into flat strips, which are further finished by cold rolling
into what is known as cold-rolled flat steel, which is the
raw material of an immense number of stamped and
formed articles which are substituted for castings and
forgings, and in which steel has become the substitute for
brass and copper. A by-product of steel wire manufacture
is sulphate of iron, which has many uses in the arts, as well
as in the purification of city water supplies. The Com-
pany also smelts zinc ores, obtaining as products commercial
spelter, used mainly for galvanizing wire, sheets and tubing,
and sulphuric acid, which is indispensable in the process
of manufacture of the three principal classes of steel pro-
ductions just mentioned; also muriatic acid, which is used
for a similar purpose, and zinc oxide, one of the most
important pigments in the paint industry. The company
has a capital stock of $90,000,000, divided into $40,000,000
preferred and $50,000,000 common.
BRAEBURN STEEL COMPANY
The works of this Company are at Braeburn, Pa. The
Company manufactures high-speed steel and other cruci-
ble grades; also alloy steel of many kinds. The Company
has been producing crucible steels since 1897, and electric
furnace steel since 1916. It has two crucible melting fur-
naces—one 24-pot and one 36-pot. It also has two 6-ton
Heroult melting furnaces in which alloy steels of various
kinds are manufactured. This Company is a Pennsyl-
vania Corporation with an authorized capital of $400,000.
CARBON STEEL COMPANY
The Carbon Steel Company, whose plant is at the foot
of Thirty-Second Street, Pittsburgh, has for many years
specialized on alloy steels and special analysis steels. I
was one of the first concerns in this country to roll steel
bars for the Allied armies, as it received, direct from one of
the Allied governments, shortly after the outbreak of the
world war, a very large order for 4.5” shells. Later came
orders for a large tonnage of shell steel in rolled bars. Steel