received the same call. The
+aged mother of the President of the Boston &amp; Montana and Butte &amp; Boston,
+while riding in her carriage, had been a victim of the same explosion.</p>
+
+<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_19_19" id="Footnote_19_19"></a><a href="#FNanchor_19_19"><span class="label">[19]</span></a> "The Street" is a general term used to designate the stock
+operators, the fraternity in New York being known as Wall Street, in
+Boston as State Street, and in Philadelphia as Broad Street; these
+streets are the centre of the financial districts of their respective
+cities, the Stock Exchanges being situated on them.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[261]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XII</h2>
+
+<h3>THE BUNCOING OF THE STOCKHOLDERS OF UTAH</h3>
+
+
+<p>This was veritably a period of financial delirium in Boston. No one
+talked or thought of aught but "Coppers," at least no one with a spare
+dollar or good credit. The air was full of mysterious yarns and the
+Stock Exchange was hung with Aladdin lamps. From every nook and corner
+of State Street, from the chinks between its sedate old cobblestones,
+came forth copper-mines&mdash;mines undreamt of before and unheard of since.
+Innumerable devices were rigged to take advantage of the prevailing
+intoxication. The prices of the strong properties leaped up with
+breath-taking rapidity. The copper epidemic spread over New England and
+began to extend in constantly widening circles through the rest of the
+country, while from England, France, and Germany came daily news of
+symptoms which proved that the infection had crossed the ocean. I, with
+my hands full, kept two secretaries busy shooing away industrious
+promoters who came at me in armies with old and new copper properties,
+which I might have on my own or any old terms.</p>
+
+<p>In the midst of this excitement I had my first real demonstration of the
+"System's" method of making dollars from nothing. Well as I thought I
+knew the stock game, I'll admit that I looked on open-mouthed, like the
+veriest novice, at the magic wrought by the simple use of the name
+"Standard Oil." Even now I can hear myself as I gasped: "Heaven help the
+people if this sort of thing can be done in America, for Heaven alone
+has power to help them."</p>
+
+<p>The Boston and New York brokerage house of Clark, Ward &amp; Co. had
+promoted the Utah Consolidated Mining Company of Utah. It was less than
+two years old, and its 300,000 shares had been kicked from gutter to
+curb and curb to gutter<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[262]</a></span> at from $2 to $4 per share. Samuel Untermyer,
+the astute corporation lawyer who, on his own account and as the
+representative of a large European clientele, had long been interested
+in "Coppers," had taken hold of Utah, and believing it a good thing had
+bought large quantities of its stock for himself and his European
+connections. Under the stimulus of my campaign the price of this stock
+had leaped to 17 or 18, and rumor had it that Utah was a prospective
+factor in my consolidation. One day Mr. Rogers asked me if I were in any
+way responsible for these rumors, and I replied that I knew nothing more
+about them than that they were in circulation.</p>
+
+<p>"Good," replied Rogers. "Do this, then&mdash;send word that we propose to
+issue a denial that we are to have anything to do with Utah
+Consolidated, and bring me their answer."</p>
+
+<p>I carried the message in person. The Utah people were absolutely
+panic-stricken. Such an announcement meant destruction to the pretty
+price-fabric they were rearing, and they begged to be allowed to make a
+proposition to Rogers before he should declare himself. This was their
+proposal: That Mr. Rogers should admit their property to the
+consolidation provided he found it good enough; that every facility
+should be accorded his experts to examine the mine; and that if the
+report was favorable, and they were convinced that it would be, and he
+decided to take hold, he should be given an option on a block of stock
+way below the market.</p>
+
+<p>This offer I took back to Mr. Rogers, who smiled one of his thin, easy
+smiles, and questioned me closely about the genuineness of the market
+for this stock. Could 50,000 shares be sold readily? I assured him that
+when it once became known that we were even looking at Utah it would be
+easy to sell 100,000 shares and at constantly advancing prices.</p>
+
+<p>"All right," said Mr. Rogers, "if you're sure of this we'll go ahead.
+Tell them we'll take a sixty-day option on 50,000 shares, no liability
+to us, at&mdash;well, we'll be liberal, say at 15, and when you mention the
+price impress upon them that I know it cost them but $2 to $4."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[263]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>I returned at once and began negotiations, but, as is usually the case,
+the fact that "Standard Oil" was nibbling leaked before I had clinched
+the option, and before we had even begun to examine the property, prices
+had advanced until there was a profit of $500,000 for us in the
+transaction. To look over the Utah property Mr. Rogers sent his
+son-in-law, Broughton, and in a short time I got word to feed out the
+50,000 shares on the market at the best prices obtainable, and to borrow
+it for delivery in such ways that the Clark-Ward-Untermyer contingent
+should suspect nothing about it. No information was given me as to the
+expert's report, and I was absolutely ignorant whether it was good, bad,
+or indifferent, though from the fact that we were to sell the stock I
+inferred that it was unfavorable. The public took the 50,000 shares at
+between 32 and 36, much as an elephant takes in water after a thirsty
+tramp across sandy deserts&mdash;the shares were just sucked in without a
+gulp or a gasp. I did not know until long afterward that the purchasers
+were the English holders who had contributed the greater part of the
+50,000 shares to meet our option&mdash;in other words, were buying back from
+us their own stock at more than twice the price we were to pay them for
+it, and that their eagerness was due to confidential information that
+the expert's examination had disclosed such richness that the price
+would surely jump to over $100 when "Standard Oil" assumed the
+management. Just where they acquired this information or how it was put
+in their path was a matter I never found out. As I have previously
+demonstrated, "Standard Oil" has its own system of wires and underground
+passages and rumor bureaus. It works in mysterious ways its wonders to
+perform.</p>
+
+<p>This section of the deal was soon wound up, and the transaction showed
+us a profit of $1,000,000. That is, we had sold 50,000 shares which we
+did not possess, but which were ours on demand, for $1,000,000 more than
+we should have to pay their owners for them. When I reported my success
+to Mr. Rogers he expressed complete satisfaction, and ordered me to
+inform the Utah people that another 50,000 shares must be added to the
+option, as he could not think<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[264]</a></span> of tacking the great name of "Standard
+Oil" to an enterprise in which he had less than a third interest;
+indeed, he was not sure that he would consider less than a one-half
+ownership. This second request was a bitter pill to the
+Clark-Ward-Untermyer crowd, who hated to surrender for such a low figure
+this tremendous parcel of a stock that was now selling fast at 40 per
+share. There was no gainsaying the soundness of Rogers' reasoning,
+however: "Who made it worth 40? Who but 'Standard Oil'? And what will
+happen if 'Standard Oil' declares that it will not take Utah into the
+consolidation?" The bare suggestion threw the Utah contingent into one
+of those hundred-in-the-shade, twenty-below-zero sweats, which resemble
+the moisture upon steam-pipes that pass through cold-storage boxes. They
+succumbed. At the moment the option was signed over to us it represented
+a profit of $1,000,000 more, and when we sold it, it netted us
+$1,250,000, for the market was still climbing. This latter phenomenon
+was not surprising, for it should be borne in mind that when our demand
+for the second 50,000 shares was made, the heavy Utah stockholders were
+called together and it was explained to them by their own managers&mdash;not
+by "Standard Oil" or by Mr. Rogers mind, for "Standard Oil" never makes
+false statements&mdash;that the expert's examination had developed such
+wealth that "Standard Oil," the mighty of mighties, had insisted on
+having at least 100,000 shares; but that, of course, "Standard Oil"
+could not be asked to pay over twenty for stock which had cost its
+original owners but $2 to $4. What was there to do? The stockholders
+just gave up, and then once more climbed over one another in the market
+to get back their precious shares as best they could.</p>
+
+<p>Just to keep the conditions of the transaction at this stage before my
+reader's mind, I'll repeat that the Clark-Ward-Untermyer people had now
+given us the right to buy of them 100,000 shares of their stock (<i>at a
+price $2,250,000 less than we had already sold it for</i>), with the
+understanding&mdash;not in words or in writing, of course, because "Standard
+Oil" never makes a promise in writing, but implied as sacredly as though
+it had been set down and attested under oath<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[265]</a></span>&mdash;that we would take and
+pay for their stock and engage with them in their enterprise, giving
+them the benefit of our experience, our capital, and our prestige. I say
+they had every reason to assume that we were acting in absolute good
+faith, and no ground to suppose that there was any ulterior motive
+behind our negotiations. It must be remembered that this occurred some
+years ago, before the "System's" perfidy was a calculated contingency.</p>
+
+<p>The knife was now in, but the "System" had still to corkscrew it in the
+wound.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[266]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XIII</h2>
+
+<h3>THE TRAP IN FINANCE</h3>
+
+
+<p>After "pulling off" such a big "trick," as the professional crooks put
+it, and getting away with such a fat bundle of "swag," you, my good
+reader, might naturally suppose that this shining light of the "System,"
+contented with his profits, would pass on to new victims; or, if you
+have a mistaken impression of Mr. Rogers' sense of humor, for really he
+has a keen sense of the ridiculous&mdash;after five o'clock on week-days and
+all day Sunday&mdash;you might think he would take the opportunity to order
+me to tack up his card on the Utah office door, inscribed, "We will
+return when you recoup," and transfer his milking machine to other
+udders. No, that is where you, old-fashioned reader that you are, have
+"sized up" Mr. Rogers inaccurately. He had not finished.</p>
+
+<p>Utah was not yet exhausted as a wealth-producer for the "System." After
+a brief lull, representatives of Clark, Ward &amp; Co. came to me requesting
+that they be allowed to see "Standard Oil's" report on their mine. It
+was most important for their financial arrangements that they be told
+what was in store for them. That was what they thought. I told Mr.
+Rogers. He instructed me to report to the Utah people that Mr. Rogers
+had looked wise and said nothing. The double-perfected
+"look-wise-and-say-nothing" is one of "Standard Oil's" pet business
+devices. Whoever tries to penetrate its secrets is always welcome to his
+inferences, but no one in "Standard Oil" is ever on record in case the
+inquisitive one guesses wrong.</p>
+
+<p>"Lawson," Rogers said, "just tell those people that our way of doing
+business is to send out reports when we decide it is time for them to be
+seen."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[267]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>In the meantime Utah kept booming. A week before the expiration of our
+option, the price being then forty-five, I heard from Mr. Rogers again.
+He gave me the most mysterious order of all: "Sell 50,000 more." Up to
+that time I should have declared to any one that I was up in all the
+quirks and kinks of the stock game, but this move puzzled me. However, I
+sold, and at the very top. We had now "out" 150,000 shares of Utah, had
+sold that number "short," in fact. Clark, Ward &amp; Co. were bound to
+deliver us 100,000 shares when we called for them. These 100,000 shares
+had been contributed by the large stockholders to Clark, Ward &amp; Co. at
+the price we had agreed to pay. Assuming that "Standard Oil" control of
+Utah would immensely enhance its value, the stockholders naturally
+desired to replace the holdings of stock they had contributed, and
+instructed Clark, Ward &amp; Co. and other brokers to buy them back in the
+market. So Clark, Ward &amp; Co. were carrying all one end and much of the
+other end of the deal, paying for the actual stock which our option
+called for as it came in, and carrying their customers for the new stock
+purchased for them at vastly higher prices. <i>But</i>, as we had not taken
+up our option and paid Clark, Ward &amp; Co. for our stock, the money
+necessary to finance the whole transaction had to be borrowed from the
+banks. It is evident that, at this phase of the game, Clark, Ward &amp; Co.
+must have been, as the phrase goes, "extended."</p>
+
+<p>While the operation had been in process, during the life of the option
+in fact, money at the "banks" became as "easy" as an old haircloth
+rocker for whoever desired to borrow on Utah Copper collateral. The fact
+was much commented on at the time by the "Street," and Clark, Ward &amp; Co.
+often gratefully remarked to their customers: "After all, 'Standard Oil'
+is good to its associates."</p>
+
+<p>The day before the option matured, Mr. Rogers briefly said to me:
+"Lawson, I've been thinking that Utah matter over and have made up my
+mind that it is not safe to go ahead unless we have the actual control
+of the company, 151,000 shares. Tell them so, and that we must have
+51,000 shares in addition to our 100,000."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[268]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>At last his game was plain to me. I gasped as I took in all the features
+of the new plan. "They'll never stand for it," I cried.</p>
+
+<p>"They won't, eh?" he said. "You look it over more carefully and I think
+you will agree they <i>must</i> stand it even if I make it another 100,000.
+This is the situation: They are sure we are going to take and pay for
+100,000 shares, and in anticipation have borrowed millions on call at
+the banks. For fear they may not see all the nice points of their
+position you can show them that if they refuse, the banks as well as
+every one else will know that we not only are not going into Utah as
+investors, but would not&mdash;in fact, could not&mdash;become connected with the
+management, because our thorough examination of the property shows that
+the mines are not as valuable as they affirmed. Now, when they grasp the
+fact that they have all the Utah stock they had, to start with, and
+150,000 more which they have bought since, they must realize that in a
+slump the price of their shares will go lower than the $2 or $4 it
+started from. Have no fear. Clark, Ward, and Untermyer will do just what
+we ask, and, in fact, if it were not for the stir a lot of failures
+would make and the bad effect these would have on our general plans, I'd
+refuse to take up that option anyway, for there would be more money in
+buying back in a smash what we have sold than in taking it from them at
+our own price," he went on.</p>
+
+<p>The implication in my suggestion that he was going too far in the Utah
+deal stung him. He said:</p>
+
+<p>"The fact is, Lawson, Americans who have accumulated great fortunes get
+no credit; on the contrary, they are unfairly treated. Instead of being
+honored for our splendid efforts as evinced by our wealth, the people
+howl as though they had not equal chances with us. Take this very case:
+we did not ask these people to give us options; we did not ask them to
+allow us to become associated with them. We have done nothing but take
+what they have thrown upon us, and yet if we refuse to exercise the
+option we did not ask for, and there comes a smash, we should never hear
+the last of how 'Standard Oil' robbed them. The more I see of the fool
+way Americans look at such things the less sympathy<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[269]</a></span> I have for their
+losses and what they entail. There was a period when I allowed myself to
+waste time on such ideas as you seem to entertain, but, thank goodness,
+I have outlived it."</p>
+
+<p>The job cut for me was one I hated to perform. I could refuse, but what
+then? Some one else would carry out Rogers' mandate, and where should I
+and my great copper structure be? If I balked here, they would go no
+farther with me&mdash;and remember, we were just at the beginning of our
+association. Had I foreseen the misery and ruin with which the future
+was fraught, I should have stopped then and there; but the future was
+hidden, and I was expectantly revelling in a glorious and delightful
+period in which I and all who were following me into "Coppers" should be
+gloriously successful and rich. So I looked at the situation in a
+practical business way, and I said to myself that even if we did insist
+on having the 100,000 shares extra Rogers had mentioned instead of the
+50,000 he had decided to demand, the Clark-Ward-Untermyer combination
+would still have remaining more of value than their whole property could
+possibly have been worth without our association. Therefore I tumbled
+into their midst and dropped Mr. Rogers' bomb&mdash;and bomb it was.</p>
+
+<p>At once they realized that they were looking into the cold steel muzzles
+of 45-calibre revolvers, for there was no concealing the
+money-or-your-life inference of the message. I had honestly tried to
+soften the blow as well as I could, but all they could see was 50,000
+shares more at something like a million dollars less than its market
+value&mdash;or in twenty-four hours a panic and no market for their stock at
+any price. What could they do? With perspiration streaming in big beads
+down their foreheads, they declared that even if their people were
+willing to submit to the knife, it was impossible in the brief time
+available to get to them. At least would I not beg Mr. Rogers and Mr.
+Rockefeller to take up the 100,000 shares pending their negotiations for
+the balance? Would I not, because they had made all their financial
+arrangements for big payments of loans next day which they could not
+renew at such short notice&mdash;I must!&mdash;I must!<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[270]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>As I listened to the pleadings of these men there flashed into my mind a
+conviction of the malignant humor of my situation. Here was I, father of
+a plan in the successful execution of which I had figured myself out as
+a benefactor to all concerned, turning the torture screws of "Standard
+Oil's" new dollar rack&mdash;fashioned from my structure&mdash;and I was powerless
+to stop or rescue the screaming victim. "But why," ask my readers, "did
+you not denounce the men and renounce the work, instead of profiting by
+it, as you undoubtedly did?" You have never&mdash;you who ask that
+question&mdash;sat in at the great game of millions; you know nothing of the
+excitement of the dollar chase, of the terrible joy of hearing, "A
+million while you wait." I am not, in telling this story, setting myself
+up as an angel, nor posing as better than others. My experience of
+business has demonstrated to me long before this that rapacity rules in
+the modern dollar game, and that in wholesale dollar making many of the
+laws of men and more of the laws of God are inevitably violated. But he
+who cannot or will not play according to the rules of those who are
+making the game is disqualified. He should go elsewhere. Hitherto in my
+life I had followed the code of a smaller game, in which we seldom
+pressed an advantage to the limit or cut our pound of flesh from out a
+vital part. Now I had voluntarily associated myself with other men in a
+venture I believed was big, fair, and square, and I was learning that
+the rule of their game was thumbs down&mdash;give nothing&mdash;take everything. I
+might have retired, but I was already deep in, with resources pledged to
+the limit; and what would my reluctance to press our advantage with
+Clark, Ward &amp; Co. be considered but fool sentimentality? If I insisted
+on my view, what would happen? The people who had followed me so
+far&mdash;and their number was thousands and their quality, measured by any
+heart and soul standard, more human than any of those whom Rogers was
+thumb-screwing&mdash;as well as I myself, would be surely ruined. If I went
+on, at least I could care for those I had brought along with me. I
+looked at the complication fairly and squarely, weighed my duty with
+such powers of judgment as I possessed, and decided,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[271]</a></span> wisely or
+unwisely, that it was best to go on. Wisely or unwisely I made up my
+mind to accept the responsibility of acting as fireman to the
+engine&mdash;and to bide my time. That time, thank God, is here now.</p>
+
+<p>I reported to Mr. Rogers. His fox-trap jaws, with their bone-and
+heart-and soul-crushing teeth, came together with a snap, and when they
+relaxed his lips parted into one of his marrow-chilling smiles.</p>
+
+<p>"I thought so," said he. "Those able gentlemen are loaded, Lawson,
+loaded, and without a by-your-leave have made up their minds that Mr.
+Rockefeller and myself are only in business to draw their load to some
+convenient safe-deposit vault, from which they can from time to time
+take it out to pay for palaces, yachts, fast horses, and society crowns.
+Lawson, don't tell me of their plight. Don't waste my time with their
+pleadings." The tiger was awake, his cage rattled; it was raw-meat time.
+I watched. Presently he snapped: "What do you suppose they would answer
+were they in our position? This: 'Give us the additional 50,000 shares
+we have demanded quick, or take the consequences.' They are able
+business men, so what they would do is just good enough for us to do.
+Take back this answer: 'You have the only proposition we will make;
+decide at once!'"</p>
+
+<p>I looked at him. I said not a word&mdash;I could not. Perhaps my thoughts
+were miles and ages away to scenes where C&aelig;sars, Napoleons, and
+Bismarcks stood gazing over fields strewn with corpses oozing blood. I
+remembered "to the victor belong the spoils"; but there also wandered
+into my mind the memory of a good mother's knee on a Sunday afternoon,
+and of a voice which repeated, "For what is a man profited if he shall
+gain the whole world and lose his own soul?"</p>
+
+<p>As I left him Mr. Rogers said:</p>
+
+<p>"You had better sell 10,000 shares more of Utah. Sell them quick and
+sharp, and perhaps they will read our answer on the tape before you get
+to them."</p>
+
+<p>I sold the 10,000 shares. The price dropped two to three points, and,
+sure enough, by the time I got to Clark, Ward &amp; Co.'s office I found
+them poring dazedly over the ticker<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[272]</a></span> tape. They knew my answer before I
+stated it, and were trembling with nervous apprehension. I wondered if
+they, too, saw the tiger, his bloody chops and claws and his piece of
+raw meat. I said what Mr. Rogers had told me to say in so many words,
+and then I talked frankly to them about their situation, and advised
+that they meet "Standard Oil's" demands. I called their attention to the
+tape: "They told me to throw over only 10,000 shares," I concluded.</p>
+
+<p>"Great heavens!" said Armstrong, the negotiating partner of Clark, Ward
+&amp; Co., "they are likely to follow it up with 90,000 more. They have it;
+at least they can demand it of us, and if they do we are ruined. What
+can we do, Lawson? What <i>can</i> we do?"</p>
+
+<p>I pointed out that their only possible course was to lay the situation
+before the large shareholders involved, stating the absolute necessity
+of coming to "Standard Oil's" time, and to make their medicine a little
+more palatable I added: "Once you come to time I can induce my people, I
+believe, to make a public announcement that they will take the open
+management and control of the Utah Company, and you know that will
+surely make the stock jump&mdash;enough, perhaps, to offset what you people
+lose on the extra 50,000 shares you yield up."</p>
+
+<p>I advised them to the best of my ability as to their only way out. If I
+had revealed to them that we had sold every share of the stock they were
+to turn over to us, it would have served no good purpose, for it would
+have made business impossible between us, and a crash would have
+occurred which would have ruined Utah, inflicted destruction on their
+price structure, and only enriched "Standard Oil." When I concluded,
+they started in to do as I had suggested, and the way they burnt up time
+and annihilated space was marvellous to behold. Though the thing was
+almost a miracle, they met the condition within the time limit, and we
+had turned over to us 150,000 shares of stock.</p>
+
+<p>The moment Mr. Rogers saw the deal was a "go" all his hardness melted as
+the snow upon the mountainsides under the April sun. Nothing could be
+softer, kinder, and fairer. The blood had disappeared; the tiger was a
+great,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[273]</a></span> purring house-cat, intent only on catching naughty rats and mice
+for the good of the household. Why, he would do anything to help out
+these good gentlemen; certainly, the world should know of his great
+interest in the Utah properties, and as the millions of golden dollars
+clinked into his golden bucket the next day, the world did learn of the
+great value of Utah, for his private counsel was made president, and
+certain other gentlemen who bear the uncounterfeitable "Standard Oil"
+tag were appointed as directors. There was a general jubilation&mdash;I had
+almost said, a killing of the fatted calf; but that part of the ceremony
+had been most ably attended to by Mr. Rogers in the preliminary stages
+of the entertainment.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p><span class="smcap">Note.</span>&mdash;When this startling and cold-blooded-trick part of my
+story was published in <i>Everybody's Magazine</i>, it astounded
+the world, and my enemies took advantage of the fierce anger
+which was aroused to call attention to my part, which they
+attempted to show was as bad as that of Rogers. Right here I
+wish to go on record: If I had been a human angel instead of
+a stock-broker, actuated solely by a desire to do just
+right, to do that which would work least harm to the
+greatest number of innocents, and least good to the largest
+number of tricksters, I should have done as I did.</p>
+
+<p class='right'><span class="smcap">Author</span>.</p></div>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[274]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XIV</h2>
+
+<h3>LAWYER UNTERMYER DISCOVERS THE "NIGGER"</h3>
+
+
+<p>I have dwelt on this Utah episode because it shows phases of the
+"System's" methods never heretofore made public, just as episodes which
+are to follow in the narrative will develop other startling and
+ingenious deviltries. But, before going on, the sequel to the Utah
+affair deserves a place in the story. A sequel there was, and my readers
+will agree, I think, that it has a mordant humor quite its own. To-day,
+after the years that have gone by, I cannot think of this tremendous
+bunco game, in spite of its cruel and tragic phases, without a laugh at
+the manner in which the smart gentlemen who composed the Utah
+Consolidated crowd were "outwitted." Bear in mind that Clark, Ward &amp; Co.
+were among the "flyest" operators in Wall Street's juggle factories.
+They asked no odds of any one in shuffling and dealing their cards, and
+with them was the eminent Samuel Untermyer, surely the head of his class
+of corporation counsellors, and himself a master in the fine arts of
+copper financiering. On the conclusion of the deal, these gentlemen and
+their partners in Utah assumed all the airs and graces they conceived
+proper for associates of "Standard Oil," and at once enlarged their
+hatbands and let out their waistcoats. Some of them, I believe, went so
+far as to be measured for copper crowns. The stories they set afloat
+about the richness of Utah, as proved by "Standard Oil's" determination
+to have its 150,000 shares, would have made the constructor of Aladdin's
+palace look to his laurels as a treasure-house creator, and the
+stockholders of the corporation felt so good over their prospects that
+in London and New York two large banquets were simultaneously given at
+which the prospective<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[275]</a></span> millionaires tossed cable congratulations at one
+another across the Atlantic and toasted in vintage champagnes the
+brilliant promoters who had worked such wonders. At these entertainments
+there was no question but that Utah was destined to be the foundation
+company in the coming great copper consolidation.</p>
+
+<p>With this roseate view Mr. Rogers did not entirely coincide. His
+diagnosis of the situation had all that whichever-way-the-cat-jumps
+frankness I had learned to look upon as characteristic of the man. He
+said to me:</p>
+
+<p>"Lawson, this is the situation: We are in absolute control of the Utah
+property. If it were good we could do great things with it, but it's
+bad, very bad; there is nothing out there but a bunch of ore which is
+rich enough, but which cannot possibly last longer than six years, and
+then&mdash;then there is nothing but a hole in the ground. Of course there is
+a possibility of our finding other bunches, but with all the machinery
+in our hands it looks to me as though we could play a very safe game. If
+we find things that will make the stock valuable, we can keep the good
+news buried until we shake the price down and get whatever we want. If
+it is all bad, we can sell the stock and buy it in at big profits. I
+think, on the whole, it is safe to call this deal completed and mark it
+a success."</p>
+
+<p>With this understanding we left it, and for some little time I paid no
+attention whatever to Utah. One day I was surprised to notice on the
+tape that the price of the stock was declining. I was puzzling over what
+could have happened, when I received a sudden call from the Machiavelli
+of the New York Bar, Samuel Untermyer. The set glare of his eyes, the
+fervor of his hand-shake, told me that I had a volcano to deal with.</p>
+
+<p>"Lawson," said he, "something came up the other day that led me to
+investigate, and do you know, I have got to a point already where I can
+put my fingers on people, outside of any one connected with 'Standard
+Oil,' who own over 200,000 shares of Utah. If this is so, how can Rogers
+and his crowd own the 150,000 shares they took away from us at millions
+below the market? It seems impossible, but<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[276]</a></span> it looks as though we had
+been buncoed&mdash;buncoed as no one outside a crazy-house was ever buncoed
+before."</p>
+
+<p>That steely imperturbability which is alternately the pride and pleasure
+of Mr. Untermyer's friends, the glittering surface of which it is said
+no cloud has ever shadowed or no gale disturbed, was fast losing its
+distinction under the influence of the excitement that welled up in the
+heaving bosom of the eminent cross-examiner; and excitement and he were
+so remote, so studiously antagonistic, that I looked on and listened in
+wonder for the outcome. An interesting situation was evidently fast
+developing, and to grasp its possibilities one should know the attitude
+of Mr. Rogers toward Mr. Untermyer. For this astute lawyer the "Standard
+Oil" magnate has something akin to terrified admiration. Mr. Rogers has
+said many times to me and to others among his associates that there is
+but one lawyer in the United States whose cross-examination on the
+witness-stand could afford him anything but amusement and recreation;
+and this extraordinary exception is Samuel Untermyer. The bare thought
+of being subjected under oath to the remorseless questioning of this
+astute dissector and analyst of motives and actions brings him to the
+verge of rippling chills. And here was this legal Nemesis on the
+war-path and headed directly for 26 Broadway.</p>
+
+<p>"What does it mean, Lawson?" His voice was in a court-and-jury key.</p>
+
+<p>The opportunity was too good to miss. I could not help it. I said,
+"Untermyer, you have another guess coming."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you refuse to tell me anything about it?" he snapped.</p>
+
+<p>"Tell you about it?" said I. "What could I possibly tell you about your
+own scheme? You flatter me; you are getting excited. Let me ask you a
+question, What do you say it means?"</p>
+
+<p>"I say it means," he fairly yelled, "that we have been
+buncoed&mdash;swindled!"</p>
+
+<p>"If that is a fact," I said, "you are the best man on earth to tackle
+such a proposition. Introducing swindlers to justice is your specialty."</p>
+
+<p>"Lawson," said he, "let's talk it out. I don't see wherein<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[277]</a></span> you are in
+any way to blame, but I tell you if I find true what I now suspect,
+there will be music in the copper world that will set copper investors
+by the ears."</p>
+
+<p>I saw there was no use trying to dodge the issue, and we entered into
+executive session. He had gathered most of the facts, he told me, and to
+ascertain the balance, proposed at once to call a meeting of Utah
+Consolidated stockholders. Also he had men out examining the transfer
+agencies to find who got the shares of Utah delivered to Rogers.</p>
+
+<p>I said to him, "What do you think has happened, Untermyer?"</p>
+
+<p>"I think you people have sold the bulk of that stock," he said.</p>
+
+<p>"Suppose we have," I said; "there is no crime in that, is there?"</p>
+
+<p>"No crime," said he, "but it is a piece of dirty double-dealing."</p>
+
+<p>"All right, suppose I admit it," said I, "what of it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, did you do it? Did you sell that stock after we delivered it to
+you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not a share," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you give me your word for it?"</p>
+
+<p>"I give you my word, we didn't sell a share of that stock after you
+delivered it to us."</p>
+
+<p>"When did you sell it?" said he.</p>
+
+<p>"Every share before we secured it of you."</p>
+
+<p>At this the distinguished impassivity faded finally away and Samuel
+Untermyer was actually and absolutely flabbergasted. The sight of him
+dumfounded, confused, was too much for me. I laughed. It is seldom one
+gets the laugh on Mr. Untermyer.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you mean to tell me you were short the whole bunch?"</p>
+
+<p>"Short every share of it, and 10,000 besides," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"And where do you stand now?" he pursued.</p>
+
+<p>"Still short of it, and before you can get fairly to work kicking up a
+rumpus I should not be surprised if we were short the whole capital
+stock. Rogers, as you know, does play a great game, that is, when he has
+all the cards, owns<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_278" id="Page_278">[278]</a></span> the table, the room it's in, and has control of the
+doorkeeper."</p>
+
+<p>There was an interval of tense silence. Untermyer was making a noble
+effort to swallow his fury. I began to figure the degree of my
+responsibility if he should burst a blood-vessel or have an apoplectic
+stroke. Finally he said:</p>
+
+<p>"Lawson, if I don't blow this thing to pieces and shake 26 Broadway to
+its foundations, I'm not Sam Untermyer."</p>
+
+<p>The time had come to reason with the heated legal gentleman, and in
+plain language I proceeded to show him where he stood, the position of
+the property, the public's relation to it, and his own duty to the
+clients whose money he had invested in it. Under the logic of my
+argument he cooled. He saw the net, and that he and his friends were
+absolutely enmeshed. He even admitted that he and his friends had
+unknowingly aided in what had occurred and were mostly to blame for
+their present position; but while he acknowledged all this, he
+reiterated over and over again that in all his experience&mdash;and in Samuel
+Untermyer's professional position he has either prosecuted, defended, or
+had an inquisitorial finger in every sword-swallowing, dissolving-view,
+frenzied finance game that has been born or naturalized in Wall Street
+within the decade&mdash;he had never met the equal in high-handed bunco of
+this deal in Utah.</p>
+
+<p>Finally he said: "There's one thing I can do, if I cannot get even with
+Rogers; and that is, I can 'fire' the present management of this
+company, and I'm going to do it now, this very minute, and incidentally
+I'm going to state what I think of them and the whole dirty business."</p>
+
+<p>I called up "Standard Oil" on the telephone and told what had happened.
+Mr. Rogers said: "Cool him down at any cost, but particularly try to
+show him I had little to do with the deal; that it was largely the
+outgrowth of what the Clark-Ward people thrust upon us, and that I left
+the details to you and the lawyers."</p>
+
+<p>Again I had visions of what would be the cost of making "Coppers" a
+success.</p>
+
+<p>Within an hour Untermyer was back visibly relieved and glowing after his
+encounter. He had the resignations in his<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[279]</a></span> pocket, and he began joyously
+to detail the specific opprobriums he had cast upon the management. "I
+shall put in an entirely new management," he proclaimed triumphantly.</p>
+
+<p>"You have positively made up your mind to that?" said I.</p>
+
+<p>"You bet I have," he answered.</p>
+
+<p>"Excuse me for a few minutes, then," I said; "I want to give my brokers
+orders to rip out 50,000 or 60,000 shares of Utah. Rogers and
+Rockefeller would take me to task if I wasted a minute."</p>
+
+<p>"Hold on there, Lawson," he said.</p>
+
+<p>"Not a minute," said I; "you know the game well enough, Untermyer, to
+realize that there are a few millions hanging very low on the boughs at
+just this second. I want to get my hat under them before you and your
+friends have an opportunity to roll in your own hogsheads."</p>
+
+<p>It was no time for diplomacy, and I set forth in plain, dog-eat-dog
+terms to Mr. Untermyer exactly where he was "at," and that no one but
+himself and his associates would be the sufferers by a public explosion.
+Reluctantly he agreed with me that under no conditions must the
+"Standard Oil" management be changed, but he was bound to have one
+victim to show.</p>
+
+<p>"You have the resignations of the present board&mdash;why not put in new men,
+the strongest 'Standard Oil' men you know?" I suggested.</p>
+
+<p>"I'll do it," he said, "but I'll throw out the present president, blame
+him for all that's happened, but&mdash;whom shall I put in to replace him?
+How about Rogers himself?"</p>
+
+<p>Knowing Mr. Rogers' cross-purposes I was sure he would never become
+officially responsible for the company; so I told Untermyer this was
+impossible, but I continued: "The next best man and the closest I know
+to Rogers is Broughton, his son-in-law. There's your president."</p>
+
+<p>Whereupon Broughton was elected president of the Utah company. The stock
+has since dropped from 52 to 22, gone from 22 to 37-1/2, dropped to
+18-1/2, with frequent repetitions, and is now 43: and all the drops have
+been preceded by tremendous short selling, followed by stories of the
+absolute worthlessness of the property; and all the rises, by
+tre<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280">[280]</a></span>mendous buying and stories of the mine's fabulous richness. Some one
+has made millions.</p>
+
+<p>"Standard Oil" is ever ready to forgive and forget those it has injured,
+but it has power and place for those who have made it tremble. Its
+associates to-day are often yesterday's enemies. As one looks back upon
+the Utah episode from over the divide, it helps accentuate its humor to
+contrast the present attitudes of the parties engaged with those they
+then held to one another. We now see the virtuously indignant Samuel
+Untermyer shoulder to shoulder with his wicked betrayer, Henry H.
+Rogers, whose counsel he is against the original ally of the same Henry
+H. Rogers, Thomas W. Lawson, historian of "Frenzied Finance." And the
+talented expert, most trusted of "Standard Oil" mining
+emissaries&mdash;Broughton, whose unfavorable report on Utah Consolidated was
+the instrument of the plundering of the Clark-Ward-Untermyer
+contingent&mdash;elected president by Samuel Untermyer, has remained ever
+since at the head of the property he had pronounced worthless.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[281]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XV</h2>
+
+<h3>DEGREES IN CRIME</h3>
+
+
+<p>Every profession has its social grades. Even crime is not without an
+aristocracy. There are as many classes of crooks as there are things to
+steal, and the more dangerous the theft, the more distinguished is the
+criminal in the eyes of his professional brethren. In the thieving
+fraternity the burglar and the highwayman figure as important persons,
+for do they not take their lives in their hands every time they "pull
+off" a trick? He who signs another man's name to a check requires fine
+dexterity to be successful and endangers his liberty for a long term, so
+the forger is of high consequence. Pickpockets and sneak-thieves stake
+freedom on the agility of their fingers and legs, and are the small fry
+of the fraternity, yet figure as legitimate practitioners. But the
+confidence man, he who goes forth among rural communities disguised as a
+clergyman or doctor, and wheedles money out of some unsuspecting
+fellow-creature by means of the trust he has inspired, ranks low in the
+estimation of his plucky brethren of the jimmy and the black-jack. Force
+they respect; stealth they despise. The burglar is frankly a burglar;
+the confidence man conceals his plundering purpose under the aspect of
+respectability. He is doubly a knave in that he pretends to be honest.</p>
+
+<p>The Utah trick performed by the "System," as described in my last
+chapter, was essentially a confidence operation. The men who executed it
+had the reputation and appearance of honesty, and their victims were
+hypnotized into security by accepting standing in the community, great
+business prestige, and enormous wealth as guarantees of individual
+probity. The only capital employed in capturing three millions of "made
+dollars" and the control of a great corpora<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[282]</a></span>tion was respectability. I
+contend, then, that the magnitude and success of the deal do not make it
+less despicable.</p>
+
+<p>Some of my readers will doubtless ask me why I so insistently repeat the
+details of the "System's" criminality, which for all purposes of
+argument have already been sufficiently established. My answer is that
+repetition alone will impress people with the real character of the
+class of individuals with whom I deal. The mass of Americans look upon
+these men as great leaders, and regard their millions as monuments to
+their commercial genius. I am showing that this commercial genius is no
+better than a high talent, for financial jugglery, and that its
+successes are achieved by a calculated disregard of the laws of the
+game. The "System's" fortunes have been won by means of marked cards and
+cogged dice, crooked wheels and bribed umpires&mdash;in other words, by the
+corruption of legislatures, the undermining of competitors, the evasion
+of railway rates, the wrongful manipulation of stocks, the perversion of
+justice, by intrigue, graft, and four play. Once the people realize
+this, the "System" is doomed; and it is my purpose to demonstrate so
+clearly and forcibly the crimes of the past that the nation may be
+aroused not only to prevent their repetition, but to crush their
+rascally perpetrators as they would so many reptiles. I shall so
+familiarize the people with the rights to which they are properly
+entitled and with the outrages committed in violation of them under the
+guise of legitimate commerce, that they will know them as they do the
+common facts of their daily lives. Let any "System" attempt to interfere
+between a man and his Bible, his meat and bread, and his proper
+allowance of sleep, and there would occur an explosion fierce enough to
+wipe the conspirators and their plots off the face of the earth; yet it
+is absolutely the fact that in the past our people have suffered
+unwittingly much fiercer wrongs than these would be, and far more vital
+invasions of their rights.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[283]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XVI</h2>
+
+<h3>MR. ROGERS UNMASKS</h3>
+
+
+<p>There was in Montana a great copper property known as the
+Daly-Haggin-Tevis group, the centre of which was the huge Anaconda mine
+with its 1,200,000 shares. This is the mine that Marcus Daly induced the
+late George Hearst to buy and develop for the marvellously successful
+syndicate of California mining operators, composed of J. B. Haggin,
+noted now the world over for his horses; Lloyd Tevis, an extraordinarily
+shrewd San Francisco financier; and Senator George Hearst, himself
+perhaps the greatest mining expert America has ever known. After Senator
+Hearst's death his estate sold its holdings to European investors, who
+with the other three owned the company at the time of which I am
+writing. I had never in my copper-consolidation plans contemplated
+including this property, for the reason that the public I was operating
+among was not familiar with it. I did not care to put in jeopardy the
+success of our venture by admitting any but mines of such well-known and
+unquestionable value that there could arise no possible doubt as to the
+security of the investment. I was well along in my task of gathering in,
+through public-market manipulation and private negotiation, the shares
+of the several good Boston companies whose merits I myself knew about
+and had so carefully gone over with Mr. Rogers and Mr. Rockefeller, when
+one day Mr. Rogers called me up on the telephone and requested that I
+come to New York to see him. "I have," he said, "a very important matter
+to go over with you." I took the train and early next morning was at 26
+Broadway. As soon as we started in I was struck by a certain strangeness
+in his manner&mdash;an unusual impressiveness that indicated to me at once
+that something was in the wind.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[284]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>This proved to be the case. I was soon in possession of the information
+that he and Mr. Rockefeller had been putting in a lot of work on the
+copper business; that they had evolved some further schemes, and that
+now the plans were so far along that I could not upset them, therefore
+they proposed to let me in&mdash;all this in the pleasantest manner.</p>
+
+<p>In answer to my quick inquiry as to what plans I had ever upset he waved
+a chilling hand toward me. "Don't start in looking for trouble," he
+said. "There are certain things which cannot be done by a man who works
+as you do. From the very beginning you have insisted upon taking the
+public into your confidence, with the result that they get large profits
+which otherwise would come to us. If you did your business as we do
+ours&mdash;acted first and talked after, or, better still, did not talk at
+all&mdash;there would be no difference of opinion between us. Still, we
+recognize that each man must do business in his own way, and we have let
+you go ahead where it was possible." After a short pause he continued:</p>
+
+<p>"While you were getting the Boston companies in shape I unearthed
+another situation which almost seemed as though it were made to order
+for us. What do you know of the Anaconda Company?"</p>
+
+<p>The way he asked this question in one of his cross-bred,
+cat-purring-and-fox-bark tones which I had seen him work on others, and
+which I had observed always denoted a perfect knowledge of your answer
+to his question before you had it, did not help my guessing any.</p>
+
+<p>I told him I knew nothing more than that there was such a company with
+stock dealt in on the English and our markets.</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing more than that?" And he looked at me quizzically. "Have you
+been watching the stock's actions in the market?"</p>
+
+<p>In a second it flashed over me that Anaconda had been quite active of
+late, that is, had been largely traded in without attracting much
+attention, although the price had been steadily advancing.</p>
+
+<p>"I thought you boasted you could read the tape, Lawson?" he went on,
+"and that nothing could be happening in<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_285" id="Page_285">[285]</a></span> a field you were interested in
+without your smelling it out? When I tell you Mr. Rockefeller and myself
+have bought control of the biggest copper property in the world,
+measured either by the number of shares and their selling price or by
+production, without your even suspecting it, much less the public's
+jumping in and running up the price on us, you can see there is
+something in our quiet way of doing things compared with your public
+way."</p>
+
+<p>"All right, Mr. Rogers; I have never contended that there were as many
+dollars in my way of doing things as in yours&mdash;as many dollars for
+<i>us</i>."</p>
+
+<p>"Lawson," said he, "the public are about ready to invest in the first
+section of our new consolidated company, are they not?"</p>
+
+<p>"Sitting up nights to see that they get a place in line the minute we
+scatter our first handbills," I answered.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, are we ready to put our things together? Have we got the
+necessary companies to meet the ideas you have been educating the public
+into?"</p>
+
+<p>"We have things in such shape that we can whip a $75,000,000 or a
+$100,000,000 company up for public subscription in a very few days, if
+you give the word."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Rogers leaned toward me and said in his most decisive and imperious
+tones:</p>
+
+<p>"Very well; I have plans all shaped up which will allow us to offer the
+first section, but not made up as we first arranged. Mr. Rockefeller and
+myself have decided to put entirely new companies in the first section,
+and to reserve the Butte and the Montana and other companies you have
+been working on for the second section."</p>
+
+<p>The blow had fallen. My head swam. Visions of Clark, Ward, Untermyer,
+Utah, and others I had seen on the rack writhed fearfully across the
+stage of memory. Here I was loaded with Butte, Montana, and other stocks
+which I had felt as certain were to go into the first section as one can
+feel in regard to a thing which seems in one's own control. On my public
+and private assurances as the accredited agent of Mr. Rogers and William
+Rockefeller and "Standard Oil," my friends and following had large
+amounts of money in the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_286" id="Page_286">[286]</a></span> same securities. The market was booming on what
+I had proclaimed was to happen, and here an absolutely new condition was
+being imposed, a condition which gave all my assertions the lie, which
+discredited me, and would, I felt sure, precipitate a terrible disaster.
+Inevitably the copper public would be dazed, would be shaken; a reaction
+would follow which would bring on a panic and a destruction of values
+impossible to measure. In it all, I should be left alone to bear the
+brunt of the storm of ruin, wrath, and denunciation as the result of
+what must seem base trickery to those who had accepted my
+representations. I tried to pull myself together, for I felt Mr. Rogers'
+keen eyes burning into the back of my head, appraising the effect of his
+words and measuring the degree of my numb terror. He saw, in spite of
+all my efforts to appear calm, that I knew I had been given a knock-out
+blow.</p>
+
+<p>As in a dream I inquired what companies it had been decided should go
+into the first section.</p>
+
+<p>"Anaconda, Washoe, Colorado, and all the big timber lands, coal-mines,
+banks, stores, and other Montana properties that go to make up the
+Daly-Haggin-Tevis properties," he replied crisply.</p>
+
+<p>I found my numb inertia melting in a fierce anger. I jumped up. I raised
+my voice:</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Rogers, do you mean to tell me that Mr. Rockefeller and yourself
+have deliberately decided to take advantage of the situation I have
+made&mdash;the situation I have not only made but put myself into&mdash;to try to
+sell to the investors of this country other property than that I have
+promised them they were to have? You cannot mean that&mdash;you surely
+cannot, for you and all your 'Standard Oil,' even though you were many
+times bigger than you are, would never have dared to tell it to me face
+to face."</p>
+
+<p>I was boiling over&mdash;becoming literally frenzied at the picture unrolling
+before me.</p>
+
+<p>Now it was Mr. Rogers' turn to be aroused. His voice quivered with
+intensity and his fist came down on his desk with a force that shook the
+inkstand. It flashed into my brain that this anger was assumed to cow
+me, and I tried to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_287" id="Page_287">[287]</a></span> look through his eyes on to his mind tablets back of
+them, and read what was there recorded. The gaze that met mine was
+polished steel ice coated, off which my glances slipped and slid. I
+dropped into my chair.</p>
+
+<p>"In the name of all that's sensible, Lawson, hear me out and quit acting
+like a child." He stopped a second and then went on impressively. "In
+looking over the copper field I discovered a number of things you failed
+to see. First, that Haggin and Tevis, who own Anaconda with Marcus Daly,
+have grown so wealthy that they have left the management of their
+Montana copper and silver properties entirely to Daly, and he has been
+coddling the mines along, saying nothing about their real worth and
+quietly passing by the richest parts, awaiting the day when he could buy
+his partners out. Shortly after you let it be known that we were to go
+into 'Coppers,' Daly came to me to talk things over, and it took me only
+a short time to get under his waistcoat and find just what he had out
+there, and it took me still less time to decide that he offered
+something a little better than anything we had yet turned up. These
+properties, which we can secure for $24,000,000, which will carry with
+them the majority of the 1,200,000 shares of Anaconda, alone are worth
+$75,000,000, and with the addition of the Colorado, Washoe, and Parrott,
+which he recommends that we buy and which he is in a way to secure for
+us at a bargain, will cost not over $15,000,000. So it came right down
+to this: We could trade with Daly immediately, while if we waited until
+the first section was out to the public the inevitable appreciation of
+Anaconda stock in the market would alone make it impossible; for even if
+Daly was willing to go in with us, Haggin and Tevis would not let him at
+anything like the prices he now names. It seemed best to take action at
+once, so we closed with him; and we have also just closed with the
+Washoe and Colorado, and we want you to secure the Parrott. Under these
+circumstances, could we do otherwise than we have done?"</p>
+
+<p>His argument seemed conclusive. It looked so fair and unanswerable that
+I could not disguise from him that my fears had fled. I was immensely
+relieved. My fight oozed;<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_288" id="Page_288">[288]</a></span> I became as pliable as any of the brittle
+clay which he daily kneaded for each shaping with his applications of
+oil.</p>
+
+<p>"What are your plans, Mr. Rogers?" I asked quietly.</p>
+
+<p>"This is what we thought would be the thing to do if you agreed, Lawson,
+for, of course, you are, after all, the one who must decide. First, you
+shall go over everything we have done, and if you feel sure we have
+property worth at least, at the hardest kind of hard-pan prices,
+$75,000,000, we want to whoop up the country to the very top notch of
+expectation, and while doing so begin to hint that there are to be three
+or four sections, and that the first one will embrace Anaconda,
+Colorado, Washoe, Parrott, and lots of other unnamed things. Then our
+idea was to offer the $75,000,000 by public subscription, and by using
+every dollar we receive for it to support it in the market, to make it
+sell afterward under all conditions at a big premium over cost, so that
+every one would make big profits, and so, consequently, by the time the
+second section came along, the demand for subscriptions would be
+unprecedented. We could continue this until all the good 'Coppers' were
+in our company, and then our consolidation would be a prodigious
+success, just as you outlined at the start. There cannot possibly be any
+loss to any one; in fact, success is so assured that William
+Rockefeller, Daly, Stillman, and all the others who will be associated
+with us, do not propose to sell a share of their stock, but, on the
+contrary, will go along with us to the finish. So good does it look to
+us that I feel it will really beat out Standard Oil itself as a
+money-maker, and you must remember that whatever else they may say about
+Standard Oil, no one who has ever owned a share has lost money; on the
+contrary, every one has made large profits."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_289" id="Page_289">[289]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XVII</h2>
+
+<h3>"EXTRACT EVERY DOLLAR"</h3>
+
+
+<p>"Standard Oil's" arguments always are absolutely flawless, and this was
+one of their best. I was fast becoming imbued with the wisdom of the
+plan which Mr. Rogers was revealing so adroitly, and began secretly to
+wonder if after all I was not a novice in such business.</p>
+
+<p>Unerringly Mr. Rogers followed my thoughts. He piled Pelions of better
+things on Ossas of good ones. Surely it was after watching some parallel
+hoodwinking put through by a remote ancestor of "Standard Oil" that Puck
+enunciated his famous dictum, "What fools these mortals be." I fell in
+like the veriest tyro&mdash;hypnotized and happy.</p>
+
+<p>"How much of this first section do you figure, Mr. Rogers, that we are
+to give to the public?" I inquired.</p>
+
+<p>"We, Mr. Rockefeller and myself, have carefully considered this phase of
+it, and as we all want to retain as much as possible of the stock, we
+would not sell over $5,000,000 to the public."</p>
+
+<p>"But can you do this?" I asked. "If the public know 'Standard Oil' is
+retaining nearly all the stock they will sour on it."</p>
+
+<p>"Leave that to us," he said, knowingly. "We can iron this out so easily
+you need not give it another thought, for no one can have any possible
+rights in the matter until he has been allotted stock, and as all those
+who come in are to have big profits from the start, they will raise no
+objection to anything we do."</p>
+
+<p>"All right, if you think it's wise. You know," I responded; "but who
+will be in this besides ourselves?"</p>
+
+<p>"Every one of us&mdash;Stillman, Daly, Olcott, Flower, Morgan, all who can be
+of use to us will have to be let in on<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_290" id="Page_290">[290]</a></span> some of the ground floors. The
+foundation profits, as we agreed under the old plan, will be twenty-five
+per cent. to you, seventy-five per cent. to us. After that we will
+jointly take care of those we let in. Is that all right?"</p>
+
+<p>When Henry H. Rogers sets out to batter down an antagonist he is as
+fierce as an eagle foraging for her young; victorious, he is as amiable
+and generous as a salesman who has unloaded on a customer a big cargo of
+damaged goods. Anything the victim wants he can have by simply naming
+it.</p>
+
+<p>Fascinated by his mastery of the subject and the obvious completeness of
+his plans, I could only continue to assent. He went on:</p>
+
+<p>"There's another section of the subject we must get at now, Lawson, and
+decide on once and for all. You seem to have made no provisions for the
+most important end of the whole business, the selling end. What is your
+idea as to how we shall control the selling end?"</p>
+
+<p>"I had given that little thought, Mr. Rogers," I replied. "I believe
+that easily takes care of itself. The demand is always greater than the
+supply. We shall have the metal to sell, the world will be more anxious
+to buy than we to sell: what more can be necessary?"</p>
+
+<p>"Lawson," said the master brain of the greatest and most successful
+commercial enterprise in the world, "you know the stock-market, but you
+don't know the first principle of working to advantage a great business
+in which you absolutely control the production. The novice assumes that
+consumption when it is greater than production makes the price, but this
+is one of the many time-worn sophistries of business. Do you suppose
+Standard Oil has built itself up to where it is and made the money it
+has simply because there were always more lamps than we had oil? If you
+do, you are in dense ignorance of the foundation requisite for great
+success. As the world goes to-day, the prices of necessities and
+luxuries are fixed and should be fixed by the man who controls both the
+selling and the producing end, for there is a greater profit to be had
+by supply to regulated demand and demand to regulated supply than from a
+charge made and regulated by supply and demand. Standard Oil gets
+to-<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_291" id="Page_291">[291]</a></span>day and has always since its birth got its enormous profit from its
+'regulation' department. Production yields it a proper profit and by
+supplying legitimate demands it earns other fair profits, but its big
+gains come from so adjusting one to the other that there can be no such
+thing as competition. Do you see?"</p>
+
+<p>"I agree that is not my end, Mr. Rogers, though in a general way I know
+about railroad rebates, steamship comebacks, and such things; but I
+don't see how they are required in our copper business, where the demand
+is of such proportions that the producer sets the price and makes a
+profit away above what may be gained in other business enterprises.
+Surely no one would ask larger gains than are naturally made out of
+copper."</p>
+
+<p>"Lawson," responded Mr. Rogers with oracular emphasis, "that is where
+your business education is flawed. No man has done his business properly
+who has missed a single dollar he could have secured in the doing of it.
+I do not think a fair judge would find me guilty of avarice, either in
+business or in the manner of my living, and yet I am made fairly
+miserable if I discover that, in any business I do, I have not extracted
+every dollar possible. It is one of the first principles Mr. Rockefeller
+taught me; it is one he has inculcated in every 'Standard Oil' man,
+until to-day it is a religion with us all."</p>
+
+<p>There you have it&mdash;the fundamental precept of the gospel of greed. "What
+must ye do to be rich? Extract every dollar." How the formula explains
+"Standard Oil," and how completely it reveals the Rockefeller attitude
+of mind! Greed crystallized into a practice, dignified into a principle,
+consecrated into a religion and become a fanaticism. But, mind you, not
+the dross, but the rule; not profit, but precedent. Money no object, but
+our laws must be kept. Shylock's god is "Standard Oil's." The ravenous
+lust for gold that possesses these men is not an appetite, but a fever.
+In them it is the craving of the tiger for blood. Gorged and glutted
+with riches, their millions piled into the hundreds, masters of the
+revenues of empires, still they are as the daughters of the
+horse-leech.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_292" id="Page_292">[292]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Once in Ogreland there was a giant, larger and fiercer than any of his
+fellows, and it was the habit of this monster to compel the inhabitants
+of the territory which he ruled to render him every evening a tribute of
+human hearts. At sundown he would come out of his castle and seat
+himself in a great chair in front of the huge iron gate, and his vassals
+would lay at his feet the dripping sacks of hearts for which they had
+scoured the land. "How many have you brought me to-day, my merry men?"
+he would say as he weighed the sacks in his mighty fingers. "Are they
+large and juicy?" How they came or whence, he cared not at all; the
+screams of the unfortunates whose hearts were torn from their breasts he
+neither heard nor thought of; hearts he must have, and if people were
+killed, so much the worse for them. But the ogre <i>ate</i> all the human
+hearts his vassals gathered for him; he lived on them and grew greater
+and lustier, for they were the food his great frame required for its
+sustenance, and he never had all he really wanted.</p>
+
+<p>"Standard Oil" in our life to-day plays the r&ocirc;le of this mythological
+giant, forcing its tribute of dollars from the people, indifferent to
+the blood and tears in which they are soaked, oblivious of the cries of
+the victims from whom they have been dragged; but, unlike the giant,
+<i>"Standard Oil" does not need this tribute to sustain its life, nor to
+make richer its blood</i>.</p>
+
+<p>But to return to Mr. Rogers, who triumphantly proceeded with his plot:</p>
+
+<p>"Let me show you, Lawson, how you have overlooked the best part of the
+copper business. We have found that for years Lewisohn Brothers have had
+a double-clamped and riveted contract with at least half the best
+producing mines in the country to sell their output, and they have grown
+very wealthy. As near as we can make it, they have made at least fifty
+millions in one way or another in the last ten or twelve years. First,
+they have had a big profit as their commission for selling; next, big
+interest out of the advances they make to companies while their output
+is being sold; now, they actually control the copper market of the
+world. Think of it, Lawson, for a few seconds, and the possibilities
+will loom<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_293" id="Page_293">[293]</a></span> up to you. You can buy or sell any number of millions of
+pounds in futures or actual deliveries. Suppose a man controlling the
+selling of three or four hundred million pounds a year should knock the
+price to, say, ten cents, sell to himself the year's output of all the
+mines he controls and then lift the price to, say, twenty cents. He
+would have a sure profit, with absolutely no risk, of thirty to forty
+millions of dollars. If he should sell the next year's output short at
+twenty and drop the price back to ten, he would have another thirty or
+forty millions. Wouldn't he? Then if, before he broke the price, he sold
+copper mining stocks short, and if, before advancing the price, he
+covered and loaded up with them, he could easily make an additional
+thirty or forty millions. Think it over, and you will agree with me that
+the possibilities are far beyond those of oil, and perhaps at the same
+time you can account for the violent fluctuations in copper stocks and
+the price of the metal during recent years. A man in such position could
+absolutely <i>dictate</i> to all new mines whose selling agency he could
+secure under long-term contracts. When their stocks were up, he could
+pinch them to the edge of bankruptcy by refusing to sell their metal or
+advance them the cash they needed for operation. Now, don't you agree
+with me that you overlooked one of the most important branches of the
+copper business when you made no provision for taking in the selling
+end?"</p>
+
+<p>Again it crept into my mind that in comparison with the diabolic
+astuteness of this man, such knowledge and experience of business as I
+had gathered were as those of the primary student to the post-graduate
+scholar's. Again, there was no quarreling with his logic or his
+conclusions.</p>
+
+<p>"It is common knowledge in Boston," I replied, "that copper commissions
+on the surface and below constitute as soft graft as any one would ask
+for, but no one suspected the possibilities you outline. Do you actually
+mean to say that that is the way the business has been conducted in the
+past?"</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Rogers lowered his voice confidentially:</p>
+
+<p>"I can only tell you, Lawson, that we have dug up some queer doings
+during our investigation, and I think I can put my finger on a great
+many millions of dollars now in<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_294" id="Page_294">[294]</a></span> the hands of certain mine officers
+which could be recovered by the different companies they have been
+acting as trustees of. It would be quite an eye-opener to some of your
+pious Bostonians to know that the controlling officials of several mines
+are silent partners in some of the big selling agencies."</p>
+
+<p>There was a pregnant interval of silence. Perhaps the expression of my
+face suggested the thronging thoughts which seethed through my head as I
+said:</p>
+
+<p>"But surely, Mr. Rogers, that's off our beat. We shall make money enough
+along our lines without getting into that kind of a game."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Rogers swung his chair half round and looked straight at me. For a
+long second he stared&mdash;sitting half upright, his long, fine hands
+clasping the arms of the chair with a clutch like steel. He said not a
+word. Then he replied:</p>
+
+<p>"Of course, Lawson, we have no need for such methods in our affairs. But
+it is a duty we owe investors and ourselves not to conduct this business
+in a way that will encourage others to continue doing it along the old
+lines."</p>
+
+<p>He frowned at me as much as to say (only he never uses such
+expressions), "Oh, but you do make me tired," as he always did when I,
+with a serious face, would ask him, as I often did: "How is it, Mr.
+Rogers, that young John D. can make such a success of his
+Sunday-School-Class Trust, and at the same time of his father's oil and
+investment business?" In business hours Mr. Rogers taboos frivolity.</p>
+
+<p>The neophyte in crime, being initiated into the mysteries of the
+profession by some able Fagin, gets his instruction by degrees. Great
+care is taken that he shall not realize too soon the depravity he is to
+practise, lest, appalled by the hideousness of it, he might jump the
+track, and along with each advance in knowledge goes a picture
+representing the ease of the life and the lordly rewards and pleasant
+adventures of the "industry." From the remote perspective of to-day very
+similar seems to have been the process in this most momentous
+conversation between Mr. Rogers and myself. The apprentice at the knees
+of the master was being gently and gradually admitted into the secrets
+of the calling<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_295" id="Page_295">[295]</a></span>&mdash;financial highwaymanry. At the moment, however, it
+never entered my thoughts to imagine myself other than a favorite
+lieutenant gathering the garnered wisdom of a great general of commerce.</p>
+
+<p>So when Mr. Rogers shifted bobbins in his shuttle and agreeably and
+naturally wove fancy patterns into the woof of our conversation, I
+suspected no sinister motive. Indeed, in reply to his kindly queries, I
+was delighted to tell him how well I was getting along with Butte,
+Montana, and the other stocks that I had been dealing in, and how deeply
+interested all the country was in our plans. We must have been fully
+half an hour discussing the degree to which the craze for "Coppers" had
+spread over all America and had affected even Europe, and it was
+pleasant to realize his interest in my own personal well-being. Then,
+suddenly, as the thread on a bobbin runs out, he paused and shifted to
+the old subject&mdash;just as if a new phase of it had occurred to him.</p>
+
+<p>"To come back, Lawson, to Lewisohn Brothers. We must buy that concern,
+and at once. Had you best do it or we?"</p>
+
+<p>Our pleasant talk had restored my mind to its normal alertness, and I
+grasped at once the significance of the switch.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't think I could begin to do as well as you on a trade of that
+kind, Mr. Rogers," I answered, off the reel, "for I don't suppose they
+will be anxious to sell, will they?"</p>
+
+<p>"Anxious?" he replied, as quick as a chipmunk; "about as anxious as
+Apollo to have one of his front teeth pulled! But they will sell, and at
+my price, too. I think I know just where they stand, and when they know
+I know it, I don't believe they will be long in seeing it my way, for I
+shall show them what coming in with us means, and just what refusing my
+offer means, too!"</p>
+
+<p>Click! His jaws came together.</p>
+
+<p>"These are my plans," he continued. "They have all the money they want,
+and such a large European and American following that nothing could be
+accomplished by a financial squeeze, even if we resorted to that form of
+pressure; and they are very bright men. Leonard Lewisohn, head of the
+firm, is second to no man in America as a business man,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_296" id="Page_296">[296]</a></span> which means he
+will not hanker for a fight with us; and when I show him we will buy, if
+necessary, the control of all the companies they represent, he will see
+the absolute futility of opposing us. I have it right from the inside of
+his own concern that Lewisohn Brothers have on hand a little over five
+millions cash and its equivalent, and that they consider the good-will
+and business of the firm worth ten to twelve millions more, which is
+fair enough, for their direct earnings must be a million and a quarter
+to a million and a half a year. Now here is what I propose offering
+them, and no more: We will incorporate the firm into a new selling
+company, which will have irrevocable contracts not only with our
+consolidated companies but with everything that we can influence, and
+the capital will be just the cash on hand, say five millions, we to take
+fifty-one per cent. of the stock and give them forty-nine. I will
+undertake to show them that their forty-nine will be more valuable under
+those conditions than the whole is now."</p>
+
+<p>This is where I sat up amazed. "But, Mr.&mdash;," I gasped.</p>
+
+<p>I remember reading somewhere that New York's infamous Boss Tweed, at the
+zenith of his extraordinary corrupt career, actually began negotiations
+with a syndicate composed of his friends to sell them the New York City
+Hall on a long-time note. When some curious heelers asked where the city
+fathers should conduct the affairs of the metropolis, he beamed on them
+in a paternal way as he explained: "Oh, a detail of the sale will be a
+hundred years' lease back to the city at a rental which will give us
+enough each five years to pay the purchase price."</p>
+
+<p>Absurd, you say. Not so far-fetched as you may think, if you will
+remember the conditions under which the National City&mdash;the "Standard
+Oil" Bank&mdash;acquired New York's old Custom House on Wall Street. They
+bought it from the United States Government, credited the purchase price
+to Uncle Sam on their books, then rented it for a good round price to
+the Government, whose new Custom House was not ready for occupancy, and
+because it remained in Uncle Sam's possession, evaded municipal taxation
+on the investment. They got the property absolutely without paying a
+cent, and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_297" id="Page_297">[297]</a></span> have ever since collected a splendid interest on the million
+they did not invest.</p>
+
+<p>But this deal which Mr. Rogers outlined to me seemed to go both of these
+transactions a point or two better, inasmuch as neither of the parties
+were corrupt city or government officials, but merely private citizens
+in a country where all are free and equal, and where the Constitution
+guarantees that no man's property shall be taken from him without due
+process of law.</p>
+
+<p>Before I could get my breath, Mr. Rogers, as if he divined my thought,
+quietly said:</p>
+
+<p>"One of the inducements I offer will be to allow them to reinvest the
+money we pay them in the new consolidated company's stock, at a good big
+advance over what it will cost us."</p>
+
+<p>This was too much. I roared and roared, and even he had to laugh as he
+quietly remarked: "I said you would find we had done better for you than
+you could do for yourself, Lawson, for you must remember you are in on
+this at actual cost."</p>
+
+<p>I stopped laughing. "How is that? I thought you intended the new copper
+company to have the fifty-one per cent. of the selling company?"</p>
+
+<p>He looked at me with something akin to disgust. Then his voice changed,
+and he let me have it straight from the shoulder:</p>
+
+<p>"Lawson, do you really intend that this whole copper business shall be a
+charitable affair? If you do, just count us out right here. We are
+willing to accede to a lot of your ideas, but there is a line we must
+refuse to cross even to please you. This fifty-one per cent. of the
+selling company is to be owned by all of our friends, and it is one of
+the things we must use as a sop to Daly, Stillman, Morgan, and the rest,
+to make them enthusiastic on our main scheme, and it will not come under
+our general arrangements of seventy-five and twenty-five per cent. It is
+one of the things I want you to leave entirely to Mr. Rockefeller and
+myself, and you can depend upon it we will do the right thing. All the
+stock is to be pooled in our hands for a long term of years, so you<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_298" id="Page_298">[298]</a></span> can
+say to the public that its operations will be in favor of the
+consolidated company."</p>
+
+<p>There you will note was the second explosive point in our conversation.
+I was too much concerned at the moment to take in all his words implied
+or to appreciate the fine dexterity with which a difficult situation was
+being handled. These decisive sentences were cracked off quick, sharp,
+emphatic, like the snapping of a bunch of firecrackers. I began a "But,
+Mr. Rogers," when he interrupted, and his words came stern, aggressive:</p>
+
+<p>"Is it satisfactory to you or not? I am half beginning to think you are
+crowding this good thing we have in copper a bit too much. I simply ask
+now, Is this satisfactory to you? Do you leave it to us, or not? But
+whether you do or not, this particular part does not go to the public in
+any way."</p>
+
+<p>He really showed a heap of irritation, and even now I think a little of
+it was genuine anger. It came over me that perhaps I <i>was</i> overcrowding
+it and treating the whole copper enterprise too much as if it were my
+personal property; for here was something I had had nothing to do with,
+the setting out, pruning, and gathering the fruit from, this particular
+plum-tree, and so I answered without any hesitation:</p>
+
+<p>"It is you, I think, Mr. Rogers, who are a little unreasonable in not
+giving me a chance to tell you how I look at it. Yes, it is perfectly
+satisfactory. I will leave it entirely to you and Mr. Rockefeller.
+Whatever you do will be all right."</p>
+
+<p>At once Mr. Rogers' expression changed. He looked relieved, making no
+attempt to disguise the fact that he had discharged a troublesome duty.
+"That is the way to look at it, Lawson," he said. "You'll not suffer, I
+promise you."</p>
+
+<p>Meditating over the conversation afterward, I realized how delicate his
+task really had been, and how well he had performed it. It had been to
+settle this matter and to rearrange our copper plans that he had
+summoned me to New York, and if I had proved refractory I can see he
+would have been badly snagged in his negotiations with the Lewisohns. If
+there had been a trace of dissension in our camp,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_299" id="Page_299">[299]</a></span> that firm would never
+have surrendered their great business on such terms as Rogers proposed
+to exact.</p>
+
+<p>This is as good a place as elsewhere to tell exactly how fair and just
+Mr. Rogers proved himself in the cutting of this particular melon, and
+to explain why he had been at such pains to have me leave it entirely to
+his and Mr. Rockefeller's generosity. The fifty-one per cent. of the
+sales company amounted in hundred-dollar shares to 26,000 ($2,600,000).
+If I had insisted upon the arrangement then in force my share would have
+been 6,500 shares ($650,000), which to-day are worth a fabulous figure.
+For some time after this I heard nothing about the matter and was in
+complete ignorance of what my portion was until one day Mr. Rogers said
+in an offhand way: "By the way, Lawson, you can send me a check for your
+allotment of the selling company's stock, 250 shares." Before I got a
+chance to interpose a word he said: "We had to divide that up among a
+great many, or there would have been a good deal of hard feeling, but,
+after all, it's only a side-show and does not amount to anything when
+you consider our real plans."</p>
+
+<p>At this moment, carefully chosen for that very reason, our affairs were
+swimming along so magnificently and my own profits were so great, that I
+had not the heart to make any serious objection. I let the matter go
+with an inward resolution that at the first convenient moment I would
+slip out of the selling company. Sure enough, shortly afterward Mr.
+Rogers said to me:</p>
+
+<p>"Lawson, I do wish we could get in that selling company's stock from the
+different holders." He did not actually say he was buying it in for the
+Amalgamated Copper Company, but he desired that I infer it. I snapped
+him up:</p>
+
+<p>"All right. You can have mine, Mr. Rogers," I said.</p>
+
+<p>"At what price?" And I think he thought that he would be compelled to do
+some trading.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, about cost and interest," said I; and the thing was done. I
+afterward learned that he had treated every one in much the same way,
+and that he and Mr. William Rockefeller practically had it all. They
+have it to-day, just as<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_300" id="Page_300">[300]</a></span> they and John D. Rockefeller, and possibly one
+or two others in "Standard Oil," have appropriated all the inner
+companies of "Standard Oil" where the real melons are cut&mdash;the secret
+rebates and all the other under-the-rose profits&mdash;while they are so
+industrious in their unloading of the stock of the main company,
+Standard Oil, that the last annual report showed that the list of
+outside stockholders numbers 4,100, this too at a time when 26 Broadway
+sits up nights to disseminate the impression that the Rockefellers and
+Rogers own it all.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_301" id="Page_301">[301]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XVIII</h2>
+
+<h3>THE BITERS BIT</h3>
+
+
+<p>To see and judge actions aright one must have them in perspective. As
+the Celt remarked, "You can get the best view of your life after you're
+dead." Looking back on the performances of this period, I myself am
+amazed at their monstrous audacity. Remote from common experience, their
+extravagance suggests unreality. Here were the master of the greatest
+business the world has ever known, and I, a mere captain of his forces,
+without even a by-your-leave, calmly carving up a big commercial
+enterprise, the property of other men who had spent the days of their
+lives in creating it; and these men whose institution was thus being
+ravished were not children, idiots, or aged dolts, but able merchants
+renowned the world over for their shrewdness and success. The one phase
+of the contemplated operation which occurred to neither of us as worth
+discussing was the possibility of not securing the property. This
+transaction demonstrates the despotism of the "System," the extent of
+its rapacity, and its arrogant disregard of all laws and rights, human
+or divine, in the enforcement of its exactions. And it was but one of a
+hundred similar transactions.</p>
+
+<p>Before Mr. Rogers and myself parted, I had definite instructions: First,
+to begin to teach the public to look for new things in the first
+section; second, to overcome the objections of the holders of Butte &amp;
+Boston and Boston &amp; Montana, and other Boston stocks to being in the
+second section of the consolidation; third, to purchase the majority of
+the Parrott Company's stock; fourth, to see that the public kept away
+from Anaconda in the market for the time being.</p>
+
+<p>While the minor details of these plans were being mapped<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_302" id="Page_302">[302]</a></span> out, I had let
+my mind run over the market situation of Anaconda stock, and had arrived
+at certain conclusions which I determined to test forthwith. So I said:</p>
+
+<p>"Some one, Mr. Rogers, must have bought lots of Anaconda while you have
+been working this plan out&mdash;I mean lots outside of that which is going
+into the new company&mdash;and I should like to know if I'm in on any part of
+what may have been gathered in?"</p>
+
+<p>His eyes focused me with a cold stare which told me even before he spoke
+that I had better have kept my suspicions to myself.</p>
+
+<p>"I have heard of no one putting you in on any Anaconda," he said
+sarcastically. "You have not given any one any orders, have you, nor
+sent any one your check to pay for any, have you?"</p>
+
+<p>I was nettled at his tone. "That is all I wanted to know," I answered.
+"Of course, Anaconda will have a still bigger rise, and if we have all
+we care to buy for the new company, no one will object to my telling the
+public what a good thing it is and putting them aboard now."</p>
+
+<p>I was on perilous ground. He gave me an ugly glare which I knew meant
+real danger as he slowly said: "I think, Lawson, you have done all that
+is necessary for you to do for the public in letting them in on the
+things you already have, and for some time any one who interferes with
+the market on Anaconda stock, which I consider fairly belongs to Mr.
+Rockefeller and myself, will not find his investment a profitable one."</p>
+
+<p>"Well and good, Mr. Rogers," I answered. "If you consider the market
+yours, I will not interfere, but I wanted to know just how it stood."</p>
+
+<p>"You know now, and I shall expect you not only to keep out of it, but to
+see that it is handled in such a manner that all others stay out&mdash;all
+others except sellers," which meant that not only was no one to get any
+of the benefits on this stock, but that innocent holders were to be
+enticed into selling, that "Standard Oil" might buy before the real rise
+came.</p>
+
+<p>As I write these sentences I marvel at my patience, and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_303" id="Page_303">[303]</a></span> my blood
+tingles with the thought of how, if the opportunity were again mine, I
+should reply to such an imperious mandate. If men said and did at the
+crucial moment all the wise, strong things that occur to them afterward,
+this would be a different world. The brave and scornful words I should
+have uttered I choked back, and, as countless others had done before me,
+I bowed my head and&mdash;submitted. Conscience and honesty slunk sadly into
+the background as I flaunted off on the arms of policy and discretion,
+pirouetting to the jingling music of golden shekels.</p>
+
+<p>Great fortunes are seldom achieved without sacrifice of morals&mdash;or at
+least of pride&mdash;and ambition makes meaner cowards of us than conscience.
+Then and there I might have made a martyr of myself by threatening an
+exposure of the whole bad scheme and defying "Standard Oil" to do its
+worst; but martyrs seldom give themselves to the flames, and looking
+back dispassionately from the vantage-ground of the present, I doubt
+seriously if by denouncing the conspiracy I should have done more than
+discredit myself.</p>
+
+<p>The interview ended, I returned to Boston and at once began the
+execution of the new plans, the remoulding of the public and the
+purchase of the Parrott mine.</p>
+
+<p>Parrott was an active mine earning a large revenue and with something
+over 200,000 shares of capital stock. For the purpose of Mr. Rogers'
+plan its inclusion was essential, for it was well known and helped cover
+up the inflation in his consolidation.</p>
+
+<p>Possession of 100,000 shares would give control, and the public would
+imagine when the announcement of its purchase was made that this meant
+ownership of most of the entire capital stock. Indeed, it afterward
+developed that this was one of the conditions Mr. Rogers and William
+Rockefeller relied on to deceive investors, for it was a natural
+assumption that nearly all of Anaconda and Parrott were included in the
+consolidation, and in estimating the value of the properties the public
+would multiply the market prices of their shares by the total capital
+stock and assume the result represented the assets of the amalgamation.
+For instance, the valuation of 1,200,000 shares of Anaconda at $70, and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_304" id="Page_304">[304]</a></span>
+200,000 shares of Parrott at $68&mdash;the prices at the time Amalgamated was
+floated&mdash;would represent respectively $84,000,000 and $13,600,000;
+whereas the company owned only 602,000 shares of Anaconda and a few
+shares over 100,000 of Parrott, selling for in all about $48,600,000.</p>
+
+<p>The control of Parrott was in the hands of certain wealthy Connecticut
+brass manufacturers, and, just previous to my receiving orders from Mr.
+Rogers to acquire the property, they were so anxious to sell this mine
+that they had given my brokers, Brown, Riley &amp; Co., of Boston, an option
+on a majority of their shares at $10 per share, agreeing to pay a large
+commission should a good customer be secured. Before I could clinch at
+this figure they took advantage of the excitement in "Coppers" to bid up
+the stock, so that when I began operations Parrott was in the market at
+$15, and I offered $20 for the majority of the shares. An intimation of
+our purpose must have leaked, for other shrewd owners, also Connecticut
+men, bid the price up still higher until I was forced to raise my limit
+to $30 per share&mdash;quite an advance on $10. On that figure we all agreed
+and the papers were prepared, but at the last moment a young man "butted
+in"&mdash;I think he was the son-in-law of one of the owners, who turned up
+with an option, and declared he could get $40 per share for the
+property. We were trapped, for the alternative presented was to forego
+the purchase or pay the price demanded. There was a conference, at which
+I denounced the "hold-up" in strenuous terms; but the son-in-law proved
+equal to the emergency and stood by his guns, though some of the old
+gentlemen declared his exaction was unwarrantable. In the discussion
+there developed a queer fact&mdash;the son-in-law told us that the property
+was a good deal richer than any one thought: he had discovered that a
+certain section of rich ore in which there were several millions of
+dollars had been walled up by some designing person for his own purpose
+and the mine was easily worth $40 per share. I had heard stories of this
+kind before and frankly professed incredulity. The son-in-law agreed to
+reveal the ore to any one we might send to the mine, and so one of our
+most trusted engineers was despatched with him<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_305" id="Page_305">[305]</a></span> to Butte on the
+agreement that if he were convinced that the walled-up values were all
+that had been indicated, we should pay $40. If not, $30 would be the
+price. The twain started at once; our expert was convinced, and we paid
+four millions instead of one, two, or three. Strange to say, the
+subsequent operations of the mine have never revealed the walled-up
+values; instead, there has been developed a queer lot of litigation, the
+tendency of which suggests strange uses of that extra million. Anyway,
+the trade was made, and the gentleman of the Nutmeg State went home
+chuckling at the thought that though there was a "Standard Oil," there
+were others.</p>
+
+<p>"Standard Oil" never forgets. Sometimes it may get left at the post, but
+always it catches up in the running&mdash;so as to be in the lead at the
+tape. When I reported the conclusion of this Parrott deal to Mr. Rogers,
+he said:</p>
+
+<p>"Lawson, all's fair in a trade"; but I shall never forget the expression
+his face wore as he went on. "Just give me the name, Lawson, again, of
+that particular individual in this particular trade, that I may remember
+him hereafter." He spoke in a low, intense tone, and each word was
+separated from the preceding one by a dwelling stop. I gave him the name
+and the identification marks to go with it, and felt satisfied that even
+if the Nutmeg financier lived to be a thousand and Henry H. Rogers kept
+him company, there would surely come an evening-up which would be the
+worse for the erstwhile victor. Sure enough it came soon afterward, for
+the able Connecticut man, embarrassed at possessing so much uninvested
+money, came to us to ask advice about reinvesting it. The "Standard Oil"
+magnate was most sympathetic and generous, and pointed out the obvious
+advantages offered by the great new company Amalgamated, which would be
+out in a few days at $100 per share, and doubtless would sell soon
+afterward for $150 per share. The Nutmegite nibbled and then swallowed
+bait and hook whole, for when the subscription was announced his agents'
+names were found opposite a large block. Later on he applied to us for
+consolation and advice, for the stock he had bought at $100 and $124 was
+then selling at $33. We figured out for him that after all he had little
+to complain of;<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_306" id="Page_306">[306]</a></span> "for you see," we explained, "fair exchange is no
+robbery, and you have had just a fair exchange. You sold us your
+property inflated four times, and we sold it back to you under another
+name at about the same percentage."</p>
+
+<p>Before the fireworks began, Anaconda sold in the market at $25 per
+share, and Parrott, as I have shown, at $10, and in addition to the
+enormous profits which Mr. Rogers and Mr. Rockefeller made in the
+Amalgamated Company proper, they cleared some $15,000,000 to $20,000,000
+on their outside purchases of Anaconda, and some $25,000,000 to
+$30,000,000 more later by selling it short (as I shall show hereafter),
+at the tremendously high prices which were obtained by leading the
+public as well as myself to believe that they intended to purchase the
+entire stocks of both companies for the Amalgamated&mdash;that is, it was
+given out that the sections which were to come after were to have these
+minority holdings included in them. They sold Anaconda short in enormous
+quantities between $50 and $70, and Parrott between $50 and $68;
+afterward they bought them at $14 and $16 respectively, and no one knows
+how many millions these gentlemen are taking in now, for both stocks are
+again on the return trip, selling at the present writing at $32 and $30
+respectively.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_307" id="Page_307">[307]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XIX</h2>
+
+<h3>THE DESPOILING OF LEONARD LEWISOHN</h3>
+
+
+<p>A few days later there came another summons from New York. Realizing
+that matters of importance were in the balance, I hurried over. Nothing
+could surpass the cordiality of Mr. Rogers' greeting as I entered his
+office.</p>
+
+<p>"Lawson," he said, "we own Lewisohn Brothers."</p>
+
+<p>"You certainly lost no time," I replied. "Is it actually fixed up
+already?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," he said, settling back in his chair. "It was about as I outlined
+to you the other day. We had a very pleasant sit-down&mdash;Leonard Lewisohn
+and I&mdash;and I frankly told him what I wanted, explained our plans, and
+gave him twenty-four hours to think things over. Next day he was in and
+we went at it again. He began by talking $15,000,000, and it did come
+hard to bring it down to a little less than the actual cash and copper
+on hand; but when he saw I intended to have things my way or not at all,
+he meekly surrendered, and the United Metals Selling Company ($5,000,000
+capital stock) is now a reality. And, Lawson, if I ever had to do with a
+better scheme I certainly cannot recall it."</p>
+
+<p>"Did not Lewisohn put up any sort of a fight?" I persisted, surprised
+that so able and forceful a man should succumb so easily. "Didn't you
+have any words about the matter?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not any but pleasant ones," replied Mr. Rogers, "although Lewisohn did,
+in an almost pathetic way, gasp when I emphasized that my only terms
+were $5,000,000, fifty-one per cent. to us and forty-nine per cent. to
+his people. He told me how he and his brothers had struggled up to
+success. They began in a small way as feather merchants, you may
+remember, and from one thing to another they progressed<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_308" id="Page_308">[308]</a></span> until the firm
+is known to-day as one of the greatest copper houses and the greatest
+coffee house in the world. He explained how he had brought up his three
+sons and his daughter's husband in the firm until they had become great
+merchants, too; and his ambition was that their sons and grandchildren
+should succeed to the institution, enlarging and strengthening it until
+the house of Lewisohn was as famous as the house of Rothschild&mdash;with
+which, by the way, he is closely connected. I tell you, Lawson, I felt a
+bit mean when, after he had told me how he had always kept his name's
+credit as good as any other man's bond, he asked me almost with tears in
+his eyes to let the name of the new company be Lewisohn Brothers.
+Indeed, he made a strong argument on the great value of the name to the
+copper business; but it did not take me long to show him the evils that
+grow out of letting men's personalities get into the public's mind. I
+battered down his objections by showing him the wisdom of Mr.
+Rockefeller's attitude in this connection. Always, from the first, he
+has taken the stand: 'The business first, the man second': with the
+result that there has never been jealousy or dissension in Standard
+Oil."</p>
+
+<p>"Too bad," I interrupted.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," Mr. Rogers went on; "I wished I might have done this for him, for
+he is a splendid fellow; but it would not do, for after the newness wore
+off he, or more probably his sons, would surely imagine that they, and
+not we, were the real heads of the business."</p>
+
+<p>As I have explained, Henry H. Rogers, when not working the handle or
+hopper end of the "System's" grinder, is a warm-hearted and generous
+man. And now, resting from his labors, he was the genial and kindly
+gentleman whom his social acquaintances admire so sincerely. I believe
+he felt almost as badly as I did over the sad picture he had drawn of
+the proud old merchant yielding up his children's birthright. I felt
+grieved to the depths of my soul at Leonard Lewisohn's predicament, for
+I knew, as did all men connected with Wall Street or Copper, what a
+stalwart he was. He had the heart of an ox and the pluck of a lion, and
+his white-man squareness and sense of justice belonged to other<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_309" id="Page_309">[309]</a></span> periods
+than that of frenzied finance. No man or woman in distress ever left his
+house or office without relief, and he gave as generously of his time
+and advice as of his money. Amid the jagged rocks and treacherous cross
+currents of Wall Street Leonard Lewisohn stood as a beacon lighting the
+way to better things, and men pointed at him and said, "There is still
+hope." Amalgamated may not have broken this man's heart as it did
+others, but I can imagine the bitterness and distress it caused him,
+whose proud boast it was that he had never gone back on his word. One of
+the promoters of the company, his name stood, in the minds of many
+investors, especially European, for a guarantee of fair play and square
+dealing. Yet the course of Amalgamated was one continuous going back on
+words. He had never allowed an associate of his to lose through his
+ventures, but in Amalgamated there was nothing but loss, and loss by
+trick and fraud. After the flotation, with its harvest of disgrace and
+scandal, Leonard Lewisohn became a changed man. His old-time happy smile
+was seldom seen, and it is said that before he died he summoned his sons
+to him and instructed them to destroy the notes and obligations of all
+his poor debtors and to return to them their collateral, of which there
+was a safe full. This man employed no press agent, and so his golden
+deeds were never reported in the papers, nor did he found a college to
+perpetuate his name; but he left a million of his estate to found a
+great home for the Jewish poor, for he loved and was proud of his race.</p>
+
+<p>I have given you a portrait of this man; let me, by way of contrast,
+present another picture, which will help toward an appreciation of how
+the votaries of the "System" respond to generosity and chivalrous
+self-abnegation. Before Leonard Lewisohn died he organized a tremendous
+deal in coffee, and Rogers, Rockefeller, and all the other "Standard
+Oil" men were in. A fund of $5,000,000 was subscribed, to which all
+contributed in due proportion, and an immense amount of coffee was
+bought against a prospective scarcity. The condition Mr. Lewisohn
+anticipated did not immediately develop, and instead of rising, coffee
+dropped down and down until the $5,000,000 and more were all used up.
+Another<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_310" id="Page_310">[310]</a></span> man would have called on his associates for additional margin,
+or, at least, closed up the deal. Not so Leonard Lewisohn. Though some
+of the other members of the combination were many times richer than he,
+he shouldered the burden alone, saying: "It's my scheme, and I'll carry
+it if it breaks me, or until my judgment is proven sound." Still coffee
+declined until he had sunk $12,000,000, but never a whimper and not a
+word of complaint to his partners. Things were near the worst when he
+died, but he had instructed his heirs not to wind the deal up until
+every cent of his associates' liability was wiped out.</p>
+
+<p>There came a time not long ago when Leonard Lewisohn's foresight was
+vindicated, and an advance in the price of the commodity relieved the
+"Standard Oil" coterie of their responsibility. The sons of the old man
+then desired to dispose of the great holdings of coffee, and so close
+the deal and secure the locked-up millions for the estate. They went to
+the various members of the syndicate and asked them to sign a release
+simply agreeing to relieve the estate of liability for presumptive
+profits growing out of further advances in coffee after they had sold
+out. It was a very ordinary legal precaution, and no great favor to the
+Lewisohns under the circumstances. The members of the syndicate signed
+the release in due course, until the document finally came to Henry H.
+Rogers, and this is the contrasting picture:</p>
+
+<p>"Coffee is going up, I think," said the "Standard Oil" magnate, "and now
+that the Lewisohns have extricated themselves from a bad hole, they may
+as well carry the stuff until I get some profit out of it. Neither Mr.
+Rockefeller nor I will sign that document."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_311" id="Page_311">[311]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XX</h2>
+
+<h3>THE CHRISTENING OF AMALGAMATED</h3>
+
+
+<p>My readers may recall the wave of indignation which swept over this
+country when the news came of the kidnapping of Miss Stone, the American
+missionary, by the bandits of Bulgaria, and how hot we all felt at the
+capture of Ion Perdicaris by Raissuli, the Morocco rebel. Only in remote
+and barbarous countries, we reflected, could such outrages occur, and we
+dwelt with high inward satisfaction on our own splendid American
+institutions and law-abiding civilization. If only these miscreants were
+on American soil so American justice could lay hands on them&mdash;what stern
+punishment would be meted out to them! Yet, under the panoply of these
+noble institutions and just laws of ours, one citizen of our
+commonwealth was enabled to seize from another millions of money and the
+ownership of a great enterprise&mdash;literally wrench it from the hands of
+men who had spent their lives in developing it&mdash;and the execution of the
+deed involved neither financial nor physical risk and carried with it no
+legal nor social consequences. Look on the picture, all ye free
+Americans rejoicing in vaunted liberty and the right to the pursuit of
+happiness&mdash;this able and successful merchant, head of a great business
+which it has been his life-work to rear, surrendering the splendid
+structure at the mere nod of one man, whose "I want it" is more potent,
+more irresistible, than family pride or Government decree. If Leonard
+Lewisohn, a millionaire many times over, rich in connections with the
+strongest financial houses of Europe, meekly submitted to the behest of
+"Standard Oil," what resistance could the average man oppose to such a
+power? The logic of the situation is inevitable. Can you free Americans
+absorb the details of this most extraordinary performance<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_312" id="Page_312">[312]</a></span> and not see
+the coming storm as clearly as the mariner does when all along the
+horizon creep the hosts of Boreas and the barometer drops like lead in a
+shot tower?</p>
+
+<p>At last, in April, 1899, the first section of the much-heralded company
+was ready to step before the footlights to the plaudits of an awaiting
+financial world, and it was really a great moment when Mr. Rogers sent
+me word: "Come over, and be prepared to stay until the consolidation is
+formed and launched." I was at 26 Broadway next day, and we entered at
+once on our council of war. It was a momentous sitting and secret, for,
+until the entire programme was mapped out and decided upon, no one was a
+party to it or had knowledge of it but Mr. Rogers, his counsel, William
+Rockefeller, and myself. After we had finished the final details, Mr.
+Rogers said:</p>
+
+<p>"This is a job on which we must not lose time, for if we give any one,
+even those who are to be directors, too long to think things over, there
+will be counterplots, and a cog may slip or jump and we shall all be
+crushed. We must all bear in mind that this thing has rolled up and up
+until it is unprecedented in business affairs, and if we slip up in any
+of the important details, we shall have a panic on our hands such as
+Wall Street has never witnessed."</p>
+
+<p>On all sides for weeks there had been accumulating evidence, which we
+could see pointed to a monumental success or an avalanche failure. The
+copper market was literally boiling, and investors from one end of
+America to the other and throughout Europe were on the <i>qui vive</i> for
+the anticipated announcement. At intervals in history great "booms" are
+started, which bloom into iridescent bubbles, and for a moment dazzle
+the world with fairy dreams of sudden millions. Greatest of all these
+was the South Sea Bubble. Since then we have had the tulip craze in
+Holland, the Hooley excitement, and the Barney Barnato South African
+mining furor in England, the Secretan copper corner, and the tremendous
+bonanza delirium in California; but none of these, save the first, is
+comparable with the magnitude of the copper maelstrom of 1899. The tulip
+craze could have been thrust in and withdrawn again without diverting<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_313" id="Page_313">[313]</a></span>
+one of its currents; the Barney Barnato affair was little more than an
+eddy on the surface of English finance in contrast. We were dealing in
+hundreds and five hundreds of millions; shares rose and fell twenty to
+fifty points in a day; some had mounted to the giddy height of $900
+each; thousands of the public had invested their savings in one copper
+property or another, and all awaited with bated breath and marvelling
+anticipations the launching of this copper monster with its freight of
+hopes and visions.</p>
+
+<p>The programme as specifically arranged had several important clauses.
+The first involved the notification of James Stillman, President of the
+National City, the "Standard Oil" Bank, who was to be let into only as
+much of the secret as was necessary to enable him to handle his
+important end intelligently. To Leonard Lewisohn it was decided to
+intrust the French, English, and German end of the subscription, and he
+was at once to receive orders to lay his pipes. I may say here that this
+task was admirably executed through his son-in-law, Philip Henry, of the
+English branch of Lewisohn Brothers. The other directors of the company
+were then and there selected, but it was agreed that they should not be
+told of the distinction thrust upon them until the very eve of the
+company's formation.</p>
+
+<p>This decision surprised me at the moment it was concluded, for with my
+Boston ideas I had regarded the gentlemen we had chosen to preside over
+the destinies of our great company&mdash;all men of the highest prestige and
+standing in American finance&mdash;as so powerful and so independent in their
+own fields as to be beyond either the coercion or the cajolery of
+"Standard Oil." It was because of this reputation for integrity and the
+confidence their names would inspire in the public mind that we had
+selected them; yet here was Mr. Rogers irreverently using them as the
+veriest pawns in his game, and taking absolutely for granted their
+immediate consent to the loan of their reputations and honor for any
+scheme he might put up. The possibility of one of these eminent
+financiers objecting to be used in any way "Standard Oil" might desire
+was a contingency evidently so remote as to be unworthy of
+consideration.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_314" id="Page_314">[314]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The legal aspects of the problem were considered, but as we felt sure of
+our ground it was agreed to avoid all delays in this direction. As a
+matter of form and habit, however, Mr. Rogers said that at the last
+moment, when the papers were ready to issue, he would have the wise
+lawyers in charge of the legal department of 26 Broadway run over them,
+but whether they approved or not, he would allow no technicalities to
+hold up the flotation. This was certainly a departure from the
+well-ordered rule of "Standard Oil," but the urgency of the situation
+seemed to require it.</p>
+
+<p>After our council adjourned, not a moment was lost. The organization was
+quickly shaped up and got ready, and the time was ripe to broach to Mr.
+Stillman the part that he and the funds deposited in the National City
+Bank were to play in the forthcoming engagement. This was a crucial
+point, and I saw that Mr. Rogers approached the task with no gusto.
+Before he went off that night he spoke about the interview which was to
+occur after dinner, and he said:</p>
+
+<p>"I don't mind giving Fewer or Olcott or even Morgan but a minute's
+notice, for every one of them will do about what I ask him to, but I
+shall feel better when I get through with Stillman."</p>
+
+<p>"But Mr. Stillman would never dare to refuse what you and Mr. William
+Rockefeller asked, any more than he would the request of John D., would
+he?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know about that," Mr. Rogers replied. "Stillman has been
+growing fast of late, and it is not nearly so easy to get him to consent
+to run deals blindly as it was formerly. Of course, if he were in on the
+bottom floor with us, it would be different. All I fear is, he may ask
+questions, and if he does, it will not do for me to refuse an answer.
+And too many answers may be dangerous to our plans."</p>
+
+<p>"Why not take him in with us&mdash;you, Mr. Rockefeller, and myself?" I
+suggested. "The profits will stand it, and as far as my share goes I am
+willing."</p>
+
+<p>"Not by a jugful, Lawson," said Mr. Rogers emphatically. "Stillman will
+only get what fairly belongs to him.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_315" id="Page_315">[315]</a></span> He has had none of the risk or
+work, and we do not need him in any way except through the bank, and the
+bank is 'Standard Oil's,' not his. He is lucky to get what I am going to
+give him."</p>
+
+<p>It is interesting to note in passing the authoritative manner in which
+26 Broadway speaks of the so-called institutions of the people that it
+controls&mdash;the banks, trust companies, and insurance companies, having
+deposits of hundreds of millions of the public's money. Familiarly they
+are alluded to as "<i>our</i> bank" or "<i>our</i> insurance company," as the case
+may be. We are all apt to feel we own the things we use, and that Mr.
+Rogers should speak of the millions of the National City Bank as "our
+funds" is not surprising when he possesses the power and the privileges
+of doing with them as he pleases. I was too fascinated at that time by
+the ready magic of "Standard Oil" to observe all the anomalous
+conditions my relation with it revealed. Such things all seemed a
+natural attribute of the despotic and all-powerful institution that I
+served.</p>
+
+<p>I was vastly relieved when Mr. Rogers reported, the following morning,
+that at the dinner with Stillman everything had slipped through very
+smoothly. Not only would the National City Bank take charge of the
+subscription, but through the institution Mr. Stillman would furnish the
+millions necessary to form the company. This meant supplying the
+paraphernalia in loans, checks, and cash necessary to pay in the
+seventy-five millions capital, thirty-nine millions of which must at
+once be "book-keepingly" available to pay for the property bought from
+Daly, Haggin, and Tevis, and purchased by the company.</p>
+
+<p>"It couldn't have gone through easier, Lawson," Mr. Rogers said quietly,
+"for the fact is, Stillman seems to have got the copper fever as badly
+as any one else and is as anxious to take a hand as we are to have him.
+It will be plain sailing now unless we strike some snag with Sterling or
+Elliott"&mdash;referring to the principal "Standard Oil" lawyers.</p>
+
+<p>By this time such substantial progress had been made with the plans that
+they were formulated on paper and the time had come when it seemed
+advisable to try them on the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_316" id="Page_316">[316]</a></span> "Standard Oil" law-department. We arranged
+that night that next morning Mr. Rogers should himself go over the
+matter with Mr. Sterling. I was waiting in his office when he returned
+from this consultation, and the expression of his face as he entered
+indicated plainly that a real snag had been struck. His jaw and the
+droop of the upper corners of his eyelids gave a curiously sinister
+aspect to his face.</p>
+
+<p>"Well," said he, "Sterling says if we carry out that plan there may be
+h&mdash;l to pay some day."</p>
+
+<p>"Wherein does he say it is wrong?" I asked, not over-surprised.</p>
+
+<p>"Everywhere. He says if there is any slip-up in the future Mr.
+Rockefeller and myself may have to pay back a lot of money."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, what are you going to do?" I said.</p>
+
+<p>"Just what we started to do." No lawyer's warnings could hold him back
+from the bursting barrels now in sight. He went on:</p>
+
+<p>"I told Sterling to forget I had asked him to pass on the matter, and
+that I would have my own counsel take the responsibility. So we go right
+ahead, and nothing is to be said to any one, not even to William
+Rockefeller. I have always argued that it is fool business to go to a
+lawyer with a scheme that depends entirely on how it is carried through
+as to whether it is perilous or not. I could have told Sterling there is
+apt to be more danger in a deal in which one makes thirty-five to forty
+million dollars without turning a hair, than in furnishing staid advice
+from an office-chair for a fixed sum per diem."</p>
+
+<p>The concentrated incisiveness of these sentences! Opposition, the mere
+suggestion of danger, had stimulated his determination to proceed rather
+than enjoined caution. Himself convinced of the expediency of our deal,
+no power on earth could make him deviate or face about. Truly a man of
+blood and iron, as Bismarck or Moltke was, his erected will is a sword
+and a vise. To gain a predetermined goal Henry H. Rogers will go through
+hell, fire, and water, swing about and make the return trip, and then
+repeat, until death interferes or his object is attained. Such men<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_317" id="Page_317">[317]</a></span> as
+he in other days subjugated kingdoms or made deserts where they
+operated; in religion they became St. Pauls or Savonarolas.</p>
+
+<p>It may occur to my readers that in depicting Henry H. Rogers I use more
+whitewash than tar, and that if he is half as determined and relentless
+as my characterization of him, he will surely exact a terrible reprisal
+for what I have written here. In describing the man I adhere to the
+facts, and before I began this crusade I weighed well the consequences.
+From the implacable wrath of Henry H. Rogers and his associates, from a
+thirst for vengeance which grows more bitter as it is deferred, nothing
+can save me, nothing but&mdash;myself.</p>
+
+<p>And now events flew. Mr. Rogers took the forenoon to notify Governor
+Flower, President Frederic P. Olcott, of the Central Trust Company;
+Marcus Daly, and J. P. Morgan, that they, in connection with William
+Rockefeller, himself, his counsel, and James Stillman, were to
+constitute the directors of the new company.</p>
+
+<p>"There, Lawson," he said, when he returned to 26 Broadway, "that job is
+done, and I am glad it's off my hands. It was all pleasant enough but
+the Morgan part. I wish it were possible for us to get along without
+having his assistance, but it isn't. Leaving him out would create
+comment, from which it would be only a short step to Wall Street's
+nosing around and manufacturing something uncomfortable, even if they
+didn't discover it. I don't like Morgan a bit, and he likes us less. It
+won't be long before one or the other of us will be able to do business
+without knowing what the other's about, much less consulting him&mdash;not
+very long."</p>
+
+<p>As the "not very long" shot out from between his lips much as the
+tail-end of an up-chimney wind switches itself around the angle of the
+fireplace, I felt there was little doubt in his mind who would be left
+to do business after the final drag-out and clean-up. At the same time
+it did not dissipate a sort of come-and-go confidence I had that the old
+terrapin around whom so many of Wall Street's eddies have swirled would
+cause the 26-Broadway crowd many a broken knife-blade before crawling or
+being pushed into his shell.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_318" id="Page_318">[318]</a></span> Turtles are not much good as sprinters,
+but they're blue-ribbon winners when it comes to the staying class.</p>
+
+<p>"You didn't meet with any set-back with Morgan, did you?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, no," Mr. Rogers replied; "he simply said it would be best,
+everything considered, for us to put in his right-hand man, Robert
+Bacon, instead of himself, and I agreed with him; in fact, I think it
+much better, as Bacon is a rattling good fellow who takes no interest in
+the other fellow's business, even when he does happen to be a director
+in the other fellow's company, and he will recognize that this copper
+affair is mine, not Morgan's." He stopped abruptly. "Now, Lawson, let us
+settle upon what in this case is an important point, the name of the
+company." He had asked me the day before to think of a suitable title
+for our organization, and I had put in some time with a pad and pencil
+experimenting. I had several names ready for him, but after I had run
+over them and given my reasons, he said:</p>
+
+<p>"There is nothing more important than to have just the right name for a
+company which is going to make history, is there?"</p>
+
+<p>I agreed; in fact, even more than he I was impressed with the
+desirability of a suitable name for a corporation whose stock was bound
+to become a great market star, and I was not satisfied with any I had
+dug up. Give a stock or a book a good name, and it is sure to be
+numbered among the best sellers.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Rogers continued:</p>
+
+<p>"Lawson, we want something as good as 'Standard Oil,' if it is possible
+to find it. Now"&mdash;and he drew over one of his little writing-pads and
+taking a slim gold pencil from his pocket slowly wrote something and
+handed it to me&mdash;"how do you like this?"</p>
+
+<p>I read "'Amalgamated Copper Company.' Perfect!" I exclaimed.</p>
+
+<p>"I thought you would say so"; and he reached over and wrote underneath
+the name, "A second Standard Oil." It was an impressive moment for both
+of us. I folded the slip, and putting it in my pocket said: "You will
+see this again,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_319" id="Page_319">[319]</a></span> Mr. Rogers, when its stock sells for as much as
+Standard Oil."</p>
+
+<p>Surely an adder crawled from that tiny golden cylinder and upon the
+smooth white paper distilled its subtle venom. I, poor fool, exulting in
+the splendid throes of accomplishment, never dreamed that the real
+christening of my bantling was the toast the Master of Hell drank as the
+name "Amalgamated" was slowly traced upon the pad before my eyes; never
+dreamed that this cherished offspring on whose rearing I had lavished
+all I possessed of dollars, of ideals, of generous hopes and high
+expectations&mdash;whose growth I had literally watered with my sweat&mdash;was an
+imp of darkness. My fool's paradise I had planted with all manner of
+fair flowers and lordly trees, and in my folly believed that those who
+had been my friends were forever after assured of pleasant places,
+lovely perfumes, and grateful shade; but like the Grecian in the ancient
+fable, I found I had sown dragon's teeth, and the crop I reaped was of
+hatred and envy, passion and revenge.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_320" id="Page_320">[320]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXI</h2>
+
+<h3>FIXING THE RESPONSIBILITY</h3>
+
+
+<p>On the day before Amalgamated's incorporation, Mr. Rogers and I
+conferred long and earnestly upon the plan of campaign for the company's
+organization. It was very necessary to avoid all errors, and to have
+everything cut and dried in advance. We were obliged to railroad things
+through, once started, a hitch or a side-track might be fatal, and I
+desired to have Mr. Rogers pass upon the programme I had drawn up.
+Therein was set down the work of each captain, lieutenant, and
+water-carrier who was to take part, and we discussed every detail to a
+finish. When he had approved everything up to the point where formation
+ended and the flotation began, I said:</p>
+
+<p>"Now comes the most important part of all&mdash;the offer to the public; for
+a slip-up, the misuse of a single phrase, or even of a word, at this
+point might destroy our whole structure."</p>
+
+<p>"Quite true, Lawson," he answered, "but I have no fear of you there. Let
+me have your idea."</p>
+
+<p>"First," I replied, "there should be an advertisement of the National
+City Bank, and one of the Amalgamated Company, and in this advertisement
+the story of the good things we have collected must be told in strong
+terms."</p>
+
+<p>I am now about to explain exactly of what the First Crime of Amalgamated
+consisted, and it behooves my readers to weigh carefully the details,
+for I make the claim here that without further proof they will be able
+to realize not only my own position and purpose at this, the crucial,
+stage of the Amalgamated enterprise, but to grasp the cold-blooded
+villany of the men I am exposing.</p>
+
+<p>At this time I was in a most uncomfortable and uncertain<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_321" id="Page_321">[321]</a></span> position. Each
+day that I did business with Mr. Rogers and his associates increased my
+knowledge of their heartless brutality in dollar-making. I knew I was on
+dangerous ground; but to retreat meant not only my own destruction but
+terrible losses to my friends who had followed me and to the public
+which had come in on my advice. So I had made up my mind to go on but to
+keep my eyelids pinned back, my tongue anchored, and what gray matter I
+possessed oscillating. Remember, I was in no way sure that Mr. Rogers
+intended to misuse the public, but I suspected that his coat-sleeves
+contained more things than his shirt-cuffs, and that he was playing a
+game other than the one he let me see. Up to now Mr. Rogers and William
+Rockefeller had kept me between the people and their legal
+responsibility by having all public statements made over my signature. I
+had half-way concluded that this was done to avoid future accounting,
+but there might be other reasons. I determined when it came to the
+flotation, which would be the first time they took openly the public's
+money, to connect them publicly with my statements. It is next to
+impossible for any man to sit in front of Henry H. Rogers and give one
+reason for his actions and have another about his person; but this was a
+desperate situation and I resolved at any cost to carry my point. How
+difficult a task I had undertaken I did not realize until I was well
+into it. When I had stated the form I thought Amalgamated's first
+announcement should have, Mr. Rogers paused. He repeated:</p>
+
+<p>"The City Bank&mdash;that's a question. Now, how do you propose to go about
+that advertisement?"</p>
+
+<p>"Simply this way," I replied. "I will draw up a memorandum of the main
+strong points about the Amalgamated Company, and you will ask Mr.
+Stillman to have some of his people write them into a good, clear
+statement. This we will publish as an advertisement over the bank's
+signature, and have the Amalgamated Company indorse it, showing that it
+is joined with the bank in responsibility for the truth of the
+announcement."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Rogers said nothing, but continued to gaze inquiringly at me. I went
+on:<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_322" id="Page_322">[322]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Or, the Amalgamated Company can be the principal and the bank the
+indorser."</p>
+
+<p>"Just what is the bank to say in this statement?" he asked very
+seriously.</p>
+
+<p>"The big things about our enterprise that I have been telling the
+public. We will put them forward in an old-fashioned, unequivocal
+way&mdash;that should accomplish what we want," I replied.</p>
+
+<p>He was looking at me in a curiously searching manner as I spoke. He
+said:</p>
+
+<p>"Let us have the strongest one or two as an illustration."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, for instance, what I have advertised so often, that this stock is
+so good the 'Standard Oil' people who formerly owned the property behind
+it would prefer to own all the stock and hold it as a permanent
+investment, but that the enterprise is so large their interests will be
+better served by letting the public in than going it alone. You and I
+know that's true. Also that the company is earning sixteen per cent. and
+will always pay eight per cent. or over. Something to that effect."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you suppose, Lawson," said Mr. Rogers, straightening up and speaking
+very impatiently, "that the public will swallow any statement of that
+kind? Just think it over&mdash;William Rockefeller, James Stillman, and
+myself, to say nothing of others, openly spending our money for
+advertisements to induce Tom, Dick, and Harry to buy stock at par which
+we know is earning sixteen per cent. and will always pay eight!"</p>
+
+<p>"Why not?" I responded. "I have practically stated the same thing scores
+of times as your agent, until, so far as the public is concerned, my
+telling it is the same as though 'Standard Oil' had said it."</p>
+
+<p>"Well and good," Mr. Rogers went on dryly. "But, Lawson, you know
+there's a heap of real difference between your telling it and our
+putting it over our signature."</p>
+
+<p>I well knew the difference, but I had my point to make; so I said:</p>
+
+<p>"All right. Let the City Bank and Mr. Stillman put it their own way."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_323" id="Page_323">[323]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Lawson, that's foolish," Mr. Rogers returned. "They must not be allowed
+to have anything to do with it save to O. K. what we are to advertise
+over their signature. Stillman would never agree to our using the City
+Bank to hawk any stock but a gilt-edged one."</p>
+
+<p>"Isn't this a gilt-edged one?"</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Rogers glared at me.</p>
+
+<p>"Why waste time and words over a matter that you know as well as I must
+be handled very, very gingerly? It is not because it is not gilt-edged,
+but because of the peculiar situation of it. The public thinks this
+stock which is to be offered to it belongs to the Amalgamated Company,
+and that the City Bank is selling it for the Amalgamated treasury just
+as in any of the ordinary first-class issues they offer for
+subscription; whereas we know that the stock belongs to us and the bank
+is selling it for our profit. If the public suspected that this stock
+was ours, and that we were not going to subscribe on the same basis as
+themselves, it would demand to know what we paid for it, and if we
+didn't tell, it would be figured out as a clear case of false
+representation. Where would that leave us? Mr. Rockefeller, myself, the
+bank, and Stillman would be held for every cent of the capital forever.
+We cannot put our heads into any such halter."</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot see why not," I expostulated. "You and I know there is no more
+chance of loss than if we were dealing in the City Bank's own stock,
+because of the way we are handling the deal, selling only $5,000,000 to
+the public, and standing behind every dollar of that, all possible risk
+is eliminated."</p>
+
+<p>"Call all that true," angrily replied Mr. Rogers, "and you don't alter
+the fact that such a scheme as you map out <i>is impossible</i>. You must get
+to work and figure out some plan which is practical."</p>
+
+<p>"I knew that we should find this a difficult matter to get right," I
+said. "Now, what is your idea of how it should be gone about?"</p>
+
+<p>This time the burden of explanation was fairly upon Mr. Rogers, and I
+waited his answer expectantly. He replied, in much milder tones:<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_324" id="Page_324">[324]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"There is no real difference between us, Lawson, except that you don't
+seem to realize the actual position we are in. We are going to do what
+is fair and right in this enterprise&mdash;indeed, there is no necessity for
+anything else&mdash;but we must not put the bank or ourselves in such a place
+that either or both of us can be held legally responsible for anything
+that happens in connection with this company. You must keep in mind
+Sterling's words, that the thing is risky enough anyway, and that even
+under the best circumstances and conditions we may find ourselves in a
+hole. Exactly how to do it I have not figured out, but the City Bank
+must appear as offering the subscriptions, and the Amalgamated Company
+as owning the stock, and simultaneously some one else must tell all
+about the advantages. Unless this latter is very fully done, the public
+will not only refuse to subscribe, but will get suspicious, and there
+might be a big scandal. It seems to me as though this part of the job is
+yours to do, and to do just right."</p>
+
+<p>So far in our argument we were even. We eyed each other as fighters do
+in a ring&mdash;looking for an opening. Both sparred for an idea. Mr. Rogers'
+reluctance to shoulder any legal responsibility deepened my suspicions,
+and inwardly I sweated blood at the thought of the deviltry that might
+be piled up around the affair. However, there was nothing for it but to
+square away and keep sparring, for if I lost my temper and exploded, it
+meant that I should be ground up or disappear in the hopper, and then,
+good-by to independence. It was the first time I had ever sat in a
+finish game with the master of "Standard Oil," and I trembled at the
+possible outcome. Yet this duel&mdash;for it was as clearly a fight for life
+on my side as though we both were armed with deadly weapons&mdash;was but one
+of a thousand similar encounters the Rogerses and Rockefellers had had
+with other adversaries as fearless and as honest as I, and out of these
+heart-breaking and soul-crushing sit-downs they had always emerged
+survivors, while behind the "Standard Oil" juggernaut, defeated and
+submissive, trudged the men who had dared oppose them. Should the fate
+of these others be also mine? Across my mind flitted "not while my brain
+retains<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_325" id="Page_325">[325]</a></span> its fly-wheels and my hands their power"; and I found myself
+wondering if there were not some stage at which a man cornered by
+arbitrary conditions and legal observances was justified in bursting all
+such trammels and meeting artifice with physical violence. Murder is a
+crime against society and against nature, and we must all observe the
+canons of God and the regulations of the law; but at least a dozen times
+in my wrestles with the exasperating, grinding, hell-generating machine,
+it was only my inborn reverence for God's law and man's that prevented
+me from&mdash;well, shall I say, strangling the fox?</p>
+
+<p>All this, however, was between me and my mind. I showed not a vestige of
+it on the surface, but went on with much earnestness:</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Rogers, I think I understand the situation perfectly, but let us
+see if I do. We have reached a point where we are out in the open, and
+the whole world is in position to pass judgment on us and our venture.
+There must be between us unanimity of purpose, for the time is past when
+I can say one thing, you another, and Stillman and his bank confuse all
+concerned by agreeing with one story and denying the second. It is
+essential that we all pull together, yet conditions are such&mdash;and no
+one's to blame for them, for they have so developed&mdash;that we cannot have
+a general pow-wow to organize a programme. We, you and I, must formulate
+a plan which can be sent out to the public with the approval of all
+concerned, all the parties to it being sure they understand absolutely
+its meaning, while in reality it means something different to each of
+them. Isn't that about it?"</p>
+
+<p>"You have covered the situation fully, Lawson," approved Mr. Rogers.
+"You must understand that this tie-up is due to our having departed from
+our usual way of doing business. 'Standard Oil' never goes to the public
+direct for money, but works up its projects through some of our"&mdash;he
+almost said "dummies," but caught himself&mdash;"our lieutenants. You have
+worked up this affair in our name instead of your own, as would have
+been the safer way."</p>
+
+<p>I thought to myself, "You cannot, whatever you do, evade<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_326" id="Page_326">[326]</a></span> responsibility
+for the millions you are to take this time"; but I went on smoothly:</p>
+
+<p>"This, then, is how I see our procedure: We will write out an
+advertisement for the City Bank. You will have Mr. Stillman pass it for
+the bank, by authorizing me to publish it. You will then authorize me to
+publish a second advertisement on behalf of the Amalgamated Company. If
+there is any slip-up, I, as the agent of both, will have to become
+responsible instead of you. Is that right?"</p>
+
+<p>He nodded. I went on:</p>
+
+<p>"Besides these, there must be a third advertisement, in which some one
+will tell the strong facts about Amalgamated, and it will be so worded
+as to bring the public with its money into the City Bank just the same
+as though it were signed by the bank, Stillman, the Amalgamated Company,
+and you and Mr. Rockefeller. What's the use of beating round the bush
+any longer? The one to sign that story and stand behind it is myself,
+because, owing to conditions, no one else will."</p>
+
+<p>I had said it. Mr. Rogers' eyes snapped just once. Only on two other
+occasions in all my long and intimate acquaintance with this wonderful
+man have I seen him lose his self-control. To anger he will give way
+frankly if the occasion justifies it or he desires to intimidate or
+impress an individual; but his face, mobile though it is, presents a
+calm and impassive mask. I caught the snap, and I think he caught me
+catching it. It meant much to me&mdash;more even than if he had said in so
+many words "I've got him." In such encounters one cannot see into one's
+adversary's mind nor know what he is trying to do, and any indication is
+like the sight of a buoy in a fog to a mariner. I gathered that the snap
+indicated relief at my compliance, and that he had been afraid I might
+balk. That showed me that consent on my part was important&mdash;which meant
+that he saw no possible way of carrying the enterprise to the end we had
+mapped out unless I stepped into the gap. Then I knew that he would have
+to agree to my terms, provided they were not too harsh and that I did
+not too vehemently insist upon them. It is a cardinal principle of
+"Standard Oil" never<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_327" id="Page_327">[327]</a></span> to do anything they decide they won't do, and that
+which they decide they won't do is what any man on earth says they must
+do. You may lead "Standard Oil," but you cannot drive it. If at that
+critical moment I had foreseen all that subsequently occurred, or
+realized that this copper affair, which was to me a matter of life and
+death, was to Henry H. Rogers only another device to extort dollars from
+the public, I should then and there have thrown down the gauntlet and
+demanded that "Standard Oil" step out into the open and assume all legal
+responsibility, or have exposed the whole scheme. But my suspicions were
+suspicions only, and I could not be sure that Mr. Rogers was doing other
+than discretion warranted, when he desired to have things done in such a
+way as to allow me to continue to conjure with the magic name "Standard
+Oil." In other words, wasn't he doing exactly what I myself was engaged
+upon? I was planning to have him consent to things he was otherwise
+unwilling to allow, and he, in his turn, was scheming to have the bank
+and his "Standard Oil" associates pass over things they would be sure to
+question if presented less adroitly, or if they came from some other
+quarter. Yet all I was trying to accomplish was honest and best for all.
+Why might not his intentions be as fair as mine? However, the eye-snap
+determined me to steer nearer the wind.</p>
+
+<p>"Well and good, Mr. Rogers," I went on. "I will tell the story I know is
+true and that you know is true, and that you have repeatedly given me
+your word you would stand by me in telling, but I will only do so in a
+way I deem safe and fair to myself. Is that agreed?"</p>
+
+<p>He winced a bit. "What do you mean by that?" he said. "What do you mean
+by a 'way safe and fair' to yourself? You are not suspicious of any of
+us, are you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Suspicious is not the word, Mr. Rogers. I brought you and Mr.
+Rockefeller this copper enterprise. We have gone ahead with it upon
+clearly laid down lines. I have done to the letter all I agreed, and, so
+far, the enterprise has more than fulfilled my promises. I realize that
+our success has largely come from our going to the public and openly
+telling it what we were doing and what we intended to do. Until now,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_328" id="Page_328">[328]</a></span> I
+am the one who has made all the promises, and, legally, up to this
+point, I am the only one who can be called to account, but it is the
+fact that for any statement I have made, you and Mr. Rockefeller have
+been as much responsible as myself, and you as much or more than I have
+had the benefit which has come from what I have promised. Now we are
+ready for business with the public, and there must be a clear and
+distinct understanding with it or it will not part with its money. This
+understanding can have but one bearing&mdash;<i>that what the public read, we
+must all be responsible for legally and morally, not some of us, but all
+of us, you, Mr. Rockefeller, the City Bank, James Stillman, and myself</i>.
+For bear in mind it was you and Mr. Rockefeller who changed my plans by
+substituting companies and properties of which I knew nothing but what
+you told me. All the things we ought to tell, you say cannot be put into
+words, because if they are powers beyond us will refuse to allow the
+enterprise to go through as it must go through. Then the condition must
+be implied, must be between the lines. You say this is my task, and that
+I alone can perform it properly. All right&mdash;but I will perform it in a
+way that will hold every one concerned to his legal as well as to his
+moral responsibility just as it will me who sign it. To save our
+enterprise I will concede just this much: The advertisements will be so
+worded as not apparently legally to involve Stillman, William
+Rockefeller, or the Bank but in reality they will be bound to as strict
+responsibility as though their signatures were in the place of mine. In
+doing this I compromise with my conscience, Mr. Rogers, because it is
+now of paramount importance that our consolidation go through&mdash;as
+important to the thousands of others who have followed us as to
+ourselves."</p>
+
+<p>"You mean this, Lawson, that you will insist upon having this done in a
+way that will make every one legally responsible?"</p>
+
+<p>"I mean just that, Mr. Rogers. In what other way can it be done?"</p>
+
+<p>"As all such affairs are arranged&mdash;by allowing the public to think for
+themselves&mdash;but steering our end clear of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_329" id="Page_329">[329]</a></span> all possible legal
+entanglements," he replied in a voice half choked with suppressed rage.
+Now we were both thoroughly aroused, he fairly seething with fury at my
+rebellion, and I boiling over at his willingness to sacrifice me to his
+own safety. By this time he was on his feet facing me, and it was
+evident the tussle would be serious. Still I slowly and coldly asked:</p>
+
+<p>"How can that be done?"</p>
+
+<p>"By <i>your</i> taking the responsibility," he as slowly and freezingly
+answered.</p>
+
+<p>"You mean that <i>I</i> shall go ahead and make glowing and generous
+promises, on the strength of which the public will put up its money, and
+that if these promises for any reason are not carried out, I alone shall
+be the one to face the music? Is that what you mean, Mr. Rogers?"</p>
+
+<p>I held myself together, with closed hands and clinched teeth.</p>
+
+<p>"Just that," he returned. "You are making millions out of this
+enterprise, and I consider this is one of the places where you earn
+them."</p>
+
+<p>"Not if every one of the millions you mention were multiplied a thousand
+times, Mr. Rogers, do I say one word to the public to induce it to part
+with its money&mdash;not a word that will not hold you and Mr. Rockefeller,
+Stillman, and the City Bank to a full responsibility&mdash;not if, on the
+other hand, I become a pauper."</p>
+
+<p>It was out. I know that the deadly earnestness I felt was in my voice,
+for though I spoke in a low tone I thought my head would burst until the
+last word was spoken. We looked at each other&mdash;glared is not the word to
+define that white-hot yet frozen, "another-step-and-I-shoot" look which
+of all expressions of which the human face is capable is most intense
+and dangerous. I did not flinch. I did not know what he would do, but I
+saw my words impressing on his mind the absolute conviction that for
+once he was face to face with a resolution no power of his could alter.
+Slowly his anger, his will, seemed to subside, but as they did I was
+aware intuitively that he had changed tactics and was coming at me from
+another direction. In an instant his whole being<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_330" id="Page_330">[330]</a></span> seemed to relax and he
+dropped into a chair with a sigh of relief as he said:</p>
+
+<p>"All right, Lawson. You've thought it out, I see. You are making a bad
+mistake, but as your mind is made up, I can do the only thing left to
+do&mdash;call the whole business off for the time being."</p>
+
+<p>I had not served as Mr. Rogers' pike-carrier in vain. Superb actor
+though he is, I saw his bluff, and quick as a hair-trigger called it.</p>
+
+<p>"Is that your decision, Mr. Rogers?" I asked, almost before the last
+word was out of his mouth. I did not attempt to shade the
+"If-it-is-I'm-off" tone of my voice.</p>
+
+<p>He replied slowly and naturally, as though he were taking his decision
+right off the scales:</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I think so."</p>
+
+<p>"Then we will call it off for good. I've hung so long by the heels on
+this whole matter that anything is better than a further wait. I'm for
+Boston on the next train, and by to-morrow I'll have figured out where
+we stand."</p>
+
+<p>I started for the door.</p>
+
+<p>"Just a minute." His voice was as indifferent as though no tremendous
+issue were at stake, for Henry H. Rogers is of the iron-willed breed
+whom peril never betrays into trepidation. He would throw dice for his
+life as casually as one of your Wall Street tipsters would for a cigar,
+and here reputation and millions were in the balance. I knew as well as
+though I had seen the message telegraphed across his mind that he had
+said to himself, "It didn't work, I must round to," but I knew my man
+well enough to realize that a false move now would tip victory back into
+defeat. I halted. As naturally as though there had been no calculation
+in the tone of resigned despair which tinged my voice, I said:</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Rogers, don't let us prolong this talk. You well know what this
+decision of yours means to me, so let me go where I can think it to a
+finish."</p>
+
+<p>In an instant Henry H. Rogers was again his virile and commanding self.
+He jumped to his feet. His words came round and tense, passionately
+convincing and persuasive.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_331" id="Page_331">[331]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Lawson, are you crazy? Would you go back to Boston and smash this
+business that we have spent years on? Would you sacrifice the millions
+that are in your grasp? Would you? Would you, I say? You know I would
+not threaten you, but I ask, would you do this, and at a time when you
+are all tied and tangled up with us in such a way that you would be
+bankrupt, literally be a pauper, and all because I insist upon things
+that conditions over which I have no control compel me to demand?"</p>
+
+<p>Whether he intended to halt or not I never knew, for I let him have my
+pent-up feelings in eleven words that gave me as much relief as any
+thousand I could have selected had I a day to do it in:</p>
+
+<p>"As true as there is a God above us, I would!"</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_332" id="Page_332">[332]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXII</h2>
+
+<h3>THE RESPONSIBILITY FASTENED</h3>
+
+
+<p>Life's alternatives are seldom labelled. Right is not always white, nor
+wrong, black. The parting of the ways is oftentimes to the eye no more
+than the forking of main-travelled roads, and good intentions are no
+sure guide to the straight path. This, however, was one of those rare
+crossings at which Fate's red light swung full in view, and in its
+warning glow I seemed to read the sign:</p>
+
+<p>"Settle Right or Forever Regret."</p>
+
+<p>Well it was for me and for those thousands who were victimized and
+robbed later that I heeded the monition, for if in the interests of
+peace I had allowed myself to be overwhelmed by the imperious will of
+Henry H. Rogers, I should to-day be as helpless as those others who,
+coming forward to accuse, are met with "Standard Oil's" crushing
+rejoinder, "It's a lie&mdash;you can't prove it." I have wondered since if
+the master of "Standard Oil" also saw the red signal or interpreted its
+prophetic message. His eyes still met mine in the same deadly, intense
+stare, but the anger had passed out. Then in an instant the battle was
+mine. Henry H. Rogers came out of the clouds and with a gesture of his
+hand waved away all that had passed, and said:</p>
+
+<p>"D&mdash;n it, Lawson, you are a most impractical man to do business with,
+but I suppose you must have your way. Now just tell me&mdash;and put it in
+few and plain words&mdash;what is it you intend to do to get this affair
+through, for we must carry it to a finish at once, although it does seem
+hard that I must do things I don't want to and which may put me in a bad
+hole; but let us hope the future will only show that all these
+precautions were a waste of energies. Bear in mind, though,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_333" id="Page_333">[333]</a></span> that
+whatever is done, must be so arranged that no one but me will know the
+real condition, for though I have given way, William Rockefeller and
+Stillman, to say nothing of the others, would throw up the whole affair
+rather than incur the danger of future litigation and trouble."</p>
+
+<p>At that moment Mr. Rogers had, I believe, made up his mind to play so
+fair with the public that there should never arise dissatisfaction with
+the course of Amalgamated, that is, he had determined to be content with
+a half brick of gold without retribution or restitution in place of the
+whole fraught with penalties of exposure and reprobation. At that period
+his cupidity had not flared into the towers of fire it afterward became,
+in the smoke and flame of which all undefined dangers were obscured.</p>
+
+<p>"As you will, Mr. Rogers," I assented; "that part is not my hunt. I
+should prefer that our associates knew things as <i>we</i> do, but as it
+seems that is impossible, I must be satisfied with knowing that you
+thoroughly understand the conditions I am going ahead on. Here they are:
+First, all public notices must bear the names not only of the
+Amalgamated Company and the City Bank, but of the individuals,
+Rockefeller, Rogers, and Stillman. As the real story is to be told by me
+alone, these names will prevent any suspicion the public, particularly
+Wall Street, would have that there was any lukewarmness or dodging. This
+means that you and Mr. Rockefeller must be known as officers of the
+company as well as directors."</p>
+
+<p>"Now, Lawson, right there, that is impossible&mdash;absolutely out of the
+question. William Rockefeller will under no circumstances take on
+additional duties of this kind, and whatever the consequences, I cannot
+persuade him to."</p>
+
+<p>I saw he meant this, and that we must get around it.</p>
+
+<p>"Let us begin at the beginning, then&mdash;the president. You should be
+president&mdash;over the flotation, at least."</p>
+
+<p>"That is impossible, too, for you know it is settled that Marcus Daly is
+president. I promised the position to him as a part of the trade. It
+would be ridiculous for me, who it is known am not a copper expert, to
+be president of a new copper company in which Marcus Daly is a large
+owner<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_334" id="Page_334">[334]</a></span> and is supposed to have a prominent hand. Besides, in certain
+parts of the country his name will stand much better than mine, and it
+means much to all miners the world over."</p>
+
+<p>"All right for president," I answered. "That settles, then, where you
+would naturally come in&mdash;vice-president; and as vice-president it will
+be proper to print your name in the advertisement below that of the
+president."</p>
+
+<p>He demurred at first, but finally acquiesced, for he had now made up his
+mind to play out the string. For treasurer and secretary he suggested a
+brother of Governor Flower's, but I knew that this was now the only
+place left where the magic name of Rockefeller could be used and I drew
+his attention to the fact.</p>
+
+<p>"How can we do it, Lawson, when I have told you it is impossible?"</p>
+
+<p>"William Rockefeller has a son, William G. Rockefeller. He's our man for
+treasurer and secretary. Not one in ten thousand but will think William
+G. is the senior Rockefeller, so the name is as good for the country as
+his father's, and in State and Wall streets it is better, for among
+financiers it is known that William Rockefeller would hesitate longer
+about putting his son out in the open in an enterprise he did not
+approve than about getting in himself. So William G. Rockefeller it must
+be."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Rogers did not take kindly to the idea, and I could see it would be
+quite a task for him to arrange the matter. However, it was necessary,
+and he undertook the contract. I went on:</p>
+
+<p>"That covers the company. Second, we will print three advertisements&mdash;a
+plain notice of the City Bank, which must be signed not only with the
+usual 'National City Bank,' but 'James Stillman, President.' This will
+immediately follow the company's advertisement, which I shall so word
+that the enormous properties composing the consolidation will be set
+forth, yet without details of the extent of our holdings in any of them.
+In its own advertisement offering the stock the City Bank will refer to
+the advertisement of the Amalgamated as though all particulars had there
+been given, and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_335" id="Page_335">[335]</a></span> I will see that it reads openly and frankly and yet
+contains nothing that need scare Stillman. Then there will be a third
+advertisement, signed by myself, in which, in the plainest and strongest
+terms at my command, I shall tell just what the company is and what it
+proposes to do."</p>
+
+<p>"So far all right," assented Mr. Rogers.</p>
+
+<p>"There is one more thing," I went on. "It cannot openly be put forward
+that I am the authorized agent of the Amalgamated Company and the City
+Bank&mdash;well, I must have the equivalent of this. It must be shown by
+inference. If I insert these three advertisements in the papers and pay
+for them, and the company pays me for them, it will be proof positive
+for all time that I acted as the authorized agent of not only the
+company and the City Bank, but of Marcus Daly, yourself, William
+Rockefeller's son, and James Stillman, and therefore that whatever my
+advertisement says is binding upon them. Remember, though, it will be
+your affair whether you tell them of it or not."</p>
+
+<p>"You persist, Lawson, that this is necessary?" Mr. Rogers interrogated.
+"You seem to lose sight of the position I shall be in should anything
+happen later to reveal to these men with whom I am so closely associated
+in business that they were binding themselves without their knowledge,
+and that I was fully aware of the fact."</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 289px;">
+<a href="images/fig003.jpg"><img src="images/fig003th.jpg" width="289" height="400" alt="lawson&#39;s advertisement which appeared in conjunction with
+amalgamated&#39;s." title="" /></a>
+<span class="caption">lawson&#39;s advertisement which appeared in conjunction with
+amalgamated&#39;s.</span>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_336" id="Page_336">[336]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Absolutely necessary, Mr. Rogers," I returned without an instant's
+hesitation. "Now let us run over the situation finally, for I want to
+relieve your mind of the idea that I am doing anything selfish in
+insisting on these conditions. When the public subscription is offered,
+there must be a story of facts to go with it. Some one must make it. The
+men who should, will not, although they are prepared to reap all the
+benefits of what the man who will, says. It seems I am that man, and
+what I say must be what I understand is the exact truth about the
+enterprise. Well and good. It is essential for the one who assumes this
+responsibility to do it in such a way that he can for all time show that
+the men who benefited and upon whose say-so he acted were in every way
+responsible for what he did. All this is undeniable. There are only two
+possible considerations <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_337" id="Page_337">[337]</a></span>that enter into the problem: first, that the
+facts I am to state are not true; second, that it devolves on me to
+accept a risk those associated with me will not take. If the first can
+be maintained, farewell to our enterprise, and get ready for the worst
+financial scandal Wall Street ever faced. If it's the last&mdash;Mr. Rogers,
+the 'Standard Oil' people are all very strong, but I don't believe any
+of them would have the nerve to ask me to accept a risk they dared not
+themselves undertake."</p>
+
+<p>There was no escaping my conclusion, and unwelcome as the fact was, he
+saw no further talk would avail, so he snapped:</p>
+
+<p>"Draw up the advertisements you think proper. Have them ready in an
+hour, and I will in the meantime see William Rockefeller and Stillman
+and do what is necessary."</p>
+
+<p>I noted the set of Henry H. Rogers' jaw and the down slant of his eyelid
+as he uttered these words, and I had no doubt of the compliance of James
+Stillman and William Rockefeller with whatever demands he chose to
+propose that day. "Cyclones and thunderbolts! Heaven help these or any
+others who venture to resist him in this mood," I inwardly commented,
+"especially if they are of those with whom he has travelled the
+'Standard Oil' blood-trail." My imagination showed me a picture of 26
+Broadway and the National City Bank swaying and shaking like full-blown
+hollyhocks in a gale.</p>
+
+<p>I had my advertisements ready and was waiting when he returned.</p>
+
+<p>"Lawson," said he peremptorily, "if your work will pass me you may go
+ahead with it."</p>
+
+<p>"You mean you have obtained all the consents necessary?"</p>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_338" id="Page_338">[338]</a></span></p>
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 289px;">
+<a href="images/fig004.jpg"><img src="images/fig004th.jpg" width="289" height="400" alt="INITIAL ADVERTISEMENT OF AMALGAMATED COPPER COMPANY." title="" /></a>
+<span class="caption">initial advertisement of amalgamated copper company.</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>"I mean that we will waste no more words on this matter. The
+advertisements you can convince me are right you may have inserted in
+the papers, and no one will say a word publicly or otherwise. Neither
+William Rockefeller, his son, Stillman, the Bank nor any officer or
+director of the Amalgamated Company will talk until after the
+subscriptions have been closed and the allotments made; not one<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_339" id="Page_339">[339]</a></span>word
+but what you say or print will be uttered. Can you ask anything more
+than that?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not a thing more."</p>
+
+<p>I then laid out the rough copies of what afterward appeared in the
+papers throughout the country (reproduced on pages 336 and 338).</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_340" id="Page_340">[340]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXIII</h2>
+
+<h3>THE FIRST CRIME OF AMALGAMATED</h3>
+
+
+<p>That those of my readers who are not versed in stock affairs may
+appreciate the unusual character of these announcements, it is proper
+for me to explain their divergence from the form of the average
+financial advertisement. It is the invariable custom in all stock
+subscriptions for the corporation which is being offered for sale, or
+the bank or bankers assuming responsibility for the proposition, to set
+forth at length the facts essential to a proper understanding of the
+enterprise: if a new corporation, its reason for existence and the
+security offered; if old, its history and the immediate purposes for
+which additional funds are asked. It is the same in finance as in
+ordinary business. If you are offering for sale goods which cannot speak
+for themselves, it is necessary that some one talk for them so those who
+purchase may know what they are receiving for their money. Under normal
+circumstances the initial advertisement of the Amalgamated Company would
+have stated the amount of its capital, its organization, and that the
+proceeds of the $75,000,000 of stock offered for sale were to go into
+its treasury to purchase designated properties. It will be seen from the
+Amalgamated's advertisement reproduced herewith, that all the
+information vouchsafed intending investors is mention of its $75,000,000
+capital, that it has no bonds or mortgage debt, and that it has already
+purchased large interests in the Anaconda and other copper properties.
+Not a word about indebtedness, equally vital, nor in definition of the
+extent of the interests owned. It is quite the briefest, most meagre
+notice of subscription ever placed before the public. Indeed, it is
+informative and specific only in regard to the officers, who are given
+extraordinary promi<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_341" id="Page_341">[341]</a></span>nence. Such announcements are usually signed by the
+president and the secretary and treasurer, or else the names of all the
+officers and directors are stated, so it is obvious here that the
+prominent insertion of the vice-president's name is for a purpose. And
+all Wall Street as well as the general public gathered that "Standard
+Oil" was so sure of this enterprise that its principal men were anxious
+to be known as being behind it.</p>
+
+<p>The offer of the National City Bank begins with a reference to "the
+foregoing statement," as though that really showed the purpose of the
+sale of stock&mdash;leaving the inference that the beneficiary was the
+Amalgamated Company. Other details&mdash;the designation of conditions of
+subscription, terms, etc., follow the ordinary form. In the matter of
+oversubscription the offer diverges vitally. Usually it is prescribed
+that "in case of oversubscription stock will be allotted pro rata and
+the right is reserved to reject any subscription in whole <i>or in part</i>."
+In preparing the advertisement I purposely left out the "or in part,"
+thereby making it impossible to reject any part of any subscription&mdash;in
+other words, rejection had to be without compromise, so that every
+subscriber whose subscription was not wholly rejected would stand on
+equal terms with every other subscriber, as he would receive his exact
+proportion.</p>
+
+<p>The terms of these advertisements prescribed the conditions under which
+subscriptions for the stock of the Amalgamated Copper Company must be
+made to the National City Bank, and bound the bank to accept
+subscriptions presented in compliance therewith. In fact they
+constituted a legal contract binding the National City Bank, an
+institution doing business under the national banking laws of the United
+States, to allot to every subscriber whose subscription was not rejected
+in full, his proportionate part of the entire 750,000 shares of the
+capital stock of the corporation, his proportionate part being the ratio
+his subscription bore to the entire subscription received at the
+National City Bank before twelve noon of Thursday, May 4, 1899. On
+receipt of official notification from the National City Bank that he had
+been allotted twenty per cent. of his subscription, or one<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_342" id="Page_342">[342]</a></span> share in
+every five subscribed for, the subscriber had a right to think he knew
+that the total subscription to the stock had been five times
+$75,000,000&mdash;$375,000,000&mdash;or five times 750,000 shares&mdash;3,750,000
+shares; and that before noon, May 4th, the National City Bank had in
+hand certified checks to the amount of $18,750,000. The public,
+including the shrewdest Wall Streeters, has, since the subscription
+closed, believed that the subscription totalled the figures given above.
+Indeed no one has ever suspected anything to the contrary, because it
+was clear that if the allotment was conducted under conditions other
+than those contracted for in the advertisement, the National City Bank
+had laid itself open to a charge of fraud and was liable to each
+subscriber for the proportion of shares of which he had been deprived.</p>
+
+<p><i>The actual amount of the subscriptions received on or before noon, May
+4, 1899, at the National City Bank was but $132,067,500, and the amount
+of the five per cent. certified checks received in the institution up to
+noon was only $6,603,375, or $5 per share on a total of 1,320,675
+shares.</i></p>
+
+<p>The meaning of this is that every legitimate subscriber&mdash;and I except
+the millions of subscriptions which the bank decided were illegitimate
+and rejected, as they had a perfect right to do under their contract
+with the public&mdash;was defrauded of two shares of each three to which he
+was entitled. Before me as I write is the original allotment of the
+National City Bank to the subscribers, which I propose to print in my
+second volume as part of this indictment, showing that the figures are
+exactly as I have stated.</p>
+
+<p>From the beginning of my narrative I have claimed that the frauds
+committed in connection with Amalgamated could be completely
+demonstrated from records outside any evidence of mine. The list of
+subscribers and the most cursory examination by the Government national
+bank authorities at Washington will furnish all the proof necessary to
+substantiate the accuracy of my statement here. At this juncture I shall
+not attempt to sum up the bearing or the consequences of this illegal
+and dishonest act, but it was one of the main cogs in bringing about the
+disaster that ensued. The conditions which led to its perpetration are
+narrated<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_343" id="Page_343">[343]</a></span> later. In passing I may say that while the formation of the
+Amalgamated Company by the clerks and office boys (as I have already
+described it) and the means by which Mr. Rogers and Mr. Rockefeller let
+in their friends to their appointed "floors" were deceptive and
+outrageous in their double-dealing, and should be prohibited by law, I
+knew them to be so commonly practised throughout our American financial
+centres that it never entered my mind to suggest that they were
+criminal. The infraction I have just explained, however, is a tangible
+fraud and a very different proposition.</p>
+
+<p>The two announcements alone would have had but little efficacy in
+persuading the public to part with its money for Amalgamated stock, but
+in conjunction with the third advertisement&mdash;mine&mdash;they proved
+irresistible. There was nothing equivocal in my announcement. I not only
+advised the purchase of the stock by subscription on the ground that it
+was the best opportunity for safe and profitable investment ever offered
+the people, but asserted that the shares could afterward be sold for
+fifty to seventy-five per cent. advance on the subscription price, so
+that every one who obtained a share of Amalgamated for $100 was buying
+something which would subsequently be worth $150 to $200. Further I
+promised that all the subscribers should be treated alike and gave it as
+my opinion that the whole 750,000 shares could at the time the public
+was reading my statement be sold for thirty to sixty per cent. more than
+the subscription price, and declared unqualifiedly that the assets owned
+by the Amalgamated Company were worth from one hundred to one hundred
+and twenty-five millions; that the company was then earning from twelve
+to sixteen per cent. per annum, and that from the start and ever
+afterward it would pay eight per cent. dividends annually.</p>
+
+<p>As I have previously stated, I had no personal knowledge of the
+conditions in the several properties comprising the first section of
+Amalgamated, but the facts and figures which were put forward in this
+advertisement were supplied me by Henry H. Rogers and through him by
+Marcus Daly, who vouched for them, and furthermore the three
+advertisements were carefully read and scanned by Mr. Rogers himself.
+If<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_344" id="Page_344">[344]</a></span> I had not believed them to be true I should not have put them
+forward nor allowed them to be published, but I accepted them as the
+public and the financiers did when they read them over the signature of
+the known agent and mouthpiece for Amalgamated and "Standard Oil,"
+myself. I showed that I believed them by putting my signature to them. I
+was and am personally responsible for the truth of these statements, but
+more so are H. H. Rogers, William G. Rockefeller, the National City
+Bank, and the Amalgamated Company. Even if it had not been a matter of
+public knowledge that I was the agent of the City Bank and the
+Amalgamated Company and the "Standard Oil" party; if it had not been a
+fact, as it was, that I inserted these three advertisements by agreement
+with those who were responsible for them and who were doing business
+directly with the public; if it had not been a fact that these people
+through me paid for these advertisements, thereby directly showing I was
+their authorized agent; if I had not taken the precaution to see that
+such payment was made by a check signed by William G. Rockefeller,
+treasurer of the Amalgamated Company, and yet made to the order of the
+newspaper people and handed by me to them, thereby clinching my agency,
+nevertheless the advertisement itself would have made it clear that I
+was the full and authorized agent, or it would have been stopped there
+and then and the bank and the company would have refused to proceed
+further, for I say:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"I advise all intending subscribers to send their
+subscriptions personally or through their banking or
+brokerage house direct to the National City Bank of New
+York. While my firm will, for the convenience of its
+clients, forward subscriptions, I would have it understood
+that such subscribers will receive the same treatment if
+they send their applications direct.</p>
+
+<p>"My firm will also furnish subscription blanks to those who,
+through lack of time or otherwise, cannot secure them
+elsewhere."</p></div>
+
+<p>I think I have made clear so far the conditions under which these vital
+statements were put forward and have lodged the legal responsibility for
+them where it belongs. The National City Bank is plainly liable for
+violation of the published stipulations under which subscriptions were<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_345" id="Page_345">[345]</a></span>
+allotted, and it is common knowledge that the stock was allotted one
+share in five subscribed for, while the original list of subscriptions
+shows that the total allotment was less than twenty-seven millions and
+the full subscription less than double the amount to be allotted.</p>
+
+<p>It is common knowledge that the dividends were cut to two per cent., and
+are at the present time, the best ever known in the copper business,
+only four per cent., and that they have been cut under eight per cent.,
+so they either could not have been twelve to sixteen per cent. at the
+time it was stated they were, or there has been great fraud committed
+since. As we are dealing with the greatest national bank in the country,
+it will be simple for the Government and banking officials at Washington
+instantly to disprove my statements if they are false; otherwise they
+must take action, civil and criminal, against the National City Bank.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_346" id="Page_346">[346]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXIV</h2>
+
+<h3>THE SUBSCRIPTION OPENS</h3>
+
+
+<p>When Mr. Rogers on returning from his conference with James Stillman and
+William Rockefeller had given the word that the course was clear, I was
+conscious of the necessity of clinching the decision so that there could
+be no further backing and filling. I told Mr. Rogers so and suggested
+that we insert at once the advertisement of the City Bank and the
+Amalgamated Company in the New York papers, and that the following day I
+have arrangements concluded with my advertising agents for their
+publication throughout the country. The announcements appeared in New
+York and the following day they were spread before the public in the
+great papers of this country and England. Thus was Amalgamated launched.</p>
+
+<p>With the appearance of these long anticipated announcements the pent-up
+copper excitement burst forth, and an avalanche of queries began to pour
+in upon us all. The interest was tremendous, and I felt certain we were
+to reap a greater success than I had dared dream of. The days preceding
+the opening of the subscription were taken up in answering a thousand
+questions regarding conditions, in supervising the advertising, and
+steering "Coppers" in the market. On the eve of the opening day Mr.
+Rogers said to me:</p>
+
+<p>"Lawson, at last we are to know how well your work has been done. The
+time of talk ends to-night and after that we'll have facts to go upon.
+What do you place the subscription at?"</p>
+
+<p>"I'll stake my prospective profits that when the books close there will
+be from forty to fifty millions subscribed and that when your 'Standard
+Oil' experts have analyzed<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_347" id="Page_347">[347]</a></span> the subscriptions they will tell you that
+three-quarters of all have come from the country&mdash;from my campaign&mdash;and
+not over a quarter from the 'Standard Oil's' following and Wall Street,"
+I answered. "Then you and Mr. Rockefeller will admit I was right when I
+told you that the public will respond to open and fair treatment when it
+is deaf and blind to stock trickery and manipulation."</p>
+
+<p>"I do hope you are right," returned Mr. Rogers, in a quiet, earnest,
+I-pray-it-may-really-be-so tone, "but if it is from six to ten millions
+we will all take off our hats to you."</p>
+
+<p>This defined the expectation of the man who above all others knew most
+of what had been done to mature and perfect the venture. I realized that
+none of the parties to the enterprise anticipated an extraordinary
+success, and though I felt more confident than the others, I was far
+from cognizant of the actual feeling abroad among the people. Monday
+morning I got an inkling of what was coming. My office in Boston was the
+centre of a dense mass of people from morning until night, and round the
+National City Bank in New York crowds were gathered watching the throng
+fight its way through the doors. Inside, a long line of men and women
+headed for the subscription desk stood laden with checks and currency,
+patiently awaiting their turn, and every mail brought sacks of orders.
+The big banking and brokerage offices in the financial districts of
+Boston, Philadelphia, and New York were packed with customers asking to
+be shown the way to secure as much as possible of this easy money, while
+the wires buzzed with messages and bids from the far West and from
+Europe. The excitement knew no bounds. In my rooms at the Waldorf I sat
+beside the telephone getting rapid reports from my lieutenants. From 26
+Broadway I learned of the progress of events at the bank, and was
+impressed with the fact that the prevailing excitement and the strain
+were beginning to affect even the nickel-steel equilibrium of Mr. Rogers
+himself. Indeed, he made no attempt to disguise his uneasiness, and told
+me that William Rockefeller was in much the same condition. It was the
+first venture of size these<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_348" id="Page_348">[348]</a></span> two strong wheelmen of "Standard Oil" had
+undertaken without the co-operation of John D. Rockefeller, and it
+appeared that he was considerably worked up over the public hubbub, and
+so opposed to the whole Amalgamated affair that nothing short of a great
+success could justify his subordinates' temerity. However one looked at
+the situation, it was evident that Henry H. Rogers and William
+Rockefeller were playing for the stake of their lives, though how great
+the stake was no one at that time guessed. Since then they have steadily
+forged ahead, both in riches and in influence, until to-day they have
+actually supplanted John D. Rockefeller in the kingship of finance. At
+that day, though his had always been the master-mind of "Standard Oil,"
+I don't believe Mr. Rogers was worth, all told, over twelve to fifteen
+millions, while to-day he is probably a hundred and fifty times a
+millionnaire.</p>
+
+<p>It must be remembered that there was good cause for trepidation over
+this venture, for though the stock markets buzzed with "Coppers" it was
+all guesswork as to how far the public would go with us. The question
+was, What would they do now that our stock was within their reach? It
+was a tremendous proposition we had put forth, for remember this was
+before the period of the great trustifications, and ten to twenty
+millions figured as the limit of large flotations. Even these were of
+well-known properties and invariably were offered below par. To come
+into the open, offering at $100 a share a brand-new stock capitalized at
+$75,000,000, was breaking the record, and we might well wonder what was
+before us.</p>
+
+<p>So far as man could do I had safeguarded the public and my own
+reputation, and believed that the assurances I had secured eliminated
+all opportunities of fleecing investors. Mr. Rogers and Mr. Rockefeller
+had each pledged me his solemn word, under no circumstances to sell to
+subscribers over five million dollars of the stock, and to place at my
+disposal the five millions cash received, to use in the open market for
+the purpose of protecting the stock so that it should never decline
+below par. That this promise should be kept was of the utmost
+consequence. While "Standard<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_349" id="Page_349">[349]</a></span> Oil" held the large majority of the
+Amalgamated stock and the public but a small minority, there was no
+danger of the latter being slaughtered, whereas if the public was loaded
+up with stock at $100 per share, it would be profitable for Rogers,
+Rockefeller, and Stillman to practise the method I was fast beginning to
+see was their favorite device for accumulating wealth&mdash;selling stock and
+then dropping its price and taking it away from its holders at
+twenty-five to fifty per cent. below what they had purchased it at. If
+my plan of guarding against this possibility were adhered to, I knew
+that there would be such a demand for the shares in the open market
+after the allotment that when the second section of seventy-five or one
+hundred millions came to be offered, it would be even more eagerly
+sought than the first. So with the third and other sections
+contemplated, until in time the whole stock would be distributed among
+the investors of the world, and assuming that part of our enormous
+profits would always be used to keep up its market price, there could be
+no possible decline. Thus Amalgamated, like "Standard Oil" or a
+Government bond, must always be worth more than par, first because there
+would be value to justify it, and second because its holders would have
+absolute confidence that the security could always be sold for as much
+or more than they had paid for it.</p>
+
+<p>So far, I had carefully refrained from discussing with Mr. Rogers how we
+should go about securing our part of the subscription. I had not
+forgotten it. Indeed, I had it well in mind and was ready to enter upon
+the matter when it came up. An iron-bound contract held the Amalgamated
+Company and the National City Bank over the signatures of a Rogers, a
+Rockefeller, and a Stillman to allow the public to subscribe for
+$75,000,000 of stock, and the terms were that every subscription must be
+in the bank at noon, May 4th, and that each subscription must be
+accompanied by a certified check of $5 for every share applied for. <i>As
+we had agreed that the public should be sold but five millions of the
+stock, that meant that we proposed to retain seventy millions of it
+ourselves, but to obtain this allotment legally, we must comply with the
+conditions of the advertisement</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_350" id="Page_350">[350]</a></span> <i>exactly as outsiders had. So it was
+necessary that we have a bid in before noon on Thursday for our seventy
+millions, accompanied by a check for</i> $3,500,000, <i>which would secure us
+our quota provided the public subscription was no more than five
+millions.</i> If the public subscription ran over five millions, then the
+bank must throw out all additional subscriptions over that amount, for
+the advertised contract specifically declared that all accepted
+subscriptions would be allowed pro rata. By my suppression of the usual
+condition that the Bank reserve the right to reject any part of any
+subscription, it was absolutely precluded from the common method of
+dealing with such an emergency and so could not reject <i>parts</i> of
+subscriptions. There was a way out&mdash;without practising fraud. If at noon
+on Thursday the public had subscribed ten or fifteen millions then the
+insiders must put in bids of $140,000,000 to $210,000,000, in which
+event the entire subscription would be divided by allotting each
+subscriber one share for every two or three subscribed.</p>
+
+<p>I presumed then that some such method would be followed. It surprised me
+at the time that Mr. Rogers should have given so little attention to so
+vital a part of our programme, for he is in the habit of thoughtfully
+thumbing over just such details to avoid slip-ups, but the idea that our
+subscription would run into unwieldy amounts never occurred to him, and
+he let things go, trusting to luck and "Standard Oil's" motto "To Hell
+with the people anyway," to adjust the matter at the last moment. To-day
+Henry H. Rogers, William Rockefeller, and James Stillman would each give
+five millions from his private fortune if this seemingly unimportant
+detail had then been provided for. Its neglect is the bloody
+finger-print on the knife-handle of the murderer, it is the burglar's
+footprint in the snow. In this case it furnishes the evidence of the
+crime of Amalgamated.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_351" id="Page_351">[351]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXV</h2>
+
+<h3>DOLLAR HYDROPHOBIA</h3>
+
+
+<p>Our first fears of failure were soon succeeded by apprehensions of a
+different nature. By Tuesday noon it was evident that the flotation
+would far exceed the low expectations of Rogers and Rockefeller, and I
+knew that if the people's interest continued to develop at the rate the
+subscriptions indicated, the totals would be far ahead of my own most
+sanguine anticipations. Every hour the excitement intensified. The
+crowds on the street and in the brokers' offices; the rush of investors
+to the City Bank&mdash;all demonstrated a feverish condition of the public
+mind, a state of unrest that fills the conservative banker with dread
+lest something happen to precipitate a disorder and a panic. The acute
+sensitiveness of a body of investors to extraneous influence, however
+slight, is familiar to any one who has had to do with market
+manipulation. In a theatre or church one strenuous spirit can quell a
+tumult with some ringing assurance, but long before the leader of a
+financial movement has got word to his following, wide-spread over the
+country, it has taken alarm, the rout has begun, and the field is strewn
+with corpses. A great financial excitement, like a rocket, should soar
+triumphantly into the air, leaving behind it a comet-like trail of
+glory, climaxing in a shower of gold; diverted from its course, it runs
+a mad, brief, tragic career along the earth, spreading ruin and disaster
+in its path.</p>
+
+<p>There comes a time when all great enterprises must emerge from the
+nursery and be exposed to the sunlight and the breezes of every day. We
+were crossing the ominous tract which divides the trenches of
+preparation from the shelter<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_352" id="Page_352">[352]</a></span>ing fortress of attainment, and the hosts
+of failure were rallied to dispute our passage.</p>
+
+<p>At this juncture any accident to our venture might affect the whole
+American business fabric, and no one realized the danger of the
+situation better than Mr. Rogers and myself. During the anxious days
+that were passing we canvassed the dire possibilities that the situation
+contained, just as children tell each other ghost stories when left
+alone in the darkness of the night. The great catastrophes of finance,
+we remembered, had all been born of the unexpected&mdash;of unforeseen
+contingencies&mdash;far beyond the range of human foresight. Who knew but
+that the hours were pregnant with some terrible potentiality&mdash;the
+assassination of a king or president, a Chicago or Boston fire, an
+epidemic of cholera, a belligerent message from the President, such as
+Cleveland's Venezuela ultimatum, a great bank defalcation, the suicide
+of an important operator, the death of an eminent capitalist&mdash;a breath
+of one of these world cyclones would crumble our structure into the dust
+and take along with it the neighboring edifices on both sides of the
+street. There were also the hidden possibilities of betrayal, of
+treachery, for we knew that scores of Wall Street's most ingenious minds
+were bent on unravelling and exposing the secret threads of our
+enterprise.</p>
+
+<p>On Wednesday morning soon after ten o'clock Mr. Rogers, on his way
+downtown, came to the Waldorf. He was plainly excited.</p>
+
+<p>"Lawson," he said, "this is something unheard of, unprecedented. The
+bank is being buried under subscriptions. Stillman says he is adding
+scores of clerks, but that he cannot possibly keep pace with the
+subscriptions. Mr. Rockefeller is very nervous, and I must confess to
+feeling a bit of 'rattle' myself. It now looks as though the total would
+run into fabulous figures. The Lewisohns are being swamped with orders
+from Europe. They alone will probably put in more than ten millions.
+Wall Street has lost its head entirely, and our people at 26 Broadway
+are coming in asking advice and doubling and trebling their
+subscriptions. If we don't keep our heads something bad may happen, for
+it looks<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_353" id="Page_353">[353]</a></span> now as though the cash the subscription is tying up would make
+a money-pinch. This affair must not be allowed to run away with us. What
+do your reports from Boston and the country show?"</p>
+
+<p>"The same as yours. The people have simply gone wild. Calls come in
+ceaselessly to me from Wall Street men. The hotel is so full of brokers
+from out of town that they are placing cots in the big rooms. I went
+down into the office just now to talk to them and was nearly mobbed.
+Already they are talking of a premium of $40 to $60 per share, but if we
+keep to the line we have laid down, I don't think we need fear bad
+consequences."</p>
+
+<p>We discussed other aspects of the affair, the intense interest developed
+in Europe, and the effect of the excitement on the price of the metal.
+As he started to go down to his office, Mr. Rogers said, as though by
+way of an after-thought:</p>
+
+<p>"Lawson, if the people are so hungry, why should we not take some
+advantage of it?"</p>
+
+<p>The suggestion, with all it implied, stunned me for a second.</p>
+
+<p>"What do you mean, Mr. Rogers? Take advantage&mdash;how?"</p>
+
+<p>"Would it not be well to let the subscribers have more than the amount
+we agreed? Why not take more of this money than five millions?"</p>
+
+<p>This was out of a clear sky, for there had not been the slightest
+suggestion of a change of programme and I had rested in the certainty
+that our plan insured the safety of all who had gone in on my say-so. I
+choked down my excitement.</p>
+
+<p>"Good God, Mr. Rogers, are you mad?" I exclaimed. "Don't let us depart a
+hair from what we all in our cool moments decided was best. We are in
+the field now. It would be sure ruin to try any new schemes at this
+moment."</p>
+
+<p>"You are rattled yourself, Lawson. There's no need for excitement. I
+merely offered the suggestion. Everything is going well," he reassured
+me, but the picture his words conjured before my mind disturbed me all
+day. That he would dare do what he had suggested I did not credit, for
+the as<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_354" id="Page_354">[354]</a></span>surances I had were too solemn to allow me to believe such
+treachery could be meditated. Nevertheless I brooded over the matter,
+and late in the afternoon ran down to 26 Broadway, ostensibly to hear
+the latest news from the bank, but really to try if I could not look
+into Mr. Rogers' head and see if the imps I had sighted early in the day
+were still there.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Rogers was over with Stillman at the bank. In half an hour he came
+in, and the excitement he labored under was plainly evident in his face.</p>
+
+<p>"Lawson," he said, "no one has ever seen anything like this before.
+Stillman is bewildered. He says it looks as though by to-morrow there
+will be a mob around the bank doors, and if between now and then
+anything unusual should happen, there'll be the devil to pay sure. I
+tell you I'm so tired out that I'm going home now to rest up."</p>
+
+<p>Together we went uptown on the Elevated, and when I left him at
+Thirty-third Street to cross over to my hotel, somehow the dark
+forebodings of the morning had been lulled by his frank geniality and
+carried away by his enthusiastic rejoicings in the success of our
+enterprise. The picture of that soft spring evening hangs in my memory's
+gallery&mdash;the declining sun seen through a long perspective of gilded
+brick and brownstone fa&ccedil;ades, the heavy rumble of trains, the clamor of
+newsboys crying last editions, the packed cable-cars slowly threading
+their way amid the hurrying crowds of clerks and shop girls streaming
+homeward, the cabs swinging in and out of the throng, through whose
+windows I caught glimpses of jewels on bare shoulders, light silks, and
+sweeping plumes&mdash;the butterflies of fashion or folly hurrying out on
+their evening trysts. Broadway, with its hundreds of sights and sounds,
+was before me in the hour of its transformation, the street lamps
+breaking into incandescence, and the huge electric signs beginning to
+glare above the theatre entrances. By the time I reached the Waldorf,
+that high abode of Yankee royalty, the kinks and curlicues were so far
+ironed from my nerves and brain that I had little doubt of my ability to
+take a fall out of Fate in whatever sort of collar-and-elbow tussle she
+might designate. In this mood I swung into the huge hotel through the
+carriage entrance on Thirty-fourth<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_355" id="Page_355">[355]</a></span> Street, eager to forget myself amid
+the rapt concourse of dollar worshippers, preening themselves against
+the plush, onyx, and gildings of the Astor caravansary. I seemed to see
+in the mirrors, on the walls, on the buttons of the lackeys' livery, in
+the patterns of the rugs, inscribed on the tessellated floors and
+painted on the lofty ceilings, dazzling and glittering, the universal
+crest of the twisted S with its two upright bars.</p>
+
+<p><i>Dollars, dollars, dollars.</i></p>
+
+<p>Through the office I pushed, my path disputed by the hosts of Cr&#339;sus
+in ambush for market information. Colonels and generals of the
+almighty-dollar army were on either flank of me, and the air was thick
+with the echo and the rumor of millions. At last I found myself in the
+high and splendid room, with its tall windows elaborately curtained with
+velvet, its floor space studded with small tables, where after four
+o'clock any afternoon, the year round, you will find the active Wall
+Street contingent busily discussing the day's doings and plotting good
+or evil for the morrow. There they all were, that eventful evening, in
+parties of seven or eight clustered at the little tables, and as I
+entered a vigorous hail caught my ear and again I found myself
+surrounded.</p>
+
+<p>"Sit down a minute, Lawson," said ex-Congressman Jefferson M.
+Levy&mdash;"Jeff Levy" in Wall Street&mdash;"and tell us about Amalgamated. I
+suppose there's not a chance to get what one wants unless one subscribes
+for five or ten times more than one needs, but if you say that's
+straight, I'll put in another subscription for &mdash;&mdash;."</p>
+
+<p>In the group were sitting "Harry" Weil, who time and again has tied tin
+cans to Wall Street's tail; big, bluff, honest "Billy" Oliver, whose
+"I'll take ten thousand more" is as familiar to Stock Exchange members
+as the sound of the gong; and little "Jakey" Field, most audacious and
+resourceful of floor operators, graduated but a few years ago from the
+ranks of Wall Street's errand boys&mdash;"Jakey" Field, who is able
+single-handed to turn a "bear" market in a rout by "bidding 'em up all
+round the room five thousand at a crack"&mdash;which means he dares buy one
+hundred thousand shares off the reel in a demoralized market when every<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_356" id="Page_356">[356]</a></span>
+one is selling, thus standing to make or lose a million or two on his
+judgment.</p>
+
+<p>They listened, breathless, while I poured out the story of the terrific
+rush of Amalgamated subscribers. Another group hailed me and I recounted
+the same story. So it went all over the busy assemblage&mdash;"<i>dollars,
+dollars, dollars</i>," how to get them, how to get them quick. The money
+talk ebbed and flowed; the chink of dollars echoed in the rattle of
+china, in the tinkling of glasses, in the laughs and salutations, in the
+shuffle of feet. It was the one word, the single theme, the alpha and
+omega of all these men of talent and virility who accorded me
+recognition as one of themselves and assumed that I, too, was crucified
+to the two bars on the snaky S; the whole thing was so interesting that
+I lost sight of the terrible seriousness of it, and I chuckled as one
+does when one sits on the cool grass under the apple-trees in summer and
+watches myriads of ants hustling and jostling and bumping over each
+other to get away with what to humans is but a tiny grain of dirt.</p>
+
+<p>As I arose to go at last, the head waiter came forward and led me into a
+corner, where his assistant and the chef awaited me. All with tremendous
+earnestness asked, "Is it safe, Mr. Lawson, for us to put our savings in
+Amalgamated?" They took my breath away by telling me they proposed to
+subscribe for one thousand, five hundred, and two hundred shares each,
+$100,000, $50,000, and $20,000 worth, if I but said the word.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Dollars, dollars, dollars</i>" beat a tattoo on my ear-drums as the rain
+used to on the roof at the old farmhouse.</p>
+
+<p>A moment later Manager Thomas of the great hotel slipped up to me. "I'm
+in for a thousand or two, if you say the word," he whispered. At dinner
+my old waiter, who I would have sworn did not know a stock certificate
+from a dog license, bent over respectfully to tell me that twenty of the
+boys had chipped in and desired me to take their thousand dollars and
+put it up for two hundred shares&mdash;$20,000 worth more. Room Clerk Palmer
+called over to me as I went by his desk a moment later to say he was
+going in for three hundred shares if it broke him. And so it
+went<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_357" id="Page_357">[357]</a></span>&mdash;bell-boys, chambermaids, valets, elevator men, all begging an
+interview, and all with the same request&mdash;"Would I not put their savings
+into this magic money-maker?"</p>
+
+<p>All were friends or prot&eacute;g&eacute;s of mine, these managers, clerks, stewards,
+and waiters. Their money was more sacred to me than my own. I had been
+instrumental in bringing many of them up to the palace of American
+dollar royalty from the old Brunswick, and I would rather have lost a
+finger any day than have jeopardized their savings. For all of them I
+had but one answer: "Go your limit."</p>
+
+<p>I looked over the memoranda and telegrams piled high on the table in my
+room, all recording the whirlwind sweep of this tremendous copper
+movement that I had set a-booming.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Dollars, dollars, dollars.</i>"</p>
+
+<p>Requests from friends for some of the easy money I was dispensing to the
+public, appeals from old associates for special allotments of the
+subscription, urgent petitions from capitalists and bankers with whom I
+had business relations that their bids for shares should have
+preference, perfumed notes on tinted paper in feminine handwriting
+begging aid, advice, my influence, on a hundred specious pleas. It
+seemed to me that all the world was in a conspiracy of dollars and I the
+one object of its plotting. For a moment there overcame me a sickening
+disgust at this universal greed, at this all-absorbing passion for gold
+which my momentary pre-eminence revealed to my view. Then sanity
+asserted itself, and I remembered that if there was a conspiracy I was
+its ringleader, that I myself for months past had thought intensely of
+nothing but dollars. Why, then, should I resent the eager desires of
+others to attach to their own bank accounts some of the money which I
+was proclaiming from the housetops any one who desired might have for
+the asking? Many of these men, moreover, who sought my assurance of the
+safety of their little ventures, had earned the private word by
+thoughtful service and friendly attentions. Dollars were food and drink
+and fine raiment; were music, pictures, and theatres; were horses and
+dogs; were green fields, blossoming trees, and the open air of heaven;
+were liberty, re<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_358" id="Page_358">[358]</a></span>lease from sordid cares, from servitude&mdash;and why should
+I, who had helped myself in bountiful measure to the good things in
+life's cornucopia, feel superior when confronted by the lusts I myself
+had been instrumental in arousing? I laughed at my egregious virtue and
+dropped off to sleep.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_359" id="Page_359">[359]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXVI</h2>
+
+<h3>DEVILTRY AFOOT</h3>
+
+
+<p>Thursday, May 4, 1899, dawned as fair a spring morning as ever set off
+sacrificial rite or triumphal jubilee&mdash;a day of buoyant, delicious airs
+which set the blood throbbing in the veins and ambition thrilling in the
+heart&mdash;a day for action, achievement, for wild gallops along country
+lanes, for swift motion on land or water. I looked out of my lofty
+parlor window far up Fifth Avenue's long vista of mansions and palaces
+to where the sunlight glittered on the tender verdancy of Central Park.
+A trickle of cabs and carriages headed southward already had begun the
+descent to Wall Street. Almost the first call over the telephone came
+from Mr. Rogers, asking for the morning's news. I told him there was not
+a cloud on our sky, not a single breeze but blew from the right quarter
+to fill our sails. "And what were my movements?" To stick to my rooms
+right handy for anything. Was there a sinister thought, I wonder, behind
+the "Good, I agree with you," that came back from him in his heartiest
+tones? "I will look after things down-town and we can keep each other
+posted at near intervals."</p>
+
+<p>It was as busy a forenoon as man ever lived through. My Boston wire kept
+up a constant ringing; Chicago, Philadelphia, and other long distance
+points showered in messages. A direct wire to Wall Street informed me of
+the progress of events in the financial maelstrom. All went merrily and
+well. It was nearing noon when a lull came; I was sitting back in my
+chair enjoying the sudden cessation of clatter and buzzing, thinking
+that after all my forebodings our ship was headed right for harbor and
+in a few moments would<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_360" id="Page_360">[360]</a></span> be across the bar and into smooth water, when a
+sharp ring at the telephone summoned me back to attention. 'Twas from 26
+Broadway, from whom it doesn't matter for the purpose of this story.
+Suffice it to say that it was from one who, because of past acts of
+mine, would make any sacrifice to warn me of danger. Only a few words,
+for he who sends secret messages from the mysterious depths of 26
+Broadway, even to dwellers on its threshold, is wise in remembering that
+brevity is the essence of safety&mdash;but were few words ever charged with
+such damnable import? This is what I heard:</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Stillman has just left Mr. Rogers and there is deviltry afoot. You
+cannot get to him any too quick." "One word of its nature?" I whispered
+back. "They are going to grab more than five millions of the
+subscription money."</p>
+
+<p>I hung up the receiver. The face of my world had changed. To choke back
+the passion of fury that rose in my throat I went over to the open
+window and looked out at the brilliant world below, at the procession of
+pleasure carriages rolling up and down the Avenue, the sunlight flashing
+from gold-mounted harness and shining on the sleek, polished flanks of
+splendid horses. A gay rumble of traffic, the murmur of voices, the
+clangor of street-car bells were borne in to me on the mellow air. But
+for me the light had fled and the May world was black and freezing cold.</p>
+
+<p>The grim agony of that moment's silence I shall never forget. I jumped
+for the door; a second's delay to tell my secretary to catch me with any
+important messages at Mr. Rogers' office, and I was flying down Fifth
+Avenue through Washington Square, and down the back streets my cabby
+knew so well how to make time on. When the recording angel calls off
+page after page of my life-book and comes to the black one covering that
+ride, I fear 'twill be no easy task excusing the murderous passion that
+filled my heart and the poison-steeped curses my lips involuntarily
+formed. After an eternity I was at 26 Broadway. I flew to the elevator,
+was on the eleventh floor in an instant, bolted by Fred, the colored
+usher who guards Mr. Rogers' sanctum,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_361" id="Page_361">[361]</a></span> and strode, without knock or
+announcement, into the large private office beyond. Mr. Rogers was alone
+with his secretary, who at my first words shot out of the room. He was
+bending over a stack of papers, and as I landed at his desk he looked up
+quickly, and in a surprised way asked:</p>
+
+<p>"What does this mean, Lawson?"</p>
+
+<p>No one ever enters Mr. Rogers' room without his permission.</p>
+
+<p>"It means that I have just learned that you and Stillman have decided to
+break your solemn promise to me." I tried to control myself, but the
+seethe of rage almost choked me. "It means that you have decided to take
+more of that subscription money than the five millions we agreed upon,
+and that means hell."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Rogers stood up, his jaws set as in their last hold, and,
+recognizing the crisis, he met me, not with the fierce anger I half
+expected and hoped he would show, but with quiet earnestness.</p>
+
+<p>"Stop just there, Lawson&mdash;remember you are in my office. Who gave you
+this tale?"</p>
+
+<p>"Never mind. Is it true? Are you going to break your promise to me? Do
+you intend to allot the public more than five millions?"</p>
+
+<p>He hesitated only a second. Just a second, but it seemed an age; then
+slowly and calmly: "Yes, it has been decided that considering the
+tremendous number and amounts of the subscription it will be best to
+give them more."</p>
+
+<p>"How much more?" I shouted, for I was beside myself.</p>
+
+<p>"Ten millions in all," he slowly answered.</p>
+
+<p>"Who has decided?"</p>
+
+<p>"Every one, Mr. Rockefeller, Stillman, all of us."</p>
+
+<p>"All of us? Have <i>I</i> been consulted? Have <i>I</i> decided? Have <i>I</i>
+consented to the breaking of your word, Mr. Rockefeller's word? What
+have Stillman and the rest to say about this? What have they to do with
+the promises I have made the people? I have been trapped just as all the
+others you and I have dealt with have been trapped. I see it all now.
+Trapped, trapped until now it is too late for me even to save my
+reputation. To think I should have been fool enough to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_362" id="Page_362">[362]</a></span> allow myself to
+be made a stool-pigeon for 'Standard Oil,' and all because I took your
+word."</p>
+
+<p>My rage was exhausted, and then, heartbroken, I turned and plead, plead
+for fair treatment, for an honest deal for my friends and
+associates&mdash;plead for my good name in his keeping&mdash;plead as I never
+before plead to any man. I had lost control of myself&mdash;begged as no man
+should beg another even for life, though the things I sought were more
+than life. He calmly awaited the end of my feverish, broken petition;
+then he went to work as the expert diamond cutter goes at a crystal. He
+focussed my position, twisted and turned my arguments, chipped and split
+my reasoning, smoothed off the corners, and then polished up the subject
+so that it might retain its old-time lustre for the bedazzlement of the
+customer whose favorable decision he meant to have.</p>
+
+<p>As ever, Mr. Rogers' arguments were plausible and intelligent. The
+subscriptions were coming in at such a rate it would be dangerous to
+allot as little as five millions; there might be talk, and an
+investigation which would so affect the market later that we could have
+no second section. Then where should we be with our millions of Butte,
+Montana, and other Boston stocks? And where would our friends be&mdash;and
+the public? On and on he spun, lulling my fagged brain with his specious
+arguments until the change of plan seemed robbed of its poison and I
+swallowed it.</p>
+
+<p>"Lawson," he concluded, "every dollar of the additional five millions
+will be kept intact and, with the first five millions, will be at all
+times behind the price, and as you are going to have the handling of it
+how can there be any wrong or any more danger because of it than if it
+were only five millions?"</p>
+
+<p>I gave in, agreed to go back to the Waldorf and take hold of the lever
+again. I left him, driving uptown by way of Broad and Wall streets so I
+might see the crowds outside the Stock Exchange and in front of James
+Stillman's money trap. By the time I reached the hotel I had recovered
+some of my optimism, and went to work to catch up with the mail and
+messages accumulated in my absence. At three o'clock<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_363" id="Page_363">[363]</a></span> I called up Mr.
+Rogers. He was very jubilant. At the stroke of twelve, he told me, it
+required four big policemen to close the bank doors in the faces of
+hundreds of belated subscribers; that it had been decided that those
+inside the building were legally entitled to pass in their subscriptions
+and at that moment they were still doing so. Sacks of mail still awaited
+opening; it would be well toward midnight before the last of the
+subscriptions were tabulated. Stillman was making a tremendous effort to
+get at an approximate statement in time for me to deal it out to the
+newspapers before they went to press at midnight.</p>
+
+<p>"How does it look to Stillman now?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>"He cannot tell much about it yet," Mr. Rogers replied, "although he can
+see far enough ahead to be sure even your estimate was too low. It will
+be at least fifty millions."</p>
+
+<p>"And about our big subscription&mdash;have you and Mr. Rockefeller put it in
+yet?" I asked, and how I strained for his answer! I well knew they had
+not done so, knew they would think it safe to wait until the final tally
+to see just how much they must put in to get their $65,000,000, which
+would thus leave the public $10,000,000.</p>
+
+<p>"Not yet," he returned. "It's all right, but we can do nothing till
+Stillman gives us the total. He says there are millions and millions of
+such a nature that he can easily throw them out. At four o'clock we will
+have a meeting and figure out the best way to fix this matter up."</p>
+
+<p>He saw no danger spot. I felt anyway his error was beyond correction
+now. I told him I would be at his office by five, so that we could
+arrange how much the press should have of our affair.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_364" id="Page_364">[364]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXVII</h2>
+
+<h3>THE BLACK FLAG HOISTED</h3>
+
+
+<p>It was a little after five when I reached 26 Broadway&mdash;my second visit
+that day. Mr. Rogers was still at the bank. Half an hour later he
+entered and threw himself wearily into a chair.</p>
+
+<p>"Lawson, this is a fitting climax for all the stories you have been
+telling Mr. Rockefeller and myself and the public for the past year
+about 'Coppers.' I have talked with the Lewisohns, Governor Flower,
+Morgan, and many others, and I have just come from an hour with Stillman
+and we are all agreed this Amalgamated subscription is the greatest
+accomplishment in finance. It is truly marvellous. The bank is literally
+buried in money, and as near as we can make it out, the stock to be
+delivered when allotted is actually selling at forty to fifty dollars
+over the subscription price. The job is done, and you and I have good
+reason to congratulate each other."</p>
+
+<p>"I am not so sure, Mr. Rogers, that we should, right now. There's lots
+of work ahead, and we may strike big snags yet," I began. He interrupted
+impatiently:</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, no, you're wrong, Lawson! We have the money safely housed at the
+bank. Nothing can now turn it into failure."</p>
+
+<p>There was a new note in his voice as he spoke. Tired though he was, I
+detected a sharpness that seemed to indicate at once a relief and an
+indifference which said plainer than words: "I am now beyond all your
+power to hurt or harm me." I went on:</p>
+
+<p>"I don't want to bring up any new things to-day, for you must be tired
+out, Mr. Rogers, but surely you are taking<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_365" id="Page_365">[365]</a></span> into consideration that
+unless everything is steered carefully to-morrow and for some time to
+come, we may have a crash in the market which will throw back on our
+hands the ten millions of stock, and it might take us years to bring out
+the other section. Don't lose sight of the fact that the people are all
+expecting to see fifty or one hundred points profit to-morrow on
+whatever stock they secure."</p>
+
+<p>As I talked I saw that he was getting impatient, irritated, angry, that
+he wanted to hear of no more unfavorable things.</p>
+
+<p>"Good Lord, Lawson, it is about time for you to let up on your croaking
+about what may happen. You have done a big thing and you have been paid
+handsomely; you have made millions, and we have just now decided that
+you are entitled to a good rest. Governor Flower has agreed to take
+charge of the market end and he is amply able to keep us out of all
+trouble in that direction."</p>
+
+<p>A cold chill struck into my heart and crept over my whole being. I
+looked straight at him and he gave me back the look with a defiance
+which plainly said that we might as well have it out now as any other
+time.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Rockefeller and myself have tried to play fair with you, Lawson,
+and we think we have been generous, but at times you have been almost
+intolerable. The only way you know how to do things is to do them your
+own way, and we cannot do business except in our way. This morning you
+kicked up a disturbance because we decided to adjust ourselves to
+conditions as they arose. I did tell you five millions would be all we
+would sell, but when we agreed to that we had no idea the subscription
+would be so large. Since then we have got far enough to see that the
+subscription will run even beyond fifty millions, and you may as well
+hear now that in consequence it has been decided by every one interested
+with the exception of yourself to raise it still another five millions,
+that is, fifteen millions instead of ten, and I don't want to go through
+any more scenes about broken promises and what the people will think,
+either. The people have gone into this thing with their eyes wide open;
+we are giving them good value; you are in no way their guardian, and you
+are not going to run this<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_366" id="Page_366">[366]</a></span> affair any more than others who are
+interested. You may as well make up your mind to it right now."</p>
+
+<p>He let himself go as he talked, breathing fire and defiance, but I cared
+nothing for all the terrors of his anger. A blind fury seized me&mdash;I
+don't believe there was ever such a scene before at 26 Broadway, and I
+think it has had but one parallel since, when Mr. Rogers and myself
+again had it out over another matter. This time there were no pleas or
+petitions. I denounced, demanded, threatened. He had straight and strong
+my version of the vampire history of "Standard Oil," and also in rough,
+crude terms my opinion of his trickery and double-dealing. My voice was
+raised. I had lost all thought of what his people in the outer office
+would think. As I went on he wilted and tried to stop me, for I had
+shown him, until he knew it was so, that nothing but my death before I
+left the building would prevent me from taking the whole miserable
+affair, first to the newspapers, and then to the courts. I proved to him
+that I would have injunctions against Stillman, the National City Bank,
+and every one in interest, before the allotment could be made. Gradually
+his rage subsided and he broke down&mdash;not as other men break down, but as
+much as it is possible for his stern nature to give way. We remained
+there until seven o'clock. The building was as still as a set
+mouse-trap, and he strove with me. Such action, he demonstrated, would
+precipitate a panic. His argument was perfect in its logic.</p>
+
+<p>"Not one man in a million, Lawson, will agree with you that you are
+justified in bringing about all this disaster simply because you think
+that we are taking too much of the cash that has been voluntarily paid
+in by people well able to attend to their own affairs. You must remember
+once this scandal and trouble are public they never can be smothered.
+There can be no more consolidation, no more copper boom in your lifetime
+and mine, and when the collapse comes every one will look for the
+victim, and that victim will be you. Even your best friend will say if
+you were going to turn informer you should have been smart enough to
+have discovered your mare's nest before you let<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_367" id="Page_367">[367]</a></span> it grow so big. Look at
+it, Lawson, look at it, and in the name of everything that is reasonable
+get back your senses."</p>
+
+<p>My readers must remember that the Henry H. Rogers I am portraying here
+is no ordinary man, but the strongest, most acute, and most persuasive
+human being that in the thirty-five active years of my life I have
+encountered. And on me all the magic of his wonderful individuality, all
+the resources of his fertile mind, all the histrionic power of his
+dramatic personality were concentrated. His logic was resistless. As he
+spun the web of his argument my position seemed hopeless; even more
+forcible than his reasoning was the graphic recital of how both
+increases had been made. His eyes watered as he spoke. They were not his
+proposals, but Stillman's and the others' who had been let in on the
+several floors, but to whom he had never explained my rights nor my
+position in the enterprise.</p>
+
+<p>"The truth is, Lawson," he said&mdash;"and I'll not mince matters further:
+From the beginning I have done business with you on a basis entirely
+different from that on which it is our rule to deal with agents or
+associates. At the start I expected that you would, as all others have
+done, fall into our ways. Instead, you have grown more stubborn, and the
+result is, I have been forced into all kinds of holes, some of which I
+have not even let William Rockefeller know about. Here at last I am in
+between the grinders. I cannot go to such men as Stillman and Morgan and
+admit that you are the one who has been doing this copper business that
+I have had them think I was doing myself. You would not ask me to put
+myself in such a humiliating position. Think what John D. Rockefeller
+would say of such a confession. It's impossible. And when these
+associates of mine get down to this matter and all agree upon the way it
+should be closed up, what can I do but go with them? If they knew the
+facts it would be easy to run you in between us, and then you would
+either have to convince them or give way yourself, but this is not
+possible here."</p>
+
+<p>The straight and narrow way is easy to follow, but once lost is hard to
+find. The defaulting bank president who over<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_368" id="Page_368">[368]</a></span>night "borrows" a few
+thousands from his institution, fully intends to return the "loan" next
+day, but repairing an error is even more difficult than resisting a
+temptation, and when a man is in crime's net, his struggles to escape
+seem only to tighten around him its meshes. When the incidents of his
+downfall are before the jury or the coroner, there will always appear a
+dozen places where the unfortunate might have cut his way out of the
+strangling coils, but he who surveys such situations from the outside
+has a clearer vision than the blinded and desperate wretch in the trap.
+He who enlists with the brigands of "frenzied finance" and takes the
+oath of addition, division, and silence cannot discharge himself because
+his comrades are needlessly harsh to their victims. Eventually he may
+decide on desertion as preferable to throat-cutting, but to suggest
+resignation is to invite destruction, for it is a tradition of the
+fraternity that the best cure for repentance is a knife-thrust.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Rogers and myself wrestled with the situation until both were fairly
+exhausted. Finally we went uptown together; he home, to return later to
+the bank, I to the Waldorf to meet the newspaper men who were there
+awaiting the news of the subscription. I left him at Thirty-third
+Street, the question between us still unsolved. In the years that have
+passed since that ill-starred night, over and over again I have sifted
+and pounded the talk that then passed between us, and never have I been
+able to decide how much of what Mr. Rogers said to me was true and how
+much cunning argument to make me accede to his wishes. I hope none of my
+readers will ever find themselves so caught between the high cliffs and
+the deep water as I was that night. I recalled the old story of the
+sea-captain whose ship was captured by pirates and who was offered the
+alternative of hoisting the black flag and joining the band with his
+crew, or walking the plank. If he became a pirate, at least he saved the
+lives of his men, for their fate hung on his decision. If he
+refused&mdash;well, he retained his own virtue and kept intact that of his
+crew. The captain in my story had preferred propriety to piracy, and
+fifteen men lost their lives to no purpose, whereas the part of wisdom
+would have been<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_369" id="Page_369">[369]</a></span> to submit, with reservations, on the chance of throwing
+the pirates to the sharks at the first opportunity. If I should throw
+the bomb that I had threatened Rogers with, I felt sure it would put an
+end to all his evil machinations, but I could not limit the area of
+destruction to the guilty. I let my mind dwell on Mr. Rogers' words:
+"Lawson, no harm can come to your people, for the fifteen millions will
+be used in the market to protect the stock, just as I promised you." If
+this promise were kept, what was there to fear? But would it be kept? In
+the face of the evidence of broken pledges already crowded on me, and
+the bitter knowledge I had acquired of the wolfish greed of this man and
+his associates, it would be paltering with facts to say that even then I
+felt certain the money would be so used. Yet "Standard Oil" avoids such
+direct illegality as might bring it within the law's clutches, and I
+knew that already a fraud had been committed. I might hold that over
+them and compel them to go straight. Then I recalled the passion that
+possessed them to grab at real money when it came within their clutches,
+and the "Governor Flower to handle the market in such a way that no harm
+can come to us."</p>
+
+<p>I carried my heart-tearing perplexities to dinner, cogitated over the
+arguments pro and con, and finally made up my mind that the percentage
+of wisdom was in favor of sticking by the ship. On board I was in better
+shape to protect my friends and followers than if I jumped into the
+ocean. Time has shown since that it would have been far better for all
+concerned for me to have touched off the powder magazine that night, had
+one grand and glorious explosion, and gone down with the wreckage, than
+to have sailed through the hell of after years. I am not the first man
+who has balked at amputation and got blood-poisoning.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_370" id="Page_370">[370]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXVIII</h2>
+
+<h3>THE BOGUS SUBSCRIPTION</h3>
+
+
+<p>Later, on his way downtown, Mr. Rogers came to my rooms.</p>
+
+<p>"Are you ready for the finals, Lawson?" he said cordially. He, too, had
+dined, and doubtless philosophized; his whole air showed me he had
+satisfied himself that I would submit to the logic of conditions. No man
+knows the human animal from his heart's seed to its bloom better than
+Henry H. Rogers&mdash;and I was human.</p>
+
+<p>I told him I would hold the reporters until I got the word from him, and
+that it must not be later than midnight. No questions were asked nor
+assurances given. He left in a moment for the National City Bank, and
+there in its solemn chambers he and James Stillman perpetrated the act
+which is the crime of Amalgamated, in itself a stark and palpable fraud,
+but aggravated by the standing of the men concerned in it, and the
+pledges that were slaughtered, into as arrant and damnable piece of
+financial villany as was ever committed.</p>
+
+<p>About eleven o'clock my telephone rang. I heard Mr. Rogers' voice.</p>
+
+<p>"Lawson, Stillman's tally is so far completed that we know about where
+we are. Give out to the press that the subscription runs between four
+hundred and four hundred and twenty-five millions, call it four hundred
+and twelve millions, after throwing out one hundred and seventy millions
+from speculators, and sixty-two millions as defective, and after
+shutting out fifty millions more which were received too late. Each
+subscriber will be allotted fifteen to twenty per cent. of his
+subscription&mdash;call it eighteen per cent."</p>
+
+<p>The figures were paralyzing. I made no attempt to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_371" id="Page_371">[371]</a></span> analyze them. They
+came so late that as soon as the newspaper-men with me got them they
+flew to their offices and thus I escaped a strenuous ordeal of
+interviewing. Our arrangements for distributing the facts throughout the
+country were made through the <i>Boston Financial News</i>, to which we had
+given the exclusive right to send out the details, and its special wires
+were soon clicking the news to all the world. The next morning the press
+contained the particulars. I reproduce from the papers of May 5th the
+tale.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<div class="blockquot"><h2>$412,000,000 FOR AMALGAMATED COPPERS</h2>
+
+<h3>$75,000,000 Subscribed More Than Five Times Over</h3>
+
+<h3>FINANCIAL WORLD COPPER MAD</h3>
+
+<p>Subscriptions of $412,000,000&mdash;the largest in any financial
+deal in the world's history&mdash;are reported by the <i>Boston
+Financial News</i> to have been received toward the Amalgamated
+Company. "The world has gone copper mad" in truth.</p>
+
+<p>Subscribers can be allotted only eighteen one-hundredths, or
+less than one share in five of the amount applied for.</p>
+
+<p>One week ago, says the report, it was announced that the
+Standard Oil magnates, Rogers, Rockefeller, and their
+associates, had begun their conquering march upon
+copperdom&mdash;that the much heralded copper consolidation was a
+thing of fact&mdash;that the Amalgamated Company had been
+incorporated, and that its first capital, $75,000,000, would
+be offered to the public by subscription through the
+National City Bank of New York at $100 per share&mdash;$100 per
+share, without a discount, a commission, or profit to any
+one.</p>
+
+<p>Never before since the first dollar of civilization was
+invented to take the place of the stone tokens of barbarism
+had such a thing been heard of&mdash;$75,000,000 of stock to be
+sold to investors at $100 per share, and in one week after
+the birth of the corporation upon which it was based.</p>
+
+<p>The financial world held its breath, and from that time up
+to the closing of the books of subscription, at twelve
+o'clock noon yesterday, the financial world, English,
+German, and French, have awaited with bated breath the
+outcome of this great feat of modern financiering.</p>
+
+<p>During the entire week from all parts of the world have
+poured into the National City Bank applications, accompanied
+by checks for the first payment&mdash;one continuous stream of
+entreaties&mdash;for some of the shares of this great enterprise.
+Nothing in history tells of such a movement.</p>
+
+<p>Early in the week it became evident to the managers of the
+great industrial revolution that something must be done to
+stop the movement or it would run to such an extent as to
+cause serious trouble in the money markets of the world.
+Since Monday most strenuous efforts have been made to
+discourage the taking of large subscriptions. To that end
+the powerful financiers interested have begged all who
+contemplated subscribing for over $1,000,000 to keep their
+applications down to that figure, and their efforts met with
+complete success.</p>
+
+<p>Again, all those who were connected with the enterprise and
+who had intended subscribing on the same basis as outsiders
+for very large amounts, agreed that if the subscription ran
+over $150,000,000 they would refrain from subscribing that
+those who had subscribed would not become dissatisfied with
+the smallness of their allotment. Still the rush continued.
+From all financial centres of the world came the unbroken
+chain of applications, until those most interested in the
+success of the undertaking were appalled at the magnitude of
+the interest aroused.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_372" id="Page_372">[372]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>For the past forty-eight hours the National City Bank has
+had employed, night and day, a corps of forty-odd extra
+clerks calculating and arranging the applications and
+checks. At exactly twelve o'clock noon four uniformed
+watchmen closed the doors of the subscription department of
+the City Bank in the face of over three hundred intending
+subscribers, who were frantic at their vain efforts to get
+in their subscriptions before the appointed hour arrived.</p>
+
+<p>Up to eleven o'clock to-night the entire bank force, regular
+and extra, have been at work, and at this hour the figures
+were announced which make the subscription of the
+Amalgamated Copper the greatest event in finance since the
+world began.</p>
+
+<p>After throwing out bids that were, on examination, proved to
+be the efforts of speculators to take advantage of the great
+interest to make money with no risk, and after throwing out
+bids unaccompanied by checks, or checks that were not
+satisfactory, the first class amounting to over
+$170,000,000, and the last to over $62,000,000, the total
+cash subscription was found to have reached the gigantic sum
+of $412,000,000, which gave to each and every subscriber
+eighteen per cent. of his subscription.</p>
+
+<p>It is not known how much was represented in the 300
+subscribers who were too late, but it is estimated at
+$50,000,000&mdash;five of the 300 had single subscriptions of
+$1,000,000 each. It is estimated that the sum total of the
+subscriptions that were thrown out or that arrived by
+messenger or mail&mdash;for the mail is still pouring into the
+bank&mdash;was between $300,000,000 and $400,000,000, which,
+added to what insiders had intended to secure for
+themselves, would have carried the total to over
+$1,000,000,000.</p>
+
+<p>It is estimated also that there are a great many who,
+anticipating the enormous over-subscriptions, have refrained
+from subscribing and will purchase in the open market.</p>
+
+<p>Immediately after the subscription closed, 140, or forty per
+cent. premium, was bid for the stock secured by the lucky
+bidders.</p>
+
+<p>It is said the company will issue the next $100,000,000 at
+once, as those insiders who refrained from subscribing were
+practically promised that they would at once be given an
+equal opportunity to subscribe if they would hold back on
+this issue. It is apparent that the next subscription will
+be even greater and cause more excitement than the first
+one, particularly as it is agreed by all that the price of
+the stock will quickly mount to $200 per share, as it is to
+be put upon the English, German, French, New York, and
+Boston Stock Exchanges, and will undoubtedly become one of
+the greatest investments sought for by the wealthy classes.</p>
+
+<p>England sent in subscriptions for $50,000,000; Germany and
+France, $20,000,000 each; Boston and New England showed
+their steadfast faith in copper by subscribing for over
+$200,000,000.</p>
+
+<p>There is great excitement at the clubs and meeting-places of
+investors and brokers to-night.</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>Here is what Mr. Rogers and Mr. Stillman did. After discarding all
+unsatisfactory and imperfect subscriptions, there remained subscriptions
+of between $125,000,000 and $150,000,000 which had complied with all
+legal conditions, and accompanying these were checks aggregating between
+$6,250,000 and $7,500,000. This was real money, in the bank and within
+reach, and the two great financiers, hungering for every dollar of it,
+determined to possess themselves of this great sum and use it as surety
+to compel the payment of the balance. First, they agreed that not a
+dollar of the five per cent. subscription should be returned; next, to
+so use this amount that no one to whom stock was allotted would back
+out, but, on the contrary, promptly take his whole allotment and pay up
+the balance. To effect this they decided to allot each subscriber just
+the number of shares of Amalgamated necessary to render the amount of
+money<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_373" id="Page_373">[373]</a></span> accompanying his subscription equal to about a twenty-five or
+thirty per cent. payment on his whole allotment. This would constitute
+such a large margin as to assure the payment of the other seventy or
+seventy-five per cent. due. For instance, a man who applied for a
+hundred shares accompanied his subscription with a check for $500. He
+was allotted twenty shares, value $2,000, on which his $500 check
+represented a payment of twenty-five per cent. If the conditions of the
+National City Bank's advertisement had been complied with, he was
+absolutely entitled to three shares of every five subscribed for, or
+sixty in all. To bring about the proportion which Mr. Rogers wanted, a
+bogus subscription of five or six times the unallotted balance was put
+in by him, and this is where the fraud was committed. The National City
+Bank was in duty bound to protect the public from any such bogus
+subscription, and to see that fair treatment was accorded to all
+subscribers. Yet, unfaithful to the trust, it permitted this bogus
+subscription to be put in, many hours after the bids had been opened. It
+utterly failed to comply with the conditions of its advertisement, and
+was thus a direct party to the fraud perpetrated by its president and
+Mr. Rogers. The exact amount of the bogus subscription could not be
+decided until the exact figures of the subscriptions had been compiled,
+so the figures I gave out that night were only estimates. Within the
+next few days it was ascertained that the genuine subscriptions totalled
+$132,067,500, upon which an allotment of one share in five, or
+$26,413,500 of stock altogether, was made to the public.</p>
+
+<p>In this way the conspirators secured from the public $26,413,500 of the
+original cost, $39,000,000, and yet retained over $48,500,000 of the
+authorized stock of $75,000,000. In other words the public paid
+two-thirds of the purchase price, and the conspirators retained nearly
+two-thirds of the property.</p>
+
+<p>The fraud thus perpetrated amounts to this: Every subscriber legally
+entitled to three shares of Amalgamated stock was deprived of two of
+them by the National City Bank, and the proof is to be found in the
+books of said National City Bank. My readers may say here that this
+constitutes a fortu<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_374" id="Page_374">[374]</a></span>nate condition rather than a crime to be punished,
+for the less Amalgamated a man had, the better he was off, as the stock
+afterward declined. This conclusion is a false one, however.</p>
+
+<p>Here, in simple terms, is an illustration of what was done in
+Amalgamated and of what the wrong was.</p>
+
+<p>B had a valuable race-horse and decided to dispose of him in five
+shares. He offered these five shares for public subscription and
+advertised that if over five were subscribed for he would split up the
+shares and allot them pro rata. There were on the final day seven
+subscriptions. Instead of turning over the horse to the seven
+subscribers to own and race in their own way, B notified them that
+twenty-one subscriptions had been received, and that for their seven he
+had allotted them a one-third ownership, while the other subscribers
+would retain two-thirds. In the two-thirds resided the right to manage
+and race the horse, and the seven had no say whatever in this direction.
+The seven honest subscribers, not suspecting that B had simply sold them
+one-third of his horse for nearly his whole cost, and that he still
+retained a two-thirds ownership in him, supposed that fourteen others
+had subscribed on the same terms as themselves. If the horse were really
+able to race and thereby earn large sums of money, it was by this fraud
+in B's power to make him appear so worthless that the seven bona-fide
+subscribers would be inclined to turn over their ownerships to B at his
+own figure. Contrariwise, B could so dose the horse as to make him
+appear more valuable than he really was, and use the advantage to
+dispose of his fourteen shares for fictitiously high prices.</p>
+
+<p>The world assumes an attitude of horror and amazement at the mention of
+crime, and thousands of words are written to describe what led up to and
+away from any given overt deed; but the deed itself, however grave,
+shameful, or portentous, seems strangely barren and bloodless set down
+in naked words. Yet the mountain peak that tops the great ranges is but
+a shoulder over its neighbor, though it may be the apex of a continent.
+A misconstrued word has caused the spilling of the blood of millions;
+the needle-point of a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_375" id="Page_375">[375]</a></span> stiletto has severed kingdoms. Between temptation
+and consequence there is but little space, yet it is deep and wide
+enough for all the poison in the tongues of all the world's serpents.
+To-day, a simple peasant, humble, gentle, is an insignificant atom in
+the great Russian Empire, and Nicholas is the supreme ruler of rulers.
+To-morrow, by a simple swing of an arm a bomb is thrown, and the peasant
+is the one human being in all the world; the face of Russia is changed,
+and Nicholas&mdash;is not.</p>
+
+<p>The first crime of Amalgamated is a matter of mathematics. It involved
+plain fraud and misrepresentation, the insertion of a bogus subscription
+and the disruption of solemn pledges, but the commission of it was
+nothing more than a matter of arrangement between two men, one the
+master of the greatest of all business organizations, and the other the
+head of the strongest bank in the United States. The consequences were
+world-wide. That night no bomb was thrown, but a seed was sown for the
+cruelest harvest of crime, dishonor, unhappiness, and desolation ever
+reaped within the confines of our republic.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p><span class="smcap">Note.</span>&mdash;The above statement has now been in the hands of the
+public, has been printed and commented on in thousands of
+the leading journals of the world for twelve months, and no
+Government official has taken cognizance of it. The charges
+I make constitute one of the gravest business crimes ever
+committed by any national bank. If they are true, the
+Government at Washington has no more important duty than to
+punish the criminals. If they are false, I should be sent to
+prison. What a commentary on our boasted freedom and
+equality! The National City Bank does business at the old
+stand. Rogers, Rockefeller and Stillman walk the streets; so
+do I, and since I published the above statement and
+submitted the above proof, at least half a dozen poor
+national bank clerks and officials who have stolen a few
+hundreds or thousands have been sent to prison, or have
+committed suicide to avoid being sent there.</p></div>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_376" id="Page_376">[376]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXIX</h2>
+
+<h3>THE AFTERMATH</h3>
+
+
+<p>It was just past the midnight of May 4th. The last newspaper-man had
+taken his departure, my friends had all retired, and I was alone for the
+first moment since the news had come from the City Bank. I had not then
+stopped to analyze its character, for there had been only time to
+announce it. Now, however, I sat down at my desk and with a pencil and a
+piece of paper began to cipher out what the "412 millions" meant. As I
+figured, cold sweat began to gather on my forehead, and the further I
+figured the colder the sweat, until at last in an agony of perplexity I
+again called up Mr. Rogers. My agitation must have betrayed itself in my
+voice, though I tried to assume a tone of calm inquiry.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Rogers," I said, "I've been vainly trying to figure out the meaning
+of the subscription figures you gave me and I cannot make head or tail
+of them. You said '400 to 425 millions'; of course that means you have
+put in our dummy subscription, but what was the real subscription? It is
+absolutely essential that I know to-night, for in the morning I shall be
+besieged for information, and ignorance on my part may get all hands
+into trouble."</p>
+
+<p>"Lawson," he replied, "you must not talk such things over the wire&mdash;you
+don't know who is listening. You must not."</p>
+
+<p>"I can't help it," I replied determinedly. "I positively must have the
+real figures, for even you and Mr. Stillman may have made a slip-up and
+I want to work the thing out so that I may have it clear in my head for
+the morning. It is essential."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_377" id="Page_377">[377]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>He realized that it was useless to try to escape my insistence, and he
+snapped out:</p>
+
+<p>"All I can say now is, it is between 125 and 150 millions real, solid
+subscriptions, backed with actual money. We haven't got it figured out
+within some millions, and won't before to-morrow, when we will put in
+our subscription for the right amount, but we know it is surely between
+these two figures, and that each subscriber will have about one share in
+five, so we shall have a good, strong twenty-five per cent. margin. That
+is all I will or can say to-night."</p>
+
+<p>I heard the sharp click as he hung up the receiver.</p>
+
+<p>I went back to my pencil and pad and began again the interminable
+figuring. My head throbbed and my senses reeled. In those still, dark
+hours of the early morning I covered sheet after sheet with figures, all
+of which had for a basis 125 to 150 millions, 400 to 425 millions, one
+in five, and twenty-five per cent. margin, and these figures I turned
+and twisted in a vain, vain effort to bring out something with fifteen
+millions for an answer.</p>
+
+<p>"No, it will not come," I said to myself at last in hopeless despair.</p>
+
+<p>Numb and dull, I leaned back in my chair with half-closed eyes, while
+night, that master phantom maker, played upon my harried nerves and
+distraught mind. Stealthily out of his murky caldron the ghosts and
+goblins crept. I saw the spectres of all my dearest dreams trail
+slouching by, jostled and driven by sneering bullies. I saw a great
+company of scowling men, wailing women, and little children, with drawn,
+pinched faces, and they seemed to point at me as they plodded past,
+muttering, "But for you." Then, to the clanking of chains, hoarse
+curses, and the sharp whip-snap, lines upon lines of men in striped
+suits, with cropped heads, and faces branded by despair, filed up.
+Faintly a mutter of sobs and groans echoed, "But for you." The clanking
+ceased; there came the slow shuffling of many feet, and a procession of
+men, bearing stretchers on which lay shrouded figures, advanced into
+view. Like a solemn knell upon my ear smote the reproach, "Suicides
+because of you." And now out of the caldron sprang a mob of goblin
+dollar-<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_378" id="Page_378">[378]</a></span>signs compounded of blood-red snakes and copper bars, that
+danced a mad saraband around my chair to a weird chorus of, "But for
+you." Transfixed and aghast I stared at the train of awful forms. So
+real were they, they seemed almost to touch me as they swept onward. At
+last, with a convulsive effort, I threw off the spell, banished the
+phantasms of my frightened brain, and shook myself together with a: "You
+have work ahead and dreaming will not do it for you."</p>
+
+<p>Back into my mind trooped the unanswerable, cold realities. There could
+be no doubt that the announcements in the morning papers would surprise
+those who had been led to expect an allotment of one share in twenty or
+thirty and had subscribed accordingly, and likewise those who had
+expected to get all, or at least one out of two. There might be murmurs
+of foul play and a general suspicion that trickery had been practised.
+Looking at the situation, I saw that upon me the chief blame must fall,
+and that it behooved me to think soundly and quickly over what had best
+be done to protect from the impending massacre those whom I had lured
+into the ambush. The smoke-wreaths had all gone out of my brain now, and
+as the known factors began to group themselves symmetrically before my
+mind I forced myself to face certain all-too-evident facts: Rogers and
+Stillman had plainly hoisted the black flag; they had broken all their
+promises to me and assuredly had no intention of carrying out to the
+public the pledges I had made on their behalf; they would handle this
+affair as they had others I knew about&mdash;only to extract the greatest
+number of dollars from it&mdash;and in the course of their operations I and
+my friends would probably be sent through the crusher with the rest. All
+this being true, I could do little by denunciation or exposure, for
+these men, caring nothing for the sufferings of others, would not fear
+the consequences of their own acts; my only hope was to meet them on
+their own ground and outplay them at their own game. Then and there I
+determined on my course&mdash;to compel them to undo the wrongs they had
+committed and, if so great an achievement were possible, put the people
+in position to do to them what they had done to the people. An almost
+hopeless resolution at<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_379" id="Page_379">[379]</a></span> that juncture, it would seem, but, as results
+have shown, by no means out of the power of man's accomplishment.</p>
+
+<p>This is what I reasoned out before I retired to bed: If the actual
+subscription were 125 to 150 millions, then six to eight millions of
+real cash had been paid into the National City Bank. On an allotment of
+one share in five, these six to eight millions represented a margin of
+about twenty-five per cent.&mdash;big enough to cover any ordinary drop in
+the price of the stock, and big enough also to lead those to whom shares
+had been assigned to make good the balance. But to meet this allotment,
+a very large bogus subscription had been necessary, and therein I saw
+the weakness of Rogers and Rockefeller and the weapon that Providence
+had intrusted to my hands.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Rogers' uncertainty as to the totals of the subscription made it
+evident that the bogus subscription was not in the bank even yet, and as
+it must be for a definite amount and backed up by a five-per-cent.
+check, it could not be put in until James Stillman's clerks had computed
+to the last cent the public's applications, and that enormous piece of
+work would not be completed on the next day nor even the day following.
+This bogus subscription was already outlawed&mdash;its insertion even at the
+present moment would have been criminal; how much worse the criminality
+if days were allowed to elapse between the legally fixed last moment for
+bids and the actual time at which this outlawed subscription was
+admitted. And as the transaction involved the making of a large check
+and other formalities, it was obvious it was not one that could be
+easily concealed. It must be a part of the bank's records. If I but
+played aright the cards Dame Fate had put into my hands, I might yet
+redeem myself and save the public I had led into the trap. But as clear
+as the new moon against a November sky stood forth the warning that if I
+attempted to cut into a "Standard Oil" game, I must play cards their
+way&mdash;dispassionately, scientifically, with no sentiment nor
+consideration for adversary or partner. With this conviction I went to
+bed.</p>
+
+<p>It was quite early on the following morning that I met Mr. Rogers, and
+without giving him time to begin the con<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_380" id="Page_380">[380]</a></span>versation, for I was determined
+he should have no provocation for the break with me that I guessed he
+had on his programme, I started in:</p>
+
+<p>"I have been figuring this thing out, Mr. Rogers, and I think I see
+things as they are, and although I might not have handled it as you and
+Stillman did, it is done, and the only thing to do now is to make some
+arrangements to keep the subscribers feeling good until the stock gets
+to a round premium. Of course it would not do to have any slump below
+par until after the receipts are issued and the whole amount of the
+subscriptions paid up."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Rogers looked me over, very suspiciously at first, then brightened
+up, and it did not require an extra eye to see he was agreeably
+surprised at my cheerful attitude. Doubtless he explained to himself the
+change on the ground that "He at last sees the dollars he is to have."</p>
+
+<p>"What suggestion have you, Lawson, as to what should be done this
+morning?"</p>
+
+<p>"Only that all hands look happy, talk big, and do all possible to keep a
+good premium on the stock to be delivered when issued. By the way, have
+you and Stillman changed the scheme about putting all the cash received
+behind the stock?"</p>
+
+<p>This I asked in as mild a tone as possible, and tried to convey by my
+voice the suggestion, "Because you may have had good reason to, and if
+you have I will not kick over the traces." It took every ounce of
+will-power in my armament to keep from grating my teeth as I so spoke.</p>
+
+<p>Again his eyes bored piercingly into mine, and I felt as though all the
+man's mental faculties were ranged to assail me, but I guess I ran the
+gauntlet.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," he said slowly, "we have changed it some. The fact is, Lawson, I
+have agreed to leave that part wholly to Flower and Stillman, while I
+run out of town for a few days." I had steeled myself to play the game
+and said not a word, but silence was a mighty effort. "And," he went on,
+"if I were you, Lawson, I should just dig out too for a while."</p>
+
+<p>"What a heartless rascal!" was on my lips, but I gripped<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_381" id="Page_381">[381]</a></span> myself hard
+and pushed the insult clear way back, and made never a protest by word
+or look.</p>
+
+<p>"I am afraid that won't be best," I said in an every-day, pondering
+tone. "There are lots of sharp chaps on 'the Street' who will insist on
+asking questions, questions Flower cannot possibly answer, and in a jiff
+they might start in to offer the subscriptions down, and before one
+could whistle a bar from 'Wait Till the Clouds Roll By' the air might be
+full of falling stars."</p>
+
+<p>This seemed to strike home.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, what have you to propose?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Some one should be ready in the market to take any amount of stock&mdash;" I
+argued.</p>
+
+<p>He interrupted in his old aggressive way before the sentence was half
+out of my mouth:</p>
+
+<p>"Cut that line out, Lawson; I told you Flower has that end of the affair
+entirely in his hands."</p>
+
+<p>And at this point my resolution to keep quiet and play the game did
+almost go by the board. For a second I literally boiled. Then there
+flashed before my mind's mirror the dreadful procession of the night
+before, and I once more held tight and, oh, so deferentially and
+politely, like a chastened school-boy, went on:</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, that will be all right. I was not going to suggest that you let me
+interfere with Flower's plans, for I can gather, Mr. Rogers, that you
+and the others have decided on doing things your own way, and you can
+rest easy I shall not interfere."</p>
+
+<p>"That's something like, Lawson," he said, with a heartiness I could see
+was from the lower hold. "That's the way to look at a big thing of this
+kind, and if we all just pull together for a while we shall have your
+old plans going like oil again."</p>
+
+<p>Yes, Mr. Rogers was plainly pleased at my complaisance and the prospect
+of using me to gather in another harvest of dollars later. Playing my
+game, I pursued:</p>
+
+<p>"Is it fair, Mr. Rogers, to ask what arrangements Stillman has made for
+loaning money to those who may want to borrow on their subscriptions?
+You know we gave out be<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_382" id="Page_382">[382]</a></span>fore the subscription was opened that the City
+Bank would loan on the stock?"</p>
+
+<p>"That is one of the things I was going to tell you, Lawson. Flower is
+going to let it be known that any one and every one who cares to, can
+borrow the remaining seventy-five per cent. at the City at going rates,
+so there will be no excuse for any one selling."</p>
+
+<p>There it was as plain as a haystack: it was the old trap, the old
+ambush; within were the victims lured there by the cupidity which I had
+played upon; the bars were up now and "Standard Oil" was ready to begin
+its familiar trick of going through their clothes.</p>
+
+<p>Already "Standard Oil" had laid its hands on the amount each subscriber
+had paid in, which represented twenty-five per cent. of the total value
+of the shares allotted. The National City Bank would generously loan the
+balance. A little later an accomplice would cause a flurry in the
+market. The loans would be called and, automatically, the stock,
+together with the money that had been paid for it, would fall into the
+greedy maws of Rockefeller and Rogers. No fluttering fly was ever so
+surely enmeshed and at the mercy of weaving spider as the unfortunates
+whom I had so decoyed to the "Standard Oil" web. With the most valiant
+assumption of indifference, I continued:</p>
+
+<p>"That being the case, it cannot possibly interfere with Flower's set-out
+for me to spread the news, too, that any one who wants to borrow the
+balance of his subscription can get it from Stillman's Bank?"</p>
+
+<p>"You can do better than that, Lawson," said Mr. Rogers with an air of
+real cordiality. "You can let it be known to the brokers and the Wall
+Street men that any good house can borrow all it wants on Amalgamated to
+the extent of ninety cents on the dollar. Of course, this won't be for
+irresponsible outsiders, for the stock might break below ninety, but
+give the word that any responsible broker can always borrow as high as
+ninety dollars a share for those who want the stock on margin."</p>
+
+<p>"That will help things," I answered. "Now, Mr. Rogers, let me tell you
+what I have decided to do on my own hook.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_383" id="Page_383">[383]</a></span> Don't misunderstand me; it
+has nothing to do with you or the rest, and, of course, none of you will
+object to my doing all I care to on my own account. As you said
+yesterday, one portion of our job is finished, and we have thirty-six
+millions' profit. This means either cash or its equivalent, stock, which
+at par or over is as good as cash, at least as good as ninety, which I
+can have my brokers borrow at the City. I calculate that my share is
+nine millions less whatever you have given away in the handling of the
+enterprise."</p>
+
+<p>I paused as I saw a black cloud gathering on his face at my mention of
+nine millions of dollars, but before he could object I went on:</p>
+
+<p>"I understand, of course, that the expense and the shares you have had
+to give to others represent a huge total. At the same time there have
+been huge profits on the side. There is no necessity to enter upon what
+is coming to me just now, but what I intended to say was this: I have
+millions with you and Mr. Rockefeller&mdash;millions more than I owe you on
+account of Butte and other Boston stocks of the second section. Now, I
+propose to take a million or two of that and start in on my account to
+support the market right from this morning; independent of Flower or
+your other operations, I will see if I cannot get up a good feeling."</p>
+
+<p>At once the frown relaxed and his set features broke into a smile of
+gratification.</p>
+
+<p>"That's something like it, Lawson," he said. "When you get down to real
+business we never have differences. It is only when you start up that
+confounded croaking about what we must do for the people, that I get
+angry."</p>
+
+<p>"All right, Mr. Rogers," I answered. "Let those things drop and, as you
+say, we'll keep down to business. How much can I depend upon drawing
+from my account this morning, provided I want it?"</p>
+
+<p>"How will two millions do?" he answered cheerily.</p>
+
+<p>"Plenty," I said.</p>
+
+<p>"All right; I will notify Stillman that you or your brokers may want to
+borrow up to that, and if you need the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_384" id="Page_384">[384]</a></span> Amalgamated stock, you can have
+it at any time. I will leave word to that effect with Curtis."</p>
+
+<p>Curtis was William Rockefeller's secretary and right-hand man, who then
+handled the details of all their financial matters.</p>
+
+<p>Before leaving I indicated to Mr. Rogers the details of my proposed
+actions, and explained that I had sent for my principal Boston brokers
+who would be with me on Wall Street to help steer the craft. Evidently
+my plans met his personal approval. Indeed, from the change that had
+come over his manner I realized that he felt he had been spared a
+disagreeable task and that my shift had been a pleasant surprise to him.
+It was plain that he and Stillman had decided that I must be thrown to
+the sharks if I kept on my old tack, and were therefore gratified to
+find that I was not only ready to assist in steering the ship their way,
+but also willing to feed the engines coal at my own expense to keep up
+her speed. In spite of Mr. Rogers' confidence in Governor Flower's
+ability to take care of the market, it was a great relief to his mind to
+know that I should be there, for he realized that no one, however able
+and popular&mdash;and Governor Flower was both to an unusual degree&mdash;could
+possibly take up such an intricate bunch of lines as those with which we
+had been driving, without a lot of feeling-out practice.</p>
+
+<p>There was another aspect of the situation that had been suggested to me
+by a certain passing twitch of his lip that I had noted when I had said
+I proposed putting some of my own millions behind the market. It was as
+though the tongue had involuntarily started to lap the chops for blood,
+and I scribbled a memo on my mind's black-board, "Think over whether he
+does not intend to set traps for your share of the spoils."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_385" id="Page_385">[385]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXX</h2>
+
+<h3>THE MORNING AFTER</h3>
+
+
+<p>It was with a feeling of intense relief that I left Mr. Rogers and
+returned to the Waldorf. At last I knew where I "was at": I was to play
+a lone hand; my enemies were in front; there were no partners from whose
+treacherous knife-blades I should have to protect my back. The path was
+clear, and as I examined my position, I felt my old self again. Promptly
+I called up my Boston brokers, who were at the Holland House, to say I
+would drop in for them on my way downtown, and with a clear plan of
+campaign in my mind, I determined to face the breakfasting crowd in the
+big caf&eacute; downstairs.</p>
+
+<p>Almost immediately I found myself in the centre of a knot of men who
+began eagerly to press me for further particulars of the Amalgamated
+subscriptions. We all know the story of the comedian informed in the
+midst of a performance of his beloved wife's death, who yet must laugh
+and antic to the end of the play. I appreciated the heavy-hearted
+actor's plight as I surveyed the little throng so vitally interested in
+their dollar affairs. I longed to mount a chair and tell them how they
+had been duped, but my r&ocirc;le called for different lines. It was my part
+to feign satisfaction and my duty to keep every cent invested in our
+enterprise from shrinking a mill. I pumped as much enthusiasm into my
+speech as possible.</p>
+
+<p>"You see what the papers say," I said. "That gives you all the
+information I have, for although you may not think it, I have been
+spending the night just as the rest of you have&mdash;in lands where all
+flotations sell away over par. I'm going down to Wall Street just now.
+After a while I'll have more to tell you."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_386" id="Page_386">[386]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The flutter of an eyelash, a hair-breadth of hesitation, a mumbled word
+and there may be born in the mind of the investor that instinctive
+distrust which is the beginning of panic. In a stock market as in a
+powder magazine there are always dread possibilities of explosion, and
+he who would survive must have incombustible nerves and an ice-packed
+brain; asbestos assurances and an unblushing swagger have averted many
+money conflagrations and set prices hill-climbing.</p>
+
+<p>My little congregation had all the fluttering fugitiveness of the
+investor-out-for-quick profits, and after a few generalities, I got down
+to the one question they all longed to ask but none dared to
+voice&mdash;"What can I sell my subscription for if I want to part with it?"
+Raising my voice a trifle and looking straight at them:</p>
+
+<p>"Don't get excited about what you read in print these next few days," I
+said, as though some one had asked me the question, "for there will be
+hogsheads of rumors unhooped, and remember that rumor prices are never
+real money. The papers this morning say that any one can sell at 40 to
+60 per cent. profit, but that hardly seems reasonable to me; in fact, if
+I were any of you who have been allotted stock and could get such profit
+as that overnight, I'd take it. All I'll do just now is this: I will
+give 110 for any amount any of you want to sell, provided you sell right
+now&mdash;and 10 per cent. profit is not so bad when you come to think it's
+40 per cent. on what actual money you have put up."</p>
+
+<p>In the vernacular of stocks this process I used is called "moulding
+public opinion" and "making a market," and it had the expected effect on
+that bright May morning which followed the closing day of the
+Amalgamated flotation. I was not offered a share; in fact, there was a
+loud guffaw, and it was a hundred to one wager that as I passed on to
+another group each listener tumbled over his neighbor to get in first.
+"110! That's a good joke! I wonder if he takes us for children!
+Evidently he is out early this morning to catch any stray worms napping!
+110 for something worth 160!"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_387" id="Page_387">[387]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Inside of ten minutes it was all over the Waldorf and on the wires,
+"Look out for Lawson! He's trying to get Amalgamated at 110." And by the
+time I got to the Holland, a block down the Avenue, the brokers and
+investors gathered there were ready to give me the laugh with "You're
+out early, we see, to pick up a bundle of easy money."</p>
+
+<p>My first task had been accomplished to my own satisfaction. Inside of an
+hour it would be flashed over the world that there was a firm reliable
+market at 110 bid and almost any price asked for Amalgamated, and while
+110 was not anything like the wild 140 to 160 that rumor gossiped of, it
+represented such a good profit that it was sure to set the market off
+with an all-round chipperness.</p>
+
+<p>My readers must bear in mind that as yet there was no real Amalgamated
+stock which could be sold, and no place to sell it if there had been,
+for until each subscriber received official notice no one really knew
+for certain that he had been allotted any stock, and until the
+Amalgamated shares were listed on the Stock Exchange, there could be no
+reliable market, although they could be traded in on the curb.</p>
+
+<p>At the Holland House, I quickly outlined to my chief brokers my plans
+for the day. Then together we started for Wall Street.</p>
+
+<p>The hours that followed were busy ones, and confusing as well. Wall
+Street was a-buzz with curiosity and from all sides poured questions.
+"The Street," it was evident, had awakened to the fact that the
+situation in Amalgamated disclosed a different line-up of conditions
+from that which it had anticipated. As to whether the change was good or
+bad no one dared hazard a guess. For the first time in my experience,
+Wall Street was completely at sea. The shrewdest plungers and
+manipulators, men to whom the tape yields up its secrets as the penitent
+to the priest; to whom the ticker babbles the inner mysteries of
+directors' meetings and deep-down deals&mdash;these men whose eyes, ears, and
+noses decades of stock-play had trained to supernatural acuteness were
+as impotent to track the truth as the veriest tyro. All admitted that
+the conditions were unusual, that the subscriptions had far exceeded<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_388" id="Page_388">[388]</a></span>
+expectation, that time would be required to get them straightened out.
+Because of this it was natural that the market should be slow and in the
+absence of definite facts it might easily look one price and be another.
+If the subscription really were 412 millions and if each subscriber
+would have a fifth of his allotment, then there was the usual chance for
+trick playing and "Standard Oil" might be scheming to gather in this
+valuable stock at 110 when its proper price mayhap was 140 to 160 or
+more.</p>
+
+<p>In Wall Street the best brains of all the Western world centre. Fortunes
+are there waiting for brains to carve and take; stacked up there are
+millions which he who has brains can pocket without a "by-your-leave."
+Wall Street is the millionnaire's checker-board, but brains direct the
+moves and make the plays. And with all its mordant wisdom, cynical
+cunning, cold suspicion, Wall Street was baffled.</p>
+
+<p>There was nothing to do but to continue my campaign of smiles and
+cheerfulness, repeat my 110 bid in every quarter possible, and so keep
+up the delusion. Late that afternoon I saw Mr. Rogers, who eagerly
+interrogated me.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, Lawson, what do you make out?"</p>
+
+<p>"It is the most mixed-up mess 'the Street' has ever wrestled with," I
+replied, "but one thing is clear: no one will dare to sell much until he
+receives notice of just what he has been allotted, and then most will be
+timid about selling until they have received the receipts. I don't see
+how, if nothing definite leaks out, there can be much danger until after
+they get their hands on the receipts, and by that time, of course, you
+will have a fine market organized to take care of any offerings."</p>
+
+<p>He flinched. I saw again that I had touched his sore spot, for at every
+faintest suggestion that our profits should be used to protect the
+market, he became as shy as a pick-pocket at a police parade.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_389" id="Page_389">[389]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXXI</h2>
+
+<h3>I WALK THE PLANK</h3>
+
+
+<p>Have you ever seen a bunch of school-boys who, having sneaked under a
+corner of the circus tent, are prowling furtively round the show in holy
+terror lest some one who has seen their entry may be awaiting a chance
+to nab them? One minute they are tasting the raptures of being under the
+canvas; the next, longing to be safely outside. That is about how Wall
+Street felt on the memorable Friday after the Amalgamated flotation. The
+same feeling prevailed generally on Saturday, though I was obliged to
+buy a few blocks of the stock at 110 from Wall Street men whose sharp
+noses had sniffed a carrion scent in the air. Sunday was uncomfortable,
+for I realized that I might have to face bad conditions on the morrow.
+On Monday an ominous feeling began to rise and pervade "the Street" like
+a miasma mist in a tropical swamp. The bacillus of distrust had started
+its infection. I had to buy quite a lot of subscriptions and was now
+varying the price from 110, for it seemed possible any moment that
+something would break loose.</p>
+
+<p>These were the conditions when on Tuesday a telephone call came from Mr.
+Rogers asking me to drop round to 26 Broadway, as he had an important
+matter to talk over with me. I reported at the appointed time. Mr.
+Rogers was evidently full of business.</p>
+
+<p>"Lawson," he said, "we have figured everything up and balanced accounts,
+and each member of the different syndicates is to be given his share,
+cash and stock, at once."</p>
+
+<p>"All right," I answered. "That suits me."</p>
+
+<p>"I thought so," he continued pleasantly. "Mr. Rockefeller has had Curtis
+figure up your account, and while in the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_390" id="Page_390">[390]</a></span> rush he may not have got
+everything in, he's fairly accurate. From what you said about getting
+your affairs into shape to help the market, it occurred to me you might
+like to have your balance of this section in hand ready for use. I have
+the statement here, and if you find it all right I'll go upstairs and
+get all it calls for fixed up at once."</p>
+
+<p>We were in the little glass pen where most of our conferences took
+place. I, with my elbows on the small mahogany table, sat looking across
+at him leaning back in his chair. Without knowing what was to happen,
+but from a certain suppressed eagerness I had detected under his frigid
+composure, I had a strong conviction that he was nerving himself for a
+coup of some kind. I realized that he and Mr. Rockefeller had talked me
+over pretty thoroughly and had decided that they had best run this
+gauntlet as soon as possible. Since Mr. Rogers had broached the
+substitution of Anaconda for the properties originally intended for the
+first section of Amalgamated, I had felt that this balancing of accounts
+would be a crucial affair, and after the recent turn of the screw, I
+hardly knew what to expect, but was ready for the worst. Now a swift
+thrill of apprehension suggested I'd better look for real deviltry.
+There was perhaps a minute's delay while he fumbled in his pocket and
+drew out letters and papers. My blood steeplechased in my veins as I
+waited for him to deal me the hand that might decide my fate. In such
+tense moments thoughts flash in and out of the mind like lightning, and
+as I watched him rise, the fateful paper in his hand, it came over me
+with a sharp exultation that however the trumps fell it was a great
+game&mdash;great even for this king of gamesters who was about to play his
+hand.</p>
+
+<p>Henry H. Rogers looked piercingly into my eyes and said: "There's the
+account, Lawson." He laid on the table in front of me an oblong piece of
+paper. On it were some lines of words followed by other lines of
+figures. That was all. I spread it out carefully between my two hands
+and bent over it. Then I looked up. Before I allowed the significance of
+the figures to penetrate my mind, I wished to know exactly what they
+represented.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_391" id="Page_391">[391]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"If I understand aright, Mr. Rogers," I asked, "this statement does not
+take in our Boston deals nor my loans on the Butte and other affairs,
+but is a settlement of this first section only&mdash;a final clearing-up
+showing just what my twenty-five per cent. of the Amalgamated and the
+things connected with it amount to? Am I right?"</p>
+
+<p>My voice was even and calmly business-like, and he answered in exactly
+the same tone.</p>
+
+<p>"It shows where you stand on this particular affair, and gives your
+balance of stock and cash, which we are ready to pay over in whole or in
+part, in case you may want to leave some of it against the loans on the
+other section."</p>
+
+<p>I turned to the paper; I leaned over it, letting my two hands with the
+elbows resting on the table support my head. Mr. Rogers could see only
+the back and top of my head, no part of my face. At the first glance I
+caught the balance&mdash;it was a little less than two millions and a half.
+At once the other lines upon the sheet became a crimson blur. Into my
+mind rushed an avalanche of figures and facts which seemed to prove
+irresistibly that I should have read nine millions in place of the
+numbers that were burning themselves into my brain. But what if it were
+rightly but two and a half millions, and the great sum on which all my
+market movements had been predicated was a hideous miscalculation on my
+part? Then inevitably was I hopelessly bankrupt, or saved from that only
+to find my neck irrevocably caught in the "Standard Oil" noose. I strove
+fiercely to steady my nerves, to arrest the stampeding terrors that had
+broken loose in my brain. There came to me a feverish memory of the
+hideous procession of Thursday's midnight vigil. I desperately
+asseverated to myself, "I must be cool, I must, I must." But all my
+resolutions went as goes the powder when touched by the match. In an
+instant more nothing in the world mattered; I sprang to my feet, kicked
+over the chair, and with an exclamation which was half yell, half
+imprecation, I stuck the paper under Mr. Rogers' eyes. On the balance
+line I beat a tattoo with my trembling forefinger. Heaven knows what I
+said, for all barriers were down and a flood-tide of rage, overwhelming,
+terrific, swept my being. There<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_392" id="Page_392">[392]</a></span> was no chance for Mr. Rogers to answer
+or to interrupt me. Suddenly I became conscious that I was asking, "Am I
+to understand that this is final? Is this what I get for all I have
+stood for?" My voice as I heard it was strange&mdash;a hoarse hiss&mdash;and the
+words fell on my ear like a death sentence. "No, by God, no!" I sprang
+between him and the door.</p>
+
+<p>"Lawson, in the name of Heaven, stop for a second; there is some
+mistake; I see there is some mistake, some terrible blunder that they
+have made upstairs. Don't say another word. Give me that paper and I'll
+take it to Mr. Rockefeller. He will see what is wrong; he and I'll go
+over it together and you shall have what's right. I will be back in a
+few minutes and I swear to you you shall have your full share. Yes, I
+swear to you you shall have what you say is right, even if it takes
+every dollar of the profits, every dollar."</p>
+
+<p>I handed him the paper without a word and he was out of the room. I
+heard gates bang and knew he had, as he promised, "gone upstairs." I
+locked the door and waited. I shall never forget the racking torture of
+that period of inaction. To make real all the terrors I was suffering it
+would be necessary for me to enter into elaborate details of the
+wide-spread financial commitment into which I had been led by my
+relationship with the Consolidation. I was staggering under immense
+lines of Boston "Coppers," which were to be included in the second
+section of Amalgamated, but had been purchased to make part of the first
+section. Some of these Mr. Rockefeller was carrying for me; the rest
+were portioned among two dozen banks, trust companies, and brokers. With
+a portion of the profits I had legitimately calculated upon, I had
+proposed to lighten my burden and to devote the balance to carrying
+through the contract I had taken on my shoulders of protecting
+Amalgamated stock in the market. To do so on this showing would be out
+of the question; more than ever should I be at "Standard Oil's" mercy.
+The dangers that threatened me assumed cyclopean proportions as I
+marshalled them. Suddenly another possibility flashed across my brain,
+"What if they should tell<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_393" id="Page_393">[393]</a></span> you that having refused what was fair, you
+should have nothing&mdash;that you could go to the devil and fight? Then
+where would you be?" That meant ruin, crushing, irrevocable, complete; a
+series of disasters, so portentously realistic, began a cinematographic
+procession across my disordered brain, that I found myself shivering in
+anticipation, when suddenly the door-knob clicked and I jumped to my
+feet to admit Mr. Rogers. In his hand was the paper. I had eyes for it
+alone. I took it from his outstretched fingers and devoured its
+contents. It was the same sheet, the same word "balance," but underneath
+the old figures was a line below which appeared a new set of ciphers,
+showing just a fraction under five millions of dollars. In the brief
+interval of minutes my balance had doubled. Before I could utter a word,
+with his hand on my arm to arrest my attention, Mr. Rogers was
+exclaiming:</p>
+
+<p>"Lawson, one word before you open your mouth. Remember I said you should
+be satisfied. Mr. Rockefeller agrees with me. He is convinced these
+figures now are right, but wants me to tell you if you believe they are
+not, to make your own and you'll have what they call for."</p>
+
+<p>As I said before, Henry H. Rogers knows the human animal, and in the
+intimate intercourse of preceding years he had had ample opportunity to
+learn those very human characteristics which go to the blending of my
+individuality. It is a weakness of which I am intensely conscious, yet
+cannot altogether regret, to be easily moved by any show of generosity
+and fairness, however specious. When I saw the new figures and realized
+that all the hell I had conjured up was no more than a nightmare, a very
+rapture of gratitude and relief seized me. It was not that I lost sight
+of the fact that this new balance was far below what I knew was my
+right, for according to the lowest computation my proper share was nine
+millions; nor that I failed to realize that I was in the power of this
+man whose greed, callousness, and brutal obstinacy in the face of
+opposition no one knew better than I. Still, though his unusual
+deference convinced me that by continued, fiery insistence I could force
+from him the remaining four millions (for the one thing Standard Oil
+never lets get into<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_394" id="Page_394">[394]</a></span> court is a dispute over a division of profits on a
+joint stock deal), the first shock had been so awful, and the reaction
+was so sudden, that my whole being revolted at the idea of further
+wrangle. Indeed, I was in the same condition as the man whose runaway
+horse suddenly stops just as the children in the roadway seemed doomed
+to be crushed and beaten to death beneath its iron heels. He condones
+the running away in gratitude for the timely halt. A glad voice within
+me seemed to be saying, "It's all right, all right&mdash;that's money enough
+to fight him out with&mdash;that's ammunition for victory&mdash;victory for
+yourself, for the friends who have banked on your ability to protect
+them."</p>
+
+<p>I said to Mr. Rogers: "Tell Mr. Rockefeller I thank him for his
+fairness. I thank you both. I'm satisfied and this is settled." I put my
+finger on the account which lay on the table.</p>
+
+<p>Yes, I positively thanked these men who had tried to rob me of
+seventy-five per cent. of all the millions that I had earned by all the
+laws <i>of the game</i>, and that I so urgently needed to protect those whom
+I had lured to probable destruction; needed as a mother in the desert
+needs milk to keep life in her babe. I thanked these men in heartfelt
+terms because they had returned me an additional third of my own money.
+Idiot, you say. I went further; I shook Mr. Rogers by the hand, and as
+the tears gathered in his eyes I said, and it was from the heart, too:</p>
+
+<p>"Don't think, Mr. Rogers, that I shall ever lay up this day against you
+and Mr. Rockefeller, or that I shall resent not getting all I believed I
+should have had. I want you both to understand that I do know I am
+entitled to more, but it ends here. I will cherish no ill-feeling, for
+this balance is amply sufficient to enable me to do what I intended to
+do, and&mdash;there is more on earth than millions."</p>
+
+<p>We were both emotionally excited; I from relief at escaping the clutches
+of that dread hell of which for certain moments I had felt the flaming
+grasp; he because of a sudden degrading realization that he had
+attempted to practise on a faithful comrade in arms a cowardly and
+contemptible piece of treachery. My impulsive gratitude for the measure<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_395" id="Page_395">[395]</a></span>
+of justice granted me made his avaricious greed seem even to him
+despicable, and for an instant Henry H. Rogers was honestly ashamed.</p>
+
+<p>Some years have elapsed since this episode, but a thousand times I
+suppose the scene has arisen to rack Henry H. Rogers with bitter
+memories of his baseness. The severest punishments are not those that we
+mortals inflict on our fellows whom for violations of our little earthly
+laws we clap in striped suits and shackle with steel bracelets. What are
+striped suits which imprint no mark on the body of the wearer, or
+handcuffs that any blacksmith can strike off at a blow, in comparison
+with the ever-recurring torture of the white-hot iron with which God
+sears the hearts and brains of those sinners whose wrong-doing is beyond
+human retribution? What memories of prison and disgrace are comparable
+with the exquisite suffering of the undetected criminal who in the dark
+watches of the night pores over the bitter scroll of his delinquencies?
+When Henry H. Rogers reads the record set down here of this faithless
+and degrading action, he will suffer infinitely more than ever I did for
+the loss of the gold he and his associates so meanly filched. Nor will
+the knowledge of the seven and a half score of millions marshalled ready
+at his nod, abate one jot or tittle of the measure of his humiliation
+and shame.</p>
+
+<p>Peace having been established, Mr. Rogers sent "upstairs" for the checks
+and stocks to complete the settlement, and while we waited we talked,
+and, as was inevitable after so strenuous a session, we found ourselves
+back on the sincere and frankly friendly footing of our earlier
+intercourse. A knock-down and attempted drag-out which at the end is
+declared a draw invariably promotes cordiality between the principals,
+and ours was no exception to the rule. Evidently Mr. Rogers had been
+doing considerable thinking since our last conversation and had
+accumulated troublesome ideas which had to be worked off. My mood at the
+moment seemed made to order for the purpose, and he ran over our
+affairs, one after another, until he thought it safe to explode his
+bomb. He rang for a clerk, and instructed that Mr. Stillman be called up
+and asked to send over "that paper if it was<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_396" id="Page_396">[396]</a></span> ready." Soon afterward the
+messenger returned with a big, square package. Mr. Rogers opened it.</p>
+
+<p>"Lawson," he said, "here's the whole story. Stillman has been steadily
+at work and has just finished two copies of the entire subscription. I
+think you ought to look it over."</p>
+
+<p>"Look it over," I repeated. "Why, it is of the utmost importance to the
+whole enterprise that I study every name. I alone can tell just what
+that list means. After I've been over it I'll know pretty thoroughly who
+will hold, who will want to sell, who must sell, and who will need
+encouragement."</p>
+
+<p>"That's just what I thought," he answered, with an air of high approval.
+Then, dropping to his most friendly and confidential key, the tone of
+voice that never fails to persuade an associate that he is in on the
+bottom floor and that all others are outsiders, he went on: "And more
+than that, Lawson, why cannot you get in touch with all those
+subscribers who are disappointed at the amounts they received and sell
+them what they want?"</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Rogers leaned back to appraise the effect of this startling
+proposition on me. At any other moment I should inevitably have broken
+loose again, but the fascination of his personality was upon me and I
+let him spin his webs. Any man, and there are scores adrift, who falls
+under the spell of Henry H. Rogers, invariably, as did the suitors of
+Circe, pays the penalty of his indiscretion. Some he uses and
+contemptuously casts aside useless; others he works, plays, and
+pensions; still others serve as jackals or servitors and proudly flaunt
+his livery; a few, the strong, independent souls, tempted with great
+rewards and beguiled by the man's baleful, intellectual charm into his
+clutches, preserve a semblance of freedom; but let the boldest of these
+turn restive&mdash;he is maimed or garroted with sickening promptitude.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_397" id="Page_397">[397]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXXII</h2>
+
+<h3>PERFECTING THE DOUBLE CROSS</h3>
+
+
+<p>To get back to my story. I realized that though one disaster had been
+averted, I was far from any haven of rest. Remembering my cue, however,
+I asked innocently:</p>
+
+<p>"Have you all decided to sell more of the stock, Mr. Rogers?"</p>
+
+<p>"All? Why no," he said. "Just let me show you where we stand now. All
+the unsold stock, roughly forty-eight millions, has been divided up and
+each man has to carry his own. That's easy, because Stillman will carry
+them all at the bank, for they are all good, Lewisohn, Morgan, Olcott,
+Flower, Daly, and the others. The only loose stock will be Mr.
+Rockefeller's, yours, and mine, and that we must turn into money before
+we can bring out the second section. You have been losing sight of the
+fact, Lawson, that we have millions upon millions tied up here, and Mr.
+Rockefeller has decided he will not go ahead until we have turned this
+venture into money."</p>
+
+<p>Marvellous, marvellous man! He unrolled the new scheme as openly and as
+freely as though he were a world's philanthropist explaining a new
+benefaction and I an enthusiastic minister employed to carry the glad
+tidings to the people. The plot was obvious. In spite of Flower and
+Stillman and all the talk of our taking a rest he was back on his black
+courser again, in a new saddle, with a freshly lighted lantern, and the
+old blackjack newly leaded. And I was the only one who could stalk the
+game. I listened.</p>
+
+<p>"Now let me show you, Lawson, what a pretty campaign I have laid out,"
+he went on. "I've pledged all the others to hold their stock and I've
+got it rigged in such a way they can't let go a share without my knowing
+of it. Then I've<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_398" id="Page_398">[398]</a></span> got them all enthusiastic and have formed a pool at
+Flower's office which, if necessary, can buy 500,000 shares, and what
+with the money they have made and the promise that they will be let in
+on the second section if they're good, we ought to have things pretty
+much our own way."</p>
+
+<p>The scheme seemed to be perfect for robbing every one in sight, and here
+was I being taken right in&mdash;I who had but one thought: to get those I
+had mired on to firm soil and myself outside the breastworks of this
+pirate stronghold.</p>
+
+<p>"It looks perfect, Mr. Rogers," I said. "Now where do I come in on all
+this?"</p>
+
+<p>He shrugged his shoulders impatiently. "You see as well as I can tell
+you," he replied evasively.</p>
+
+<p>"I take it that you want me to unload our stock on to the pool and the
+other members of the syndicate?" I asked with a brutal frankness that I
+realized, after I heard the words, was almost indecent.</p>
+
+<p>"What is the use of putting it that way, Lawson?" he replied angrily.
+"You know I mean nothing of the sort. You know I want you to keep every
+one you can from selling, and simply supply the legitimate demand that
+can be worked up among the subscribers all over the country. If worked
+as you can work it, this ought to clean up our stock without any one's
+being hurt."</p>
+
+<p>I understood perfectly. If Mr. Rogers and I had been on terms of
+flippancy instead of dignity, at this stage we should have given each
+other the wink. Just what he wanted done I knew. He knew I knew what he
+wanted, and I knew he knew I knew, and yet we were pretending not only
+that we knew nothing but that there was really nothing to know.</p>
+
+<p>Fortunately, at this stage of the duel Mr. Rogers' secretary arrived
+with my checks and stock, and while we were verifying these, I had time
+to study my mental chess-board for the next move. The papers were all
+passed at last and then I entered into some explanation of my own
+intentions. I told Mr. Rogers that for the time being I would hold all
+my stock, but that I intended to borrow a stack of money on it from
+Stillman through my brokers, for I fully in<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_399" id="Page_399">[399]</a></span>tended to support the
+market, as my belief in the stock was absolute.</p>
+
+<p>I could have sworn Mr. Rogers inwardly chuckled at my fatuity, but I
+went right on:</p>
+
+<p>"If Mr. Rockefeller has decided that your share and his of the allotment
+must, in whole or in part, be turned into money before the second
+section is tackled, there's nothing for it but to go ahead, and I will
+put in great work for you (I didn't add, "my work, if I can make it,
+will keep you in as long as the public have a share"), because," said I,
+"my one ambition now is to complete the second section and get things in
+such shape that those people I have had locked-in so long can get out,
+if they care to."</p>
+
+<p>It was an intricate problem that was thus settled, for Mr. Rogers well
+knew that it would be useless to attempt to sell big quantities of
+Amalgamated without my detecting it, and he dared not ask me to have a
+hand in his plot without including my own stock. When he saw I intended
+to stand by my baby, and yet was so anxious to get to the second section
+that I would accede to Mr. Rockefeller's wishes, he perceived that the
+situation was ideal for his purposes.</p>
+
+<p>"Let me glance over that subscription list," I said; and I opened up the
+book, for book it really was.</p>
+
+<p>My readers may surmise how intense was my interest in scanning the
+results of my work. This great stack of bank sheets before me was the
+official list of the subscription, stitched together in seventeen
+sections of twenty pages each; twenty-eight names, with city, State,
+street number addresses, and amounts subscribed to a page, all in ink in
+longhand.</p>
+
+<p>"Better take them with you to the hotel and go carefully over the names
+and amounts," put in Mr. Rogers. "It certainly is a long job, but one
+that you must tackle some time, and the sooner the better."</p>
+
+<p>Here was the missing link in my chain of evidence, delivered directly
+into my hands without a word of persuasion or cajolery. Providence
+played that hand for me surely. I concealed my jubilance by rattling
+along vociferously:</p>
+
+<p>"I shall have to work over this a heap, sending out circu<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_400" id="Page_400">[400]</a></span>lars and what
+not. It would have been better to have had it in typewriting, but I
+suppose Stillman didn't dare intrust it to the machine people. However,
+I can divide up the seventeen sections among different people and none
+will know the whole story. I will keep it in Boston with the other
+papers, and&mdash;gracious! what's this?"</p>
+
+<p>"What is it?" he asked, smiling at my excitement.</p>
+
+<p>In front of me was the section beginning with the "Mc's," and the
+largest subscription on the page was 6,000 shares&mdash;1,200 allotment. I
+followed the line back to the name. It was that of Hugh McLaughlin, then
+the big "boss" of Brooklyn, who, like all the other big bosses of New
+York State, was a trusted lieutenant of "Standard Oil." I put my finger
+on the amount and said:</p>
+
+<p>"You have taken care of your friend across the river, I see. No wonder
+all the politicians were so anxious to get in, for they know you would
+not put this old gentleman into anything that is not pretty sure."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Rogers nodded wisely:</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I told the old stalwart he had better have about half a million,
+but he went $100,000 better, I see. I sent the word around to the
+others, too, but have not had a chance to go over the list carefully.
+Have they all gone in under their own names?"</p>
+
+<p>I ran over page after page, looking for names as he called them off, but
+most of them had disguised their ventures through dummies. We had no
+trouble in putting our fingers on their allotments, however; Mr. Rogers
+commenting in his sage and caustic way on men and politics. It was
+growing late, and at a natural stopping-place in our talk I sent for
+paper and string, with my own hands tied up the book, and&mdash;with all the
+airs of extreme leisureliness&mdash;literally bolted.</p>
+
+<p>No school-boy with a three-pound trout caught in a deep hole under a big
+willow bearing the sign, "Any one fishing here will be prosecuted," no
+burglar with an unexpected fat swag, was ever in such a fever to lug his
+booty to a concealed place as I to get that infinitely precious bundle
+to the Waldorf. At last I landed it in my room and began to scan<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_401" id="Page_401">[401]</a></span> the
+interesting pages. My first thought was to look for our own big dummy
+subscription. As I supposed, it was not there. <i>Roughly I added the
+totals of the different sheets and compared them, with the 412 millions
+we had given the public, which was now indelibly, the world over, a
+matter of record.</i> Again I stopped to congratulate myself on my good
+fortune in securing this first-hand evidence of the fraud that had been
+practised on the people.</p>
+
+<p>I leaned over the thick pages with their various inscriptions. The names
+and addresses carried me into every corner of the United States and into
+the great cities of Europe as well. Set down there were towns and
+villages I had never heard of, and my mind made pictures for me of
+fathers, mothers, and children, beguiled by my pledges and promises,
+embracing the opportunity to add to their scanty hordes. But it was not
+a moment to indulge in scares, so I slipped over the people's mites and
+fixed my mind on the millions.</p>
+
+<p>The Lewisohns were down for eleven millions, and Mr. Rogers' old
+cronies, John Moore's firm, were represented by a subscription of
+between six and seven millions. As I ran over the names I found million
+after million down to Mr. Rogers' friends, which told me that he had
+spared no one. All the lieutenants and the queer people who do the
+confidential business of the "System," and invariably turn up at
+melon-cutting time, were down for round amounts. Conspicuous among the
+rest was the name of that rising votary of the "System" who won
+notoriety, while Comptroller of the Currency under President Cleveland,
+as manipulator of the slick bond deal which has gone into American
+history as among the queerest performances of its period. Loaded up with
+Government banking secrets, this young man subsequently became a prize
+for whom the various organizations of the "System" competed valorously.
+There he was, in three places&mdash;James H. Eckels, President of the
+Commercial Bank of Chicago, 6,000, 2,000, and 2,000 shares&mdash;or a million
+dollars altogether.</p>
+
+<p>Another name caught my eye: "Bay State Gas Co., J. Edward Addicks,
+20,000 shares"&mdash;two millions of dollars. I leaned back and laughed as I
+thought of this wary old<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_402" id="Page_402">[402]</a></span> fox, with the bruises and scars of the
+"System's" hopper thick all over his body, dutifully bringing his
+contribution to his old enemy, Rogers. And Rogers, disdainful and
+contemptuous of the man, found his $400,000 good. This, I said to
+myself, is a case of spider eat spider with a vengeance; and I wondered
+if experience is really as good a teacher as the text-book says.</p>
+
+<p>Hour after hour I pondered over that list, "sizing up" each subscriber
+and questioning what his financial condition might be. At last I dropped
+it, swearing to myself to use every effort to protect these thousands of
+people who had ventured so much money on the strength of my pledges.</p>
+
+<p>Two days later the allotments were officially announced; in a few days
+more the receipts were issued and Amalgamated was fairly out in the
+world on its own feet. It was not listed on any of the exchanges yet,
+but it was very much in the mouths of people, and in the papers. And
+every day grew the ominous feeling that something was wrong. It was a
+contradictory situation and no one could put a finger on the trouble.
+Rumors one heard, but no definite derogatory statements. The truth was
+that those who knew what was wrong had good reasons for saying nothing,
+while all who had to do with stock affairs and surmised the evil, were
+themselves loaded up with the stock and hoping against hope that our
+promises of great profits would yet be fulfilled.</p>
+
+<p>It was my part to keep up these anticipations and by hook or crook
+prevent Rogers and Rockefeller from unloading. I bought and bought to
+steady the market when no one else apparently would buy; and when I
+found others whom I could induce to venture, I had them relieve those
+who were faltering and who must sell. When Mr. Rogers took me to task, I
+invented all manner of excuses to account for my tardiness in creating a
+market on which he could unload his holdings. He listened impatiently
+and incredulously, and I felt that sooner or later he would take the bit
+in his teeth.</p>
+
+<p>In spite of my efforts the price of Amalgamated dropped and dropped and
+it was all I could do to prevent a quick crash. My profits&mdash;the immense
+sum of money I had obtained at the settlement&mdash;had been used up,
+together with the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_403" id="Page_403">[403]</a></span> great sums I had borrowed on my own allotment of
+shares. At intervals I stopped long enough to make brief excursions into
+sugar or other stocks, out of which I captured additional hundreds of
+thousands, but every cent of such gains went toward staying the
+avalanche. These indeed were days of desperation and black despair, all
+the more trying because I had to look happy and talk hopefully; all the
+more difficult because my enemies came out of their holes and did their
+share to balk my efforts; all the more painful because the public were
+beginning to doubt whether the second section was coming&mdash;and whether it
+had best come&mdash;and our Boston "Coppers" had begun to drop in value.</p>
+
+<p>During all this time I had troubled myself but little about the Flower
+pool, which had been set going soon after the conversation in which Mr.
+Rogers had told me that he and Mr. Rockefeller intended to unload their
+stock. I concluded that the pool would surely get a share of what they
+had to sell, and showed no inclination to join in with it. But at last
+Mr. Rogers said to me:</p>
+
+<p>"As every one is going into the pool, Lawson, it will seem strange if
+you are missing, so you had better send Flower your check and I will see
+you get it back later."</p>
+
+<p>"For how much?" I asked him.</p>
+
+<p>"A hundred thousand will be about right," he answered, and I sent it,
+and that was all I had heard of the subject until one day after the
+stock had been weaker than usual I received by mail a brusk notice from
+Flower &amp; Co. to mail them another hundred thousand dollars. Immediately
+I called up the banking-house, and learned to my horror and astonishment
+that the pool had accumulated over 225,000 shares. I went at once to Mr.
+Rogers with Flower's call and said:</p>
+
+<p>"I know nothing whatever of this affair, Mr. Rogers, and as I have not
+been unloading any of my stock and have all I can do to keep up my end
+anyway, you will look after it, of course."</p>
+
+<p>He took the notice and said: "I will attend to it." Remembering his
+intentions to unload, after what I had heard of the pool's accumulations
+I was not surprised at Mr.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_404" id="Page_404">[404]</a></span> Rogers' willingness to take care of this
+matter of mine. It is of interest now, in looking back over our affairs,
+to recall that though there were several periods later when the sledding
+was hard, and I needed all the money I could lay hands on, he never
+offered to return me that hundred thousand, not even after the pool had
+liquidated, as will be shown later. In spite of this fact, in his
+readiness to hurl any charge or insult at me, he had his hireling, Denis
+Donohoe, recently make the accusation that I alone of all its members
+refused to keep up my payments to the Flower pool.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_405" id="Page_405">[405]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXXIII</h2>
+
+<h3>A RETROSPECT AND A MORAL</h3>
+
+
+<p>The crime of Amalgamated and its immediate consequences are before my
+readers. I have fulfilled the promise made in my foreword to expose to
+the people of America the manner in which they have been plundered and
+the methods by which the "System" habitually cheats them out of their
+savings. Robbery conducted on so gigantic a scale as I have pictured
+must necessarily simulate the natural processes of finance, and to
+understand the deep devices of the schemers requires a knowledge of
+banking and commercial practices which the average man has no chance to
+attain. If I had begun my story by stating exactly what constituted the
+crime of Amalgamated, my readers would not have grasped its heinousness.
+In the chapters that I have devoted to leading up to it they have been
+educated in the piratical practices of finance and financiers, and have
+acquired familiarity with the jugglery of corporations and the
+multiplication and division of stock certificates through which most of
+the great American fortunes have been created.</p>
+
+<p>Depending still on the ignorance of its blinded dupes, the "System"
+again raises its brazen face from among the poison rushes of Wall Street
+and hisses, "Listen to what he calls a great crime&mdash;a simple business
+transaction. It is no crime, but a common practice of modern finance and
+by no means unusual or extraordinary."</p>
+
+<p>No crime to take by a trick from thousands of the people thirty-six
+millions of the results of our great country's prosperity? Think of what
+this vast sum represents&mdash;the revenues of a year's work of 36,000 men
+earning each $1,000. Think of it, ye millions who dig and delve and bear
+heavy<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_406" id="Page_406">[406]</a></span> burdens that your mothers, wives, and children may in exchange
+have a bite to eat and a couch to sleep upon!</p>
+
+<p>The crime of Amalgamated, as I have explained it, constitutes a specific
+breach of the banking laws of the State and nation. But the legal
+aspects of the offence are trivial in comparison with the great moral
+crime which was consummated by Henry H. Rogers and James Stillman, in
+the National City Bank on that night in May, 1899. Through false
+representations and specious pledges and the credit of the names of
+"Standard Oil" and the National City Bank, thousands of people were
+beguiled into investing their savings in this Amalgamated Copper
+Company. Because of the promise of great gains other thousands mortgaged
+their homes, appropriated their wives' savings, even their employers'
+funds, and embarked in this fair-seeming enterprise. The greatest bank
+in America aided and abetted the conspiracy by the loan of its funds to
+lure the victims deeper into the toils. All in, the trap is sprung; the
+thousands are despoiled of their savings by familiar devices of finance,
+and throughout the land is spread a wave of misery, madness, and
+despair.</p>
+
+<p>The crime of Amalgamated, a critical correspondent writes me, is purely
+a Wall Street offence, important to bankers and capitalists but of no
+consequence to the working men, the farmers, or the toiling millions who
+have no savings to invest in stocks. "Of what concern is it to us," says
+this writer, "how one section of the rich robs another of its
+hoardings?"</p>
+
+<p>Poor fool! A few men cannot deprive even a few thousands of so great a
+sum as $36,000,000 without working untold injury upon the entire body of
+the people. Such a stupendous sum looted from the coffers of the many
+and piled in the vaults of three or four men unbalances the whole
+economic structure of the nation. The consequences of that act do not
+end in the series of defalcations and bankruptcies, imprisonments and
+suicides, in the ruined homes and wrecked careers that follow in its
+immediate wake. In the grip of these plunderers intrenched in the
+stronghold of finance each of these filched millions becomes a new
+weapon<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_407" id="Page_407">[407]</a></span> of oppression. Because of the crime of Amalgamated every pound
+of food that goes to sustain life in the American people, every shingle
+on every roof that shelters the American people, every mile of
+transportation for man or freight in America; in fact, every necessity
+and every luxury of the American people has had added to its cost some
+fractional increase, representing in the aggregate tens and tens of
+millions annually, which, flowing into the coffers of the "System,"
+strengthen and extend its stupendous grip on the property of the nation.</p>
+
+<p>Our country for a generation has been prosperous beyond the dreams of
+man, yet what have the masses of our people to show for it? A better, a
+higher, and a <span class="smcap">more expensive</span> standard of living&mdash;that is all. That this
+prosperity which is our national boast will last forever is incredible.
+Sooner or later will come one of the times when Nature frowns and sends
+her floods, her droughts, and her epidemics of disease. Is the American
+people prepared by its long-sustained prosperity to bridge over that
+period of want and suffering?</p>
+
+<p>The truth is that the mass of our population has not sufficient surplus
+laid by to last over thirty days of such a calamitous interval. All the
+unearned increment of national prosperity the "System" has captured and
+capitalized. Not only have the people been deprived of the profits of
+their labor, but this capitalized prosperity is the stern instrument by
+which new burdens are laid on their shoulders and new tithes are exacted
+from their wages. But for the plundering "System" the great mass of our
+people would be able to sit in their tents in the shade of their
+husbanded harvests and laugh to scorn the frowns of fortune. Now, I say,
+God help the nation when Nature, tired from her great work, rests, and
+the people, too, are compelled to rest&mdash;for then will come an awful
+awakening. When the millions face famine and realize for the first time
+that their gigantic storehouses, filled to bursting with the surplus of
+the past, are the property of the few who cannot even count the
+contents, much less use them&mdash;when they realize that these hoarded
+treasures are as far beyond their starved reach as are the violets and
+daisies beyond the picking of the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_408" id="Page_408">[408]</a></span> galley-slave, then they will
+appreciate how much deeper and more damnable are the crimes of the
+"System," such crimes as Amalgamated and its like, than even such
+national tragedies as the assassinations of Lincoln, Garfield, and
+McKinley, at each of which all the people held aloft their hands in
+horror.</p>
+
+<p>Why is it that the millions of intelligent, able-bodied Americans, who
+could crush the tribe of Rockefeller as elephants crush snakes, rise
+with each sun and dig and delve and suffer that a Rogers may wallow in
+wealth and an Armour gain a greater income than the Rothschilds? Why are
+they so easily hoodwinked into imagining that the elaborate reports
+detailing the immense and growing wealth of the country represent their
+own well-being and affluence? Because the wise men of the "System" know
+human nature, know that most men and women accept unquestioningly the
+conditions they find surrounding them. Each day it is pounded into the
+heads of the people through a hundred agencies that it is the greatest
+and most flourishing of peoples and that the laws and customs which
+regulate its lives and rights are the best in all the world. How shall
+the people know that these glowing rumors, these propitious tidings, are
+but the siren songs of the "System" under the spell of which it is
+despoiled of its savings?</p>
+
+<p>Ask yourselves, my friends, how much you know about those familiar
+things which are part of your lives as are the sunshine, the grass, and
+the flowers&mdash;your Bible, your money, your playing-cards. Each is an
+institution so consecrated by custom that you accept it exactly for what
+it meant to your father just as he took it from his own father a
+generation before. That the Holy Book is God's message to His children,
+the human race, we know because we have the words of our ancestors
+therefor; the stamped silver and gold we take for granted as we do shoes
+and clothes, because money is an essential factor in the social fabric
+and the form in which it comes to us seems as inevitable as the moon or
+our ten fingers; humanity has gone on for hundreds of years considering
+the knave of greater value than the ten-spot and the ace of higher worth
+than all the rest of the pack, because it is content to believe that the
+rules that have been handed<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_409" id="Page_409">[409]</a></span> down apportioning these values are the best
+that could be devised. With a hundred other elements and details of our
+daily life, it is the same&mdash;we accept unreasoningly what we are told or
+what is given us, with no look forward or back, and, engaged with the
+thousand new toys and problems which Fate, the conjurer, shakes out of
+his hat, we become bound by habit and blinded by precedent.</p>
+
+<p>The love men have for the formulas and conventions of their daily lives
+is the "System's" opportunity for plunder, and it is this fundamental
+principle of humanity that makes my work so difficult. It would be as
+easy to convince the masses that their playing-cards are all wrong and
+that the ace is really of lower value than the two-spot as it is to
+awaken them to the terrors of the conditions that are confronting them;
+to compel them to realize that a despotism of dollars is being organized
+among them; that the cherished institutions of generations are the
+instruments by which a few daring schemers are concentrating into their
+own hands the money of the nation, and that this concentration can have
+no other result than the abject slavery of the American people.</p>
+
+<p class='center'>END OF VOLUME</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_413" id="Page_413">[413]</a></span></p>
+<h2>LAWSON AND HIS CRITICS</h2>
+
+<h2>I</h2>
+
+<h3>THE INSURANCE CONTROVERSY</h3>
+
+
+<p>In the July, 1904, number of <i>Everybody's Magazine</i> I announced that I
+proposed to give to the world a story concerned with events which had
+taken place in real life&mdash;a true story.</p>
+
+<p>I outlined it, giving the names of the persons and events it would deal
+with.</p>
+
+<p>These things happened:</p>
+
+<p>The edition of the magazine was sold out in three days; my chapter was
+printed in part or in full in nearly all the papers and periodicals of
+the United States and Canada; many of the representative journals, even
+in England, published long editorials on the subject, and with but few
+exceptions, editorials and news comments were favorable.</p>
+
+<p>I was urged to continue. My second chapter appeared.</p>
+
+<p>The magazine, with an additional 100,000 copies, was sold out in two
+days. The press took hold of the matter with even greater interest than
+it had accorded my first chapter.</p>
+
+<p>The third chapter met with a still more cordial reception. The edition
+of the magazine, although increased another 100,000, sold out as before,
+and my mail expanded to a degree that surprised me. In addition to
+thousands of press notices and criticisms, I received ever so many
+letters from all classes of Americans and Canadians&mdash;teachers of the
+Word of God, and members of the flocks who are taught, earnest statesmen
+and insincere politicians, millionnaires and paupers, anarchists,
+socialists, municipal-ownershipists, and the hundred and one travelers
+on the beaten highways and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_414" id="Page_414">[414]</a></span> lowways of life, who, spurred by ambition or
+unrest, pantingly seek a chance to blaze a way for the trudging millions
+of the future to that goal of all ambitious and restless dreamers&mdash;a
+people's Utopia. Nearly all appealed to me to give them the word as to
+the ultimate intention of "Frenzied Finance"&mdash;"Is it only to point to
+the sores, or will it prick them with its long sharp point and will its
+double edge cut the flesh in which they are rooted?" Others required
+further information or explanation about the subjects I had treated;
+another section questioned my statements and found fault with my
+disclosures. The volume of these communications and criticisms finally
+became so large and they were so urgent in tone that I made up my mind
+it was necessary to devise some fair and intelligent way to remove the
+writers' difficulties and resolve their doubts. The modern surgeon finds
+the preparation of a patient who is to go under the knife as important
+as the operation itself. My readers, unacquainted with the intricate
+details of finance and confused by the angry outcries and denials of
+those I had attacked, required education <i>en route</i> to be able to absorb
+and digest the hard facts and strong statements I was dealing out to
+them in monthly instalments. My publishers agreed with me as to the
+necessity of dealing in some radical way with the emergency, and devoted
+to my service additional pages in the back of <i>Everybody's Magazine</i>.
+Here I decided to begin a department to be called "Lawson and His
+Critics" in which I would solve the knotty problems my correspondents
+presented to me, set right their misunderstandings, and reply fully to
+those critics who had aspersed my motives or were attempting to
+discredit my message.</p>
+
+<p>I began the department in October, 1904, and though I have been most
+seriously pressed for time, and in many instances have dealt imperfectly
+with the problems treated, I must say that the task I set myself has
+proved interesting and agreeable, and the letters the department evoked
+have been a tremendous source of inspiration and encouragement to me
+along the hail-stony road I had set myself to travel.</p>
+
+<p>The bulk of the department during the months of 1904 was devoted to the
+subject of insurance. In an early chap<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_415" id="Page_415">[415]</a></span>ter of my story I said that the
+three great insurance corporations, the New York Life, the Equitable,
+and the Mutual Life of New York, were an integral part of the "System,"
+and especially instanced the New York Life as one of the most pliable
+tools of the "Made Dollar" makers. This statement, so mild and so vague
+in view of subsequent developments, was the first move in the historic
+controversy that has resulted in the extraordinary exposures that are
+being made as this book goes to press. When that first pebble was
+thrown, the surface of the insurance pond was as placid as a mountain
+lake, unruffled by a ripple, and in it were reflected the benignant
+faces of the noble philanthropists who consented to spend their days
+conserving the interests of the widows and the orphans of America. The
+people had grown so accustomed to regarding the McCalls, the Perkinses,
+the Hydes, the McCurdys, and the Alexanders, whose eminent physiognomies
+looked out at them from their insurance policies, as lofty and generous
+souls far removed from thoughts of pelf or self-aggrandizement, that my
+assertion caused consternation such as would occur in a Chinese temple
+if some rough intruder struck the idol, before whom a congregation was
+worshipping, with a stone. At once an avalanche of letters&mdash;protests,
+demands for further facts, anxious appeals from policy-holders&mdash;poured
+in upon me, and frankly I took up the subject, giving my readers exactly
+what they desired.</p>
+
+
+<p class='center'>NEW HAMPSHIRE TRACTION</p>
+
+<p>In order that the controversy may be unfolded in the manner in which it
+was first given to the public, I give here the first letter of the
+series, and then follow directly along with those passages from
+succeeding numbers that are devoted to the subject:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p class='right'><span class="smcap">Buffalo</span>, N. Y., August 25, 1904.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Thomas W. Lawson</span>,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Boston, Mass.</p>
+
+<p><i>Dear Sir</i>: I have been astounded beyond measure at the
+revelations you make in your second article regarding the
+New York Life Insurance Company, because I have two policies
+in that concern which I am keep<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_416" id="Page_416">[416]</a></span>ing up for the protection of
+my family. My confidence in the company has been shaken by
+your revelations, and I wonder if much more can be said.
+Perhaps it is best for clean life insurance to tell all
+now&mdash;the rest will be the better for it. Do you really
+believe the officers of the company personally profited from
+using the "cash on hand" of the company? Go on in your
+exposure; you are doing a meritorious work, and we poor
+devils, plodders, will never cease to thank you for your
+work. Should like to have you intimate if anything more
+about New York Life is coming.</p>
+
+<p class='indent1'>Yours truly,</p>
+<p class='right'>&mdash;&mdash; &mdash;&mdash;</p></div>
+
+<p>To this I replied: I desire to emphasize that the New York Life
+Insurance Company, which I cited, is no different from the Equitable and
+the Mutual Life, or many of the other large companies. They are links in
+the chain of the "System"&mdash;necessary links in the device by which
+dollars are "made," by which the savings of the people are sucked from
+the people to the "System," the "Private Things."</p>
+
+<p>I will, later in my story, dwell upon this tremendous phase of this
+stupendous question, and will only say at the present time, as an answer
+to such questions as "Buffalo's": The insurance companies use the
+billions the people have placed with them to buy or create banks and
+trust companies, the stocks of which are a large part of their assets.
+They then use these banks and trust companies, which exist because of
+the people's savings, in stock gambling enterprises, speculations as
+unsafe and as frenzied as those of the wildest plunger of Wall Street. I
+will give one illustration:</p>
+
+<p>The New York Life Insurance Company's directors and managers created the
+New York Security and Trust Company. $1,000,000 capital; $500,000
+surplus&mdash;in all, $1,500,000. $150 per share, of which the insurance
+company held about two-thirds. The Trust Company soon secured deposits
+to the extent of about $50,000,000, and these it loaned out by
+"financing" new and old enterprises. Among them was the New Hampshire
+Traction. The Trust Company flourished. Its stock advanced in price to
+over $1,300 per share, or over $13,000,000, and its different
+speculative ventures prospered exceedingly. New Hampshire Traction kept
+pace with the rest and simultaneously with<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_417" id="Page_417">[417]</a></span> them bounded upward in value
+until the amount of this stock owned by the Trust Company represented a
+value of between $5,000,000 and $6,000,000. There came a time when the
+directors of the New York Life Insurance Company decided to dispose of
+their stock in the Trust Company, and did so to a syndicate composed of
+their own members, headed by John D. Rockefeller, at $800 per share.
+Afterward the stock disposed of at $800 per share advanced to over
+$1,300, or, with the third which had not been owned by the insurance
+company but by the "insiders" and their friends, to a total of over
+$13,000,000. Then came the slump, and the price of the New Hampshire
+Traction fell to twenty-five cents on the dollar, and the Trust
+Company's stock to less than $600.</p>
+
+<p>If in all the histories of the wildcats of the wild catteries of Wall
+Street a wilder case of "frenzied finance" can be discovered, I don't
+know it, and yet this is only one of many I could quote, selected at
+random. Boiled down, it means that what was bought at $150 went to
+$1,400 and back to $590, and that it changed hands at $800 before it got
+to $1,400, and that the plunger in this transaction, which made this
+plunging possible, was one of the most conservative life insurance
+companies in America.</p>
+
+<p>I will answer "Buffalo's" question by asking another:</p>
+
+<p>Suppose all the insurance companies have been doing business on the same
+scale, and have tied up billions of the people's money in such schemes
+as New Hampshire Traction, and the people, learning these facts, should
+demand their savings to the extent of the $9,000,000,000 which they have
+deposited in banks and trust companies, what would happen? What would
+happen to the undigested securities, the insurance companies, the
+people's savings, and the policies such as "Buffalo" says he has
+purchased for the benefit of his family?</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>This statement precipitated a perfect flood of letters and queries,
+growing more urgent as the month wore on. It was impossible to answer
+all of them. I contented myself with replying to the letter of a
+prominent Philadelphia church-<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_418" id="Page_418">[418]</a></span>man, a policy-holder in the New York
+Life, who wrote as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p class='right'><span class="smcap">Philadelphia</span>, September 23, 1904.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Thomas W. Lawson</span>,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Boston, Mass.</p>
+
+<p><i>My Dear Sir</i>: I have just finished reading the current
+article on "Frenzied Finance," and like "Buffalo" I am
+astounded at your statements regarding the "New York Life."
+I, too, have a policy in that company and have been led to
+believe that I was not only insured in the best and most
+conservative company, but that I had a first-class and
+perfectly <i>safe</i> investment as well. This particular company
+claims that not a dollar of its assets is invested in stocks
+of any kind, and yet, to quote from your article:</p>
+
+<p>"The insurance companies use the billions the people have
+placed with them to buy or create banks and trust companies,
+the stocks of which are a large part of their assets."</p>
+
+<p>Either you are manifestly unfair or else the company is
+guilty of deliberate falsehood for the purpose of deceiving
+the public.</p>
+
+<p>As a policy-holder and prospective sharer in the surplus of
+the "New York Life," I am much interested in knowing whether
+its statements in regard to its investments are to be relied
+upon.</p>
+
+<p>Will you take just a moment to answer the following
+question? Is the "New York Life" telling a falsehood when it
+states that not a dollar of its assets is invested in stocks
+of any kind?</p>
+
+<p class='indent1'>Very respectfully yours,</p>
+<p class='right'>&mdash;&mdash; &mdash;&mdash;</p></div>
+
+<p>I replied: The transaction in regard to the New York Security Company
+and the New Hampshire Traction stocks was exactly as I set it forth. I
+can imagine no one but an absolute idiot who would dare to set it forth
+unless he knew he was dealing with facts.</p>
+
+<p>Your high position in the church should, in my opinion, peculiarly fit
+you to answer fairly your question, "Is the New York Life telling a
+falsehood when it states that not a dollar of its assets is in stocks of
+any kind?" when I unqualifiedly state the fact that the New York Life
+owned the millions of the New York Security Company's stock; that it
+paid $150 a share for them and sold them to a syndicate of its own
+directors at $800 per share, and that the stock afterward sold at over
+$1,300 per share, and still afterward dropped to less than $600 per
+share. I did not wish to be unfair to the New York Life, or I should
+have stated, what I shall endeavor<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_419" id="Page_419">[419]</a></span> to show before my story is ended,
+that at the time the New York Life parted with these shares to their own
+directors at $800 per share they were actually worth and could have been
+sold for hundreds of dollars per share more.</p>
+
+
+<p class='center'>THE HONESTY OF THE ONE MAN</p>
+
+<p>At this the big insurance companies uncovered their guns, and soon the
+air, the newspapers, and my mail were full of underwriting explosions.
+It was necessary then to line up my forces and to go at the attack
+seriously. So, having carefully thought out a campaign which my
+knowledge of the men whom I was antagonizing taught me would bring
+results, I began, in December, as follows:</p>
+
+<p>When I began to write "Frenzied Finance" I specifically stated that I
+should not concern myself with men, but with principles. I held that to
+put an end to the plundering of the people required more than the
+denunciation of individual criminals; that the real peril lay in the
+financial device through which the plundering was done and the "machine"
+developed for their operation. The "machine" is the tremendous
+correlation of financial institutions and forces that I call the
+"System," and the most potent factor in the "System" is the life
+insurance combine&mdash;the three great insurance companies, the New York
+Life, Mutual Life, and Equitable, with their billion of assets and the
+brimming stream of gold flowing daily into their coffers. That I should
+have to discuss the relation between the "System" and these great
+institutions was inevitable; but, knowing how vitally interested the
+public is in the preservation of the gigantic structures its savings
+have erected, I had thought to treat this phase of my subject later on,
+when my readers should be absolutely convinced by what had preceded it
+of the honesty and fairness of my purpose. Moreover, it did not seem
+possible to touch on life insurance conditions without involving the men
+who direct the three great companies, and whom policy-holders and the
+people at large have been taught to regard as men of wellnigh miraculous
+sagacity, integrity, and beneficence. With these men I have had none but
+the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_420" id="Page_420">[420]</a></span> pleasantest relations, and determined as I am on the performance of
+my task, I go about it with the reluctance a surgeon feels when, in
+order to save a friend's life, he must amputate his limb.</p>
+
+<p>A contingency has now arisen which compels me to depart from my rule and
+to discuss much more frankly than I had purposed at this juncture, the
+New York Life Insurance Company, the system which controls it, and its
+president, John A. McCall, the "System's" representative.</p>
+
+<p>In reply to the inquiries of an anxious policy-holder, who had taken
+alarm at my statement that the funds of these great corporations were
+under the control of the "System," I stated in the October issue of
+<i>Everybody's Magazine</i> that the New York Life was, as well as its
+so-called competitors, the Equitable and the Mutual, as much a
+participant in the frenzied speculation of the period as were the
+plunging Wall Street stock gamblers; but in giving an illustration of
+its methods (the New York Security and Trust Company and the New
+Hampshire Traction Company) I selected a case which would not
+unnecessarily alarm nervous people, for the transaction showed an
+enormous profit as the result of a wild stock plunge, instead of an
+enormous loss&mdash;some of the New York Life's other deals were much less
+fortunate. When I stated that the New York Life disposed of its interest
+in the Security Trust Company to its directors for four millions of
+dollars, which represented a gain of over $3,000,000 on its original
+investment, I was careful not to state that the shares for which they
+paid $800 each were worth at the time $1,300 each, or $7,000,000 for
+what was sold for $4,000,000&mdash;particularly careful to state that they
+were afterward worth this additional amount.</p>
+
+<p>Policy-holders in the three great life-insurance companies may argue:
+"The man who is known to us policy-holders as the real head of the New
+York Life is John A. McCall, its president. All that you may say about
+the 'System's' votaries being in control may be so, but we depend on the
+integrity and the character of this one man to protect our interests. He
+is our representative, not the 'System's,' and our savings are surely
+safe in his strong hands."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_421" id="Page_421">[421]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>There is the point. In the great insurance corporations that are
+"one-man run," the hundreds of thousands of policy-holders have but one
+protection. This, notwithstanding the protection of the State laws, the
+guardianship of the Insurance Department of the various States, and the
+provisions of the company's charter and by-laws.</p>
+
+<p>However impregnable may seem the safeguards which the law has built
+round the administration of our great insurance companies, the fact
+absolutely is that the honesty of "the one man" is the one potent
+protection policy-holders may depend on. The others may be juggled with
+as are the rules of the Stock Exchange, which say in thunder tones, "All
+within our sacred walls is honest and honorable," when in reality if the
+microbes of dishonor and dishonesty generated within Stock-Exchange
+walls each busy week of every year should be collected and disseminated
+throughout the land, they would give typhoid of the soul to our eighty
+millions of Americans. So it becomes the duty of every policy-holder to
+find out by such tests as he can apply, "Is 'the one man' who runs our
+company an honest man or is he a dishonest man?" If "the one man" stands
+their tests, if he emerges from their ordeal clean, strong, honest, as
+they believed, then they may rest awhile in patience. But if he is
+revealed as dishonest, then it behooves the policy-holders of that
+company to take measures for the protection of their interests. The
+welfare and happiness, perhaps the very lives of their mothers, their
+wives, and their children depend on their action.</p>
+
+<p>I was recently waited upon by an important man.</p>
+
+<p>"Lawson, what are you doing in life insurance?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Giving facts about the life-insurance branch of a 'System' which is
+foully plundering the people," I answered.</p>
+
+<p>"What are you trying to do?"</p>
+
+<p>"Educate the millions of life-insurance policy-holders to their present
+peril; after they are educated, arouse them to quick, radical action."</p>
+
+<p>"What are you going to do?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>"I am going to cause a life-insurance blaze that will<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_422" id="Page_422">[422]</a></span> make the
+life-insurance policy-holders' world so light that every scoundrel with
+a mask, dark-lantern, and suspicious-looking bag will stand out so
+clearly that he cannot escape the consequences of his past deeds, nor
+commit new ones."</p>
+
+<p>"Have you figured the consequences to yourself?"</p>
+
+<p>"Having no interest in what the consequences may be to myself in
+performing what I have decided is a sacred duty, I have not."</p>
+
+<p>"Let me show them to you. First let me ask, do you intend to confine
+your criticisms to the New York Life Insurance Company?"</p>
+
+<p>"I intend to bring out the facts, particularly as to the New York Life,
+the Mutual Life, and the Equitable Life; and, so far as in my power
+lies, as to every other life-insurance company in America that is
+connected with the 'System.'"</p>
+
+<p>"Are you actuated by any selfish motives&mdash;gain, revenge, or friendly
+interest in certain life-insurance companies or banks or trust
+companies?"</p>
+
+<p>"My only interest is to perform a duty in righting a startling wrong,
+and I would not undertake the terrible task if I could possibly avoid
+it."</p>
+
+<p>"I am sent to ask you these questions, to find out whether, if you are
+only seeking to serve the policy-holders, and the insurance companies
+can absolutely prove to you that your making public your facts will
+cause terrible destruction to policy-holders' interests, you will
+consent to forego the life-insurance branch of your story?"</p>
+
+<p>"I know the facts. I have calmly, and I believe intelligently, reviewed
+the effects of their being given to the world, and have concluded that
+the damage to policy-holders and the people would, in any circumstances
+or conditions, be greater because of my not doing what I have decided to
+do than by my doing it. Therefore I will not in any circumstances
+consent to stop until I have laid before the world those things I
+consider it should know."</p>
+
+<p>"Well and good. Let me show you what you are up against. The Equitable,
+the New York Life, and Mutual Life Insurance Companies, and their
+affiliated institutions and individuals, are to-day by all odds the
+greatest power in<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_423" id="Page_423">[423]</a></span> the world, greater by all odds than any power that
+can possibly be gathered together from those outside themselves, a power
+so great that the effort of no man nor party of men outside themselves
+can possibly prevail against their wishes."</p>
+
+<p>"Stop where you are for a minute," I answered, "and let me run over to
+you what I know I am up against, and then you can judge whether I
+appreciate the difficulties of my task:</p>
+
+<p>"First, the three companies I have named have absolute possession of
+property and money in the form of assets of over $1,000,000,000&mdash;more
+than half the combined assets of all the insurance companies of
+America&mdash;and indirectly, through their affiliated institutions, of an
+additional sum, the aggregate of which is much greater than the assets
+of all the national banks of America and the great financial
+institutions of Europe, such as the Banks of England, France, and
+Germany. The three have a ready cash surplus of almost $200,000,000,
+which is greater than the combined capital of the four greatest
+institutions of Europe&mdash;the Banks of England, Russia, France, and
+Germany. The income of these three companies is, each year, $100,000,000
+greater than the combined capitals of the Banks of England, Russia,
+France, and Germany&mdash;or about $250,000,000, $200,000,000 of which is
+taken each year from their policy-holders in the form of premiums. Yet
+from out of this income there is returned to their policy-holders each
+year in dividends less than $15,000,000, and in total payments of all
+kinds not over $100,000,000. And yet these three companies pay out each
+year in what they call expenses to keep the concerns running
+$50,000,000, paying to the officers of the companies $3,000,000 in
+salaries, almost $1,000,000 to their lawyers, and a number of millions
+in various forms of advertising.</p>
+
+<p>"Second, the three companies are absolutely steered and controlled from
+a common centre, and the men who do the steering and controlling are the
+'System's' foremost votaries, Henry H. Rogers, William Rockefeller,
+James Stillman, and J. Pierpont Morgan through George W. Perkins, a
+partner in J. Pierpont Morgan &amp; Co. Mr. Rogers, vice-president of the
+Standard Oil Company, is a trustee of the Mutual<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_424" id="Page_424">[424]</a></span> Life and a director in
+one of the largest trust companies owned by the three great insurance
+companies, the Guaranty Trust Company of New York. William Rockefeller,
+vice-president of the Standard Oil Company, is a trustee of the Mutual
+Life and director in the National City&mdash;the 'Standard Oil'&mdash;Bank. James
+Stillman is a trustee of the New York Life, and president of the
+National City&mdash;the 'Standard Oil'&mdash;Bank of New York. George W. Perkins,
+partner of J. Pierpont Morgan &amp; Co., is vice-president and trustee of
+the New York Life and a director in the National City&mdash;the 'Standard
+Oil'&mdash;Bank; while John A. McCall, the president of the New York Life, is
+a director in the National City&mdash;the 'Standard Oil'&mdash;Bank.</p>
+
+<p>"These great institutions own a majority of the capital stock or have
+absolute control of a number of the leading banks and trust companies of
+New York and elsewhere; and such ownership shows conclusively the
+linking together of the three great insurance companies. For instance,
+the Equitable owns more than a majority of the stock of the Mercantile
+Trust Company of New York, of a book value of about $4,500,000 and a
+market value of almost $13,000,000; and of the Equitable Trust of New
+York, of a book value of $5,500,000 and a market value of $9,000,000;
+and of the Bank of Commerce of New York, of a book value of about
+$8,000,000 and a market value of over $9,000,000; and in the directory
+of the Mercantile Trust of New York and Equitable Trust is E. H.
+Harriman, one of the leading 'Standard Oil' men and one of the active
+votaries of the 'System,' while in the directory of the Bank of Commerce
+are the president of the Mutual Life and seven other trustees of the
+Mutual Life and three of the trustees of the New York Life.</p>
+
+<p>"The Mutual Life owns stock of the Bank of Commerce, of a book value of
+$4,500,000 and a market value of $7,500,000; of the United States
+Mortgage &amp; Trust Company, of a book value of $2,000,000 and a market
+value of $4,500,000; and of the Guaranty Trust Company of New York, of a
+book value of $1,250,000 and a market value of $5,500,000. The directors
+of the United States Mortgage<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_425" id="Page_425">[425]</a></span> &amp; Trust Company consist of eight trustees
+of the Mutual Life, including its president, and two trustees of the
+Equitable Life, while in the Guaranty Trust directory is the president
+of the Mutual Life, Henry H. Rogers, and E. H. Harriman, 'Standard Oil'
+votary and director in the Equitable.</p>
+
+<p>"In addition to these financial institutions, the Mutual Life has about
+$20,000,000 of its funds invested in the stock of twenty-five other
+trust companies and national banks, while the Equitable has about
+$10,000,000 invested in some fifteen other trust and banking
+institutions.</p>
+
+<p>"Third, the absolute control of the three great companies, and through
+them of their subsidiary financial institutions, while supposed to be in
+the hands of the policy-holders, is entirely beyond their regulation, as
+all policy-holders of the three companies give over complete control of
+their companies to the 'System' through the following machinery: The
+control of the New York Life rests absolutely in President McCall, that
+of the Mutual Life with President McCurdy. Originally these men were
+elected to office by policy-holders' proxies, voted by the great general
+agents; but so immeasurable has been the growth of these corporations
+that only rebellion among policy-holders on an international scale could
+oust from power the McCalls and the McCurdys. The control of the
+Equitable Life rests in the $100,000 of capital stock which is almost
+entirely owned by the men who elect themselves to manage the company.</p>
+
+<p>"Therefore you will see that I fully comprehend that this power, which
+you claim to be, and which undoubtedly is, the greatest on earth, is
+absolutely, for all practical purposes, in the hands of three men, and
+that any one who attempts to do anything contrary to what this power
+allows will find himself opposed by practically unlimited money, which
+can be used first to corrupt all sources of help, including State
+insurance-law enforcers, and then to keep such corruptions from the
+policy-holders by subsidizing the press. In other words, you see that I
+fully comprehend that I, or any man or any body of men, would be
+absolutely helpless in an attempt to correct present evils unless we
+could do two things: First, show to the policy-holders of the great<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_426" id="Page_426">[426]</a></span>
+insurance companies that they are absolutely in the hands and at the
+mercy of 'one man,' and next, that this 'one man' is unscrupulous."</p>
+
+<p>In other and different ways I had it forcibly impressed upon me that I
+must go no further in connecting the life-insurance companies with
+"frenzied financiering"; that while the "Standard Oil"-Amalgamated-City
+Bank crowd might bide their time for reprisal and vengeance, the great
+insurance companies must at any cost instantly squelch those rash souls
+who dared to cross their paths. To all such warnings I replied that a
+life-insurance company, especially great institutions with hundreds of
+thousands of policy-holders, must be as far above suspicion as C&aelig;sar's
+wife; that the security of the immense funds in their possession must be
+as unassailable as the United States Constitution; but that immunity
+from criticism could be secured only by honesty of purpose, honesty of
+method, and honesty of results; and that I would follow "frenzied
+finance" wherever it might lead, even if the exposure brought every
+life-insurance concern in the country down to the ring-bolt of making
+public confession of complicity. But with all my knowledge of the
+"System's" weakness, I never dreamed of the condition of fatuity into
+which the past few years of unbridled "frenzied finance" have plunged
+its votaries. If the correspondence that follows here correctly
+represents the purposes and the methods of great American life-insurance
+companies, I ask my readers what quick, sharp, effective means should be
+taken to call a halt and rescue the billions of the people's savings
+before it is too late. And I ask all policy-holders in the great
+insurance companies to weigh carefully what follows, that from it they
+may decide the question.</p>
+
+<p>As soon as it became fixed in the minds of the different interested
+parties who had communicated with me that my purpose was unalterable,
+queer things happened:</p>
+
+<p>First, there appeared in the press of the country, under large, black
+headlines, the startling confession of the editor of a New York
+financial paper, who, conscience-stricken, admitted that he had been
+engaged in the systematic blackmail of insurance companies and officials
+and Wall<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_427" id="Page_427">[427]</a></span> Street institutions such as banks and trust companies. It was
+a curious document, and even the casual reader must have wondered at the
+mysterious lack of detail. The paper, I found out later, was one of the
+innumerable swarm of journalistic insects generated, like mosquitoes, in
+the financial swamps of Wall Street, destined to live a day and die as
+they deliver their sting, and the attention given it was curiously out
+of proportion to its importance. Among other queer things, the editor
+announced that after printing his confession he would disappear; no
+names were mentioned nor a fact printed which identified any one or
+anything. All this could not happen without a motive, and I said to
+myself, "The 'System' is planting a mine for some one." Not another word
+appeared. I awaited developments. On October 8th I received the
+following letters, which tell their own story:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p class='right'><span class="smcap">Fremont, Ohio</span>, October 6, 1904.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Thomas W. Lawson</span>,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Boston, Mass.</p>
+
+<p><i>My Dear Sir</i>: I have followed with intensest interest your
+discussion of "Frenzied Finance." The <i>expos&eacute;</i> of the
+"System," and its Machiavellian performances, was highly
+interesting to me. I was associated with Attorney-General
+Monnett in his effort to get testimony and the inside facts
+concerning the trust and its operations in his prosecution
+against that corporation for violating the Ohio anti-trust
+law. At that time the books of the company were burned in
+Cleveland, and, as stated in your article, the company now
+relies upon the superior memory of Standard Oil.</p>
+
+<p>I was well aware of the connection of certain life-insurance
+companies with Morgan and the Rockefellers, but until your
+public charge, was not familiar with the details. As I had
+considerable money invested myself in New York Life
+Insurance I wrote John A. McCall a bitter letter. In this
+age of commercialism sentimental benevolence gets little
+place. The common sentiments of humanity and appreciation of
+responsibility admonish one in moderate circumstances or
+even in affluence to invite the co-operation of others in
+providing for those dependent upon the individual hazard of
+life and fortune. Life insurance has come to be a sacred
+thing. It is the substantial token and expression of
+responsibility which a reasonable man dying leaves to those
+dependent upon him. I so wrote Mr. McCall, and told him that
+if the head of a great institution like the New York Life
+Insurance Company would be guilty of such perfidy as charged
+by you, the organization which would retain him in a
+position of responsibility was undeserving of confidence or
+patronage.</p></div><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_428" id="Page_428">[428]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 317px;">
+<a href="images/fig005.jpg"><img src="images/fig005th.jpg" width="317" height="400" alt="PHOTOGRAPH OF JOHN A. McCALL&#39;S REPLY TO H. C. DeRAN, THE
+POLICYHOLDER WHO HAD ASKED FOR A DENIAL OF MR. LAWSON&#39;S CHARGES." title="" /></a>
+<span class="caption">photograph of john a. mccall&#39;s reply to h. c. deran, the
+policyholder who had asked for a denial of mr. lawson&#39;s charges.</span>
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>I enclose for your inspection Mr. McCall's reply. This is
+doubtless a sample of the sort of campaign waged throughout
+the country by the "System."</p>
+
+<p>I enclose stamped envelope for the return of the McCall
+letter, as I purpose continuing the correspondence until I
+force him to an issue.</p>
+
+<p>You will observe the very palpable evasion of the issue. I
+asked him if the details of the transaction described in
+<i>Everybody's</i>, in which<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_429" id="Page_429">[429]</a></span> the New York Life Insurance figured
+conspicuously, were true. He answered by saying that he made
+money out of the trust company venture and retired. The fact
+that New York Life money is so deposited as to suit the
+convenience of the "System" in its heads&mdash;I win, tails&mdash;you
+lose, operation, is a matter which has escaped the attention
+of the astute financier. I have written him further, calling
+his attention to the fact that his letter conveys no
+information not heretofore made public in circular but that
+my inquiry was directed to the particular transaction
+alluded to in <i>Everybody's</i>, and requesting a flat
+affirmation or denial.</p>
+
+<p>Trusting that these facts may be of assistance to you, I am,</p>
+
+<p class='indent1'>Yours very truly,</p>
+<p class='right'>(Signed) <span class="smcap">H. C. DeRan</span>.</p></div>
+
+<p>I shall spare my readers the enclosures. They were newspaper slips,
+printed on fairly thick paper, reproduced from unknown publications, and
+obviously put forth to discredit me by implication. One, headed "A
+Frenzied Financial Blackmailer," from the <i>Vigilant</i>, New York City,
+September 30, 1904, presented the confession, previously referred to,
+made by the editor of the <i>United States Investors' Guardian</i>, and an
+editorial denouncing the blackmail of financial corporations. Another
+slip was "Stamp out the Fake Financial Newspaper Publisher" from the
+<i>Fourth Estate</i>, New York City, October 1, 1904, in which the wickedness
+of the aforesaid editor came in for further moral castigation.</p>
+
+<p>At once, as I read these letters and ran over the printed slips pinned
+to Mr. McCall's, I realized the purpose of the blackmail editor's
+confession and just how so much space came to be given it in the daily
+papers. Insurance corporations are large advertisers<a name="FNanchor_20_20" id="FNanchor_20_20"></a><a href="#Footnote_20_20" class="fnanchor">[20]</a> and enjoy great
+popularity in the business offices of great newspapers. It is not said
+in these clippings that either Mr. Lawson or <i>Everybody's Magazine</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_430" id="Page_430">[430]</a></span>
+belongs to that lowest order of criminal, the self-confessed
+black-mailer, but the suggestion is obvious. Every policy-holder
+throughout the world who received these enclosures attached to letters
+from the greatest insurance president in America would instantly supply
+the connection&mdash;"'Frenzied finance black-mailer'&mdash;that's intended for
+Lawson, surely; 'Frenzied financial journal'&mdash;<i>Everybody's Magazine</i>,
+beyond question."</p>
+
+<p>Will my readers weigh carefully this awful charge:</p>
+
+<p>"Thomas W. Lawson, in addition to being a frenzied financial
+black-mailer, is attacking the New York Life Insurance Company because
+he tried to secure insurance from that company, and that company would
+not give it to him. His attack is made in the interest of some competing
+company."</p>
+
+<p>Again, I ask that it be kept in mind that all this is not said by an
+insignificant and irresponsible trickster, but is deliberately put forth
+by the greatest insurance president in America, over his signature, to
+his policy-holder No. 826,152 and 957,006.</p>
+
+<p>Soon afterward, in its issue of October 20th, a well-known organ of the
+insurance companies, <i>The Spectator</i>, published in New York, had a long
+article dealing with malicious attacks on our great insurance
+corporations, specifically mentioning my accusation against the New York
+Life. "Mr. Lawson was actuated by the meanest motives," says <i>The
+Spectator</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Extract from <i>The Spectator</i>, October 20, 1904:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Mr. Lawson, in the hypocritical r&ocirc;le of a
+would-be-reformed-speculator, is a figure calculated to stir
+the risibilities of all who have watched his antics and read
+his articles, <i>especially when each one of the companies he
+mentions has repeatedly rejected him for insurance</i>.</p></div>
+
+<p>Letters to policy-holders from the New York Life Insurance officers
+poured in on me from different parts of the country, all containing the
+same defence and the same accusations as the one above, and signed by
+vice-presidents of the company as well as President McCall, showing
+conclusively that this great corporation as a corporation had
+deliberately<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_431" id="Page_431">[431]</a></span> adopted this method of meeting my serious yet
+conservatively put business accusations.</p>
+
+<p>President McCall's defence of the New York Life Insurance Company and
+his reply to my accusations are now completely before my readers. Let us
+see if there is not a chance here to determine the grave question, "Is
+'<i>the one man</i>' who runs each of our great insurance companies honest?"</p>
+
+<p>The facts are: During the past twenty years I have been importuned,
+begged, and hounded by the several great insurance companies of the
+United States to take out policies with them almost upon any terms I
+might name. Of this statement I could present more photographic proof
+than would fit in any one issue of this magazine, but most of it would
+have no bearing on the point at issue.</p>
+
+<p>In the present year (1904)&mdash;to go no further back&mdash;John A. McCall has
+repeatedly urged me to come into the New York Life Insurance Company.
+Absolute evidence of the truth of this assertion is presented below. Mr.
+McCall's letter reproduced here would be accepted as complete proof in
+any court of justice. In the correspondence that follows this first
+letter it will be seen that Mr. McCall left no stone unturned in his
+effort to get me into the New York Life Insurance Company. A duplicate
+of the communication sent to my residence went on the same date to my
+office. To quote his own words, "I hope you may" and "I may have the
+pleasure of welcoming you either to new or increased membership in this
+great mutual insurance investment." Then, his anxiety being so great,
+after waiting four days for a reply he sent his special agent to argue
+with me, and, on the following day, his Boston manager to urge me
+further.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_432" id="Page_432">[432]</a></span></p>
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 214px;">
+<a href="images/fig006.jpg"><img src="images/fig006th.jpg" width="214" height="400" alt="PHOTOGRAPH OF LETTER FROM JOHN A. McCALL SOLICITING
+INSURANCE, SENT TO MR. LAWSON&#39;S HOUSE." title="" /></a>
+<span class="caption">photograph of letter from john a. mccall soliciting
+insurance, sent to mr. lawson&#39;s house.</span>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_433" id="Page_433">[433]</a></span></p>
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 366px;">
+<a href="images/fig007.jpg"><img src="images/fig007th.jpg" width="366" height="400" alt="PHOTOGRAPH OF HEADING AND SIGNATURE OF JOHN A. McCALL&#39;S
+LETTER OF JANUARY 22d, SENT IN DUPLICATE TO MR. LAWSON&#39;S OFFICE; OF
+SPECIAL AGENT GILLESPIE&#39;S LETTER OF JANUARY 27th; OF MANAGER HAYES&#39;S
+LETTER OF JANUARY 28th. THESE THREE LETTERS SOLICITING INSURANCE,
+FOLLOWED EACH OTHER WITHIN A PERIOD OF SIX DAYS." title="" /></a>
+<span class="caption">photograph of heading and signature of john a. mccall&#39;s
+letter of january 22d, sent in duplicate to mr. lawson&#39;s office; of
+special agent gillespie&#39;s letter of january 27th; of manager hayes&#39;s
+letter of january 28th. these three letters soliciting insurance,
+followed each other within a period of six days.</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>Is it any wonder that I called the history I am writing "Frenzied
+Finance"? The man who wrote the letter practically saying that I was a
+black-mailer and that my reason for attacking the New York Life was my
+anger because he would not take me into his company, and the man who
+wrote the ones begging me to come in, are one and the same; and he
+absolutely controls directly $400,000,000 of the people's savings in
+the New York Life, and indirectly unnumbered millions in affiliated
+institutions!</p>
+
+<p>I think the case is complete. The policy-holders of the New York Life
+have an opportunity to decide whether the "one man" who runs the great
+institution in which their savings are invested is honest. In making up
+their minds,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_434" id="Page_434">[434]</a></span> I implore them not at the present time, or at least until
+the question has been more fully ventilated, to allow their policies to
+lapse. Under any and all circumstances they should keep up the payment
+of their premiums, for the one thing especially desired and schemed for
+by some of the "frenzied finance" insurance companies is a wholesale
+lapse of policies.</p>
+
+<p>Some few years ago the financial world learned with great interest of a
+new and very useful invention in finance. A group of individuals who had
+been buying large quantities of a certain stock at a low price, found
+they could not, on account of the fact of its overcapitalization having
+become known to the public, resell it; and they were, to use the
+stock-gambling term, "hung up" with it because it was too water-logged
+to float. It became necessary to disguise its identity. Here's how they
+did it: They formed a "syndicate," to which they "turned over" their
+stock at a good profit; the "syndicate" in its turn put it "in trust" by
+simply depositing the stock certificate with a trust company, which in
+its turn issued against the stocks thus held a new security, which it
+called a "bond." For these a ready market was found, for the word "bond"
+is still a term to conjure with in the world of finance.</p>
+
+<p>This seemed such a serviceable arrangement that the originators soon had
+many imitators. Many "syndicates" were formed, and many so-called
+"bonds" were put on the market. In most cases the stocks were purchased
+at a low price, turned into "trusts" at double their cost, and then paid
+for by means of these certificates, dubbed "bonds." As one stock after
+another was converted into syndicate certificates&mdash;"bonds"&mdash;the
+familiarity of the procedure robbed it of its novelty and these "bonds"
+were quoted and dealt in much as other and more tangible securities
+bearing the same name. Perhaps this is why the startling announcement of
+the New York Life Insurance Company made about this time, that it
+proposed to sell all its stocks and thereafter hold nothing but bonds,
+created so much less of a sensation than was anticipated. The term
+"bond" had become vulgarized.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_435" id="Page_435">[435]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>This excellent example would undoubtedly have had many followers but for
+the humor of the Tobacco Trust. This robust institution, with an immense
+amount of watered stock, audaciously poured it all but a small amount
+into bonds, $157,000,000 of them, and with a fine trumpet-blast
+proclaimed these "bonds" safe investments for widows, orphans, and
+insurance companies. Even Wall Street, with its frenzied votaries and
+its frenzied environment, was staggered. The culmination of these
+conversion performances was the brilliant plan evolved by George W.
+Perkins, the junior partner in the firm of J. Pierpont Morgan &amp; Co.,
+vice-president of the New York Life Insurance Company and expert
+investor of its vast surplus, to have the United States Steel Trust
+purchase some $200,000,000 worth of its own water-logged stock and
+convert the same into more "absolutely safe bonds"; for its most
+valuable services in the turning-over process the Morgan firm was to
+have a commission of some forty millions of dollars. At this juncture
+"frenzied finance" became gagged with its own froth, and I have not
+space here to go further into the subject.</p>
+
+<p>The New York Life Insurance Company declares to its agents,
+policy-holders, and prospective policy-holders that it no longer holds
+stock securities. In its last report to the Insurance Commissioners
+there are set forth stock securities of the kind I have described above,
+to the amount of fifty millions of dollars. I will give one
+illustration:</p>
+
+<p>"Northern Pacific&mdash;Great Northern&mdash;C., B. &amp; Q. collateral 4s, book
+value&mdash;$12,057,132.59, market value&mdash;$11,375,000."&mdash;(From the official
+report to Insurance Commissioners.)</p>
+
+<p>Now, these bonds are nothing more nor less than Chicago, Burlington and
+Quincy stock of a par value of $100 per share, which shares were
+purchased by individuals, and had "bonds" issued against them at $200
+per share. (Northern Pacific and Great Northern stock in about the same
+proportion.) In the sense in which the public look upon the old bonds of
+railroads this "bond" is no more a bond than it is a Government bond. It
+is nothing more nor less than a stock security, <i>and yet President
+McCall says in his letter printed</i> <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_436" id="Page_436">[436]</a></span> <i>above and sent by him to
+policy-holder DeRan that the New York Life does not and cannot invest
+its surplus in stock securities</i>.</p>
+
+
+<p class='center'>THE TRUE STORY OF HOW I WAS "BLACK-LISTED"</p>
+
+<p>The publication of President McCall's letter and the charges which
+accompanied it attracted so much attention that the "Big Three" were
+flooded with letters from policy-holders demanding information. In the
+January, 1904, issue of <i>Everybody's Magazine</i>, I continued the
+controversy. After reviewing the conditions of the previous month's
+argument, I went on:</p>
+
+<p>In entering upon the exposure of the most powerful body of men in the
+world, I knew quite well what I was "up against," and deliberately
+decided that in the conduct of my fight I would use such strategy as I
+believed proper to outwit so strong and so unscrupulous an adversary.
+One can hang a dog as well with a cord as with a hawser, and in proving
+my assertions I am quite willing that the insurance companies should
+believe each play is my best card. I decline, however, to show my hand.</p>
+
+<p>In reply to the charge that I was attacking the New York Life because I
+had been refused insurance by that company, as positively stated in Mr.
+McCall's letter, I reproduced a letter written and signed by President
+John A. McCall, dated 1904, soliciting me to take out insurance in his
+company. I printed parts of three other letters, one directed to my
+office, also signed by Mr. McCall, another from the special agent, and a
+third from the Boston agent of the New York Life, supplementing Mr.
+McCall's letter and requesting the privilege of an interview.</p>
+
+<p>This correspondence was put forth with a thorough understanding of its
+nature. The publishers of <i>Everybody's Magazine</i> and my own lawyers, to
+whom I submitted it, both pointed out that the insurance companies would
+undoubtedly take the ground that the McCall letter was no more than a
+circular that had been sent out to a number of capitalists and had gone
+to me by mistake. I replied that such a re<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_437" id="Page_437">[437]</a></span>joinder would practically
+amount to an admission that the statement and signature of the highest
+officials of the New York Life were valueless and without significance,
+which would place President McCall in an untenable position. If his
+signature were valueless and without significance when appended to a
+letter addressed to me, why not in other instances if the interests of
+his corporation seemed to require such a disclaimer? Considering my
+argument, would not such a confession have a pregnant bearing on the
+proposition&mdash;is the "one man" honest, especially as I was equipped with
+additional documents to offset further attempts on the part of the
+insurance companies to show me up as a disappointed seeker after their
+policies?</p>
+
+<p>Here, specifically, are the details of my encounter with the
+life-insurance institutions, and I pledge my word to my readers that
+they constitute all the facts in this connection. They are well known to
+the prominent men associated with the great companies whose duty it is
+to keep track of just such transactions. Whoever knows by experience of
+the incessant pursuit of business by the important insurance
+corporations need not be told that a man in my position has had his
+share of importuning by agents great and small. I have never sought life
+insurance, for it has not appealed to me as an investment, but on three
+separate occasions I have yielded to the persuasions of a friend
+connected with one of the big institutions and have considered the
+subject. The first time was in 1887, following a breakdown from
+overwork. This illness my friend used as an argument to induce me to
+take out insurance, and I went so far as to agree to submit to a private
+medical examination by the leading physicians of his company for the
+purpose of ascertaining if my breakdown, which for a brief time had left
+a trace of paralysis in my left side, would bar me. This examination was
+at my own expense, and it was expressly understood that, being private,
+it should not constitute a record. The physician pronounced me a perfect
+risk, but advised against going further inasmuch as a rigid rule of the
+company precluded them from granting insurance to any one who had
+suffered from this form of illness until<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_438" id="Page_438">[438]</a></span> seven years after the attack.
+I was not disappointed except on account of my friend.</p>
+
+<p>Five years later his solicitation was renewed and I was assured that the
+officials of his company were so eager to have me that they would waive
+the seven-year rule, which still had two years to run. This time I went
+up before another medical examiner, and after the usual tests, was asked
+the stereotyped question if I had ever previously been rejected for life
+insurance. My friend replied for me&mdash;no. I, however, in spite of his
+protests stated fully the conditions of my previous examination, which
+the doctor assured me did not constitute an official rejection, and the
+application was filled out. In the conversation that ensued, the doctor
+said that it was safer to await the expiration of the seven years, and I
+being still indifferent, except to my friend's interest, accepted the
+apologies of the several people concerned for the trouble I had taken
+and let it go at that.</p>
+
+<p>Four years later, in 1896, after the attack of appendicitis which I
+described in the December, 1904, instalment of "Frenzied Finance," again
+my good friend the agent came to me and used the incident of my narrow
+escape from death to impress upon me once more the desirability of
+having a large policy of life insurance. Those who have read the
+"System's" disclaimer, will remember that I had been blacklisted since
+1892. There were the usual consultations with high officials of the
+corporation, and when all preliminary bargains had been arranged, I
+underwent a thorough examination in New York. This time, the seven-year
+term having expired, I was pronounced a perfect risk. But my latest
+illness had brought me up against another waiting rule, and once more
+the subject was abandoned after the usual expressions of regret and
+good-will. Since 1896 my connection with life-insurance companies has
+been about the same as that of a molasses barrel with the industrious
+flies in summer.</p>
+
+<p>The interviews of 1892 and 1896 are both matters of record. My position
+in each instance was well understood, and several insurance officials
+who know the facts as well as I do have, since the publication of the
+company's statement,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_439" id="Page_439">[439]</a></span> come to me and offered to back up my assertions
+with their own. American manhood is certainly not extinct when men are
+willing to sacrifice their careers to set a wrong right.</p>
+
+<p>The manner in which the great companies have met my rejoinder to
+President McCall will afford my readers an excellent illustration of how
+the "System" goes after a man who has excited its antagonism.</p>
+
+<p>A few days after the publication of the December issue of <i>Everybody's
+Magazine</i>, containing my fac-simile of President McCall's letter to
+policy-holder DeRan and his two letters to me, the Life Insurance
+Underwriters met and "resoluted" that I had applied for insurance in the
+New York Life Insurance Company in 1892, and being asked if I had ever
+been refused insurance, had replied in the negative. Investigation
+showed that I had been refused four years before by two other companies,
+whereupon my application was rejected and I was practically
+black-listed, and so could not secure life insurance in any American
+company. By way of corroborating this plausible story two letters,
+purporting to have been written by agents of the two companies to their
+head officers without my knowledge, were incorporated in the resolution.
+The letters stated that the writers could secure me for a large amount
+of insurance if the companies would accept the risk. The virtuous
+corporations were alleged to have replied that Mr. Lawson had been
+refused life insurance before, and for good reasons was not desired as a
+risk. This resolution was then published throughout the press of America
+in the news columns, and to all but those initiated in the desperate
+practices of the "System" and its votaries, it was conclusive evidence
+that an unprincipled man had been convicted, red-handed, of fraud.</p>
+
+<p>You who read this statement of mine doubtless found the resolutions in
+your own paper, and thought it ordinary news-matter printed because of
+its public interest. This notice was an advertisement disguised as news,
+and inserted through the "System's" professional character assassinator,
+whose head-quarters are in Boston, a person who will occupy a prominent
+part in the chapters of my story wherein I treat of the crimes of
+Amalgamated. The publication cost the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_440" id="Page_440">[440]</a></span> insurance companies $2.50 per
+line of the policy-holders' money, while advertisements that I insert in
+the course of my private business cost me but 75 cents per line.</p>
+
+
+<p class='center'>HOW THE "SYSTEM" MAKES ITS PROFITS</p>
+
+<p>It appeared that I had sinned still further, for had I not questioned
+the virtue and integrity of the New York Life's securities? To
+policy-holder DeRan, Mr. McCall had stated, over his own signature, that
+the New York Life did not and could not own stock securities. (See the
+DeRan letter on page 428.) I proved from the regular insurance reports
+that millions of the New York Life's bonds were no more than disguised
+stock securities, created by the new device of depositing stocks with a
+trust company at an inflated price and issuing against them a receipt
+which is arbitrarily called a "bond." I mentioned, as an illustration,
+the Northern Pacific-Great Northern-C., B. &amp; Q. Collateral 4s, created
+out of the stock of the Chicago, Burlington &amp; Quincy and other
+railroads. I could have selected a much worse type of security, just as,
+instead of the typewritten letter of Mr. McCall, I might have published
+others of a more personal nature.</p>
+
+<p>Against me out sallied 2d Vice-President Perkins, brother of George W.
+Perkins, 1st Vice-President of the New York Life (J. Pierpont Morgan's
+partner), and at a banquet in Philadelphia boldly answered my aspersions
+by declaring that the bonds I named "are printed in the list of holdings
+which the company publishes in detail, and has published for the last
+five years, in order that its policy-holders may be informed of its
+affairs in the minutest detail." The convincing logic of this rejoinder
+the dullest will appreciate, but for a moment I must stop to remind Mr.
+Perkins that the publicity on which he plumes himself is really not an
+expression of the New York Life's individual frankness, but merely an
+observance compelled by the law.</p>
+
+<p>All this recapitulation has been for a purpose. My readers will bear in
+mind before taking hold of my next exhibit that the great insurance
+companies have published me as a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_441" id="Page_441">[441]</a></span> falsifier, who since 1892 has been
+refused insurance and black-listed for good reasons, and have claimed
+that Mr. McCall's letters were circulars sent me by mistake. We are
+still considering the problem&mdash;<i>are the men who run our great insurance
+companies honest?</i> Well, look at the reproduction on page 442 of a
+document that is now in my possession and has always been since the date
+when it was delivered to me by one of the three great representatives of
+the "System," the Equitable Life Insurance Company.</p>
+
+<p>This document speaks for itself. My readers are aware of the
+negotiations and investigations which precede the making of an insurance
+contract. To them and to the "System's" votaries I recommend the exhibit
+and the underwriters' resolutions as a simple lesson in frenzied
+finance.</p>
+
+<p>My charge that the directors of the great life-insurance corporations of
+America use the funds of the companies they control in stock speculation
+for their personal benefit is but one contention in my argument against
+the character of their management. Here I formally add another charge:
+It is that in the placing of loans, in the purchase of properties and
+securities, and in the underwriting of enterprises, there are enormous
+profits made, directly and indirectly, which are pocketed by individuals
+and are never shown on the books of the corporation.</p>
+
+<p>The basis of life insurance is security. A policy-holder pays his
+premium to enable the corporation accepting it to make good its contract
+with him when death or time matures it. The vast sums in the possession
+of the three great companies are accumulated to safeguard their
+policy-holders, and should be invested only in securities of tried and
+solid worth, which will bring in no more nor less than the going rate of
+interest. There must be no experiments and, above all, no speculation.
+But what do we find? The positions of managers and manipulators of these
+huge hoards of the people's money have become the greatest financial
+prizes of the day. New and ingenious methods of graft have been devised
+in connection with them. The vast revenues of the insurance companies
+have become the "System's" most potent instrument in working its will in
+the stock world.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_442" id="Page_442">[442]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 262px;">
+<a href="images/fig008.jpg"><img src="images/fig008th.jpg" width="262" height="400" alt="" title="" /></a>
+</div><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_443" id="Page_443">[443]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 279px;">
+<a href="images/fig009.jpg"><img src="images/fig009th.jpg" width="279" height="400" alt="" title="" /></a>
+</div><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_444" id="Page_444">[444]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Their investments, largely in the securities of properties or
+corporations in which the "System's" votaries have large interests, are
+fertile sources of profit to the "insiders." The groups of banks and
+trust companies affiliated with them are the medium through which access
+to the coveted insurance funds is obtained, for these institutions are
+allowed by law to use money for speculative purposes, which the
+insurance concerns are prohibited from doing.</p>
+
+<p>The immense opportunities for profit afforded by the control of these
+great money hoards are taken advantage of in various ways. Let me
+illustrate one or two of them. Rogers, Rockefeller, Stillman, and Morgan
+buy the capital stock of three railways at a fair valuation, say,
+$20,000,000 apiece, $60,000,000 for the three. Owning all, or nearly
+all, the stock, they can put its price on the stock-exchanges to any
+figure they desire, say, $60,000,000 for each railway, or $180,000,000
+in all. They proceed to deposit the stocks of the three roads in a trust
+company, issuing against them $180,000,000 of what they call "bonds." An
+"underwriting" syndicate is then organized. This is composed of certain
+individuals and corporations who agree that when these bonds are offered
+to the public at $180,000,000, the portion the public does not buy, they
+(the "underwriters") will purchase on the basis of $120,000,000; in
+other words, they guarantee the sale of the bonds at $180,000,000. In
+return they "make" on all the bonds sold the difference between the
+price to them, $120,000,000, and the price the public pays,
+$180,000,000. Let us assume that the public takes up the issue greedily
+and the full price, $180,000,000, has been secured. The original owners,
+Rogers, Rockefeller, etc., have made $60,000,000, the difference between
+the first cost and $120,000,000, the cost to the "underwriters," while
+the "underwriters" have made $60,000,000, the difference between
+$120,000,000 and the $180,000,000, the cost to the people. In looking
+over the list of subscribers to these bonds, you will note that the
+largest purchases have been made for the great insurance corporations
+and the banks and trust companies owned or controlled by them and "The
+System." If, in the instance I am using for illustration, a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_445" id="Page_445">[445]</a></span> president
+or vice-president of one of the great insurance companies is known to be
+willing to subscribe for, say, $10,000,000 for his insurance company;
+$5,000,000 for his principal trust company, which is owned by the
+insurance company; $1,000,000 apiece for five other banks and trust
+companies, also owned or controlled by the insurance company; and can
+influence five other affiliated institutions to subscribe for $1,000,000
+apiece, he controls, as will readily be seen, a purchasing power of
+$25,000,000, and is sought for as an underwriter, if he is not already
+an owner. For this $25,000,000 which his institutions buy he "draws
+down," as his personal profit, 33-1/3 per cent. "underwriters'"
+commission, or over eight millions of dollars.</p>
+
+<p>In taking this amount, he is not <i>robbing</i> his insurance company, in the
+common acceptance of the term in this era of "frenzied finance," though
+he has absolutely appropriated to himself a profit which belongs to it
+and not to him.</p>
+
+<p>It must not be supposed that such transactions as this I have outlined
+are conducted in the simple ABC fashion I have set down here for purpose
+of illustration. No "one man" appears through any deal. The purchases
+and sales are usually made through dummies, and the final recipient of
+the "made millions" carefully conceals all the phases of his
+participation.</p>
+
+<p>Let us take another type of transaction. An insurance company owns two
+adjoining pieces of unimproved city real estate, for which it paid
+$250,000 apiece, but which are now worth $500,000 each. The directors of
+the corporation formally decide to dispose of these holdings, and sell
+the first piece to a trust company, which is owned or controlled by the
+insurance company. One of the "System's" dummies or an officer or
+director of the corporation agrees to take the other at the same price.
+This is a perfectly legitimate transaction, and the insurance company
+shows a half-million profit on its investment. The next step is this. On
+its piece the trust company erects a two-million-dollar building,
+procuring the money from the insurance company at a low rate of
+interest. Thereupon the value of the adjoining piece bought by the
+"System's" votary jumps fifty per cent., so he has<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_446" id="Page_446">[446]</a></span> made $250,000
+without risking a dollar. At the same time there have been several other
+profitable transactions between institutions and individuals. The agent
+who disposed of the two pieces of real estate and who is "in" the
+transaction receives a generous commission for making the sales; the
+trust company's representative has his own "draw-down," and there are
+further commissions to the agents who borrow and loan the money and
+control the erection of the building.</p>
+
+<p>My readers may well ask, Are these merely illustrations, or do such
+things really take place? I unqualifiedly reply that deals similar to
+these have occurred repeatedly and that the principle and procedure set
+forth are the rule and not exceptional. Here is a minor episode of which
+I have personal knowledge. A well-known man made direct application to
+the Mutual Life Insurance Company for a loan of $400,000 on a valuable
+city business block which he owned. He was told that the corporation had
+no funds available for that purpose. The refusal was authoritative and
+definite. A few days later a lawyer and real-estate agent came to his
+office and said to him: "I'm informed that you want $400,000 on your
+property. I can let you have it, or $500,000 if you need that much."</p>
+
+<p>"Good," said the would-be borrower, "I will take it. Whose money is it?"</p>
+
+<p>"The Mutual's."</p>
+
+<p>"My dear fellow," said the would-be borrower, "how can that be? I was
+there at the office a few days ago and was assured I could not have the
+money."</p>
+
+<p>"That's all right," was the answer. "Of course you could not get the
+money. The right party did not see the right party. D'ye understand?"</p>
+
+<p>He understood.</p>
+
+<p>A recent issue of the <i>Insurance Register</i>, of Philadelphia, in
+criticizing my comments on President McCall and life insurance, makes
+the following significant admissions in regard to the conduct of these
+great corporations:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>While riding on the train on my way to my office this
+morning a lawyer told me the following story: A client of
+his, a real-estate agent, represented a corporation owning
+and wishing to sell a valuable<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_447" id="Page_447">[447]</a></span> Chestnut Street property.
+The price asked was $750,000. A representative of a New York
+corporation called upon him and agreed to take the property,
+but stipulated that the price named in the deed and
+receipted for should be $850,000, the difference covering
+his commission of $100,000. The Philadelphian, finding it
+impossible to induce his clients to make this concession,
+and the New York agent insisting upon it as indispensable to
+the purchase, made a trip to New York to see the principal,
+acquaint it with the facts, and find out whether or not some
+arrangement could be made by which the buyer could take care
+of its agent's commission. He was received by the manager of
+the New York corporation, but when he stated that he
+represented the owner of the Philadelphia property he was
+instantly bowed out of the office, with the assurance: "We
+never interfere with business in the hands of our agent."
+The outcome was that the sale was not consummated, because
+the officers of the Philadelphia corporation would not
+receipt for $850,000 when they were to receive only
+$750,000, for the reason that they could not square the
+transaction with their stockholders, and the buyer's agent
+would not consummate the deal without such a receipt,
+because he could not square with his client and its
+stockholders the payment of $850,000 with the consideration
+of $750,000 mentioned in the deed. This story was told to
+illustrate the proposition that every action has its
+prompting motive, and my fellow-passenger imparted to me his
+conclusion that the motive of the manager of the New York
+corporation for refusing to listen to his client was that
+"the scoundrel was in cohoots with the agents to share in
+the commission and cheat his own company." The public will
+in time come to look for motives, and we, fellow-editors,
+and the managers of mutual life-insurance companies, will be
+judged by what seems the most apparent motive for our
+actions....</p>
+
+<p>Any alliance between life insurance and this modern
+speculative frenzy cannot be too deeply deprecated, nor too
+strongly reprobated. Every true friend of honest life
+insurance among insurance journals will demand that this
+great business, of all businesses, must be kept free from
+the contagion of corruption that has shamed finance, is
+covering commerce with a blighting mildew, and threatens our
+whole land with disaster as well as dishonor.</p></div>
+
+<p>All this is preliminary to treating the case of the Prudential Insurance
+Company. I want to say here that I do not know the corporation, any of
+its officers, nor any one interested in the control or management of it,
+and personally have never had the slightest connection with its
+officers. I desire to prove through an outsider, some one of
+unquestioned authority, that the great insurance companies are part of
+the "System" and are engaged in manipulating the stock-market with the
+funds their policy-holders put in their<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_448" id="Page_448">[448]</a></span> hands as a sacred trust. In so
+far as the Prudential is concerned, rank and unsound as are the
+transactions I am about to speak of, my investigations have proved to me
+that this insurance corporation is only as a baby-carriage to a runaway
+automobile compared with the three great representatives of the
+"System," the New York Life, the Mutual, and the Equitable. Certain
+critics have accused me of being unduly emphatic in my strictures on the
+doings of the corporations of which I am treating. I will confess to a
+secret amusement at being able, in this instance, to quote the language
+of one of the most conservative insurance officials in America,
+Frederick L. Cutting, for many years Insurance Commissioner for the
+State of Massachusetts.</p>
+
+<p>The Prudential Life Insurance Company has $2,000,000 capital stock. The
+stock is owned and the company absolutely controlled by a few men. This
+capital of $2,000,000 represents only $91,000 paid in in cash; the
+balance has been derived from stock dividends; that is, profits that
+have been made out of policy-holders. In addition to this enormous
+amount, there has been paid ten per cent. in cash dividends annually, so
+that for every thousand dollars paid in the stockholders hold $22,000 of
+stock, upon which they receive annually $2,200, or, as Commissioner
+Cutting puts it, "each year for ten years the stockholders have received
+in cash dividends more than twice the original investment." I commend to
+the policy-holders of the Prudential and other insurance corporations,
+and to other honest men, these tremendous figures: every $1,000 invested
+turned into $22,000, not in a gold or diamond mine, but in a
+life-insurance company where every dollar comes from the policy-holder
+who is supposed to pay in only enough to insure a promised payment plus
+provision for honest expense.</p>
+
+<p>The Prudential Company owned the stock of the Fidelity Trust Company,
+the capital of which was $1,500,000, and the directors came before
+Commissioner Cutting and informed him that they proposed to double up
+the stock of the Fidelity Trust Company to $3,000,000; that the new
+$1,500,000 at a par value of $100 was to be sold for $750 per share;
+that the new stock was to be bought by the Pru<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_449" id="Page_449">[449]</a></span>dential Company and the
+Equitable Company; and that with the proceeds of the sale, the Trust
+Company was to buy a control of the Prudential Company from its
+directors. The motive of this transaction was as follows: The set of men
+who absolutely controlled the Prudential, with its sixty millions of
+assets belonging to its policy-holders, proposed to control it for all
+time, but without tying up $7,000,000 of their own money in the
+business. In other words, they desired to eat their pudding and yet have
+it for continuous re-eating, and had found a way to accomplish this
+heretofore impossible feat.</p>
+
+<p>By this plan the men who controlled the Prudential Company, and thereby
+the Trust Company, at the time the plan went into force, would forever
+continue to manage and control both institutions, although not one of
+them held a policy or any investment in the insurance company beyond the
+one share of stock required by law to qualify as director.</p>
+
+<p>If this scheme had been consummated it would have borne to "frenzied
+finance" the same relationship that perpetual motion does to mechanics.
+By it a few men could gamble forever with the entire assets of the
+policy-holders of this corporation for their own personal benefit. If my
+readers will imagine the same scheme applied to several other great
+insurance companies and the men controlling them, the "System's"
+votaries, they will recognize the "System's" ideal world, with all the
+people in a condition of ideal servitude. However, this ingenious plan
+was forestalled because there happened to be in control of the
+life-insurance affairs of Massachusetts one of those old-fashioned
+relics of American honesty&mdash;a man who thought more of the interests of
+the people intrusted to his care than of the prospect of innumerable
+"made dollars" which might have been his had he proved more amenable. It
+is regrettable that he was not able to deprive the conspirators of their
+power to juggle with the property of the corporation, for only two weeks
+later they developed and executed an alternative device which
+practically accomplished the result which the Massachusetts authorities
+had declared illegal and the courts of New Jersey had enjoined.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_450" id="Page_450">[450]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>There is food for thought here for the policy-holders of American
+insurance corporations who have intrusted to the "System" and its
+upholders the billions of their savings, to which they are adding every
+year hundreds of millions. To them I recommend a reading of the
+Forty-eighth Annual Report of the Massachusetts Insurance Commissioner,
+dated January 1, 1903, and the decision of the New Jersey judge who
+passed on the case. These men are surely not to be accused of exploiting
+my story. Under the head of "Control of Life Insurance Companies" in the
+Massachusetts Report will be found the following:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>The Insurance Commissioner had the honor of addressing the
+insurance committee of the General Court relative to the
+control of life-insurance companies by other corporations or
+by syndicates. For some years it has seemed to impartial
+observers who are conversant with life-insurance matters,
+and have also seen the eager quest by promoters for funds to
+finance all kinds of enterprises, and the determined
+struggle to grasp every opportunity for speculation, that
+there would be no cause for wonder if covetous glances
+should be turned toward the massive accumulations of
+life-insurance companies. It is well, therefore, to pause
+and ask what would be the chances for obtaining control of
+them, and what might be the result of such control, and in
+general whether the funds of such companies are imperilled
+by modern methods.</p>
+
+<p>Insurance corporations on a capital stock basis, on the
+other hand, give their policy-holders no voice in their
+management. To obtain control of such a company it is
+necessary only to control by purchase or otherwise a
+majority of its capital stock. If a "king of finance" should
+start out with the determination to secure a majority of the
+stock of such corporations, the chances are that in some
+cases at least he would be successful. He might, it is true,
+be obliged to pay more than the "book value" of the shares;
+but perhaps <i>control</i> of a company's assets would well be
+worth twice or thrice or even more than what could be
+figured out as the value of the stock on the books of the
+company. On no other theory can the figure offered for
+life-insurance company stock in some cases be accounted for,
+since these offers are not warranted by the surplus nor by
+the dividends paid, nor by both combined.</p>
+
+<p>Is there aught to prevent a bold manipulator from entering
+this inviting field and purchasing a controlling interest in
+the stock of enough such life-insurance companies to make
+their combined assets aggregate one hundred million dollars
+of the more than six hundred millions of assets of stock
+life-insurance companies doing business in Massachusetts?
+This accomplished, he transfers his rights to a "trust," or
+an association, or trust company, which is not only a bank<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_451" id="Page_451">[451]</a></span>
+of deposit, but is also engaged in brokerage schemes, in
+financing large enterprises and promoting all kinds of
+corporate consolidations, and underwriting their stock for a
+consideration. The central controlling trust company, or
+whatever it may be, becomes a medium through which the
+investments of the controlled insurance companies are made;
+all sales of their securities pay tribute to its treasury;
+all funds awaiting investment are deposited in its keeping;
+the most valuable of their securities are turned into cash,
+and then used by the controlling power for such purpose as
+it sees fit. All these things are conceivable, and their
+accomplishment would be a no greater task, seemingly, than
+some of the gigantic "operations in finance" of the last few
+years.</p>
+
+<p>Judged by what has happened in other fields, this trust
+would not only control these vast assets, if the plan should
+be executed, but would control them without individual
+liability on the part of its managers.</p>
+
+
+<p class='center'><span class="smcap">The Prudential Merger Case</span></p>
+
+<p>Is there really any danger, it may be asked, that any trust
+or syndicate will attempt to control the stock and assets of
+life insurance in this way, or is this simply the
+presentation of possibilities? As an answer to that question
+here follows a plain, unvarnished story of what has been
+attempted and what has taken place within the past year
+between one of the life-insurance companies doing business
+in Massachusetts and a trust company with which it has close
+relations.</p>
+
+<p>In October, 1902, the Insurance Commissioner received from
+the president of the Prudential Insurance Company of America
+a letter, transmitting a copy of a circular letter addressed
+"To the field and home office staff" of the company. That
+circular letter disclosed a plan of mutual control between
+the insurance company and the Fidelity Trust Company, a
+corporation organized under the laws of New Jersey. It
+stated that:</p>
+
+<p>"The capital of the Fidelity Trust Company is about to be
+increased from $1,500,000 to $3,000,000, the new stock being
+sold at $750 per share. This will result in giving the
+Fidelity Trust Company a capital of $3,000,000, a surplus of
+$13,000,000, and a considerable amount of undivided profits,
+making this company, from the standpoint of capital and
+surplus, as large if not larger than any similar institution
+in the country. Sufficient of this stock will be taken by
+the Prudential Insurance Company to give it, together with
+its present very large holdings of Fidelity stock, absolute
+control of that company. A very large portion of the balance
+of said stock is to be taken by the Equitable Life Assurance
+Society of New York, which will give to that company a very
+substantial interest in the Fidelity Company, and therefore
+justify it in materially increasing its business with the
+Fidelity. The bulk of the new money thus to be received by
+the Fidelity Trust Company is to be used by it in the
+acquisition of a controlling interest<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_452" id="Page_452">[452]</a></span> in the entire capital
+stock of the Prudential Insurance Company.... A contract has
+been entered into between the Fidelity Trust Company and a
+large majority of stockholders in interest of the
+Prudential, in which the latter have contracted to sell
+their holdings of Prudential stock, or as much as may be
+necessary, to the Fidelity Trust Company on or before May
+1st next, at $600 for every $100 of par value.... While by
+this arrangement the Prudential Company will control the
+Fidelity, and, on the other hand, the Fidelity will own a
+majority of the capital stock of the Prudential, the annual
+meetings of the two companies will be so arranged and other
+arrangements be so made that the Prudential will forever be
+the dominant factor, as of course it should be. The officers
+of the Prudential are united in their belief that this move
+is of the greatest possible interest to its stockholders, as
+well as to all of its policy-holders and its great army of
+employees. The consummation of this arrangement insures the
+continuance of the present management of the Prudential,
+both in its home office and in the field. The advantages of
+the plans of the trust company are too obvious to need
+comment. It is expected to consummate this entire
+transaction between the two companies on or about February
+1, 1903."</p></div>
+
+<p>The Insurance Commissioner of Massachusetts, on receipt of this
+circular, wrote United States Senator John H. Dryden, president of the
+Prudential Insurance Company of America, declining to approve of the
+proposed exchange of stock on the ground that the merger was
+antagonistic to the interests of policy-holders, inasmuch as it forever
+deprived them of the power to dislodge the management from the control
+of the institution. The minority stockholders petitioned the New Jersey
+courts for an injunction to restrain the Prudential and the Trust
+Company's directors from carrying out the proceeding for mutual control,
+and Vice-Chancellor Stevenson enjoined the corporation from executing
+its project. However, the reciprocal control was effected by the sale of
+enough Prudential stock to the Fidelity, whose capital was increased for
+the purpose of purchasing it, so that the Fidelity lacks but eight
+shares to control absolutely the Prudential. As the situation stands
+now, the Prudential directors control the Fidelity, and the Fidelity
+holdings, with eight shares more, control the Prudential. Practically
+the ring is about as hard to break into as the plan enjoined. Those who
+control the Fidelity can always "dominate" the insurance company.
+Minority stockholders and policy-hold<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_453" id="Page_453">[453]</a></span>ers alike are practically in the
+hands of the trust company for all time, and the insurance company's
+assets can be managed as the majority of the trust company's directors
+dictate.</p>
+
+<p>The director goes on to explain the relations between a life-insurance
+company and a trust company, which, in the light of recent exposures,
+seems prophetic.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"The money value of intimate relations between a majority of
+the directors of a life-insurance company and a trust
+company may be easily comprehended. These relations are at
+the beginning based on the needs of the insurance company,
+which needs it is hard to define and limit, and accordingly
+hard to say just where the provision for them becomes more
+of an advantage to the trust company than to the insurance
+company. Standards will differ, and change, too. But here,
+let us say, is a great insurance company with over
+$50,000,000 of assets which it has collected from its
+policy-holders, and which are needed for carrying out their
+contracts, and which safety requires shall be held in sound
+investments. Such an insurance company has to have a large
+and active bank account. It must deposit checks and all
+forms of paper promises or orders for collection, and for
+the payment of expenses and claims must have a large sum of
+ready money. This is the absolute need; but the directors
+are not bound by any legal requirements to limit their
+deposits to just what will reasonably suffice as a margin to
+pay current claims and expenses, nor are they required to
+patronize any particular banks. They conclude, let us say,
+that 'it will be safer' to take some banking institution for
+such depository which they 'know about,' and of which,
+perchance, some of them are directors, or in which, at all
+events, they are stockholders. If no such trust company is
+at hand, it is very easy to start one, and easy for the
+directors of the insurance company to be in 'on the ground
+floor.' The insurance company then begins to bestow its
+patronage. The trust company, which is thus supplied with
+funds, begins to feel the effects of this attention; by the
+use of its big deposits large dividends are earned. A 'boom'
+begins, and the director who 'had the sagacity' to invest in
+the stock of the trust company when it was around about par,
+sees his holdings advance by rapid strides until he is
+offered perhaps ten times as much for his stock as its par
+value. He has seen this stock advance in value in proportion
+to the amount of funds of the insurance company which the
+trust company had at its command. It has been worth much to
+him 'to be on the inside,' and will be worth much in the
+future for him to be on the inside if any new trust company
+is to be a depository; the bigger the deposit, the more it
+will be worth to him."</p></div>
+
+<p>All thinking people, after reading these extracts from Insurance
+Commissioner Cutting's report, will ask: "Why<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_454" id="Page_454">[454]</a></span> have we never heard of
+this before?" I can only answer that he found it impossible to get any
+part of the warning contained in it before the people. It should be
+remembered that the insurance companies annually spend millions of
+dollars with the daily, weekly, and monthly press&mdash;and it is unnecessary
+for me to say more. My own advertisement calling attention to the
+life-insurance chapters in the last issue of <i>Everybody's Magazine</i> was
+refused by some of the leading dailies of New York, Boston, Cleveland,
+and Pittsburg. When I called on the managing editor of one of
+Pittsburg's leading dailies for an explanation of the publication's
+declination, he said: "Don't mention me or you'll get me into trouble.
+Our copy for the advertisement was a day late and the insurance combine
+had time to get in its work. The local managers sent a representative to
+all the papers warning them not to run your stuff, under penalty of
+losing the big full-page annual from each of the three big companies, as
+well as the numerous fliers through the year." One hears of the
+sagacious ostrich which, when pursued by an enemy, hides its head in the
+sand. The ostrich is wise in comparison with the "System's" votaries in
+the year 1904.</p>
+
+
+<p class='center'>THE VULTURES FEEDING</p>
+
+<p>Owing to the claims of other subjects on my space, I left the subject of
+life insurance for a few months. In the meantime President Alexander
+began his grapple with President Jimmy Hyde for the control of the
+millions of the Equitable Life&mdash;the historic entanglement which has had
+such dire consequences for all concerned. In the April, 1905, issue of
+The Critics I wrote as follows:</p>
+
+<p>When first I touched on the subject of life insurance and called
+attention to the manner in which the three great companies were juggling
+with the immense funds entrusted to them by their policy-holders, the
+"System" raised a great outcry, declaring that I was unsettling the
+confidence of the people in a sacred institution. At this moment we have
+the chief officials of one of these huge organizations engaged in a
+desperate and disgraceful struggle among themselves for<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_455" id="Page_455">[455]</a></span> its control.
+All thought of the widow and the orphan, against whom they declared my
+hand had been raised, has been forgotten in the mad fight for supremacy
+over the accumulated millions in stocks, bonds, and in trust companies,
+from the secret manipulation of which the great private fortunes of
+successful underwriters are derived.</p>
+
+<p>Before definitely grappling with the evils of the insurance trust, I
+hesitated a long time. I realized my words would cause terror or
+distrust among policy-holders and perhaps induce some misguided ones to
+abandon their insurance. After long consideration, however, I became
+convinced that what I had to say would in the long run benefit all
+policy-holders, insure the greater safety of their funds, reduce their
+annual premium-payments, and perhaps bring about the restitution of the
+vast amounts which in the past had been diverted from them to private
+individuals. The response to my criticism was a flood of abuse. Instead
+of meeting my charges, the big companies denounced me for a liar and a
+misrepresenter, and the insurance journals and subsidized press declared
+that the things I had charged were impossible. Now, the president of the
+Equitable Life Insurance Company is openly accusing a leading member of
+his board of trustees, who is one of the foremost votaries of the
+"System," of loading the company with twenty-two millions of securities,
+which, as a member of the finance committee of the corporation, he had
+purchased for himself in his capacity as head of a great banking-house.
+On the other hand, the president and his associates, who have hitherto
+swayed the destinies of the institution, are accused by the other party
+of conspiring to mutualize the institution, not for the benefit of the
+policy-holders, but to conceal the traces of past misdeeds. Before this
+chapter is in the hands of my readers the officers and directors of this
+great insurance company may be before the courts and a condition of
+affairs spread out for the public's gaze such as will make my charges
+seem, in comparison with the actual truth, as chestnut-burrs to
+porcupines' quills.</p>
+
+<p>One result achieved so far is an awakening of the people's attention to
+the evils of present conditions; but let them<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_456" id="Page_456">[456]</a></span> beware of the remedies
+suggested. The "System" is quick to adjust itself to storms it cannot
+control, and there are many signs abroad that it is trimming its sails
+to fly before the present blow, ready when it shall abate to switch back
+to its old course, and, under fresh canvas, make up for lost time.
+Already we have Senator Dryden, representing New Jersey and the
+Prudential Life Insurance Company in the United States Senate,
+introducing a bill for Federal supervision of life insurance, and the
+"System's" hirelings throughout the land are clamorously agitating the
+passage of some such measure. It behooves the public to scrutinize
+carefully the form of reform which these patriots approve. It may be
+taken for granted that they will initiate nothing that will interfere
+with their grip on the millions of the policy-holders or will divert fat
+pickings and commissions from their own pockets. Once I asked a leading
+votary of the "System":</p>
+
+<p>"What would you do if by any chance the Government decided to get into
+the railway business, and took a railway or so to see how government
+control would work?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh," was the reply, "we'd manage that all right! As soon as we saw it
+coming, the stocks and bonds of the roads wanted would go up, so that by
+the time Uncle Sam got ready to buy, it would be the fattest sale we
+could possibly make. After that it would not be difficult to disgust the
+Government with its bargain, and before long the people would be glad to
+sell the property back to us, and we'd find a way to get it at slaughter
+prices."</p>
+
+<p>The reformation of the big insurance companies is sadly needed, but
+reformation of a more drastic kind than they'll be willing to administer
+to themselves. To begin with, there should be a relentless probing of
+their stock transactions of the last fifteen years, followed by the
+passage of some simple laws regulating their investments. The
+relationship between these institutions and the "System" would then at
+once of necessity terminate, and we could say good-by to the <i>r&eacute;gime</i>
+under which the expenses of the Big Three have enormously increased and
+their dividends to policy-holders have steadily declined while during
+the same period the private fortunes of their officers and controllers
+have flourished amazingly.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_457" id="Page_457">[457]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>I have been repeatedly asked to define the conditions that make it
+possible for these immense private fortunes to be gathered, within the
+law. An examination of the figures that follow will reveal the
+far-reaching possibilities that reside in the direction of the billion
+of assets of the great insurance companies.</p>
+
+<p>The last issued New York report (1903) shows that the three leading
+companies had in uninvested funds, all told, $70,212,453. Of this sum
+total there was "deposited in trust companies and banks drawing
+interest"&mdash;at the <i>close</i> of the year:</p>
+
+<div class='center'>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="equitable">
+<tr><td align='left'>Equitable</td><td align='right'>$25,617,668</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Mutual</td><td align='right'>22,439,396</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>New York</td><td class='bb'>17,731,710</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'></td><td align='right'>$65,788,774</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<p>the balance, $4,423,679, being on deposit without interest.</p>
+
+<p>The above aggregate represents 71.7 per cent. of the uninvested
+interest-bearing funds of twenty-eight companies&mdash;leaving but 28.3 per
+cent. for the remaining twenty-five (in which, by the way, is included
+$6,801,789 of the Prudential, as large in proportion as the funds of the
+Big Three, with which it is associated).</p>
+
+<p>This sum, at the two-per-cent. interest allowed by the trust companies,
+returned to the insurance companies $1,315,775, while it earned for the
+trust companies in the different speculations in which they were
+engaged, from five to twenty per cent., or an annual profit of
+$1,973,663 to $11,184,079, over and above the interest paid the
+insurance companies for its use.</p>
+
+<p>But who owns the trust companies? you ask. Some are owned jointly by the
+three great insurance corporations and their directors, others by the
+directors alone. The men who control the Big Three organize these
+flexible depositary institutions, allotting half or more of their stocks
+to themselves, the balance to the insurance companies, or keeping all
+the stock themselves, for the purpose of manipulating the stupendous
+sums in the treasuries of the insurance companies.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_458" id="Page_458">[458]</a></span> The trust company is
+the irrigating canal of Wall Street, the insurance company the
+reservoir. For the development of the various schemes of consolidation,
+trustification, and amalgamation in which Wall Street profits are made,
+money is required in large quantities. When the soil is ready for the
+seed, when negotiations have been sufficiently matured, the trust
+company's sluice is tapped and the gold flows out. And gold which makes
+a $225 crop sprout, where previously only a $100 crop grew, is a
+valuable commodity, for the use of which large compensation is given the
+engineers. Thus the men who hold the treasury-keys of the Big Three, and
+who decide how the accumulated premiums of the policy-holders shall be
+used and where deposited, are actually the owners of these trust
+companies and of other corporations and trusts which borrow the money
+the trust companies have on deposit from the insurance companies.</p>
+
+<p>The hackneyed defence of the insurance companies to this accusation is
+that great corporations, such as they are, must keep on hand, ready for
+emergencies, enormous amounts of cash. This is a futile argument, for in
+the nature of things the daily receipts of each of the Big Three are
+larger than the expenditures. We are also told "We keep large amounts,
+ready to take advantage of a sudden smash in the market." This sounds
+well, but cloaks one of the most vicious practices of these great
+institutions, and another of the insider's opportunities for private
+graft. It means that the officers of the great insurance corporations
+are ever ready for a stock gamble with the sacred funds of their
+policy-holders; that is, they admit their willingness to use the
+people's savings to make sure-thing gambling-profits from those
+unfortunates who must throw over their stocks and bonds because of the
+"System's" manipulations.</p>
+
+<p>Imagine, my honest, old-fashioned reader, the millions of insurance
+funds used in this way! Let me give you a picture of how it is done. I
+have seen it worked a score of times. The stock-market is crashing,
+dropping tens of millions a minute, and business men are saying: "Oh, if
+we only had cash to buy, but we can not get it! The banks will not loan
+at any price. Rates have gone up to 100 to 150 per<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_459" id="Page_459">[459]</a></span> cent. and no cash is
+in sight." No one has money but the big insurance companies and the
+"System's" votaries.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly mysterious buying appears&mdash;hundreds of thousands of shares of
+stock, and bonds in million blocks. The crash has been stayed; the panic
+is over; stocks are bounding upward again; millions are being made by
+the mysterious buyers with each tick of the clock, and presently it is
+common knowledge that all the insurance insiders have cleaned up
+millions, and&mdash;of course, the company has made something, but the
+biggest profits have been won by the men who, having previously
+personally loaded up, were able to throw the unlimited buying power of
+the policy-holders' millions into the gap. Talk of loaded dice, or any
+of the sure-thing gambling devices! They are lily-white business schemes
+compared with this method of plundering the people.</p>
+
+<p>Again we are authoritatively informed that the great companies have so
+much cash on hand that it is impossible to find investments for it save
+at a low rate of interest. The fallacy here is obvious. If these
+institutions have grown so unwieldy that they cannot conduct their
+business as ably as the smaller companies, the latter are the ones to
+insure with, because, right along, they are deriving larger returns from
+their invested funds than the big companies. There are scores of ways,
+however, by which the sixty-five millions could be made to earn even
+larger dividends than do the funds in stocks and bonds. Let the Big
+Three offer the use of their big cash balances by public
+competition&mdash;under the most conservative conditions that can be
+prescribed. Instantly the net returns will double.</p>
+
+<p>All insurance policy-holders are familiar with the specious circulars
+and letters presenting statements of business done and investments made,
+which are sent out from the head offices of the great companies at odd
+intervals on the plea: "We want our policy-holders to know everything we
+are doing at all times." The public is assured at other intervals that
+there can be no secret or inside deals in the affairs of insurance
+companies because of the close examinations they are subjected to by the
+Insurance Departments of the various States. The insurance officials
+say: "All our facts and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_460" id="Page_460">[460]</a></span> figures are vouched for by so many different
+sets of auditors and State Departments that they must be exact truths."
+To what extent is the public actually safeguarded by these
+investigations?</p>
+
+<p>Some months ago I called attention to the fact that the directors of the
+New York Life Insurance Company had sold to themselves the stock of the
+New York Security &amp; Trust Company at from three to four millions less
+than the property would have commanded from outsiders. Here is another
+transaction which requires explanation:</p>
+
+<p>In 1901, ostensibly in order to maintain its position in the German
+states&mdash;I will explain later on what I mean by "ostensibly"&mdash;the
+insurance company disposed of its remaining holdings of stocks, the same
+having a book value of $2,965,000 and a market value of $5,471,000, as
+per report of 1900. These stocks, with possibly sales of some other
+securities, realized an actual profit of $5,839,087 instead of
+$3,075,392 as per the company's <i>sworn</i> report to the several State
+Insurance Departments.</p>
+
+<p>Rather a queer proceeding, you say. Why should it do such a thing? Had
+some one stolen the extra profit? Or what? This is what was done: The
+company had simply availed itself of the opportunity to conceal an
+actual cash profit of $2,763,715 in order that it might sequestrate
+assets to that amount unnoticed by its policy-holders or the
+departments. The sum so sequestrated was made up of balances due from
+agents&mdash;presumed, as in all such cases, to be amply secured by pledge of
+renewal contracts&mdash;to the amount of $1,919,734, and $843,891 charged off
+depreciation of real estate. (See Massachusetts Report, 1902, pages
+158-159.)</p>
+
+<p>This illegal suppression of most important transactions, directly
+affecting, as will be seen later, the interests of policy-holders, would
+have remained a sealed book but for the careful audit of the
+Massachusetts Department, which revealed the fact, unnoticed by that of
+any other State (note in this one instance the boasted careful
+supervision and boasted double and triple auditing of all accounts
+before publication!), that the item "Agents' Balances," amounting in
+the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_461" id="Page_461">[461]</a></span> preceding year to $1,527,123, had disappeared altogether from
+assets. This led to a prompt request from the Massachusetts Department
+for explanation.</p>
+
+<p>The honorable business men of the New York Life, who pay out so many
+hundreds of thousands of dollars each year advertising the fact that
+they are sitting up o' nights to find new ways to acquaint the
+policy-holders with the innermost secrets of the company, finding there
+was no avenue of escape from their dilemma, quickly realized that the
+Massachusetts Department meant to have the facts, and publish them, too.
+Their own "faked" report was already before the public in the published
+reports of two departments, those of Connecticut and New York.</p>
+
+<p>There was but one course open to avert the terrific scandal that was
+inevitable upon publication of the Massachusetts Report, and that was to
+head off and forestall adverse comment and criticism, as far as
+possible, by making a clean breast of it. No time was lost in preparing
+a letter of explanation to the Department. This answered the purpose of
+the Department, which did not care to press the matter, having
+accomplished its main object.</p>
+
+<p>Now for the moral, or the iniquity, rather, of the preceding, the wrong
+to policy-holders, which has been so completely ignored and passed over
+by the insurance press and all hands: Either the company had, as at
+least supposedly it has in all such cases, ample security for its
+advances to agents in the pledges of their renewal contracts, or it had
+not. On the former hypothesis, that $1,900,000-odd was a sound and valid
+asset, earning a good rate of interest. On the latter, the company
+simply squandered this amount of trust funds belonging to its trusting
+policy-holders in its mad rush for business at whatever cost; or&mdash;In
+either case the money has gone from sight so far as any sign or
+indication appears to the contrary since.</p>
+
+<p>And before leaving this point, it may be well to ask, "Has the New York
+Life Insurance Company altogether discontinued these advances to
+agents?" If not, how and where are they accounted for? An answer may be
+found, possibly, in the comparatively meagre underwriting profits of the
+com<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_462" id="Page_462">[462]</a></span>pany, growing relatively smaller and beautifully less with each
+succeeding year. I say it may possibly be found here, because this is
+the only place the item could be buried; but I am reasonably sure that
+it is not buried here, and that these advances to agents are being
+continued on a scale as large as, or larger than ever, for the agents
+could not have been shut off and the business increased at one and the
+same time.</p>
+
+<p>Again, during the last two months of 1904, or at a time when my story,
+"Frenzied Finance," began to get in its work all over the world, I
+received from many quarters information that the Big Three had
+instructed their leading agents to get in a great lot of new risks "at
+any cost," so that the total business for the year would show such
+increase as to discredit my claim that the policy-holders were getting
+"scared." I watched the game with much interest, knowing that bunco
+would out in time, by whomever worked. During these months I read from
+week to week of this great policy, or that record-breaking risk just
+landed by this or that agent. One in particular made me chuckle at its
+transparency. A certain friend of the New York Life, a Wall Street man,
+"has just taken out a $2,000,000 policy." About the same time I began to
+receive information of the remarkable offers that were being made to
+prospective customers, offers which probably meant an indirect rebate of
+perhaps the full first year's premium; and I got to thinking and
+reaching back into my memory-box, and I raked out a number of instances
+of the same kind of offers which had been made to me in the past, and I
+ruminated to myself how all this was possible; for even if the Big Three
+were bold enough to get around the law against such practices, it
+puzzled me how they could pay to their agent the big cash commissions
+that new business called for. Presently as I waited I read, as did the
+rest of the world, the big January full-page advertisements of the New
+York Life to its policy-holders, calling their attention to the increase
+of $15,000,000 new business over the year before. Then I took another
+think and did a little work, with the following result:<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_463" id="Page_463">[463]</a></span></p>
+
+<p class='center'>A JOLT FOR THE NEW YORK LIFE</p>
+
+<p>The "Brown Book of Life Insurance Economics" shows that the sum laid by
+annually for future tontine or other dividends ranged in the ten years
+ending with 1903 from $2,936,026 to a minimum of $956,597, these amounts
+being savings after payment of dividends. In 1904, however, for the
+first time in the tontine history of the company&mdash;also the first year of
+maturity of non-forfeitable tontine contracts with their largely reduced
+dividends&mdash;the dividends paid and credited, $6,018,202, actually
+exceeded the year's earnings, as shown by the company's sworn statement,
+by $76,595.</p>
+
+<p>I want to call policy-holders' attention right here to what this means
+to those who are now being beguiled into taking policies on the strength
+of "adjusted" estimates placed by the company in its agents' hands,
+showing dividend results ranging from fifteen to fifty per cent. higher
+than those of 1904, with, however, the saving (?) clause that, depending
+upon future unforeseeable conditions, the same "may be higher or may be
+lower." It may be added that, but for a profit realized from sale of
+securities, the company's gross surplus would have shown shrinkage.</p>
+
+<p>In order to realize what such a showing means, let us make a comparison,
+using the figures of a well-known Western company (partly tontine, but
+operated on diametrically opposite lines from the New York Life), for
+the three years 1901-03, this company being barely four-tenths the size
+of the New York Life as regards outstanding business:</p>
+
+<p class='center'><span class="smcap">Comparison of Totals, Three Years</span>, 1901-03</p>
+
+<div class='center'>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="16" summary="comparison">
+<tr><td align='left'></td><td align='right'><p class='center'>Dividend<br /> earnings.</p></td><td align='right'><p class='center'>Dividends.</p></td><td align='right'><p class='center'>Laid by for<br /> future dividends.</p></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>New York Life</td><td align='right'>$16,826,289</td><td align='right'>$13,189,278</td><td align='right'>$3,636,091</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Western Company</td><td class='bb'>17,788,820</td><td class='bb'>12,284,255</td><td class='bb'>5,504,565</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'></td><td align='right'>-$962,531</td><td align='right'>+$905,023</td><td align='right'>-$1,867,574</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<p>After mulling these over, I dug further in regard to the "prosperity" as
+shown by the business of 1904. The company boasts of its enormous volume
+of new business, $345,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_464" id="Page_464">[464]</a></span>722,000, which is $15,000,000 in excess of the
+1903 business. Here is the story: While this new business was being
+secured, the</p>
+
+<div class='center'>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="terminations">
+<tr><td align='left'>Total terminations were</td><td align='right'>$162,326,114</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Less those inevitable terminations by death or maturity of endowments</td><td class='bb'>26,767,873</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Waste by lapse, surrender, etc.</td><td align='right'>$135,558,241</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>And when we add the lapsed policies which continued in force, under
+the "extended-insurance" provision</td><td class='bb'>89,938,500</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>We have the total waste of</td><td align='right'>$225,496,741</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<p>and this, reduced to its actual significance, means that of the total
+actual terminations, 83.6 per cent. was <i>actual waste</i> and only 16.4 per
+cent. legitimate terminations, while the great bulk of the last item of
+$89,938,500, upon which premium payments have ceased, must run off the
+books in the near future; and this is what goes on from year to year,
+more than keeping pace with the boasted increase in volume of new
+business. The public never sees this side of the question.</p>
+
+<p>When I got to this point in my deductions, I was brought face to face
+with the tremendous expense of acquiring new business. Then I saw the
+light&mdash;why it was necessary to wipe off the books nearly two millions of
+what were considered good assets, that is, pledges from agents of their
+renewal commissions against which advances had been made, and where the
+new business came from, and how it was possible to make rebates when the
+law says they shall not be made. An agent induces a friend to have a
+policy written, for which the agent practically pays the premium out of
+his commission, and thereupon has advanced to him large sums against the
+future premiums which are to be paid by the policy-holder, who has no
+intention of paying them, and allows his policy to lapse. Heavens! What
+a vista of plundering opportunities the bare thought opens up! Somebody
+has to pay.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_465" id="Page_465">[465]</a></span></p>
+
+<p class='center'>THE MILLION-DOLLAR POLICY</p>
+
+<p>In the May number I inserted the following letter:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p class='right'><span class="smcap">Fort Worth, Texas</span>, February 16, 1905.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Thomas W. Lawson, Esq.</span>,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Boston, Mass.</p>
+
+<p><i>Dear Sir</i>: I have read and will continue to read your
+articles on "Frenzied Finance," published in <i>Everybody's
+Magazine</i>, with a great deal of interest. I have noted
+especially your statements in reference to the big
+life-insurance companies, as I am a policy-holder in both
+the New York Life and the Equitable.</p>
+
+<p>Under the heading of "Lawson and His Critics," in
+<i>Everybody's</i> for January, you give your side as to the
+assertion on the part of the insurance companies that you
+have been refused life insurance, among other things
+publishing a fac-simile of a contract of life insurance
+between yourself and the Equitable Life Assurance Society
+for $1,000,000. On my first reading of your article, I was
+certainly impressed with the fact that you had $1,000,000 of
+insurance with this company. On a second reading, I note
+that you do not say in so many words that this is a policy
+in force, but you say: "Well, look at this reproduction of
+the document that is now in my possession and always has
+been since the date when it was delivered to me by one of
+the great representatives of the 'System,' The Equitable
+Life Assurance Society." This statement taken in connection
+with others, conveys the idea that you are insured in the
+company named.</p>
+
+<p>In conversation with a gentleman a few days since, who
+claims to know whereof he speaks, having gotten his
+information direct from New York, he stated that you had no
+policy in the Equitable Life Assurance Society for
+$1,000,000, or any other amount, and that the reproduction
+referred to above, was of a <i>sample copy</i> of a policy, and
+not a real contract.</p>
+
+<p>As your editor states that you will answer any pertinent
+question, I will ask the following, trusting that you may
+consider it pertinent: Have you a valid subsisting policy in
+the Equitable Life Assurance Society for $1,000,000, the
+fac-simile of which appears in <i>Everybody's Magazine</i> for
+January, 1905?</p>
+
+<p>Trusting you will favor me with a reply, I am,</p>
+
+<p class='right'>Very truly, &mdash;&mdash;</p></div>
+
+<p>I answered:</p>
+
+<p>Since the chapter which contained the fac-simile of the million-dollar
+policy was published I have received many letters similar to the above,
+but have not answered any because I wished to see how far the insurance
+people would go<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_466" id="Page_466">[466]</a></span> in this matter. Finding I did not reply to the
+different attempts they made in their subsidized journals to draw me
+out, they grew bolder, until the use of this million-dollar policy has
+become the chief defence of the Big Three companies. I want my readers
+to think this point over and weigh its significance carefully. In a
+previous chapter I called attention to the fact that there is nothing to
+protect the policy-holder from being robbed of the amounts he has
+invested to insure his family from poverty after his death but the
+honesty of the men who really control the big insurance companies as
+absolutely as any of their policy-holders do their personal affairs. If
+these men are honest, policy-holders in their companies may rest easy
+for the time being; but if they are dishonest, the policy-holders should
+call them to account, for these men have it absolutely in their power to
+make way with the funds of the companies they manage until there will
+not be a dollar left for policy-holders.</p>
+
+<p>Therefore the one thing for policy-holders to settle, the one vital
+thing is, Are these men honest, or are they tricksters and liars?</p>
+
+<p>To settle this point they must be weighed in the same way that all other
+men and women in this world are weighed&mdash;by the simple, ordinary
+standards: Do they lie? Do they trick? Do they cheat?</p>
+
+<p>When I made my charges in my first chapters against the votaries of the
+"System" who controlled the insurance companies, they met my specific
+charges as dishonest men would meet them, not as honest men would. They
+impugned my motives, and specifically charged that my reason for
+attacking them was that I had been blacklisted by all insurance
+companies and could not get insurance from any of them.</p>
+
+<p>While it was immaterial so far as my specific charges went whether this
+was so or not, it had a most decided bearing upon the question whether
+the officers and controllers of the Big Three insurance companies were
+honest or dishonest men. Therefore I picked up their accusation and
+began a line of argument to prove they were tricksters and absolutely
+devoid of honor.</p>
+
+<p>I showed, by reproducing the personal letters of President<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_467" id="Page_467">[467]</a></span> McCall, of
+the New York Life, to my office and to my house, re&euml;nforced by his
+special agent's letter, and these re&euml;nforced by his Boston agent's
+letter, that I had been continuously and urgently importuned to take
+insurance during the time he said I was blacklisted. The insurance
+people met this by the excuse that these were not personal letters, but
+mere advertisements.</p>
+
+<p>I then reproduced the million-dollar policy, hoping to drag from the Big
+Three a specific charge that this, too, was an advertisement.</p>
+
+<p>Of course, I did not pretend that the policy in question was in force,
+that is, that I was insured in the Equitable Life Assurance Society for
+one million dollars. This would have been too childish; first, because
+every insurance policy, particularly the very large ones, is as much a
+matter of record, to be got at by any one in the insurance business, as
+are real-estate records; and, next, because that which I printed had the
+signature punched out, which made it obvious that it was not in force.
+My object was to lead the Equitable into the positive statement that it
+was an ordinary advertisement, when I would have reproduced the
+proposition that accompanied it and which the Equitable made in probably
+the most elaborate set of documents ever assembled by an insurance
+company for the purpose of inducing one of the "best risks" in America
+to take out a "great big policy." These constitute the complete argument
+which was made by the Equitable Life Assurance Society to persuade me to
+take a million dollars' worth of insurance. They are engrossed upon
+parchment and bound in a specially gotten-up morocco cover, and, I was
+told, cost the insurance company between four and five hundred dollars.
+They were presented to me as the result of my demanding that all the
+inducements they offered to come into their company should be put down
+on paper, so that there could be no mistaking them. The documents as
+engrossed and the terms of the contract were carefully copyrighted by
+the Equitable, and are now on my table before me as I write.</p>
+
+<p>The question which the publication of the million-dollar policy was to
+settle was whether or not I had been impor<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_468" id="Page_468">[468]</a></span>tuned to take out great sums
+of insurance in the leading insurance company of America, and it proved
+exactly what I had contended&mdash;that I had been so importuned.</p>
+
+<p>Up to and including my April, 1905, instalment I have made specific
+charges against the great insurance companies, the Mutual, the New York
+Life, and the Equitable:</p>
+
+<p>1st. That the control of the officers of these great corporations over
+the billion dollars of their policy-holders' funds is as absolute and
+unrestricted for all practical purposes, as is their control of their
+own personal affairs, and is largely exercised for their personal
+enrichment.</p>
+
+<p>2d. That the policy-holders have absolutely no voice in the management
+of these companies or the control of their funds, because of the
+manipulation of proxies in the New York Life and the Mutual and the
+control of the stock of the Equitable.</p>
+
+<p>3d. That those who do control the big companies are votaries of the
+"System," and as such are subject to the "System's" orders as absolutely
+as is James Stillman, president of the "Standard Oil" National City
+Bank.</p>
+
+<p>4th. That the insiders of these insurance companies, not one but several
+of them, have accumulated fortunes in the past few years, of from one to
+twenty millions, while at the same time premium-rates have advanced and
+dividends decreased.</p>
+
+<p>5th. That under the present methods of conducting these great companies
+it is as inevitable as it was in the case of 520-per-cent. Miller or
+Mrs. Howe's Woman's Bank, that as soon as they can get no more
+insurance, the funds behind the old insurance will be dissipated and a
+crash take place such as the world has never known before.</p>
+
+<p>6th. That the companies are "milked" in every direction, through the
+purchase and sale of real estate, through the loaning of their millions,
+and through the manipulation and investment of their funds.</p>
+
+<p>7th. That they acquire new business at an expense and by methods which
+alone will in time wreck the companies.</p>
+
+<p>8th. That in a single instance the New York Life sold securities for
+$5,839,087, but its statement under oath to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_469" id="Page_469">[469]</a></span> the State Insurance
+Departments showed receipts of only $3,075,392.</p>
+
+<p>9th. That the New York Life sold the stock of the New York Security &amp;
+Trust Company, which it held, to its insiders for over $4,000,000 less
+then they could have secured for it from others.</p>
+
+<p>I have specifically charged other things, and will, as my story
+proceeds, make many more specific charges of as serious a nature; but
+the above suffice for my present argument, which is, that up to and
+including the April number I have made these accusations and that the
+only way they have been met is by underhand mud-slinging and by alleging
+that the incentive for my attack was that I could not secure insurance
+from any of the American companies; and I have met this with absolute
+proof, which must stand until it is disproved, that I have been during
+the past ten years importuned and urged by the large insurance companies
+of America to take out insurance.</p>
+
+<p>Therefore I will leave the question of this million-dollar policy and
+other forms of importuning until the insurance companies offer something
+in rebuttal.</p>
+
+
+<p class='center'>THE WAY OUT</p>
+
+<p>The overhauling of the Equitable Life exposed conditions far worse than
+I had indicated to the public, and it seemed probable that the usual
+whitewashing process would be utilized to conceal the guilt of the
+rapacious criminals who had been untrue to the most sacred trust that
+can be imposed on man. Since that time, however, the Governor of the
+State of New York has appointed a committee to investigate the affairs
+of the Big Three corporations, and the resulting disclosures are the
+sensation of the hour as this book goes to press. In order to protect
+the interests of policy-holders, in case the authorities declined to
+act, I issued the following address in the July, 1905, number of
+<i>Everybody's</i>:<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_470" id="Page_470">[470]</a></span></p>
+
+<p class='center'>TO THE POLICY-HOLDERS OF THE NEW YORK LIFE, MUTUAL, AND EQUITABLE
+INSURANCE COMPANIES</p>
+
+<p>The time has come for you to act. When, less than a year ago, I began my
+story, "Frenzied Finance," I exposed the function of the three great
+life-insurance companies in the structure of the "System." I explained
+that they were controlled in the interests of great financiers and that
+their funds were juggled with to compass the huge plundering operations
+of Wall Street. At that time the New York Life, the Equitable, and the
+Mutual Life loomed before the American people as the greatest, most
+respected, and most venerable institutions in our broad land. To-day
+they stand for all that is tricky, fraudulent, and oppressive.</p>
+
+<p>A great change to have been accomplished in less than twelve months!</p>
+
+<p>My readers are by this time familiar with the condition of affairs in
+the Equitable. The greed, juggling, and grafting practised by its
+officers and controllers have been fully exposed through the press. I
+hope none of those who have followed the terrific arraignment of
+rottenness and rascality made through the Frick report are so foolish as
+to imagine that the evils described are confined to the Equitable. In my
+own opinion the Equitable is much less reprehensible than the New York
+Life, and when that institution and the Mutual are thoroughly shaken up,
+as they will be in the future, indubitable evidence of the same fashion
+of extravagance, trickery, and fraud will be found in plenty. Conditions
+in the three institutions are the same; though of late the New York Life
+has altered the character of most of its securities. Each has piled up
+an immense surplus which has been used through allied trust companies
+for stock juggling; each has paid extravagant commissions to agents; the
+funds of each have been managed to afford to high officials plentiful
+opportunities of graft; each has its real estate, fire insurance, low
+rent and loan favor graft; in each will be found the same type of
+syndicates as President Alexander and Vice-President Hyde used for their
+personal enrichment in the Equitable. To-day President John A. McCall of
+the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_471" id="Page_471">[471]</a></span> New York Life is credited with possessing a fortune of between ten
+and fifteen millions&mdash;a few brief years ago he was State Superintendent
+of Insurance in Albany. The chief associate in the management of the
+same corporation, George W. Perkins, J. Pierpont Morgan's partner, is
+another very rich man, whose wealth has been accumulated in a few short
+years. Do you imagine for a moment that such transactions as I set forth
+last year in connection with the New York Security and Trust Company, in
+which the interest of the New York Life was sold to a syndicate of its
+own directors for a sum far below the market value of the shares, were
+put through without the connivance of President McCall and
+Vice-President Perkins? Even if the New York Life, as its president
+explains, did make a large profit on the sale of the trust company's
+stock, he cannot deny that the syndicate paid far less than the then
+market value of the shares for the insurance company's holdings.</p>
+
+<p>There is something particularly vile about the crimes of these high
+officials and distinguished gentlemen who have been waxing fat and
+luxurious on life-insurance graft. In a recent number of this magazine I
+drew a parallel between the confidence operator and the burglar to show
+that the latter despises the former for a sneak thief who takes no
+chances in his thieving operations. Infinitely more depraved than the
+sneak thief is the high-placed functionary, presiding over a great
+institution built up out of the savings of millions of people, paid an
+immense salary for his important services, trusted with vast funds
+because of his reputation for integrity and business sagacity&mdash;who yet
+uses his splendid place to line his own pocket. Of all fiduciary
+institutions, life insurance should be the most sacred. Its chief
+function is to care for the widow, the orphan, and the helpless. The
+millions of revenue paid annually into the life-insurance companies of
+this country represent the blood and tears and sweat of millions of
+Americans who thus provide for the care of their dear ones for the time
+when death shall have put an end to their own income-earning abilities.
+The administrator of a trust so solemn and exalted should devote himself
+to its safeguarding as a priest dedicates himself to the service of his<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_472" id="Page_472">[472]</a></span>
+Maker. The responsibility conferred on him is the highest and holiest
+man can repose in his fellow-man. Remembering all this, consider again
+the revelations of greed and plunder in the Equitable; consider that
+millions upon millions of dollars have been filched and wasted; analyze
+the Frick report and the letter of President Alexander to the directors
+of the society, calling for Vice-President Hyde's removal from office.
+Think, ye farmers and laborers, of personal traveling expenses of
+$75,000 in a brief period, of salaries of $100,000 annually paid for a
+few hours of work per day; think of vast sums of your money used to
+provide expensive safe-deposit institutions with low-priced quarters so
+that the personal income of men already multimillionaires may wax still
+greater. Think of the great institution to whose hundreds of millions'
+income you contribute your hard-earned dollars, being farmed, milked,
+and squeezed by a pack of dissolute and greedy schemers and robbers more
+conscienceless and oppressive than any band of thugs in the country.</p>
+
+<p>When I began to discuss in <i>Everybody's Magazine</i> the subject of the
+three great life-insurance companies, I stated that there is actually
+nothing between the two million-odd policy-holders and the possibility
+of their being robbed of the billions of dollars of their accumulated
+savings but the devotion and the honesty of the men who are in control
+of these institutions.</p>
+
+<p>You know what happened when I said this to you the first time&mdash;less than
+a year ago. The officers, trustees, and hirelings of these great
+companies laughed to scorn my statements and called me a liar and a
+scoundrel. They drew the attention of the whole world to the standing
+and wealth and honesty of the men who managed these great corporations,
+and proved by the most positive asseverations that nothing could be more
+preposterous than that any one of them could do wrong. But the great
+God, who seldom allows His children to remain long deceived to their
+undoing, heard these loud-mouthed protestations, and to-day the world is
+listening to exposures of low, mean thefts and contemptible crimes far
+worse than any to which I had pointed.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_473" id="Page_473">[473]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>And from whom comes the proof of the treacheries and rascalities
+perpetrated within the Equitable? From the men who control and manage
+this great institution and its hundreds of millions of accumulations.
+When my accusations first appeared, these men saw the handwriting on the
+wall and some of them, bolder than others, determined to seize these
+vast hoards of the public's money and at the same time get possession of
+all evidence of past crimes so that they might be immune forever after
+from punishment and the necessity of making restitution. In the act of
+grabbing, however, the robbers fell out with one another, and, presto!
+they are in the public square where all men, women, and children, cats,
+dogs, and asses may see and hear as they gouge, bite, and accuse each
+other of the vilest crimes.</p>
+
+<p>These are the men in whose custody even now are the accumulations on
+which you, Mr. Policy-holder, are depending to take care of your wife
+and little ones, should you die. On the honor and responsibility of men
+who in the past five years have "saved" out of salaries of $20,000 to
+$100,000, private fortunes of millions, you must absolutely rely for the
+safety of the billions of dollars of your savings. The future of the
+helpless beings whom your hard daily labors provide with a livelihood is
+in the hands of men who admit having expended $100,000 of your money to
+provide a lordly and regal entertainment for a set of extravagantly paid
+agents and solicitors who, spurred on by prodigal inducements, have
+piled up huge amounts of new business on the company's books. I have
+explained to you before what such business is worth, that the agent gets
+so large a commission that he is practically in a position to accept
+risks at far below their cost to the company, and that such business as
+this is seldom renewed. The same men have been paying personal
+secretaries, gardeners, and flunkies out of your earnings; they have
+been feasting and traveling in private cars with large parties of the
+New York flubstocracy at your expense; every possible extravagance they
+have been guilty of by means of the revenues some of you have worked
+fourteen to eighteen hours a day to gather in. Shame, I say, on such
+contemptible thievery.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_474" id="Page_474">[474]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>I cannot resist the temptation to pull back the slide from one episode
+of the past. When my strictures on the three great life-insurance
+companies first appeared, one of the vice-presidents of the Equitable,
+Gage E. Tarbell, in writing to an inquiring policy-holder, said: "Pay no
+attention to Lawson; he is only a reckless stock gambler, and every
+sensible person knows that any man, no matter what his position might
+be, who would do anything to cause loss to the class of people we
+insure, must be a rascal." And this is the same man Tarbell, it is now
+admitted by all the Equitable officers and investigating committees,
+who, as soon as he saw the crisis coming in the affairs of the
+Equitable, had his pal, President Alexander, pay to him $135,000, which
+he claimed was due him for commission renewals, even though he was then
+in receipt of a salary of $60,000 per annum for his services. It is
+through the operations of this same Tarbell that the vast system of
+rebates, one of the chief evils of the present system of life insurance,
+came into being, and through his prodigality that the immense sum of
+$2,000,000 stands on the books of the company, representing advance
+commissions to the pampered agents.</p>
+
+<p>The time has come for all you policy-holders to act, and there is but
+one way to act.</p>
+
+<p>A thousand and one schemes are afloat to confuse and trick you at this
+period. The cry is&mdash;anything to hush things, to confine the fire to the
+Equitable, at any cost, even though it totally consumes the $400,000,000
+of the people's savings in that institution. I told you at the beginning
+that the New York Life was worse, if anything, than the Equitable, and
+the Mutual Life just as bad. Therefore I unqualifiedly advise
+policy-holders to:</p>
+
+<p>1. Pay up this year's premium&mdash;it will be the last to these plunderers.</p>
+
+<p>2. Have nothing to do with any committee or scheme.</p>
+
+<p>3. Write me, at once, your name, address, and the amount and character
+of your policy. I want nothing more from you, and under no consideration
+will I divulge your name without your further consent in writing.</p>
+
+<p>I already have the names of thousands of policy-holders,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_475" id="Page_475">[475]</a></span> but to make my
+plan instantly effective I must have scores of thousands.</p>
+
+<p>My plan has for its aim and end, this and only this:</p>
+
+<p>The absolute preservation of the face value of your policy.</p>
+
+<p>The reduction of future premium payments to forty cents on the dollar on
+what you now pay.</p>
+
+<p>The restitution of millions upon millions looted from the three great
+companies, or as much as can be collected after a careful examination of
+the books&mdash;and the punishment of the thieves.</p>
+
+<p>Bear in mind <i>that I will not have any money connection with you in the
+working out of my plan. I pay my own expenses. I will not ask any reward
+or profit, money, office, or otherwise, nor will I under any
+circumstances accept any.</i></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;">
+<a href="images/fig010.jpg"><img src="images/fig010th.jpg" width="400" height="309" alt="Policy-holders reply coupon." title="" /></a>
+<span class="caption">policy-holders reply coupon.</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>In response to this appeal I received over sixteen thousand proxies,
+representing over fifty-four millions of insurance. The investigations
+made by the legislative committee of the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_476" id="Page_476">[476]</a></span> State of New York are
+unearthing in a most thorough manner the iniquities of the directors and
+managers of the Big Three, and before proceeding further I shall await
+the results of its work. If there is any way short of criminal
+proceedings to compel the restitution of the millions diverted or stolen
+from policy-holders, I shall begin suits which I am satisfied can be
+fought to a successful conclusion.</p>
+
+
+<p class='center'>THE CALL TO ARMS</p>
+
+<p>The extraordinary disclosures made before the investigating committee of
+the New York Legislature, which is now conducting inquiries into the
+methods of the great insurance companies, led me finally to issue the
+following open letter to John A. McCall, in which I review the
+controversy between us and contrast his disclosures of corruption and
+mismanagement with his brazen professions of virtue and probity made
+last year. In order to wrest the two great mutual companies from the
+control of men who are obviously unworthy to direct them and with whom
+the policy-holders' funds are plainly unsafe, I asked for proxies which
+would make it possible for me to bring about a change in the control of
+these two great corporations.</p>
+
+<p>This letter and call appeared in the November, 1905, issue of
+<i>Everybody's Magazine</i>.</p>
+
+
+<p class='center'>AN OPEN LETTER TO JOHN A. McCALL, PRESIDENT NEW YORK LIFE INSURANCE
+COMPANY</p>
+
+<p><i>Sir</i>: It is time your attention was called to the moral sense of the
+American people. It is time some one dragged you out of the Wall Street
+conservatory and set you in the plain white light of daily life. It is
+time you were shown yourself as you are to-day seen by the millions of
+your countrymen who, a month ago, believed you to be a great and
+honorable man.</p>
+
+<p>In spite of the terrible exposures of the past few weeks, in spite of
+the pitiless revealment of yourself and your direc<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_477" id="Page_477">[477]</a></span>tors as tricksters,
+in spite of the unveiling of the jugglery, grafting, and corruption of
+your administration of the most sacred trust that can be confided to
+man, you remain unconvinced of your fall and unpenetrated by your shame.
+Fortified by the sympathy of your fellow-sinners, you imagine your
+audacious bluster and your sly evasions before the Investigating
+Committee of the State of New York represented shrewd generalship and
+able strategy, forgetting that the enemy against whom your man&#339;uvres
+were directed was the American people and that, in this inquisition,
+your character and reputation were as absolutely before the bar as
+though you had been indicted for sequestration of the funds of some dead
+friend's wife.</p>
+
+<p>Throughout this broad country of ours are good Americans who have slaved
+and toiled to gather up the hundreds of dollars which you have exacted
+from them yearly as the price of the future livelihood of their wives
+and children, or as the provision for their own old age. You have made
+yourself the custodian of these funds under sacred pledge of square
+dealing and safe and honest administration. You have made yourself the
+national executor, the great depositary of the moneys of the widow and
+the orphan. You have cried your virtue and honorableness from the
+housetops, and, under the stress of your pleadings, hundreds of millions
+of dollars have been confided to you annually&mdash;half the savings of the
+nation have been turned into your coffers, all because you insisted that
+you were honest beyond all other men, and that the dear ones left behind
+might rely on your generosity and integrity for their support.</p>
+
+<p>And it is with the moneys that might at any time have been claimed by
+these widows and orphans that you have been rigging syndicates,
+debauching legislatures, juggling judges, manipulating stock-markets,
+and doing other things which will be proven later. Instead of employing
+the vast power and the immense wealth intrusted to you to conserve the
+interests of your policy-holders, you have made yourself a part of the
+cruel robbing machine which the "System" has created to deprive the
+American people of their savings. Under the pretence of seeking
+profitable investment, your<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_478" id="Page_478">[478]</a></span> corporation has been perverted into a vast
+stock-gambling agency. You have filled the high places in your
+corporation with your own children and relatives and their relatives,
+and conferred on them great salaries out of which they have grown rich.
+You have paid out to friends and associates, on various pleas, millions
+that rightly belonged to your policy-holders. You have done all these
+things habitually, yet to-day you describe the investigation being
+conducted into your operations as an impertinence, and secretly you
+regard this inquisition and all that pertains to it as a waste of time
+and energy. You are unrepentant, unashamed, and defiant.</p>
+
+<p>I shall take this opportunity, sir, of reviewing our own relations
+during the past year and contrasting your position to-day with that you
+boasted twelve months ago.</p>
+
+<p>One year ago, in <i>Everybody's Magazine</i>, I said:</p>
+
+<p>"The officers, trustees, and officials of the 'Big Three' life-insurance
+companies have been and are systematically robbing their policy-holders.
+They are grafters&mdash;mean, contemptible grafters."</p>
+
+<p>I gave specific instances of their thieveries.</p>
+
+<p>You replied, not by haling me to court, but by:</p>
+
+<p>Circulating throughout the world documents by the millions, disparaging
+my reputation by advertisements and "news" and "editorial" statements
+from your subsidized insurance press, denying my charges and attacking
+my character, all at the expense of your policy-holders.</p>
+
+<p>You libelled me in thousands of private letters to policy-holders, many
+of which came back to me.</p>
+
+<p>You employed James M. Beck, ex-Assistant Attorney-General of the United
+States, then and now chief attorney for Henry H. Rogers, the Standard
+Oil Company, the "System," and the Mutual Life Insurance Company, to
+ridicule my utterances and asperse my honor in addresses in the cities
+of Philadelphia and Boston.</p>
+
+<p>You employed James H. Eckels, ex-Comptroller of the Currency of the
+United States, now president of the Commercial Bank and representative
+of the "System" in the West, to attack my arguments and distort my
+motives in Chicago.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_479" id="Page_479">[479]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>You ordered Vice-President Perkins, of the New York Life Insurance
+Company, to perform similar service in Philadelphia; and</p>
+
+<p>The burden of all these documents, advertisements, and disguised
+advertisements and addresses was: "Lawson is an unmitigated liar and
+scoundrel, whose sole reason for attacking the insurance companies is
+that we refused him insurance."</p>
+
+<p>I replied by printing your personal letter to me, wherein you importuned
+me to accept insurance in your company.</p>
+
+<p>Again you gave me the lie, and pronounced your letter spurious.</p>
+
+<p>I replied to you and your followers by instancing cases of perjury,
+bribery, and false statements.</p>
+
+<p>I stated that your claim that your company did not own, nor loan upon,
+stocks was false, and that it was made for the purpose of misleading and
+imposing upon your policy-holders, banks, trust companies, Government
+officials, and investors.</p>
+
+<p>You answered this by writing a letter to one of the great churchmen of
+America, and in it you said: "I pledge you my word of honor this company
+has never, since 1899, had a dollar's interest, directly or indirectly,
+in any stock. Lawson knows this, and deliberately, for his own base
+purposes, makes charges to the contrary which he knows to be false."</p>
+
+<p>To-day you and your fellow-plunderers stand convicted in the eyes of the
+whole world not only of juggling the moneys of the widow and the orphan
+in the stock-market, but of manipulating these trust funds for the
+benefit of your own pockets. To-day the world is aghast at your perfidy
+and amazed at your temerity.</p>
+
+<p>Notwithstanding the turpitude already exposed to the people, you still
+imagine you can so conduct yourself as to prevent the investigators from
+fastening on you and your associates the more desperate crimes that have
+been committed in the past&mdash;the 150 to 200 millions stolen and diverted
+or used in corruption. You know as I do that only the very edges of this
+national cesspool have yet been uncovered. You know that not only have
+the ballot-box and the Legisla<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_480" id="Page_480">[480]</a></span>ture at Albany been tampered with, but
+the law-making and administering machinery of other States corrupted,
+the Federal Government surrounded, and certain of the judiciary of
+America "educated."</p>
+
+<p>You believe you can keep the evidence of these crimes from the American
+people by the same kind of bluff and effrontery with which you met my
+first charges. But you have mistaken the tempers of your countrymen.</p>
+
+<p>I have been authorized in writing by over 16,000 policy-holders,
+carrying over fifty-four millions of insurance, to act for them.</p>
+
+<p>I had intended to await the finish of the New York investigation before
+proceeding, but as I have had placed in my hands during the past few
+days evidences of the determination of yourself and your accomplices and
+fellow-conspirators to face it out regardless of consequences, and as I
+believe men capable of committing the acts that have been proved during
+the past few days are fully capable of taking the transportable part of
+the billion and a quarter funds to foreign countries, and of using them
+to keep themselves from their justly deserved punishments, I have
+decided to act now.</p>
+
+<p>In sending you this open letter, I am actuated only by a desire to bring
+you and your associates to such a sense of the seriousness of your
+position that you will see it is useless longer to attempt to defy the
+American people.</p>
+
+<p>Yours, for the Exposure of Corporation Sneak Thieves,</p>
+
+<p class='right'><span class="smcap">Thomas W. Lawson</span>.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_481" id="Page_481">[481]</a></span></p>
+
+<p class='center'><span class="smcap">To Life-Insurance Policy-Holders</span></p>
+
+<p>At the beginning of my story, in 1904, I made certain accusations
+against the management of the three big life-insurance companies.</p>
+
+<p>I knew, when I began my story, that the big life-insurance companies
+were in the hands of grafters and thieves, just as are the great banks,
+trust companies, railroad companies, and big corporations and trusts.</p>
+
+<p><i>This I knew</i> and, in plain language, said it.</p>
+
+<p>The big insurance companies, through their officers and trustees,
+replied by declaring: "He's an unmitigated liar."</p>
+
+<p>I kept at my knitting, for I knew the crimes of these insurance grafters
+were such that, sooner or later, the world would have an opportunity to
+judge fairly who were the unmitigated liars and thieves.</p>
+
+<p>The opportunity is at hand.</p>
+
+<p>To-day the press of the world is devoting its space, news and editorial,
+to a recital of the contemptible and heinous crimes of the New York Life
+and the Mutual Life Insurance companies&mdash;not as I relate them, but as
+their own officers and trustees publicly confess them.</p>
+
+<p>In the July instalment of my story I called upon policy-holders to sign
+a coupon blank inserted in <i>Everybody's Magazine</i>, and send same to me
+that I might speak for them in a plan to further their interests.</p>
+
+<p>In response to my call I have received up to October 4, 1905, 16,307
+answers, representing $55,165,916.</p>
+
+<p>I think my readers, when they analyze the following list and take into
+consideration the character of the senders, many of whom are men of the
+highest standing&mdash;bishops, ministers, governors, mayors, judges,
+senators, members of Congress, railroad, bank, and trust company
+presidents&mdash;will agree with me that it is the most remarkable collection
+ever made by one interest since life insurance began.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_482" id="Page_482">[482]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class='center'>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="coupons">
+<tr><td colspan='2'>INSURANCE COUPONS</td></tr>
+<tr><td colspan='2'><i>Received from June 20th to October 4, 1905</i></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>New York Life</td><td align='right'>$18,845,410</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Equitable</td><td align='right'>17,317,956</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Mutual</td><td align='right'>14,550,240</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Miscellaneous</td><td class='bb'>4,452,310</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'></td><td align='right'>$55,165,916</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<div class='center'>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="states">
+<tr><td align='left'>Alabama</td><td align='right'>22</td><td align='left'>Montana</td><td align='right'>130</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Arizona</td><td align='right'>127</td><td align='left'>Nebraska</td><td align='right'>236</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Arkansas</td><td align='right'>124</td><td align='left'>Nevada</td><td align='right'>28</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>California</td><td align='right'>842</td><td align='left'>New Hampshire</td><td align='right'>73</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Colorado</td><td align='right'>211</td><td align='left'>New Jersey</td><td align='right'>282</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Connecticut</td><td align='right'>177</td><td align='left'>New Mexico</td><td align='right'>40</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Delaware</td><td align='right'>43</td><td align='left'>New York</td><td align='right'>1,780</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>District of Columbia</td><td align='right'>152</td><td align='left'>North Carolina</td><td align='right'>466</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Florida</td><td align='right'>230</td><td align='left'>North Dakota</td><td align='right'>143</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Georgia</td><td align='right'>169</td><td align='left'>Ohio</td><td align='right'>985</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Idaho</td><td align='right'>150</td><td align='left'>Oklahoma</td><td align='right'>154</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Illinois</td><td align='right'>1,012</td><td align='left'>Oregon</td><td align='right'>93</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Indiana</td><td align='right'>415</td><td align='left'>Pennsylvania</td><td align='right'>1,133</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Indian Territory</td><td align='right'>130</td><td align='left'>Rhode Island</td><td align='right'>67</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Iowa</td><td align='right'>560</td><td align='left'>South Carolina</td><td align='right'>81</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Kansas</td><td align='right'>316</td><td align='left'>South Dakota</td><td align='right'>104</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Kentucky</td><td align='right'>153</td><td align='left'>Tennessee</td><td align='right'>157</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Louisiana</td><td align='right'>197</td><td align='left'>Texas</td><td align='right'>580</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Maine</td><td align='right'>144</td><td align='left'>Utah</td><td align='right'>68</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Maryland</td><td align='right'>126</td><td align='left'>Vermont</td><td align='right'>57</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Massachusetts</td><td align='right'>843</td><td align='left'>Virginia</td><td align='right'>242</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Michigan</td><td align='right'>406</td><td align='left'>Washington</td><td align='right'>417</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Minnesota</td><td align='right'>574</td><td align='left'>West Virginia</td><td align='right'>205</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Mississippi</td><td align='right'>173</td><td align='left'>Wisconsin</td><td align='right'>318</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Missouri</td><td align='right'>499</td><td align='left'>Wyoming</td><td align='right'>36</td></tr>
+<tr><td colspan='4'></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Alaska</td><td align='right'>27</td><td align='left'>Corea</td><td align='right'>1</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Argentina</td><td align='right'>1</td><td align='left'>Mexico</td><td align='right'>71</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Bermuda</td><td align='right'>1</td><td align='left'>Newfoundland</td><td align='right'>4</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Canada</td><td align='right'>344</td><td align='left'>New Zealand</td><td align='right'>1</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Chili</td><td align='right'>1</td><td align='left'>Panama</td><td align='right'>2</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>China</td><td align='right'>1</td><td align='left'>Philippines</td><td align='right'>16</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Colombia</td><td align='right'>1</td><td align='left'>Porto Rico</td><td align='right'>5</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Costa Rica</td><td align='right'>1</td><td align='left'>Santo Domingo</td><td align='right'>7</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Cuba</td><td align='right'>4</td><td align='left'>Straits Settlements</td><td align='right'>1</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>England</td><td align='right'>9</td><td align='left'>Sweden</td><td align='right'>1</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>France</td><td align='right'>4</td><td align='left'>Trinidad</td><td align='right'>2</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Hawaii</td><td align='right'>35</td><td align='left'>Uruguay</td><td align='right'>2</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Honduras</td><td align='right'>2</td><td align='left'>Yukon Territory</td><td align='right'>4</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Japan</td><td align='right'>4</td><td align='left'></td><td class='bb'></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Grand total</td><td align='right'></td><td align='left'></td><td align='right'>16,307</td></tr>
+</table></div><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_483" id="Page_483">[483]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>As soon as I received a number of signatures sufficiently large to
+warrant it, I quietly began operations.</p>
+
+<p>The first direct result is the investigation now being held. This
+investigation has proceeded far enough to put before the public absolute
+proof of all the crimes I have charged, and three to thirty times as
+many more.</p>
+
+<p>It is now evident to all that:</p>
+
+<p>1st. The policy-holders in the great companies have yearly paid into
+their company scores of millions more than necessary.</p>
+
+<p>2d. The policy-holders have been robbed of scores of millions.</p>
+
+<p>3d. The vast funds now on hand have been habitually used by the grafters
+now in control of them in the rankest kind of stock-gambling.</p>
+
+<p>4th. These funds have been used to corrupt the ballot-box and the
+law-makers of the country.</p>
+
+<p>I repeat, absolute proof of all this has been made public.</p>
+
+<p>It should now be evident to all that:</p>
+
+<p>1st. The funds now on hand are in actual jeopardy, because they are in
+the absolute control of unprincipled scoundrels.</p>
+
+<p>2d. Unless something is done, and done at once, by the policy-holders,
+each and every one of the largest companies may become insolvent; that
+is, they may not be able to meet the engagements of their policies,
+because of waste of funds, tremendous falling off of new business,
+tremendous cost of new business, and the nature of the new
+business&mdash;so-called "graveyard business"; for I am credibly informed
+that they are now seeking to insure those who formerly have been refused
+insurance because of physical infirmities.</p>
+
+<p>It should also be plainly evident that, if the policy-holders move, and
+move quickly, they can be absolutely assured that:</p>
+
+<p>1st. The funds as they are to-day will remain intact.</p>
+
+<p>2d. They will be added to by the restitution of from $75,000,000 to
+$150,000,000.</p>
+
+<p>3d. A score of the thieves who have plundered policy-holders in the past
+will be sent to prison.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_484" id="Page_484">[484]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>4th. The future payments of policy-holders will be largely cut down.</p>
+
+<p>5th. The present swollen surpluses will be returned in large part to
+policy-holders.</p>
+
+<p>6th. In the future policy-holders will actually run the company.</p>
+
+<p>7th. All policy-holders can be assured that in the future they will
+receive the actual worth of their policy at surrender.</p>
+
+<p>All this being so, it is most eminently desirable for policy-holders to
+act, and at once.</p>
+
+<p>The time will never again be so opportune, for if nothing definite is
+done now, policy-holders will be discouraged for all time.</p>
+
+<p>I have given the subject the closest and most earnest study, assisted by
+the best insurance experts and lawyers procurable, and guided by the
+suggestions of over 100,000 policy-holders, for in addition to the
+16,000 mentioned, I have received over 90,000 letters. I have come to
+the conclusion that the one thing for policy-holders to do now is:</p>
+
+<p>To authorize some one in whom they have confidence to select a committee
+to take their proxies and at once seize possession of the two great
+mutual companies, the New York Life and the Mutual.</p>
+
+<p>I omit the Equitable at this stage, because litigation may be necessary
+before the Equitable, being a stock company, can come into the
+policy-holders' hands. But in the other two, no obstacles can be placed
+in the way of the policy-holders' taking control.</p>
+
+<p>To empower this committee to bring action at once to compel full
+restitution and enforce full punishment, and then to change the present
+method of conducting the insurance business.</p>
+
+<p>The vital question is: Whom can the policy-holders trust to do this?</p>
+
+<p>The "Big Three" are at present spending vast sums of the policy-holders'
+money to prevent some such action as this, in the following ways:</p>
+
+<p>First, by moulding public opinion through paid news and editorial items;
+next, by the collection of proxies; and third,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_485" id="Page_485">[485]</a></span> by the inauguration of
+different moves and dummy suits and investigations.</p>
+
+<p>There are already three of these affairs under way. Almost any way the
+policy-holders turn for relief they are confronted with traps which, if
+they fall into them, will make relief and rescue impossible.</p>
+
+<p>Any man or body of men who go to the great expense necessary to collect
+proxies must have some hidden scheme for reimbursing themselves, or they
+must be working in the interests of the thieves now in control.</p>
+
+<p>I therefore make bold to say: I am the natural one to make this move.</p>
+
+<p>Just a minute before you pass judgment. Let us see if I am:</p>
+
+<p>1st. I have already spent in my work over a million dollars of my own
+money.</p>
+
+<p>2d. I am willing to spend, if necessary, two millions more.</p>
+
+<p>3d. I will absolutely prove I want nothing in return.</p>
+
+<p>4th. I will absolutely prove on the face of my plans that I cannot in
+any way benefit beyond the satisfaction I shall derive from putting
+another spike in the "System's" coffin.</p>
+
+<p>I ask of the policy-holders simply this:</p>
+
+<p>Fill out the following form of proxy; sign and seal it, and send it to
+me. Quick action is most desirable in view of contingencies.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_486" id="Page_486">[486]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 260px;">
+<a href="images/fig011.jpg"><img src="images/fig011th.jpg" width="260" height="400" alt="" title="" /></a>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_20_20" id="Footnote_20_20"></a><a href="#FNanchor_20_20"><span class="label">[20]</span></a> In the course of the legislative investigation of the
+great insurance companies in New York, it developed that the Mutual Life
+Insurance Company conducts a publicity bureau, organized to discredit
+any one who dares criticise its methods. This bureau is conducted by one
+Charles J. Smith, on a salary of $8,000 per annum, and he works through
+Allan Forman, editor of the <i>Journalist</i>. Forman maintains a
+"telegraphic news bureau" and secures publication in various newspapers
+or periodicals of matter sent him for dissemination by the Mutual Life,
+and he is paid $1.00 per line of the policy-holders' money on all matter
+for which he obtains publicity. The whitewash paragraphs recently
+published throughout the country in regard to President McCurdy and the
+Mutual Life were all paid for on this basis.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_487" id="Page_487">[487]</a></span></p>
+<h2>II</h2>
+
+<h3>THE ENEMIES I HAVE MADE</h3>
+
+
+<p>When a man discovers that a public building full of men, women, and
+children is infested with rats and that these vicious rodents have
+undermined its foundations and honeycombed its structure, it becomes his
+duty, first, to warn the occupants of the presence of the rats, next, to
+show them the damage that has been wrought and how the rats can be
+trapped and killed&mdash;and then he may take a hand in the rat-hunt himself.</p>
+
+<p>That is about what I have been doing, and if proof were needed that the
+"System" suffered under my exposure of its villainies, I should have it
+in plenty in the showers of mud bullets it has fired at me. From scores
+of quarters these volleys came. A regular army of the "System's"
+votaries must have been out working like Trojans to stop my work, to
+discredit me, to bespatter me with its dirt.</p>
+
+<p>The manner in which the "System" writhed under my attacks showed how
+seriously it was hurt. What surprises me was that so little intelligence
+was exhibited in defaming me. Such wanton, foolish attacks those that
+were made on me personally! As though it mattered who or what I am in
+comparison with the accusations I have made. Americans are not fools. To
+say that Lawson is this or that does not minimize or detract from his
+charge of robbery and conspiracy.</p>
+
+<p>Every morning after I began to write "Frenzied Finance" I found a new
+budget of personalities in my mail, in the newspapers, in pamphlets.
+Learned lawyers traveled about the country slinging mud at me at
+banquets and society gatherings; scores of hireling weekly and monthly
+papers devoted pages to vilifying me; the insurance press was laden
+with<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_488" id="Page_488">[488]</a></span> assaults, and for fear the public should miss the brickbats, the
+insurance companies carefully mailed them to their policy-holders. All
+these tirades were in one key&mdash;that of crude abuse. The statements about
+myself and my career were nothing but lies. They were not even cleverly
+imagined.</p>
+
+<p>Upon entering on this crusade against "Frenzied Finance" I expected
+attack. Reforms are not matured to accompaniments of incense and
+rose-water, and I had made up my mind to disregard the mud and its
+slingers. Afterward, if there were any "System" left, I rather looked
+forward to smothering it beneath the foulness of its own generating.
+There came a time during the year, however, when I deemed it proper to
+depart from this resolution and nail some of the lies my enemies were
+circulating about me. I debated the subject thoroughly, for the rancor
+of these assaults was evident and I could not help feeling that the
+general run of my readers would be impatient of the space given these
+gutter rakers. The determination to go at them was clinched by a letter
+which came to me, with a number of others from clergymen of various
+denominations, from a learned Catholic priest, who put the case for a
+reply most earnestly. He said:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>You owe it, my son, to yourself to clear away, for once and
+all, the charges your enemies have made against you. I have
+faith you mean all that you say, but there are many, many
+sons and daughters who are troubled in heart and harassed in
+mind with doubt whether your motives be pure, and if your
+deeds in the past have been along the ways of the good. It
+is my advice, if you will accept it, that you put aside your
+pride and your dignity and frankly and openly tell us
+whether these charges that we read are true or false.</p></div>
+
+
+<p class='center'>BECK VS. LAWSON</p>
+
+<p>I shall deal with the subject as fairly as possible, reminding my
+readers, however, that I am at a disadvantage in having to use pen and
+ink instead of the implement appropriate for the purpose, a hose
+connected with a disinfectant barrel. To begin with, I reproduce the
+following from the Toledo <i>Blade</i>, December 26, 1904. (I have similar
+paragraphs clipped from one hundred other papers.)<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_489" id="Page_489">[489]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p class='center'>JAMES M. BECK FLAYS LAWSON</p>
+
+<p class='center'>Calls Boston Author-Broker a Frenzied Fakir.</p>
+
+<p class='center'><span class="smcap">Defines Moneyphobia</span></p>
+
+<p class='center'>Declares He is Victim of New Disease&mdash;Compares His Actions to "Crazed
+Malay Running Amuck."</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Philadelphia</span>, December 26th.&mdash;Ex-Assistant Attorney-General
+James M. Beck talked on "Moneyphobia" at the thirty-ninth
+annual commencement exercises of the Peirce Business
+College. He paid his respects to Thomas W. Lawson in such
+terms as "frenzied fakir" and "crazed Malay running amuck."
+... "There are abundant indications that this epidemic is
+now rife in the community. The extraordinary vote polled by
+a Socialistic candidate for President, in a time of general
+prosperity, seems to evidence this, as does the avidity with
+which many intelligent people read in a cheap 'penny
+dreadful' magazine the incoherent, self-contradictory, and
+self-incriminating articles of a notorious frenzied fakir,
+who, like a crazed Malay, is wildly running amuck, and,
+without rhyme or reason, slashing at the reputations of
+judges, senators, and financiers."</p></div>
+
+<p>The following is from a Chicago insurance paper, and comes to me with
+the marginal inscription, "Puncture this bladder when convenient." I may
+say that I receive hundreds of clippings every day from various parts of
+the country, sent me by correspondents who are determined I shall be
+apprised of what my antagonists are trying to do against me.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p class='center'>BANKER ECKELS AND BROKER LAWSON</p>
+
+<p>The splendid tribute to our country's greatness, resources,
+and possibilities given by President James H. Eckels, of the
+Commercial National Bank, of Chicago, and ex-Comptroller of
+Currency of the United States, before the Chicago Life
+Underwriters' Association, was listened to with earnest
+attention.</p>
+
+<p>The brilliant young financier ... believes in life insurance
+for the people. It creates the valuable habit of saving. He
+deprecates the malicious attacks on companies by men of
+mysterious motives, and feels it will be a sorry day if they
+ever become objects of prey for political thieves.</p>
+
+<p>The banker paid his respects to Thomas W. Lawson, of Boston,
+whom he characterized as a notoriety seeker and branded as a
+"dis<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_490" id="Page_490">[490]</a></span>credited, disreputable, despised stock-jobber who
+glories in his infamy." Mr. Eckels lashed Lawson with
+caustic language, and stated the American people of judgment
+are not misled by his diatribes.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Eckels believes that life-insurance presidents reach
+their high stations by their own ability and grasping of
+opportunities. Because a man is elevated to a position of
+eminence and responsibility does not mean he is dishonest.
+He arrives there because he cannot be held down and remains
+as long as he proves his worth. The banker declared that
+life companies, with their vast funds, were being safely
+guided by men of superior mental mould.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Eckels referred to President McCall, of the New York
+Life, as being a clerk in a State bureau office when he
+first made his acquaintance. He said President McCall had
+advanced, like other company executives, owing to his own
+ability and genius for management.</p></div>
+
+<p>In an early article in this series I stated that one of the favorite
+operations of the "System" is to pick off those officials who have
+exhibited unusual talent or energy in protecting the interests of the
+National Government. In this way they secure the services of men who
+know the secret workings of the people's institutions and how best to
+guard the corporations against the consequences of their misdeeds.
+During the Cleveland administration there developed a "financial
+phenomenon," James H. Eckels, Comptroller of the Currency. It did not
+take long for the astute Rogers-Morgan-McCall clique to see that this
+young man's knowledge of finance in connection with his governmental
+position might prove a dangerous obstacle to their machine if he were
+not captured. It was not long before he was captured.</p>
+
+<p>I met Mr. Eckels during the Cleveland bond performance. I need not enter
+into the details of that extraordinary affair here, for it is one of the
+sore spots in recent American history. Briefly, the Administration at
+Washington attempted to issue $100,000,000 government bonds and deliver
+them in a snap sale to the "System." The New York <i>World</i> began a
+crusade against the transaction, and was so successful that the
+Administration was compelled to offer the issue to the public through
+competitive bids. The result&mdash;the bonds fetched many more millions for
+the Government than if the deal had been allowed to slip along the ways
+the "System" had greased for it. I remember well the scene at the
+opening of the bids. It was in the United States Treasury at
+Wash<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_491" id="Page_491">[491]</a></span>ington. With many others who desired an allotment of the bonds, I
+was present. We were crowded into a small room, and following the
+direction of young Mr. Eckels, who handled the transaction, we gave him
+our bids, which, according to the advertised programme, were in sealed
+envelopes. After all the bids were submitted&mdash;mine was for a number of
+millions&mdash;the envelopes were taken by Mr. Eckels into a rear room. Then
+a few of the leading financiers present, among them John A. McCall, of
+the New York Life, J. Pierpont Morgan, and one or two others of the
+"System's" foremost representatives, got their heads together and began
+an earnest conference. Certain of them went out of the room and after
+awhile returned for a further conference. There were several such
+confabulations and comings and goings, until finally, after a monotonous
+delay, the bids were opened and the bonds awarded. Morgan, McCall, <i>et
+al.</i>, had secured the bulk of the issue at a price many points above
+what any one had been led to believe the bonds would sell for, and many
+points higher than the "System" and the Government had proclaimed to the
+people they could possibly sell for, yet at a price which showed
+millions of profit a few hours after the bids were opened. I do not
+charge that the public's envelopes were opened and "peeked" into before
+the "System's" bids were sealed. Such a charge is not necessary. It has
+been made many times by the press. Mr. Eckels, to the minds of such of
+us as could see through cracks in a floor wide enough to drive a
+four-in-hand coach into without unhooking the leaders, had lived up to
+his r&ocirc;le as a financial phenomenon, and when some time afterward it was
+bruited abroad that this able young man was to have the presidency of
+the City Bank, or any other large bank belonging to the "System" that he
+might select, there was no surprise, although much comment, in Wall
+Street. Mr. Eckels finally accepted the presidency of the Commercial
+Bank of Chicago, where he now is one of the important cogs in the
+"System's" machine.</p>
+
+<p>The case of James M. Beck has points of similarity. Mr. Beck, a young
+Philadelphia lawyer, obtained a valuable knowledge of the secrets of the
+Department of Justice in<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_492" id="Page_492">[492]</a></span> Washington as Assistant United States
+Attorney-General, and in the prosecution of the Northern Securities suit
+got an insight into the "System's" methods. It will be remembered that
+at the trial of the suit he made a great appearance and became famous as
+the young champion of the people who had succeeded in "busting" this
+notorious trust. The victory was hardly announced before it became known
+that the brilliant Assistant Attorney-General had renounced the cause of
+the public and had been engaged at a large salary as chief counsel for
+Henry H. Rogers, of Standard Oil.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Beck has proved a most available and flexible servant in the cause
+of his master. He has done Mr. Rogers's bidding in a manner befitting
+the best traditions of "Standard Oil." Almost his first work was the
+trial of the famous Boston Gas suit, in which for weeks he "steered"
+Henry H. Rogers while on the witness-stand in the Massachusetts Supreme
+Court. The very night before this case was to be called for trial, the
+eminent young "trust buster" and people's champion called on my attorney
+and made him a proposition. It was that I should meet Mr. Beck and agree
+upon the details of certain testimony that Mr. Rogers and Kidder,
+Peabody &amp; Co. (the "System's" Boston representatives), and myself would
+be called upon to give upon the witness-stand next day. My attorney
+brought the proposition to me.</p>
+
+<p>"Great heavens!" I said, "is it possible that this man has the audacity
+to come to Boston and ask me to commit perjury?"</p>
+
+<p>"He does not put it in just those words," my attorney answered.</p>
+
+<p>"No, but he says he wishes to <i>match up</i> testimony with me so that we
+may all testify alike."</p>
+
+<p>"That is it," my attorney answered.</p>
+
+<p>"But," said I, "I have got to state the facts, and the facts are
+diametrically opposed to the testimony Mr. Rogers and the others are to
+give. This looks to me like subornation of perjury."</p>
+
+<p>My lawyer would not have it that way, and I instructed him to secure
+from Mr. Beck a writing as to just what he wished me to do, and that
+writing I have at the present time.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_493" id="Page_493">[493]</a></span> In it he states that if I do not
+see him and agree upon the testimony to be submitted in the Supreme
+Court of Massachusetts the following day, there may be developments
+which will be decidedly uncomfortable for Mr. Rogers and perhaps for the
+rest of us.</p>
+
+<p>I did not meet Mr. Beck, and Henry H. Rogers and Kidder, Peabody &amp; Co.
+told one story and I another. Bald perjury was committed by some one.
+However, I will give all the facts, including the "match up" letter,
+when I come to them in my story.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Beck and Mr. Eckels are the two men designated by the "System" to
+attend public gatherings and vilify Thomas W. Lawson. They are at it,
+industriously.</p>
+
+
+<p class='center'>THE DONOHOE EPISODE</p>
+
+<p>As soon as the first chapter of "Frenzied Finance" appeared, Henry H.
+Rogers turned loose on me one Denis Donohoe, a character thug whom he
+had imported from California for just such emergencies. Donohoe's first
+service for Mr. Rogers was a vicious onslaught on Heinze, of Montana, in
+the New York <i>Commercial</i>. This was an attack of such unusual vulgarity
+and malignity that it won Donohoe his spurs, for soon afterward, when by
+a characteristic trick Mr. Rogers obtained possession of the New York
+<i>Commercial</i>, he made Donohoe its editor. I may mention that Heinze sued
+the <i>Commercial</i> for $300,000 damages, and apropos of the suit an
+interesting complication occurred which seriously interfered with Mr.
+Rogers's plans. The night before the old owners, from whom Mr. Rogers
+had grabbed the <i>Commercial</i>, were to be thrown into the street, they
+threatened, by way of reprisal for the mean trick that had been served
+on them, to confess judgment to Heinze. One was president and the other
+secretary of the company, and this action would have settled the
+proposition. Rogers, treated to a dose of his own medicine, had to make
+a compromise, and the men are still on the paper. The details of this
+good story are to be found in the Detroit <i>Journal</i>. It was fitting that
+when I began my exposures of the "Sys<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_494" id="Page_494">[494]</a></span>tem" this thug should be ordered
+to do his worst by me, and he began the series of virulent assaults that
+the <i>Commercial</i> published and advertised all over the country. The
+first of these was devoted to proving me crazy, and it was carefully
+circulated by my friends the insurance companies by way of offsetting
+the effects of my revelations of their jugglery of the people's funds.
+Later I showed up the fellow so vigorously that John D. Rockefeller
+ordered Mr. Rogers to muzzle him in his own paper, whereupon
+arrangements were made with a New York weekly to act as the
+sewer-conduit for the lies and abuse this thug was warranted to turn
+out.</p>
+
+<p>I should not dream of dealing with this man or his fatuous attacks in a
+respectable publication save that he has been appointed the "System's"
+chief defender. It really seems as though the game were too small to
+take time for its killing, but as these weak and febrile maunderings
+really represent the "System's" reply to my charges, it may be worth
+while to show, once and for all, what idiotic lies they put forth and
+what a silly and ineffective falsifier it is that they have made their
+champion. I shall take the second article of the series and contrast
+Donohoe's statements with the actual facts.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Incidents in Mr. Lawson's versatile career which even those
+who are not censorious might well deem shameful.</p></div>
+
+<p>If in my career I have done anything of which I or any honorable man
+should be ashamed, then I am willing to stand convicted of all that this
+character thug charges against me&mdash;of being a stock-jobber, fakir, liar.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>He claims, if the writer understands him aright, that he is
+<i>animated solely</i> by a keen regard for the public weal in
+performing what he describes as a public duty.</p></div>
+
+<p>I stated positively in the Foreword of my story, and have reiterated
+many times since, that in making these revelations I am actuated first
+and mainly by a desire to benefit the people of this country, not only
+by informing them how they are being plundered, but how they can in the
+future guard<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_495" id="Page_495">[495]</a></span> themselves, and that if it were necessary to accomplish my
+purpose I would spend every dollar I possess; but mixed with this desire
+is a hatred of the "System" as deadly as a man can have for anything
+human. I have also reiterated that at such stage of this revelation as
+is possible I shall secure from the "System" every dollar I can wring
+from it to be used in my fight against it, provided always I can get its
+dollars in legal, fair, and above-board fighting ways&mdash;I mean, in the
+open market.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Mr. Lawson appears before the bar of public opinion as a
+volunteer witness for the commonwealth&mdash;"state's
+evidence"&mdash;as the lawyers phrase it&mdash;and hence his
+reputation, his motives, his character, his every act,
+become at once fit subjects for the closest scrutiny and
+examination.</p></div>
+
+<p>Whoever says that in telling my story I am revealing anything which it
+is not fair or just to tell, or that I have not a perfect right to
+state, says that which is false. I am confining myself to explaining how
+the "System" gets its money. I do not touch upon how it spends it. If in
+an honorable way I could write the things that have come to me
+confidentially, the "System" might well tremble. I confess that at times
+I have been tempted to depart from my code&mdash;when, for instance, soon
+after the first Donohoe chapter, a man came to me and showed that he had
+been offered $5,000 to vouch for the statement&mdash;which Denis Donohoe, H.
+H. Rogers's right-hand man, had printed, and the insurance companies had
+spread broadcast&mdash;that the first ten years of Thomas W. Lawson's
+business life were spent as an employee of Richard Canfield, the
+Providence and New York gambler, and afterward as his partner. "Give us
+an affidavit to that effect and we will pay you $5,000." To this man I
+said: "I have never in my life been connected with any gambling-place in
+any way, nor had to do with gambling in any form, and only once in my
+life have I set eyes on Richard Canfield. He was in the Waldorf Caf&eacute; one
+day when I was passing through. However, if I did know him I should not
+be ashamed to admit it, for I consider Canfield, from what I have read
+of him, an angel of purity compared<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_496" id="Page_496">[496]</a></span> with any one of a score of the
+'System's' votaries I could name." The man left me, but soon after
+returned. He said: "It makes no difference whether what you say is true
+or not, I can now secure $10,000 for the affidavit." When this kind of
+fighting is brought to my attention, I am strongly tempted to let down
+the bars.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>He relates, with all the graphic art of a novelist, a
+wellnigh incredible story. Chicanery, fraud, blackmail,
+bribery of a legislature and of a judge, systematic pillage
+of investors and of the American public.</p></div>
+
+<p>The details I have narrated are facts, and I will prove them to be facts
+so all may know them.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>In delving into Lawson's career&mdash;a most unwelcome task&mdash;the
+writer has detected a continuity of purpose, a fixity of
+design, a uniformity of method pervading his every public
+act. What he is doing now, <i>i.e.</i>, exposing somebody or
+something, he has repeatedly done on a lesser scale in the
+past; not from worthy motives, but for the sole purpose of
+illegitimate pecuniary gain.</p></div>
+
+<p>Yes, throughout my entire life I have pursued with a continuity of
+purpose that class I am pursuing to-day&mdash;the class that has taken from
+the people their earnings by fraud or trick. If other proof were needed
+that the men I am after have lost the discretion which made them great
+in the world, these foolish yarns supply it. It is well known that no
+man ever gets near to "Standard Oil" in business or socially until their
+detectives have dissected his career from the cradle up. I spent years
+in close business relations with these men, so close that, as I will
+show later, I acted as the agent not only of Rogers and Rockefeller, but
+of the Amalgamated Company and the City Bank.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>He is at present engaged in attacking the "System," as he
+calls it, and the banks and the insurance companies and Wall
+Street and American finance, by circulars, by
+advertisements, and through the stock-market, as in the past
+he has repeatedly attacked other corporations and
+individuals until he obtained what he was seeking, and in
+every recorded instance that thing was unearned dollars.</p></div>
+
+<p>In the past I have repeatedly attacked individuals and corporations
+until I obtained what I sought in every case<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_497" id="Page_497">[497]</a></span>&mdash;justice for the defrauded
+and punishment for those who had cheated them, and in no case dollars or
+their equivalent.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>In the gilded biographies of himself which, from time to
+time, Mr. Lawson has caused to be written and published in
+newspapers and magazines.</p></div>
+
+<p>My history is well enough known. I have always lived in the open. It has
+not been necessary to press-agent myself. A good deal has been printed
+about me in the newspapers during the last twenty-five years, but if I
+have ever sought to exploit myself before the public by means of
+autobiographies or journalistic puffs, and it is so proved by any
+reputable newspaper, may I be shown up to public scorn.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>It was Mr. Stevens who defrayed the expense of a six months'
+course at a Boston business college for his prot&eacute;g&eacute;.</p></div>
+
+<p>I have never had such a course of six months, nor of any length, nor
+have I ever been inside a business college.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Mr. Stevens, who was a kindly, philanthropic man, known and
+beloved by all his fellow-citizens, died years ago,
+therefore he cannot dispute what Lawson tells.</p></div>
+
+<p>The late Horace H. Stevens died not years ago, but on March 8, 1904.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Old residents of New York will recall that long before the
+days of Canfield's gilded palace, and long before the era of
+the present district attorney, Mr. Jerome, there was a
+gambling-house known to the commercial traveller and
+man-about-town as "818 Broadway," and that one of the
+backers of the game was William F. Waldron, or "Billy
+Waldron," as he was usually called. Waldron retired nearly
+thirty years ago from the syndicate that controlled this
+house and moved to Providence, where he interested himself
+in gambling and what, for lack of a better term, may be
+called the cognate industries. One of these latter was a
+bucket-shop of the ordinary country town type.</p>
+
+<p>This bucket-shop was confined to the tender mercies of one
+"Jo" Lumpkin as manager. Lumpkin failed to make the business
+profitable, and Waldron, after attaching $500.00 that
+Lumpkin had on deposit in a bank in New York, turned him
+out. In his place he installed the present loquacious
+reformer of American finance, Thomas W. Lawson, or "Billy"
+Lawson as he was then known to the gamblers, race-track
+touts, and confidence men who made Providence their
+head-quarters.</p></div><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_498" id="Page_498">[498]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>My readers will agree with me that such weak and feeble rot is beneath
+any man's attention, for even if what is here charged were true, namely,
+that a young man of twenty-one had been so employed, it would have no
+bearing on his work twenty-six years afterward; but as I have decided to
+take cognizance of this stuff, here are the facts:</p>
+
+<p>What to-day is known as the bucket-shop evil&mdash;that is, the speculation
+in stocks over the counter at offices conducted by brokers outside the
+pale of the law or the Stock Exchange&mdash;did not exist at the period
+mentioned. This method of conducting speculation, however, had just been
+invented, and many of the legitimate brokers, Stock-Exchange members,
+utilized the new form in their ventures. Indeed, the number of brokers
+and brokerage shops outside the Stock Exchange was as large, if not
+larger, than that of the regular houses. At the time Donohoe treats of I
+was doing considerable business for a young man, as will be evidenced by
+my business card of that period:</p>
+
+<div class='bbox'>
+<p class='center'>
+THOMAS W. LAWSON &amp; CO.,</p>
+<p class='center'><span class='smcap'>bankers and brokers.</span></p>
+
+<p class='center'>Dealers in First-class Investment Bonds and Stocks.<br />
+Offices: Boston, Providence, New York, and Chicago.<br /></p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;President of the Lawson Manufacturing Company.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;President of the McDonald-Lawson Manufacturing Company.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Vice-President of the Briggs Printing Machine Company.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>I regularly visited every week my offices in Boston, Providence, and New
+York. At one time I had a Providence office in the building marked in
+the cut in the Donohoe story, and the sign over the door was "Thomas W.
+Lawson &amp; Co."</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>It was in Providence, during the heyday of the
+Waldron-Lawson enterprise, that Lawson ... first met "Jack"
+Roach, whose apparent employment now is selling diamonds on
+commission to the so-called "sporting element" of New York,
+but who is acknowledged to be Lawson's personal
+representative in this city. It was there, too, that he made
+the acquaintance of Herbert Gray, who subsequently conducted
+a gambling-house in Boston, and who recently served as one
+of Lawson's captains and managed his trotting stable. Ben
+Palmer, a well-known<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_499" id="Page_499">[499]</a></span> character in State Street, who is one
+of the main cog-wheels of Lawson's machine, first made
+Lawson's acquaintance during this period of his career.</p></div>
+
+<p>I do know the Waldron Brothers, of Providence, who are among the oldest
+residents of Rhode Island, and who, with the present United States
+Senator Nelson A. Aldrich, composed the great wholesale grocery house of
+Waldron, Wightman &amp; Co. They did not graduate from a gambling-house on
+Broadway. I knew the brother referred to familiarly throughout Rhode
+Island as "Honest Bill," and a royal old fellow he was. I did business
+with him in those days, and to any connection I ever had with him I look
+back with pleasure. He was then conducting a farm in the suburbs of
+Providence, and in a straightforward, old-fashioned way supplying that
+city with produce and poultry, and had, to the best of my knowledge, the
+respect and confidence of all who knew him. I never knew of his having
+been a gambler, and had no means of knowing, as such matters were then
+an unknown world to me.</p>
+
+<p>I never, up to reading it in Donohoe's story the other day, heard of 818
+Broadway, curious as it may seem for a man of my experience. My
+knowledge of gambling has always been confined to that kind which comes
+under the head of stock gambling. I had not met my present friend, John
+J. Roche, of New York, at the time mentioned. I never heard of Herbert
+Gray, of Boston, until I employed him to manage my stable in 1899. I
+have known J. Benjamin Palmer all my life. We were boys together on
+State Street. Afterward he was the Stock-Exchange member of one of the
+oldest banking-houses in Boston. He is still a broker on State Street.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Nothing of certainty can be learned of his career during
+this period. That he sold "base-ball" cards (a unique kind
+of playing-cards) at the Providence railroad station is
+stated on credible authority; that he "worked the trains"
+between New York and Providence; that he sold books; that he
+was a hanger-on at race-tracks, has been alleged. Any or all
+of these rumors may be true&mdash;or false&mdash;for whatever may be
+said of Lawson, his career has undoubtedly been one of
+marvellous activity in many diversified lines.</p></div><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_500" id="Page_500">[500]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>I have never sold baseball playing-cards at the Providence station, nor
+anywhere, at this time nor any time, but I did invent the Lawson
+Baseball Playing-Cards, and was president of the Lawson Playing-Card
+Company. I never sold books at this time nor any time, and never "worked
+trains" at this time nor any time, although I fail to see any disgrace
+in such honest employment; nor had anything to do with trains in any way
+whatever at this time nor any time except to ride in them. I have never
+been a hanger-on at race-tracks, and have never had anything to do with
+a race-track of any kind other than visiting one for the first time in
+1899 to see my own horse, Boralma, race, and four or five times since to
+see my own horses run. I desire to dwell on this especial accusation
+because these character thugs have caused it to be published throughout
+the country that I am and have always been a <i>habitu&eacute;</i> of race-tracks
+and a plunging bettor upon races. I regret that it is my misfortune
+never to have seen a horse-race until 1899, but if it can be shown that
+I was ever upon a race-track before that time, I will agree to stop
+writing this story of "Frenzied Finance."</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>In 1882, a concern known as the Briggs Printing Machine
+Company was incorporated in Rhode Island ... to manufacture
+a machine that was advertised to "print, cut, pack, and
+fasten with twine 100,000 tags per hour." Thomas W. Lawson
+secured the job of selling agent of this company, and he
+proved so successful and the advertising matter which he
+wrote brought such handsome returns, that we find him in
+1884 promoted to the position of manager and enjoying a
+salary of $150 per month. Later he became the secretary of
+the company, and very shortly thereafter, in 1887, the
+enterprise collapsed, was sold out by the sheriff, and
+realized little or nothing for the numerous creditors....</p></div>
+
+<p>It is true that I was the vice-president of the Briggs Printing Machine
+Company, which was organized and owned by others before I had aught to
+do with it. I was induced to invest considerable money in it and to take
+charge of its affairs. The Briggs Company was a close corporation. Its
+stock was never sold to the public, and after I left it it met with
+failure.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_501" id="Page_501">[501]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>In December, 1888, the Lamson Consolidated Store-Service
+Company was incorporated at Boston. Its purpose was to
+exploit an invention of W. S. Lamson ... the overhead
+trolley system used in department-stores for carrying cash
+and parcels.... The capital stock at the beginning was
+$250,000&mdash;par value of shares, $50. The company was doing
+business and declaring two and a half per cent. dividends
+quarterly, when Mr. Lawson stepped in and began to
+manipulate the stock. The price of shares rose steadily to
+122. Under the influence of speculative excitement the
+directors increased the capital stock to $1,000,000, then to
+$4,000,000. Mr. Lawson boomed the stock on the basis of a
+report, totally destitute of truth, that an English
+syndicate was about to purchase a controlling interest in
+the company. Having unloaded all the shares at his disposal
+on the uproad to 122, Mr. Lawson suddenly one morning awoke
+to a realization of the fact that Lamson Store-Service
+shares possessed absolutely no value, and he at once took
+the public, as is his custom, into his confidence. In
+circulars, by advertisements, and by cunningly contrived
+"news" items he insistently dinned into the public ear that
+Lamson shares were valueless. The result was as well might
+be imagined. The stock declined to 30, whereupon Lawson
+bought it back and then and there made his first grand
+<i>coup</i>. It is said that first and last he realized $250,000
+from the Lamson shareholders.</p></div>
+
+<p>I did "Lawsonize" the Lamson Store-Service Company, just as I am at the
+present time "Lawsonizing" the "Standard-Oil"-Amalgamated-City-Bank
+crowd. The Lamson Store-Service Company, with $4,000,000 capital, was
+blunderbussing all who dared oppose it&mdash;all who refused to be bulldozed
+into consolidating with it. It was the most vicious exponent of the
+"Trust" methods I had ever met up to that time. Its arrogance, audacity,
+and crimes were the themes of the newspapers and courts of the day. A
+most casual investigation of the newspaper files, particularly in Osgood
+<i>vs.</i> Lamson, and The New York Store-Service Company <i>vs.</i> Lamson, will
+show a state of corporation assassination equal to that of the "Standard
+Oil," only on a smaller scale, of course. Perjury, bribery, and even
+murder will be found openly charged and in some cases proved. At the
+height of the sensational career of the Lamson Company it ran into one
+of my corporations, The Lawson Manufacturing Company, and started in to
+"do me up" or compel a consolidation, and&mdash;well, I gave it battle. The
+following circular to the stockholders will show how the battle
+started:<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_502" id="Page_502">[502]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p><i>Dear Sir</i>: I deem it my duty to say to you, as a
+shareholder of the Lamson Store-Service Company, that your
+Mr. Lamson and his agents have opened up on my company, and
+with their usual criminal methods are endeavoring to ruin
+us. This circular is to inform you that I have this day
+given notice to each of your officers and directors that, in
+three days from to-day, if they have not stopped their dirty
+work and taken their hands off my company, they will take
+the consequences. I do not pretend to be able to meet them
+on the fighting grounds of the courts, for I know too well
+their power of corruption and jury-buying, but I assure you
+I have other ways by which I can stop them, etc., etc.</p></div>
+
+<p>If Donohoe had desired to deal with facts, he could not have missed the
+details of this story, of which the papers at the time were full. It was
+a fight which would have warmed the heart-cockles of an embalmed warrior
+of the catacombs. Lamson stock was selling at 62, the highest price it
+ever attained, not 122, as this numskull states. When I began operations
+I slaughtered it and the reputation of Lamson and his associates; and in
+the midst of the fight, when the shares were down to 18, or perhaps 14,
+a great public meeting of stockholders&mdash;there were a whole lot of
+them&mdash;was called in the city of Lowell, and, amid fiery speeches, Lamson
+was told to choose between refuting my charges of fraud and being
+deposed from the presidency of the institution. Lamson attempted
+explanations, but the hard-headed stockholders did what the Amalgamated
+stockholders will some time do, passed resolutions that Lamson must
+punish me for libel or that they would punish him. The gathering then
+adjourned to a future date, at which Lamson was to report what action he
+had taken to punish me for my crimes. The next step was interesting, and
+bears on an accusation I have seen mentioned frequently of late. I had,
+when I began my fight, laid before Mr. Joseph Pulitzer, of the New York
+<i>World</i>, the dastardly crimes of which the company had been guilty, and
+was even then engaged in committing, and he had said: "Damnable! I will
+aid you in exposing them." And he did. Day after day there were
+broadsides in the <i>World</i> relentlessly denouncing the rascalities of the
+Lamson outfit. These finally stirred them to action. One day I received
+word that some trickery was being put up in the district attorney's
+office in New York. A few days later there ap<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_503" id="Page_503">[503]</a></span>peared at my office in
+Boston a police officer from New York and three of our head Boston
+police officers. They said to me: "We regret, Mr. Lawson, but we must
+take your secretary, Mr. William L. Vinal, back to New York, as he has
+been indicted for spreading false reports."</p>
+
+<p>"Has any one else been indicted?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes," they replied, "you and some of the <i>World</i> people."</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Vinal has done nothing but obey my orders," I said. "Why don't you
+take me?"</p>
+
+<p>"We have no orders to," was the reply.</p>
+
+<p>I saw the game and sent word to the Governor of Massachusetts, who
+promptly told the combination: "Go slow, gentlemen. Remember you are not
+in New York now, but in Massachusetts." He ordered a public trial.
+Within two hours from the time they laid hands on my secretary I brought
+suit in his name for false arrest against the officers who were trying
+to arrest him, and grabbed the New York official before he could skip
+out of town. Then I went to see the Lamson crowd and we had it out. They
+begged that I allow Vinal to go to New York, just to vindicate them, in
+which circumstances he would be allowed to return on the next train, and
+the case would never be heard of again. If I would consent, they would
+agree to a reorganization of the company and the dropping out of Lamson.
+I showed them that they had gone too far, that I had damaging
+information as to how they had secured the indictment, and that now they
+must take the consequences.</p>
+
+<p>I took the "midnight" for New York, and in the morning was at
+District-Attorney Fellows's office. I dared him to arrest me or the
+officers of the <i>World</i>. He replied: "I don't want you, Lawson. I cannot
+and won't help you advertise your fight." It proving impossible to get
+up any excitement in New York, I returned to Boston, and the extradition
+proceedings furnished a most sensational trial. The cause was bitterly
+fought. The lawyers even came to blows in the governor's chamber.
+Finally, when Governor Brackett had all the facts before him, he said:
+"You cannot work your dirty tricks on me," and he entered a vigorous
+refusal of the ap<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_504" id="Page_504">[504]</a></span>plication for Mr. Vinal's extradition. This case
+established precedents for all such proceedings since.</p>
+
+<p>The fight won, pressure was brought to bear on me to let up on the
+Lamson outfit and call off further proceedings. For some time I
+persistently refused to do so, as I was determined to contest the
+constitutionality of the law. Finally, however, on condition that Lamson
+should be thrown out, the management of the company reorganized, its
+criminal methods abandoned, and all records and trace of the indictment
+against myself and the others removed from the district attorney's
+books, I consented.</p>
+
+<p>This is the history of how I "Lawsonized" the Lamson Store-Service
+Company, and if there is anything I have ever done that was good to do
+and well worth doing, this was it. I am just as proud of my work here as
+of what I did in the General Electric fight upon which I have already
+touched. In the Lamson reorganization I was offered all sorts of good
+things, but I refused, as I always have in such affairs, to benefit in
+any way but the open and fair one where I go into the open market and
+stake my money against that of my opponents on my ability to prove I am
+right. The facts here are of legal record. Following is the
+Donohoe-Rogers version. The mendacity is obvious:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Among the unfortunate Lamson-Service stockholders were
+numbered several aggressive people of the old-fashioned
+kind, who resented Mr. Lawson's peculiar way of doing
+things. These submitted, in 1892, to the grand jury of the
+city of New York a sheaf of Lawsonian literature, comprising
+his scandalous attacks on the company's securities. The
+grand jury indicted Thomas W. Lawson, and Colonel John R.
+Fellows, the district attorney, and his assistants, Francis
+L. Wellman and Mr. Lindsay, went to Boston to try to have
+Lawson extradited. The Governor of Massachusetts came to
+Lawson's rescue in the nick of time and declined to honor
+the request of the Governor of New York for his extradition;
+but for years thereafter the future author of "Frenzied
+Finance" made his trips to this money-centre incognito.</p>
+
+<p class='center'>THE GRAND RIVERS ENTERPRISE</p>
+
+<p>In 1890 the entire country rang with the fame of Grand
+Rivers, and it was Thomas W. Lawson, of Boston, who pulled
+the bell-rope.... The scheme, as may be deduced herefrom,
+was a most comprehensive<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_505" id="Page_505">[505]</a></span> one. The development of the
+"marvellous deposit of coal and iron," which had been
+discovered upon the property by Mr. Lawson, one day while
+seated in his revolving chair in his State Street office,
+furnished the basis for the incorporation of the Furnaces
+Company. After $2,000,000 had been "expended," the clamor of
+the stockholders caused the company actually to build
+several furnaces. They were erected and stood idle, with
+nothing to feed them. The whole scheme collapsed in 1892.
+The stockholders lost every dollar of their investment....</p>
+
+<p>In this, his fourth financial venture, Mr. Lawson did but
+repeat his former experiences&mdash;except, in this case, the
+loss sustained by those who reposed confidence in his
+promises was heavier than in any of his prior undertakings.</p></div>
+
+<p>The Kentucky experience is one of the pleasantest memories of my life.
+Measured by dollars and cents it was expensive but was well worth it, as
+the young man remarked who broke his arm by being thrown from his horse
+into the lap of his future wife. It makes a long story, and I shall only
+touch on the leading facts concerning it by way of showing the desperate
+straits my enemies are put to in their efforts to discredit my career.</p>
+
+<p>My present brokers, Messrs. Brown, Riley &amp; Co., one of the oldest and
+largest Boston and New York Stock Exchange houses, had floated the Grand
+Rivers enterprise for some of their wealthy clients. It was an iron,
+coal, and furnace proposition, and before I ever heard of it, it had
+been bought and paid for, and enormous furnaces were under way. It was a
+close corporation. After a very large amount of money&mdash;in the
+millions&mdash;had gone into the property, I was induced to take the
+executive management, and also I put in a very large amount of my own
+money. My work was to be that of business director, for I did not know
+an iron or a coal mine from an alabaster ledge in the lunar spheres, and
+not half as much about an iron smelter as I did about converting
+whiskers into mermaid's tresses. However, one of the greatest iron men
+in New England, Aretas Blood, president of the Manchester Locomotive
+Works, and of the Nashua Steel and Iron Company, was at the head of the
+enterprise, which apparently safeguarded it. Well, it turned out that
+there was no iron in the mines&mdash;at least not enough to pay for
+extraction, and the investment simply disappeared. I<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_506" id="Page_506">[506]</a></span> lost a very large
+amount&mdash;at least, a very large amount for me&mdash;but I had to show for it
+the love and friendship and respect of the inhabitants of one of the
+fairest places on the earth&mdash;a place where brave men and lovely women
+live in peace and comfort in the knowledge of their own fearless, simple
+honesty, and their hatred of shams and trickery&mdash;in absolute ignorance
+of frenzied financiers and the "System's" votaries.</p>
+
+<p>The history of Grand Rivers is an open book. There is no secret about my
+connection with the enterprise. It was a straight and proper venture.
+The men who are my brokers of to-day fathered it, and they are men of
+honor, probity, and responsibility, who since my first year in business
+in 1870 have been my close business associates and personal friends. Why
+do not Donohoe and his breed of gutter-rooters, when seeking information
+about me, ask such men as these for facts about my life?&mdash;they know what
+every hour of it has been. Strange as it may seem to such vampires, the
+men I began to do business with when I was a boy I am doing business
+with to-day, and they are my associates and friends.</p>
+
+<p>I postponed until the last moment writing this article in order that I
+might be able to diagnose the "System's" attack on me. The first of the
+widely advertised series was such a foolish and asinine thing as to be
+unworthy of notice, and I desired to see how much further the second
+would go. In the former it was charged that I was writing my articles
+solely for the purpose of securing stock-market profits and compelling
+the "System" to settle; in other words, that I was attempting to
+blackmail them; that I had no honorable motives in writing my story, and
+had no remedy of any kind in mind; that in the recent panic I had made a
+million and a quarter of dollars; that I had secured President
+Roosevelt's message eight days before it was published; that I had
+advertised on November 29th, unqualifiedly advising all to purchase
+Amalgamated, and that on December 6th I had advertised advising all to
+sell. It is true that I did advise the public to sell, but that in my
+advertisement of November 29th I advised the people to buy Amalga<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_507" id="Page_507">[507]</a></span>mated
+I positively deny. I carefully avoided doing so. The other statements
+are equally false, and were made with a full knowledge of their falsity.</p>
+
+<p>The incidents in my career about which I have here set forth the facts
+are not secret. All the things I have stated are fully susceptible of
+proof. For another instant let me take the assertion that my motive in
+this crusade is personal gain through stock-jobbery, and that I have no
+aim or end in view other than that. Well, I can to-day show the Remedy
+to which I have alluded so often, and which when I worked it out in 1893
+I had printed with full detail. It is in my vault now under lock and
+key. In the year 1894, in London, I laid a copy of this document before
+Joseph Pulitzer of the New York <i>World</i>. Remember, this was a year
+before I met H. H. Rogers or any of the "Standard Oil" party.</p>
+
+<p>Since Donohoe began his latest series of attacks I have had scores of
+letters commenting on them. A significant verdict on what the man is
+accomplishing is the following:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p class='right'><span class="smcap">Buffalo</span>, N. Y., January 23, 1905.</p>
+
+<p><i>Dear Sir</i>: I herewith enclose you copy of a letter just
+sent to Mr. Donohoe, also to the editor of &mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class='indent1'>Yours respectfully,</p>
+<p class='right'>&mdash;&mdash;</p></div>
+
+<p class='center'>(COPY)</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p class='right'>January 23, 1905.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Denis Donohoe</span>,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Financial Editor, New York <i>Commercial</i>, New York City.</p>
+
+<p><i>Dear Sir</i>: With considerable pleasure, satisfaction, and
+conviction, I have carefully read all the articles on
+"Frenzied Finance," by Mr. Lawson, and from my limited
+knowledge of affairs, gained by fifteen years of active
+life, am of the opinion that he has been telling facts,
+although at times they are clothed in the language of a
+writer of fiction.</p>
+
+<p>I have been waiting and confidently expecting, during the
+past six months, that some able, honest, unbiassed, and
+free-handed man would take up the discussion against Mr.
+Lawson, and in this way aid the people in viewing the entire
+subject with all possible side-lights, so that when public
+opinion shall be finally formed, as surely it will be in the
+future, it may be as nearly right as possible and only the
+guilty suffer. It was, therefore, with a high degree of
+exultation that I purchased<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_508" id="Page_508">[508]</a></span> &mdash;&mdash; of January 19th, upon the
+first page of which in bold type appears: "Lawson
+Answered&mdash;the Truth About Frenzied Finance." At the sight of
+these words I said in almost audible tones: "Now we shall
+hear the other side, or at least learn what Mr. Lawson has
+omitted, if anything."</p>
+
+<p>I have just finished reading your article in said issue of
+&mdash;&mdash;, and as you now pose as a public writer and benefactor,
+you of course will welcome frank, honest criticism. After
+reading and rereading your said article, I am, against my
+desire, forced to the following conclusions:</p>
+
+<p>1. You are either one of the "System" or are hired by it.</p>
+
+<p>2. This article of yours was prepared for the purposes of
+making two points: (a) Working on the sentiment and passions
+of the weak, and the women; and (b) diverting public
+attention and opinion from the real facts at issue, by
+attacking Mr. Lawson's personal character, which is not up
+for discussion.</p>
+
+<p>3. Your article is full of high-sounding declarations, and
+void of either logic or common sense.</p>
+
+<p>4. In your endeavor to express the wishes of the prejudiced
+and biassed, you are undoubtedly dishonest with yourself
+without deceiving the public.</p>
+
+<p>5. Your article lacks the ring that carries conviction,
+either as to your sincerity or the truthfulness of the
+statements you make.</p>
+
+<p>6. The article indicates that you are vainly trying to ape
+Mr. Lawson's style.</p>
+
+<p class='indent2'>Yours respectfully,</p>
+<p class='indent1'><span class="smcap">E. G. Mansfield</span>,</p>
+<p class='right'>Attorney-at-law.</p></div>
+
+<p>Following the Donohoe outburst there came innumerable letters, of which
+this is a good sample:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p class='right'><span class="smcap">Tacoma, Wash.</span>, February 14, 1905.</p>
+
+<p><i>Dear Sir</i>: It would be greatly appreciated by at least one
+of your readers if you would furnish the great and only
+Donohoe the details of some really scandalous epoch of your
+past. It has been stated many times that one man cannot make
+a million dollars and do it honestly, so we must assume you
+have done some "things" in your past. We have a very high
+regard out West for the works of Mr. Dooley and Mark Twain,
+and also are regular subscribers of <i>Puck</i> and <i>Judge</i>, and
+we don't want to see these noted writers and periodicals
+unseated, even for the time being, by Mr. Donohoe.</p>
+
+<p>Therefore we ask you to give him some tip from which he can
+work out something serious, so he can make a statement that
+is not "re<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_509" id="Page_509">[509]</a></span>ported," or the deduction of which does not
+require Sherlock Holmes.</p>
+
+<p>His work of "dissecting" so far reminds us of the work of a
+six months' student of a medical college on a Tom cat (no
+pun meant).</p>
+
+<p class='indent1'>Yours very truly,</p>
+<p class='right'>L. H. M.</p></div>
+
+<p>I answered as follows:</p>
+
+<p><i>My Dear Sir</i>: Your request is similar to that of a hundred other
+correspondents. I regret I can do nothing to help out. Donohoe's trouble
+is, he is short of facts, so "short" that he seems to me completely
+"cornered." I am "long of" them, as you and all my other readers will
+admit before I am through my story, but my facts are not the kind
+Donohoe can use, or I would willingly let him have a few to assist him
+out of his present predicament.</p>
+
+<p>Donohoe's employers, Rogers and the "Standard Oil," knew before they put
+him on to his present "job" that my life was a peculiarly and unusually
+open one&mdash;one that had absolutely no dark or covered corner in it; they
+knew it not only because all men in my walks of life know it, but
+because they had investigated it with their unerring search-light. Most
+men who have ever been on the inside of "Standard Oil" know that no man
+with a bad record could do business, much less have an intimate
+relation, with Rogers and Rockefeller for nine seconds; and my
+connection extended over nine years.</p>
+
+<p>The tone of my correspondence during the year was not by any means
+altogether friendly. The writer of the following letter presented his
+conclusions straight from the shoulder and I was equally direct in my
+reply:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Personal.</p>
+
+<p class='right'><span class="smcap">Gainesville, Fla</span>., February 21, 1905.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Thomas W. Lawson</span>, Boston, Mass.</p>
+
+<p><i>Dear Sir</i>: Pardon my "buttin' in"&mdash;seems I must say
+something.</p>
+
+<p>If what Donohoe says about your Trinity Copper Company is
+true, it would seem you ought to stop throwing mud at the
+Standard Oil crowd, for you are no better than are they, and
+they are known thieves and robbers. While you may be telling
+the truth about the other fellow, yet the fact of your
+telling it does not set well on the stomach<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_510" id="Page_510">[510]</a></span> of those who
+read both sides of the story. Seems to me it's "dog eat dog"
+until every one is disgusted.</p>
+
+<p>Why don't you come down to business and give the readers of
+<i>Everybody's</i> something wholesome to digest and plenty of
+it? The way it comes now, we are over our hunger before the
+next issue shows up, and, in the meantime, your friend has
+converted many to the thought that you are worse than the
+Standard Oil crowd.</p>
+
+<p>Won't you please answer, in the next issue of <i>Everybody's</i>,
+if you made your money&mdash;your fortune, HONESTLY, or did you
+"do others" for fear they would "do you"? I am inclined to
+think you are as big a "grafter" as ever came down the pike,
+even though you may be telling on the other fellow&mdash;turning
+State's evidence.</p>
+
+<p class='indent1'>Yours truly,</p>
+<p class='right'>&mdash;&mdash;</p></div>
+
+<p>You ask why I do not get down to business. You won't mind my telling you
+the principal reason is that it is <i>I</i> who am writing "Frenzied
+Finance," not you nor any of your kind, and that I propose to decide
+when it is time to get down to business. If in the meantime there is any
+one else who can do the job I have cut out better than I, why, none will
+be better pleased than myself. Indeed, I will gladly contribute as a
+reward to my successor double the many thousands of dollars I am paying
+each month to get this work of mine properly before the people.</p>
+
+<p>What Donohoe says of my Trinity Copper is not only absolutely false, but
+has over and over again been demonstrated to be so. The actual facts
+regarding that property have been printed time and again in reputable
+Boston newspapers, and casual inquiry will obtain you the full details.
+In addition, practically everything which Donohoe, the hired mouthpiece
+of "Standard Oil" and the "System," has said is absolutely untrue and
+made from whole cloth. When I say this I cover all criticism which has
+been made upon me or my work by "Standard Oil" or the "System," for this
+character thug has utilized every dirty slander which my enemies ever
+invented and put into circulation.</p>
+
+<p>Did I make my fortune honestly, you ask? and I answer: In thirty-six
+years of active business life, very active, embracing transactions
+through which I have passed from poverty to wealth and back again from
+riches to poverty, and in which I might easily have retained the riches
+by sacrificing<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_511" id="Page_511">[511]</a></span> a principle, I have never once in all these years and in
+all these transactions done a wrong to man, woman, or child, nor taken
+from man, woman, or child a dollar unfairly, much less dishonestly.
+Rather a remarkable record, you will say, for one who has made millions
+in the stock business. But I should not be broadly honest if I did not
+add the modification that these millions of dollars were made in the
+open stock-market, by methods which in the open stock-market are called
+fair and honest; that is, I have played the game according to the rules,
+and the "other fellow" has had equal chance with me and might have done
+anything I ever did. If, however, business were conducted as it should
+be and as it will be after my "Remedy" has reformed present conditions,
+such methods will net those using them only thousands where I have
+gained millions.</p>
+
+<p>You add that you are inclined to think I am a "grafter." In reply I can
+only say you would not dare&mdash;and I don't know your size, color, or
+length of trigger-finger&mdash;to say it in my presence, though of course, it
+is absolutely immaterial what you or your kind think of me or my work.</p>
+
+
+<p class='center'>THE LAWSON PANIC</p>
+
+<p>During the eighteen months in which "Frenzied Finance" has been before
+the public, history has been made at a stiff pace. Next to the insurance
+revelations which are still in process of deliverance, the most striking
+demonstration of the period has been the flurry in stocks which was
+spoken of as the Lawson panic. In the February, 1905, issue of
+<i>Everybody's Magazine</i> I dealt with the performance and its attendant
+phenomena.</p>
+
+<p>Without undue vaunting, I may say that my explanation of the mysteries
+of modern finance has not been without immediate profit to the public.
+The people, accustomed to invest their money in the legitimate
+securities of the country, had time and again lost hundreds of millions
+without dreaming that they had been as ruthlessly robbed as though held
+up at a pistol-point by a highwayman. They imagined that the great
+capitalists whose names were emblazoned in the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_512" id="Page_512">[512]</a></span> press throughout the
+land, and who managed the banks and trust companies and insurance
+corporations to which their savings were intrusted, were noble and
+public-spirited gentlemen of the highest moral principles and of
+absolute integrity. They know to-day that many of them are reckless and
+greedy stock gamblers, incessantly dickering with the machinery of
+finance for their own private enrichment.</p>
+
+<p>I have stripped the veil from these hypocrites and exposed to all the
+world their soulless rapacity. I have let the light of heaven into the
+dim recesses of Wall Street in which these buccaneers of commerce
+concocted their plots. I have done more than this: I have nipped in the
+bud the newest conspiracy for the entanglement of the public&mdash;the great
+"bull" market which was organized late in 1904 by the chief votaries of
+the "System," to harvest a new crop of profits on the securities they
+had laid in during their last raid. In other words, I have treated Wall
+Street to a dose of its own medicine.</p>
+
+<p>During the month of December the newspapers devoted considerable space
+to the doings of the stock-market in connection with the episode to
+which I refer. I use the word "episode" purposely, for I warn my readers
+that it was but one of a series of disturbances which must occur before
+the grasp of the pirates on the great financial interests of this
+country can be shaken off. David slew Goliath with one pebble from his
+sling, but the giant "System," intrenched in the stoutest citadel ever
+constructed, and armored in gold and riven steel, will yield to no mere
+call for surrender. My own part I have cheerfully taken with no
+delusions as to the difficulties of the contest. He who interferes
+between the lamb and the wolf is likely to provoke the wrath of the
+wolf, and I have done worse, for have I not come between the lions of
+finance and their willing prey?</p>
+
+<p>It is worth while here to rehearse the steps of this first disturbance,
+because it constitutes part of a movement destined to wield a tremendous
+influence in this country's history. While my revelations of the methods
+of the "System" were circulating throughout these United States, the
+"System" was engaged at its old trick of inflating the prices of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_513" id="Page_513">[513]</a></span> its
+favorite stocks and bonds and spreading its nets for another gigantic
+plundering of the people. In the stock-market and in the highways and
+by-ways and resting-places of finance nothing was heard for months but
+fairy tales of great earnings of railroads and industrials, fairy tales
+of new ore in old mines, fairy tales of great financial forces
+converging toward colossal combinations.</p>
+
+<p>These are the lures of the "System's" hirelings, the decoy calls of the
+market tout and the financial tipster whose part it is to mould opinion
+and urge the people to the shambles. Before my eyes, with a blind and
+audacious defiance of my warnings, the old, old game was rigged in full
+view of the audience and the old players began their venerable antics.
+In the meantime the "System" attended to its own r&ocirc;le in the
+conspiracy&mdash;supplying out of its banks and trust companies the public's
+money for the gamblers to make the game with. Then began the artful
+process of working up the market; stocks gradually climbed higher and
+higher. Amalgamated ascended from the forties into the fifties and the
+sixties and even into the eighties; steel assumed the appearance of life
+and grew from ten slowly upward into the twenties and thirties. Every
+day in the Stock Exchange hundreds of thousands of shares changed hands
+back and forth among the professionals who lustily played their parts in
+this financial melodrama. The good old myths of great fortunes made by
+lucky investors began to reappear in the papers. Sales increased; values
+jumped rather than climbed. The trap was set; the market made. The wily
+manipulators rubbed their hands gleefully. The public began to bite, to
+buy. It was then only a matter of sizing up the wool crop before
+beginning the shearing.</p>
+
+<p>Before I detail the steps I took to spring its own trap on the "System,"
+I should explain that this market was purely an artificial one. The
+immense advance of prices was not brought about by any honest methods or
+legitimate causes. The "System's" votaries had enormous quantities of
+stocks&mdash;millions upon millions of shares, bought when the people during
+the past two years were compelled to throw them overboard at slaughter
+prices. By employing one of the old<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_514" id="Page_514">[514]</a></span>est swindling devices known to
+finance,<a name="FNanchor_21_21" id="FNanchor_21_21"></a><a href="#Footnote_21_21" class="fnanchor">[21]</a> they could bid prices to any figure they desired. Honest
+financial writers called attention each week to the tactics of the
+manipulators and declared the high quotations unjustifiable and
+unreasonable.</p>
+
+<p>At the stage of the game that I felt sure immediately preceded the
+unloading signal, I determined to test whether the people had really
+digested as well as absorbed the cold facts I had been ladling out to
+them in my story of "Frenzied Finance"&mdash;whether they had grown wise
+enough to heed a warning. So on Monday, December 5th, I carefully
+prepared the following advertisement, which was published Tuesday
+morning in the great papers of the great cities of this country and
+later in Europe.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p class='center'>AMALGAMATED STOCKHOLDERS&mdash;WARNING</p>
+
+<p>From the creation of Amalgamated I have continuously
+believed in its worth and constantly advocated the purchase
+of its stock.</p>
+
+<p>Henry H. Rogers personally negotiated with Marcus Daly for
+the properties which went to make up the Amalgamated
+Company.</p>
+
+<p>Henry H. Rogers alone knew absolutely their values.</p>
+
+<p>Henry H. Rogers's associates took his word for them.</p>
+
+<p>While they cost Messrs. Rogers, Rockefeller, and associates
+only $39,000,000, we all believed they were worth more than
+the $75,000,000 at which they were sold to the public.</p>
+
+<p>Shortly after the public flotation at $100 per share, the
+stock dropped to 75. I did all in my power to prevent the
+decline, losing millions in the effort, but I retained my
+faith in the real worth of the property.</p>
+
+<p>Some of the insiders made millions; the public was fleeced
+of millions.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_515" id="Page_515">[515]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>I still refused to be discouraged. I urged Messrs. Rogers
+and Rockefeller to make good their promises made through me
+to the public. Finally they consented. The stock advanced
+until it sold at 130.</p>
+
+<p>At the highest price I was still buying and advising its
+purchase. Then there came the awful slump which slid the
+stock down to 33. I lost enormously; insiders made vast
+profits. The public was again fleeced.</p>
+
+<p>At 33 I began a new campaign to induce my followers and the
+public to buy. As a result there were purchased by hundreds
+of people all over the country directly and indirectly
+through me, rising 260,000 shares, at an average of 40 to
+42, and probably hundreds of thousands more which I could
+not trace.</p>
+
+<p>This campaign I have prosecuted incessantly up to the
+present time, until now I estimate the public holds
+1,000,000 shares, 700,000 of which show at to-day's price,
+82, a profit of $28,000,000.</p>
+
+<p>When my story, "Frenzied Finance," began, I advertised that
+it could do no damage to Amalgamated stock, but would help
+it.</p>
+
+<p>Hoping to divert the dangerous disclosures I threatened, the
+leading attorney of Messrs. Rogers and Rockefeller asked for
+a conference. At it he demanded of me what I expected to
+accomplish. I replied: "One thing, at least&mdash;to put the
+price of Amalgamated back to 100, that those unfortunates
+who still retain their stock may recover their money."</p>
+
+<p>Then the secret was revealed to me that Amalgamated was not
+worth anything like the price at which it had been sold to
+the public. I said: "How can this be?"</p>
+
+<p>He answered: "Mr. Rogers knows for a certainty that Marcus
+Daly deceived him about the worth of the properties."</p>
+
+<p>I had great faith in this attorney. He was sincere in what
+he said; his knowledge and relations were such he could not
+have been deceived, and his special information about this
+property was such that he could speak in the first person. I
+believed him. Soon afterward another official of Amalgamated
+confirmed his statements.</p>
+
+<p>When I received this information my dilemma was a terrible
+one. If I gave it to my following they would at once throw
+over their stock, probably at a great loss. I waited. Sooner
+or later I knew these men would get behind the market, push
+up the prices of the stocks they had gathered in at bottom
+figures, and, when the moment was ripe, again unload on the
+public.</p>
+
+<p>The market "came in." I did all in my power to assist in
+raising the price of Amalgamated.</p>
+
+<p>To-day's situation is the same as that of 1901.</p>
+
+<p>"Frenzied finance" stock gamblers have accumulated immense
+lines of Amalgamated. The same sensational rumors of a great
+rise to come flood Wall and State streets as in 1901. They
+have asked me to join in creating a wild market upon which
+all the Amalgamated taken in at lower prices may be turned
+out upon the public.</p>
+
+<p>It would be millions in my pocket to assist, but&mdash;<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_516" id="Page_516">[516]</a></span>&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>I see the handwriting on the wall which the "frenzied
+financiers" of Wall Street do not yet see. It reads:</p>
+
+<p>"The people will not stand plundering any longer."</p>
+
+<p>And I have decided.</p>
+
+<p>I advise every stockholder of Amalgamated stock to sell his
+holdings at once before another crash comes. Another slump
+may carry it to 33 again, or lower.</p>
+
+<p>It may go higher, but this is no affair of mine. From the
+moment of the publication of this notice all those who have
+looked to me for advice must relieve me of further
+responsibility.</p>
+
+<p>As the people who look to me for advice are scattered all
+over this country, I know of no other way than this to
+simultaneously notify them of what I have learned.</p>
+
+<p>If the powerful people who manage and control Amalgamated,
+and who, after selling it to the public at $100 a share,
+allowed it to sink to $75, and after it had advanced to 130,
+smashed it to 33, regardless of their sacred promise to me
+and the public through me, now reveal to me that it is not
+worth over 45, it is inevitable that if they are honest in
+what they say, the stock must go there of its own weight. If
+they are not honest, they will put it there anyway, and
+lower still.</p>
+
+<p>I would have waited until the reckless speculators who are
+now manipulating the market had put the stock higher, but I
+did not dare. During the past two days I have detected
+unmistakable signs that the vultures are gathering for the
+feast.</p>
+
+<p>In the past I have told what I thought I knew about
+Amalgamated; from to-day I shall tell what the men who
+control and manage Amalgamated say they have found out about
+it. No stockholder should, after this fair notice, object or
+accuse me of trying to injure the property, even though I be
+compelled to begin court proceedings based on this
+information so lately revealed to me.</p>
+
+<p>This advertisement and my mailed notices will appear in New
+York and Boston, Tuesday, December 6th; in the Eastern and
+middle portions of the United States Wednesday, and the
+balance of the country, Canada and Europe Thursday, and I
+shall wait until Friday, that all may have ample time to
+dispose of their stock, if they care to, before making my
+next move.</p>
+
+<p>Every holder of Amalgamated must keep before his eyes this
+one tremendous fact: His property is now absolutely at the
+mercy of men who have the market in the hollow of their
+hands, and who in the past have raised this stock to the
+highest and then dropped it to the lowest without heed or
+concern but for their own pockets.</p>
+
+<p class='center'>COPPER RANGE</p>
+
+<p>Since Copper Range Consolidated sold at 12 I have advised
+its purchase. To-day it sells at 70. All who have followed
+my advice have made immense profits.</p>
+
+<p>Copper Range has 385,000 shares; Amalgamated 1,550,000.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_517" id="Page_517">[517]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Copper Range is a new property at Lake Superior, consisting
+of three immense mines and a railroad, with the latest and
+most complete plant in the world, including its own
+smelters. It is the largest and richest copper mine
+discovered and developed in the past twenty years. It is
+producing now 40,000,000 pounds of copper annually, and will
+in the near future become the largest producer in the world.</p>
+
+<p>Amalgamated pays 2 per cent. in dividends. Copper Range will
+pay 6 per cent. in the coming year, and continue to
+increase, to what limit no man can tell. If the present
+market for copper, the metal, holds at 15 cents, and the
+best judges think it will probably go higher, Amalgamated
+should increase its dividends to 4 or 6, but with 15-cent
+metal Copper Range will earn and pay 8, 10, and 12 per
+cent., and upward.</p>
+
+<p>The curse of Amalgamated has been "Standard Oil" management.
+Copper Range has been, and is, directed and controlled by
+representative Boston copper men, who seek their profits in
+the mine and not in the stock-market.</p>
+
+<p class='right'><span class="smcap">Thomas W. Lawson</span>.</p>
+<p><span class="smcap">Boston</span>, December 6, 1904.</p></div>
+
+<p>The result of this announcement proved that my message had not fallen on
+stony places, but had been accepted by the public in the spirit of its
+giving. All Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday the people sold their
+stocks to the "System's" votaries at the falsely inflated prices these
+gentry had forced for their own plundering purposes. Instead of
+gathering in the savings of the toilers, the "System" had to part with
+some of its wad. For once the people got the money and the "System" had
+the stocks. Under the stress of tremendous selling the price of
+"Amalgamated" was shattered. Other frenzied finance stocks declined in
+sympathy. The power of publicity had been triumphantly vindicated and
+the cries of frenzied financiers, their mouths full of their own
+fish-hooks, resounded through the land.</p>
+
+<p>That this condition would be allowed to prevail long, I knew was
+improbable. The "System's" leading votaries got together and organized
+to stop the frightful decline in prices. The old cuttle-fish methods
+were at once resorted to&mdash;a campaign of falsehood, deception, and
+trickery began. Lest the people should realize that it was their power
+which had wrought such havoc, the touts and tipsters shouted in chorus
+that the slaughter of prices was the work of the "System" itself, and
+that I was secretly in league with the "System"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_518" id="Page_518">[518]</a></span> against the public;
+that, the public having been robbed of its stocks, prices would advance
+with an extra bound. Scores of millions were drawn from the banks and
+trust companies to stay the slump. Under the influence of all this
+industry and clamor the market began to boil again; prices recovered,
+and the people, confused and bewildered, were once more about to be
+entrapped. A sharp advance was followed by a cry from the votaries that
+I was a trickster and that what had been in reality the most notable
+demonstration of "the people's strength" ever given was only another
+evidence of the "System's" infallibility. If this deceit had prevailed,
+the task I have undertaken of enlightening the public would have had a
+setback. Relying on my previous work, I put forth the following
+announcement Monday morning, December 12th, and confidently awaited
+results:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p class='center'><span class="smcap">INVESTORS AND SPECULATORS&mdash;WARNING!</span></p>
+
+<p>For six months through my story, "Frenzied Finance," in
+<i>Everybody's Magazine</i>, I have been educating the people to
+the terrible condition existing to-day in America&mdash;the
+people are plundered of their savings by a few men through
+the working of the "System."</p>
+
+<p>After a close study for six months I concluded that the
+people were awakening to the truth.</p>
+
+<p>I decided to make a test.</p>
+
+<p>I advertised certain truths. That was all.</p>
+
+<p>For three days Wall Street and the "System" were
+panic-stricken&mdash;paper values melted to the extent of
+hundreds of millions.</p>
+
+<p>The laws of the land are strict about panic-breeding by
+public statements.</p>
+
+<p>If any of the terrible statements I have made had been
+false, I should to-day be in prison or my body suspended
+from a lamp-post. I could not possibly have escaped.</p>
+
+<p>What I have stated is truth. No one dares gainsay it.</p>
+
+<p>Wall Street and the "System" for the first time were
+compelled to come to the rescue and put in jeopardy their
+own money by buying stocks from the people at inflated
+prices.</p>
+
+<p>For the first time a break came while the manufacturers of
+stock still held them.</p>
+
+<p>The people sold them.</p>
+
+<p>To-day every scheme known to frenzied financiering is being
+worked to make the world believe last week's panic was the
+result of stock speculators, bears, "Standard Oil," and the
+"System."</p>
+
+<p>Throughout this country and Europe is being spread the story
+that<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_519" id="Page_519">[519]</a></span> I was in league with "Standard Oil" and the "System,"
+that they had sold out their stocks and got me to raid the
+market to shake out the public.</p>
+
+<p>That another great rise is coming.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>This is clever, smart, the only thing possible under the
+circumstances.</p>
+
+<p>But it is a lie.</p>
+
+<p>I ask the people to watch the desperate efforts that are
+being made to get this lie to pass for a truth.</p>
+
+<p>The "System" must unload on the public, but above all else
+the "System" must convince the people that the awful
+destruction of last week could not have been brought about
+merely by the people's own doings.</p>
+
+<p>If the people are not so convinced they will know their
+power, and that they have in their own hands, to use at any
+time, a weapon which can stand the "System" on its head.</p>
+
+<p>There is no reason why the people cannot reverse the old
+process and always sell at the top to the frenzied
+financiers and buy from them at the bottom.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>This is my warning:</p>
+
+<p>I ask the people and Wall Street and the "System" to give it
+weight or their loss will be on their own heads.</p>
+
+<p>I am going to strike again, suddenly, sharply,
+sensationally, and in a way that will produce effects upon
+prices and upon markets, so much more destructive, that the
+effects and the destruction of last week will appear by
+comparison as milk to vitriol.</p>
+
+<p>Every owner of an active stock in which the "System" has any
+interest owes it to himself to weigh my warning.</p>
+
+<p>The result must be terrible for Wall Street and the
+"System," and nothing can avert it.</p>
+
+<p>It matters not how much preparation is made, as it will come
+in a way not possible to guard against.</p>
+
+<p>I want all to know now, so they will not blame me when the
+slaughter is on.</p>
+
+<p>My first and only warning will come in the form of a public
+notice that certain named stocks should be sold the day my
+advertisement appears.</p>
+
+<p>Three days afterward I will publish why, but with the why it
+will be too late for holders of stock to save themselves.</p>
+
+<p>I now say to all, if you decide after reading this that I am
+only talking, well and good, but when it is too late,
+remember what I did say.</p>
+
+<p>While waiting for me to speak, again think it over.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>When "Frenzied Finance" first appeared, only six months ago,
+the wise heads of the "System" said:</p>
+
+<p>"The public will tire of it in sixty days."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_520" id="Page_520">[520]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>At the end of six months the people, the press, and the
+pulpit are lashing themselves into a fury over its
+revelations, and it is impossible to print magazines enough
+to meet the demand.</p>
+
+<p>When I first touched on the life-insurance companies they
+laughed.</p>
+
+<p>To-day policy-holders are panic-stricken, and the big
+companies are falling behind millions a week.</p>
+
+<p>When I said my story would affect Wall Street, Wall Street
+laughed; last week it yelled, cursed, and begged.</p>
+
+<p>And I am only in the mild, preliminary stages yet.</p>
+
+<p>While waiting for the next move, make no mistake.</p>
+
+<p>When real work begins Wall Street and the "System" will look
+like a last year's straw hat in the swirls of Niagara.</p>
+
+<p class='center'>AMALGAMATED</p>
+
+<p>Last Tuesday morning I publicly said:</p>
+
+<p>"The men who control Amalgamated told me it is not worth
+half the price it was floated at. If they told the truth it
+will go back to 33. If they have lied they will smash it
+back to 33 as they did before. Sell it."</p>
+
+<p>All that day (Tuesday) holders could have sold at an average
+of 79.</p>
+
+<p>Holders of over 200,000 shares did.</p>
+
+<p>The following day all holders could have sold at an average
+of 74&mdash;300,000 did.</p>
+
+<p>The third day all holders could have sold at an average of
+66&mdash;200,000 did.</p>
+
+<p>Then the Wall Street powers got desperate and stopped the
+decline.</p>
+
+<p>During these days I did not sell a share nor do anything in
+the market to assist the decline, but did buy enormous
+amounts to prevent it from breaking below 60.</p>
+
+<p>Every scheme known to frenzied financiers is being worked to
+make it appear now that this stock is going to sell much
+higher.</p>
+
+<p>It is advertised broadcast that I was working with the bear
+raiders and "Standard Oil."</p>
+
+<p>This is a lie.</p>
+
+<p>My brokers were requested by another client to publish a
+statement that a prominent copper company president stated
+there was $33 in the Amalgamated treasury.</p>
+
+<p>Instantly the rumors were sent broadcast that I had settled
+with "Standard Oil" and was bulling the stock.</p>
+
+<p>This, too.</p>
+
+<p>I know the man who made the statement and the high officer
+of the Amalgamated who got him to make it.</p>
+
+<p>And it shows the desperate position of the Amalgamated
+"Insiders."</p>
+
+<p>They are loaded with the stock.</p>
+
+<p>I dare any officer of the Amalgamated Company to publish the
+above statement over his signature.</p>
+
+<p>If he does court proceedings will be begun at once.</p>
+
+<p>I also dare Mr. Rogers or Mr. Rockefeller to deny the
+statement made<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_521" id="Page_521">[521]</a></span> by me that they have said the stock is not
+worth 50, and that Marcus Daly deceived them. I dare them.</p>
+
+<p>I repeat what I have said to holders of Amalgamated:</p>
+
+<p>Sell your stock now, before it is too late.</p>
+
+<p>Bear in mind when Amalgamated sells at 33 that I have warned
+you.</p>
+
+<p>And in the meantime watch for sharp breaks in Amalgamated. I
+will give no further warning on this stock, and under no
+circumstances will change my now advertised position on it.</p>
+
+<p class='right'><span class="smcap">Thomas W. Lawson.</span></p>
+<p><span class="smcap">Boston</span>, December 12, 1904.</p></div>
+
+<p>The second test brought a stronger demonstration than the first. This
+time the "System's" votaries were drawn up in solid phalanx; behind them
+uncounted millions and unmeasured power braced to meet attack. All day
+Monday the people hurled their securities at the gamesters, and with
+every onslaught prices crumbled until, when the Stock Exchange closed,
+the "System's" losses were represented by hundreds of millions of
+dollars. The people had learned a lesson, and a hundred years more of
+the "System's" trickery and falsehood will not efface its impression.</p>
+
+
+<p class='center'>VILIFICATION NO REPLY TO FACTS</p>
+
+<p>The attacks I made on the "System" were frank and direct statements of
+facts. The destruction they wrought upon the cherished plans of the
+gamesters was due to their truth. If the things I stated about
+Amalgamated were not true, how easy to prove them false, and how
+completely then should I have been discredited. But what has the
+"System" in its blind rage done? Well may the American people who read
+what is printed below say to themselves, "'Whom the gods would slay,
+they first make mad.' What is Thomas W. Lawson in this transaction that
+his personality need enter into a controversy wherein the issue is of
+facts alone?" Suppose I were all that my enemies say of me, the question
+is not of my guilt, but of the truth of my charges. I was not surprised
+to read on the morning of Tuesday, the 13th of December, the diatribe
+printed below. It was published in the leading papers of the country in
+the form of an advertisement, in great type covering half a page.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_522" id="Page_522">[522]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p class='center'>THOMAS W. LAWSON&mdash;READ THIS PICTURE</p>
+
+<p class='right'><span class="smcap">New York</span>, December 12, 1904.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Thomas W. Lawson</span>, Boston, Mass.</p>
+
+<p>For six months I have read with close attention your story
+of "Frenzied Finance," in <i>Everybody's Magazine</i>, and have
+paid close attention to the manner in which, by pandering to
+the worst prejudices of the American people, you have
+endeavored by misstatement of facts to distort the
+conditions actually existing through what you call the
+workings of the "System."</p>
+
+<p>What is the conclusion to be deducted from your own
+statements? What is the "System" to which you have so often
+referred?</p>
+
+<p>From the standpoint of honest, unprejudiced men no other
+conclusion can be derived but from your own statements you
+have endeavored personally and through subornation of others
+to debauch legislation, to distort facts, to create in the
+minds of investors a lack of confidence in men whom the
+public for many years have looked up to as the leaders in
+the industrial world.</p>
+
+<p>By every foul vilification and every statement which
+distorted imagination is capable of producing, you have
+endeavored to show that the so-called leaders of finance of
+the United States are in league to rob and defraud the
+investing public.</p>
+
+<p>Taking all your statements and analyzing them, what do they
+amount to? That certain men, amongst whom you yourself was
+one of the leaders, have bought out certain corporations
+which were capitalized at a price which you state was far
+above their cost.</p>
+
+<p>Not one single new fact has been brought to the attention of
+the public. If men, by their brains, their capital, and
+their energy, acquire properties that have not been
+appreciated by the public, put them forth under whatsoever
+name, so that the statements made in connection with those
+properties are true, and capable of verification, what is it
+but a business proposition that cannot be criticised?</p>
+
+<p>What is the "System" which you denounce as the very
+personification of evil? Is it not the "System" of which you
+have been the leading advocate, votary, and exponent for
+many years? Is not the "System," when analyzed and reduced
+to its root, a stock-brokerage of which you are and have
+been for many years one of the shining lights; not the
+system of honest, legitimate brokerage, but the system of
+endeavoring by false statements and by exciting the fears of
+the multitude to depress and destroy values in order that
+its votaries may reap their ill-gotten gains?</p>
+
+<p>Is there one thing in connection with all that you have
+written in your articles on "Frenzied Finance" in which you
+have not been from start to finish one of the prime movers?
+Who is the man that, from the inception of the enterprise
+which you most severely criticise, has been most prominently
+before the public? Who is the man that, from your own words,
+originated the idea and carried it to its completion? Is it
+not<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_523" id="Page_523">[523]</a></span> Thomas W. Lawson? Who is the man that, in the various
+schemes which you hold up to the condemnation of the public,
+has taken from start to finish the leading part? Is it not
+Thomas W. Lawson?</p>
+
+<p>Is there one honest man in the United States who to-night
+believes that, in spending the thousands and thousands of
+dollars that you have spent in advocating your views and in
+posing as the friend of the people, that you have not acted
+for your own selfish ends? Do you believe that there is one
+man in all this wide world to-day who honestly believes one
+single statement that you have made, or who believes that
+you have ever turned your hand to, or aided in the slightest
+degree in, any honest enterprise? You criticise the copper
+corporations who have placed their stock before the public
+as a legitimate investment. Can you point to one single
+instance in which a misrepresentation of fact or figure has
+ever been made in anything connected with the Amalgamated
+Company?</p>
+
+<p>Who are you, who should say in relation to a copper mine
+whether it is good or bad? Did you ever see a copper mine?
+Did you ever put a pick into ore? Did you ever reduce one
+ton of metal so that it would yield up its wealth for the
+benefit of mankind. Have you ever done anything excepting to
+act as a parasite upon honest labor and, by chicanery and by
+misrepresentation, endeavor to rob the people of their hard
+earnings? I speak to you plainly, knowing you yourself for
+what you are. Can you show one man that can point to any
+honest industry in which you ever took part; to one single
+act of yourself that ever contributed to the welfare or the
+advancement of the working people? Can you point to one
+single act in your career that was ever based on any other
+motive than absolute egotism and selfishness; to one single
+utterance, act, word, or deed of yourself that was not based
+on selfishness and a desire to rob or misrepresent or, in
+some other manner, attach the earnings of the people to your
+coffers without effort on your part?</p>
+
+<p>I address this communication to you knowing you for what you
+are; as a man who, throughout his many years of active life
+on the Stock Exchange, came to be generally considered as
+the synonym of chicanery and of misrepresentation. To-day,
+through your perversion of truth and partial misstatement of
+fact, which, through many years in pursuance of your
+calling, you have become an adept in, you can destroy the
+confidence of the people who make the money and the wealth
+of the country. Do you for one moment suppose that there is
+one honest person in this country to-day who believes that
+you are actuated by a sincere desire to aid them?</p>
+
+<p>Do you not know that your only motive is, by destroying
+confidence, to endeavor to make a large profit for yourself,
+by the methods which you have pursued of advertising to the
+public? The men who do things, the men who created wealth,
+the men who are known throughout the world for integrity and
+for their business qualifications, will unanimously say that
+your motive is selfish from start to finish.</p>
+
+<p>Do you remember the dealings that you had with me, how they
+were based on falsehood and misrepresentation from start to
+finish? How,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_524" id="Page_524">[524]</a></span> by the use of names that are well known in the
+financial and business world, you endeavored to rob and
+convert to your own use what you thought was one of the
+greatest properties in the world? What has been the result
+of your advertisements of the last few days? Has it not been
+to destroy confidence, to create a panic among people who
+had invested their earnings in what they have considered as
+legitimate propositions? Have you ever paused and thought
+for one moment about what the results of your selfish and
+distorted statements might be?</p>
+
+<p>In your articles you have spoken of the loss that has been
+entailed upon widows and orphans, of disgrace and suicide
+and other ills that have come through what you are pleased
+to call the workings of the "System," the "System" of which
+you have been and are to-day the exponent, the system of
+misrepresentation and of spreading false statements; in
+other words, of stealing Heaven's livery to serve the devil
+in. Millions of dollars of legitimate investments have been
+lost to the people who have made them. Why? Because you, in
+your selfish egotism, have looked to nothing but your
+personal gain, thinking nothing, caring less for the woe
+that you might work to thousands, pandering to the worst
+prejudices, and by means of such words as "Standard Oil,"
+"Amalgamated," "Frenzied Finance," etc., and making
+statements which investors have not the means or the time to
+dispute, you have endeavored to destroy values that have
+been created by the works of a lifetime.</p>
+
+<p>To-morrow, in Boston, I shall call upon you. I for many
+years have stood as a worker, as a man who has built up and
+who has created, and I know that the savings of a lifetime
+of many honest investors have been swept away by the
+falsehoods that you have spread abroad through the public
+press.</p>
+
+<p>To-morrow, at your office, I shall denounce you for what you
+are. The Master long ago said: "By your works ye shall be
+judged."</p>
+
+<p>Personally I shall call upon you for your answer to-morrow.</p>
+
+<p class='right'><span class="smcap">W. C. Greene</span>.</p></div>
+
+<p>This is the rejoinder of the "System." No denial of my facts. No defence
+against my charges, but a volley of mud and a threat of assassination. I
+had dared tell the people how they had been robbed.</p>
+
+<p>All remember the panic of 1901, the famous Northern Pacific corner, in
+which values shrank hundreds of millions in a few hours and tens of
+thousands of the people lost their entire savings. Who precipitated that
+terrific slaughter? Certain great railroad magnates and bankers were at
+each other's throats; two greedy corporations had quarrelled ferociously
+over the control of a railway line. No man in all our broad land dared
+to hint at the assassination of a Morgan<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_525" id="Page_525">[525]</a></span> or a Perkins or a Harriman or
+any of the "Standard Oil" votaries who were parties to the bitter
+contest that left Wall Street strewn with the mangled and bleeding
+carcasses of the ruined and bankrupt. That time, however, the "System"
+had both money and stocks&mdash;the people had lost both.</p>
+
+<p>I am not going to enter into a defence of myself against Colonel
+Greene's charges. In the newspapers of the country that matter was fully
+ventilated at the time. I simply republish his vituperation to show how
+the "System" sets about silencing those who dare protest against its
+villainous methods. In the first six months of the publication of my
+story the sole defence the "System" entered against my specific and
+terrible charges of plunder and debauching of the people was to attack
+me personally. It inaugurated a war of mud-slinging and vilification
+directed by the New York <i>Commercial</i>, Henry H. Rogers's own paper,
+which printed the ridiculous statement that I was crazy. This editorial
+made splendid ammunition for the big insurance corporations, which
+caused it to be distributed among their policy-holders, and for the
+yelping pack of insurance papers which may be depended on to bark, and
+bite the legs of any one who dares attack their master, the "System's,"
+most profitable institutions. I find I have not space here to reproduce
+these several mud broadsides, which really are more valuable as evidence
+of the doddering imbecility and fatuous weakness of the so-called great
+men of finance than interesting or informative. Since my personality is
+the issue, I propose to give my readers some testimony of a different
+character, gathered by experts<a name="FNanchor_22_22" id="FNanchor_22_22"></a><a href="#Footnote_22_22" class="fnanchor">[22]</a> in the heat of battle.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_526" id="Page_526">[526]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p class='center'>THOMAS W. LAWSON AT CLOSE RANGE</p>
+
+<p class='center'><span class="smcap">An Intimate Talk with the Financier and Fighter</span></p>
+
+<p class='center'><span class="smcap">By</span> ARTHUR McEWEN</p>
+
+<p class='center'>From the <i>New York American</i>, November 27, 1904.</p>
+
+<p>Thomas W. Lawson of Boston, who is making it so interesting
+for Standard Oil financiers and other able gentlemen that
+add your money to their corpulent millions while you wait,
+is himself an interesting man and a very puzzling one to a
+great many people.</p>
+
+<p>One day last week I spent several hours with him at his
+rooms in Young's Hotel, and it surely was a stimulating and
+enjoyable time. Everybody now knows how exceedingly well Mr.
+Lawson can write, and he talks as he writes&mdash;boldly,
+vividly, audaciously. He thinks out loud, pouring forth a
+flood of speech, breaking off in the middle of sentences,
+going into long parentheses, touching on a dozen incidental
+things by way of illustration as he goes, but always coming
+back to the main point. He may confuse you, but he does not
+confuse himself. And notwithstanding the rapidity of his
+utterance and his copiousness he is not carried away into
+saying what he would rather not have said.</p>
+
+<p>He is handsome&mdash;tall, broad-shouldered, strong, well-knit,
+and graceful&mdash;still almost youthful physically, despite his
+forty-five years and the beginning of grayness in the dark,
+wavy hair which covers his large, finely arched, and
+well-proportioned head. His forehead is high and broad, his
+gray eyes deep set under brows that come together and give
+intentness and fierceness to his gaze when he is aroused.</p>
+
+<p>And when Lawson is aroused you see a fighter with all his
+wits about him and of utter fearlessness. He would have made
+a first-class soldier, with his quickness and dash and the
+pluck that was born in him, and has not to be summoned by
+thinking and resolving.</p>
+
+<p class='center'>THE BOSTON VIEW OF LAWSON</p>
+
+<p>The Boston view of Lawson is illuminating. They are afraid
+of him on State Street. He thinks so rapidly and does things
+with such instant decision that he bewilders the
+conventional plodders. They admit that he is brilliant, that
+he has a genius for gathering in the dollars, but he shocks
+the financial Mrs. Grundy. They tell you that he is
+"irregular," "sensational," "bizarre," and the rest of
+it&mdash;all of which means simply that he is a man of original
+mind, who follows his own methods, succeeds with them, and
+doesn't care a snap of his fingers about being out of the
+fashion.</p>
+
+<p>He has a hundred ideas and impulses where the "safe and
+steady-going" <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_527" id="Page_527">[527]</a></span>business man has one&mdash;and as the safe and
+steady-going State-Streeter doesn't understand the
+ninety-nine Lawson ideas and impulses which do not come to
+him, he charges them up to "eccentricity" and
+"charlatanism."</p>
+
+<p>Boston says Lawson is vain. He certainly does hold a good
+opinion of himself, and he has a right to. A boy who goes
+into a bank at twelve as he did and before he is seventeen
+cleans up $60,000 is hardly to be rebuked for considering
+that he is better fitted for the financial game than most.
+He knows life, he knows men. He has made and lost fortunes
+and is not afraid of being "broke."</p>
+
+<p>That experience has been his repeatedly, but always he rose
+again. His brains, energy, and daring would cause him to
+rise anywhere. Had he been given birth in a South American
+republic, the dictatorship would have been his inevitably.</p>
+
+<p>Lawson was born a money-maker, but he is a great deal more
+than that. He is a many-sided man, interested ardently in
+lots of things to which the ordinary money-maker is
+oblivious. He is very, very human. He has a soul.</p>
+
+<p>Although he is raining blows on important men, who are not
+accustomed to being treated with disrespect&mdash;although he is
+charging them with crimes, and hopes, I should say, to drive
+them out of the country or into the penitentiary, he speaks
+of some of them with the greatest kindness, thoroughly
+understanding their good personal qualities.</p>
+
+<p class='center'>THE WONDERFUL ROGERS</p>
+
+<p>He denounces H. H. Rogers, for example, as a robber, a
+criminal, and he said to me:</p>
+
+<p>"Rogers is a marvellously able man and one of the best
+fellows living. If you knew him only on the social side, and
+knew him for years, you couldn't help loving him. He is
+considerate, kindly, generous, helpful, and everything a man
+should be to his friends. But when it comes to business&mdash;his
+kind of business&mdash;when he turns away from his better self
+and goes aboard his pirate brig and hoists the <i>Jolly
+Rover</i>, God help you! And, then, as a buccaneer you have to
+admire him, for he is a master among pirates, and you have
+to salute him, even when he has the point of his cutlass at
+the small of your back and you're walking the plank at his
+order. Rogers is wonderful. He is one of the most prolific
+human creatures I have ever met; prolific in thought, in
+devices&mdash;and I've been at the game a long time now and ought
+to know.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't think me egotistical, but I can't help looking under
+the surface and going to the bottom of things. So I learn
+more about men in Wall Street and what they are at than
+most. This is my thirty-fourth year of sixteen and seventeen
+hours a day and three hundred and sixty-five days in the
+year, and I have seen them all come and go. I <i>am</i> with the
+third generation of my time now. In such matters I feel
+somehow that I'm about three hundred years old.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_528" id="Page_528">[528]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Men like Rogers are all very good fellows. They are genial
+and tolerant in their judgment of others. Yes, they are
+mighty good fellows, until you turn them around and look at
+their other side. Rogers is lovable enough until he touches
+the other button. Then he goes with perfect ruthlessness for
+what he wants. And yet, though you are his victim, you can't
+bring yourself to hate him. After he has thrown you down and
+taken all you have and you turn yourself over and find the
+dark lantern has disappeared, and you hear him going up the
+lane, you pick yourself out of the gutter and admire the
+skill with which he did the job. If you could stand it, you
+would almost whistle to have him come back and do it over."</p>
+
+<p>"It is easy to see," I said, "by what you write of Mr.
+Rogers in your magazine story, that you were fond of him and
+gave him the highest rank for ability, but just the same you
+said you had to go on the stand in the gas suit and swear
+exactly opposite to his testimony. Do you charge him flatly
+with perjury?"</p>
+
+<p>"I have put it fifty times in black and white," answered Mr.
+Lawson, "that he committed perjury. There isn't any question
+about it. I produced my secretary's minutes, delivered over
+the telephone, received by his secretary and afterward
+confirmed. He confirmed the message to me, called me up and
+talked it over and did business on that agreement. Two men,
+Rogers and myself, followed each other on the stand and made
+diametrically opposite statements; and neither one of them
+reserved himself in stating that it was knowledge at first
+hand. Therefore there was perjury."</p>
+
+<p class='center'>LEGISLATIVE CORRUPTION</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Lawson, the whole country is familiar enough with
+legislative corruption, so there's nothing new in your
+charge that the Legislature of Massachusetts was bought up.
+But what will attract national notice is the definiteness of
+your accusation. You charge H.M. Whitney, brother of the
+late W. C. Whitney, and one of the foremost business men of
+your State, with having done the corrupting in order to get
+through a complete charter for a gas company. Now, when you
+pillory a person of Whitney's standing and prominence, as
+you have done, he has got to do one of two things&mdash;either
+force you to come to the front and compel you to prove the
+truth of what you say or stand before the public morally
+convicted."</p>
+
+<p>"That's right," agreed Lawson heartily.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you stand ready to prove your charge if he challenges
+you to do it?"</p>
+
+<p>"What else can I do? Of course I can prove it. I'm sorry for
+Whitney. He is a good fellow on his personal side, like
+Rogers, but truth is truth."</p>
+
+<p>"However used we may have become to buying Legislatures,
+however commonplace it may be, still, when a financially
+responsible man like yourself gives concrete instance, and
+is prepared with proofs,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_529" id="Page_529">[529]</a></span> the fact is horribly startling to
+everybody that cares for his country. What is to be the end
+of this sort of thing&mdash;the purchase of the people's
+representatives by the criminal rich?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, you can ask me a question even broader than that.
+What is going to be the end, not only of such things as I
+have stated in regard to the corruption of the Legislature
+of Massachusetts&mdash;and we all admit that the same thing is
+being done in other States&mdash;what is going to be the outcome
+of this rottenness in connection with the practices in Wall
+Street that I am telling about in my magazine narrative in
+'Frenzied Finance'? To answer would be to disclose my
+remedy&mdash;the climax to my whole story. At present I can only
+say that I make no charges loosely, on insufficient
+evidence. I state only what I know. I have seen the
+iniquities worked out. I know that these crimes are being
+committed every day; that these great financial schemes are
+carried through, not only by the commission of moral crimes,
+but legal crimes&mdash;crimes for which those participating in
+them can be held responsible if they are gone after in the
+right way, and I am going to show the right way.</p>
+
+<p class='center'>THE REMEDY</p>
+
+<p>"I believe that I have a remedy. That, of course, is a
+tremendous thing to say. I have spent my life on it. I have
+been waiting for the opportunity."</p>
+
+<p>"I may not ask you what your remedy is?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, I shall propose that myself when I have laid all my
+facts about these crimes before the people. I am going to
+tell them about some startling crimes. All that I have told
+so far, including the systematic corruption of the
+Massachusetts Legislature, relates to the past. That is, the
+deeds are dead, so to speak. But the crimes of Amalgamated,
+though in one sense they are now past, are yet connected
+with the present, because Amalgamated is alive. The man who
+was robbed in 1899, in 1900, and 1901 has his claim
+unsettled. That man is alive and Amalgamated is a big,
+living corporation. When I get to that I shall be talking in
+the present and something is going to be done.</p>
+
+<p>"I have the remedy for the whole thing. You will appreciate
+the largeness of that statement, but I have thought and
+advised and worked it out. My remedy is based on common
+sense."</p>
+
+<p>"Does it aim at any real change in our political system? Is
+it socialistic?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, no; it doesn't mean a turning over in politics. You and
+I know that the dollar is what is running things in this
+country to-day, and if you come along with an ideal
+proposition&mdash;a proposition that carries with it a change in
+our laws or a proposition to have some new laws passed&mdash;you
+might as well say good-by to it, because the fellow whose
+hundred millions you want to take away is going to say: 'How
+many dollars does it need to turn that upside down?' and he
+is going to supply the dollars."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_530" id="Page_530">[530]</a></span></p>
+
+<p class='center'>LAWSON'S VERSATILITY</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Lawson gave me nearly three hours of his time, and
+during those three hours he was interrupted every five
+minutes or so by telephone calls. He conducted his business
+right along, ordering the selling and buying of stocks,
+making or declining appointments, talking with his
+publishers, his lawyers, his family, his friends. It would
+have goaded almost any man into excitement and irritability,
+but it was all in a day's work with Lawson. Yet he is not
+phlegmatic; indeed, he is extraordinarily animated. But it
+is animation with composure. In a business way there is not
+a busier man in the country, but he finds leisure for other
+interests&mdash;books, pictures, bronzes, horses. He has a
+beautiful country home, where he goes daily by special
+train, and then puts up the bars against business, bores,
+and all intruders.</p>
+
+<p>In his talk with me he ran a remarkable gamut. He spoke of
+business like the shrewdest and readiest of practical men.
+Then in the midst of some story of stock-market guile, such
+as he is exposing in <i>Everybody's Magazine</i>, his face,
+voice, and hands conveyed amusement, anger, disgust. With
+his good looks and gift of expression he would have made his
+way to the top of the stage. I do not know if he has done
+any public speaking. But when he got into the full tide of
+denunciation of the crimes of Amalgamated I regretted that
+he was not addressing a great audience, for it was real
+oratory&mdash;strong talk, ardent, electric, manly. His eyes
+flashed, his teeth came together with a snap and he shook
+both fists under my nose. He has enthusiasm, capacity for
+righteous wrath, and the spirit of battle. But he doesn't
+lose poise for a moment.</p>
+
+<p class='center'>HIS CONFIDENCE IN HIMSELF</p>
+
+<p>Cheerfulness, gay confidence in his own powers, is his
+predominant trait.</p>
+
+<p>"You are firing hot shot into these people," I said. "They
+have endless money, and you are in the stock-market, taking
+chances every day. Aren't you afraid they will dig pits for
+you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, what can they do to any of us in this world except to
+send us to the poor-house or the grave? I don't fear them. I
+know them and all about them. You must remember this is not
+a new occupation with me. For twenty-five years or more I
+have been in the habit of picking up a brick without looking
+to see how many corners it had or whether it was round or
+square and hitting the first head I thought I had a good
+reason to hit. I have been doing these things regardless of
+how they liked it. It's upward of a quarter of a century
+since I had my first wrestle with a corporation in the
+newspapers. I have tried not to be a common scold and
+avoided being vicious when I could. I have only attacked
+when I thought some fellow had done me<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_531" id="Page_531">[531]</a></span> a deliberate wrong.
+And when I have felt that way I have started after him. Then
+it has been vicious, hard fighting, you know; vicious, but
+not malicious.</p>
+
+<p>"With the 'Standard Oil' crowd I have this big advantage&mdash;I
+am only one man, a small target, and it needs a mighty good
+aim to hit me, whereas they present a large surface and I
+have only to heave a brick in any direction to break a
+window. The contest is unequal. Everything favors me. My
+ammunition is the truth."</p>
+
+<p>There is cheerful courage for you&mdash;more particularly in the
+case of a man who proclaims from the housetop that there is
+no limit to the villainy of his adversaries.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Lawson," I said, "there are few who would care to be in
+your shoes&mdash;a rich man waging a war of this sort. The
+chances are altogether in favor of their smashing you
+financially."</p>
+
+<p>"Let them, if they can. There are worse things in this life
+than being smashed financially."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Lawson's smile was sunny and confident. He is fearless.</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p class='center'>LAWSON, THE MAN</p>
+
+<p class='center'><span class="smcap">By</span> JAMES CREELMAN</p>
+
+<p class='center'>From the New York <i>World</i>, December 12, 1904.</p>
+
+<p class='right'><span class="smcap">Boston</span>, December 10th.</p>
+
+<p>All through the critical business hours of Friday, when
+Thomas W. Lawson, master spirit in the present extraordinary
+war against Standard Oil finance in Wall Street, was
+reported to be locked up with H. H. Rogers, generalissimo of
+Standard Oil, perfecting the details of a settlement for
+$6,000,000&mdash;all through that anxious time, when the
+stock-tickers and newspapers of the country were trying to
+guess the meaning of Mr. Lawson's sudden silence and
+inaccessibility, he was standing in his quiet room in
+Young's Hotel, explaining the situation to the public
+through the <i>World</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Although I sat in the room with him almost from the time
+that the stock-market opened until long after it closed, not
+once did Mr. Lawson show the slightest sign of excitement
+over market affairs. Strong as an ox, clear-eyed, tranquil,
+smiling, the man who had moved the financial market downward
+against the will of the greatest combination of capital the
+world has ever seen, bore himself like one absolutely
+confident of success. The bunch of blue corn-flowers in his
+button-hole was not fresher than he, although on the
+previous day he had fought through one of the greatest
+battles in the history of speculation, had made an
+hour-and-a-half speech at a night banquet, had gone to bed
+after midnight, and risen before five in the morning.</p>
+
+<p>In that one day he had forced nearly 3,000,000 shares of
+stock into the market in New York.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_532" id="Page_532">[532]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"My one instrument is publicity," he said. "It is the most
+powerful weapon in the world. With it I have been able to
+strike with some of the power which eighty millions of
+Americans possess when they are wide-awake and in earnest.</p>
+
+<p>"This week's work is only the beginning of a demonstration
+that the secrecy of the frenzied finance system&mdash;under the
+cover of which the savings of the people gathered into
+banks, trust institutions, and insurance companies, have
+been used by the Standard Oil crowd to rob the people
+through the stock-market&mdash;cannot succeed against publicity.
+The people only need light to save themselves.</p>
+
+<p>"At the beginning of the week I advised the people of the
+United States to sell Amalgamated Copper and the other pool
+stocks. It was the first step in the final realization of
+plans I had been maturing for ten years. Since then, against
+the whole force of the billions and billions commanded by
+the Standard Oil system, Amalgamated has dropped from 82
+into the 60's. I give the people my word, which I have never
+yet broken, that not once in that time have I sold a share
+of Amalgamated stock. Not only that, but I have actually
+bought large blocks of Amalgamated in order to steady the
+market and prevent too great and too sudden a panic, so that
+my friends everywhere might be able to get out without
+complete ruin. But for that I believe we would have had a
+panic greater than the Northern Pacific crash.</p>
+
+<p>"I simply went out into the public square and told the
+people the truth. I was in a position to tell the truth. I
+knew the methods by which they had been robbed. I knew that
+ruin was staring them in the face unless they acted quickly.</p>
+
+
+<p class='center'>SPENT $92,000 ADVERTISING</p>
+
+<p>"I advertised the fact over my signature in the newspapers
+of New York, Boston, Chicago, Los Angeles. I cabled the
+advertisement to London. All this cost, with incidental
+expenses, something like $92,000.</p>
+
+<p>"The frightened leaders and agents of the 'System' spread
+reports that I was in league with the leading plungers and
+manipulators of Wall Street, that I was making a mere stock
+raid, that I was trying to 'shake down' Mr. Rogers. The
+truth is that I have no partners. Not a soul knew my plans
+until my first advertisement appeared. I have no price, for
+there can be no peace now until the whole rotten scheme of
+frenzied finance is smashed and things are brought back to
+their natural honest level. I am in deadly earnest. No man
+knows better than I do how great a service I am rendering to
+the American people."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Lawson stood squarely upon his heels, the incarnation of
+strength and courage. The square head, high and wide at the
+top, the long line of the jaw and broad, fighting chin, big,
+blue-gray eyes, the big, flat teeth, the strong nose, large
+firm mouth, sinewy neck, hairy hands, broad, deep chest,
+powerfully curved thighs, and the steady<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_533" id="Page_533">[533]</a></span> voice&mdash;these were
+eloquent of strength, determination, and concentration.</p>
+
+<p>There was a black pearl in his cravat and an almost
+priceless canary-colored diamond sparkling on his little
+finger. He wore gray, striped trousers and a black coat and
+vest, across which was a beaded gold watch-chain. Everywhere
+in his room were flowers, roses, lilies, and bunches of the
+famous Lawson Pink, the flower for which he once paid
+$30,000.</p>
+
+<p>The man whom I had expected to find haggard, pale,
+wild-eyed, and excited, in the centre of a nervous
+hurricane, was rosy-cheeked, cheerful, and apparently as
+free from care as though he had never heard of Wall Street.
+He spoke rapidly but in an even voice, occasionally pacing
+the floor and sometimes gesturing or setting his hands
+firmly on his hips. He answered questions promptly and with
+an almost boyish appearance of frankness. It would be hard
+to imagine a more masculine, compact, and concentrated
+personality.</p>
+
+<p>This is the man who left school in Cambridge at the age of
+twelve, walked into Boston with his books under his arm, and
+secured a three-dollar-a-week position as an office-boy
+almost on the very spot where, after thirty-six years, he
+has worked himself up into a position from which he feels
+able to captain the fight against Standard Oil and its
+allies. He owns a palace in Boston filled with works of art;
+he has a six-hundred acre farm on Cape Cod, with seven miles
+of fences, three hundred horses, each one of whom he can
+call by name; a hundred and fifty dogs, and a building for
+training his animals larger than Madison Square Garden. Some
+of his horses are worth many thousands of dollars apiece.
+Even the experts of the German Government who examined
+Dreamwold the other day were amazed at its costliness and
+perfection. Within forty-eight hours Mr. Lawson wrote and
+published a large illustrated book analyzing his farm and
+gave it to his German visitors as a souvenir, after
+organizing for them a horse show that overwhelmed them with
+surprise.</p>
+
+<p>He built the yacht <i>Independence</i> at a cost of $200,000, and
+when it was shut out from the America's Cup race smilingly
+threw it on the scrap heap. He established a great racing
+stable, and when tired of playing with it, broke it up. He
+went to Kentucky, and the day before a great trotting race
+bought Boralma for $17,000. His pride was aroused by the
+fact that the betting was against his trotter. He gave
+$104,000 to a friend to sustain Boralma's reputation in the
+betting and won $92,000. And yet he claims that he has never
+been seriously interested in betting, and that his winnings
+on Boralma were simply an accident.</p>
+
+
+<p class='center'>THAT $30,000 PINK</p>
+
+<p>But it was the purchase of a pink carnation, wonderful in
+color and vigor, which had been named by a Boston
+experimental florist after Mrs. Lawson, that made Mr.
+Lawson's name known all over the world. Thirty thousand
+dollars for a pink! The news was spread broadcast,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_534" id="Page_534">[534]</a></span> and
+printed in the newspapers of all countries as an
+illustration of the vulgar extravagance and folly of an
+American millionaire.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Lawson explained that incident while I was with him, and
+his explanation threw a new light upon his character. He
+bought the flower originally as a matter of sentiment, but
+the sum he offered was comparatively small. Mr.
+Higginbotham, of Chicago, bid $25,000 for the Lawson Pink.
+When he heard this news, Mr. Lawson sat down with a florist
+friend and figured out the possibility of the new flower as
+a business investment. He closed the matter in a few minutes
+by paying $30,000. Some time later on the florist bought
+back the right to the Lawson pink for $30,000, and gave Mr.
+Lawson, in addition, $15,000 profit, according to agreement.</p>
+
+<p>A curious evidence of this man's astonishing coolness is the
+fact that, at the very time when the market was closing on
+Friday, when it was whispered all over the country that he
+was arranging terms of peace for the Standard Oil with Mr.
+Rogers, Mr. Lawson was actually explaining the peculiar and
+beautiful qualities of his favorite flower.</p>
+
+
+<p class='center'>A REASON FOR HIS LAST ATTACK</p>
+
+<p>"But if Amalgamated Copper shares were worth $100 when you
+were market manager for Mr. Rogers and his friends, how is
+it that they are not worth that price now?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Lawson leaned against the edge of an open door and
+thrust his hands deeply into his pockets.</p>
+
+<p>"I have tried to make that plain to the public," he said
+quietly.</p>
+
+<p>"The other day Mr. Rogers's lawyer was trying to get me to
+stop. I told him that I intended to force the Standard Oil
+crowd to put the price of Amalgamated Copper back to $100,
+at which I advised my friends to buy it. He said that the
+stock was not worth $100. I asked him how he knew. He
+answered that Mr. Rogers, Mr. Stillman, Mr. Rockefeller, and
+the other fellows in control had discovered that they had
+been deceived when the property was bought. They did not
+consider it worth more than $45 a share.</p>
+
+<p>"That settled it in my mind. I appealed to the public to
+test the situation. I advised them to sell Amalgamated at
+once and keep on selling. If it was worth $100, the men in
+the 'System,' having billions of dollars behind them, would
+buy it. If it was worth only $45 a share, then the price
+must fall to that point in the end. It was simply a question
+whether the public could unload on the Standard Oil crowd
+before the 'System' could unload on the public."</p>
+
+<p>"Then you caught the leaders of Standard Oil at the
+psychological moment."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Lawson's smile was beyond words to describe.</p>
+
+<p>"That partly explains the crash," he said. "They were ready
+to unload on the public, but the public moved too quickly.
+Publicity destroyed the one great weapon of the Standard Oil
+men, which is secrecy. I had been tricked and deceived, and
+those who were<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_535" id="Page_535">[535]</a></span> responsible had used my name to deceive and
+trick the public. I got out into the open and laid the plot
+bare. I had been working up to that point for many years,
+always waiting, waiting, waiting for the day when I could
+begin a work of reformation in behalf of 80,000,000 of
+people.</p>
+
+<p>"I know my game. I have stood here in Boston for thirty-six
+years studying man and his ways. I have no false conceptions
+of my own strength. I know, and I have known all along, that
+to win against a system backed by billions of dollars
+working in the dark and controlling largely the law-making
+powers of the nation, I must have the people with me. My
+articles in <i>Everybody's Magazine</i> were simply in
+preparation of the public mind for the practical
+demonstration which I have made this week, that the
+whispering manipulators of Wall Street will not buy at $68 a
+share stock which they were selling to the public at $100 a
+share.</p>
+
+<p>"The Standard Oil interests came into my world simply
+because they entered Boston to control gas affairs. They
+wanted to run their automobile down a particular road, but
+they found a fellow standing in the middle of the road. They
+did not dare to run over that fellow, as little as he was,
+because he warned them that he had in his pocket a stick of
+dynamite that would blow the machine up if it passed over
+him. Mr. Rogers is a really big and brainy man. He saw and
+understood the situation. He offered to take me inside of
+his secret lines.</p>
+
+
+<p class='center'>HIS INDEPENDENCE</p>
+
+<p>"It is said by my enemies, and they are many&mdash;and some of
+them are crackajacks, I admit&mdash;that I am a squealer, that I
+have peached on my pals. That is absolutely untrue. From my
+boyhood up I have always insisted on being free and
+independent. I have punched a head when I thought it needed
+punching, without asking whose it was or what the
+consequences would be. But I have never consciously told a
+lie or violated a confidence. The newspaper files will show
+that when I made my deal with the Standard Oil people, I
+publicly announced that I had entered into a secret
+agreement with them. That brought a hurried call from Mr.
+Rogers, who wanted to know what I meant. I told him, as I
+had told him before, that I had to work in my own way, that
+my methods were open and above board, and that I could not
+work successfully unless I was free to do things as I
+thought they should be done.</p>
+
+<p>"That was my arrangement with Standard Oil. They had a great
+chest, and the whole method of the 'System' was to prevent
+any one from getting a peep at that chest save as one of
+them and on their own terms. I refused to be bound by their
+code. I told Mr. Rogers again and again that everything I
+learned as the market manager of the Standard Oil interests
+I felt free to use publicly at any time. Mr. Rogers again
+and again assured me that this was fully understood.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_536" id="Page_536">[536]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<p class='center'>THE REMEDY</p>
+
+<p>"All through that time I had, deep down in my heart, the
+plan which I am carrying out now. Each day brought me nearer
+to the day when I would expose the whole system of fraud to
+the public. Having that idea always present with me, I was
+careful to avoid deals or partnerships which involved any
+loss of independence to act when the day for action came. I
+have been worth as much as $28,000,000, and I have lost as
+much as $14,000,000. But never have I altered my purpose to
+awaken the public to a realization of the great crimes
+committed against them in the name of finance.</p>
+
+<p>"If the people will stand by me, and I have always been open
+and honest with them, America will witness a great
+transformation. With an honest and courageous President in
+the White House we shall see whether the 'System' will be
+able to use the fiduciary institutions of the country for
+piratical purposes. The fall in the price of Amalgamated and
+other pool stocks is only a bubble on the surface. The final
+revelation, and the final solution, are yet to come into
+sight."</p>
+
+<p>Just then the telephone bell rang and Mr. Lawson put the
+receiver to his ear and laughed as he listened. "No," he
+answered softly, through the instrument, "I am not locked up
+with Mr. Rogers, but with a man who has more power."</p>
+
+<p>Then he turned to me, rocking back strongly on his heels and
+clasping his hands behind his square head.</p>
+
+<p>"I meant that," he said; "there is more power in the pen of
+one honest writer in the service of an honest, fearless
+newspaper than in all the wealth and cunning of the
+'System.'"</p></div>
+
+
+<p class='center'>THE MUNROE &amp; MUNROE EPISODE</p>
+
+<p>There came a time in the first twelve months of my "Frenzied Finance"
+crusade when people rather took the attitude that I was exaggerating
+conditions and that neither Wall Street nor the "System" was so bad as I
+had depicted them. About this time, following the so-called Lawson
+panic, occurred the Munroe &amp; Munroe <i>esclandre</i>, the details of which
+plainly showed eminent financiers in the vulgar business of
+stock-washing. I frankly treated the subject in <i>Everybody's</i>, and as it
+is part of the history of the movement, I reproduce the passage:</p>
+
+<p>The average man is prone to lose sight of perfidy in magnitude and to
+say, when he hears all the facts: "At least these rascals hunt big
+game." I wish to say here that such<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_537" id="Page_537">[537]</a></span> distinction is undeserved. The
+"System" is omnivorous. Its insatiable maw yawns as greedily for the
+ten-cent pieces of the people as for the thousands of the larger
+investor. It is as avid and relentless in devising ant-traps as
+elephant-snares. There fell into my hands recently certain valuable
+documents in the meanest of contemporary swindles, which reveal the
+connection of the National City Bank, certain of its officers and other
+important financial interests, with a plot to fleece the fag ends of the
+public. The details of the Munroe &amp; Munroe-Montreal &amp; Boston conspiracy
+have been widely published, and the world is well acquainted now with
+the two Munroes, graduates of a "gents' furnishing-goods" shop in
+Montreal, introduced into high finance in New York, organizing with the
+assistance of the great Rockefeller-Stillman-Rogers bank a copper
+corporation with shares at a par value of five dollars. There never was
+such barefaced exploitation as was used on behalf of this proposition.
+It was advertised as a bonanza; investors were guaranteed against loss
+by an assurance that their stock would double and treble in price, and
+that the company would stand ready at all times to buy back shares at
+cost. The intention was plainly to entice into the Montreal &amp; Boston
+people of very limited means, who could ill afford to lose their
+savings.</p>
+
+<p>The sudden panic, brought about by the warning to the people of the
+traps that were being set for them, caught napping many of the
+"System's" votaries, large and small, and before they could get their
+different devices even-keeled from the shock caused by that single blast
+of truth, the public got a peep 'tween decks into the machinery. Among
+those whose port-holes were blown wide open was the Munroe &amp; Munroe-City
+Bank-Montreal &amp; Boston outfit, whose scheme went down like a card-house
+in the blow. A receiver was at once appointed to take care of the
+d&eacute;bris. This mishap revealed an amazing condition of affairs. With only
+$2,000 capital, Munroe &amp; Munroe had arranged with the great National
+City Bank to honor their checks for immense sums every day, the proceeds
+being used to carry on a series of fictitious transactions in Montreal &amp;
+Boston stock for the purpose of beguiling the public into purchasing it.
+The<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_538" id="Page_538">[538]</a></span> affair was a ten-days' wonder, and was finally squelched by the
+great bank's throwing over its vice-president, Archibald G. Loomis, who
+had bravely shouldered the responsibility for the transaction. At
+writing, two professional gamblers, who seem to have been the principal
+victims of the underwriting end of the swindle, are being settled with,
+and the whole affair will soon be buried from public gaze.</p>
+
+<p>The episode was, on the whole, so foul in its revelation of greed that
+even Wall Street was horrified&mdash;not at the arrant double-dealing
+exposed, but that the "System" should descend to such vulgar
+malpractice. The documents now in my possession, which I shall publish
+later in my story, include the original underwriters' agreement, which,
+at great cost of time and money, has so far been kept from the public,
+and they show some of the greatest bankers in the land deliberately
+planning, by the use of fraudulent papers and bogus agreements, to
+beguile investors to adventure their money in a scheme the sole purpose
+of which was the enrichment of its organizers. The whole performance
+reveals a depravity so profound and a greed so heartless that the people
+may well tremble for the safety of their savings intrusted to the
+custody of men of this type. It also proves my contention that the
+"System," while depending on burglary for its largest returns, does not
+despise the small profits of the pick-pocket.</p>
+
+<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_21_21" id="Footnote_21_21"></a><a href="#FNanchor_21_21"><span class="label">[21]</span></a> Groups of Stock-Exchange members each day appear to buy
+from other groups great quantities of shares of different stocks at
+advancing prices. In reality all the brokers&mdash;the ones appearing to buy
+and those who sell to them&mdash;are in league with each other, and none of
+the transactions is actual. The performance bears the same relation to
+legitimate Stock-Exchange trading that the purchase and sale of a gold
+brick among confederates at a circus do to the genuine work of the
+gamblers and pick-pockets who are really attending to business around
+them. On certain days in the months I refer to, when the official
+records of the Stock Exchange told that one and a half million shares
+had been bought and sold, and prices had advanced until the aggregate
+increase in the worth of the stocks dealt in amounted to hundreds of
+millions of dollars, not more than a few thousand shares of real stock
+changed hands. The rest was barefaced fraud for the purpose of deceiving
+the millions of investors and speculators throughout the country who are
+dependent upon the daily press and "market letters" for information in
+regard to investments for their savings.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_22_22" id="Footnote_22_22"></a><a href="#FNanchor_22_22"><span class="label">[22]</span></a> Arthur McEwen and James Creelman are among the strongest
+and ablest of American newspaper writers. Their names are not as
+familiar to the readers of magazines as some others, but they are,
+perhaps, the most highly paid men in journalism to-day, and they have a
+well-earned reputation for independence and personal integrity. Mr.
+McEwen, who is now one of the editors of the New York <i>American</i>, is
+known throughout the country as a fearless exponent of corporate
+villainies. Mr. Creelman is a distinguished member of the New York
+<i>World's</i> editorial staff, and has interviewed more of the world's great
+men than any other journalist living. From their standing in their
+profession, their well-known hatred of hypocrisies and shams, their wide
+experience in estimating men of all degrees&mdash;the verdict of Mr. Creelman
+and Mr. McEwen, as set forth in their papers, should be conclusive.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_539" id="Page_539">[539]</a></span></p>
+<h2>III</h2>
+
+<h3>EXPLANATIONS</h3>
+
+
+<p>The revelations I delivered to the public in my story of "Frenzied
+Finance," together with the accompanying expositions of insurance and
+other rottenness in the "Critics" department, were not accepted without
+protest from my correspondents. Though the majority of the letters that
+came to me in shoals from all parts of the country have been generous in
+their appreciation of my work, many have seriously taken my methods to
+task and dubiously questioned my motives. The most salient and
+satisfactory expression of these doubters was a letter that came to me
+from a New York banker, to which I replied at length, for it afforded me
+the opportunity to get before my readers in general many matters about
+which explanations seemed due them. The letter was as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p class='right'><span class="smcap">New York</span>.</p>
+
+<p><i>Dear Sir</i>: I have read all that you have written in
+<i>Everybody's Magazine</i>, and have been unusually interested.
+If you will consult the Amalgamated subscription list you
+will see my house is down for quite a large amount. For this
+reason and others, and as an old member of our Stock
+Exchange, I naturally follow such writings as yours. At the
+beginning I agreed with most bankers in believing that you
+were actuated by a desire to get even with Mr. Rogers, Mr.
+Rockefeller, or Mr. Addicks; but as your tale progressed I
+thought I perceived a sincere desire to carry out some
+genuine work of reform in the system of conducting the stock
+business; then when you began your advertising work last
+December, I shifted again and felt that your efforts were
+probably for personal gain.</p>
+
+<p>Since then I have noted your every move with an acute
+interest, for I became convinced that you were going to work
+considerable mischief before you got through. Of late you
+have been so bold&mdash;and I believe I voice the opinions of the
+large majority of men connected with finan<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_540" id="Page_540">[540]</a></span>cial affairs when
+I say <i>dangerous</i>&mdash;that I cannot resist writing you as I do
+herewith.</p>
+
+<p>You advertise through the daily press and in your "Critics"
+pages that you are doing all in your power to create unrest
+and fear among the people for the purpose of frightening
+them into selling their stocks and bonds, and you go further
+and openly make the most astounding of statements, the most
+dangerous and vicious&mdash;that you will endeavor to have all
+the people owning deposits in banks, trusts, and insurance
+companies withdraw them in concert.</p>
+
+<p>I will be frank and state that if I did not know your
+business career, and had not read your writings, I should
+dismiss this latter statement of yours by calling on the
+proper authorities to take cognizance of you as a most
+dangerous lunatic, but as your business career and your
+writings show you to be an able financier, a successful
+business man, an advanced thinker and brilliant writer, I
+feel that mental derangement cannot be the cause of this
+remarkable proceeding.</p>
+
+<p>Therefore I challenge you, as one who professes to be an
+honest man, to answer at once the inclosed list of questions
+fully and unqualifiedly in your magazine before you make any
+more extraordinary and, I believe, perilous public requests;
+and I warn you that if you do not do so, I shall consider it
+my duty to make public through the press of this country,
+and in other places where you have been advertising your
+vicious theories, that you have not dared to make answer. In
+other words, I shall, after the next issue of <i>Everybody's
+Magazine</i>, if it does not contain your answers, publish
+broadcast a copy of this letter, and in all fairness and
+sincerity, I warn you I shall not be deterred from doing
+this by any excuse you may make that my letter was received
+too late for the July number of the magazine, or that more
+important matters take up your space. I have, by diligent
+research, ascertained that you will have at least
+forty-eight hours from the time this letter is placed in
+your hands before the section containing your "Lawson and
+His Critics" pages is sent to press; or, to be plainer, I
+can have advertisements inserted in the same section as that
+containing your "Critics" pages if I hand in my copy
+forty-eight hours after you will have received my letter.</p>
+
+<p>Therefore you have sufficient time to formulate your answer,
+and you know as well as I that, in the present excited
+condition of the public mind, which has been created largely
+by your public statements, there can be nothing more
+deserving of space in <i>Everybody's Magazine</i> than the
+answers to my questions. You must realize, sir, that in all
+sections of the country small holders of stocks are not only
+selling their holdings, but that small depositors in banks
+and trust companies are already beginning to withdraw their
+deposits, that already many small banks have failed because
+of this feeling of apprehension. So far as Wall Street is
+concerned, legitimate business is practically dead, and you
+have, for the time being at least, killed it. I will not add
+what ill your attacks have worked in the large insurance
+companies, for it is, I am sorry to say, patent to all that
+there is but little life-insurance business being done at
+present by the very large companies, and at best it will
+require<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_541" id="Page_541">[541]</a></span> years to live down the unsettlement you have
+wrought in the people's confidence in this worthy and
+time-proven institution.</p>
+
+<p>These are the questions I want answers to, and answers in
+keeping with those broad professions of honesty and keen
+regard for the best interests of the people which you have
+been making.</p>
+
+<p class='indent1'>Earnestly and respectfully yours,</p>
+<p class='right'>&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>1. Do you know economics and finance, money, banking,
+credits, corporations, and business in their broad relations
+to the people, the American Government, and natural law, and
+the relation each holds to the other, or is your knowledge
+confined to the skimming and smattering such as any alert
+and bright stock speculator would naturally pick up in years
+of experience as a broker and manipulator?</p>
+
+<p>2. Do you not know that in all times there have been, and
+must naturally be, very rich men, and that necessarily there
+can be but very few of these, and that where they are there
+must be very many times as many poorer ones, very poor ones?</p>
+
+<p>3. Do you not know that there must be billions of dollars'
+worth of stocks and bonds in America, and that they must not
+only increase but increase very rapidly, and that their
+existence instead of being evidence of great evil is proof
+positive of the great prosperity of the whole country and
+the whole people, and that it is the sacred duty of all the
+people down to the very poorest, who own none of these, to
+guard, protect, and maintain their price, and not the duty
+of any honest man to destroy or shrink the value of this
+evidence of real wealth?</p>
+
+<p>4. Do you not know that a large portion of all these stocks
+and bonds is owned by the masses of the people; that if they
+should be frightened into selling them there would be no
+place to put the vast sums they would receive for them, as
+the banks could not profitably use this cash if it were
+added to what is deposited now, and that the only sufferers
+by this frightened and forced selling would be the people
+whom you profess to be working for?</p>
+
+<p>5. Do you not know that if the people should start on a
+given day to withdraw their money from the banks and trust
+companies throughout this country, there would be the worst
+calamity in this country that the world has ever witnessed;
+that all lines of business would be disorganized; that the
+country would be set back a very long time, and that the
+principal sufferers would be the working people and the
+farmers, and, in fact, all those classes you profess to be
+working for; and do you not know that in the middle of this
+calamity you would probably be lynched and perhaps torn limb
+from limb by the crazed and deluded people, who would then
+see the danger of your teachings?</p>
+
+<p>6. Do you not know that the result of the people's selling
+their stocks and bonds in concert would be a great drop in
+their price, and that the people's raiding the banks and
+trust companies of their deposits would also bring about a
+tremendous drop in the price of stocks and bonds; that the
+only ones who can possibly benefit are the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_542" id="Page_542">[542]</a></span> bears who sell
+short; that these bears have no legitimate standing in the
+business world, and should have none, and that in the
+broadest sense of the term they are not honest men?</p>
+
+<p>7. Do you not know that the greatest institution in this
+country to-day is life insurance, and that if you disturb
+the confidence of the people in life insurance their
+families will be deprived of the greatest source of income
+at a time when most in need of it?</p>
+
+<p>8. Do you not know that there can be no new remedy for the
+present condition of affairs, even if it is really as bad as
+you picture it, and that the only remedy or cure possible is
+a more honest enforcement of our present laws, a more honest
+conduct of our present enormous business, and a more
+intelligent recognition by the working people and farmers of
+the inevitable natural laws? Also that there can be nothing
+more pernicious than this constant teaching them that their
+interests are opposed to the interests of the very rich
+class?</p>
+
+<p>9. Did you not write your story to advertise yourself for
+the purpose of making money out of the following your
+disclosures would bring you and for the purpose of making
+money for <i>Everybody's Magazine</i>?</p>
+
+<p>10. Do you not own the largest part of <i>Everybody's
+Magazine</i>, and has not your part of the profits received
+from that source since you began your story been very large?</p>
+
+<p>11. Do you not sell stocks short before each of your
+advertisements, and are not the press stories and the one
+now current in Wall Street that you made over a million
+dollars in the decline which preceded the appearance of the
+June <i>Everybody's</i>, true?</p>
+
+<p>12. Are you going to commit the crime of calling out bank
+and trust company deposits?</p>
+
+<p>13. If you make such a call, and it is answered, and there
+is a destructive panic and a number of the big New York
+banks and trust companies fail, what will you do?</p>
+
+<p>14. If the masses should sell their stocks and bonds and get
+their money, what would then happen?</p>
+
+<p>15. Do you dare say to your readers now and unqualifiedly,
+that you have a real remedy for the present financial evils,
+and that it will show when it is given that it is anything
+more than some new scheme by which you personally are to get
+the people's money?</p>
+
+<p>16. Do you dare to say now to your readers unqualifiedly
+that this remedy will show conclusively that it has not been
+invented since you began your story of "Frenzied Finance"?</p>
+
+<p>17. Do you dare tell your readers now and unqualifiedly that
+you personally did not make money out of what you call the
+"Amalgamated swindle"?</p>
+
+<p>18. Do you dare tell your readers now and unqualifiedly that
+you have not made money, and an enormous amount of it&mdash;very
+much more than all you have spent in connection with your
+work of "Frenzied Finance"&mdash;out of the people since your
+story began?</p>
+
+<p>I will state in fairness to you before you make answer to
+the above<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_543" id="Page_543">[543]</a></span> questions that it is now my intention to take
+your answers into court in a suit which will be brought, and
+that if you have made answers different from those you make
+under oath you will be held up to the scorn of the whole
+American people.</p></div>
+
+<p>I replied:</p>
+
+<p>I admire your smartness. Of the thousands of letters I have recently
+received yours is the cunningest. If I do not answer your shrewd and
+adroitly put questions in the brief space at my disposal, you will
+discredit my work. If I take offence at your way of putting your
+questions, you will have the pretext you are evidently looking for.
+Then, your closing warning is so manly and generous! I must not lie,
+because, if I do, you will expose me in court! You thought that would
+make good reading after I had refused to make reply in this issue, and
+you had advertised your letter. Again, you probably figured that as my
+June chapter was all taken up with my story and there was no room for
+the insurance article I had promised, I should need all my "Critics"
+space this month for it; so, all in all, I guess you were pretty sure I
+could not answer your apparently fair and honest questions.</p>
+
+<p>I'll disappoint you. If my "Critics" pages had actually been on the
+press at the moment your questions came in, I should have telegraphed
+the publishers to yank off the plates and hold up the edition at my own
+expense until I should have had time to polish off your interrogations.
+Before starting in let me say to you that if you will find a way of
+getting my answers out into the open under oath, I shall consider that
+you have done me and my work a good turn.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Question 1.</span> I <i>know</i> economics and finance, money, banking, credits,
+corporations, and business in their broad relations to the people, the
+American Government, and natural laws, and the relation each holds to
+the other&mdash;not so well as I should like to know them, but as well as any
+member of the "Standard Oil," of the "System," or any one of their
+hirelings knows them. You have been brutally blunt in putting your
+questions, so don't accuse me of egotism if I bluntly answer: I know
+them all, top, sides, and bottom,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_544" id="Page_544">[544]</a></span> from thirty-six years' book study of
+them and thirty-six years' actual experience in the nine-pin alleys
+where they are daily and nightly set up for the express purpose of being
+knocked down. I know the relation of each of these important life
+factors to each of the now-you-see-it-and-now-you-don't jokers of the
+"System." Make no mistake, Mr. Banker, my knowledge is not "a skimming
+and smattering such as any alert and bright stock speculator would
+naturally pick up in years of experience as a broker and manipulator,"
+but the straight brand which the "Standard Oil" and the "System" so like
+to impress into their service when they run up against it in their
+continuous robbing excursions. You may judge that my knowledge is not of
+the smattering kind when I say that for years, in spite of my refusal to
+join the band and wear the collar, whenever Rogers and Rockefeller had a
+particularly hard nut to crack they called me in to try it on my
+"<i>knows</i>."</p>
+
+<p>2. Yes, I am aware that there have always been, and that there will
+always continue to be, very rich men, and that there cannot be many of
+them, and that where they are there must be very poor ones. And I also
+know that no honest man, rich or poor, objects to the necessarily few
+very rich ones who have honestly acquired great fortunes as the reward
+of their own or their ancestors' labors of body or brain in the interest
+of all the people. Don't misunderstand me&mdash;no honest man or woman can
+object to the <i>necessary</i> great fortunes, but all honest American men
+and women do object, and are getting ready to make their objection
+heard, to all unnecessary great fortunes, "made dollar" fortunes gained
+by trick of finance or evasion of law, or the brutal and ruthless stock
+manipulation of recent years. The sooner the "System" and the other
+possessors of these "unnecessaries" realize that their doom is sealed
+and dig for the cyclone cellars, the quicker the American people will
+get through with the strenuous house-cleaning job for which they are
+just rolling up their sleeves.</p>
+
+<p>3. I do know there must be billions of dollars' worth of stocks and
+bonds in America. I also know that among these legitimate billions of
+dollars are now mixed other billions<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_545" id="Page_545">[545]</a></span> of dollars that have no proper
+title to being, save the greed of the "System." That while the existence
+of certain billions of dollars' worth of stocks and bonds is proof
+positive of the great prosperity of the whole country and the whole
+people, it does not follow that their existence is proof that the hands
+they are found in are the hands they should rest in. Further, I assert
+that the existence of other billions of dollars' worth of stocks and
+bonds is proof positive that the laws have been violated and that the
+great prosperity of the whole country has been used as the excuse and
+motive of this violation, and declare that, in my opinion, it is the
+duty of honest men and women to do all in their power to shrink
+fictitious securities and to destroy them; and, further, that it is the
+duty of all honest men to lend a hand so that the legitimate billions of
+dollars of stocks and bonds may be returned to the hands of those who
+are legally entitled to them.</p>
+
+<p>4. I am aware that the people owned billions of these stocks and bonds
+three years ago, and also that if they had then sold them back to the
+"System," even at the price they had paid for them, and had kept their
+money in the banks without interest, or had even buried it in the ground
+or kept it in their stockings for a year, they would have been able to
+buy back for fifty cents on the dollar what they had sold the "System,"
+thereby making for themselves billions of dollars and impoverishing the
+"System" by just as many billions as they had made. You know that the
+"System," after it had loaded up the people with its stocks, "shook them
+out," and thereby gathered in half the billions of money the people had
+paid for what they bought.</p>
+
+<p>Let me illustrate. The people bought of the "System" for 760 millions of
+dollars the Steel Trust stocks and bonds, and after the people had the
+"System's" chromos and the "System" had the people's 760 millions of
+savings, the "System" caused the price to be cut in two. Then it bought
+back the Steel Trust's chromos for 380 millions, thereby transferring
+from the people to the "System," in this one instance alone, 380
+millions. And, further, after the people had been shaken out of their
+stocks and bonds and the mil<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_546" id="Page_546">[546]</a></span>lions of their savings&mdash;in the Steel Trust
+alone 380 millions&mdash;the "System," having these securities in its
+possession, began to inflate prices for the purpose of again selling to
+the people; in December last they had inflated the prices of billions of
+stocks and bonds to their old false figures, and were then preparing to
+unload them on to the people; in the case of the Steel Trust stocks and
+bonds the price had again mounted to 760 millions. In compliance with my
+warnings the people began in December last to unload upon the "System"
+the billions they then held at these inflated prices, and they have
+continued to do so ever since, and have suffered no hardship by the
+forced selling into which I have frightened them. I further know that
+they will find good use for this money at a later period in buying back
+from the "System" these same securities at their true worth; in other
+words, that before I am through with my work they will be able to
+repurchase from the "System" for 380 millions or less the Steel stocks
+and bonds now selling for 760 millions.</p>
+
+<p>5. I do know that one of the most colossal impositions ever perpetrated
+on the whole people of any nation is that formula which the "System" has
+so insidiously instilled into the minds of the American people during
+the last century, to wit: that they must do nothing which might disturb
+the "System" in its use at two to four per cent. per annum of all the
+people's savings, deposited in banks and trust companies throughout the
+country; that if they do, there will be a Wall Street panic, and thereby
+all the people will be made to suffer great hardships. On the contrary,
+I know that if the people do what is necessary to shake off the
+"System's" strangling grip upon their savings, the "System" will suffer
+death, and everlasting profit and advantage will accrue to the nation.
+Though it be necessary for the people to withdraw from the banks and
+trust and insurance companies their billions of savings, and even though
+such withdrawal must cause a temporary business crash and the failure of
+many of the financial institutions of the country, the sacrifice would
+be many thousand times compensated for by the benefits that would follow
+in its train. I will go<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_547" id="Page_547">[547]</a></span> further and state that if such radical action
+should become necessary, the people should willingly face the failure
+and destruction of one-half the banking institutions of New York if by
+doing so they could absolutely destroy the "System." But do not
+misunderstand me&mdash;the simultaneous withdrawal of the people's savings
+from the banks and trust companies throughout the United States would be
+such a terrible temporary hardship that nothing could justify it but the
+absolute necessity for uprooting and eradicating the "System"; I should
+not hesitate, however, to face the full responsibility for such a move
+if the "System" cannot be destroyed in any other way, even though I were
+sure I should be lynched or torn limb from limb by those people who have
+been crazed and deluded, not by my teachings, but by the damnable
+doctrines and acts of the "System" and its votaries.</p>
+
+<p>6. I am well aware that the result of the people's selling their stocks
+and bonds in concert and the withdrawal of their savings would bring a
+tremendous drop in the price of stocks and bonds. <i>This is what I am
+working for</i>, but I am proceeding in such a way that I believe when the
+crash comes the people will be free from their stocks and bonds. Your
+proposition that the bears will be the only beneficiaries I regard as
+rot; on the contrary, I know that the people will benefit a dollar where
+the combined bears will benefit a cent. Pardon my giving you here an A B
+C lesson in finance&mdash;I know a bear is no more dishonest than a bull.
+When a man tries to put up the price of stocks and bonds, he is a bull.
+When he tries to put them down, he is a bear. If a bull tries to put
+prices to a point of fair worth, he is an honest bull. When he tries to
+put them any higher than fair worth, he is a dishonest bull, for he does
+so for the purpose of obtaining from the one to whom the stocks are sold
+a greater gain than he is entitled to, and always by false pretences.
+When a bear tries to put stocks from an artificially high price to their
+fair worth, he is an honest bear. When he tries to put them any lower,
+he is a dishonest bear, because he does so for the purpose of purchasing
+from their owners stocks or bonds at less than their fair price, that he
+may pocket the difference between the artificially low price<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_548" id="Page_548">[548]</a></span> he makes
+and the higher price at which he has sold, and this profit is procured
+by false pretence. You, and thousands like you, should get out of your
+heads the false notion that a bear is necessarily less honest than a
+bull.</p>
+
+<p>7. Life insurance is a great institution, and should be a sacred
+institution&mdash;<i>provided</i> it is honest life insurance. He who would, for
+any dishonest reason, disturb the people's confidence in honest life
+insurance I consider a criminal; but I am sure that one who, having the
+power to awaken the people to their peril, yet stands silently by and
+suffers them to be bled and plundered in the name of life insurance is
+even a greater scoundrel.</p>
+
+<p><i>What is life insurance&mdash;honest life insurance?</i> A contract between two
+parties by which the first agrees, in return for a certain fixed charge
+per year, to pay to the family or other beneficiary of the second party
+a stipulated sum in case of said second party's death; but it is plainly
+understood between them that the annual charge exacted by the first
+party shall be only such an amount as will insure the carrying out of
+the contract, plus whatever is the legitimate expense of conducting the
+business connected therewith. Under no circumstances would I say aught
+in disparagement of such a contract, but if I did not lift my voice
+against such life insurance as is carried on by the Mutual, New York
+Life, and Equitable companies, knowing what I do know, I should be a
+deep-dyed scoundrel.</p>
+
+<p>Life insurance as it has been conducted in the past and as it is being
+conducted at present by these three companies, I regard as the most
+damnable imposition ever practised upon the people of any nation. Under
+the pretence that it is necessary to enable life-insurance companies to
+carry out their contracts, two million policy-holders are annually
+tricked into contributing from their savings sums which not only insure
+the performance of these contracts but enable the officers and
+trustees&mdash;mere servants of the policy-holders&mdash;to maintain the most
+gigantic stock-gambling machine the world has ever known. Through its
+operation the companies themselves not only make and lose millions at
+single throws of the dice, but the bands of schemers whose services it
+is<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_549" id="Page_549">[549]</a></span> pretended are essential for the transaction of the life-insurance
+business filch for themselves huge individual fortunes. Piled on to
+these excessive charges are additional amounts which enable these
+tricksters to maintain palaces, hotels, bars, and every conceivable kind
+of business, to pay for armies of lackeys and employees and private
+servants of officers and trustees, and for debauches and banquets which
+vie with any given by the kings and queens of the most extravagant and
+profligate nations on earth; in addition, enough more to accumulate huge
+and unnecessary funds&mdash;which are juggled with for the enrichment of
+individuals. Such wicked exactions and shameful extravagances constitute
+an imposition of the most wanton and criminal character, and those
+responsible should be sent to State prison for life, as too vicious and
+dangerous to be allowed freedom among an honest people.</p>
+
+<p>I would say further that the trickery and frauds that have been
+practised by the New York Life and the Mutual companies are fully as bad
+as, if not worse than, those of the Equitable, now publicly confessed.</p>
+
+<p>8. It is difficult for me to answer such a question&mdash;just as difficult
+as it is for the mature man to answer the question of the child, "If the
+moon is made of green cheese, what kind of rat-traps do they use in
+heaven?" The "System" for forty years has taught the people that it is
+impossible for them to improve upon the conditions which the "System"
+has moulded for its own plundering purposes, yet I have a simple Remedy,
+readily understood, which I believe the people will eagerly embrace as
+soon as it is given them. This Remedy is adjusted to laws now in force;
+and when it is put into operation those who have acquired enormous
+fortunes by trickery and fraud will find themselves deprived of their
+ill-gotten gains by the simple application of natural laws to which the
+said Remedy affords leverage and action. All honest people, the richest
+as well as the poorest, will be benefited in fair and just proportion.
+Once the Remedy is in force, it will be out of the power of the
+trickster and the thief to accumulate overnight scores of millions,
+although the Edisons, the Stephensons, the Morses, or any man who by
+brain or body does those things for his fellows which they<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_550" id="Page_550">[550]</a></span> cannot do
+for themselves, will continue to receive that great reward which the
+whole people in their wisdom and generosity decide is fair for
+exceptional services; the common miner, too, when he discovers the
+hidden gold, silver, or copper in the earth will obtain the same return
+that he is entitled to under to-day's laws, or even better.</p>
+
+<p>9. This story is written, as I have explained so many times before,
+simply and solely in performance of my duty toward my country and its
+people and without hope or desire for reward of any kind.</p>
+
+<p>10. I do not own any part of <i>Everybody's Magazine</i>, nor have I any
+money interest in it, directly or indirectly. I have not made a dollar
+from <i>Everybody's Magazine</i> directly or indirectly, but, on the
+contrary, have spent hundreds of thousands of dollars to assist in
+getting my story into the hands of the people.</p>
+
+<p>11. Before my first advertisement in December, at a time when I did not
+know how the people would take it, and when I did not know whether
+stocks would go up or down, I took my chance in the open of making loss
+or profit and did sell large amounts of stock short, making some
+hundreds of thousands of dollars profit; but when in the middle of the
+disturbance I saw how seriously the people took my message and that
+there might be a great panic, I began to buy, and thereby sacrificed a
+million of profits. And, since then, that is, after I realized that the
+people would respond to my warnings, I have refrained from going short
+in advance of these advertisements, because I desire to keep strictly
+apart transactions conducted for my own personal account and operations
+I am directing for the benefit and safeguarding of the public. I am
+determined to use every means in my power to keep the people out of a
+dangerous market and to concentrate the billions of stocks in the hands
+of the "System," and am not actuated by any desire or necessity for
+gain. Already the "System's" votaries are tottering under their load and
+it is certain that in the coming months they will employ every possible
+means to persuade the public back into their trap. More than ever, then,
+is it necessary to be firm against their blandishments, for when the
+crash comes it will be a terrific<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_551" id="Page_551">[551]</a></span> one, and those who have great
+holdings of speculative securities will surely find their values cut in
+half. Since my first public announcement I have not made enough out of
+market operations to pay even the expenses of any particular
+advertisement.</p>
+
+<p>12. I shall not commit any crime; I have too much veneration for the
+laws of our country; although let it be understood that I may, at any
+time, commit what some hireling judge of the "System" may call a crime,
+<i>for I am going to call upon the American people to withdraw their
+deposited savings at the proper time; and the proper time will be that
+time when I am absolutely sure they will withdraw them. But I shall not
+resort to this last move unless it is certain that the "System" cannot
+be crushed in any other way</i>.</p>
+
+<p>13. I will first thank God and then proceed to assist in burying the
+corpse of the "System."</p>
+
+<p>14. The "System" will be brought to its knees; stocks will fall to
+figures representing their legitimate values and the public will
+reinvest its money therein, and thus regain control of the great
+transportation and industrial interests of the country which the
+"System" has filched from them.</p>
+
+<p>15. I say unqualifiedly to the American people that this Remedy of mine
+will, when adopted, correct the greatest evil in the financial system of
+this country. That while it is simple it is absolutely new, and that
+neither I nor any one else can possibly benefit moneywise from it except
+in the some proportion as all other people in the country benefit.</p>
+
+<p>16. My Remedy was worked out before 1894, and in that year, one year
+before I had met any of the "Standard Oil" people, it was so far
+perfected that in London I laid before Joseph Pulitzer, then and now
+owner of the New York <i>World</i>, the identical first printed plan that I
+will print in <i>Everybody's Magazine</i> when I judge the people are ready
+to receive it.</p>
+
+<p>17. I unqualifiedly say to you and to the American people that I lost
+millions of dollars more in what you call the Amalgamated swindle than I
+made, and that I lost trying to make good my word to the Amalgamated
+subscribers.</p>
+
+<p>18. I have spent much more money, hundreds of thou<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_552" id="Page_552">[552]</a></span>sands of dollars
+more, in getting this work, "Frenzied Finance," into the hands of the
+people than I have made through anything in any way connected with it.</p>
+
+
+<p class='center'>THE CRIME OF AMALGAMATED</p>
+
+<p>Many of my readers had difficulty in following the intricacies of the
+great crime of Amalgamated and I had many letters desiring further
+explanation of that act.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p class='right'><span class="smcap">Peake's Island, Me.</span>, May 31, 1905.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">T. W. Lawson, Esq.</span></p>
+
+<p><i>Dear Sir</i>: Have just finished June number of "Frenzied
+Finance."</p>
+
+<p>You are running a "primary class" of High Finance for
+millions; have been able to follow you up to this number,
+and my apology in writing to you is to state that I don't
+understand this lesson and I believe I am of the average
+intelligence of your readers.</p>
+
+<p>I am not clear on the following points, and if you can take
+the time and have the desire to do so, I should be glad to
+have you set my gray matter moving in the right direction.</p>
+
+<p>1. Why should subscribers think that a company, who had as
+good a thing as advertised, would sell the entire stock,
+thus giving an opportunity to any financier to gather in
+fifty-one per cent. and practically take away its good
+thing?</p>
+
+<p>2. How would it have been possible for you with the
+$5,000,000 from the shares it was originally the plan to
+sell to protect those 50,000 shares on a bear market with
+700,000 shares in Messrs. Rogers and Rockefeller's
+possession?</p>
+
+<p>3. Why would it not have been a crime to dispose of only
+50,000 shares when the whole 750,000 were advertised?</p>
+
+<p>4. Messrs. Rogers and Rockefeller were the Amalgamated
+Company after purchasing the capital stock from the
+office-boys, were they not?</p>
+
+<p>5. If Rogers and Rockefeller paid for their shares, what
+became of the Amalgamated Company's $75,000,000 secured by
+sale of stock?</p>
+
+<p>These may sound foolish to you, but I'm interested and
+should like to understand.</p>
+
+<p>Permit me to state that I admire your pluck and ability and
+wish you success in your remedy, whatever it may be.</p>
+
+<p class='indent1'>Respectfully yours,</p>
+<p class='right'>(Signed) &mdash;&mdash;</p></div>
+
+<p>I replied:</p>
+
+<p>Your first question is a hard one to answer, as it goes to the very
+foundation of "the stock-market." In the ideal<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_553" id="Page_553">[553]</a></span> operation of
+stock-markets, owners of valuable properties should always allow the
+public to join in their "good things" at fair prices, because all who
+thus participated would make money and would be ready for the next "good
+thing," and so on to the end. On the other hand, if the public were only
+invited into the "bad things," in time they would not come in on
+anything, good or bad, and there would be no stock-market. The
+foundation of stock-markets, like all other kinds of markets, is the
+public interest therein&mdash;for it is the people who own the great bulk of
+the money in the country, and its aggregate is far beyond the amount
+that the very few rich men possess. Stock-markets are no different, at
+least should be no different, from horse-markets, boot and shoe markets,
+or mowing-machine markets. The horse-markets whose dealers sell to their
+patrons good horses at fair prices, succeed; those whose dealers offer
+only the "culls" and "no goods," fail.</p>
+
+<p>2. Had I been able to keep 700,000 shares in the hands of Rogers and
+Rockefeller with but 50,000 in the hands of the public, Rogers and
+Rockefeller would never have permitted the stock to go down, because
+they would have lost $700,000 at every point drop and by "bearing" they
+could make only $50,000 a point drop. Stock schemers never "bear" a
+stock of which they own a large majority and the public a small
+minority.</p>
+
+<p>3. It would have been no crime if Rogers and Rockefeller had subscribed
+honestly&mdash;that is, according to the advertised terms&mdash;for enough to
+secure the stipulated 700,000 shares, because there was nothing in the
+conditions which excluded them or any one from subscribing. The crime
+was in the way they obtained the amount thus retained and in their
+"intentions" subsequently executed, also in the selling of $27,000,000
+worth of the stock when they had pledged their word solemnly to me in my
+capacity as protector of the people that they would sell but $5,000,000.</p>
+
+<p>4. Yes.</p>
+
+<p>5. The office-boys, equipped with the check of $75,000,000 provided by
+the National City Bank, were organized into a corporation and turned
+over to the treasurer of the new cor<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_554" id="Page_554">[554]</a></span>poration the $75,000,000 check in
+payment for the capital stock of the company. The company then turned
+this same check over to Rogers and Rockefeller for the mining properties
+comprising the consolidation, for which Rogers and Rockefeller had paid
+thirty-nine millions of dollars; then Rogers and Rockefeller paid back
+to the office-boys the seventy-five-million check and received from them
+the seventy-five-million stock. The check was returned to the bank by
+the office-boys, who stood where they stood at the beginning of the
+transaction, and canceled. Thus Rogers and Rockefeller at the close of
+the transaction had in their possession the entire capital stock of the
+Amalgamated Company.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>Another correspondent had even greater difficulties with the problem:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p class='right'>May 29, 1905.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Thomas W. Lawson,</span><br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Boston, Mass.</p>
+
+<p><i>Dear Sir</i>: The writer of this letter has had much
+experience in literary matters, but does not remember ever
+reading after any one who could hold his interest as you
+can. He is an author himself (though not so well known as
+you), and feels some little ability to measure and
+appreciate not only literary worth, but the intentions of
+the author in hand. From the "internal evidences" alone he
+has a settled conviction that you are perfectly honest in
+this crusade, and from the bottom of his heart wishes you
+Godspeed.</p>
+
+<p>A few points are certainly not clear to the ordinary reader.
+Closely as I have followed you I cannot see some things as
+you think they should be seen. For instance:</p>
+
+<p>1. Just why were you so fearfully wrought up at the thought
+of the public's getting ten millions instead of five? If you
+had such confidence in the gigantic possibilities of
+Amalgamated, why should you not have been glad to let the
+poor suffering public have ten millions, or twenty millions,
+instead of a paltry five millions? Was this hydrophobia of
+yours at the mere suggestion prompted by a perfectly pure or
+by a selfish motive? At the first did <i>you</i> not plan to let
+the public have very much more than this? Was it not your
+thought, I mean, that the public should be in the thing
+about equally with you promoters? Then why not welcome the
+suggestion of Rogers? I do not understand this at all.</p>
+
+<p>2. About that "bogus subscription." Did you not all plan to
+do about the same thing? Did you not intend to have Rogers
+put in a towering subscription, large enough to cover the
+situation, and to permit<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_555" id="Page_555">[555]</a></span> the bank to reject all above the
+five millions to be allowed the public? I believe <i>you</i>
+expected Rogers to make it "genuine" by really putting it in
+in time, and by laying down his check for the five per
+cent.; but, as you fully expected to realize on the thing so
+quickly, did you not understand that the whole of this
+"subscription" would not have to be paid at all, and that
+your "check" was after all only technical? If I am right,
+how did this differ so greatly from what Rogers did? Was not
+your avowed object to cheat the public into thinking they
+were to be allowed to subscribe to seventy-five millions,
+when actually you were only going to let them subscribe to
+five? And if, on that last day, you knew the subscriptions
+were pouring in in such a flood, and knew that offers of a
+big premium were then being made, how in the world did the
+idea of letting the outside public have twenty millions or
+so (on which to immediately realize this premium) seem so
+abhorrent to you, when you professed to be looking after
+their interests?</p>
+
+<p>The more I think of these points, the more mixed I become,
+and I think many, very many of your readers are in the same
+boat. Your illustration of the horse-race does not clear the
+matter a particle. It certainly does appear on the face of
+the facts you present that the people who did not get any
+stock were the lucky ones, whether Rogers's precise action
+was criminal or not. You say yourself that it would have
+been good all round if you had pricked the bubble that
+night&mdash;that is, if you had then and there prevented anybody
+from getting any premiums, from buying or selling a share.
+Then in the name of reason, why was it not really good for
+those who were rejected, that they were left out?</p>
+
+<p>3. Now, in plain language, brief and straight, what would
+you have deemed the right thing, that night at the bank?
+With hundreds of millions subscribed, how many shares would
+you have thought the public should have? How many do you
+think now? And how should the balance have been kept for you
+promoters? Perhaps in answering this you will make it plain.</p>
+
+<p class='indent1'>Sincerely yours,</p>
+<p class='right'>(Signed) &mdash;&mdash;</p></div>
+
+<p>In answer to Question 1, I said: All my dealings had been conducted on
+the basis of selling to the public a fair amount of the first section of
+the consolidation and I had no tremors as to consequences. I knew that
+whatever allotment was made them would be worth all they were to pay for
+it, for I was personally familiar with the value of the properties of
+which the section was to be composed. When Mr. Rogers, as I have
+explained in my story, substituted, under circumstances that rendered me
+defenceless,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_556" id="Page_556">[556]</a></span> an entirely new set of mines for those programmed for the
+first section&mdash;properties about which I knew only what he told me&mdash;from
+that time on my only guarantee against the jugglery and fraud I feared
+was to keep in the hands of Rogers and Rockefeller so large a part of
+this stock that they could play no tricks on the public without
+themselves suffering much more severely. If they regarded the stock as
+so valuable a possession that it was a security to be held as "Standard
+Oil," then their attitude to it guaranteed its value, and no harm could
+come to any one. When, however, they showed a readiness to part with
+more shares than the number they had promised me they would not go
+beyond, my fears were aroused, for all the contingencies I dreaded at
+once became imminent. Besides, such action was proof positive that in
+their opinion the mines were not worth the price at which they were
+selling them. Later on, when I had practical evidence that they were
+unloading and proof positive that they were juggling the stock, I felt
+certain that these facts constituted proof positive that they had lied
+to me about the cost and worth of the Amalgamated mines.</p>
+
+<p>My answer to Question 1 practically disposes of part of Question 2, and
+my replies to the other inquiries above take care of another part.</p>
+
+<p>I did expect Mr. Rogers to make an honest subscription for that part of
+the stock which we were to retain and which I was doing all in my power
+to have him retain, not because I desired to hold all of the good thing
+and so cheat the public, but because I did not think it safe for the
+public to hold so many shares that it would be to Rogers's and
+Rockefeller's interest to "bear" prices later and take shares away from
+the holders at slaughter prices. In one sense it was not fair to lead
+people to imagine that they were being offered $75,000,000 of an issue
+when as a matter of fact they were really offered only $5,000,000, but
+if only $5,000,000 were offered no harm could come to them, because
+every one who got some of it would make a profit, and those who received
+none would not suffer.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_557" id="Page_557">[557]</a></span></p>
+
+<p class='center'>STEEL COMMON AND PREFERRED</p>
+
+<p>A definite accusation of misrepresentation was presented in a letter
+that came to me early in the year in criticism of Steel facts and
+figures I had used in illustrating the artificial advance and depression
+of stocks:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p class='right'><span class="smcap">Cincinnati</span>, O., January 24, 1905.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Thomas W. Lawson</span>.</p>
+
+<p><i>Sir</i>: Lawson, you are both a fakir and a fool. A fakir
+because you misrepresent, and a fool because you do not
+begin to understand the people.</p>
+
+<p>When you said the stockholders of the Steel Corporation lost
+$500,000,000, you knew that you lied. Because the difference
+in price of the stock to-day and when it was quoted on the
+New York Stock Exchange for the first time in 1901 does not
+approach that amount. I say that you knew this when you made
+that statement, but you thought and hoped that the general
+public would not be posted in the matter.</p>
+
+<p>The whole substance of your magazine articles has been
+nothing but half-truths, and a half-truth is worse than a
+lie. You know that it is to gratify your personal spite, and
+not to help the general public, that you have engaged in
+your frenzied writings. The public is wiser than you think,
+although your conceit has blinded you to that fact.</p>
+
+<p class='indent1'>Respectfully,</p>
+<p class='right'><span class="smcap">F. F. Methven</span>.</p></div>
+
+<p>This frenzied nincompoop is evidently ignorant of the fact that
+360,281,000 shares of Steel Preferred were sold to the public at over
+$100 per share, and that 5,500,000 shares of Steel Common were sold at
+over $50 per share, or nearly $300,000,000, and that months later, when
+the people were compelled to resell to the "System," they could get only
+$50 for this preferred stock and $10 for the common, while the
+$551,000,000 of bonds depreciated in value over $100,000,000 more. What
+this critic desired to say was that, at the present price of Steel
+stocks, no such loss as $500,000,000 is shown, which proves my
+oft-repeated contention&mdash;the "System," having "shaken out" the public
+and acquired their holdings at fifty and ten respectively, is now
+engaged in putting the price back to the old figure, intending to repeat
+the robbery process later. A votary of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_558" id="Page_558">[558]</a></span> the "System," whom I know quite
+well, said to me a few weeks ago:</p>
+
+<p>"Lawson, you keep chasing 'Frenzied Finance' will-o'-the-wisps while the
+rest of us are pulling in the dollars, and see where you will come out
+in the end. Look what I've done: I sold 200,000 shares of Steel Common
+for $8,000,000. It cost me $3,000,000. I made $5,000,000. I then
+'shorted' 100,000 at $50 and bought it back at $12. I made $3,800,000. I
+then bought 300,000 at 10. It's now 30. When I sell out at 40, I shall
+have $9,000,000 more, making $18,000,000, without turning a hair or
+risking a dollar. With prizes such as these a man can stand a lot of
+frenzied hard names, can't he?"</p>
+
+
+<p class='center'>THE REMEDY</p>
+
+<p>As I have explained on another page of the "Critics," my Remedy cannot
+be dealt with save at considerable length and with living, tangible
+illustrations. I have purposely abstained from starting it until I have
+the American public educated to the point of comprehending its value and
+appreciating its practicability so far as to be ready to put it into
+operation. During the year I have had thousands of letters in regard to
+it, the following being a fair example:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p class='right'><span class="smcap">Topeka, Kan</span>., January 5, 1905.</p>
+
+<p><i>Dear Sirs</i>: I have followed Mr. Lawson's article very
+closely and, as I understand it, he intimates that he has a
+remedy for the rotten condition of affairs now prevailing.
+What I, and many more of your readers, would like to know
+is, whether Mr. Lawson, in offering a remedy, is taking into
+consideration the 22,000,000 people of the country who
+neither invest in stocks nor hold any amount of insurance,
+or is his remedy meant merely to protect the four million
+small capitalists from being eaten up by what he terms the
+"System."</p>
+
+<p>It is very evident to some of us that if he cannot show us
+how to protect the great majority of the people who,
+although they are not even small capitalists, are the ones
+who are really footing the bills, his remedy will not be the
+grand success he anticipates.</p>
+
+<p class='right'><span class="smcap">J. P. Ferriter</span>.</p></div>
+
+<p>My Remedy will benefit the whole American people. It<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_559" id="Page_559">[559]</a></span> will help most the
+man who nowadays in America deserves most to be helped&mdash;the producer,
+who to-day is exchanging the efforts of all his working hours for the
+bare necessities of himself and family; not those bare necessities which
+the white slaves of Europe are ground down to believe are their only
+requirements, but those which the free and enlightened American
+believes, and has taught his family to believe, should be his
+necessities.</p>
+
+<p>It is intended to benefit most the man who has nothing left over after
+paying his bills Saturday night but the terrors of not being able to
+meet them the coming week. It would indeed be a parody on a Remedy if it
+did not bring relief to this class.</p>
+
+<p>Next, my Remedy will benefit that great middle class whose savings go to
+make up the billions in the savings-banks, national banks, trust and
+insurance companies, which are used by the "System" to secure for
+themselves a hundred, a thousand, and ten thousand per cent. interest on
+<i>their</i> capital, while the owners of these billions must be content with
+two and a half to four per cent. per annum; and</p>
+
+<p>Next, it will benefit that class which possesses large fortunes honestly
+acquired, inasmuch as it will enable them to know what there is behind
+their investments. None but those who have plundered the
+people&mdash;acquired overnight fortunes many times larger than any honest
+lifetime efforts could possibly bring&mdash;can possibly be hurt by the
+application of my Remedy.</p>
+
+<p>You are right&mdash;any remedy which would do other than what mine proposes
+to do would be a farce.</p>
+
+<div class='transnote'>
+<a name="transnote" id="transnote"></a><h3>Transcriber's Notes:</h3>
+
+<p>Page <a href="#Page_vi">vi</a>: Scheheherezade <i>sic</i></p>
+
+<p>Page <a href="#Page_40">40</a>: Missing "l" added to "loser" in Footnote 2</p>
+
+<p>Page <a href="#Page_59">59</a>: guerilla <i>sic</i></p>
+
+<p>Page <a href="#Page_62">62</a>: dumfounded <i>sic</i></p>
+
+<p>Page <a href="#Page_64">64</a>: villany <i>sic</i></p>
+
+<p>Page <a href="#Page_99">99</a>: gayly <i>sic</i></p>
+
+<p>Page <a href="#Page_107">107</a>: Machiavelian <i>sic</i></p>
+
+<p>Page <a href="#Page_134">134</a>: Machiavelian <i>sic</i></p>
+
+<p>Page <a href="#Page_154">154</a>: "slighest" amended to "slightest"</p>
+
+<p>Page <a href="#Page_175">175</a>: Comma added after "perjury" in Footnote 12</p>
+
+<p>Page <a href="#Page_193">193</a>: "metres" amended to "meters"</p>
+
+<p>Page <a href="#Page_277">277</a>: dumfounded <i>sic</i></p>
+
+<p>Page <a href="#Page_289">289</a>: Opening quotes added to "Every one of us...."</p>
+
+<p>Page <a href="#Page_348">348</a>: millionnaire <i>sic</i></p>
+
+<p>Page <a href="#Page_352">352</a>: Comma added after "defalcation"</p>
+
+<p>Page <a href="#Page_388">388</a>: milllionnaire's <i>sic</i></p>
+
+<p>Page <a href="#Page_447">447</a>: cohoots <i>sic</i></p>
+
+<p>Page <a href="#Page_471">471</a>: "very rich men" amended to "very rich man"</p>
+
+<p>Page <a href="#Page_478">478</a>: haling <i>sic</i></p>
+
+<p>Page <a href="#Page_482">482</a>: Corea and Porto Rico <i>sic</i></p>
+
+<p>Page <a href="#Page_490">490</a>: "managment" amended to "management"</p>
+
+<p>Page <a href="#Page_548">548</a>: "insuarnce" amended to "insurance"</p>
+
+<p>Hyphenation has generally been standardized. However, when hyphenated and
+unhyphenated versions of a word each occur an equal number of times, both
+versions have been retained (baseball/base-ball; blackjack/black-jack;
+blacklisted/black-listed; chessboard/chess-board;
+cooperation/co-operation; downtown/down-town; handshake/hand-shake;
+headlight/head-light; headlines/head-lines; setback/set-back;
+typewritten/type-written; uptown/up-town; viewpoint/view-point).</p></div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Frenzied Finance, by Thomas W. Lawson
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK FRENZIED FINANCE ***
+
+***** This file should be named 26330-h.htm or 26330-h.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+ http://www.gutenberg.org/2/6/3/3/26330/
+
+Produced by Barbara Tozier and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
+will be renamed.
+
+Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
+one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
+(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
+permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
+set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
+copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
+protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
+Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
+charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
+do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
+rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
+such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
+research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
+practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
+subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
+redistribution.
+
+
+
+*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
+
+THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
+
+To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at
+http://gutenberg.org/license).
+
+
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works
+
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
+all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
+If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
+terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
+entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
+
+1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
+and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
+or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
+collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
+individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
+located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
+copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
+works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
+are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
+Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
+freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
+this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
+the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
+keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
+
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
+a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
+the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
+before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
+creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
+Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
+the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
+States.
+
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
+access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
+whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
+phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
+copied or distributed:
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
+from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
+posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
+and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
+or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
+with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
+work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
+through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
+Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
+1.E.9.
+
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
+terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
+to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
+permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
+
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
+
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm License.
+
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
+word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
+distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
+"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
+posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
+you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
+copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
+request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
+form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
+that
+
+- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
+ owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
+ has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
+ Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
+ must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
+ prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
+ returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
+ sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
+ address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
+ the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+ License. You must require such a user to return or
+ destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
+ and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
+ Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
+ money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
+ of receipt of the work.
+
+- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
+forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
+both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
+Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
+Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
+
+1.F.
+
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
+collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
+"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
+property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
+computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
+your equipment.
+
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
+of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH F3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
+your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
+the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
+refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
+providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
+receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
+is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
+opportunities to fix the problem.
+
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS' WITH NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
+WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
+If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
+law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
+interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
+the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
+provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
+
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
+with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
+promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
+harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
+that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
+or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
+work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
+Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
+
+
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
+including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
+because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
+people in all walks of life.
+
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need, is critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
+To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
+and the Foundation web page at http://www.pglaf.org.
+
+
+Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
+Foundation
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Its 501(c)(3) letter is posted at
+http://pglaf.org/fundraising. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
+permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
+
+The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
+Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
+throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at
+809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email
+business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact
+information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official
+page at http://pglaf.org
+
+For additional contact information:
+ Dr. Gregory B. Newby
+ Chief Executive and Director
+ gbnewby@pglaf.org
+
+
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
+spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
+SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
+particular state visit http://pglaf.org
+
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+
+Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations.
+To donate, please visit: http://pglaf.org/donate
+
+
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works.
+
+Professor Michael S. Hart is the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
+concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
+with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project
+Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
+
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+
+Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
+
+ http://www.gutenberg.org
+
+This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
+
+
+</pre>
+
+</body>
+</html>
diff --git a/26330-h/images/fig001.jpg b/26330-h/images/fig001.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..2a8489a
--- /dev/null
+++ b/26330-h/images/fig001.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/26330-h/images/fig001th.jpg b/26330-h/images/fig001th.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..d3bfaf6
--- /dev/null
+++ b/26330-h/images/fig001th.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/26330-h/images/fig002.jpg b/26330-h/images/fig002.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..40174de
--- /dev/null
+++ b/26330-h/images/fig002.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/26330-h/images/fig003.jpg b/26330-h/images/fig003.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..b5fd51a
--- /dev/null
+++ b/26330-h/images/fig003.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/26330-h/images/fig003th.jpg b/26330-h/images/fig003th.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..f50444f
--- /dev/null
+++ b/26330-h/images/fig003th.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/26330-h/images/fig004.jpg b/26330-h/images/fig004.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..f30b025
--- /dev/null
+++ b/26330-h/images/fig004.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/26330-h/images/fig004th.jpg b/26330-h/images/fig004th.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..d1cf9fb
--- /dev/null
+++ b/26330-h/images/fig004th.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/26330-h/images/fig005.jpg b/26330-h/images/fig005.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..f4bb546
--- /dev/null
+++ b/26330-h/images/fig005.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/26330-h/images/fig005th.jpg b/26330-h/images/fig005th.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..05971c3
--- /dev/null
+++ b/26330-h/images/fig005th.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/26330-h/images/fig006.jpg b/26330-h/images/fig006.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..e1dfb3e
--- /dev/null
+++ b/26330-h/images/fig006.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/26330-h/images/fig006th.jpg b/26330-h/images/fig006th.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..33470c2
--- /dev/null
+++ b/26330-h/images/fig006th.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/26330-h/images/fig007.jpg b/26330-h/images/fig007.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..07992c3
--- /dev/null
+++ b/26330-h/images/fig007.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/26330-h/images/fig007th.jpg b/26330-h/images/fig007th.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..43828de
--- /dev/null
+++ b/26330-h/images/fig007th.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/26330-h/images/fig008.jpg b/26330-h/images/fig008.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..7dd1e37
--- /dev/null
+++ b/26330-h/images/fig008.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/26330-h/images/fig008th.jpg b/26330-h/images/fig008th.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..8d69ce4
--- /dev/null
+++ b/26330-h/images/fig008th.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/26330-h/images/fig009.jpg b/26330-h/images/fig009.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..8f0b6f8
--- /dev/null
+++ b/26330-h/images/fig009.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/26330-h/images/fig009th.jpg b/26330-h/images/fig009th.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..8daa440
--- /dev/null
+++ b/26330-h/images/fig009th.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/26330-h/images/fig010.jpg b/26330-h/images/fig010.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..1bfc935
--- /dev/null
+++ b/26330-h/images/fig010.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/26330-h/images/fig010th.jpg b/26330-h/images/fig010th.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..f5c7863
--- /dev/null
+++ b/26330-h/images/fig010th.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/26330-h/images/fig011.jpg b/26330-h/images/fig011.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..ea55cd7
--- /dev/null
+++ b/26330-h/images/fig011.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/26330-h/images/fig011th.jpg b/26330-h/images/fig011th.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..ef55da2
--- /dev/null
+++ b/26330-h/images/fig011th.jpg
Binary files differ