242 The Stock Market Crash—And After of the market, the withheld securities might be judiciously fed into the stream of sales. These rallies were further helped by the expedient of extra divi- dend declarations on the part of such market leaders as United States Steel, American Can and others, out of their ample surpluses, derived, in most cases, from earnings plowed-back into the companies over a series of years. Aid to Stock-holding Employees Many large corporations which had sold stocks to employees, including United States Steel and Stand- ard Oil of New York, undertook to protect the hold- ings of their employees by making loans on the stock above the prices which had prevailed on the New York Stock Exchange. Thus the Standard Oil Com- pany of New York accepted its own shares for loans to employees at a price $11 above the prices which had been ruling. It was reported, however, that less than one per cent of employees of this company re- quired any aid whatever. Proposal to Examine Banks Inasmuch as the banks, in coming to the rescue of the market, became involved in the carrying of large blocks of “frozen” loans on securities, one financial newspaper, the New York Journal of Commerce, has urged that the government put the banks throughout the country into a position to resist strain imposed on them by such a situation. It urged careful and effective bank examination for several