MORNING ENTERPRISE, THURSDAY," SEPTEMBER -11,-1913: 5v MUTUAL RELATIONS, AND INTERESTS OF THE BELL SYSTEM AND PUBLIC 0 The suit brought by the United States questioning the purchase of cer tain telephone properties in the north west, as well as the pending Interstate Commerce Commission telephone in vestigation, have caused many inquir ies. Without taking up anything go ing to the merits of these proceedings, it has seemed to us proper to state generally what has been our policy and purpose in the conduct of our busi ness. We have found, or thought that we had, that our interests were best served when the public interests were best served; and we believe that Buch success as we have had has been be . cause our business has been conduct ed on these lines. We believe that our company lias an interest as vital as that of the public in the proper administration of the nmhlems of electrical inter-communi cation. The success and prosperity of nnr pomtianv detend upon a solution nf thse nroblems which shall be sound from both the standpoint of the company and the public which it . serves Following our own best judgment supplemented by the best obtainable mercial value can only be attained by one system under one common control and that it cannot be given by inde pendent systems unless that are oper ated 'uder agreements which result in one common control and one common interest, in effect making them a single system. We believe ut rates should be so adjusted as to afford the company sufficient revenue to pay such wages and compensation as will secure the most efficient service; to maintain. the very highest and most advanced stand ards of plant and apparatus, to carry on such scientific and experimental re search and inventions as to apparatus and methods as to insure the highest standards, and to carry to reserve and depreciation such amounts as will en able the company at any time to re place old plant- and old methods with new plant and new methods as fast as they may be developed and found to be to the advantage of the service. We believe that in addition, such fair charges should be paid upon the in vestment in plant as will enable the company at any time to obtain money necessary to provide the planti r quired to meet the continuing demands advice, we have endeavored to do what 'of the public; and in order that waste would best serve the public interest; land duplication of effort may be avoid- wherever possible our plans have been , ed and uniformity of purpose and eom , disclosed to the public in advance, and mon control be enforced, that there i what has been done in carrying them should be a centralized general admin : out has been along ordinary business , istration in close communication with lines, with the implied, and generally, and having general authority over the with the expressed approval, authori- whole on matters common to all or zation or consent 01 me municipal auu matters ot general policy. state authorities directly mterestea. Our effort has been not only to obey the law, but to avoid everything which might even have the appearance of an attempt at evasion. Our business methods and policy, and practically all of the details as to the transactions of our business, are matters of common knowledge and are, and for many years have been, well known to the government. We will willingly furnish the government any additional information which is in our possession or under our control, and will cordially co-operate with it in obtaining such further information as it may require. Every possible assist ance will be given by us to the courts in their effort to determine whether our policy is or has been inimical to the public interest. We desire that anything wrong be corrected; we will voluntarily rectify any wrong that may be pointed out to us; and, so far as it may be determined that our pol icy or any act under it is against the public interest, we will promptly con form to such determination. We believe that if each of our ex changes were made an independent unit and if each connecting line were put under a separate control, the ef fect upon the telephone service of the country would be a condition so intol erable that the public would refuse to submit to it and would immediately require such physical connection and common control of these various units as would amalgamate them into a single system. Physical connection in the case of telephone or telegraph does not mean transfer of messages from one line to the other. It means such a connection as will permit one person to have the actual possession of the particular- line of communica tion from one end of it to the other and this can only be given efficiently by exchange systems and connecting lines under a common control; and that is what the Bell System is. In this connection, and for general information, we will restate the policy which controlled the building up of the Bell System, and our belief as to what a telephone system should be, and what are its relations to the pub lic. We believe in and were the first to advocate state or government control and regulation of public utilities; that this control or regulation should be by permanent quasi-judicial bodies, act ing after thorough investigation and governed by the equities of each case; and that this control or regulation, be yond requiring the greatest efficiency and economy, should not interfere j with management or operation. We believe that these bodies, if they are to be permanent, effective and of pub lic benefit, should be thoroughly rep resentative; they should be of such character and should so conduct their investigations and deliberations as to command such respect from both the public and the corporations that both will without question accept their con clusions. We believe that the public would in this way get all the advantages and avoid all the manifest disadvan tages of public ownership. We believe that centers of business and population exist for the conveni ence of the public as a whole, and that no such center can prosper without sufficient and efficient means of Inter course with other centers, and tribu " tary territories; that such means can only be afforded by prosperous util ity and service companies and that , fair rates are essential to prosperous companies. We do not believe that any public either desires or can ob tain, nor can any service or utility furnish, permanent and efficient ser vice at less than cost, including capi tal charges. We believe that ultimate ly the public either directly or indi rectly pays the losses involved in the . efforts to furnish such service at less We believe that any surplus beyond that necessary to equalize dividends on a fair basis should be used by the company for the benefit of the public and should be inalienable for any other purpose, and should be either in vested in revenue-earning plant until necessary to substitute plant which may become inadequate or obselete: or should be used to make the service cheaper or better. We believe that under proper gov- ernmentar control and regulation the profits from promotion or operation allowed to be distributed should not be so large as to warrant or tempt complete duplication of plant and or ganization, with its duplication of its capital charges and its organization. operating, maintenance and deprecia tion expenses; and we do not, believe that utilities giving at fair rates an efficient and sufficiently comprehen sive universal service should be sub ject to limited competition, not giving such service. Competition which , nores the obligation to furnish a com plete and comprehensive service is not competition, is not for the benefit of the public in that it does ;ot reach the whole public interested. If, therfcfore, complete dupi..a.tion, with its dual exchange connection and dual bills for service, is a prerequis ite to complete competition, govern ment control and regulation cannot go hand in hand with competition. We believe that the record of the Bell System will be accepted by the public as fully in accord with these declarations. Consistent adherence to this policy has given the public of the United States the best, most compre- nensive and cheapest telephone ser vice in the world and made the Bell standards the standards of all nations, To remove any possible excuse for misapprehension on account of the many misleading statements which have been circulated as to the alleged unnecessary and overcapitalization and excessive charges of the Bell Sys tem, the following statistics are given. Except where stated, the figures are for the Bell System; that is, the American Telephone and Telegraph, and its Associated Companies. The entire Bell System on June 30, 1913, had outstanding in the hands of the public obligations (i. e., notes, open accounts, bonds and shares! to the par value of $776,000,000. ' The book value of the total tangible assets, which is considerably less than their replacement value, amounted to $960,000,000. Many appraisals of property included in these assets have been made, and most of them under tne direction of public authorities. In no case has the value as it stands on the books failed to be sustained, and in most cases it has been very lareelv exceeded. The total dividends and interest Daid during the year 1912 amounted to on ly 6.1 per cent, on the average of its outstanding obligations, and to less than 5 per cent on the average value or its assets. The actual cash which has been paid into the treasury of the American Telephone and Telegraph Company on account of the capital obligations now outstanding amounts to $22,000,000 more than tliB par of such outstand ing obligations. The Associated Companies collected from the public and paid back in taxes over $10,000,000 during the year 1912. The steadily increasing necessities of the public not only for additional but for new telephone service can only be met by new construction, involving capital outlay. To meet these de mands during the six and one-half years from 1907 to June, 1913, inclu sive, the increase in telephone plant was as iouows: Toll line wire in creased from 1,160,000 miles to 2,242 - vvu iiuies; excaange wire inorfiaspri than its fair o.r.Rt. Pithpr thrnnorh trio from 6,000,000 miles to 13.000.000: thP loss of the capital involved, the losses i numb?'5f exchage stations increased lnf?idnt tn nnnr servion nr tho nvnc ! froIn 2,730,000 to 5,200,000: the numher sarr increase in charge required to,0' statlons of independent companies pay for duplication of capital. connected with the Bell System in- W helievfi that the highest, nnmmer-1 creased from 343,000 to 2,620.000. The cial value of the telephone service de-1 numer of independent companies con pends on its completeness on t'Ae ex-1 nctsi with the Bell System is about tent and comprehensiveness of the fa- 2000. Tne nunber of employees in cilities for intercommunication, not I tne Bel1 system, not including the em only between individuals but between 1 Payees of connected companies, on centers of population; that no isolated j December 31, ,1912, was 141,000. section can be considered independ-1 Durmg this same period the number ently of any other section or of the ' shareholders of the American Tele whole; that rates must be so adjusted I ? , and TeleSraph Company, not as to make it possible to obtain the including either the associated or con . maximum development by making it i nected companies, increased from 17, possible for every one to be connected , 2 ? about 64,000: About 47,000 who will add to the value of tha sys- shareholders hold less than 100 shares tern, thus giving the greatest value to each; 6,500 shareholders hold from the greatest number; that the inter-!00 t0 1'000 shares each; 347. share dependence of the telephone service ho'.d-ers hold from 1,000 to 5,000 shares and the value of complete and uni- eaca- wnile there ar only 16 share versal intercommunication justify and j holders of o,00o shares or over In their require some service partly at the wn rtSht A majority of the share expense of the whole for the bene-' holders are women. . fit of the whole. . American Telephone and Telegraph Co. We believe that this highest com- THEO. N. VAIL, President. THE ENTERPRISE wants every one of its readers to take a trip to the GREAT PANAMA CANAL, and see the wonders of this mighty achievement. You say you can't spare the time. ' All right, then we'll bring the-Canal TO YOU all in one BIG volume, filled to the full with PICTURES of ACTUAL SCENES never before published, described, in words that hold you spell bound. Read on and learn how you may get this magnificient book this complete story of Panama in picture and prose - , . Not merely a picture book, but an educational work of rare interest to every mem ber of the home. - Art plates reproduced from water-color studies abound throughout the entire mag nificent volume. Every progressive man, woman and child is eager to know all about the Panama Canal and the temarkable country through which it passes. Realizing this fact several hundred newspapers have ar ranged to take an enormous advance edition of the most elaborate and complete illustrated history of PANAMA AND THE CANAL, pub lished by the Syndicate Publishing Co. of New York City. This company is eminently fitted to issue such a work at a mini mum cost. It has heretofore supplied through . daily newspapers millions of high-class dictionaries and other books. THE ENTERPRISE is the one paper in this section through which PANAMA AND THE CANAL IN PICTURE AND PROSE can be had. The plan outlined below tells you how to get this only complete Panama Book ALMOST FREE. The large volume is twice the size of an ordinary novel; it is a most handsome book, stamped in gold, with beautiful color panel on front cover showing the famous Culebra Cut; it contains 450 large pages filled with interesting information of rare educational val ue to every reader. The illustrations are modern works of art, cov ering every important scene in the Canal Zone; they include 16 water-color plates with more than 600 photographic studies. Presentation by the REGON CITY ENTERPRIRE Willis J. Abbot, the versatile writer on International subjects and author of many books of history and travel; spent months in Panama and the Canal Zone in the preparation of this volume. He collected at first hands the complete history of the great Canal, with a wealth of historical data concerning Panama which has never before been written. The result is a human interest story of this beautiful land its people from the early days when Columbus tried to find a natural waterway from the Atlantic to the Pacific, down to the present time. Our Special staff photographers made the hundreds of beautiful views with which practically every page of this exhaustive book is illustrated. The well-known artist, E. J. 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T:, vellum cloth; contains only 100 photographic i, 0 I reproductions and ,the color 1 he Canal plates are omitted. This Expense " , , book would sell at. $2 under Amount of A rt" octavo sented. to .. our, readers , for V " EDITION s,x certificates of consecu- By Mail, Postage Paid," 67 Cents and 6 .. . i:? il- VCertificatetfVV'ri "t" ' ' n. mailorders; 'ADDRESS4'; u THE ENTERPRISE, OREGON CITY, ORE. 48c