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A Group of Trusts and Combinations

Quarterly Journal of Economics 1912 26(4), 593
I. The Electric Lamp Combination; relation to General Electrical Company, 594. — Control of tantalum and tungsten filaments, 600. — Circuit Court decree of 1911, 601. — II. The Keystone Watch Case Company, 602. — Methods of destroying competition, 607. — III. The United Shoe Machinery Company, 608. — IV. The Consolidation Coal Company; how related to Baltimore & Ohio Railroad, 613. — V. The Bath Tub Pool, 617. — Control of the jobbing trade, 623. — VI. The Cash Register Company, 625. — Deliberate destructive competition, 626. — VII. Combination of Wholesale and Retail Dealers, 630. — Michigan lumber retailers, 632. — Other lumber retailers, 634. — Wholesale lumber dealers, 637. — Pacific Coast jobbers of plumbing supplies, 640. — Southern Wholesale Grocers' Association, 641. — VIII. Conclusion, 642.

The Powder Trust, 1872-1912

Quarterly Journal of Economics 1912 26(3), 444
Introduction, 444. — Period I. Organization of the first combination in the explosives trade, 445. — The Council, 446. — Compacts with the California Powder Works, 447. — Amendment of the Articles of Association, 448. — The Agreement of 1886, 450. — Fundamental Agreement of 1889, 452. — Period II. Competition between 1890 and 1894, 454. — Revision of the Fundamental Agreement, 456. — The "Understanding" of 1896, 456. — Advance in the prices of powder subsequent to 1896, 457. — Contests against new competitors, 459. — Miscellaneous agreements looking to more complete control, 460. — Early combination in the Dynamite Trade, 462. — Acquisitions of the Eastern Dynamite Company, 465. — Origin of the European Agreement, 465. — Its terms, 466. — The Mexican Agreement, 467. — Period III. The organization of E. I. du Pont de Nemours and Company, Delaware Corporation of 1902, 470. — Relation of E. I. du Pont de Nemours and Company and Laflin and Rand to subsidiaries, 471. — Option upon Laflin and Rand, 472. — The Delaware Securities Company, 472. — The Delaware Investment Company, 473. — Relations of the Companies outside of the combination, 474. — E. I. du Pont de Nemours and Company of Pennsylvania, 475. — The California Investment Company, 476. — International Smokeless Powder and Chemical Company, 477. — Percentage of control exercised, 478. — Prices, 478. — Dissolution of subsidiaries, 479. — Decision of the Circuit Court, 480.

The Dissolution of the Powder Trust

Quarterly Journal of Economics 1912 27(1), 202
The Dissolution of the Powder Trust Get access William S. Stevens William S. Stevens Columbia University Search for other works by this author on: Oxford Academic Google Scholar The Quarterly Journal of Economics, Volume 27, Issue 1, November 1912, Pages 202–207, https://doi.org/10.2307/1882675 Published: 01 November 1912

The Origin of the National Customs-Revenue of England

Quarterly Journal of Economics 1912 27(1), 107
Importance and difficulty of the subject, 107. — I. Review of customs theories, 108. — A priori theories of customs origins, 108. — Prise theory of Mr. Hall, 110. — Purveyance, 113. — Prise of merchants' goods, 113. — Prise commutations, 117. — The customs of 1275, 118. — Later history of the prise, 121. — The chain of errors in the prise theory, 123. — II. Local customs, 123. — Custuma ville, 124. — Periods in the development of local customs, 125. — Medieval and modern local customs compared, 127. — Local customs not to be expanded into national customs, 128. — III. Semi-national customs, 1050–1275, 130. — Lastage, 130. — Scavage, 133. — Ancient wine custom, 134. — The prise of wines, 136. — Recta prisa, 137. — Decay of these dues, 142. — IV. The customs experiment of King John, 143. — The fifteenth, 143. — The Great Winchester Assize of Customs, 144. — Failure of King John's customs system, 146. — V. Conclusion, 147. — Classification of customs, local, semi-national, and national, 147. — Efforts to create a national system, 1275–1347, 147. — Great influence of the local upon the national system, 148.

Tudor "Books of Rates": A Chapter in the History of the English Customs

Quarterly Journal of Economics 1912 26(4), 766
Dates of Books of Rates prior to 1558, that usually accepted as the first, 766. — Metropolitan rates (1507–36) precede the national valuations, 768. — Increase of valuations in 1558 and 1610, 769. — The Books contain valuations, not specific duties, except in the case of cloth, 770. — Other contents, 771. — The chief motives for the issue of the earlier Books were the desire for national uniformity and the need for reform of customs frauds, 772. — For the later books not the loss of Calais revenue but the necessity of adjustment to price changes and the increase of indirect taxation, 773.