The price went down and down until the
trade was threatened with ruin. It seemed absolutely necessary to
extend the market for oil by exporting to foreign countries, which
required a long and most difficult development; and also to greatly
improve the processes of refining so that oil could be made and sold
cheaply, yet with a profit, and to use as by-products all of the
materials which in the less-efficient plants were lost or thrown away.
These were the problems which confronted us almost at the outset, and
this great depression led to consultations with our neighbors and
friends in the business in the effort to bring some order out of what
was rapidly becoming a state of chaos. To accomplish all these tasks
of enlarging the market and improving the methods of manufacture in a
large way was beyond the power or ability of any concern as then
constituted. It could only be done, we reasoned, by increasing our
capital and availing ourselves of the best talent and experience.
It was with this idea that we proceeded to buy the largest and best
refining concerns and centralize the administration of them with a
view to securing greater economy and efficiency. The business grew
faster than we had anticipated.
This enterprise, conducted by men of application and ability working
hard together, soon built up unusual facilities in manufacture, in
transportation, in finance, and in extending markets.
Pages:
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73