PRE-WAR PRINCIPLES AND METHODS 39
of Locomotive Engineers and Firemen and other em-
ployees, has been afforded by an analysis of the dividend
disbursements of only fourteen companies during the
past fiscal year—a subnormal period of industrial depres-
sion. These companies alone were found to have paid
dividends in 1914 on fictitious stock issues amounting to
$43,167,599. This does not account by any means for
all of the excess stock of Western Railroads which are
engaged in these proceedings, but only for a number of
representative and illustrative cases. A comprehensive
estimate would also have to take fictitious bond issues
into consideration. If the future outlook were also
considered; hundreds of millions of dollars of fictitious
capitalization would be discovered which has not as yet
received remuneration but which may become a drain
1pon operating revenues.
[t will be noted that the claim was made that the net
gains secured from the increased productive efficiency of
railway engine and train crews, as well as from the invest-
ment of new capital, from managerial efficiency, and from
government land grants, had been improperly absorbed or
dissipated by railroad financial management, and, as a
consequence, neither employees, travelers nor shippers had
received a fair participation in these productive gains. The
overturning of the existing financial structure and man-
agement of the railroads was not advocated, but the
demand was made for the granting of a just share to em-
ployees in revenue gains arising from their increases in
productive efficiency before further corporate distribution
of funds was permitted.
The representatives of the railroads replied to this argu-
ment by the counter-claim that decreases in costs of opera-
tion had been made possible by increases in capital invest-
ment, and improved facilities had lessened rather than
increased the physical labors of employees. From this it