Then
John G. McCaskey, the “Sauerkraut King”, a wealthy investor and young Pittsburgh adulthood friend of Marland's reorganized the company. Elected President, McCaskey raised funds from Pittsburgh investors including
W. H. McFadden, a retired President of Mackintosh, Hemphill & Co., a rolling mill manufacturer and J. M. Weaver, a business associate of McCaskey's. McFadden was elected vice president and general manager of the company and Weaver was elected Secretary and Treasurer. In 1911 Pittsburghers held the stock of the company. These were E. W. Marland, J. G. McCaskey, W. H. McFadden, G. W. Baum, Vice President of Pittsburgh Rubber and Hemphill's son in law, N. A. Hemphill, co-founder of Mackintosh, Hemphill & Co. a rolling mill manufacturer and business associate of W.H. McFadden, Pittsburgh Alderman J. J. Kirby, J. M. Weaver, Brownlee Harper Gibson, a 1906 Princeton graduate and insurance broker and Hemphill's son in law, C. L. Stevens a Pennsylvania Medical Society member, J. J. Kearns, President of Electric Service Company, and Marland's father-in-law Samuel C. Collins. Later, McCaskey appointed
Lewis Haines Wentz, an employee in his sauerkraut operation, Secretary of the company. ==Ponca lease==