Page 1 836 THE JOURNAL OF INDUSTRIAL AND ENGINEERING

stock of the Kny-Scheerer Corporation (surgical instruments) was seized by the Alien Property Cus- ... had occasion to investigate in connection with ...
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T H E JOURNAL OF I N D U S T R I A L A N D ENGINEERING CHEMISTRY

t o remove it rallied t o his aid t h e services of t h e ablest lawyers and financiers in t h e land. And Judge Palmer made good his promises. Gradually t h e coils were unwound, through t h e seizure of t h e enemy-owned properties and their sale t o American citizens. This great work was carried out i n a manner which has successfully defied criticism either of a political or of a financial character. T h a t was all t h e Alien Property Custodian could do. T h e concomitant thought in this great piece of war work was t h a t America should become economically independent of Germany as a source of certain essential supplies. I n t h e great majority of cases t h e results have been admirable. American control, where once was German, is being exercised for America’s good. Formerly not only were profits made for Germans, b u t frequently those very profits were turned t o corruption in t h e practice of bribery a n d in t h e support of a complex system of espionage. But there are indications t h a t t h e fine work of Judge Palmer a n d his successor, Mr. Garvan, is being crippled b y t h e action of American stockholders t o whom some of these properties were sold under authorization of Congress. For example, t h e enemy-owned stock of t h e Kny-Scheerer Corporation (surgical instruments) was seized b y t h e Alien Property Custodian, and on April 24, 1919,was sold t o American citizens. T h e Alien Property Custodian’s report t o Congress, pages 120-121, stated: The president of the company is Richard Kny, whose activities I have had occasion t o investigate in connection with the Chemical Exchange in the Heyden Chemical Co., the Eisemann Magneto Co., and the New York Patents Exploitation Corporation.

* * * *

Through the Bureau of Investigation in my office, a lengthy and careful examination [of the Kny-Scheerer Corporation] was had covering a period of months. It was discovered that information submitted for my inspection had been falsified, and that important instruments had been suppressed. Finally, the proof established by my bureau reached such proportions that Kny withdrew his claims of ownership and reported that the property was owned by Aktien Gesellschaft fur Fein Mechanik (commonly called A. G. F. M.). The investigation disclosed that A. G. F. M. had purchased the business from Kny in 1896, and that from that time Kny had simply been an employee of the German company. During an investigation conducted by the customs authorities into alleged undervaluations, and later in an attempt t o evade the British blockade, the books and records of the Kny-Scheerer Corporation had been prepared so as to give it an appearance of an independent American company entirely free of foreign or German connections. When the trading-with-the-enemy act was passed, advantage was taken of this condition by Kny to make a bold and unscrupulous claim to the property, which finally was broken down by my office. Nevertheless, Mr. K n y was retained as president for at least a year b y t h e new American owners. Mr. E. S. Beck was likewise retained as secretary, a n d during t h a t period we have been told t h a t t h e manufacturing plant in Brooklyn was closed, while surgical instruments were again imported from Germany a n d offered t o t h e trade in America at prices guaranteed t o be 2 0 per cent below t h e prices of American goods.

Vol

12,

No. 9

Mr. K n y has resigned t h e presidency, b u t we have not heard of a n y manufacturing operations in this country b y t h a t firm. $3,000,000 of t h e preferred stock of t h e Susquehanna Silk Mills was owned b y Germans and is now t h e property of t h e Alien Property Custodian, b u t as this stock has no voting power he found himself powerless t o prevent the representative of this company from being extremely active in Washington opposing legislation whose sole purpose is t h e development of a n American industry, necessarily t o t h e injury of t h e German. These are indications of failure of t h e ultimate purpose of t h e Custodian’s work. Plainly, the remedy is effective protective legislation b y Congress for bona fide American manufacturers whose products are. faced with actual or a t least potential destructive competition. It is a strange commentary upon political affairs t h a t t h e only instance of t h e passage b y both House and Senate of protective legislation for a n American industry from t h e beginning of t h e war t o t h e present moment took place when b o t h bodies were controlled b y t h e Democrats. Since t h e Republicans gained control, none of t h e many bills introduced for this purpose have secured a favorable vote i n t h e Senate. Senator Penrose dubs these bills “pop-gun legislation” and decrees t h a t t h e y must wait until a general revision of t h e tariff can be undertaken. Meanwhile, impending disaster waits a t t h e door. T h e responsibility for its removal lies with t h e present Congress. MUTUAL OBLIGATIONS T h e organization of t h e General Meetings of t h e AMERICANCHEMICALSOCIETYoffers unusual opport u n i t y for t h e oral presentation of t h e results of research. T h e SOCIETYincludes upon its program t h e name of t h e author and t h e title of his paper and places at t h e disposal of t h e author a definite portion of its program time. Therefore t h e SOCIETY feels t h a t papers t h u s presented become a definite part of its transactions, t h e printing of which is essentially a function of t h e SOCIETY. Under this cbnviction t h e Council at its Buffalo meeting unanimously adopted t h e following resolution : Resolved, The SOCIETY reserves the right of original publication in its official journals of all papers appearing on the programs of its general meetings, divisions, and local sections. The editors are requested to inform authors promptly of decision regarding publication of such papers. This decision can be facilitated by authors sending duplicate copies of their papers in advance to the editor of that journal in which publication is desired. The Secretary is requested t o give proper notice of this action by printing this resolution on the greliminary and final programs of all general meetings. I n justice t o authors it is required t h a t t h e editors give prompt notification as t o acceptance of papers for publication or their release. This will be done as speedily as is consistent with careful consideration b y t h e reviewers. T h e official ruling is reasonable from every viewpoint and we are confident needs only t o be understood t o enlist t h e hearty compliance of every contributor t o t h e program.