diff options
| -rw-r--r-- | .gitattributes | 4 | ||||
| -rw-r--r-- | LICENSE.txt | 11 | ||||
| -rw-r--r-- | README.md | 2 | ||||
| -rw-r--r-- | old/52996-0.txt | 6850 | ||||
| -rw-r--r-- | old/52996-0.zip | bin | 121500 -> 0 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | old/52996-h.zip | bin | 178522 -> 0 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | old/52996-h/52996-h.htm | 8140 | ||||
| -rw-r--r-- | old/52996-h/images/cover.jpg | bin | 51021 -> 0 bytes |
8 files changed, 17 insertions, 14990 deletions
diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes new file mode 100644 index 0000000..d7b82bc --- /dev/null +++ b/.gitattributes @@ -0,0 +1,4 @@ +*.txt text eol=lf +*.htm text eol=lf +*.html text eol=lf +*.md text eol=lf diff --git a/LICENSE.txt b/LICENSE.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..6312041 --- /dev/null +++ b/LICENSE.txt @@ -0,0 +1,11 @@ +This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements, +metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be +in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES. + +Procedures for determining public domain status are described in +the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org. + +No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in +jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize +this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright +status under the laws that apply to them. diff --git a/README.md b/README.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..7969438 --- /dev/null +++ b/README.md @@ -0,0 +1,2 @@ +Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for +eBook #52996 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/52996) diff --git a/old/52996-0.txt b/old/52996-0.txt deleted file mode 100644 index 2c67e28..0000000 --- a/old/52996-0.txt +++ /dev/null @@ -1,6850 +0,0 @@ -Project Gutenberg's Selected Articles on the Parcels Post, by Various - -This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most -other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions -whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of -the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at -www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have -to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. - -Title: Selected Articles on the Parcels Post - Debaters' Handbook Series - -Author: Various - -Editor: Edith M. Phelps - -Release Date: September 6, 2016 [EBook #52996] - -Language: English - -Character set encoding: UTF-8 - -*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SELECTED ARTICLES--PARCELS POST *** - - - - -Produced by MWS, Adrian Mastronardi, The Philatelic Digital -Library Project at http://www.tpdlp.net and the Online -Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This -file was produced from images generously made available -by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.) - - - - - -Transcriber’s Note: obvious printers’ errors have been corrected but -the spelling, hyphenation etc. in this book is generally inconsistent, -as you might expect from a collection of articles by different authors: -the editor did not impose a uniform style. - - - - - -_DEBATERS’ HAND BOOK SERIES_ - -PARCELS POST - - - - - DEBATERS’ - HANDBOOK SERIES - - Enlargement of the United States Navy (3d ed. rev. and enl.) - - Direct Primaries (3d ed. rev. and enl.) - - Capital Punishment - - Commission Plan of Municipal Government (2d ed. rev. and enl.) - - Election of United States Senators - - Income Tax (2d ed. rev. and enl.) - - Initiative and Referendum (2d ed. rev. and enl.) - - Central Bank of the United States - - Woman Suffrage - - Municipal Ownership - - Child Labor - - Open versus Closed Shop - - Employment of Women - - Federal Control of Interstate Corporations - - Parcels Post - - _Other titles in preparation_ - - _Each volume, one dollar net_ - - - - - _Debaters’ Handbook Series_ - - SELECTED ARTICLES - ON THE - PARCELS POST - - COMPILED BY - EDITH M. PHELPS - - MINNEAPOLIS - THE H. W. WILSON COMPANY - 1911 - - - - -EXPLANATORY NOTE - - -The plan of this volume is very similar to that of the others of the -series to which it belongs. It contains a brief, a bibliography, and -reprints of articles containing the various arguments for and against -the parcels post; also, information in regard to the present status of -the parcels post in this and other countries. For the convenience of -the reader, the articles have been arranged in three main divisions: -the General, Affirmative, and Negative Discussions. The bibliography -is similarly divided. It is believed that debaters and others wishing -material on this subject will find this book both convenient and -helpful. - -September, 1911. - - - - -CONTENTS - - - BRIEF ix - - BIBLIOGRAPHY - - Bibliographies xiii - - General References xiii - - Affirmative References xvi - - Negative References xix - - INTRODUCTION 1 - - GENERAL DISCUSSION - - Carr, D. M. Up to Members of Congress 5 - - Meyer, George von L. Data Relative to Proposed Extension of - Parcels Post 9 - - Cowles, James L. Our Postal Express 16 - - Walker, Ernest G. From the Boston Herald. Data Relative to - Proposed Extension of Parcels Post 18 - - Bennet, William S. Post-Office, Our Mutual Express Company 27 - - Lewis, David J. System of Postal Express 32 - - Barth, Dr. Letter. Hearings before the Committee on the - Post-Office and Post Roads 42 - - German Parcels Post. Monthly Consular and Trade Reports 45 - - AFFIRMATIVE DISCUSSION - - Sulzer, William. Our Postal Express 49 - - Rider, Fremont. Parcels Post and the Retailer. World’s Work 52 - - Mondell, F. W. Star Routes and Rural Parcels Post. - Congressional Record 58 - - Bennet, William S. General Deficiency Bill. Congressional - Record 62 - - Walker, John B. Who Will Be Benefited by a Parcels Post? - Cosmopolitan 72 - - Stickley, Gustav. More Efficient Postal Service. Craftsman 78 - - Parcels Post Once More. Independent 80 - - Sulzer, William. People Demand a General Parcels Post 82 - - Let Us Have a Parcels Post. Hampton’s 87 - - Curtis, Isabel G. Housekeeping by Parcels Post. Good - Housekeeping 92 - - Miller, George E. Parcels Post. Housekeeper 94 - - NEGATIVE DISCUSSION - - Maxwell, George H. Perils of Parcels Post Extension 99 - - Clark, Allan W. Objections to the Parcels Post. Independent 106 - - Burrows, Charles W. Further Thoughts on Parcels Post 108 - - Burrows, Charles W. One Cent Letter Postage, Second - Class Mail Matter, and Parcels Post 110 - - Ordway, John A. Parcels Post 115 - - Merritt, Albert N. Shall the Scope of Governmental Functions - Be Enlarged so as to Include the Express Business? - Journal of Political Economy 122 - - Parcels Post in England. Parcels Post Problem 129 - - Spofford, C. W. A. B. C. of Parcels Post 130 - - French, F. E. Parcels Post 131 - - Bogardus, W. P. Why Parcels Post Is Not a Good Thing - for This Country 135 - - Haugen, Gilbert N. Parcels Post and Postal Savings Banks 138 - - Smith, S. C. Parcels Post 140 - - - - -BRIEF - - -Resolved, That the Federal Government should establish a Parcels Post. - - -INTRODUCTION - -I. It has been claimed that - - A. Our postal rates on third and fourth class matter are - exorbitant as compared with those in foreign countries. - - B. Foreign parcels post systems afford many conveniences which - we do not have. - -II. An extension of our present parcels post system is demanded. - - A. Bills providing for it have been presented to Congress. - - B. Postmasters-General Wanamaker, Meyer, and others have tried - to secure it. - - C. It has been recommended in presidential messages, in - conventions, by postal officials and by the people. - -III. The plan which has received most favorable attention is that of -Postmaster-General Meyer, providing for - - A. A general parcels post at the rate of 12c a pound, with a - limit in weight of eleven pounds. - - B. A rural parcels post at the rate of 5c for the first pound, - 2c for each additional pound, limit of weight eleven pounds. - - -AFFIRMATIVE - -The Affirmative is in favor of the Parcels Post, for - -I. The United States government would benefit financially. - - A. The receipts from the increased volume of business would - more than repay the loss from the reduction in rate. - - B. Increased receipts from rural routes would be clear profit. - - 1. Rural routes are already equipped for this service. - - C. If the post with foreign countries pays now, the government - ought to make a profit from a similar domestic service. - -II. The general public would benefit by this service. - - A. Present transportation charges would be reduced. - - 1. The express companies would have to reduce rates. - - B. Greater convenience in sending merchandise would result. - - 1. The express companies would have to improve service. - - C. The cost of living would be reduced. - -III. Rural communities would be benefited. - - A. The local dealer would profit. - - 1. He could do a larger business with less expense, and - with increased facilities for delivery. - - 2. He could meet the competition of mail-order houses and - city merchants. - - B. Country towns and villages would have cheap transportation - which is so essential for favorable growth. - - C. The parcels post would turn the tide of civilization from - the cities back to the land. - - D. The farmer would be benefitted. - - 1. He would save time and expense in driving to market. - - 2. He could have more of the comforts and conveniences of - city life. - - 3. He would have better market facilities for his products. - -IV. A parcels post would not be class legislation. - - A. Mail-order houses and city department stores would not - benefit unduly. - - B. Express companies would not be seriously injured. - - 1. Their present rates are excessive. - -V. The parcels post has been successful in other countries and is -practicable. - - A. It has paid - - 1. Financially. - - 2. In comfort and convenience. - - B. In nearly every country the rates are lower than in the - United States and the limit in weight is much higher. - - -NEGATIVE - -The Negative is opposed to the Parcels Post, for - -I. The present postal deficit would be increased rather than diminished. - - A. The cost of the increased service would not be covered by - the increased traffic. - - 1. The government cannot compete successfully with the - express companies. - - 2. There would be a continual demand for more and better - equipment. - - 3. Government undertakings are always more costly than - those under private management. - - B. The inconsistencies between our present foreign and domestic - rates are not as great as has been claimed. - -II. The general public would not be benefitted by it. - - A. It would have little influence on express rates. - - B. It would increase the centralization of wealth, population, - and manufactures. - - C. The demand for it has been artificially created. - -III. Rural communities would be injured by it. - - A. Retailers and local dealers would suffer. - - 1. Orders would be sent direct to manufacturing centers. - - 2. Mail-order houses would obtain most of the trade. - - B. Rural towns and villages would be injured. - - 1. Trade would be drawn to the larger cities and population - would follow. - - C. The farmer would not be benefitted. - - 1. He would not use it nearly as much as has been claimed. - - 2. The market for his products would be largely destroyed - by the removal of population to large cities. - - 3. The rural parcels post alone would be merely an entering - wedge. - -IV. Legislation for a parcels post would be discriminating and -unnecessary. - - A. Dealers, wholesalers and jobbers in heavy merchandise could - not use it. - - B. Mail-order houses and department stores would benefit at the - expense of the retailers and consumers. - - C. The Interstate Commerce Commission already has the power to - correct excessive express rates. - - D. The rural post alone would increase the business of the - express companies. - -V. That the parcels post is in operation in foreign countries at very -low rates and high weight-limits is no argument for its extension in -the United States. - - A. Conditions vary so widely. - - 1. Distances are greater in the United States. - - 2. The population is more scattered. - - 3. The railroads are privately owned, and the government - must pay heavy rates for service. - - B. It is claimed that the system is run at a loss in England - and Germany. - - - - -BIBLIOGRAPHY - - -An asterisk (*) preceding a reference indicates that the entire article -or a part of it has been reprinted in this volume. - - -BIBLIOGRAPHIES - -Kansas. State University. Extension Division. Bulletin. Vol. XI. No. -10. July, 1910. Kansas High School Debating League, Announcements, -1910-1911. pp. 26-8. - -United States. Library of Congress--Division of Bibliography. Select -List of References on the Parcels Post. 5p. Typewritten. 15c. Supt. of -Doc. - -Virginia. Dep’t of Public Instruction, State University, and the -Co-Operative Education Ass’n. Bulletin. Ser. I. No. 3. March, 1911. -Parcels Post. pp. 18-21. - -Wisconsin. State University. Extension Division. Bulletin. Ser. No. -204: Extension Ser. No. 18. March, 1908. Parcels Post. pa. 5c. - - -GENERAL REFERENCES - - -_Books, Pamphlets and Documents_ - -Bennet, William S. Freight, Passenger and Intelligence Post: The Public -Need. 14p. pa. Govt. Ptg. Office. - - Address William S. Bennet, Representative, Washington, D. C. - -*Bennet, William S. Post-Office, Our Mutual Express Company: Speech in -the House of Representatives, May 13, 1909. 8p. pa. Govt. Ptg. Office. - - Reprinted from the Congressional Record. 44: 5174-6. Ag. 5, 09. - [Address William S. Bennet, Representative, Washington, D. C.] - -*Carr, D. M. Up to Members of Congress. 8p. pa. March, 1908. - - Address D. M. Carr, Editor “The Winning West,” Omaha, Nebr. - -Congressional Record. 32: Appendix. 208-10. F. 21, ’99. United States -Parcels Post. James L. Cowles. - - Printed in connection with a speech by Senator Butler, in the - Senate, F. 20-21, ’99. - -Congressional Record. 43: 1866-8. F. 4, ’09. Parcels Post System. - -Cowles, James L. General Freight and Passenger Post: Practical Solution -of the Railroad Problem. G. P. Putnam’s Sons, New York. 1898. - -*Cowles, James L. Our Postal Express. 2p. Postal Progress League. - - Address the Postal Progress League, 125 E. 23rd St., New York - City. - -*Lewis, David J. System of Postal Express to Include Both Country -Merchants and Farmers: Speech in the House of Representatives, June 8, -1911. 32p. pa. - - Reprinted from the Hearings before Sub-Committee No. 4, of - the Committee on the Post-Office and Post-Roads, June, 1911. - pp. 10-38, 48-52. [Address David J. Lewis, Representative, - Washington, D. C.] - -Monthly Consular and Trade Reports. No. 326. p. 37. N. ’07. Parcels -Post from United States. Govt. Ptg. Office. - -*Monthly Consular and Trade Reports. No. 329. pp. 104-6. F. ’08. German -Parcels Post. Govt. Ptg. Office. - -Monthly Consular and Trade Reports. No. 334. p. 192. Jl. ’08. Parcels -Post from United States. Govt. Ptg. Office. - -Monthly Consular and Trade Reports. No. 335: 179-80. Ag. ’08. Parcels -Post. - -Monthly Consular and Trade Reports. No. 357. Je. ’10. pp. 109-11. -Parcels Post. Germany and Australia. Govt. Ptg. Office. - -Postal Progress. 1907-1911. Post Office: The Minister of Peace. 4p. -Postal Progress League. - - Address the Postal Progress League, 125 E. 23d St., New York - City. - -*United States. Congress, House of Representatives. Parcels Post: -Hearings before the Committee on the Postoffice and Post Roads. April -20-29, 1910, 322p. pa. 25c. Supt. of Doc. - - Recommended for purchase. - -United States. Congress. House of Representatives. Parcels Post: -Hearings before Sub-Committee No. 4 of the Committee on the Postoffice -and Post Roads, June, 1911, 390p. pa. Supt. of Doc. - - Recommended for purchase. - -*United States. Post-Office Dep’t. Data Relative to Proposed Extension -of Parcel Post. (60th Cong., 1st Sess., Senate. Doc. 366.) 15p. ’08. -Govt. Ptg. Office. - - Reprinted from the Congressional Record. 42: 3041-5. Mr. 6, ’08. - -World Almanac, 1911. Postal Information, pp. 99-105. - - A summary of the present governmental regulations respecting - foreign and domestic mails. - - -_Magazine Articles_ - -Arena. 34: 113-9. Ag. ’05. European Parcels-Post. J. Henniker Heaton. - - Reprinted in condensed form in the Review of Reviews. 32: - 345-6. S. ’05. - -Bulletin. Pan American Union. 32: 365-8. F. ’11. Parcels Post -Convention between the United States and Haiti. - - Contains the text of the convention adopted by Haiti and the - United States in 1910. - -Catholic World. 81: 353-61. Je. ’05. Parcel-Post System of Germany. J. -C. Monaghan. - -Chautauquan. 64: 7-8. S. ’11. Parcels Post Next. - -Cosmopolitan. 35: 3-10. My. ’03. Governmental Parcel-Post in Great -Britain. J. Henniker Heaton. - -Cosmopolitan. 36: 217*-19*. Ap. ’04. Postal Parcels Delivery One Cent a -Pound. John B. Walker. - -Dun’s Review. 14: 12-4. F. 24, ’06. Parcels-Post System of Germany. J. -C. Monaghan. - - Reprinted in the Hearings before Subcommittee No. 4 of - the Committee on the Post-Office and Post-Roads, House of - Representatives, June, 1911. pp. 70-3. - -Nineteenth Century. 25: 894-901. Je. ’89. Agricultural Parcels Post. -Henry P. Dunster. - -Nineteenth Century. 54: 981-4. D. ’03. Cash on Delivery, or Shopping by -Post. J. Henniker Heaton. - - Arguments for and against the extension of the parcels post - system in England to admit the cash on delivery feature. - -North American. 187: 330-6. Mr. ’08. Parcels Post. George von L. Meyer. - -Outlook. 72: 147-8. S. 20, ’02. Cheap Parcels Post from England. - -Outlook. 79: 148. Ja. 14, ’05. Comparison of Postal Rates. James L. -Cowles. - -Postal Progress. Vol. I. No. 6. pp. 1-4. Ag. ’07. Common -One-Cent-a-Pound Postal Rate. James L. Cowles. - - Clippings from American Industries, June 15, 1907, and Iron - Age, July 4, 1907, form a part of the article. - -Scientific American. 98: 455. Je. 27, ’08. Reduction of Foreign Parcel -Postal Rates. - -Scientific American Supplement. 48: 20008. D. 2, ’99. Parcels Post -Exchanges with Germany. - -Survey. 25: 121-2. O. 22, ’10. Parcels Post Made in Germany. - - -AFFIRMATIVE REFERENCES - - -_Pamphlets and Documents_ - -Congressional Record. 42: 3081-4. Mr. 7, ’08. Post-Office Appropriation -Bill: Speech in the House of Representatives, March 3, 1908. James M. -Griggs. - -Congressional Record. 42: 6567-8. My. 15, ’08. Special Parcels Post. -George von L. Meyer. - -Congressional Record. 45: 2958-9. Mr. 8, ’10. Amendment for the Parcels -Post. Mr. Hardwick. - -Congressional Record. 45: 3223-4. Mr. 14, ’10. Extension of Parcels -Post: Letter to John M. Stahl. George von L. Meyer. - -Congressional Record. 45: 9310-4. Je. 24. ’10. General Deficiency Bill: -Speech in the House of Representatives, June 21, 1910. William S. -Bennet. - - Reprinted in the Congressional Record. 45: Appendix 382-6. - -Congressional Record. 46: 1243-5. Ja. 21, ’11. Proposed Parcels Post: -Speech in the House of Representatives, January 17, 1911. Ralph W. Moss. - -Congressional Record. 46: 1273-6. Ja. 21, ’11. Limited Parcels Post. - -Congressional Record. 46: 1443-5. Ja. 25, ’11. Why the People Favor a -General Parcels Post: Speech in the House of Representatives, January -17, 1911. William Sulzer. - -Congressional Record. 46: 1881. F. 2, ’11. Resolution Adopted by -Nebraska Farmer’s Congress in Favor of Parcels Post. - -*Congressional Record. 46: 1941-7. F. 3, ’11. Star Routes and Rural -Parcels Post: Speech in the House of Representatives, January 19, 1911. -F. W. Mondell. - -Congressional Record. 46: 2773-4. F. 9, ’11. Parcels Post: Speech in -the House of Representatives. Ralph W. Moss. - - Consists mostly of quotations from the Price Current and other - trade journals. - -Meyer, George von L. Address at the Banquet of the New England -Postmasters, October 12, 1907. 14p. pa. Govt. Ptg. Office. - -*Sulzer, William. Our Postal Express: Speech in the House of -Representatives, June 9, 1910. 8p. pa. Govt. Ptg. Office. - - Reprinted from the Congressional Record. 45: 8287-97. Je. 15, - ’10. [Address William Sulzer, Representative, Washington, D. C.] - -*Sulzer, William. People Demand a General Parcels Post: Speech in the -House of Representatives, February 6, 1911. 15p. pa. Govt. Ptg. Office. - - Reprinted from the Congressional Record. 46: 2094-7. F. 6, ’11. - [Apply to William Sulzer, Representative, Washington, D. C.] - -United States. Post Office Dep’t. Annual Report of the Postmaster -General. 1907. pp. 9-11. Extension of the Parcel Post. 10c. Supt. of -Doc. - - -_Magazine Articles_ - -Arena. 23: 103-6. Ja. ’00. Needed Postal Reform. Louis E. Guillow. - -Arena. 35: 212-3. F. ’06. England’s Magnificent Postal-Service Record. - -Arena. 37: 308-9. Mr. ’07. Postal Service in Japan. - -Cosmopolitan. 36: 379*-81*. F. ’04. Aid Which the Post Office -Department Might Render to Commerce. John B. Walker. - -*Cosmopolitan. 36: 497*-9*. Mr. ’04. Who Will Be Benefited by a Parcels -Post? John B. Walker. - -*Craftsman. 14: 592-4. S. ’08. More Efficient Postal Service. Gustav -Stickley. - -*Good Housekeeping. 53: 2-10. Jl. ’11. Housekeeping by Parcels Post. -Isabel G. Curtis. - -*Hampton’s. 26: 261-4. F. ’11. Let Us Have a Parcels Post. - -*Housekeeper. 31: 11-35. Ag. ’08. Parcels Post. George E. Miller. - -Independent. 53: 2607-8. O. 31, ’01. Parcels Post. - -Independent. 56: 306-9. F. 11, ’04. Post Office, Our Mutual -Transportation Company. James L. Cowles. - -Independent. 63: 1185-7. N. 14, ’07. Parcels Post. - -Independent. 67: 986-7. O. 28, ’09. It Must Come. - -*Independent. 70: 105-7. Ja. 12, ’11. Parcels Post Once More. - -Nation. 90: 345. Ap. 7, ’10. For a Parcels-Post. Reuben G. Thwaites. - -Nineteenth Century. 53: 253-63. F. ’03. Agricultural Parcel Post. J. -Henniker Heaton. - -Outlook. 90: 801-2. D. 12, ’08. Postal Deficit and a Rural Parcel Post. - -Outlook. 96: 567. N. 12, ’10. Express Monopoly versus a Parcels Post. - -Postal Progress. Vol. I. No. 4. pp. 1-2. Ap. 1, ’07. Foreign Parcels -Post Necessary. - -Scientific American. 102: 274. Ap. 2, ’10. Need of an Improved Parcels -Post. - -World’s Work. 21: 13978-86. F. ’11. Post-Office: An Obstructive -Monopoly. Don G. Seitz. - -*World’s Work. 21: 14248-51. Ap. ’11. Parcels Post and the Retailer. -Fremont Rider. - - -NEGATIVE REFERENCES - - -_Pamphlets and Documents_ - -*Bogardus, W. P. Why Parcels Post Is Not a Good Thing for This Country. -8p. pa. Iowa Retail Hardware Ass’n. - - Address A. R. Sale, Iowa Retail Hardware Association, Mason - City, Iowa. - -*Burrows, Charles W. Further Thoughts on Parcels Post: With an -Examination of Postmaster-General Meyer’s Recommendations. 19p. pa. - - Address Charles W. Burrows, 633 Euclid Av., Cleveland, Ohio. - -*Burrows, Charles W. One Cent Letter Postage, Second Class Mail Rates, -and Parcels Post: Address Delivered before the National Hardware Ass’n, -March 30, 1911. pp. 11-25. - - Address Charles W. Burrows, 633 Euclid Av., Cleveland, Ohio. - -Congressional Record. 40: 3476-82. Mr. 7, ’06. Parcels Post: Speech in -the House of Representatives. Gilbert N. Haugen. - -*French, F. E. Parcels Post: Address before the Southern Merchant’s -Ass’n, Nashville, Tenn., February 28-March 3, 1911. Leaflet No. 8. 15p. -pa. American League of Associations. - - Address the American League of Associations, Room 343, - Rand-McNally Bldg., Chicago, Ill. - -*Haugen, Gilbert N. Parcels Post and Postal Savings Banks: Speech in -the House of Representatives, March 13, 1908. 8p. pa. Govt. Ptg. Office. - - Reprinted from the Congressional Record. 42: 3548-51. Mr. 17, - ’08. [Address Gilbert N. Haugen, Representative, Washington, D. - C.] - -Hutsinpillar, C. A. Parcels Post: Address Delivered before the Annual -Convention of the Ohio Hardware Ass’n, February 23, 1904, 3p. pa. -gratis. - - Address C. A. Hutsinpillar, Ironton, Ohio. - -*Maxwell, George H. Perils of Parcels Post Extension. Leaflet No. 7. -35p. pa. American League of Associations. - - Reprinted in the Hearings before the Committee on the - Post-Office and Post-Roads, April 20-29, 1910. [Address - American League of Associations, Room 343, Rand-McNally Bldg., - Chicago, Ill.] - -Menace of a Parcels Post. 40p. pa. - - Address S. R. Miles, Mason City, Iowa. - -Miles, S. R. Extracts from an Address Delivered before the Federated -Commercial Clubs of Minnesota, January 17, 1908. 14p. pa. - - Address S. R. Miles, President, National Retail Hardware - Dealers Ass’n, Mason City, Iowa. - -*Ordway, John A. Parcels Post: Address before the New England Drygoods -Ass’n, March, 1911. Leaflet No. 9. 15p. pa. American League of -Associations. - - Address the American League of Associations, Room 343, - Rand-McNally Bldg., Chicago, Ill. - -Parcels Post: from the Standpoint of an Iowa Editor. Parcels Post -Circular No. 3, Series 1911. 4p. pa. Iowa Retail Hardware Association. - - Address A. R. Sale, Iowa Retail Hardware Ass’n, Mason City, - Iowa. - -*Parcels Post Problem: From the Standpoint of the Towns and Small -Cities. 30p. pa. National Hardware Bulletin. - - Address M. L. Corey, Secretary, National Retail Hardware - Association, Argos, Ind. - -Shall the Country Towns Be Destroyed by a Local Rural Parcels Post. -Pamphlet No. 5. Home Advancement Series. 30p. pa. American League of -Associations. - - Most of this pamphlet is a reprint of pp. 274-96 of the Report - of the Hearings before the Committee on the Post-Office and - Post-Roads, April, 1910. [Apply to M. L. Corey, Argos, Ind.] - -*Smith, S. C. Parcels Post: Speech in the House of Representatives, -March 3, 1908. 15p. pa. ’08. Govt. Ptg. Office. - - Reprinted from the Congressional Record. 42: 2928-31. Mr. 3, - ’08. [Address S. C. Smith, Representative, Washington, D. C.] - -Spofford, C. W. A. B. C. of Parcels Post; A. Catechism, 11p. pa. - -Trans-Mississippi Commercial Congress, Proceedings, 1907. pp. 232-40. -Parcels Post. - - -_Magazine References_ - -*Independent. 70: 72-3. Ja. 12, ’11. Objections to the Parcels Post. -Allan W. Clark. - -Independent. 70: 185. Ja. 26, ’11. Parcels Post Again. Sylvester C. -Smith. - -*Journal of Political Economy. 16: 417-35. Jl. ’08. Shall the Scope -of Governmental Functions Be Enlarged so as to Include the Express -Business? Albert N. Merritt. - -North American Review. 174: 807-19. Je. ’02. Defects and Abuses in Our -Postal System. Henry A. Castle. - - Parcels Post. pp. 812-4. - -North American Review. 178: 222-34. F. ’04. Postal Service. E. F. Loud. - - Parcels Post. pp. 224-6. - -Outlook. 96: 794. D. 3, ’10. Parcels Post. George P. Engelhard. - - - - -_SELECTED ARTICLES ON THE PARCELS POST_ - - - - -INTRODUCTION - - -The parcels post is not a new question. It has been the subject of -popular discussion for years, and several of our postmasters-general -have recommended an extension of our present system, sufficient, at -least, to put it on an equal basis with our foreign service. Those who -are familiar with the parcels post systems of other countries, and -those who believe that the express companies should not be permitted to -monopolize so large a part of the parcels-carrying trade, are in favor -of these recommendations. On the other hand, those who believe that the -government should not enter into any commercial undertaking, and those -who fear that the change will be detrimental to the country communities -and will result in the centralization of our population in the large -cities, are strongly opposed to any increase in our present rates, or -in the size of the package to be accepted. - -There are several organizations who are actively engaged at the -present time in supporting or opposing all attempts to enact parcels -post legislation. The Postal Progress League, with headquarters at -125 East 23d St., New York City, has for its aim the improvement of -our postal service, and is at present actively promoting the cause -of the parcels post. This organization is made up of manufacturers, -wholesalers, publishers and importers, and is supported by many of the -state Granges. The Postal Express Federation is a new organization, -formed for the express purpose of urging a reform of our parcels post -service, and is supported by many of the same organizations which are -back of the Postal Progress League. The American League of Associations -(headquarters at Room 343, Rand-McNally Building, Chicago, Ill.), is -composed of wholesalers in all lines of merchandise. Its object is to -promote the welfare of the small towns and country communities, and to -oppose the centralization of population in cities. It is at present -actively engaged in fighting the parcels post. - -These organizations as well as several others, named in the -bibliography given elsewhere in this volume, publish and distribute -literature for and against the parcels post, and the student of this -subject will find it profitable to get into communication with them. - -Hearings on the subject of a parcels post have been held before the -House Committee on the Post-Office and Post Roads, at two different -times, in April, 1910, and in June, 1911. At these hearings, have -appeared representatives of the associations named in the preceding -paragraph and of others who approve or oppose the recommendations -for an enlarged parcels post. Among those who have appeared in favor -of the parcels post are the various state Granges and farmer’s -organizations, the American Dyers and Cleaners Association, the -Manufacturing Perfumers Association, the Associated Retailers of St. -Louis, the Pennsylvania State Federation of Labor, the Society of -American Florists and Ornamental Horticulturists, and the National -American Woman’s Suffrage Association. Other societies opposing the -parcels post are the National Retail Hardware Association, the United -Commercial Travelers, the National Association of Implement and Vehicle -Dealers’ Associations, the National Associations of Retail Druggists -and Grocers, and various Oil, Paint, and Varnish Clubs and Associations. - -Postmaster-General George von L. Meyer recommended that our present -parcels post system, which is now limited to parcels weighing four -pounds or less, be extended to include all parcels of eleven pounds -or less, and that the rate be reduced from sixteen to twelve cents a -pound. He also recommended that a similar post be established on the -rural routes for all parcels of eleven pounds or less, with a rate -of five cents for the first pound and two cents for each additional -pound. Various bills have been introduced into Congress embodying -part or all of these suggestions. Other measures that have been -presented provide that the government be given a complete monopoly -of the parcels-carrying trade. One bill of this kind introduced by -Representative David Lewis of Maryland, provides that the government -shall take over the business of the express companies and have complete -control of the carrying business in parcels under a given weight. This -bill also provides that the zone-system of rates, now in operation in -Germany, be adopted. - -The General Discussion, following this Introduction, contains data in -regard to our present parcels post systems both foreign and domestic, -also similar data concerning the systems of other countries. It also -contains information regarding many of the recommendations that have -been made for an enlarged parcels post and the measures that have been -presented to Congress. The student is advised to familiarize himself -with the facts given in this discussion before proceeding to take up -the arguments for and against the parcels post. - - - - -GENERAL DISCUSSION - - - - -Up to Members of Congress. - -D. M. Carr. - - -Bills have been introduced in the present Congress, by Senators Burnham -and Kean, with a view of further improving the postal service. These -measures are for the purpose of enabling the postal department to -extend its parcel delivery service, commonly designated as the “parcels -post.” - -There is a large percentage of citizens who strongly advocate -an enlargement of the parcels carrying service performed by the -government. A number of foreign countries have for years maintained -parcels post systems on broad gauge plans; in fact, in Great Britain, -in Germany and a few other countries, the parcels post is conducted in -a manner so as to almost monopolize the express business. But in these -countries conditions, both geographically and commercially, are vastly -different from conditions that obtain within the United States. In the -old countries, there is greater density of population, and distances -which mail matter traverses are about one-thirteenth the distance that -the average piece of mail matter is carried in the continental United -States. - -In considering any postal innovation, it is essential that not alone -the operation and the revenue of the postal department be taken into -consideration, but also what the effect of the innovation will be upon -the industries located in various districts of the United States. -Some of the bills introduced in Congress, chief among them, that -introduced by Congressman Hearst during a former session, and the one -by Congressman Henry of Connecticut, during the present session, have -elements that mark them as undesirable and thoroughly impractical under -prevailing conditions, or any possible conditions that may arise in the -United States during the next quarter century. - -The postal department is not conducted for the purpose of profit; -rather it is conducted to perform a special service, which governmental -function can best perform for the people. But the department should -be self-sustaining. The revenue derived for the services rendered -the people should be sufficient to cover all expense of operation -economically performed. Any legislation involving the performance of -this service for less than cost to the government does not appeal to -the economist as wise or desirable. Yet the postal department does -perform certain services at a loss, although there are compensating -circumstances which more than overbalance the expenditure. In the -carrying of newspapers and periodicals, under the present system, there -is probably a loss, but at the same time the people receive a general -benefit far outweighing the cost to the government by having cheap -and good literature and such information as the press of the country -conveys and this at the minimum of expense. The second class rate, a -subsidy granted the press, has been instrumental to a degree impossible -of estimation in improving the intelligence of the people and raising -the standard of citizenship. - -The proposals set forth in the Henry bill, involving the establishment -of a parcels post system with a maximum weight of 11-pounds and the -maximum charge for maximum weight 25 cents from one postoffice in the -United States to any other postoffice or where mail is delivered, -are objectionable from an economic view. In the first place, such -service would entail heavy losses annually to the department; these -losses possibly reaching $150,000,000 or $200,000,000 annually. -Then again this system of parcels post would be a wonderful factor -in increasing the unequal distribution of business throughout the -nation. Geographical and other conditions greatly vary throughout -the states of the United States. In the thickly populated districts, -where manufacturing is carried on, the cost of labor and the cost of -production of articles of manufacture, ranges from 20 to 50 per cent -less than in other sections, principally in the agricultural regions. -A parcels post that allows the transportation of merchandise at as low -a rate as that provided for in the Henry bill, would enable consumers -residing in agricultural districts, where wages are high, to purchase -their goods in the lowest priced markets in the United States, and the -results of this system would be to concentrate industries in the large -cities and densely populated districts to the detriment of agricultural -and other sections now undergoing commercial and manufacturing -development. This would retard the growth of towns and the upbuilding -of manufacturing industries in those sections. Thus it can be seen that -there would be no compensating effects to justify the installation of a -parcels post of this character. - -The exorbitant charges made by the express companies and other carriers -have caused the people of the United States to demand that the package -carrying machinery of the United States postal department be enlarged. -Recognizing this demand, Postmaster-General Meyer in his annual report -made the recommendation that the parcels carrying service of the -government be broadened and that the parcels post be extended so as to -make the maximum weight of a package carried 11 pounds with a graduated -rate up to one pound and a pound rate of 12 cents, making the maximum -rate for the maximum weight $1.32. He also recommended that a parcels -post be established over rural delivery routes, starting from the -post-office where the route emanates and ending upon a rural route. For -this service he recommended that the limit of weight be 11 pounds and -the charge 5 cents for the first pound and 2 cents for each additional -pound, making the maximum charge for an 11 pound package 25 cents, and -that this service be limited to bonafide merchants and others residing -along the line of a rural route. - -In making his recommendation as to parcels post enlargement, it -is evident that the postmaster-general well considered not alone -the welfare of the department as to revenues sufficient for proper -maintenance and the installation of a more efficient service, but -as well carefully weighed the economic aspects as they relate to -geographical and commercial conditions throughout the Union. - -A careful study into Mr. Meyer’s plan will show that it does not -contemplate any revolution in commercial methods. Notwithstanding the -charges made to the contrary, by those opposed to his views, it does -not appear that should his system be adopted by Congress that the large -houses doing an exclusive mail order business would have any advantage -over the merchants of the smaller cities and towns. The rural parcels -post would certainly be not alone advantageous to the twelve or fifteen -millions of people residing in agricultural districts, who are now -served by more than 38,000 rural carriers, but would be of great value -to the live merchants in the smaller towns who at a minimum of expense -could utilize the rural service for the delivery of goods to their -patrons in the country. - -The bills introduced, respectively by Senators Burnham and Kean, are in -perfect harmony with the recommendations of the postmaster-general. - -With the diversion of small packages from the express companies -to the mails, the revenues to the postoffice department would be -proportionately greater than the increased cost occasioned by the -greater tonnage of matter carried. - -During the past fiscal year, the expense of maintaining the rural -delivery routes was in excess of $26,000,000. The installation of a -parcels delivery over the rural routes would most likely during the -first year place the rural delivery on a self-sustaining basis. There -are 38,253 rural routes. Should each carrier over a route on his daily -trip carry only 88 pounds of merchandise from the local stores to -the patrons on his route, it would give the government a revenue of -approximately $24,000,000 annually, and this service can be performed -without other carrying equipment than rural carriers now have. - -When every phase of the recommendations of Postmaster-General Meyer be -carefully weighed, it becomes apparent that his plans are based upon -soundest business judgment. - -Opposition to Mr. Meyer’s recommendations comes from three sources, -namely: - -Large manufacturers, jobbers and other classes of business men who -annually spend enormous amounts for letter postage. - -Country merchants who are unduly alarmed over the growth of the -catalogue houses, and who fear that a parcels post extension will -increase the mail order business to their detriment. - -Express companies, whose revenues would be decreased by operation of -the system. - - - - -Data Relative to Proposed Extension of Parcel Post. pp. 1-6. - - -OFFICE OF THE POSTMASTER-GENERAL, - -_Washington, D. C., March 4, 1908._ - -MY DEAR SENATOR: It affords me great pleasure, in compliance with -your request, to place at your disposal the data which are available -relative to the proposed extension of the parcel post. - -It does not appear to be generally appreciated that a comprehensive -system of parcels post is already in satisfactory operation in most -foreign countries. Exhibit No. 1 gives detailed information on this -subject. I show here the limit of weight which has been fixed in a -number of instances: - - Pounds. - Great Britain 11 - Germany 110 - France 22 - Italy 11 - Chile 11 - New Zealand 11 - Austria 110 - Belgium 132 - The Netherlands 11 - Cuba 11 - -The rates in the countries mentioned are much lower than those shown in -Exhibit No. 2, which have been recommended for the general parcel post -in the United States. - -The present rate on the general parcel post is 16 cents a pound -for people in our own country, the limit of weight being 4 pounds, -while the rate from the United States to 29 foreign countries is 12 -cents a pound and the limit of weight to 24 of these countries is 11 -pounds. In other words, our own people must pay 4 cents a pound more -for the privilege of dispatching packages to each other than when -destined to residents of a foreign country. I have therefore urged a -rate of 12 cents a pound for packages forwarded through the mails to -post-offices in the United States and its possessions, subject to the -same regulations as exist at the present time, with the exception of -increasing the weight limit to 11 pounds. The service can be rendered -at a cost well within the rates recommended. - -According to the report of the record of weight of second-class mail -matter, transmitted by the Post-Office Department to the House of -Representatives under date of February 1, 1907, the average haul of all -second-class matter was 540 miles. - -Of the total receipts of the Post-Office Department 69 per cent are -expended for labor and supplies, and 7 per cent for conveyance charges -other than those paid the railroads for transporting the mail. A -general rate for parcel post of 12 cents a pound would produce a -revenue of $240 a ton. Even on the basis of a 540-mile average haul, -I find the debit and credit sides of 1 ton of parcel post to be as -follows: - - By postage $240.00 - To railroad transportation, 540 miles, at 5½ cents $29.70 - Other transportation charges 16.80 - Labor and supplies 165.60 - ------ - - Total cost 212.10 - ------ - Profit 27.90 - -A local parcel post confined to rural delivery routes is also advocated -at the rates given in Exhibit No. 3. The Department favors the -establishment of this special service because of its ability to render -it with great advantage to the farmer, the country merchant, and other -patrons of the routes, as the necessary machinery (over 38,000 routes -now regularly covered by rural carriers) is in operation. There are -some 15,000,000 people living on these routes, which shows the vast -possibilities of the rural service. It has been estimated that if but -three packages of the maximum weight were handled each trip on the -rural routes now established the resulting revenue, even at the low -rates given, would more than wipe out the postal deficit. The increased -cancellations would automatically advance the salaries of postmasters -of the fourth class, and the remaining revenue, which would be -clear gain, would be of great assistance in making the rural service -self-sustaining. The rural service will, in all probability, cost the -government this year $34,000,000, an increase of $10,000,000 over last -year. - -The history and advantages of the rural delivery should be understood -by our people. There is a feeling in many quarters that it is an -extravagance and an unnecessary drain upon the postal revenues. The -first rural route was established in the latter part of 1896, $14,840 -being expended for rural delivery during that fiscal year. At that time -the postal deficit was $11,411,779. During the fiscal year ended June -30, 1907, the expenditures for rural delivery aggregated $26,671,699, -while the postal deficit showed a decrease, as compared with 1897, of -$4,800,000, the deficit amounting to $6,653,282. This would seem to -show that while the expense incurred for maintaining rural delivery is -great, yet the rural delivery has been instrumental in increasing the -general postal receipts. However, its benefits to our people can not be -measured in dollars and cents. - -That a local parcel post would be of material advantage to the retail -merchant in competition with mail-order houses is seen at once when it -is pointed out that the latter, at the proposed general parcel post -rate of 12 cents a pound, would be obliged to pay $1.32 for sending an -11-pound package to a rural route patron, a difference in favor of the -local storekeeper of about 10 cents a pound, or $1.07 on an 11-pound -package. - -Letters and petitions for the extension of the parcel post are being -received from all sections of the country. Many commercial bodies -formerly opposed to any action of this kind are on record as being -heartily in favor of it. - -On the other hand, objections have been raised to the measures the -Department is advocating. Although no sound argument has been advanced -in opposition, the contentions which have been made are not without -interest. I mention the more important of them, at the same time giving -the replies which they have elicited: - -It has been stated that the Department is not equipped to deliver -11-pound parcels received in the general mails. The present postal -regulations provide that where a package is of undue size or weight a -formal notice shall be sent the addressee requesting him to call for -it. This practice, would continue were the weight limit increased to -11 pounds, in the case of offices having free delivery. Nor would it -work a hardship, for under the present limit of 4 pounds the average -weight of parcels sent through the mails is but one-third of a pound. -Increasing the weight limit would not have nearly as great an effect on -the average weight of parcels mailed as seems to be commonly supposed. -Where packages were addressed to persons living on rural routes they -would, of course, be delivered to the boxes of the patrons by rural -carriers, who would not thereby be inconvenienced. - -The claim that the special local rate recommended for the parcel post -on rural routes would eventually be extended to include the entire -postal service has been given considerable publicity. The impossibility -of this becomes apparent when attention is directed to the cost of -railroad transportation, which has no part in the former service. About -$45,000,000 were paid last year for mail transportation and $6,000,000 -for postal cars. - -Others have said that large mail-order houses would, under the proposed -law, utilize the special parcel post or rural routes through agents -to the great disadvantage of the country merchant, first assembling -their orders and despatching them by express or freight to suitable -distributing points. The Department has recommended provisions which -will prevent any such use of the routes. It should be remembered, too, -that even in the absence of a specific prohibition of this nature, -any systematic attempt upon the part of a mail-order house to thus -distribute its wares would necessitate the employment of many thousands -of local representatives. The catalogues of these concerns indicate in -no uncertain way that they attribute their success, in large measure, -to their low selling expense, and that the absence of any sort of -agents is the principal feature of their argument in accounting for the -supposedly low prices of their goods. - -The cry of “class legislation” has been raised. There is, of course, no -discrimination involved, for all who can be reached by rural carriers -will be accommodated. It would be as reasonable to decry the laws -which permit the delivery of mail to patrons living on rural routes, -while persons differently situated are obliged to make a trip to a -near-by post-office to obtain their letters. - -Those who claim that an increase in the weight limit would work -an injury to country merchants appear to have the impression that -mail-order houses now deliver their goods extensively through the -postal service, and that this practice would largely increase if the -recommendations which have been made become law. Upon a moment’s -reflection it will be perceived that the present rate of 16 cents -a pound ($16 per hundred-weight), as well as the proposed rate of -12 cents a pound ($12 per hundred-weight), are alike prohibitive on -practically all lines of merchandise. Mail-order houses make their -shipments usually by freight or express and would continue to do so. - -Antagonism to the proposed measures, when analyzed and found not to be -the result of selfish motives, appears to be based upon inaccurate or -insufficient information. In illustration, I desire to invite attention -to a communication of the Richmond Commercial Club, of Richmond, Ind., -which appeared in the Congressional Record of January 4, 1908. In this -letter the statement was made that a certain mail-order house would -save $40,000 a year on the mailing of catalogues alone. Catalogues are -rated as third-class matter, whereas the Department’s recommendations -with respect to parcel post relate to fourth-class matter only. -Catalogues are now mailable at 1 cent for 2 ounces, or 8 cents a pound, -4 cents a pound less than the rate proposed for the general parcel -post. The mail-order house referred to, therefore, would gain nothing -under the proposed law in the mailing of its catalogues. - -With the adoption of new conveniences of life by urban residents, and -the ever-increasing attractions of the city, especially potent in their -influence upon the younger generation, the importance of affording -farmers and ruralites generally every legitimate advantage becomes more -and more apparent. The free rural delivery has improved materially -and intellectually the life of great numbers of these people. Is it -too much to ask that the Department shall make a further use of this -important system; a use which, while adding appreciably to the postal -revenues, will directly and vitally benefit every man, woman, and -child within reach of a rural route? The countryman would have the -necessities of life delivered at his gate at an average cost of 2 cents -a pound, thereby facilitating and increasing consumption. This would -mean augmentation of the trade of thousands of country merchants. The -commercial traveler should appreciate the advantages of this system; it -would increase his orders because the country merchant buys from the -jobber or the wholesaler. Every component part of our commercial system -would feel the effects of an increased prosperity. - -It would inevitably tend toward the improvement of the roads. Better -roads and improved postal facilities in the rural districts would -result in increased values of farm lands. The rural service as now -organized has accomplished something in this direction; its enlargement -will add to the good attained. - -Believe me, faithfully yours, - -G. v. L. Meyer. - -Hon. Henry E. Burnham, _United States Senate, Washington_. - - -Exhibit 1. - -Parcel Post Rates in the Domestic Service of the Countries Named. - -Great Britain.--Postage rates for the first pound, 3 pence (6 cents), -and for each additional pound, 1 penny (2 cents); maximum weight, 11 -pounds; greatest length, 3 feet 6 inches; greatest length and girth -combined, 6 feet. - -New Zealand and the States Composing the Commonwealth for -Australia.--Limits of weight and size, same as in Great Britain. -Postage rates, 6 pence (12 cents) for the first pound, and 3 pence (6 -cents) for each additional pound. - -Germany.--Greatest weight, 50 kilograms (about 110 pounds); no limit -of size. Postage rates: For all parcels conveyed not more than 10 -geographic miles, 25 pfennig (6 cents), and 50 pfennig (13 cents) for -greater distance; if a parcel weighs more than 5 kilograms (11 pounds -av.), it is charged for each additional kilogram (2 pounds) carried 10 -miles, 5 pfennig (1 cent); 20 miles, 10 pfennig (3 cents); 50 miles, -20 pfennig (5 cents); 100 miles, 30 pfennig (8 cents); 150 miles, 40 -pfennig (10 cents); and more than 150 miles, 50 pfennig (13 cents). -Unwieldy parcels are charged in addition 50 per cent of the above rates. - -Austria.--Greatest weight, 50 kilograms (110 pounds); except that -parcels containing gold or silver coin may weigh up to 65 kilograms -(143 pounds). Postage rates: Parcels up to 5 kilograms (11 pounds) in -weight are charged 30 heller (6 cents) for the first 10 miles, and 60 -heller (12 cents) for greater distances. A parcel weighing more than -5 kilograms (11 pounds) is charged for each kilogram (2 pounds) in -addition to the above rates, for the first 10 miles, 6 heller (1 cent); -20 miles, 12 heller (2 cents); 50 miles, 24 heller (5 cents); 100 -miles, 36 heller (7 cents); 150 miles, 48 heller (10 cents), and more -than 150 miles, 60 heller (12 cents). - -France.--Greatest weight 10 kilograms (about 22 pounds); no limit of -size. Postage rates: Up to 3 kilograms (7 pounds), 60 centimes (12 -cents) delivered at the railway station, and 85 centimes (17 cents) -delivered at a residence; from 3 to 5 kilograms (7 to 11 pounds), 80 -centimes (16 cents) at a station, and 1 franc 5 centimes (21 cents) -at residence; from 5 to 10 kilograms (11 to 22 pounds), 1 franc 25 -centimes (25 cents) at a station, and 1 franc 50 centimes (30 cents) at -a residence. - -Belgium.--Greatest weight 60 kilograms (about 132 pounds); no limit -of size, but unwieldy parcels are charged 50 per cent in addition to -the following rates for any distance: Parcels up to 5 kilograms (11 -pounds), 50 centimes (10 cents)--or if by express trains, 80 centimes -(16 cents); up to 10 kilograms (22 pounds), 60 centimes (12 cents)--or -if by express trains, 1 franc (20 cents); for each additional 10 -kilograms (22 pounds), 10 centimes (2 cents)--or if sent by express -trains, 50 centimes (10 cents) additional. Fee for delivering at -residences, 30 centimes (6 cents). - -Italy.--Greatest weight, 5 kilograms (11 pounds). For ordinary parcels, -greatest size in any direction, 60 centimeters (2 feet), except rolls -which may measure 1 meter (40 inches--3 feet 4 inches) in length by 20 -centimeters (8 inches) in thickness. Postage rates for a parcel not -exceeding 3 kilograms (7 pounds), 60 centimes (12 cents); and 1 franc -(20 cents) for a parcel exceeding that weight. A parcel which exceeds -60 centimeters (2 feet) in any direction, but does not exceed 1½ meters -(5 feet), is admitted to the mails as an “unwieldy” parcel and is -charged, in addition to the above rates, 30 centimes (6 cents) if it -does not weigh more than 3 kilograms (7 pounds), and 50 centimes (10 -cents) if it exceeds that weight. - -The Netherlands.--Greatest weight, 5 kilograms (11 pounds); greatest -size, 25 cubic decimeters (1,525 cubic inches), or 1 meter (3 feet -4 inches) in any direction. Postage rates: 15 (6) cents (Dutch) up -to 1 kilogram (2 pounds); 20 (8) cents from 1 to 3 kilograms (2 to 7 -pounds); 25 cents (10) from 3 to 5 kilograms (7 to 11 pounds). - -Chile.--Greatest weight, 5 kilograms (11 pounds); must not measure -more than 60 centimeters (2 feet) in any direction. Postage rates: 30 -centavos (10 cents) if a parcel does not weigh more than 3 kilograms (7 -pounds); 50 centavos (17 cents) if it weighs more. - -Cuba.--Greatest weight, 11 pounds; greatest size, 3 feet 6 inches -in length by 2 feet 6 inches in width. Postage rates: 10 centavos -(10 cents) a pound up to 5 pounds; and 6 centavos (6 cents) for each -additional pound. - - -Exhibit 2. - -Rates recommended by the Postmaster-General in his annual report -(year ended June 30, 1907) for packages forwarded through the mails -to post-offices in the United States and its possessions, subject to -the regulations which exist at the present time, with the exception of -increasing the weight limit to 11 pounds. - - Cents. - - One ounce 1 - Over 1 ounce and not exceeding 3 ounces 2 - Over 3 ounces and not exceeding 4 ounces 3 - Over 4 ounces and not exceeding 5 ounces 4 - Over 5 ounces and not exceeding 6 ounces 5 - Over 6 ounces and not exceeding 8 ounces 6 - Over 8 ounces and not exceeding 12 ounces 9 - Over 12 ounces and not exceeding 16 ounces 12 - - -Exhibit 3. - -Rates recommended by the Postmaster-General in his annual report -(fiscal year ended June 30, 1907) for packages covered by the special -local parcel post on rural delivery routes. - - Cents. - For the first pound 5 - For each additional pound, up to 11 pounds 2 - For fractional parts of a pound: - Two ounces or less 1 - Over 2 ounces and up to 4 ounces 2 - Over 4 and up to 8 ounces 3 - Over 8 and up to 12 ounces 4 - Over 12 ounces and up to 1 pound 5 - - - - -Our Postal Express. - -James L. Cowles. - - -The United States post-office has always been an express service, -although Congress long confined the business to sealed parcels of very -small weights--not over 3 pounds--and at very high rates graduated -according to distance, with no insurance whatever against loss or -damage in the mails. In 1874, however, the business was extended over -all kinds of merchandise in unsealed parcels at a common rate of -one cent each two ounces, regardless at once of distance and of the -volume of a patron’s business. This placed the humblest citizen in the -most out of the way postal district of the country on a par with the -biggest corporation in our greatest metropolis as to the cost of the -transportation of his produce and of his supplies in parcels up to four -pounds, and, though still with no insurance against loss or damage, -the new postal express immediately became a dangerous competitor to -the private express company with its distance rates based on what the -subject will bear and always discriminating in favor of the big town -against the little town, the big corporation against the ordinary -citizen. - -The private express interests got quickly to work, therefore, and -Congress soon checked up the growing postal express business by -increasing the postal rate one hundred per cent--from eight to sixteen -cents a pound. Later Congress bowed to the powerful book and seed -interests of the country and reduced the rate on their merchandise -to the old rate of 1874, and now, for many years, the post-office -and the public have been subjected to two sets of rates on matter -indistinguishable both in character and as to the cost of their -transportation. - -The evil of this absurd postal classification, continued these twenty -years by Congress, becomes decidedly evident when our domestic service -is compared with the foreign parcels post services established by -President Taft and Postmaster-General Hitchcock, with their common 11 -pound weight limit at 12 cents a pound, on all merchandise posted from -the United States to foreign countries and from those countries to the -United States: - - From Austria: - 4½ pounds .35 - 11 pounds .86 - - From Italy: - 7 pounds .39 - 11 pounds .79 - - From Norway: - 2½ pounds .16 - 11 pounds .96 - - From Germany: - 4½ pounds .33 - 11 pounds .81 - - From Belgium: - 4½ pounds .35 - 11 pounds 1.10 - - U. S. Foreign Rates: - 2¼ pounds .36 - 7 pounds .84 - 11 pounds 1.32 - - U. S. Domestic Service: - 2¼ pounds .36 - 4½ pounds (2 parcels) .72 - 7 pounds (2 parcels) 1.12 - 11 pounds (3 parcels) 1.76 - -Under the English post-American express arrangement English postal -parcels now come to New York three pounds for sixty cents; seven pounds -for 84c; eleven pounds for $1.08, and these parcels are forwarded by -the American express company throughout the country at a common rate -of twenty-four cents a parcel, eight cents a pound on a three-pound -parcel; about three and a half cents a pound on a seven-pound parcel, -and less than two and a half cents a pound on an eleven-pound parcel. -Meantime the express company taxes domestic merchandise of the same -weights from 25 cents to $3.20, according to the distance traversed, -while Congress taxes the public for a similar domestic postal service, -three pounds, forty-eight cents; seven pounds, 2 parcels, $1.12; eleven -pounds, 3 parcels, $1.76. - - - - -Data Relative to Proposed Extension of Parcel Post. pp. 8-14. - -From The Boston Herald. - -Ernest G. Walker. - - -Postmaster-General Wanamaker first actively urged the establishment -of a parcels post on a large scale. He summed up the situation -epigrammatically in his 100 reasons for it and only 4 reasons against -it--those 4 being the express companies. Others after him, especially -the late Postmaster-General Bissell, made like recommendations. But -Mr. Meyer now has an advantage in his campaign which none of his -predecessors had in the rural delivery routes. Every one of the many -thousands of routes would be a little parcels service in itself, aside -from being a line of communication, by which small packages could be -conveyed from all parts of the country or to any part of the country. -Mr. Meyer is building much upon that fact. The local service at cheaper -rates will also protect the local store-keepers, to which the big -department stores and mail-order establishments are bogeys. - -Ever since he announced his intention of urging a better parcels post -service for the United States, the Postmaster-General has been the -recipient of many letters. These come from various classes of people. -Most of them commend his plan, but the retail associations, such as the -associations of hardware men and grocers, come out in bold opposition. -It is such people as these that the Postmaster-General hopes to convert -when they are brought to understand the details of what he wants to -do. Some of these critics, besides claiming that the legislation would -favor the catalogue houses, argue that the government should not go -into a general freight business and that if the express companies are -charging exorbitant rates, the Interstate Commerce Commission, which -now has authority over them, should step in and require that the rates -be lowered. - -The operations of parcels post in other countries make a very -interesting transportation chapter. They are conducted on a gigantic -scale and, apart from what J. Henniker Heaton, long an English member -of Parliament from Canterbury, and a great advocate of postal reforms, -calls “grandmotherly regulations,” have worked with practically -world-wide success. Shopping by mail is made easy, whether one in the -country would trade with the local draper or the big metropolitan -merchant. - -Great Britain’s conservative enactments will likely be a model for -any extension of the parcels post service by Congress. The service is -almost twenty-five years old over there. It has become one of the most -important and highly appreciated postal features. Its growth has been -continuous and phenomenal. The scope has frequently been broadened. -There was an early clamor for an agricultural parcels post. The owners -of small farms in remote localities wanted it. The growers of spring -flowers in Kerry said it would enable them to compete with the south -of France and the Scilly Isles. Eventually the agricultural parcels -post was authorized and also spacious dimensions for packages. Flower -growers can now send full length orchid spikes and long-stemmed roses -by post, where formerly only simple blooms were admissable. - - -_Send Fish, Eggs and Fruit_ - -The produce of the culturists goes forward to London and other big -English cities in tremendous volume. Fresh fish, dispatched from -seaport towns to the large hotels, are delivered with celerity. Meats, -cheese, fruits, vegetables, and freshly laid eggs in mail packages -under the 11-pound limit form a very considerable factor in the -commerce of the Kingdom. - -The general rates are low. A 1-pound parcel takes a three-penny stamp. -That is 6 cents in our money. For 2 pounds an 8-cent stamp is required; -for three pounds, a 10-cent stamp; for 5 pounds, 12 cents; for 7 -pounds, 14 cents; 8 pounds, 16 cents; 9 pounds, 18 cents; 10 pounds, -20 cents, and 11 pounds, 22 cents. Four-pound parcels cost as much as -five pounds, and 6 pounds cost as much as 7 pounds. For inland parcels -3 feet 6 inches is the maximum length; 6 feet the maximum measurement -for length and girth. These have been adopted as standard dimensions -in the services of numerous other countries. Parcels should not be -posted at a letter box, but presented at the counter of a postoffice. -The government virtually guarantees the sender against loss up to -$10. Payment of a registry fee of 4 cents, in addition to the regular -postage, insures the parcel for $25; a 25-cent registry stamp carries -an insurance of $1,000. There have been demands, not yet conceded, -for the cash on delivery system that several European countries have -adopted. - -The big retail stores of London avail themselves extensively of the -parcels service for delivery of goods. The rates, ranging from 6 to -22 cents, are not prohibitive. In many cases the government service -is cheaper and quicker. Laundries return washing by parcels post. In -Germany, where the rates are even cheaper, lads away at school send -their soiled linen home by mail to be washed and it is returned to them -by the same conveyance. - -Sidney Buxton, the postmaster-general of Great Britain, in his -last report, statistically demonstrates the continuous growth, and -consequently the popularity, of the parcels post in the United Kingdom. -The number of parcels delivered in the country districts of England -and Wales in 1896-97 was 41,512,000, and increased annually by from 3 -to 6 per cent, till in 1905-6 the number was 66,277,000. In the London -district for the same ten-year period the increase was from 11,229,000 -parcels to 18,167,000. A similar increase was shown for Scotland from -6,802,000 to 10,725,000 parcels, and for Ireland, where the increase -was from 4,172,000 in 1896-97 to 6,513,000 in 1905-6. - -The gross amount of revenue the government collected increased from -£1,445,126 for 63,715,000 parcels in the United Kingdom for the first -year of the decade to £2,138,673 for 101,682,000 parcels in the last -year of the decade. The post-office’s share of these collections -increased from £763,307 to £1,142,224. The average postage per parcel -decreased during the period from about 11 cents to 10 cents. The -postmaster-general undertakes to deliver both letters and parcels at -every house in the Kingdom. They are delivered by the same postman, -except in the large towns, where there is a special staff for parcel -work. - - -_Call Swiss Service Best_ - -Because of competition from private agencies, that have charges -graduated on a basis of distance, there is a tendency for an unduly -high proportion of long distance parcels and parcels for delivery in -rural districts, which are the least remunerative. The post-office -has met this competition by establishing, for comparatively short -distances, a large number of horse and motor parcel van services, -as road conveyance for these distances makes possible an economy as -compared with conveyance by railway at the charge of 55 per cent of the -receipts. - -The Swiss is cited much as one of the most efficient and satisfactory -in Europe. The mountain villages and resorts of that industrious -little country receive a large portion of their supplies by post, as a -maximum weight of 110 pounds is carried within a radius of 62 miles. -The conditions there are somewhat the same as with the dwellers in the -Appalachian and Blue Ridge mountains, to whom it has been declared that -a parcels post would be a great boon because there is no prospect that -either the railroads or the express companies will ever approach their -hamlets and villages. - -This Swiss law includes an agricultural parcels post and likewise a -passenger post, agitation for both of which has generally followed the -establishment of parcels post in most countries. The passenger post of -Switzerland is something like the mail coaches in the United States -before the coming of railroads, except that the coaches are owned by -the state and the fees are prescribed by the same authority. A very -large business is done in sending parcels through the mails. A treasury -official, who was traveling in Switzerland during the past summer, saw -at one railroad station several enormous baskets filled with hams and -provisions. They were samples of mail parcels under the 110-pound limit. - - -_Cash on Delivery Plan_ - -The general rates are more liberal than in any other country. A parcel -weighing 1 pound is carried anywhere within the boundaries of the -Federation for 3 cents, a 5-pound parcel for 5 cents, a 11-pound -parcel for 8 cents, a 22-pound parcel for 17 cents, a 33-pound parcel -for 23 cents, and a 44-pound parcel for 33 cents. Parcels weighing -as much as 110 pounds are carried within a radius of 62 miles for 60 -cents, which enables many of the peasants to market much of their light -produce by mail. The rates are so adjustable that housewives can secure -anything by post from a paper of pins to a bag of flour. The V. P., -or value payable, system is a part of the Swiss postal arrangements, -so that purchaser can pay for his goods on delivery, and there is but -one financial transaction connected with the purchase as far as he is -concerned. A provision for delivery makes the service all the more -attractive. - -Belgium’s parcels post has even a higher weight limit than Switzerland, -for it accepts articles of 62 kilograms, or about 132 pounds, in -one package, and puts no limit upon the size, except that unwieldy -packages are subject to an extra charge of 50 per cent. But up to 5 -kilograms, which is the conventional 11-pound limit of a majority of -the parcels post countries, the charge is 50 centimes, or 10 cents; -for 10 kilograms 12 cents, and two cents extra for every additional -10 kilograms (22 pounds). A higher charge is made in Belgium, as in -several other European countries, if the parcel is to be carried on an -express train. It amounts to six cents for five kilograms. The fee for -delivering at residence is six cents additional. - -Germany and Austria maintain the 50-kilogram limit. The first named -country enforces the 50 per cent extra charge for unwieldy articles. It -also has what is called the zone system. For conveyance 10 geographic -miles the charge is six cents (25 pfennigs), and 13 cents (50 pfennigs) -for greater distances. If the parcel weighs more than 11 pounds there -is a charge of one cent (five pfennigs) for each additional kilogram -carried 10 miles, 10 pfennigs for 20 miles, 20 pfennigs for 50 miles, -30 pfennigs for 100 miles, 40 pfennigs for 150 miles, and 50 pfennigs, -approximately 13 cents, for more than 150 miles. The same rate of -charges applies in Austria. - - -_A Table of Charges_ - -The French parcels post law requires presentation at the railroad -station. Some other European countries, like Great Britain, require -it to be delivered at the postoffice. The French maximum weight is 10 -kilograms (22 pounds) without any restriction as to size. The postage -rates are 12 cents up to 3 kilograms; 16 cents up to 5 kilograms, -and 30 cents up to 10 kilograms. These rates are for delivery at a -railroad station. An extra fee of 25 centimes (5 cents) is charged for -delivering the parcel at the residence of the addressee. - -Certain elementary items of cost enter into the service of European -countries that would not be identical with the maintenance of a similar -service in the United States. In Germany a considerable mileage of -the railroads is state owned. They carry certain parcels in the mails -without compensation. In large sections of Europe there has never been -anything like adequate service by express companies, and in the absence -of business enterprises in establishing such transportation the people -have been compelled to look to their governments for relief. The cheap -rates for parcels post there were originally, in some part, intended as -an accommodation for the poorer classes. - -The distances for transportation are less and the population is denser. -The United States is 225 times larger than Switzerland, 60 times larger -than England, 17 times larger than Germany, 12 times larger than the -three countries combined. In England the average distance a letter or -mail package travels is 40 miles; in Germany it is 42 miles; in the -United States it is said to be 542 miles. - - -_Difficult to Estimate Cost_ - -No accurate information is available as to whether the European parcels -posts are in reality self-supporting. They certainly are nearly so, -and in some instances are regarded as profitable government ventures. -Everywhere the service is characterized by prompt transmission and -prompt delivery. The percentages of loss are very small. The several -national constituencies that have a parcels post system would no more -relinquish such privileges than American cities would relinquish -electric lights or automobiles. One European enthusiast pronounced -the establishment of the parcels post “a service to mankind only less -splendid than that of the transmission of thought.” - -In England it is claimed that the parcels post service would be -a source of profit but for the amounts paid to the railroads for -transportation, the share of 55 per cent of the receipts being regarded -as exorbitant. Generally the parcels post is so joined with the rest of -the mail service that its entire cost can not be counted. - -The international business has grown to enormous proportions. The -figures collected at Berne for 1904, in connection with the Postal -Union, show that the parcels mailed across the frontiers of 36 nations -and colonies that year numbered something like 38,000,000. The small -percentage of that total, where the value was declared, showed an -aggregate of about $162,000,000 worth of property. In that list the -United States would have stood about eleventh on the showing for the -fiscal year of 1906, when 264,438 parcels of an average weight of 2⅔ -pounds were sent from this country abroad. Tunis sent more according -to the figures than the United States. Germany, leading all other -nations both in the dispatch and receipt of parcels in international -mails, sent a total of 11,675,385, of which 11,343,516 were classed as -“ordinary,” and 331,869 were “with a declared value” of $23,352,378. -Austria, enjoying close postal relations with Germany, dispatched -10,659,300 parcels to other countries, of which 1,082,430 had a -declared value of $68,396,578. - - -_Has Become Great Factor_ - -The totals of “receipts” and “dispatches” of course balance for the -36 countries in question, but are not the same for each country -represented. The rank in parcels dispatched runs: Germany, Austria, -France, Hungary, Great Britain, Switzerland, Italy, Belgium, -Netherlands, Tunis, British India, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Russia, Denmark, -Luxemburg, Japan, and Egypt; in parcels received the order is: Germany, -Hungary, Austria, Switzerland, France, Italy, Great Britain, Belgium, -Russia, Netherlands, Denmark, Roumania, Spain, Bosnia-Herzegovina, -Sweden, Norway, Luxemburg, Tunis, and so on. Switzerland in 1904 -received across her borders 2,788,406 parcels by post, of which -2,635,090 were “ordinary” and 133,316 were declared of a value of -$9,863,886. Of 6,352,360 parcels that came over the Austrian frontier, -778,380 had a declared value of $64,788,927. Germany received 7,337,404 -parcels in international mails, of which 482,472 had a declared value -of $35,901,435. The parcels received by post in the United States -during the fiscal year 1906 from abroad were recorded as 131,064, of -an average weight of 2.73 pounds. Probably the actual number was much -larger, perhaps twice as large. - -Sufficient figures have been given to indicate what a great factor the -parcels post has become in the trade of the world. The value of the -merchandise thus transported can only be roughly estimated, but it will -probably exceed half a billion dollars annually. - -This business is transacted across frontiers, causing little or no -friction with customs officers. Boxes with declared value are subject -to the legislation of the country of origin or destination as regards -payment of stamp duties on articles exported and as regards the control -of stamp and customs duties on articles imported. The stamp duties and -charges for examination by customs officers involved in the importation -are collected from the addressees when the articles are delivered. - - -_Provision for Insurance_ - -Practically the same rules apply for all parcels post. There is -provision for insurance and also for “trade charges,” which latter -term means that goods can be sent c. o. d., the maximum value being -f.1000. The limit of weight is 5 kilograms, or 11 pounds. The cost -of conveyance comprises a charge of 10 cents for each country -participating in the territorial transit, a graduated distance tax -for sea conveyance and extra rates for cumbersome parcels, and may be -increased under certain conditions by delivery fees and, in case of -declared values, by insurance fees. Weights under 2 pounds, however, -are transported for a maximum of 1 franc. Special forms are provided -for registering for customs declaration, for certificate of prepayment, -when that is desired, and for trade charges. - -The United States is not a party to this comprehensive parcels post -convention, by which a vast quantity of merchandise is carried to -different parts of the world annually, but Argentina, Bolivia, Chile, -Colombia, Guatemala, Uruguay, and Venezuela are among the signatories. -But the United States has parcels post conventions with 33 different -countries on somewhat different but fairly liberal terms. It keeps the -postage for parcels it sends to other countries and they in turn retain -the postage on parcels sent here. That saves in bookkeeping and has -been found economical, whereas the more comprehensive convention, under -which most of the European and Asiatic countries operate, divide the -postage receipts pro rata. The United States will not transmit through -its mails parcels en route from one foreign country to another. Among -the latest parcels post conventions the President has ratified under -statute authority are those with Sweden, Peru, Denmark, Ecuador, and -Bermuda. - - -_Customs Easily Collected_ - -The popularity in this country of the parcels post is well demonstrated -by the great growth in the use of international facilities. The -dispatches from this country for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1905, -amounted to 560,228 pounds and for the year ending June 30, 1906, was -721,164 pounds, an increase of 28.73 per cent. Only one-fifth of the -dispatches of the last mentioned fiscal year went to Europe, which -indicates that a good share of the parcels business was with Mexico and -Central South America. Parcels for Germany, Hongkong, Japan, Norway, -Belgium, Great Britain, Sweden, and Denmark are accepted only for a -maximum weight of 4 pounds and 6 ounces, where the maximum weight -for the other countries with which the Postoffice Department now has -conventions is 11 pounds. - -The customs officials say that the parcels post business with -foreign countries is increasing by leaps and bounds. Within recent -months better facilities for the collection of customs dues have -been inaugurated, with the result it is said, that many packages -which hitherto passed without being noted are now being examined and -recorded. There are offices of exchange, so called, in several of the -larger post-offices of the United States where customs officials are -stationed to attend to the collection of duties on these parcels from -abroad. In the Washington City post-office this foreign parcels post -business is said to have increased 300 per cent within the last twelve -months. The Treasury Department keeps about 25 customs employees now on -duty at the New York City post-office to attend to the foreign parcels -post business which goes through that office. Dutiable packages to -minor offices are handled from exchange offices. Such mail addressed -to Plymouth, Mass., for instance, would be held till the addressee had -forwarded to the postmaster at Boston the amount of duty required. - - - - -Post-office, Our Mutual Express Company. pp. 1-3. - -William S. Bennet. - - -MR. CHAIRMAN: In connection with this subject I take pleasure in -submitting the following views of the Postal Progress League: - -_The Post-Office, Our Mutual Express Company_ - -From the foundation of our national government, the people of the -United States, through their representatives in Congress, have always -determined the scope of their postal service, the pay of their mail -carriers, their own postal rates; and from the first they seem to have -provided for the postal transport of merchandise in very small sealed -parcels at very high rates--by the act of 1792, 24 cents an ounce for -distances up to 30 miles, higher rates for greater distances. In 1810 -they fixed the postal weight limit at 3 pounds, and it so remained -for many years. In 1863 the postal rates were made uniform regardless -of distance, and since 1863 Congress has definitely provided for the -transport of merchandise in unsealed parcels, but still with a weight -limit so low and rates so high as to be practically prohibitive. - -In the old era of household industries when the peddler, with his -pack on his back, or driving his own team, was the chief agency of -commercial intercourse, these postal limitations worked little harm, -but their continuance in our day, when every industry needs a continent -for its development, is no longer endurable. The common welfare -demands the widest possible extension, the most efficient and economic -administration of our great mutual express company. - -In its report of January 28, 1907, the Postal Commission of the -Fifty-ninth Congress declared that: “Upon the postal service, more than -upon anything else, does the general economic as well as the social and -political development of the country depend.” And yet the United States -merchandise post of to-day is limited to 4-pound parcels at rates: -Sealed parcels 2 cents an ounce, 32 cents a pound, with no insurance -against loss or damage unless registered; and unsealed parcels, with no -insurance under any conditions, at rates: - -_Third-Class Matter_ - -Some specific kinds of merchandise; printed books; Christmas cards -printed on paper; advertisements on ordinary paper; seeds, bulbs, etc., -for planting, 1 cent for 2 ounces, 8 cents per pound. - -_Fourth-Class Matter_ - -General merchandise; blank books; Christmas cards of any other -substance than paper; advertisements on blotting paper; seeds, bulbs -for food, etc., 1 cent per ounce, 16 cents per pound. - -In 1874 third-class matter covered all merchandise at one-half the -present general merchandise rate. - -The Postal Report of 1904, pages 593-595, shows the effect of these -limitations on the free rural service. In its daily 24-mile course, -visiting over 100 families, the average rural post-wagon handles -less than 26 pounds of mail per day, collected and delivered; it -collects less than 1 pound. The average rural family posts hardly one -merchandise parcel a year. Its total merchandise traffic dispatched -and received is less than 10 parcels a year. The postal revenue from -its entire merchandise traffic is less than 50 cents a year. The -total cancellations of the average carrier in 1904 amounted to only -$10.64 a month; to less than $132 a year. With the same limitations in -1909, his postal income must remain practically the same. Meanwhile -the 4,000,000 families on the rural routes go to and from their post -towns and their homes, carrying their supplies and their produce at a -needless expense--estimated at only 50 cents a week per family--of over -$100,000,000 a year. - -And the postal weighings of 1907 disclose a similar state of things -in the general-merchandise traffic of the post-office. Of the general -postal business, the merchandise traffic represents: - - Per cent. - In number of parcels 1.12 - In weight 4.79 - In revenue 4.44 - -The weight of the average merchandise postal parcel is 5.45 ounces; -its average haul is 687 miles. The merchandise tax, 1 cent per ounce -or fraction thereof, amounts in practice to 17.23 cents per pound. -The average family posts less than 9 parcels a year--less than 3 -pounds--and pays for the service about 50 cents a year. - -The local merchandise mailed in October, 1907, at 17 representative -post-offices of Alabama weighed only 65 pounds, at 16 representative -post-offices of Arkansas only 14 pounds, at 18 representative -post-offices of Iowa only 116 pounds, at 16 representative post-offices -of New Hampshire only 27 pounds, at 16 representative post-offices of -North Carolina only 30 pounds, at 14 representative post-offices of -Oregon only 1 pound, at 14 representative post-offices of Montana only -1 pound, at 14 representative post-offices of Nevada only 4 pounds, at -12 representative post-offices of South Dakota only 15 pounds, and at -14 representative post-offices of Wyoming only 1 pound. - -The weight of the parcels posted in October, 1907, by the 4,000,000 -people of New York City in their local traffic amounted to only 55,918 -pounds, less than 1¼ ounces per family, and in their total traffic to -only 469,111 pounds, about 8 ounces per family. - -The post-office is the most important department of our national -government. Its system of rates--regardless of distance, regardless of -the character or volume of the matter transported, rates determined by -the representatives of the rate payers in Congress assembled on the -basis of the cost of the service rendered--its system of uniform rates -places our whole country on a plane of the most perfect commercial -equality. Up to its limits there can be no possible discriminations -either as to persons, places or things. Up to its limits, the humblest -citizen on the most out-of-the-way rural route is guaranteed the -transport of his supplies and his produce at the same rates as the -biggest corporation in our greatest metropolis. These rates moreover, -may be steadily reduced with the improvement of our transport machinery -and its administration. And yet by our own limitation of this mighty -service we deny ourselves its use almost altogether in local traffic, -and in through traffic confine it to parcels of less than 6 ounces. - -Meantime we pay private express companies what “the traffic will bear” -for the transport of our large parcels, and in our local traffic -cheerfully carry our small parcels in our pockets or hand bags or -dispatch them by private messengers or private vehicles. Such petty -work is beneath the notice of our great private express companies. In -many small places they have no offices. Even in our great cities they -have no regular daily courses, save in a few business districts. If -the ordinary city resident would dispatch a parcel by express, he must -go after an express wagon on foot or by telephone. The post-man--our -public expressman--comes to our doors one, two, three, four times a -day, or oftener. We have but to substitute a machine post for our -overburdened foot post and, with a perfected system of collection and -delivery of insured parcels at reasonable rates, we shall have a postal -express at hand, ready and competent to do our bidding on our own terms -and conditions. - -The possibilities of such a service were illustrated some years ago, -when James L. Cowles, of the Postal Progress League, dispatched an -11-pound suit case from New York City to New Haven, Conn. Prepaid as -a sealed parcel, with a special-delivery stamp affixed, the suit case -was mailed at a branch post-office on Fifth avenue about 5 o’clock in -the afternoon; it was delivered at its address in New Haven before 10 -o’clock the same evening. On another occasion Mr. Cowles telegraphed -from Philadelphia about noon for a parcel of stationery to be sent him -from his office, 361 Broadway, New York City. The Philadelphia postman -delivered the parcel at Mr. Cowles’ hotel before 8 o’clock the same -evening. - -In his testimony before the congressional committee on railway mail -pay, in 1898, Mr. H. S. Julier, of the American Express Company, -testified that the weight of the average express parcel is 25 pounds; -its average charge is 50 cents; its average haul in the eastern states -is 100 to 125 miles; in the central states a little more; in the -western states from 175 to 200 miles. In local traffic the ordinary -express charge on the smallest merchandise parcel is 15 cents; in -general traffic, 25 cents. The private express service is chiefly -confined to traffic between cities. To be successful, a business -requiring express service must be located in a large city, where -the different express companies have their headquarters; otherwise -their parcels will often be subjected to two or three express charges -before they reach their destination. The private express company, with -its rates based on the value of the service rendered and determined -according to volume of business, is deadly to the small place and the -small dealer. - -Under the growing differentiation of industry there is a steadily -growing demand for a door-to-door express service of parcels ordered -by telephone, telegram, or by mail. The business can not be done by -private express companies to the public satisfaction. Their machinery -does not reach the rural districts. An extended postal service is the -only public choice. - -As long ago as December 6, 1898, the Merchants’ Association of New York -issued the following statement to the merchants, manufacturers, and -shippers of the State of New York: - - A very large part of every dollar paid by you for express - charges is exorbitant and exacted to pay a monstrous profit to - an unrestrained monopoly. - - Many of you are compelled by present conditions of competition - to use the express service on a large part of your shipments, - and to pay express charges which are from 300 to over 20,000 - per cent of corresponding freight charges. The express charges - on many classes of goods average from 5 to 15 per cent of the - value of the merchandise transported. - - These are the charges that you pay. But many of your strongest - competitors are favored by discriminating rates and pay much - less. - - The express companies are now uncontrolled by law and you - have no recourse against exorbitant charges; you must ship by - express and must pay whatever the express companies see fit to - charge. - -On the 10th of February, 1909, the Merchants’ Association of New York -again returned to their attack upon the express companies. Note their -charges: - - -_Exorbitant Rates_ - -Rates so high in the case of the Adams Express Company as to enable -them to pay dividends of over 80 per cent a year on the amount actually -invested in their business. In 1907 they made a dividend of $24,000,000. - -Excessive charges for collection and delivery varying, on 100-pound -parcels, from 27 cents to $7.79 for similar services. - -Unreasonable restrictions of free delivery service. - -Unreasonable regulation as to size of parcels. - -Unreasonable regulation as to packing. - -Delays in delivery. - -Failure to notify shippers of nondelivery. - -Delays in settlements of claims. - -Delays in returns of undelivered goods. - -Marking parcels 1 to 5 pounds over actual weight, and compelling -consignees to pay for the fictitious increase. - - - - -System of Postal Express. - -David J. Lewis. - - -MR. CHAIRMAN: In December the government issued its first annual -report on the statistics of express companies for the year 1909, which -developed the fact that the average pay of the express companies to -the railways for carrying express matter was about three-quarters -(0.74) of a cent a pound, while the postal reports show that the -government paid for its letter or mail transportation about 4 (4.06) -cents a pound, barring the weight of equipment in both cases. It -was apparent to me at once that the parcels function could not be -successfully or economically discharged by the government on the basis -of letter-transportation rates. And then the economic significance -of another fact developed: It was that the express companies’ -service was at a disadvantage, even greater than that of the post -office, in regard to the nonrailway transportation of its parcels. -The express companies have no agency and at present rates can not -secure an agency to reach nonrailway or rural points. In short, it -appeared that the express companies had exclusive control of one of -the absolutely essential conditions of fast package transport, the -express rate of three-quarters of a cent a pound, while the post -office had equally exclusive possession of the other great agency of -necessary service--the rural delivery system. Common sense indicated -what the solution must be; these two advantages, the railway express -transportation rate and the rural delivery system must be made -cooperative; must be united under one control. The express railway -transportation rate would, if the government parcels amounted to but -one-fourth of the express business, save it, if in its control, at -least $50,000,000 a year, while the addition of rural delivery to the -express business would add to this great service the farming population -of our country at practically no cost to them or the country. The bill -I have introduced for postal express is the result of these conditions. - - -_Principal Provisions of the Postal Express Bill_ - -As I have said, the idea of the bill is to unite in one service the two -great instrumentalities above named, in order that a greatly cheapened -and an even more extended service to the public may be had. For this -purpose the bill provides for the compulsory purchase by condemnation -of the railway-express company contracts and franchises, as well as -the equipment and property devoted to the express business per se, and -their subsequent employment by the postal department in connection -with rural delivery and the postal system. The express-railway -transportation privileges are all the subjects of contracts between the -railways and express companies. They constitute the primary condition -of the express service, and while the equipment and other facilities -are only immediately necessary to a running plant, and their -acquisition is provided for, it is the contracts which constitute the -conditions sine qua non of the service. Happily, there can be no legal -question as to the right of the government to acquire these contracts -and other facilities upon providing just compensation. - - -_Necessity for Postal Express_ - -In addition to those grave needs for such a service, which the majority -of national communities have recognized, as commending its adoption -domestically and internationally, there exist in the United States -supplementary reasons which it is believed render the institution -uncommonly necessary. - -Briefly summarized, they are: - -(_a_) The greater area over which our population is distributed and -correlatively greater transportation distances which consume so much -time by freight that a fast or express service needs to be resorted to -in a larger number of instances than if the journey were short. - -(_b_) The 100-pound minimum and corresponding charge in railway -practice and the inadaptability of railway methods to diminutive -consignments. - -(_c_) The prohibitive minimum charge of the express companies in -respect to small consignments. - -(_d_) Absence of railway “collect and delivery” service and absence of -“collect and delivery” service by express companies as to our farming -population and a large portion of our urban population. - -(_e_) Incalculable waste of transportation effort, so far as made, -in movement of necessaries of life from the farms to points of -consumption, a serious factor in our high cost of living. - -Of course, the need for fast service will depend upon the greatness of -the distance, when demand is immediate, as much as upon the valuable or -perishable character of the shipment. In our country, with an average -haul for freight of 251 miles, from three to ten times as long as in -Europe, the demand for speed to overcome the obstacle of the time -lost in distance, the time-element necessity for an express service -is correspondingly increased; and so the disadvantages of inadequate -or ineconomical express service are vital. The railway organization -of America and its system of practices does not seem adapted to meet -this great need; while its refusal, upon adequate grounds, to accept a -smaller payment than the rate for its minimum shipment of 100 pounds -precludes it from this service even if speed were not prerequisite. -The minimum charge of 25 cents (average 27 cents) imposes an equally -substantial and serious restriction upon the express service as now -conducted; so that when it is considered that the farmers or nonurban, -about half of our population, are virtually excluded from the service -of this great agency, and the express rates by their prohibitive -costliness substantially minimize the service for the urban population, -it is apparent that instead of possessing an express service -commensurate with its needs, the United States has both unexampled -necessity for, and unexampled deficiency in, its dispatch or express -agencies. Add to this situation the tremendous waste and corresponding -costliness of the unorganized country-to-town transportation of our -necessaries, and such almost equally wasteful and quite equally costly -express service as we have, and have we not put a finger on one of the -big leaks which swallow so much of the unprecedented productiveness of -our country? - - -_Prohibitive Express Charges_ - -We should expect express charges to be higher per ton here than abroad, -as much higher as our freight-per-ton charges. But no necessary -economic cause is known which justifies a substantially higher -proportion or ratio of the express to the freight charges here as -compared with other countries. The average express charge per ton here -is shown to be $31.20, while the average freight charge is $1.90 per -ton, giving a ratio of the express charge to the freight charge of 16 -(16.42) to 1. This express charge includes the cost of such collect -and delivery service as is rendered, covering, it is thought, about -90 per cent of the traffic. In the table now inserted this element of -the expense of the express companies for collecting and delivering, -amounting to 11.50 per cent, is excluded, because many of the European -countries and other data do not include this factor of cost. The table -embraces 10 countries, while the specific data upon which the ratios -are based are set forth in Appendix B. All countries have been included -where the express data is clearly distinguishable from general freight -statistics. - - -_Ratios of average express charges to average freight charges in 11 -countries._ - - -----------------------------+----------+----------+---------- - | Average | Average | Ratios of - | express | freight | average - Countries | charge | charge | and - | per ton. | per ton. | freight - | | | charges. - -----------------------------+----------+----------+---------- - Argentina | $6.51 | $1.95 | 3.2-1 - Austria | 3.77 | .74 | 5.0-1 - Belgium | [A]4.92 | .53 | [A]9.3-1 - Denmark | 5.49 | .87 | 6.3-1 - France | 6.88 | .95 | 7.2-1 - Germany | 3.80 | .76 | 5.0-1 - Hungary | 3.68 | .93 | 3.9-1 - Netherlands | 2.43 | .67 | 3.6-1 - Norway | 1.90 | .49 | 3.8-1 - Prussia | 4.32 | .86 | 5.0-1 - +----------+----------+---------- - Average for 10 countries | | | 5.23-1 - United States | 27.61 | 1.90 | 14.53-1 - -----------------------------+----------+----------+---------- - - [A] Belgium delivers parcels. - -From this table it appears that while Argentina charges three times, -Austria five times, Belgium nine times, Denmark six times, France -seven times, Germany (including Prussia) five times, Hungary, the -Netherlands, and Norway, about four times as much for carrying a ton -of express as of freight, the express companies of the United States -charge nearly fifteen times as much. - -No further statement need be made to show that the charges of -American express companies are prohibitively excessive, and such -as to disqualify this service as a national economic agency. The -instances given represent merchandise carried by passenger trains -in all instances, and while higher charges for both the express and -freight tonnage in America are justified by the longer haul, there is -no necessary economic reason for a higher ratio of express charges -to freight charges. The presence of the “express company” is the -only circumstance distinguishing express transportation here from -that of the instances cited. In those the “express company” has no -part; the work is done exclusively by the railways. As we shall see -later, the deficiencies of the express companies are constitutional, -not gratuitous merely, and are such as can not be remedied through -corporate agencies. - - -_Inadequacy of Various Proposals--Regulation_ - -We have seen that the present express fails to reach the farm, in -itself a fundamental objection to its adequacy. It may be suggested -that where its high charges are such as to inhibit the traffic, they -might be corrected by appeals for reductions to the Interstate Commerce -Commission. A glance at the express report for 1909, it is true, will -show that the profits of the companies are clearly out of normal -proportion to the investment. But it will also show that such profits -amount to but 8.44 per cent of the gross receipts, i. e., to only 8.44 -per cent of the rates charged. So that even if all the profits were -taken away, the modified rates would show but a wholly inadequate -reduction; so that the desired relief could not thus be obtained. As a -matter of course, no such reduction would even be asked. No one would -wish that they conduct the business without a profit. But in practice -even when the justification for a reduction is present, and the power -and purpose active, the regulating board will always hesitate to even -substantially reduce a rate in the fear of unduly trenching on private -rights. - -It was this principle which Bismarck had in mind when in connection -with a similar subject he spoke of-- - - The attempts to bring about reform by (regulatory) laws have - shown the futility of hoping for a satisfactory improvement - through legal (regulatory) measures, without trenching - materially on established rights and interests. (Parsons, The - Railways and the People, p. 318.) - -With a margin of but 8 per cent of the rate to work on, the board would -feel this constraint in a marked way; for under substantially reduced -rates a very slight perturbation of the customary traffic might place -in danger the whole net return. Substantial relief in the way of -regulation is thus shown to be wholly impracticable. - - -_Various Parcels-Post Schemes_ - -There remains to discuss the numerous proposals for limited carriage of -parcels up to 11 pounds, and so forth, by the postal department. These -all concern the present railway status quo of the post office. It is -apparent that such proposals can only result in two things--the express -companies taking the major portion of the short-haul, profitable -traffic and the postal department getting the long-haul and losing -traffic. But there is another fact recently disclosed by the express -report--a fact rendering any of these proposals, so far as they involve -railway transportation, wholly untenable. - -The Post Office Department pays an average of 4 (4.06) cents per pound -to the railways for carrying the mail, excluding equipment. - -The express companies pay an average of three-quarters (0.74) of a cent -per pound for carriage of express matter, excluding equipment. - -It is manifest that not even the government could render substantial -service under conditions so utterly unequal. It could not pay--what -we shall see when we come to consider the length of the express and -the mail hauls amounts to--about three times as much as the express -companies pay to the railways for carrying its parcels. One is mail -service, which is naturally more costly; the other more closely -resembles a fast freight service, which lies midway between the mail -and the freight in the weight cost of railway movement. - -Other difficulties in such proposals, based on the status quo of the -post office, need only be suggested: - -(_a_) The government would have to install urban delivery wagons at a -cost its traffic might not justify. - -(_b_) The express companies still in the field, the wastes of service -would merely be increased by the entrance of the Postal Department, and -the people would have to pay it all. - -(_c_) The government, being a moral agent with the inelastic rate -proposed, would be at the mercy of its unrestrained competitors. - -(_d_) The express companies’ contracts with the railways permit them -to reduce their compensation to the railways to the point of 150 per -cent of the freight rate--i. e., from the present ratio of about 8 -(7.80) to 1 of the freight rate to about 1½. Of course, they could not -go to this extreme without destroying their own profits, but their -contracts permit them to go as far as they might wish. Thus, while the -government in the beginning might have to pay about three times as much -to the railways for its parcels per pound, in a struggle the express -companies could exaggerate this disparity to any point they wished for -the purpose of destroying the postal department as a competitor. - - -_Essential Elements of an Adequate System_ - -For the sake of brevity we state these elements categorically: - -(_a_) Fast service. - -(_b_) Greatest economically feasible extension of delivery and collect -service, necessitating coordination with both urban and rural free -delivery systems. - -(_c_) Express railway contracts to secure the relatively low railway -rates. - -(_d_) Cheap capital charges. - -(_e_) Reliable public-service motive. - -(_f_) Economies of single organization, in which all existing -serviceable plants should be merged. - -With regard to the element of fast service, discussion is unnecessary. -It is now commonly rendered by the railways for the express companies -in connection with the passenger service. It seems worthy of -suggestion, however, that a single organization like the post office -might on the strong lines of traffic, where carload lots might be -regularly obtainable, employ for certain kinds of matter the fast -freight service, profiting enough on the carload rate reductions to -fully cover the expense of delivery and collection, the regular railway -100-pound charges to be paid to the postal express by the shipper. It -is further suggested that in this way agricultural products might be -received through the rural free delivery in small allotments from -the truck gardeners and farmers, consolidated into carload lots and -conveyed on the trunk lines to the branch lines and distributed over -the branches to destination by passenger trains. The Prussians do, -in fact, have this latter service, for which the charge is based on -a tariff of twice the freight rate, the regular service by passenger -train calling for a charge of four times the freight rate. The railways -would now perform such service if, of course, the collect service -existed to gather the shipments from the country and assemble them. - -It is obvious that the element most wanting is the service described -as “collect and delivery,” necessary between consignor and railway at -the beginning and railway and consignee at the conclusion of the act of -transportation. Our country is utterly deficient in this respect as to -the “country” or farming population. In towns of about 3,000 or 4,000 -population up the present express companies do render this service -for such traffic as their rates permit to move; but what is required -is a service as extensive as the postal agency, which reaches cities, -towns, and country with the degrees of efficiency of the urban and -rural deliveries, conceded to far excel such delivery as the express -companies give. - -There can be no doubt that with regard to this collect and delivery the -postal department is the only agency to which we can look for a service -sufficiently extensive to be really efficient. It only remains to -observe that with regard to the farming part of the country the service -already exists in the form of rural free delivery, equipped and paid -for, and actually waiting with empty wagons to receive and execute the -work. - - -_Advantages of Postal Express_ - -In three years under a postal administration it is believed that the -reformed system will produce: - -(a) A minimum charge of 7 cents for the first pound, graduated to 17 -cents for a 11-pound package, for average distances. - -(b) General reductions of about 28 per cent in all merchandise charges. - -(c) The extension of the service to the out-of-town and agricultural -population. - -(d) The elevation of the employees to the plane of the postal service. - -(e) The coordination of country supply of the vital necessaries with -urban demand by a cheap and regular collect and delivery service. - -(f) As a result, a greater attractiveness in rural life and improved -highways. - -(g) In 10 years’ time, with the development of the traffic, a reduction -of rates to about one-half of the present rates. - -It is as difficult to describe in detail the manifold economic -and social results of a great agency like this as to give a bill -of particulars of the benefits of the postal system. And in this -connection it seems not irrelevant to suggest that a proper -coordination of the railway mail with the railway express service may -indeed render penny postage feasible. As things are now the rural -free-delivery agency does not bring a direct fiscal return to pay -for itself. In a few years, as the traffic develops in parcels and -agricultural products, the proposed system would enable it to do so. -This would assure a considerable financial gift to the account of penny -postage. - - -_The Agricultural Post_ - -In the present state of things the truck farmer must devote a large -part of his time to marketing; that is, to the transportation of his -product, however little it may be, to the place of demand. He must -also for this purpose provide himself with transportation facilities, -however small his business. These involve a horse, and its maintenance -and care, and a barn; and the expense of both during the unproductive -seasons. And yet in a socio-economic sense his work and expense of -transportation is the smallest element in his service to the public, -although it requires the maximum of upkeep work and expense, if not -of capital. The proposed postal collect and delivery eliminates all -these, and would enable the truck farmer to enter into the business on -a minimum of capital, and pursue it on a minimum of labor and expense. -The field service of a horse he could hire as occasion might require. -Thus the truck-farming industry would receive a necessary impetus and -the cost of such foods be greatly reduced to the consumer, saying -nothing of the advantage in quality coming from a speedier forwarding -to the market by daily allotments instead of the delays now incurred to -garner a worth-while load. - -This application of postal express, with its thoroughly articulated -service and regular schedules, may be taken as illustrative of the -close relations which may be established between the rural producer and -town consumer, as well as between producers and merchants generally. - -It is manifestly unfair to the proposition to judge its social value -on a mere computation of the savings in rates which may be made. While -this saving would amount to some $35,000,000 a year on the traffic of -1909, and from seventy to a hundred millions a year when the traffic -reaches its normal dimensions, yet as large benefits will follow in -clearing the prohibitive rate clogs from this necessary conduit of -commerce that it may freely discharge its normal output, in placing the -50,000 express employees on a postal basis, in rendering it easier to -engage in and market food production, to relieve the towns and cities -of high prices for necessaries of life, and relieve them, too, of the -overplus of labor, and, perhaps, too, in aiding in reversing that -tendency of population movement from the country to urban centers to -which is due the most aggravated and most discouraging social problems -of our time. - - - - -Hearings before the Committee on the Post-Office and Post-Roads. April -20-29, 1910. pp. 296-7. - -Postal Savings Bank and Parcels Post. - -Letter of Dr. Barth. - - -Whilst the postal savings-banks system became firmly established -some time ago in Belgium, France, Great Britain, Italy, Holland, -Austro-Hungary, Russia, and Sweden, all efforts have failed to -introduce the system into the German Empire. In the year 1885 the -draft of a postal savings-bank law was laid before the Reichstag. The -draft never came out of the committee. The principal reason of this -opposition lay in the competitive interest of the many local savings -banks existing in Germany, which are generally under the control of -commercial boards of directors. Since the frustration of the plans for -the law in the year 1885 no further serious efforts have been made to -introduce postal savings banks. - -All the greater has been the development of the parcels-post traffic -with us. This traffic dates in Prussia back to the eighteenth century. -Under Frederick William I there already had been introduced a postal -monopoly (the exclusive right of the mail to forward packages) for -packages up to 20 pounds. Under Frederick the Great this monopoly was -increased to 40 pounds. By a postal law of June 5, 1852, it was again -reduced to 20 pounds, and only entirely abolished by the law of March -20, 1860. This postal monopoly has never been revived in Germany; -nevertheless, the parcel postal traffic has developed tremendously -without the protection of a monopoly. In Germany the weight for postal -parcels has now been set at 50 kilograms (110 3-10 pounds); while, as -is well known, there has also existed since 1885 European international -parcels-post traffic with a maximum weight limit of 5 kilograms (about -11 pounds). Only very few articles within the aforementioned weight -limits are excluded from the postal traffic. Even live singing birds, -fish, crabs, fresh flowers, grapes, etc., are sent by us in postal -parcels. The parcels-post service in Berlin employs about 1,000 -officials. The rate within the postal territories of Germany and -Austro-Hungary is 25 pfennigs (6 cents) for packages up to 5 kilograms -(about 11 pounds) in weight and 10 geographical miles in distance: at -50 pfennigs (12 cents) for further distances. With heavier parcels the -rate increases rapidly for every kilogram (2½ pounds) in excess of 11 -pounds with the growing distance, so that, for instance, at a distance -of 150 geographical miles every kilogram over 5 costs 50 pfennigs (12 -cents) more. This rate proves that the post lays its principal stress -on receiving parcels up to 5 kilograms (11 pounds) in weight. - -The parcels-post traffic in 10-pound packages is therefore the normal -one. For many trades and producing branches a very strong direct -traffic between the producer and the consumer has grown up in these -10-pound packages, and many articles which in the locality in which -they were produced were either not utilizable, or forced to sale at -a very low figure, have found a market which without the cheap 50 -pfennig (12 cents) postage they would never have attained. Mushrooms -gathered in the forests of Masuren near the Russian frontier come to -Berlin in postal parcels. Large crabs caught in the waters of western -Prussia come even to Paris. We ourselves, for example, obtain for our -household through the parcels post meat from Silesia, butter from -eastern Prussia, eggs from Mecklenburg, melons from Hungary, etc. For -the household this is not only cheaper but also more convenient than -the purchase in the market halls, for the post brings the parcels -(for delivery sum of 15 pfennigs; 3½ cents) to the door, also calls -for parcels, cashes in the amount in c. o. d. deliveries, in short, -makes it extremely convenient for the order. It is clear that this -postal traffic forced out many middlemen; the retailers especially in -small places have been made to feel very keenly the competition of -the large forwarding houses in the capital cities. Their complaints -therefore were formerly directed very actively against the cheap -parcels postage. But since the flat land in turn could derive benefits -for its agricultural products, such as fruits, meats, butter, eggs, -etc., from these self-same cheap rates, the complaints of the retailers -became silenced after awhile as far as the question refers to the -cheap parcels rates. They now turn so much the livelier against large -warehouses and forwarding businesses for whom one is seeking through -all sorts of lawful tricks to make the competition more difficult. -The parcels-post traffic has meanwhile become so firmly rooted that -it seems impossible to upset it. Considered from a politic-economic -viewpoint it presents itself as a most important and very beneficent -branch of the whole system transport. - -Following the German example in the United States would, I believe, -be of enormous advantage, particularly for the agricultural districts -surrounding the large cities. For the producer of eggs, poultry, -butter, vegetables, fruits there would develop, with a cheap -parcels-post rate, entirely new market possibilities; also the -decentralization of many branches of industry would to a certain degree -become a possibility. - - - - -Monthly Consular and Trade Reports. No. 329. pp. 104-6. February, 1908. - -German Parcels Post. - - -Consul W. T. Fee, of Bremen, states that the parcels post system of -Germany, as well as most of the railroads, is owned by and is under the -control and operation of the Imperial government. He adds: - -The express companies in Germany are less developed than those in the -United States, where the largest part of parcels forwarded are handled -by these companies. Under the German parcel-post system, parcels are -divided into five classes namely: (1) Parcels with value declared; (2) -registered parcels; (3) common parcels, value neither declared nor -registered; (4) collect-on-delivery parcels; and (5) urgent parcels. -Each shipment of parcels must be accompanied by a waybill called -“packet addressee”; and no more than three packages which must be of -the same class, and which must bear the same address, are to be entered -on one waybill. Each c. o. d. or urgent package, however, must have its -own waybill. - -Forms of waybills, with the respective postage stamp of the amount -of the charge printed thereon, are furnished by the postoffices at -the price of the postage charge, while waybills, without this stamps -imprint, are sold by the postoffices at the price of 1.19 cents for -five pieces. Forms of waybills, which are purchased from other sources, -must conform in every respect with those furnished by the postoffice -department. There are two different kinds of waybills in use, foreign -and domestic. - -At times of increased postal traffic, before Easter, Whitsuntide -and Christmas, a waybill for each package is required. The prices -charged by the postoffice for forwarding parcels vary according to the -weight of the packages and distance. The fees charged are shown in the -following statement: - - For distance up to-- over - - 46 92 230 461 702 - miles miles miles miles miles - - For parcels weighing up to-- - cents - - 11 pounds 5.9 11.9 11.9 11.9 11.9 - - 15.4 pounds 7.1 14.2 16.6 19.0 23.8 - - 17.6 pounds 8.3 16.6 21.4 26.18 35.7 - - 19.8 pounds 10.7 21.4 30.9 40.4 59.5 - - 22 pounds 11.9 23.8 35.7 47.6 71.4 - - additional 2.2 pounds 1.1 2.38 4.76 7.1 11.9 - -The maximum weight for parcels to be forwarded by post is 110 pounds. - -For registered packages an additional fee of 4.76 cents is charged, -while the insurance fee for packages with declared value is 1.19 cents -for each $71.40 or fraction thereof. For “not-prepaid” parcels up to -11 pounds a collection fee of 2.38 cents is levied. Besides this, in -places where there is delivery to the house, an extra fee of 3.5 cents -is charged for packages weighing up to 11 pounds. - -Packages may be sent c. o. d. in the German Empire if the amount to be -collected does not exceed $190.40. These c. o. d. packages, if payment -is not made at presentation, will be held for seven days. Meanwhile -another request will be made on the consignee to pay the amount -charged, and then if payment is refused the package is returned to the -consignor. The fee charged for c. o. d. packages in addition to the -ordinary postage is 2.38 cents, and the fee for the postal money order, -by means of which the amount collected is returned to the consignor is -charged. The charges for these money orders for amounts not exceeding -$1.19 are 2.38 cents; not to exceed $23.80, 4.76 cents; $47.60, 7.14 -cents; $95.20, 9.52 cents; $142.80, 11.9 cents; and $190.40, 14.28. - -Printed matter, samples without value, newspapers and business cards do -not come under the heading of parcels or packages, different rates of -postage and also different limits of weight and measure being provided -for these classes. - -In case of loss the postoffice refunds for common packages at the -maximum rate of 71.4 cents per 1.1 pounds, and for a registered package -at least $10. - -Parcels are handled by the postoffice entirely separate from letters -and other mail matter. A request may be sent to the postoffice on an -unfranked postal card to call for a package, whereupon the parcelpost -wagon will call at the place designated in the request. An extra charge -of 2.38 cents is made for this service, regardless of the size or -weight of the package. - -Under ordinary circumstances, a package sent from Bremen to Munich, -Bavaria, a distance of 470 miles, thus crossing Germany from north -to south, will be delivered on the evening of the second or on the -morning of the third day. If it weighs up to 11 pounds, it will cost -11.9 cents. If it is a c. o. d. package for $142.80 it will cost 11.9 -cents for postage, 2.38 cents for collection fee, 11.9 cents for return -money order, and 1.19 cents for delivery charge for the money order, in -all 27.37 cents. The same package could be sent at the same rate from -Bremen to Königsberg, a distance of 579 miles. - -There is no restriction as to the size of the packages to be shipped -within the German Empire, as long as they are not cumbersome, but the -size of packages to foreign countries, as a rule, must not exceed 23.6 -inches in each dimension. Exceptions from this rule are made for goods -like umbrellas, canes, charts, furs, plants, etc., which may measure -39.37 inches in length, if they do not exceed 7.87 inches in breadth -and height. Besides this there is a space limit of 25 cubic decimeters -(1 cubic decimeter = .035 cubic foot) for packages destined for -Algiers, Tunis, Santo Domingo, and the French colonies, and 20 cubic -decimeters for packages to Bolivia, Brazil, and Canada, while packages -for Great Britain and nearly all its colonies may measure one meter in -each dimension, with a space limit of 54 cubic decimeters. Packages to -foreign countries, exceeding the before-mentioned limit in weight and -measurement, may be shipped as “postal freight.” The rates for such -shipments, however, vary too much to be quoted here, and they are, in -most instances, subject to contracts of the postoffice department with -prominent forwarding agents. - -For packages to the United States--that is New York, Jersey City, -and Hoboken--the charges are from 30 cents for 2.2 pounds up to 64 -cents for 11 pounds. To all other places in the United States, Alaska -excepted, the rates are 55 cents for 2.2 pounds up to 88 cents for 11 -pounds. - -According to a postal treaty between the United States and Germany, -which is in force since October 1, 1907, packages, which for any reason -cannot be delivered will not be returned after a period of thirty days, -as heretofore, but the consignor will be informed of this fact by the -postoffice in order to give him a chance to dispose of the package in -some other way. If the consignor has not disposed of the package within -two months it will be returned to him as undeliverable. - -For special delivery of a package 5.8 cents is charged, and for urgent -packages, which will be forwarded by the fastest mail facilities, a -charge of 23.8 cents is made, in addition to the regular postage and -the special delivery fee collected for each package. - - - - -AFFIRMATIVE DISCUSSION - - - - -Our Postal Express. pp. 1-6. - -William Sulzer. - - -MR. SPEAKER: I am in favor of a parcels post. I believe the people of -the country generally favor it, and I feel confident its establishment -will be of inestimable benefit and advantage to all concerned. The -post-office is one of the oldest of governmental institutions, an -agency established by the earliest civilization to enable them to -inform themselves as to the plans and movements of their friends and -foes; and from the dawn of history the only limit upon this service has -been the capacity of the existing transport machinery. - -The cursus publicus of imperial Rome--the post-office of the -Roman Cæsars--covered their entire business of transportation and -transmission, and with its splendid post-roads, swift post-horses, -and ox post-wagons the Roman post-office was a mechanism far wider -in its scope than that of our modern post-office; and except for the -use of mechanical power, the old Roman post was far more efficient in -its service of the Roman rulers than is our modern post-office in the -service of the American citizen. - -The evil of the Roman post-office and of the royal postal services that -succeeded it was their common restriction to the enrichment of the -ruling powers. They were the prototypes of our modern private railway -and express companies, which have for their chief end the enrichment -of their managers rather than the promotion of the public welfare. In -this country the citizen owns the post-office and wants to use it as -his transportation company. Its end is to keep him informed as to what -his representatives are doing at the centers of public business, to -make known to them his wishes, and to provide means by which he may -communicate with his fellow-citizens for their mutual benefit, and to -supply his wants and dispose of his wares at the least possible cost, -in the shortest possible time, and with the greatest possible security. - -The postal system of rates, regardless of distance, regardless of the -character of the matter transported, and regardless of the volume of -the patron’s business, eminently fits it for this great service. That -it will sooner or later be greatly extended over the entire field of -public transportation, is absolutely certain; and the people will -duly appreciate the aid of those who assist in its extension and -development. As far back as 1837, Rowland Hill, of England, promulgated -to the world the law that once a public transport service is in -operation, the cost of its use is regardless the distance traversed -upon the moving machinery by any unit of traffic within its capacity, -and upon this law he established the English penny-letter post of 1839. - -Instead of a taxing machine, a contrivance for making money, -the post-office should be an agency for good, reaching out its -multitudinous hands with help and comfort into all the homes in our -widespread land. - -Without the post-office where would be that national unity, with its -guaranty of equal rights to all, which is the glory of the sisterhood -of states? - -The postal savings system and parcels post was inaugurated in England -largely through the efforts of the great Commoner, William E. -Gladstone. Near the close of his life he made the following statement -about it: - - The post-office savings bank and parcels post is the most - important institution which has been created in the last fifty - years for the welfare of the people. I consider the act which - called the institution into existence as the most useful and - fruitful of my long career. - -It is because we realize these truths so keenly that we are so -persistent in urging favorable consideration of a parcels post. Its -only fault is its conservatism. What this country now needs, what -Congress should give it, is a parcels post covering much of the -business of public transportation. - -In April last representatives of at least 10,000,000 American voters, -including the great agricultural associations of the country, National -Grange, the Farmers’ Union, the Farmers’ National Congress, Retail Dry -Goods Association of New York, the Associated Retailers of St. Louis, -the manufacturing perfumers of the United States, the American Florist -Association, and others, appeared before the House Postal Committee, -demanding a domestic express post as extended and as cheap as that -provided by the Postmaster-General in our foreign postal service. The -argument in behalf of this legislation, with its 4-pound weight limit, -had then been before the committee for many months, but the bill was -not up to the demands of these friends of the post-office. The report -of the hearing showed that the public wanted an 11-pound service at -least. Seldom, if ever, has any proposition received a stronger public -support, and it seemed as if the House Committee on Post-Offices would -be obliged to report at least some legislation back to the House for -its consideration. - -Their answer finally came on the 27th of May in the shape of H. R. -26348, introduced by Chairman John W. Weeks, which provides: - - That all mail matter of the fourth class shall be subject - to examination and to a postage charge at the rate of - three-fourths of 1 cent an ounce or fraction thereof, to - be prepaid by stamps affixed--stamps of the following - denominations: - - Cents. - - 1 ounce ¾ - 2 ounces 1½ - 3 ounces 2¼ - 4 ounces 3 - 5 ounces 3¾ - 6 ounces 4½ - 7 ounces 5¼ - 8 ounces 6 - -On the 1st of June Mr. Weeks wrote to the secretary of the Postal -Progress League as follows: - - It does not seem to me likely that any other parcels-post - legislation than possibly the bill which I introduced last - week--this bill--providing for the reduction in rate on - fourth-class matter, will be considered at this session of - Congress. - -This means that for at least two years more the American people are -to be left subject to the extortions of the rich and powerful express -companies, while we have in the post-office a well-equipped service of -our own through which much of the people’s business now carried on by -these companies could be done quicker and at infinitely less cost. - -Mr. Speaker, if the powers arraigned against the post-office continue -their efforts to limit its functions in behalf of private interests, -they will soon find themselves confronted with a Congress pledged to -extend the service of the post-office to a much larger degree of the -public transmission business; and hence, I think it wise that my bill -should now be brought before the House for immediate consideration. - - - - -World’s Work. 21: 14248-51. April, 1911. - -Parcels Post and the Retailer. - -Fremont Rider. - - -Of all the arguments against a parcels post by far the most venerable -is that of financial disaster; and even April 1911 finds many an -opponent of a parcels post uttering gloomy prophecies of the enormous -losses which the system would entail, losses which would have to be -met, as he takes pains to point out, by an already bankrupt post office -department. - -On the other hand, the men best acquainted both with the problem of -transportation and its cost and with the parcels post as it has been -worked out abroad, go so far as to say, that so far from being an -expense, a parcels post would probably be the most profitable business -venture into which the United States government ever embarked. In fact -a private parcels post, in certain of the metropolitan districts at -least, would probably be started by private capital were it not for one -thing--the growing agitation for a government parcels post which would -render valueless the plant of the private company. - -The plan of this private parcels post, in direct competition with the -present express companies is no chimera.... Every thinking person -marvels at the economic waste in the present day methods of city -delivery. By your house in Yonkers, for instance, if you happen to -live in Yonkers, there now rattles, once or twice daily, the wagons -of your butcher, your baker, your laundryman, your milkman, and your -grocer, as well as those of the various butchers, bakers, laundrymen, -milkmen, and grocerymen of your neighbors, all covering in staggeringly -wasteful duplication, the same route. Besides them, up from the city -come, in further duplication and longer distance waste, the wagons -of the nine different New York department stores that deliver in -Yonkers, the wagons of the four local express companies that divide the -“independent” business, and those of the two general express companies -which do the high-priced long distance business. Yet, when you think -of it, one wagon could come to you three times a day and do the work -of all these people, more effectively and at one-tenth of the present -total expense. - -You buy a dollar’s worth of groceries of John Jones, the grocer. The -whole package, bread, milk, eggs, butter, and vegetables, weighs, -perhaps, ten pounds. A company doing all the delivery business of a -town, centralized, complete, without waste labor or waste mileage, -stopping its motor wagons two or three times a day at every house on -every street, can make money delivering that ten pounds for six cents. -It now costs Jones, sending out his boy and wagon to a dozen odd houses -scattered all over town, two or three times that amount. - -But such a private parcels post will not be undertaken because of the -fear that the government may enter the field. Yet so far at least, -although in the post office the government has most of the plant -necessary to carry on such a business, it cannot be persuaded to go -into it. - -The most exasperating reason for this inactivity is the legislative -assumption that our present “parcels post” approaches perfection. The -fact is, of course, that the United States has no parcels post in the -sense in which the term is in accepted international use. The present -fourth class rate is but little used in this country simply because -it is prohibitively high. To send ten pounds of merchandise from New -York to Philadelphia involves, not merely the indefensible nuisance of -separating it for mail transportation into three packages, but a charge -of $1.60. Naturally, instead, the merchandise is sent in one parcel by -express for fifty cents. As the work done by the express company, it -is needless to note, gives them a very handsome profit indeed, it is -evident that by far the larger portion of the government’s $1.60 in -this case would be sheer profit--if the post office were as efficiently -conducted as the express company. - -The express company, however, does not attempt to carry a ten pound -package from New York to Seattle for fifty cents. Such long and -profitless hauls they leave for Uncle Sam. Yet, even so, with all the -cream of the parcel business continually and inevitably going to the -express companies, the Post Office Department according to its reports -makes a profit in its “parcels post” business. - -Of course were the post office rate from New York to Philadelphia a -real parcels post rate, that is, for example, 20 cents for ten pounds -instead of $1.60, there would be 1,000 pounds of merchandise so sent -where there is one sent today. People will use a parcels post when it -becomes cheap enough to be an economic possibility, and they will use -it enormously, as experience elsewhere has abundantly and conclusively -proved. Until then they will use the fourth class postal rate only for -the occasional cross continental parcel on which the express rate soars -out of all reach, or for the small parcel under a pound in weight on -which the fourth class rate is less than the express companies’ minimum -charge. - -The four vital arguments (the four great express companies) against a -parcels post, once so succinctly enumerated by Mr. Wanamaker, and the -other hoary arguments sampled above, have, however, of late years been -bolstered by another--the welfare of the “small country retailer”; and -round the great fear of a vague but very horrible something called -“trade centralization” the battle for parcels post is at present being -waged. - -It has been taken for granted that the small country retailer will -be put out of business by the parcels post with its low delivery -charges--yet there are stores in Yonkers, Plainfield, etc., in spite of -the fact that the New York department stores deliver in these places -free. - -Let us examine another aspect of this -death-of-the-small-retailer-fattening-of-the-mail-order-trust-bogey a -minute, and see whether a parcels post means really a more centralized -basis of distribution, or a less. - -Speaking very roughly, there are in the world two great tides of -merchandise traffic: one of raw materials, of which food products is -the most important, from the farmer to the urban consumer; one of -manufactured products--to wear, to use, or to eat (as refined sugar or -prepared breakfast food)--from the urban maker to the farmer consumer. - -Surprising as it may seem the parcels post argument has dealt almost -entirely with the latter tide: of the former tide, even more important, -as I think I can show, very little has been said. - -Let us look for a moment into our existing high cost of transportation, -and therefore, decentralized distribution of farm products. - -In New York the farmer sells his milk for--these figures are quoted -very roughly and without elaboration but they will give my point--2 -cents a quart. He sells it, usually, to one of two or three--there is -considerable evidence that they all act in agreement as one--gigantic -milk companies (of which Borden’s is the largest) which bring it into -the city and distribute it. The ultimate consumer--again I give a rough -figure--pays 10 cents a quart. The other 8 cents is the “distributing -cost”; and in each case it goes, mind you, to two great corporations, -a milk company and an express (or a rail-road) company. Is this that -decentralized distribution that the defenders of the express companies -in and before our Committee have eulogized. - -Take almost any other farm product, strawberries, for example. The -farmer, who grows them, gets 3 cents a basket. Then begins a long line -of tolls: the express company, 3 cents; the commission merchant, 2 -cents (he claims, and often with reason, that his “spoilage” is high); -the jobber 1 cent; the small retailer--delicatessen store, corner -grocery or street cart vendor--3 cents (it “costs 25 per cent. to do -business” he says, and it does too). The ultimate consumer pays 12 -cents a basket, sometimes more, sometimes, when the market is glutted, -a little less. Here is 9 cents of “distributive costs” of which but -3 went to our friend, the “small retailer.” The rest went to more or -less centralized distributing agencies. Now suppose on the other hand -that the farmer could send his products direct to his list of regular -customers in the city. It would be perfectly feasible with a parcels -post. Strawberries, which the farmer would get 6 cents a basket for -(double what he gets now) could be delivered at your breakfast table -the next morning after picking instead of two or three days old in the -triple transit of commission merchant and his storage place, jobber and -his trans-shipment, retailer and his store, and finally to you. And for -this infinitely better article you would pay only 8 cents (2 cents for -the parcels post) instead of the former 12. - -There are only three factors, the farmer, the government parcels post, -and you! This is not theory: it is being done in England, in Germany, -in Japan, and in almost every other civilized country in the world -every day; and has been done for years. - -And as for the mail order business bogey, it would not be a bogey in -the country districts because every farmer would be running a little -mail order business of his own, shipping his eggs and butter pats -and comb honey and fresh fruit and vegetables by mail right to his -customers, on their standing or postal card orders, getting enough -for his produce to make small farming worth while, but giving the -consumer better goods at a big saving. Cost of living! There is no -other revolution in the methods of distribution that would make so much -difference in the cost of living as a thoroughgoing parcels post would -work. And instead of greater centralization it would be almost the -ultimate of trade decentralization. - -Or, let us look at the thing the other way round. What is the chain -of trade from urban producer of manufactured articles to the country -retailer and consumer? Is there any decentralized purchasing now except -by mail? The farmer buys of the small retailer. But the retailer -buys of the lesser jobber and he of the main jobber and he of the -manufacturer; and this is true whether the product be canned goods or -dry goods. Freight shipments in bulk can underbid single shipments by -mail or express; and the present system of distribution, cumbersome and -expensive as it is to the ultimate consumer, is nevertheless cheaper -than direct single shipments at the present mail or express rates. -The moment that you introduce bulk shipments into any distributive -system you necessarily introduce a middleman somewhere to divide up -that bulk shipment for individual consumers; and the greater the bulk -economically shipped the more middlemen there will be between producer -and consumer. - -Now where the parcels post could afford a cheaper way of doing the -distributing than the machinery at present in use, the people ought -to have the benefit of it; but in spite of the obvious benefits of a -parcels post it is not wise to jump to the ultimate conclusion. No one -would be rash enough to say that the present system of retail selling -is entirely wrong. Even if the flat-rate, “zoneless” parcels post were -established there are certain kinds of goods--books, for example, in -which every article is a “novelty” which must be personally handled -before choice and purchase, in which a local retailer with a display -is, if not essential, at least a great convenience. - -But so far we have been considering an ideal, flat-rate parcels post, -without that “zone” provision which is an important provision in -the bills and proposals for a parcels post which are now being most -actively agitated. - -The zone system of parcels post proposes, roughly, a flat rate per -pound and per additional pound within the limits of any delivery office -(that is a service which involves no transfer from one post office to -another) and a rate considerably heavier (but still much less than -the present fourth-class mail or express rate) for delivery elsewhere -in the United States. This would furnish the cross-roads store with -a most convenient delivery system and furnish it at a cheaper price -than its city rivals could secure it. The local retailer would have -the advantage of the difference between the two charges. To give this -advantage to the local retailer is probably wise from the standpoint -of general public policy. The small retailer in the country does -the public a very actual and very valuable service. To have a stock -displayed for selection is often an assistance in purchasing; there -are certain things which cannot in any case, be bought by mail; there -are other things which may sometimes preferably be bought direct, just -as most people like, occasionally at least, “to shop”; there is a -welcome personal touch in retailing which is lost in the long distance -purchase. For these and other reasons the retail store will remain, -stripped of overcompetition and non-essential distributive agents, -competing with the parcels post, not in price so much, as in the kind -and quality of service. That is the way the small retailer in Germany -had adapted himself to the parcels post; and although in his case -there is no zone preferential to aid him, he has made good. - -After all, there is the gist of the answer to those who oppose a -parcels post on anti-centralization grounds. They speak as though there -were but one factor in retailing--price. As a matter of fact there -are many factors, and the best students of retailing methods consider -service one of the most important. With a parcels post established the -public would be getting value for its money in cheapness or service, as -it chose; with the present express system it gets neither. - - - - -Congressional Record. 46: 1941-7. February 3, 1911. - -Star Routes and Rural Parcels Post. - -F. W. Mondell. - - -I do not want to put the entire blame for the hidden, circuitous, and -indirect opposition to parcels post upon the express companies. There -is another class of people who are opposed to parcels post who do not -directly show their hands. They are the firms and corporations who send -out a very large letter mail, upon which they pay 2 cents for every -half ounce. The average citizen who only writes an occasional letter -does not realize how heavy the burden 2-cent letter postage is to -people who send out great numbers of letters. - -There are many large concerns, like the mail-order houses for instance, -promoters, jobbers, and dealers in special extensively advertised -lines, whose actual letter postage amounts to many thousands of dollars -a year. Such people naturally oppose any change in the postal service -which might increase the postal deficit, even temporarily, because of -their anxiety to have the letter rate reduced. The yearly income of the -Post Office Department from letter postage is about $132,000,000, and -it is said that some mail-order houses pay several hundred thousand -dollars a year for letter postage. A reduction of that by half would be -well worth working for. - -It would not be fair in the discussion of this subject to overlook the -fact that there are arguments against the establishment of a general -parcels post which are advanced in perfect good faith and which are -entitled to serious consideration. Those local merchants who have some -misgivings about the matter are entitled to have their views carefully -considered, but as I have indicated, it is my opinion that in the main -their fears are not well founded, and arise largely from the fact that -they have not had an opportunity to give the matter their personal -consideration, and therefore have been inclined to accept the arguments -of interested parties. There are also a considerable number of people -who are honestly opposed to the parcels post in the belief that it is -an unwarranted extension of government activities into a field which -ought to be satisfactorily covered by private enterprise, and who still -hope that the express service may be so cheapened and improved as to -very largely satisfy the demand for a parcels post. There are also -those who feel that owing to the vast area of our country it would be -difficult to adopt a system of parcels post which would be generally -satisfactory and at the same time self-supporting. - -The argument is also made that the handling of a large amount of -merchandise by the postal service would make delivery difficult where -city delivery is provided, and delay the transmission of letters by the -loading of the mails with merchandise. - -These arguments do present problems which must have serious -consideration. They are none of them, however, in my opinion, problems -which are insurmountable, but a consideration of them, as well as of -that character of powerful opposition exerted indirectly to which I -have referred, leads thinking people to the conclusion that the outlook -for the establishment of a general parcels post in the country in the -near future is far from promising. With this as with all progressive -legislation, little progress will be made until the people as a whole -become thoroughly interested in the subject, quite generally make up -their minds what they want, and in no uncertain tone make their wants -known. - -So long as only those who are opposed to the extension of the parcels -post are generally heard from by members of Congress, there is not -much likelihood of definite action being taken, and the probability is -that in any event a general parcels post in this country can only be -secured through the medium of a modest and limited and more or less -experimental beginning in the way of a local or rural parcels post. - - -_Local Parcels Post_ - -President Taft in his last annual message recommended a parcels post -limited to rural free-delivery lines. This recommendation was made on -the ground of economy, to meet the opposition aroused by the argument -that a general system would create a great deficit in the postal -revenues, for a time at least. The local system would also have the -virtue that it would furnish an object lesson in a partial and limited -way, which might be valuable in determining the propriety of further -extending the system. There is, furthermore, an argument for rural -parcels post which does not apply in the same degree to a general -parcels post, and that is that while the dwellers in cities and towns -have ready access to stores and opportunities of express service, -the dwellers in rural communities do not have these advantages, -and therefore a rural parcels post which would enable them to have -articles delivered on local routes or to local post offices would be -of great benefit and advantage to them. As we do not have many rural -free-delivery routes in our sparsely settled intermountain country, I -am of the opinion that a rural parcels post, if established, should -also operate over the star routes which supply our country offices and -our people in boxes en route, and therefore the bill which I introduced -provides for such a service. - -Such a rural parcels post as is thus proposed would unquestionably be -helpful in building up the trade of the merchants in the small cities -and towns and of very great value and advantage to the people who get -their mail at the country post offices and along country routes. This -being true, I supposed I would avoid much of the storm of opposition -which those who have advocated a general parcels post have heretofore -encountered. Much to my surprise, however, the onslaught against this -very modest proposition, intended to help the local merchant and the -people of the country, has been even more terrific than the outburst -against the general proposition; all of which makes one fact as clear -as the noonday sun, and that is that the opponents of a parcels post -realize that the local parcels post, if it works well and is generally -satisfactory, will be the entering wedge for the general parcels post. -It also illuminates quite as clearly another fact, and that is that the -opponents of parcels post believe that the rural parcels post will work -well and be generally satisfactory. Another important fact emphasized -by this opposition is that the opponents of parcels post believe that -the agitation for a local parcels post is much more dangerous than -the agitation for the general parcels post, because it is more likely -to be successful. The gentlemen who have been spending their money so -liberally in opposition to the local or rural parcels post have thus -made clear three important facts: - -First. They believe that there is a strong probability of a local -parcels post being established. - -Second. They believe that such a system will work to the satisfaction -of the people. - -Third. They believe that, the local system having proven satisfactory, -it would lead to the establishment of a general system. - -In this condition of affairs it would seem that it is the duty of -the friends of a parcels-post system to get behind the President’s -suggestion of a local parcels post enlarged so as to include star -routes and country offices. - -Some one is spending a lot of money to defeat the rural parcels post. -One way they are doing it is by sending out petitions by the tens of -thousands, which they ask the local merchants to sign and send to their -Congressman. I have received hundreds of these petitions. They have -various sorts of headings printed in various kinds of type, but they -are nearly all alike. - -After having in the first paragraph drawn a dreadful picture of the -awful disaster and destruction which the rural parcels post will bring -to the farmers and to the country towns, in whose behalf they weep and -wail--a destruction compared with which the devastation of Sodom and -Gomorrah would be as the passing of a summer zephyr--they tell us how -all these direful calamities are to come, as follows: - - In every town catalogue agents of mail-order concerns would - establish themselves. They would need no stores, pay no rent, - employ no clerks, require no credit and give none, and carry no - stock. Their whole time would be devoted to soliciting orders - from catalogues. The merchandise would be shipped to them by - express or freight from the retail mail-order houses in the - large cities. When received it would be deposited in the local - post office and the packages delivered by the rural carriers. - -The only trouble with this lovely piece of sophistry is they fail -to explain to us why the very game they describe can not be worked -just as well now as it could after a rural parcels post had been -established. There is nothing in the world to prevent just the sort -of a plan, which is thus held up to our horror and execration, from -being carried out now, except that it would not pay. The mail carriers -on rural and star lines not only have the authority, but they would -be very glad to have the opportunity of delivering packages along -their routes which solicitors for catalogue houses might deliver to -them. And, furthermore, they can now, no doubt would be glad to, take -packages of any size; whereas a rural parcels post only provides -for packages up to 11 pounds. So, when you come to analyze it, this -“local-solicitor-of-the-mail-order-trust” bugaboo is found to be just -another one of the strawmen, the poor miserable scarecrows, that the -express companies are trying to terrify us with. - -The mail-order houses claim they can sell cheaper than the local -merchants because they do not have any local expense. The moment they -are called upon to pay for the services of a local agent their expenses -are greater than those of the local merchant. I think this disposes -of the “local-agent bogy.” He is the most transparent of all the -scarecrows the express companies have raised. - - - - -Congressional Record. 45: 9310-4. June 24, 1910. - -General Deficiency Bill. - -William S. Bennet. - - -Mr. Speaker: In view of the great interest in the parcels post -question, I submit herewith the views of the Farmers’ National -Congress: - - -_A Brief for a Modern Parcels Post for the United States_ - -[By John M. Stahl, legislative agent Farmers’ National Congress.] - -It has been said, and not without justice, that because of greater -density of population parcels can be carried at a less cost in the -domestic mails of Germany or Belgium than in the domestic mails of the -United States, because the average haul would be shorter in Germany or -Belgium. But the disparity between the domestic parcels post of the -United States and of foreign countries is greater than is warranted -by the length of the average haul. No fact is better established in -the science of transportation than that the cost of transporting an -article bears little relation to the distance transported. But if the -density of population should fix the rate of postage and the limit -of weight in a domestic parcels post, then surely we should have a -lower rate of postage and a higher weight limit than those countries -in which the population is not so dense as is ours. For example, the -area of the Commonwealth of Australia is 2,974,581 square miles, and -the present population is 4,300,000. The area of the United States, -excluding Alaska and the islands, is 3,025,600 square miles. Alaska and -Hawaii would add a shade less than 600,000 square miles. The area of -the Philippine Archipelago is 832,968 square miles, and the population, -according to the 1908 census, is 7,835,436. It is certain that, -including all our territory and all our population, we have an average -population of more than 20 per square mile. Australia has a population -of less than 2 per square mile. If the argument of the opponents of -a modern parcels post for the United States, founded on the density -of population of Belgium, Germany, etc., is a good argument, then the -rate charged in our domestic parcels post should be much less and the -weight limit should be much greater than in the domestic parcels post -of Australia. But the postage rate in the domestic parcels post of -Australia is as follows: Intrastate, 1 pound, 6 pence (12 cents); 2 -pounds, 9 pence (18 cents); 3 pounds, 1 shilling; and 3 pence (6 cents) -for each additional pound up to and including 11 pounds, the postage -rate for an 11-pound parcel being 3 shillings (72 cents). - -The interstate rate in the parcels post among the six states of -Australia is as follows: One pound, 8 pence (16 cents); 2 pounds, 1 -shilling 2 pence; 3 pounds, 1 shilling 8 pence; and 6 pence additional -for each additional pound up to and including 11 pounds, making the -charge for an 11-pound parcel 5 shillings 8 pence ($1.36). - -New Zealand is 1,200 miles from Australia and extends for 1,100 miles. -It has a population of only 1,000,000. Yet the rate in the parcels -posts between the States of Australia and New Zealand is just the same -as it is among the States of Australia, and the weight limit is the -same. - -Now, if the people of Belgium and Germany should have a less postage -rate and a higher weight limit in their domestic parcels post than we -have because the population of Germany and Belgium is denser than our -population, then we should have a much less postage rate and a much -higher weight limit in our domestic parcels post than have the people -of Australia, because our population is more than ten times as dense as -the population of Australia. But, on the contrary, the average postage -rate in not only the intrastate but also in the interstate parcels post -of Australia is less than in our domestic parcels post, and the weight -limit is 11 pounds, as compared with 4 pounds in our domestic parcels -post. The rule laid down by the opponents of a modern parcels post for -the United States must apply to Australia as well as to Belgium and -Germany, and by this rule the rate in our domestic parcels post should -certainly be less than 8 cents a pound and the weight limit should -certainly be far above 11 pounds. - -The postage rate in the domestic parcels post of New Zealand is 4 -pence (8 cents) for the first pound and 2 pence (4 cents) for each -additional pound. The population of New Zealand is less than one-half -as dense as our population. The weight limit in the domestic parcels -post of New Zealand is 11 pounds. If the argument of the opponents of -a modern parcels post for the United States, founded on the density -of population is correct, then the rate in our domestic parcels post, -instead of being several times that of New Zealand, should be less, -and the weight limit, instead of being only about one-third that of New -Zealand, should be greater. - -Our parcels post with foreign countries shows beyond argument that -the postage rate in our domestic parcels post should be not more than -one-third of what it is, at the utmost, and that the weight limit -should be several times what it is. The domestic parcels posts of other -countries and of Australia and New Zealand show also beyond argument -that the postage rate in our domestic parcels post should be only a -fraction of what it is and that the weight limit should be several -times greater. - -Whether or not the railways are owned by the government does not -touch the argument founded on the parcel post of other countries. -If government ownership of railways lessens the cost of the postal -service, it may be an argument that our Post-Office Department pays -our railways too high a rate for transporting mail matter, but it has -nothing to do with the character of the mail service our government -should give our people. - -As a matter of fact, government ownership of railways has no apparent -effect on the parcel post of foreign countries. Both those in which the -railways are in large part owned by the government and those in which -the government does not own any railway mileage have a parcel post much -superior to ours. - -Possibly our government should not conduct a parcel post at any -considerable loss, although it should be borne in mind that the object -of our Post-Office Department is to serve the people and not to make -money. It might be successfully argued that fundamentally there is no -greater reason why the Post-Office Department should be a source of -revenue than that the War Department should be a source of revenue. The -mails have become so very important in the transaction of business, -in the communication of intelligence, and affect so many of the -operations of our daily life, that each year it becomes apparent that -the test of our Post-Office Department should be the excellence of -the service it gives our people; and the relation of expenditures, so -long as they are judiciously and economically made, to receipts is of -less and less importance. But we would not advocate any parcel post -that, when fully established and on a normal basis, would add much, -if any, to the net cost of our Post-Office Department. However, it is -apparent from a study of the profits of our express companies that our -Post-Office Department could carry parcels in our domestic post at a -much less rate than 16 cents a pound without increasing the net cost -of the Post-Office Department. Further, a study of the profits of our -express companies show clearly that we are being charged altogether -too much by these express companies for the service they give us, and -that their charges should be subjected to that most effective of all -control--the competition of a modern parcel post. This study shows -with equal plainness that the present weight limit on parcels in our -domestic post, which compels us to send by express all parcels weighing -more than 4 pounds, should be raised to a much higher figure, probably -25 or even 100 pounds. Recent investigations and revelations have shown -that our express companies are really subjecting us to extortion. - -The competition of a modern parcels post may not prove sufficient of -itself to make the charges of the express companies what they should -be, but it would certainly be most effective in accomplishing this -result. We are subjected to overcharges by express companies as are the -people of no other country on the face of the earth. In fact, the most -important countries of Europe, as well as Australia, New Zealand, etc., -are not subjected to any overcharges at all by express companies for -the reason that in those countries and colonies there are no express -companies of the nature of those existing in this country. On account -of the overcharges of our express companies we have a very good reason, -indeed, for a modern parcels post in this country; and this very good -reason is in addition to those that so many other countries have found -amply sufficient to warrant a modern parcels post. - -And it should not be forgotten that the enormous profits of our express -companies on the capital they actually have invested in the express -business show conclusively that our government could give us a modern -parcel post without increasing the net cost of the postal service after -that parcel post had been established and its business had reached -normal proportions. - -In an honest endeavor to arrive at a correct conclusion as to the -features of our domestic parcel post we can not do better than to study -the parcel post of Australia and New Zealand, for the dominant elements -in the population of Australia and New Zealand are the same as in ours, -the people of Australia and New Zealand have obtained their ideas of -government and the functions of government from the same source that -we have, their institutions and conditions approach ours nearer than -those of other countries, and they have the same problem of adapting -the government service to a wide expanse of territory in the settlement -and development of a new country. This problem, though much greater -than ours at this time--the area of Australia is nearly the same as -that of our states, while the population is only about one-twentieth as -much--is the same in its nature. - -Another reason is that the postal service of Australia and New Zealand -is so satisfactory in every way. On page 25 of “L’Union Postale” for -1909 it is stated in regard to the New Zealand postal service: “The -financial results of the administration were very satisfactory. The -receipts increased by 9.04 per cent and the expenditure by 7.22 per -cent over the preceding year.” - -It will be seen that the postal business of New Zealand conforms to the -rule of good business management that as a business increases in volume -the receipts should increase faster than the expense. - -In the last published report of the postmaster-general of New Zealand -it is pointed out that notwithstanding several important reductions -in the postage rate the revenue of the postal service had during the -preceding sixteen years increased by a considerably larger amount -than the expense. “From December 16, 1907, the postage on inland -post cards was reduced to one-half penny. From January 1, 1908, the -rates for inland letters were made 1 penny for the first 4 ounces and -one-half penny for each additional 2 ounces. From January 1, 1908, the -commission chargeable on money orders within New Zealand is 3 pence -for each 5 pounds sterling or fraction of 5 pounds. Owing to the -reduction in postal rates made the year before, the number of parcels -increased 81.57 per cent.” “The rate of postage for inland parcels -was reduced from 6 pence for the first pound and 3 pence for each -additional pound to 4 pence for the first pound and 2 pence for each -additional pound. The public, moreover, has by the change been induced -to send by parcels post articles which were previously forwarded as -packets.” “The reduction in postal rates may be practically referred -to as having resulted in a great increase in parcels-post business.” -There was a handsome net balance to the credit of the postal business. -“The net balance on the year’s transactions would be much higher if the -value of official correspondence dealt with were taken into account.” -“The expansion of the business has necessitated large additions to the -staff. The increase of the staff was, however, below the percentage -of increase of the receipts. An amendment to the post-office act -contributed to improve the financial condition of the postal service.” -The experience of New Zealand and the Commonwealth of Australia in -postal service is well stated by the colonial treasurer, Hon. Sir -J. G. Ward, in one of his recent financial statements, as follows: -“Experience has shown that every concession in postal rates creates -a new class of business which is ultimately to the profit of the -post-office.” - -Of course, in the official publications of the Commonwealth of -Australia and of New Zealand one hears nothing to the effect that the -government should not engage in any competitive business--one hears -that only in the United States. If that were put into effect, our -national government would be compelled to stop building war ships -in the navy-yards, to close up altogether the government printing -establishment, to stop at once all its irrigation projects, to close -up all the land-grant colleges, to stop at once casting cannon and -making small firearms and ammunition, etc. As a matter of fact, when -our Constitution was framed there was no question among those that -framed it that it should give to the national government the power to -do certain things, in competition with private enterprise, that would -be for “the public welfare;” and there was never any intimation that -the national government should not engage in any competitive business. -On the other hand, those that helped to frame the national Constitution -and to secure its adoption participated in and sanctioned legislation -by Congress that put the national government into several lines of -competitive business. - -The publications of the labor officials of Australia and New Zealand -are decidedly numerous, and show plainly that the working people of -these colonies, as well as the other elements of their population, -are heartily in favor of a modern parcel post. It may truly be said -that the parcel post of Australia and New Zealand has the hearty and -universal approval of the people of those colonies. The officials -and the rank and file of the labor organizations of these colonies -are among the heartiest supporters of their parcel post. And it is -certain that the very large majority of the rank and file of our labor -organizations and the very large majority of our city people, as well -as of farmers, heartily favor a modern parcel post. - -As for the relation of a modern parcels post to the so-called -catalogue houses: In his official reports the postmaster-general of -both Australia and New Zealand frequently emphasizes that for years a -thoroughly modern colonial, intercolonial, and foreign parcels post has -been enjoyed by the people of those colonies, even in “the most remote -districts to which the mail service penetrates.” Notwithstanding this, -in all of the many publications on Australia and New Zealand, or by the -officials of those colonies, there could not be found a sentence to -the effect that the local merchants of those colonies have been in the -least injured in their business by catalogue houses. - -This fact certainly merits being emphasized. In all the countries in -which there is a modern parcels post the catalogue house is unknown. -In our country, which is the only enlightened country that has not a -modern parcels post, the catalogue house exists and, to some limited -extent, flourishes. Hence the fact is plain that instead of a modern -parcels post aiding catalogue houses the very opposite is true. If -the universal experience of humanity counts for anything, then the -antiquated parcels post, such as we have, aids the catalogue house and -the modern parcels post puts it out of business and keeps it out of -business. - -The rural delivery service has grown to more than 20,000 routes. -Official reports show that the average weight of mail delivered by -each team or single-horse wagon in the rural delivery service is only -25 pounds. On nearly all the trips the carrier could practically as -well take 500 pounds in his wagon. The more than 40,000 rural carriers -make more than 12,480,000 round trips each year. If a parcels post on -the rural routes earned $2 for each round trip the gain would be, in -round numbers $25,000,000 a year, and this, with some little reforms -that all agree should be and easily could be made, would wipe out the -postal deficit. Now, if the rate on the pound packages in a rural route -parcels post was 5 cents a pound the carrier to earn the $2 per round -trip would be compelled to carry not the 500 pounds that he could, but -only 20 pounds additional going and coming or a total load of only 45 -pounds. - -This is a fair calculation as to profit to the government, for the -expense for the rural carrier service would not be any greater -whatever, and the small expense for handling the additional 20 pounds -at the terminal post-office would be more than covered by the increased -first-class mail (handling which is very profitable) resulting from the -parcels post. - -As, on the average, about 100 families are served by each rural route, -if, on the average, each family had delivered or sent each trip only -one-half pound of parcel, taking into account that a good many parcels -would weigh less than 1 pound and that every parcels-post bill proposes -for them a higher rate than for heavier packages, the rate could be -made much less than is proposed and yet the postal deficit would be -wiped out altogether! - -And this would be of very great benefit to the 4,000,000 families -served by the rural mail delivery. The rural carrier passes the farm -every week day, yet if the farmer wants a package from the town he must -go after it--each of the 100 farmers must hitch up and drive to town -and back for packages that the one carrier could have brought them as -well as not with the outfit that he already has. Or these 100 farmers -must hitch up and take to town packages that the carrier could have -taken for them with the outfit he already has. The time and labor -saved the 4,000,000 families on rural routes would amount to many times -the present postal deficit. - -It is only natural that farmers should be especially desirous of a -modern parcels post, because, as already stated, the express service -stops with the railway station. Hence the farmer has no express service -that reaches to him as have the people of towns and cities. The express -companies have never cared to carry their business to the farmer, -and this must convict them of only the most reprehensible motives in -opposing a parcels post limited to rural routes, which would extend -the equivalent of an express service to the farmers. As bearing on the -farmer’s need of a modern parcels post, the following from a letter -just received from Hon. W. L. Ames, Oregon, Wis., a practical farmer -and a leader of national reputation in all agricultural movements, is -of interest: - -“One of the things we most need is better and prompter transportation -facilities for rather small articles. I recently needed a small but -important repair for a machine. It weighed 4¼ pounds. It cost 55 cents. -The express company charged 45 cents to bring it to Oregon--200 miles. -The charge was altogether too high, but what I felt most disposed to -complain about was that it took a week to bring the repair to me. Mail -matter moves promptly; but the express company knew that it was certain -of the job of carrying that repair to me, hence no need of haste on the -part of the express company. We need better and added facilities for -the prompter moving of such merchandise. Present delay is a serious -handicap, and undoubtedly a parcels post would give us prompt service -at a less rate, as it would not be expected that the parcels post would -do more than make a moderate profit for the government, whereas the -express business is a constant ‘melon-cutting’ business. We must not -forget, also, that all the equipment for a parcels post on rural routes -is already installed. - -“If the government would take charge of what it already has and add -rules to fix charges for carrying parcels on the rural routes, it would -relieve us of much unjust charge and also much annoyance and loss of -time. Under the rulings of the Post-Office Department prohibiting rural -carriers from acting as agents for anyone to obtain business, carriers -are afraid to carry parcels to any extent. But what cuts a yet -greater figure is that no rule can be established to fix the charges -for carrying parcels and make them the same for all. Each person on -a rural route and the carrier cannot dicker for the transportation -of each article. That would soon lead to great dissatisfaction, as -some would think that others were being favored. And to dicker on -each parcel would take so much time and be so much trouble that the -carrier could not be expected to do it. All we need to put into effect -a modern parcels post on the rural routes is a law fixing a reasonable -and proper rate for the transportation of parcels and making it the -business of the rural carrier to handle parcels as well as the mail -matter he now carries.” - - - - -Cosmopolitan. 36: 497*-9*. March, 1904. - -Who Will Be Benefited by a Parcels Post? - -John B. Walker. - - -Those who have been appointed to defend the Post-Office Department -in the sacrifice it has made of the American people in the matter -of postal parcels delivery have replied to the argument in the last -issue of _The Cosmopolitan_ by claiming that but very few people will -be benefited by a parcels delivery equal to that of Germany. It is -therefore necessary to consider this question: “Who are the people who -will be benefited?” - -First. There will be a gross saving amounting to more than two hundred -and fifty millions of dollars per annum. This annual addition to -our national wealth constitutes an economic factor of the highest -importance. - -Second. While this sum will be distributed equally among the people in -proportion to their purchases--especially among those who make small -purchases--the direct benefit will be first appreciable in the business -of the following classes: - -I. _The Small Storekeepers of the Country Towns and Villages._ One of -the arguments used by those who have been placed in the Post-Office -Department for the protection of special interests, is that a -parcels post would injure the country storekeeper. The very slightest -consideration of the problem, however, would have shown that no one -is so likely to be its beneficiary as he. The chief difficulties with -which the small merchant has to contend are these: - -1. Insufficient capital. - -2. Distance from wholesale centers. - -3. Cost of expressage on small parcels. - -The country merchant has the acquaintance of his customers; he knows -their wants and enjoys their good-will, and would have their patronage -if he could be placed in a situation where he could give them equal, -or approximately equal, advantages with a merchant who buys on a large -scale. If one of his customers is driven to go elsewhere, it is not -only because the merchant cannot afford to keep in stock the particular -class of goods desired, but because he cannot afford to ship these -goods in small quantities, on account of the prohibitive rates of the -government’s postal parcels charges of sixteen cents per pound, or the -almost equally prohibitive rates of the express companies. - -The country storekeeper has the experience of his customer’s wants, -and he has a knowledge of the best goods, knows what is a fair price -for an article. He is in a position to advise his customer as to his -needs, and if he were not handicapped by lack of capital and cost of -transportation for parcels, he could, in nine times out of ten, supply -the wants of the customer. - -In addition to the trade he has now, the country storekeeper would, -with the advantage of a first-class postal parcels system, be able to -keep in touch with all the great wholesale distributing agencies of the -country. He would earn a reasonable commission on all goods ordered, -and would be in a position to secure, within a very brief time, by -postal parcels, the goods which the customer, after looking over the -catalogues and receiving the advice of the merchant, should decide to -order. - -There would be no investment and no risk, such as is involved in -carrying a stock of goods which may become unsalable. Without large -capital, he is now handicapped by being compelled, on account of the -discrimination against him as a shipper, to lose the sale of all those -articles which he cannot carry in stock in quantities, and which may, -under present arrangements, only be shipped in bulk. If he attempts -to use the mails, the rate of sixteen cents per pound is prohibitive, -while the fact that the bulk is limited to four pounds is almost -equally so; and the express companies’ charges are so high that in the -majority of cases he cannot utilize their services. - -Let us suppose that, instead of the United States’ charges for postal -parcels being six thousand per cent. greater than Germany’s they were -on a par, and that the country merchant could receive parcels weighing -from one ounce to one hundred and eleven pounds for a quarter of a cent -a pound. _It is not even necessary that the rate should be so low. -Let it be made four times as great as that of Germany_, or one cent -per pound, and let us see what advantage the country merchant would -have. One hundred and ten pounds covers nine-tenths of the articles -which he would be likely to sell. Instead of a store equipped with -comparatively few articles, the country merchant would be able to -carry, in addition to his regular stock, an extensive line of samples. -He would familiarize himself with the best that there is in the market, -be able to advise his customer to his advantage, and then, receiving -the order, could, within a brief time, have the goods sent by parcels -post directly to the customer’s home, saving the expense of handling -two or three times--making more money by a small commission than he -does now by the larger margin on the goods which he is compelled to -carry constantly in stock. - -Good organization is the trend of modern business, and this is -good organization--saving two or three handlings, truckage, some -bookkeeping, et cetera. - -II. _The Manufacturers._ Next to the country merchant, the manufacturer -will be the largest beneficiary of the postal parcels delivery. Take, -for instance, the hardware business. The manufacturer is obliged, -under the existing conditions of trade, to maintain large stocks in -an endless number of cities scattered over the country, or do what is -the equivalent of directly maintaining the stocks--that is, to give -extended credit. This is because there is no way of handling small -parcels of hardware without a cost that is so excessive as to force -shipments of hardware to be made in bulk. With a one-cent-per-pound -rate, more than fifty per cent. of the stocks now carried could be -eliminated and orders sent by the hardware merchant directly to the -manufacturer to be shipped by package. One hundred and ten pounds would -cover the greater portion of the trade, and leave only nails, barbed -wire, and similar articles, for bulk handling. - -In cotton goods, instead of shipping from the Mills to New York, -trucking them there through the streets, breaking bulk, repacking, -retrucking and reshipping to the merchant there would be but one -operation. A single piece of goods would go direct from the factory -by parcels post at a total cost for handling not to exceed twenty -per cent. of the charges now engendered by our clumsy, costly and -inconceivably stupid method. - -The same thing would happen in the grocery business. A factory in -Rochester or Pittsburg, manufacturing canned articles, must ship in -bulk to New York, or Chicago, or St. Louis. There the car-load, after -being hauled to a warehouse, is broken up and transshipped. There is -no reason for this transshipment, no possible excuse for this waste -of money, except that the ownership of the express by a few private -companies has prevented the organization of a parcels post upon lines -which have long been recognized as absolutely successful in Europe. - -The question here will be asked: Would this shipment direct from -the factory interfere with the business of the wholesale merchants -whose task it is now to repack and reship? On the contrary, it would -simplify their work and reduce expenses from every point of view. Their -business primarily is one of distribution of credits. They have certain -customers who receive from them certain lines of credit. They furnish -the capital between the manufacturer and the retail dealer. If tomorrow -they could order by letter or telegraph, directly from the factory, for -shipment to the retail dealer by postal parcels, their business would -be greatly simplified and their profits increased. - -III. _The Merchants in Large Cities._ Perhaps to no class will the boon -of a parcels post be greater than the merchants in the large cities. -All the way from four cents to fifty cents is now paid for the delivery -of a parcel within a radius of thirty miles around the leading cities -of this country. Experiments have shown that it is possible, where -the interests of a considerable number of merchants are combined, to -deliver an average dry-goods parcel, thirty miles out, at a cost not to -exceed four cents. - -As conducted today, the business of delivering parcels consists in -sending the wagon of one dry-goods house to follow another into a city -block, and deliver each its parcel; then each wagon goes off to another -block, and delivers its parcel. In New York city thousands of wagons -meander through the two or three thousand miles of streets, each firm -doing its work independently of the others, and each wasting money by -lack of cooperation. - -It is altogether probable that with thorough organization city delivery -could be conducted, within a radius of thirty miles, upon a basis -not to exceed one half cent per pound. This would mean but two cents -per package for the average four-pound dry-goods parcel, including, -of course, the large number which are transported but a few blocks. -But that is not the only advantage. It would take from the merchants -the constant effort which the maintenance of good delivery systems -involves. I have personally studied the delivery systems of nearly all -the leading merchants in New York, Philadelphia, and Boston, and have -spent a day in the delivery department of Marshall Field in Chicago. -Everywhere I heard the same complaint--that the brains consumed in -managing the parcels delivery was one of the most expensive items in -the cost of operating a great establishment. - -IV. _Book Publishers._ The cost of delivering a book by mail is now -eight cents per pound. This, for a four-pound book, means a tax -of thirty-two cents. Just how far this retards the development of -intelligence in the people is not difficult to estimate. - -V. _Stationers’ Supplies._ The large class of manufacturers and -wholesalers who are engaged in supplying the stationery trade would -find the parcels post a great convenience in receiving supplies and -in delivering to customers; a matter of lessened capital, lessened -trouble, and greatly increased profits. - -VI. _The Railways._ At first sight it might appear that the interests -of the railways would not be favored by a postal parcels law. But the -briefest analysis of the problem shows that the benefit to them would -perhaps be greatest of all. - -To-day vast numbers of freight-cars stand idle, waiting carload -shipments. These bulk shipments are necessarily made at the very -minimum of cost. In the low price of bulk shipments, American railways -lead the world. Even at existing prices, however, water transportation -carries off a large part of the burden. - -The benefits to the railways, by transferring freight from the class of -bulk to parcels, would be: - -1. Goods being shipped in a constant stream of packages, instead of -intermittently by car-load or train-bulk; - -2. A higher price would be obtained from shipments of the same freight -in parcels as compared with the previous cost in bulk; - -3. The large increase in traffic due to better, cheaper, speedier and -more direct, and in every way infinitely more convenient, facilities; - -4. The additional prosperity which a saving of anywhere from two -hundred and fifty to six hundred millions of dollars per annum would -mean to the country at large. - -There are to-day far-seeing railway officials who have given this -problem serious consideration, and who have arrived at the conclusion -just stated. - -VII. _The Farmer._ Last, but not least in importance, comes the -farmer. To-day, cut off from parcel delivery, he is the victim of bad -government, both in his bad roads and lack of postal facilities. The -one step of progress that the United States post-office has made of -recent years, that is worthy of respect, is the rural postal delivery. -As proposed, however, it is ridiculous. The idea was advanced by some -politicians for the purpose of creating additional patronage. Merely -to deliver letters and newspapers to the farmer would, of course, -be to operate a service without hope of placing it on a profitable -basis. It would be as if the New York merchants would keep a thousand -wagons traveling around the streets of New York to deliver nothing but -kid gloves and lace veils--nearly empty, while other wagons would be -carrying the burden of the goods sold. - -Rural free delivery is absolutely impossible unless accompanied by -a postal parcels law. Giving a rate even four times as high as that -of Germany, the entire rural delivery could be put on a paying basis -to-morrow. - -Here again would be an advantage to the country merchant. The farmer -to-day, when he wishes to buy, hitches up a pair of horses, drives -four or five miles, and makes a few purchases. If the United States -had the postal parcels law of Austro-Hungary, the farmer would draw a -postal check, mail it free, the merchant would deliver the goods to the -post-office, and a few hours later they would be in the hands of the -farmer. - -The life of the farm, which has so many drawbacks, would thus be made -vastly more comfortable. It is impossible to estimate in dollars how -great the saving to the country would be in this one particular. - -It would be easy to show the endless ramifications of this beneficial -service; but space need not here be taken up for that purpose. -Sufficient has been indicated to show that there is no man or woman, -however poor, however rich, who would not be vastly benefited and -convenienced by a government postal parcels system. - - - - -Craftsman. 14: 592-4. September, 1908. - -More Efficient Postal Service. Gustav Stickley. - - -Speaking of the success of the rural routes, of which there are more -than thirty-eight thousand already established in this country, Mr. -Meyer says: “The isolation which existed in many parts of the country -has been overcome; the people are in daily communication with their -friends in the rest of the world; the daily papers and magazines come -to the door of every farm house on the rural routes, and enlightenment -and information are being spread broadcast through the land. Medical -men have said that already the establishment of the rural service is -having its effect upon the mentality of our country patrons, and that -because of it insanity is on the decrease. The extension of the rural -routes to include a parcel post,” he asserts, “will be a boon both to -the rural population and to the store-keeper as the latter can receive -his orders by mail or telephone and despatch the desired merchandise by -the rural carrier. The farmer will be saved from hitching up his horse -and losing the time he needs for planting or harvesting his crops, and -it will enable the store-keeper to increase his sales and meet the -requirements of modern trade.” - -Much of the opposition to this measure has come from the country -store-keeper, who very naturally dreads that such largely increased -facilities for delivery by mail would simply extend the already -wide domain of the department store and drive him completely out of -business. But this objection has been met by the plan for a special -postal service for the rural routes, which would be given at a much -lower rate than that prevailing throughout the general system of parcel -post. This special rate as advocated by Mr. Meyer would be five cents -for the first pound and two cents for each successive pound up to -the limit of eleven pounds, thus enabling any one along the line of -rural route to use the mails for delivery of packages at a charge of -twenty-five cents for the maximum weight, as opposed to one dollar and -thirty-two cents for the same weight if sent at the regular rate of -twelve cents a pound,--which regular rate would necessarily have to -be used by department stores unless they should go to the trouble and -expense of maintaining a large system of rural agencies throughout the -country. - -The result of such a system in bringing about the general dissemination -of business throughout the country by fostering small individual -enterprises is almost beyond calculation, especially as a secondary -result would be the growth of small villages and settlements throughout -the thinly settled farming districts. And these two changes in the -present state of affairs would go far toward solving the whole problem -of the possibility of turning the tide from the city back into the -country. The hardships and discomforts of many of the conditions -of city life, particularly among people of limited means, and the -uncertainty of the wage-earner’s means of livelihood, are now endured -chiefly because of the greater disadvantages that are attached -to farming in remote parts of the country or to undertaking the -responsibility of working independently of any large commercial or -industrial organization. For months, the Craftsman has been urging the -establishment of rural settlements and the introduction of handicrafts -in connection with small farms. Nothing that is likely to be done in -the way of legislation to this end seems to us to make so possible a -general change for the better along these lines as the postal measures -recommended by the Postmaster-General, supported by the President and -now recognized by Republicans and Democrats alike as a reform that -will not be downed, no matter how powerful are the interests opposing -it. Given the postal savings bank as an encouragement to thrift, and -transportation facilities that will not only bring all necessary -merchandise within reach of the farmer, but also take the products -of his own industry and a great part of the output of the village -workshops to the nearest market at a reasonable rate, and the rest will -follow almost as a matter of course. When a man has a fund of several -hundred dollars, there is hardly any question as to what he will do -with it if he has a chance. The desire to own a home and a little patch -of land is universal with civilized mankind and when to the possibility -of gratifying this desire is added facilities that render life in the -country as interesting and as much abreast of the times as life in the -city, the tenement question in cities will soon cease to be the serious -problem it is now. - - - - -Independent. 70: 105-7. January 12, 1911. - -Parcels Post Once More. - - -Proportional rural population is not diminishing. We do not know what -the present census will say, but we do know that from 1890 to 1900 -the country gained enormously on the city in its proportion of new -settlers. The old record of 65 per cent. for the city tumbled down -to a little over 30 per cent., and we know of no reversal of this -tendency. Back to the country has become a universal cry. Lands are -rising in value steadily, and deserted farms are a myth. At least, -Governor Hughes in one of his speeches said that he should like to -know where they were in New York State, for he could not find them. -Country churches have often died, to be sure; but they were killed -seventy-five years ago, and they do not note at all any decadence -of farm prosperity. They went out when railroads began to be built. -Crossroads stores have not been run to any extent for half a century, -any more than crossroads taverns. They do not belong to advanced stages -of country life, and are not needed. - -Never was country life more progressive, better organized or more -lifeful and hopeful. The crossroads has been displaced by the village -store, and this village store must deliver its goods. It wants the -parcels post. The trolley is reaching its fingers up into the valleys -and touching the farmyards with its carrying capacity. The automobile -is doing even more to reach the isolated farmhouse. We might as well -forbid these forces and conveniences as to deny the farmer a parcels -post. The same argument lies with intense force against rural free -mail delivery in every form. It destroys many post offices; it keeps -the farmer at home; it dissolves hamlet life: but it aids in the great -movement of distributing the blessings of a complete life all over the -country. - -We are quite willing to face the frightful proposition which is offered -us, of a community with no business institutions except the post office -and the freight depot. We have seen the tens of thousands of district -schoolhouses blotted out without a qualm, for we have seen the union -schools gloriously taking up the work in their place. We have seen -the little stores and taverns that used to be convenient for watering -horses vanish, because we find a substitute in department stores, -almost invariably within reach, by aid of the trolley and automobile. -We are not worried at all when we contemplate a picture involving a -more substantial country home, with its isolation abolished, hidden -among the hills, but visited daily by the rural free delivery carrier, -even tho he shall have in his automobile a ten-pound package for the -housewife. - -Without parley, we believe that the American people, almost without -dissent, demand a parcels post service; and that if put to popular -vote, this demand would be exprest by a majority of 90 to 1 the -country over. The people are growing impatient over delay, and they -are expressing this impatience very loudly. We believe that the coming -Congress will hardly find it possible to ignore this desire. We quite -agree with one of our contemporaries who says that the next step of -social and economic progress in the United States is unquestionably -bringing the producer and consumer closer together by reducing the cost -of carrying small parcels. - - - - -People Demand a General Parcels Post. pp. 7-12. - -William Sulzer. - - -Absence of a parcels-post law enables the railroad companies, through -subsidiary companies called express companies, to eliminate all -competition and prevent all regulation in one branch of transportation -and to escape compliance with the laws that are being enforced against -them in other branches of transportation by the several state commerce -commissions and the Interstate Commerce Commission. - -That the owners of the securities of these express companies have made -enormous profits is a recognized fact. One hundred per cent, even 200 -per cent, profit when an express company “cuts a melon” no longer -excites surprise when found in the news columns of our evening paper. - -No one objects to a fair profit for good service, but conditions seem -to indicate that the transportation companies are not satisfied with -the first and are not giving us the second, while developments before -commerce commission hearings indicate that their backwardness in -adopting economical and scientific business methods causes a tremendous -unnecessary expense. This they are meeting by maintaining and even -increasing already exorbitant rates for service that many believe are -discriminatory, and that grave injury and injustice to business and to -the general public results. - -As an example, W. P. Dickinson, of the Burlington Railway, is quoted in -the Railway Record as saying at a public hearing that the expenditures -of the Burlington traffic department for printing and stationery in -the fiscal year 1910 was $222,000. Assuming that they are typical for -all the railways in the United States, the cost of printing railroad -tariffs alone under present methods, is $6,000,000 to $10,000,000. -In modern transportation methods, as, for instance, those in vogue -in Germany, this expense is so trifling as to be scarcely worth -considering. Freights move in Germany on a uniform tariff, based -entirely upon bulk, weight, and distance, discrimination is impossible, -and any shipper can learn in a moment, by referring to the table, -the exact freight charge to any point, and can ship knowing that his -competitors must pay the same price for the same service. - -In the United States the shipper can not know all the tariffs that are -published or how they affect rates. He is supplied with a few easily -understood tables, but it is not within human possibility for him to -even read, to say nothing of comprehending, the millions that are filed -with the commission every year and how they affect the cost of the -transportation he buys. - -So it seems this extraordinary printing expense of millions, whatever -its purpose may be, operates to keep the average shipper ignorant -about rates. Ignorance is always dangerous, and particularly so in -transportation matters. - -Harrington Emerson, the expert, testified at the hearing before the -Interstate Commerce Commission at Washington last November, that -$300,000,000 annually in railroad operating expenses in this country -would be saved if the railroads adopted better business methods of -management. - -To save for the consumers that enormous sum, no better beginning can be -made than for the government to establish a satisfactory parcels post -and adopt scientific business methods in its management. - -That the interests that control our railroads also own and control -the express companies and that their separate incorporation is merely -a device to cover extortion and discrimination by complex contract -relations is indicated by Senate Document No. 278, pages 53, 54, and 55: - - Stock held by railways in express companies $20,668,000 - Railway securities held by express companies 34,542,950 - Holdings of express companies in the stock of express - companies 11,618,125 - ---------- - Total intercorporate ownership express companies - June 20, 1906 66,829,075 - - -_Express Company Rates Cause Loss to Shippers--Express Company Methods -Cause Loss to the Postal Department_ - -The peculiar, graduated, increasing rate for small-weight parcels is -absolutely prohibitive for express transportation except at an actual -loss for a considerable proportion of business. Most express shipments -are in small parcels. They therefore pay the higher scale. This -increased rate is exacted for both terminal and haulage service and is -as high as 37½ times the first-class freight charge. - -The express companies take from the Post Office Department the -profitable business and pocket millions of profits, but leave the -unprofitable for the Post Office Department. The profits from a parcels -post would stop the post-office deficit and give us a 1-cent letter -rate. The annual surplus of the British post-office department about -equals our annual postal deficit. The British have a serviceable -parcels post. - -The men in the mail service have a record of one error in 18,000 pieces -handled. Compare that with your experience with the express companies. - - -_The Parcels Post Not Openly Opposed by the Beneficiaries of Present -Methods_ - -The opposition to the parcels post at the late congressional hearing -was made by persons who appeared in the name of American Hardware -Manufacturers’ Association, Illinois Retail Merchants’ Association, -National Association of Retail Druggists, National Association Retail -Grocers, National Retail Hardware Association, National Federation of -Retail Implement & Vehicle Dealers’ Associations, Wholesale Dry Goods -Association, Paint Manufacturers’ Association of the United States. - -There was no direct opposition by the express companies to the parcels -post. - - -_Misdirected Energy Benefits Express Companies and Catalogue Houses_ - -Since the members of the above commercial associations can not to -any important degree be beneficiaries of the present confiscatory -and restrictive system that has a monopoly of the transportation of -merchandise in packages of 4 pounds to 20 pounds, some other reason -for their opposition to the parcels post must be found, and in that -connection the testimony given by these gentlemen at the hearing is -interesting. - -The main objection to the parcels post was that it would build up -catalogue houses to the injury of retail businesses. - -In reply to questions by members of the congressional committee, -however, some of their specific objections applied only to the rural -free delivery now firmly established and which nobody dreams of -abolishing. - -The other objections advanced were also to conditions already in -existence, some of which at least it would seem would be less -objectionable if we had a serviceable parcels post. - -For instance, the mailing of catalogues by the catalogue houses. That -can be done now to the farmer’s door for one-half cent an ounce, but -even that low rate does not always get the business. I have seen the -catalogue of Sears, Roebuck & Co. and the Chicago House Wrecking Co. -that were sent by each of these firms to addressees who did not specify -how he wished them sent. They were received since the date of the -hearing; both catalogues came by prepaid express. - -Had we a parcels post competing with the express companies and reducing -their extortionate charges the express companies would be less able to -deprive the government of that revenue by underbidding the Post Office -Department rate on catalogues. - - -_Catalogue Houses Don’t Need the Parcels Post, and Oppose It_ - -At the congressional hearing so much was said by the opponents of the -parcels post about the catalogue houses, how they were behind the -parcels post--that it was for their sole benefit, etc., etc.--that I -went to Chicago and succeeded in getting an interview with Mr. Julius -Rosenwald, president of Sears, Roebuck & Co. He declined to support the -parcels post. He said they were very well satisfied with conditions as -they are, under which they had built up their immense business, which -was done entirely by catalogue and without salesmen or commission. He -explained that only an insignificant amount of their sales went by -mail, that what did was unprofitable, as it cost as much to make ready -and handle such little sales as larger shipments, jewelry being the -only exception, and even for that they advised express. - -Evidence that catalogue houses do not want or need, and do oppose, the -parcels post was not lacking at the hearing. - -For example: Marcus M. Marks, of the Merchants’ Association of New -York, after stating that the Merchants’ Association is not in favor of -a general parcels post and has frequently placed itself in opposition -thereto he quoted one of the large Chicago catalogue houses as in -opposition, and for this reason: “The result would be that instead -of shipping goods in large bulk it would tend to create a demand for -small shipments, which would increase his expense of doing business.” -Marshall Field & Co., one of the largest concerns in this country, -were referred to by both J. G. Baker, president National Federation of -Retail Implements, etc., and H. L. McNamary, of the Hardware Dealers’ -Association, as opposed to the parcels post. - -All the opponents of the parcels post at the hearing, mostly retailers -in heavy-weight goods, were very insistent to impress upon the minds -of the committee the great injury that is being done their business -by the big catalogue houses, who, they claimed, are underselling them -and are doing a very large and increasing percentage of the business -that belongs to and should go to the retail dealer. But is it correct -to charge to the parcels post this great loss of trade which has -occurred while we have no parcels post and that has been brought about -by conditions that can claim no assistance from a parcels post? Is it -reasonable to say that a parcels post would produce such conditions -when no such conditions do exist as above noted where the parcels post -has been in operation for many years? - - - - -Hampton’s. 26: 261-4. February, 1911. - -Let Us Have a Parcels Post. - - -There would be some shadow of excuse for refusing to accept so great a -convenience as the parcels post if, in accepting it, we would destroy -a large investment in the business of the express companies. But, in -fact, we would not destroy any legitimate values in these companies. -They own practically nothing on which they would lose a dollar. Most -of their money is not in the business of transporting freight, but -in banking and investment enterprises. These would not be interfered -with. Their tangible property actually used in transportation would -be required, and would undoubtedly be taken over at good figures by -the government, when it established a parcels post business. Their -investments in stocks, bonds and banking business would be undisturbed. -The express companies would lose nothing except their graft--the -privilege of charging outrageous rates for the service they render. In -morals and equity that ought to be ended as soon as possible. - -The truth is that it is not the political and financial influences of -the express companies which keeps Congress from giving this nation -a parcels post. It is the pathetic and benighted ignorance of a -considerable section of our own people, who have been led to believe -that the parcels post would injure them. It is well-nigh impossible -to believe that there can still be millions of intelligent Americans -who doubt that national prosperity must be promoted by every increase -of the facilities and cheapening of the cost of transportation. Yet -there is such a section of the American public. Misguided and ignorant, -it has permitted itself to become the chief bulwark of protection to -the express companies’ graft. It persists in believing, in the face of -nearly a century of world experience to the contrary, that there is -danger in too easy, too cheap and too universal transportation! - - -_Unwise Opposition of the Small Merchant_ - -Reference, of course, is had to the fears which the merchants of the -country towns entertain as to the effect of the parcels post upon their -business. The country merchant has come to accept on this point the -sophistical, disingenuous and dishonest arguments of the express lobby, -skillfully put out through agencies whose real purpose is concealed. - -The argument that cheap transportation of parcels will injure the -country towns is exactly as reasonable as the contention that London -and New York, Hamburg and Liverpool, Seattle and Sidney, must be -injured by the railways and steam-ships which, bringing all parts of -the world into close and easy communication, would make it impossible -for great and dominating centers of population, commerce and industry -to exist. Everybody can see how absurd such an argument would be. -The best possible transportation facilities constitute the first -requisite to making a great city. Commercial centers are prosperous and -important, in proportion as they have adequate, efficient and cheap -transportation. This is as true of the country town with a single -railroad line as it is of a continent’s metropolis with half a hundred -great railroad systems pouring their tonnage into its terminals and -with the ships of all the seven seas unloading their cargoes at its -wharves. - -It is an axiom that good, ample and cheap transportation actually -makes commerce. The country town which has no railroad always wants -one. The hamlet which has no post-office is forever riding the neck -of its congressman until it gets one. Great cities vote millions to -build artificial harbors, to provide wharfage, and to increase every -possible facility for cheap and rapid transportation. - -There are no communities which need improvement of transportation so -much as the country towns which have been misled into opposing the -parcels post. The country merchant has been made to believe that the -parcels post would take his business away from him and give it to the -mail-order house in the great city. It would do nothing of the kind. On -the contrary, it would give the country merchant the one facility which -he does not now have: it would place him on a parity with the merchant -in a great city. - -Quick, cheap transportation would enable him to buy better and cheaper. -He could sell many articles from catalogues instead of having to carry -them in stock. He could create a mail-order business of his own in his -surrounding territory. The local merchant who conducts his business -well has nothing to fear from the mail-order house. Farmers and -citizens prefer dealing with the home man, and the parcels post will -give him many advantages that will enable him to increase his trade to -proportions which are now impossible. - -Of course, this does not apply to the country merchant who buys his -goods badly or at high prices, and who gives long credits and sells at -long prices. Parcels post or not, his day is doomed. More alert men, -with better business ideas, will soon occupy his place. The alert, -hustling merchant will use the parcels post so effectively that the old -sleepy head’s day will end just that much sooner. - -The proof of the pudding is in the eating. Every enlightened country -except the United States has a parcels post. No country would think -of abandoning it, any more than it would think of disestablishing its -letter postal service. In the experience of all the world the argument -about injuring the country town is sweepingly and completely refuted. -The small town would gain vastly more than the large town by this -tremendous increase and improvement of its transportation facilities. -The whole public would benefit, for precisely the same reason that it -benefits by having fast steamships instead of sailing vessels, limited -passenger trains instead of stage coaches, two-cent letter postage -instead of five-cent. - - -_Part Played by the Express Companies_ - -The people who oppose the parcels post are the innocent and unwitting -dupes of the express monopoly. This is the one point in the parcels -post argument that cannot be too constantly emphasized. When the dupes -are brought to understand their true interests, Congress will not dare -stand for a single session as the protector of express graft. - -Small wonder that the express companies are fighting with every -resource against the parcels post. They constitute one of the greatest -groups of financial power in the country. They are united firmly. -Most of the companies are large stock-holders in the others. Thus the -United States Express Company was shown by the report of the Public -Service Commission of New York, issued in 1908, to be capitalized -at $10,000,000. Of this, the Adams Express Company owned nearly -$1,000,000, the American Express Company exactly $1,000,000, and the -Southern Express Company, $70,000. How tremendously profitable the -business of the United States Express Company has been is shown by the -fact that whereas the company claimed an investment of only $2,042,000 -in real estate and equipment, it had $7,464,000 in investments, -$895,000 in cash holdings, and $2,000,000 in collateral and other -loans! That is to say, while this company had very little more than -$2,000,000 invested in its transportation business, it had more than -$10,000,000, representing surplus and undivided profit, in general -investments! - -It has accumulated such vast profits because it has been for many years -charging unconscionable and scandalous rates for its service. - -The Adams Express Company is shown by the current number of Moody’s -Manual to have $12,000,000 capital. After paying large regular -dividends and numerous extra dividends for many years, the company in -1907 found itself with such a tremendous surplus that it actually paid -a special dividend of 200 per cent in 4-per-cent bonds! Every holder -of a one-hundred-share of stock was presented with two hundred dollars’ -worth of 4-per-cent bonds! The present, of course, represented in part -the excessive charges which the company had been permitted to collect -from the public. - -But the most startling statistics of express accumulations are the -financial statements of Wells Fargo and Company. For many years this -company’s capital stock was $8,000,000. Its most recent statement, -as published in Moody’s Manual, listed these assets: Real property, -$4,100,000; equipment used in transportation, $2,044,000; stocks owned -as investments, $3,211,000; bonds owned as investment, $3,750,000; -loans, $17,165,000; cash on hand and in the bank, $5,459,000. - -Such were the accumulations of this company whose own statement -admitted that the equipment actually used in its transportation -business represented only $2,044,000. The company has always paid -large dividends. Its star performance in this line was the payment, -early in 1910, of a cash dividend of 300 per cent. Every holder of a -one-hundred-dollar share of stock was given three hundred dollars cash! - -This was not all. The stock of the company was worth in the market -exceedingly high prices. In addition to giving this 300-per-cent -cash dividend, the company increased its stock from $8,000,000 to -$24,000,000, and gave the holders of the original $8,000,000 the right -to subscribe at par for two shares of the new issue for each share of -their previous holding. - - -_Enormous Profits of the Express Companies_ - -These figures suggest the profits express companies have been making. -They have been making them because our government is the only -government which permits such a monopoly. It is a monopoly which not -only extorts millions upon millions every year from the people, but -which enables railroad companies, through their intimate business and -financial relations with the express companies, to conceal a very -considerable part of their earnings. The express companies are large -holders of one another’s stock, and also of railway stock; in turn, -the men who control the great railway combinations are themselves big -owners of express-company stocks and bonds. The express companies lease -from the railroads the right to transport freight over the railroad -lines. The terms of these leases represent, not a reasonable and -fair charge for the service, but an elaborate project of covering up -excessive earnings and extortionate charges in a maze of complicated -intercorporation transactions. - -The worst penalty that the American public pays in order that the -express grafters may make these huge profits and conduct these -manipulations, does not lie in the excessive charges. It lies rather -in the stunting and depressing effect upon general business, which is -a necessary and manifest result of a policy that denies the freest and -cheapest transportation facilities to the entire community. - - - - -Good Housekeeping. 53: 2-10. July, 1911. - -Housekeeping by Parcels Post. - -Isabel G. Curtis. - - -What would a parcels post mean to the American housekeeper? The -suburban or rural family could receive the bulk of its supplies by -mail--clothing, food, even eggs and butter and fresh meat. And the -country household that had something to sell could, by availing itself -of the parcels post, eliminate the expensive middleman and ship direct -to the consumer. Thus the city housekeeper could receive eggs, butter -and other things by mail at much less than she pays now. In scores -of ways the parcels post would tend greatly to decrease the cost of -living, for it would revolutionize the present cumbrous and expensive -methods of retail business. - -The United States Postoffice authorities will accept a package of not -more than twelve pounds in weight and not more than three and one-half -feet wide by six feet long for delivery at any postoffice in England, -Germany or in any one of the thirty-nine foreign countries blessed with -the parcels-post system, at a rate of twelve cents a pound. But you are -denied the privilege of sending the same package to any destination -in your own country at any price. A four-pound package sent to a local -point will cost the sender sixty-four cents while the same package can -be sent to New Zealand or Costa Rica for forty-eight cents. - -The parcels-post rates in foreign countries are very moderate. In -Germany, for instance, weight and distance determine the amount of the -charge. The distance charge is fixed by means of zones, the first zone -having a radius of ten geographical miles from the sending point, the -second twenty, etc. The charge for an eleven-pound parcel is six cents -within the first zone and twelve cents for every greater distance. -For parcels weighing more, the charge is the same for the first five -kilograms, but varies proportionately for each additional kilogram. In -Germany, the weight limit is one hundred pounds, in England eleven, in -France twenty-two and in Belgium one hundred and thirty-two pounds. -That there is no good economic reason why any civilized community -cannot have a parcels post seems to be proved conclusively by the -earnings of the postal departments of the governments that have tried -it. The postoffice departments of Germany and France each has a yearly -surplus of more than $14,000,000, and England enjoys a surplus of more -than $20,000,000--a striking contrast to our own Postoffice Department, -with its annual deficit of millions. - -“Then why don’t we have a parcels post?” you ask. The answer given -to this question many years ago by Mr. John Wanamaker, when he was -Postmaster General, means just as much today as it did then. - -“There are just four reasons against the establishment of a parcels -post,” said he. “They are the American, the Adams, the United States, -and the Wells Fargo Express Companies.” - -It has been said by some congressmen and postoffice officials that -there is no parcels post because the public has not demanded it. Why -not demand it now? Let every woman write to her husband’s congressman -and speak her mind! - -As pointed out by an Englishman recently in New York, one of the great -advantages of the parcels post is its celerity. “Before it came into -vogue,” he said, “customers often had to wait days for their goods. -Now, within the London radius, it is a case of only a few hours, for -the parcels post makes several deliveries daily. By paying a small -additional fee, ‘immediate delivery’ is secured. - -“The great retail houses, in increasing numbers, employ the parcels -post for sending home the purchases of customers, instead of using -their own delivery wagons. They find the government does the work for -them cheaper and better than they can do it for themselves. The price -charged, which is paid, of course, in postage stamps, varies from two -cents for a parcel weighing under two pounds to twenty-two cents for a -parcel not exceeding eleven pounds. Many of the London laundries now -send home the week’s washing by parcels post for the same reason that -the big stores are taking to it. The service cost less than that which -they had previously provided themselves.” - -This gentlemen dwells upon the importance of the fact that goods thus -conveyed by the government are virtually insured up to the value of -most packages sent. - - - - -Housekeeper. 31: 11-35. August, 1908. - -Parcels Post. George E. Miller. - - -Now what are the advantages and disadvantages of the parcel post? The -advantages can perhaps best be illustrated by reference to the work -done by the parcels post abroad. There, especially in Germany and Great -Britain, this great modern convenience has been brought to the greatest -perfection. And there it is worth studying. - -In the first place, it has been demonstrated there that the parcels -post is the greatest stimulant of domestic trade ever devised by man. -In the next place, it has made life in the country, in both Germany and -England as comfortable and convenient as in the city. And lastly, it -has proven so great a blessing in the cities, towns and villages that -in many instances merchants have disposed of their delivery wagons -and they depend upon the parcels post exclusively for the delivery of -merchandise to their customers, except in the matter of goods of too -much weight or bulk to go through the mails. - -In London the government runs motor wagons in all directions into the -country for many miles for the delivery of parcels, and this service is -being extended until presently it will cover the country. Parcels up -to the weight of eleven pounds are carried through the British mails, -while in some other countries the limit is much higher, Italy, Chile, -Cuba, the Netherlands, and New Zealand are the only other countries -holding the weight to the same maximum as Britain. In Germany and -Austria packages weighing one hundred and ten pounds are received, and -in Belgium the limit is one hundred and thirty-two pounds. In France it -is thirty-two pounds. In the United States alone the limit is as low as -four pounds while the rate with us is so high, sixteen cents a pound, -as to make the service prohibitive for ordinary use. Abroad the rates -vary, but they are always aimed to be not much above cost, and they are -materially lower than the rate now charged here, and much lower even, -than the rate proposed by the president, which is twelve cents a pound. - -No more enticing tale is told by the traveler returned from abroad -than that relating to the parcels post. In England, Germany, and some -of the other countries, the housewife particularly luxuriates in the -joint convenience of the telephone and the liberal mail service. Does -she want a spool of thread of a certain color and texture, or a bottle -of medicine, or a cake or loaf of bread from the bakery, or any one of -a thousand small needs, the necessity for which may come with all too -much suddenness, she simply steps to the phone and makes her request -and by the next visit of the postman she receives that which she -ordered. And yet, she may be ten or twenty miles from the nearest town. - -The farmers of those countries likewise receive untold benefit from -the same service. Not long ago a gentleman called at the post-office -department in Washington to relate a circumstance coming under his -observation. - -“I saw a Yankee demonstrating an American potato digging device to a -farmer in Germany,” he said. “Suddenly one of the parts of the machine -broke. It looked like bad business for the Yankee, but he, with real -American resourcefulness, sprang to the telephone and ordered a -duplicate part from his repository in a village two miles away, and in -twenty minutes the postman delivered it to him and the demonstration of -the digger proceeded to a successful conclusion. Of course, this was -an exceptional instance. Everything connected with it happened luckily -for the man selling the digger. His agent in the repository happened to -be right on the spot when the telephone message came, and the postman -happened to be just on the point of starting in the right direction to -make a speedy delivery. But it seemed to me to tell an eloquent story -of the parcels post, and its effectiveness.” - -A red-headed, freckled, vivacious manufacturer from Detroit was in -Germany not long ago and he also brought back a fund of parcels post -stories. But his most significant statement was in regard to the effect -of the service upon the country merchant. - -“No man,” he said, “can study this question abroad and retain the -belief that the parcels post will ruin the country merchant. On the -contrary, it has been the making of him. The country merchant of -Germany is far more solid and substantial since the introduction of -the parcels post than he ever was before. It has made him a permanent, -fixed cog in the industrial scheme of that country and given him an -opportunity which he never had before of making himself indispensable -to the community in which he does business. - -“How did this happen? By the natural evolution of events. Nothing -else. The wholesale houses of Germany simply stepped into the field -themselves and issued catalogues as fine as any the mail order houses -could produce. And these they placed with the country merchants in -every town and village in the empire. The result was that each merchant -had several dozen catalogues upon his counters for the benefit of his -customers. He was authorized to say to all who came: ‘Here I am. You -all know me. You know whether I am responsible. If you give me your -order and the goods do not prove to be exactly as represented, you need -not take them and I will refund your money. If you want goods of the -same grade as those sold by the mail order houses, I can sell them to -you, and at the same price. And I also have better goods which will -cost you more. But I can give you exactly what you want, and as cheaply -as any one.’ - -“In the meantime the country merchants have been able to greatly reduce -the stocks carried in their stores. This reduced the amount of capital -tied up in their business. And yet, by means of the catalogues, their -customers were able to select from as large an assortment as they could -in the largest stores, in Berlin. - -“And this latter fact is amply recognized by the people of Germany. -They step into a store in the most remote village of the country, and -make their selections and place their orders, securely confident that -they have seen all they could have seen if they had made the journey -to one of the large cities. And they are all satisfied. They regard -their mercantile system as the very best on earth, and I think it is. I -had occasion, while visiting at a house out in the country one hundred -miles from Berlin to need a dress suit, and I didn’t have one on that -side of the Atlantic. I rode to the nearest village one morning, -stepped into a little store, was measured by the storekeeper, and by -mail that afternoon received a very fair ready-made evening suit. I was -both pleased and surprised but the circumstance was a matter of course -to the people I was visiting.” - -These are some of the advantages of the parcels post. Now, about the -disadvantages. These would, in this country fall exclusively upon the -express companies. These unaccommodating friends, who have been with us -so long, and who deliver nothing at your door unless you chance to live -in a large city, would doubtless suffer the fate of the German mail -order houses if the government of the United States were to inaugurate -a parcels post upon the same scale as that in Germany. They would have -to go, for who would pay the higher price to have a parcel sent by the -nondelivering express company when the mails would be both cheaper and -would deliver the parcel at your door in city or country? - -As for the country merchant, of course, he would demand the German -system, and equally, of course, he would get it. Otherwise, he also -might have to walk the plank and the wholesalers of the United States -would never permit that. They could not afford to. - - - - -NEGATIVE DISCUSSION - - - - -Perils of Parcels Post Extension. pp. 13-31. - -George H. Maxwell. - - -_A Heavy Deficit Inevitable_ - -The commercial advocates of larger bulk and lower rates by domestic -parcels post for the shipment of merchandise by mail do not want either -a distance rate or a system limited by territorial zones. They want the -privilege of shipping from any factory or central store or warehouse, -wherever located, anywhere in the United States, to any customer or -consumer, at any postoffice, however remote or inaccessible, in any -state or territory. The rate desired is a flat rate of so much per -pound without regard to distance. - -It is urged that the same rate should be charged by Uncle Sam for -carrying merchandise by parcels post from a New England factory to -the distant mountain mining camps in Idaho or Oregon, or to the -prairie towns of Texas, as would be charged for delivering the same -package from the same factory by local trolley car service to a nearby -postoffice in the immediate suburbs of the New England city where the -factory happened to be located. - - -_Government Bears the Burden_ - -The national government in each and every case would pay the full -actual cost of transportation and delivery to the point of destination, -whether it were by trolley, railroad, stage-coach, wagon, pack-horse, -mule, sled or snowshoes. Of course it is not contended that the -government could secure an average or flat rate for the cost to it of -transporting merchandise by mail, the same to all points in the United -States, as it is urged that it should charge. On every package mailed -the government would of necessity pay the full cost of carrying it -from the point of shipment by mail to the place of delivery to the -consignee, no matter how great the distance or how costly the character -of the transportation. - -In other words, while the government is expected to and of course must -itself pay the full distance cost of transportation and delivery in -every case, and could not give the service unless it did so, it is -expected to look for reimbursement wholly to an average flat rate, -like the rate for letter postage, or the present rate of the existing -domestic parcels post for small parcels--a rate that is the same -everywhere, without regard to the distance from point of mailing to -point of destination. - - -_Averages Are Misleading_ - -The argument of averages is relied on to meet this insuperable -objection. It has been suggested that the average haul of all -second-class matter (which comprises only regularly entered -publications, periodicals and magazines) was 540 miles in 1907, as -shown by the report of the Postoffice Department, and on that as a -basis it was estimated that an average rate of 5½ cents per pound or -$29.70 per ton for other transportation charges, and $165.00 for labor -and supplies, a total of $212.00 a ton, would leave a profit to the -government of $27.00 a ton from a general parcels post rate of 12 cents -a pound, which would produce a revenue of $240 a ton. - -The estimates given above were embodied in an address by the Postmaster -General before the Union League Club at Philadelphia on October 26, -1907. - -For reasons based on facts that are undeniable and unquestionable, -these averages and the estimates based on them, would prove utterly -delusive and misleading when put to the test of a practical application -of the proposed extension of the domestic parcels post to include -merchandise in larger bulk and at lower rates than those now authorized -by the postal laws. It is not necessary that the proposed extensions -should be actually tried to demonstrate the deceptiveness of these -average estimates. The conditions are before us and arise from facts so -clearly known and established that he who runs may read. - - -_The Average Haul_ - -The average haul of second-class mail matter, made up of printed -reading matter, for every copy of which a regular subscription must be -paid, is fixed by and is in proportion to the average density of the -population. - -To illustrate this, take the city of New York as a starting point. It -is the leading publication center in the country, and a larger number -of publications entered as second-class matter are issued from the city -of New York than from any other one city of the country. - -The population of New York state in 1906 was estimated to be 8,226,990. -The population of the state of New York alone is as large as that of -the whole western half of the United States, and yet that whole western -half of our territorial area contains only about one-tenth of the -entire population of the country. - -The average number of subscribers receiving regular publications -through the mails as second-class matter in proportion to population -is as large in the one state of New York as in the entire western half -of the United States. So the Postoffice Department would serve in New -York state, within an area of 48,204 square miles of closely settled -territory, as many subscribers for second-class mail matter as it -would be compelled to serve over a sparsely settled region in the west -covering 1,513,394 square miles, that being the area of the western -half of the United States, not including Hawaii and Alaska. - - -_Second-Class Mail Matter_ - -An average length of haul of second-class mail matter now carried by -the national government would be much greater if limited to the one -state of New York and the western half of the United States, than if -applied to the entire country; for the very simple reason that the -vast sparsely settled area in the west would comprise one-half of the -total number of subscribers served; whereas if the whole United States -were included, then the western half with its sparse population would -embrace only one-tenth of the whole number served, and nine-tenths -would be located in the more closely settled eastern half of the United -States. - -In other words, in averaging the length of haul of second-class matter, -nine-tenths of the people served are in closely settled territory, -where they are reached by the short haul, and only one-tenth in the -thinly settled western half of the country, to be served by the long -haul, and oftentimes by the most difficult and expensive methods of -transportation. - - -_Conditions That Control Are Reversed_ - -The principle that controls the average in estimating the length of the -haul of second-class matter is that as the proportion of density of -population increases the average length of the haul is decreased. - -It is naturally assumed that the same principle would control in -fixing the average haul of transporting merchandise by mail if the -movement for an extension of the domestic parcels post should prevail; -but strange as it may seem at first thought, the exact contrary would -happen. The principle that controls the average haul in the case of -second-class matter would be reversed in the case of parcels post -extension. The greater the distance the more remote the territory, -the more sparse the population the larger would be the proportion of -merchandise shipments by mail as compared with the whole volume of such -shipments. - -The reasons for this are, first, because the express companies with -their flexible distance rate system would practically surrender the -distant territory and make a rate on nearby points so much lower than -the government rate that the short haul service would go to them, -leaving the long haul shipments for the government; and, second, -because it is the distant market that merchants and manufacturers -desiring to trade by mail wish to reach by the parcels post system of -delivery and which they would exploit if the opportunity were created. - - -_Impossibility of Adjustment_ - -Every effort of the national government to readjust an average flat -rate so as to meet this condition, and command for the parcels post the -desired proportion of nearby business, would simply be to get out of -the frying pan into the fire. To lower the average flat rate so as to -compete with express companies in nearby territory and on the short -hauls would stimulate the volume of long distance shipments and still -keep the balance on the wrong side of the ledger. To raise the average -flat rate, so as to secure a larger revenue from the long distance -shipments, would widen the circle within which the express companies -would be able to command the business by a lower rate and reduce the -government revenue by taking away from it more of the short haul -business. - -It has been urged that one reason why the proposed extension of the -domestic parcels post should be adopted is that it would lower the -express rates. If that should occur the rates would, of course, be -lowered in the territory, where by lowering their rates the express -companies could command still more of the short haul business, and -thereby increase the proportion of long haul business that the -government would have to carry at a loss. Every time the express -companies lowered their rates it would increase the annual deficit that -would be incurred by the government. No business proposition could be -more simple. The government would be in the position of having entered -into a competitive business. It would have done this after adopting -at the start a system that made it impossible for it to cope with its -competitors. Whatever flat rate the government established would be -met by a lower distance rate by the express companies that would take -the short haul business from which the government could earn a profit, -leaving to the government the long haul business that it could only -conduct at a loss. Nothing that the government could do would prevent -this, because it would make the conditions worse one way or the other -every time it either lowered or raised its flat rate. If the flat rate -were lowered, the proportion of long haul business would be increased, -and the losses be as great as ever. If the flat rate were raised the -proportion of short haul business would decrease, and the average cost -would still create a heavy deficit. - - -_Act With Open Eyes_ - -The fact is, the United States government cannot carry merchandise by -parcels post without having to meet an enormous annual deficit for -conducting the service, and the service should not be undertaken by the -government unless such a deficit is to be deliberately and knowingly -created and assumed by the people at large. The government is asked to -undertake an impossibility, if it is expected to make the service pay -for itself, when it is asked to adopt the proposed extensions of the -domestic parcels post. - -A flat rate system of charge cannot, in the very nature of things, be -operated in this country without loss. The only way to avoid such loss -would be the adoption of a distance tariff by the government, just as -is charged by the express companies. The proponents of domestic parcels -post extensions do not advocate such a distance tariff system and it -will be time enough to consider its merits if it ever comes before the -people for serious consideration. The fatal defect in the reasoning -of the advocates of the proposed parcels post extensions is that they -disregard the fact that we live in a country as broad as a continent -and extending for over three thousand miles from ocean to ocean, and -that in all that vast territory we have a population of only something -over eighty million people. - - -_A Subsidy to a Favored Class_ - -Should the mail trade have a government subsidy? - -That is a very plain and simple question, and the answer to it -will also answer the question whether the shipment and delivery of -merchandise by mail should be facilitated and undertaken by the -government as advocated by the proponents of domestic parcels post -extension. - -If there is any good reason why the mail trade should be encouraged -by government subsidy, it has never been set forth by any advocate of -parcels post extension. - -And yet, that is exactly what the proposition amounts to in its -practical application. It would not be a subsidy that would create new -business where there was none before. If it would do that it might be -an argument in its favor. Instead of doing so, it would take the trade -from the merchants, both wholesale and retail, who are now doing it, -and transfer it to new and wholly different agencies, who would be -enabled to secure the trade because of a direct advantage given to the -new agencies by the national government at the expense of the general -public. - - -_Who Are the Favored Class?_ - -Whether the seller or the consumer, under this system of a government -subsidy for the mail trade, were to be regarded as the favored class, -the result would be the same. A favored class would be benefited at -the expense of the people at large, and without any advantage to the -general public that would warrant it. - -For many reasons the consumer in the long run would be injured more -than benefited by the establishment of such a system for doing the -business of the country, and ought for this reason to be eliminated in -defining the favored class. Temporarily, and considering only immediate -cheapness of needed merchandise, the consumer might imagine himself -benefited, and probably would, but that benefit would be involved and -submerged in far greater indirect losses in the future. - -So the favored class, in the last analysis, would be the great -catalogue concerns, and manufacturers who desire to eliminate the -jobber and the retailer and country merchant and sell direct to the -consumer, using the mail as the agency of transportation and delivery -to the purchaser. - -Without regard to any of the many serious objections to this system of -trading, based on social and economic reasons, there is no possible -ground upon which a subsidy for the encouragement of this mail trade -should be given out of the United States Treasury and at the expense of -the people at large. - - -_Effect of a Subsidy_ - -And when the effect of that subsidy would be to break down long -established commercial customs, and divert the trade from institutions -now successfully and satisfactorily conducting it, there is no more -justification for such a mail trade subsidy than there would be for -the government to carry some new brand of flour cheaper than the old -established brands--in order to enable the manufacturer of the new -brand to introduce and sell the product of his mills. - -The growth of the mail trade, under its present limitations, has been -stupendous, and multitudes of retail and country merchants have been -injured, and many driven to the wall by it. But its future growth -would sweep over the country with an irresistible force and wipe out -of existence many thousands of now prosperous retail and general -merchandise stores, if a subsidy were granted to the mail trade in the -form of the proposed extensions of the parcels post. - -There are many manufacturers who are doing business along the regularly -established lines, selling goods to the jobber or the retailer, who -are not now seeking or advocating any change in the channels of trade, -but those manufacturers would change their system and enter the field -of the mail trade if the advantages advocated by others were gained -for it. If the avalanche of mail shipments that would follow the -inauguration of such a mail trade system were ever once started no -one could foresee the end or define the limits of the evils it would -ultimately accomplish. - - - - -Independent. 70: 72-3. January 12, 1911. - -Objections to the Parcels Post. Allan W. Clark. - - -There are probably a hundred really national organizations of dealers, -and several thousand state and local organizations--generally -affiliated with some of these national bodies. These embrace -practically every line of retail merchandising and the ramifications -of various interests among them. The individual, due paying membership -in some of these larger organizations, like the National Association -of Retail Grocers, the National Retail Hardware Association and the -National Association of Retail Druggists, is from 50,000 to more -than 100,000 each. I have never heard of any association of retail -dealers that is not on record against the extension of the domestic -parcels post in any form, especially the R. F. D. “entering wedge,” -except the organized department stores in one or two cities (such as -“The Merchants’ Association of New York”), who want this practical -government subsidy for the benefit of their mail order departments and -for cheaper local and suburban delivery. - -I have mentioned only retailers’ organizations, whose resolutions on -this subject, during the convention season, crowd the pages of all the -trade journals. Nevertheless, practically all the organizations of -wholesalers and manufacturers, besides many local commercial and civic -associations, are opposed to the parcels post, and like the retailers, -have been fighting it for years. Conspicuous among these is the Chicago -Chamber of Commerce, the leading members of which, thru the “American -League of Associations,” are pushing a national campaign “to assist -the retail merchant and to co-operate with other associations in the -protection and development of home trade, and (the italic emphasis is -theirs), _specifically, this organization is now opposing the proposed -parcels post legislation_.” - -These dealers, jobbers, manufacturers and others interested in the -maintenance and the improvement of the local stores and the local -community, and who oppose any extension of the domestic parcels post, -vie with its advocates in denunciation of the extortionate charges of -the express companies. But they go further--their associations are -fighting in many states to secure state regulation of express rates -and classification; and they are making practical progress, with every -prospect that their appeals for national regulation will be recognized -by the Interstate Commerce Commission, which has just won its fight -to regulate sleeping car charges. The opponents of parcels post want -lower and equitable rates for the transportation of small packages -of merchandise, but they believe that these rates, like those on the -transportation of larger packages, should be investigated and regulated -by the Interstate Commerce Commission, especially as various state -railway boards have recently demonstrated the fact that the express -companies are chiefly owned by the railroads and are merely vehicles -to bring into the coffers of the railroads larger profits than can be -secured thru government regulated freight rates. - -That any one can find an example for the United States in the parcels -post systems over government owned railways in European countries, -the largest of which is smaller than Texas, is incomprehensible to -the average business man who is not asking for a government subsidy -to arbitrarily annihilate distance and the natural local advantages -of thousands of local business communities in order to increase the -present $200,000,000 mail order business; and this in a nation that -maintains a high tariff wall that may or may not “protect” the American -manufacturer, farmer and workman, but the chief effect of which, so far -as the distributor, the dealer, is concerned is to place him between -the upper and nether millstones--the butt of criticism, the subject of -Congressional inquiry on the high cost of living! - -The mail order houses want a general parcels post; the general business -community is opposed to it. Suppose that both are actuated by selfish -reasons, one to gain an arbitrary advantage and the other to prevent -it--where do the people come in, those besides the mail order men and -the million retailers and their families? - - - - -Further Thoughts on Parcels Post pp. 3-5. - -Charles W. Burrows. - - -Postmaster-General Meyer in an address to the New England Postmasters’ -Association, Boston, October, 1907, and elsewhere, made recommendations -urging legislation giving to the Postal Department a greatly extended -parcels carrying service. The recommendations made were mainly two. - -First. That the present rate of sixteen cents per pound for the mail -carriage of merchandise with a weight limit of four pounds per parcel -as the maximum shall be changed, reducing the rate to twelve cents per -pound (with fractions at rates from one cent up) and increasing the -weight limit to eleven pounds. The recommendation was that this should -be, like the letter charge, a flat rate to prevail anywhere within -the United States and its possessions irrespective of distance or -accessibility. - -In support of this, his first proposition, he calls attention to -certain inconsistencies now existing in the service. He states that -an individual entering any post office in the country with a parcel -weighing four pounds, addressed to New York city will be obliged to -pay sixty-four cents for its carriage by post. If on the other hand it -is to pass through New York city to any one of the thirty-three foreign -countries with which we have postal conventions, the charge will be -but forty-eight cents. Further, should the package weigh more than -four pounds, it will be denied admission to the mails in this country -while it will be accepted and forwarded to any of these foreign lands -if it weighs up to four pounds six ounces, and in the case of some, -twenty-four of the countries it will be accepted even if it weighs so -much as eleven pounds, and it is on account of these inconsistencies -that he urges his legislation. - -Let us first examine this point. General Meyer is quite correct in his -statement that it does cost more to send, for example, a pair of shoes -weighing just four pounds from Brockton, Massachusetts, to New York -city, than it would cost to send the same pair of shoes through New -York city to any one of the thirty-three foreign countries with which -we have postal conventions. - -General Meyer, however, fails to state that while there is this large -number of foreign countries with which we have postal conventions, yet -not a single one of the twenty-four countries with which we have an -eleven-pound convention is on the map of Europe. They are all of the -nature of Jamaica, the Windward Isles, Venezuela, Barbados, Costa Rica, -Danish West Indies, etc., countries with which we do not do any great -volume of business. - -It may further be stated that the weight limit with the remaining nine -countries, most of which are European, is in reality intended to be the -nearest approximation to our own domestic four-pound limit, that is, -it is two kilograms--about four pounds six ounces--and the European -countries all closely scrutinize this weight limit as the business is -one that involves a loss in its operation. Germany, for example, for a -number of years recognized an eleven-pound limit but changed to the two -kilograms about three years ago. - -It should be borne in mind, moreover, that the exchange of parcels -between these countries and our own is made as a matter of comity or -international courtesy, and is permitted because the amount involved -is small. The work is done, too, in connection with the carriage of -first-class mail which produces a large profit. - -To illustrate this matter, Great Britain carried in her parcels post -last year 104,819,000 parcels. Of these only 2,575,000 (less than 2½ -per cent) went out of the country to all foreign countries, her own -colonial dependencies included, and to the United States she sent only -61,000 and we sent to her 89,000 only. The difference which is after -all what we make or lose upon, was some 28,000, and that was but a -fraction of a tenth of 1 per cent of the whole business. With some of -the other countries in question, we exchanged less than 1,000 parcels -in the last fiscal year, and with one of them it was less than 100, -while with all of them aggregated it was a total of but 330,000 parcels -dispatched and 181,000 received; so when we examine this question of -inconsistencies microscopically we find that it is truly of microscopic -proportion only, and may be disregarded as having no important bearing -upon the general question. - - - - -One Cent Letter Postage, Second Class Mail Rates, and Parcels Post. pp. -14-22. - -Charles W. Burrows. - - -Paternalistic, socialistic legislation does not diminish the expense -account, but simply transfers it from one person’s shoulders to those -of others. It is with a people as with a person. If a father gives to -his boy a pair of shoes, the shoes cost the lad nothing, they are to -him as if they had descended from the skies, but the cost is a charge -upon the father, unless he stole them, and even if acquired dishonestly -the cost has simply been moved back upon the shoulders of the merchant. -The compensation for the labor of producing the pair of shoes and of -transporting them to the place where they are put to service is just as -much a charge upon the community whether one individual pays for them -or another. Similarly if the users of any governmental service do not -pay a high enough tariff for that service somebody else must foot the -bill. - -Now to endeavor to demonstrate that whether the rates imposed for such -service be high or low the government will inevitably be a loser and in -large amount. To this end let us examine for a moment the parcels post -systems of foreign countries. - -In Germany a zone system prevails, but the tariff is always low. In -England, a flat rate prevails, and this also is extremely moderate. And -low rates prevail in other foreign countries. - -But circumstances alter cases, and with other things we should bear in -mind that the total area of Germany is but 208,000 square miles, while -the area of the one state of Texas is 265,000; in other words, Germany -is but four-fifths the size of Texas. The area of France is almost -exactly that of Germany, again but four-fifths the size of Texas. The -area of England is 50,000 square miles, less than one-fifth the size -of Texas. We have 26 states, any of which is larger than England, and -several many times larger. The area of Switzerland is just under 16,000 -square miles, and you can put nearly seventeen Switzerlands into the -one state of Texas. The area of Belgium is but 11,000 square miles; you -can put 24 of it in the state of Texas. Again the density of population -in England is over 550 to the square mile; that of Belgium, more than -600 to the square mile; of Germany nearly 300 to the square mile. - -Moreover, no haul in England can be long and but few hauls in the -United States would be short. You may perhaps be able to take 550 -parcels from a central originating point like London, carry them for -an average haul of 41 miles, which is the case in that country, and -deliver them all within one square mile of territory at a small tariff -per parcel without material loss, though even England is losing money -upon this service with all conditions favoring. - -But remember that the density of population of the United States by -the last census was under 25 to the square mile, and that the parcels -post service would not be mainly operative in densely populated Rhode -Island and near the large cities like Boston, New York, Philadelphia, -etc. If we imagine that 550 parcels are sent from New York city over -a long haul of more than 1,500 miles to the state of Wyoming, where -the density of population is one to the square mile, and have to be -distributed to 550 distinct individuals resident in 550 separate -square miles of territory, no sane business man can doubt that at any -tariff likely to be imposed the government would be a heavy loser. - -According to one expert’s estimate, it is possible to carry the -second-class mail matter for short distances on dense traffic routes, -and in quantity lots to one address, that of a news dealer, for -example, as is done for the average daily paper for the part of its -circulation that goes by mail, up to 45 miles with little loss even at -this low 1c a pound rate, though first-class mail at the rate paid by -it can be transported nearly 5,000 miles before the service shows a -loss, and post cards over 11,000 miles. - -Now let us suppose a parcels post statute to be enacted, and that the -rate be put at anything you please from 5c per pound to 10c per pound. -Even at the low rate of 5c per pound the express companies will do the -nearby business. If the rate be 10c per pound, the government will -have less to do, but it will still have much with the weight limit -considerably increased over the present amount. And if the rate be put -at 12c per pound, still the government will not make money, not on a -single parcel that it carries. All service that can be rendered at a -cost of less than the government charge will be handled by the express -companies. - -We cannot have as does Germany a zone system. But without the -operation of a zone system, or a monopoly as on first-class matter, -the government will get all of the losing business and none of the -remunerative. - -A friend of mine made a visit a few years ago to the state of -Washington. First he took from Cleveland a 2,000 miles railroad ride. -He then had a day and a half steamboat ride up the Columbia river, -following that a two days’ stagecoach ride to the remote locality that -he was visiting. - -He remarked to me in connection with this trip that he should like to -see the government handle a parcels post service for that country at -a profit, even at a rate of 25c a pound, and added that every pound -of anything that went in there would most assuredly be handled by the -government were a parcels post service in operation, for it would be -the cheapest method of getting things there. - -Now, the only reason we can have a flat rate upon first-class mail is -because the government makes that a monopoly, and you can send your -letters in no other way than through the post office. Hundreds of -millions of profitable short haul letters carried between the largest -cities of the country where traffic is very dense take care of the -proportionately small number of expensive long hauls. - -To show how necessary this may be, permit me to inform you that the -first batch of letters the government sent to Circle City, Alaska, -though each was carried upon a 2c stamp, cost the department some $450 -per letter. And it is solely due to the fact that the carriage of -first-class mail is a monopoly that inheres in the government that, -in spite of such expensive occasional service as this to Alaska just -cited, a large part of the receipts from first-class mail are net -profit. - -Now, even at the low 1c per pound rate accorded to the monthly -magazines and other periodicals, not all of their wares are sent by -mail. There is you know no monopoly of carriage. The publisher can send -packages of his magazine ahead of time by slow freight at less than -the 1c per pound tariff, this freight service being used for the large -lots going over main transportation lines between the great cities and -without expensive changes of route. But upon the quarter hundreds and -half dozens and single copies that go for long distances by expensive -changes of route and to remote rural localities from back of Portland, -Maine, to back of Portland, Oregon, from the upper peninsula of -Michigan to the everglades of Florida, and to the crossroads and rural -free delivery customers of Ohio, New York and other states of the -Union, the government gets the losing job of carrying the periodicals. - -I have endeavored in the explanation above to show that the difference -in social condition, density of population, length of haul, ability to -inaugurate a zone system, etc., will operate against our doing at a -profit what may be attempted though even there unsuccessfully, in Great -Britain, Germany, etc. - -In Great Britain they pay for transportation but 55% of the charge, -having thus automatically 45% left for other expenses, and if anybody -can do the work at a profit they certainly are in position to attempt -it. - -Again the average pay of a British postman is only one-half what we -give our carriers, which is another feature that must be reckoned with. - -The first year they had this service in operation, it showed a heavy -loss. They were keeping account of the business, so much in detail that -if a man worked in two different branches they divided his salary. -The eminent gentleman who fathered the system, then said: “Oh, well, -you can’t expect that it should be profitable the first year. This -year we will make it profitable.” The next year the loss was more than -doubled. “Well,” said he, “bookkeeping is expensive, let us discard -bookkeeping.” And since that time they have kept no expense account on -the parcels post system. - -Now let us examine what would result in the United States if we were -to enact parcels post legislation and attempt to get it in successful -operation. - -I wish to make a quotation from the “Catholic World” of June, 1905, -describing the operation of the parcels post system of Germany by a -writer who favors its establishment here. He says: - - “Anyone who has stood in a German post-office, and has seen - the constant stream of men, women and children, pouring in - through the doors with packages of all descriptions and sizes, - and lining up in never-ending rows before half a dozen and - more receiving officials; who has watched heavy wagons driving - up to the doors and depositing hundreds of packages, and who - has noticed the mountains of parcels heaped up in rear rooms - of the post-office, cannot but have been forcibly struck with - the magnitude of the parcels post system of transportation in - Germany.” - -Does it not occur to the most casual thinker that if a comparable -service were enacted in this country the postal facilities of every -city would be inadequate to the work? Why, you would have to have -in New York city one hundred times as great an amount of space at -your disposal as the Post Office Department has or can readily get -at present. It would involve a thorough readjustment and enormous -expansion of the post office facilities in every large and small -city of the United States, involving an equipment expenditure which -would run to hundreds of millions of dollars--this irrespective of -the question whether it would produce a profit or a loss in operating -expenses. - -There are in the United States more than 50,000 fourth-class -postmasters of these 50 per cent get $100 per annum or less, and 25 -per cent of them get less than $50.00 per annum. How long would it be -before they would demand an increase of salary to something like $75.00 -per month or more? - -The Vice-President of the J. F. Stevens Arms and Tool Co., told me -that if such a service were inaugurated as that of Great Britain, it -would change entirely the methods of distribution of his own house. -They would be obliged to discontinue their present freight shipments -of arms in carload lots to the Pacific Coast at a rate of $3.00 per -hundred pounds upon a twenty-day time schedule for transportation, and -take advantage of the pound rate that the government would give to them -upon a six-day time schedule; that while it would involve increasing -their office force from less than 50 to more than 500 to handle the -work, the savings would be so large that they would have to do this -and to inaugurate many other most radical and far-reaching changes in -organization. - -If this meant that the service was going to be reduced in cost, while -at the same time shortening the time schedule by more than two-thirds, -always an important factor in increasing rather than in diminishing -expense account, we should all of us find it our duty to welcome -the innovation, great a wrench as it might give to our business -connections. But the costs of the service will not be changed, simply -it will be a different set of people who pay them and no longer would -all the costs be paid by the proper parties--the manufacturer and his -customer, the consumer--but a large proportion by the public at large -in some way or other. - - - - -Parcels Post. pp. 6-15. - -John A. Ordway. - - -I question whether there is a man in this hall who actually believes -that one cent of benefit will come to the farmer through reduction in -his cost price of anything he buys because of postal delivery. Each one -of us knows from practical experience that even should the method of -distribution be shifted, still the expense of reaching the consumer -would increase by the methods advocated, which combined with the -profits of inevitable monopoly would cause the poor farmer to wonder -whether this alluring vision of substantial comfort had vanished. Yet -this sham shibboleth of benefit to the farmer has other advocates -besides this small percentage of theorists. The most persistent, -continuous, noisy clamor has proceeded from those whose selfish -self-seeking is as plain to the searcher for motives as the printed -types upon their pages. The editors of various magazines and newspapers -not in touch with the cost and expenses of mercantile life have -almost universally used their columns to create a public sentiment to -accomplish this commercial revolution. Their solicitude for the farmer, -their keen distress at what they term his unfortunate dilemma in being -forced to supply his present needs through present channels, would -wring the stoutest heart, were it not for the perhaps uncharitable -suspicion that their tears were of the crocodile variety, and their -anguish a thin disguise for rank cupidity. “The poor farmer,” more -advertisements; “the unfortunate farmer,” for more advertisements; “we -love and would protect the farmer,” still more advertisements; “we will -organize and preach of deliverance,” for more advertisements; and so -on and so forth shall be our cry until the jobbers’ percentage and the -retailers’ narrow margin shall be diverted into “more advertisements,” -has been the wailing but insistent note everywhere. “No matter if the -actual cash loss of second class matter in 1909 did show a grand total -of $64,128,000, what care we? Still shall our cry be, ‘Help the poor -farmer.’” Shame on such transparent hypocrisy from a public press that -should lead and inspire by truth untainted by the virus of debased -commercialism. - - -_The Consumer Will Buy Goods No Cheaper_ - -I may be wrong, but I firmly believe that the development of the -mail order house or the increased adoption of direct selling by -manufacturers, aided by governmental postal delivery, would not confer -one benefit on the consumer in cheapened prices, because of these -facts. The change in the method of distribution would be merely the -shifting of the final price from one shoulder to the other. The margin -between the actual net cost of manufacture and the price paid by -the ultimate consumer is at present divided in varying proportions -into the profits of the maker, the percentage allowed the jobber -for economical distribution, and the final profit of the retailer -in completing this distribution, and in each case competition, that -most effective friend of the consumer, has forced these margins down -to a low general average. Assuming that the jobber and the retailer -have been eliminated and that the manufacturer sells direct, is there -any possible advantage that the consumer or the farmer would obtain? -Decidedly not. The manufacturer would, of a necessity, be compelled to -make and hold a stock of goods ready to respond to instant call. His -cost of manufacture would immediately increase for the reason that his -quantity would be wisely restricted, awaiting the edict of whimsical -fashion, and his sole dependence for the sale of his product would be -that obtained from extensive advertising. I do not believe there is a -man here tonight who has any knowledge of the expense of an advertising -campaign, but will admit that the usual profits of both jobbers and -retailers combined would fall far short of the expense necessary to -continuously maintain any general range of articles of fashion or -utility by advertising alone, and every large advertiser, even if this -stock be protected by trademark or patent, will bear testimony that -not only does the expense of advertising continuously increase, but -also that any cessation of publicity results in immediate suspension of -sales. - -The second argument or sham pretext for action is that advanced -relating to express companies. - - -_The Interstate Commerce Commission Now Has Power to Adjust and -Regulate Express Rates and Will Regulate Them_ - -I am aware, and expensively so, that this monopoly is a menace both to -our pocketbooks and to the general prosperity of the community. Their -course of action is guided by those who fully exemplify the modern -greed and relentless clutch of soulless corporations. Personally, -in their private homes, or in open contact in social gatherings, -these organizers and executives of express companies are attractive -as friends or companions, but officially, and as part of their -corporations, their individuality is lost and the Golden Rule is -locked away to be used only on Sunday or in the imminence of death. - -The dangers that confront a free people when monopoly obtains a -stronghold have been freely discussed during the past few years, and -wise restrictions have been placed among our laws. At this very moment -the rates and methods of express companies are being considered by the -Interstate Commerce Commission, and from them we may expect the same -fair-minded decision as recently shown in railroad matters. The laws -are on our books. It is for us to urge, argue, even threaten that they -be obeyed, but the appeal of the proponents of the parcels post bill -that we punish the express companies by starting a government monopoly -in opposition has about the same force to me as an invitation to jump -from the frying-pan into the fire. The power is always ours to regulate -by law, and the law is already ours. One-half of the same energy in -letters, telegrams and petitions asking and insisting on the immediate -action of the law, as has been shown in the propaganda for the novelty -of the parcels post, would have produced results long ago. If this -association, if the various boards of trade, or chambers of commerce, -should manfully and persistently follow this line of action, results -would follow, and thus avoid the dangerous expedient of increasing the -already formidable list of government officials. - - -_Objections to Parcels Post_ - -Passing from the consideration of these elusive and mendacious appeals -by self-seeking interests, I ask your attention to what in my judgment -are positive objections to the parcels post, objections that are not -based wholly on dollars and cents, but on the broader principles of -humanity that are above the fleeting tribulations of our little hour, -and whose laws of action create or destroy states or nations as they -are applied wisely or unfortunately. - - -_Will Injure Country Communities_ - -John Stuart Mill, one of the strongest reasoners in political economy, -stated in an incisive sentence that “The community that contains the -greatest diversity of industries will always be the most prosperous -and intelligent.” It would seem as if his vision were prophetic of -our loved New England, where towns and villages contain within their -borders the farmer, the manufacturer, the merchant, the teacher, -living in useful harmony, and by their diversity of thought and action -producing men equipped to accomplish the destiny of this wonderful -land. Such environment, such healthy conditions, produce the character -of Americans that the country needs, and the practical benefit from the -New Englander reared in such communities is impressed upon all sections -of this great land. It is to wither and destroy these safeguards of -national security that the proponents of the parcels post intend. In -their infinite wisdom they would sweep the village aside in their zeal -for the mail order octopus and the magazine advertisements. A great -city whose water supply is polluted is in serious danger; a great -community that stems or hinders the growth and influx of healthful men -is short-sighted, and decay will follow. Totally aside from personal -gain, I believe we should steadfastly oppose any attempt, open or -concealed, to sap the vitality of the New England town. Boston exists -because of New England, and Boston should protect its own. - - -_It Will Increase the Horde of Government Employees_ - -Another objection to the parcels post is that its operation will add -a tremendous force of government officials to the already swelling -list. Excepting always that human hog who never votes, never reads, -never thinks, but roots and grubs along, grunting out one single -word, “Dollars,” which happily die with him, this objection should be -considered by all thinking men. The stronger the intrenched force of -the party in power, the more difficult will it be to effect needed -reforms when stagnation in office produces disease. - - -_It Limits the Field of the Individual_ - -Another objection is that our government of free men was never intended -to block or hinder the pathway of individual endeavor. Rather was its -function to be that of aid or protection to insure equal opportunity -under sane restriction. Following this connection and not to be lightly -regarded, is the assumption that is clearly foreshadowed, that -should the government engage in the transportation of merchandise the -inevitable result would be the national ownership of the railroads, -thereby still further increasing the centralization of power, which is -diametrically opposed to the conception and scope of our general system -of representative government. - - -_Extravagance Will Be Augmented_ - -Again a serious objection is that the transfer of conditions of -transportation with its accompanying word paintings of alluring -advertisements would tend to increase general extravagance, -particularly in those sections where prudence is necessary for -happiness, or precaution for old age. A distinguished writer has said -that more discord and misery are caused in this country by our national -extravagance than from any other source, not excepting the results from -alcohol. - -Still again, it is closely argued with logical coherence that the -various monopolies that now practically control many branches of trade -would welcome the development of large distributors at the expense -of the present countless individuals, because of the greater ease of -organizing in combination. The tremendous sales and enormous profits -of one mail order house are the subject of daily comment, and should -the government lend its aid to still further increase these figures, -the time would not be distant when similar institutions would start -into life in other sections. Backed by ample capital, and equipped with -the experience regarding methods, their success would doubtless become -immediate, until such time as competition among themselves endangered -profits. - -It is no fanciful assumption that when that point is reached -combination or absorption will add another impregnable monopoly to the -already threatening list. - -The present monopolies have produced such colossal and unwieldy -fortunes that the employment of their surplus is a constant thought, -and so rich a plum would not escape. - -Finally, for I have detained you gentlemen long enough, is the rank -injustice of this proposed measure. If by taxation of the people as a -whole, some permanent benefit be obtained, two blades of grass be grown -where one existed, or even one section developed through the agency -of the whole country’s help, no one would more eagerly advocate such -action, for I realize that a healthful growth spreads its benefits -everywhere. But this measure does nothing, creates nothing, carries -with it no lifting of burdens, but simply takes from A to give to B, -without assurance or guarantee of betterment of service or conditions. -As all dry goods retailers know, not one article sold by mail order -houses, in their line, but is daily and usually sold by them at the -same or lower price, without any special fuss or feather about it, and -all of us understand, without possibility of contradiction, that the -advertised brand, in nine cases out of ten, does not depend on its -intrinsic merit for its sales, but instead relies on the credulity of a -thoughtless purchaser. - -Again, what justice is there in any law that proposes government aid -to the man whose product weighs eleven pounds, or measures within -certain cubic inches, and denies the same relief to another citizen and -taxpayer whose product necessarily exceeds these limits? If this is not -special legislation bestowing subsidy or patronage on the few at the -expense of the many, then what is it? - -For these reasons, and many more, my friends, I oppose the parcels -post as today presented. I believe it unwise and manifestly unfair. -I believe its passage would cause tremendous initial loss, without -subsequent compensating gain. I believe it is a move in the wrong -direction as it affects the government. I believe that the people, -through their representatives, and under the constitution, should have -and should use the power to regulate the channels of trade, and I -strongly deprecate any additional departure from the simplicity, the -directness of our form of government, and especially if such action -should hinder or usurp the zeal or ambition of any citizen in his -wage earning capacity, conducted under the law. If an express company -violates the law treat it under the law with the same justice as would -be given a second story burglar, but no more consider the opening of -governmental lines of express in opposition than you would consider the -governmental employment of other second story burglars as punishment to -law breakers. - -The fewer that we have the better, but as self-respecting citizens let -us strive to maintain their standard of even justice, regardless of -special interests or our own personal discomfort. - - - - -Journal of Political Economy. 16: 417-35. July, 1908. - -Shall the Scope of Governmental Functions Be Enlarged so as to Include -the Express Business? Albert N. Merritt. - - -In the nature of things the local dealer cannot compete with the -mail-order houses on equal terms. He cannot afford to issue the -expensive catalogues, or to keep so large an assortment of goods. -Moreover, the immense volume of business of the catalogue concerns -enables them to quote cheaper prices on many commodities. Frequently -they are able to secure, on private contracts with manufacturers, large -stocks of goods at prices even lower than the jobber is required to -pay. Furthermore, their expense of doing business is proportionately -much lower, as practically their entire expense of distribution -consists of the outlay in issuing the catalogues and in packing and -shipping the goods when ordered. No experienced force of salesmen is -required to display the goods and argue their merits. Moreover, it is -often the case that the glowing terms in which goods are described -in these catalogues cause the credulous to believe them superior to -what they really are. Distance always seems to lend enchantment, and -abundant opportunities are offered for deception as to the quality of -the goods. - -The local dealer, on the other hand, in order to fill orders promptly, -must keep a stock of goods which, in proportion to the amount of -business he does, is vastly greater than that of the catalogue houses. -In order to purchase his goods to advantage, he must lay in a stock in -the fall sufficient for six months or a year, while few, if any, of -the larger mail-order houses would have at any time sufficient goods -in stock to enable them to fill orders for a fortnight. Naturally, -therefore, where the turnover of capital is slower, the percentage of -profit upon individual transactions must be higher, and competition -upon an equal basis becomes impossible. - -But quite apart from a theoretical exposition of causes, the facts -show that the local dealers are rapidly losing trade to the catalogue -houses, and in many districts the local retail business has become so -unprofitable that the number of retail stores is decreasing, and their -volume of business less instead of greater as might be expected with -the normal growth of population. - -Not only do the mail-order houses excel in the volume of business, and -in the greater assortment of goods, but they are able to effect the -most efficient and economical management by the employment of the most -able managers and department men, which is rarely or never the case in -the ordinary country store, owing to the natural scarcity of men of -that grade. In fact the business management of the ordinary country -store is lamentably weak. From the economic standpoint, therefore, one -is compelled to admit that, in accordance with the laws of competition -and of the survival of the fittest, the catalogue houses have already -demonstrated their superiority. - -Admitting, therefore, that the economic position of the mail-order -houses is stronger, are there not important social arguments against -permitting the absorption of local business by the rapidly expanding -catalogue concerns at our large trade centers? - -In the first place, it should be noted that the rapid consolidation -of our manufacturing industries makes it more difficult every day to -conduct such enterprises in small communities in competition with the -large plants in the large communities. The result has been that for a -long time the proportion of the manufacturing business done in small -communities has been growing smaller. With the gradual and necessary -elimination of the manufacturing business in smaller communities, the -mercantile business is about all that is left as an economic basis for -the existence of such communities. - -These forces tend to a rapid concentration of business in the large -trade centers, and the resulting congestion of humanity at such points. -In one generation the proportion of the population of the United States -living in our large cities has more than doubled, and just at present -is increasing more rapidly than ever before. - -It may well be doubted whether this tendency will ultimately be -beneficial to the race. Vice, crime, and disease are rampant in the -slums of our great cities. Human life, under such conditions, becomes -cramped. The unfolding process is impossible. The exigencies of the -situation cause sporadic and abnormal development. The moral and -physical culture of the individual is almost wholly neglected, and -the intellectual development resulting is nearly always one sided, -and too frequently resolves itself into the attainment of solely -those qualities which make for greater acquisitive power. The social -superiority resulting under the questionable standards prevailing in -such centers may be obtained only with the sacrifice of much that is -higher and nobler in human nature. - -A large proportion of the population is compelled to lead a sedentary -life. It may well be asked whether the conditions prevailing in our -large mail-order houses and department stores make for the good of -humanity. From 8:00 a. m. till 6:00 p. m. the many children and young -girls employed are kept at close, confining work, frequently straining -every nerve far beyond the limit of safety and human endurance, in -order to make themselves independent, and to meet the conditions which -city life imposes upon them. During the fall rush these girls are often -asked to remain at work till 9:00 or 10:00 p. m. They realize that it -is necessary for them to acquiesce in such unreasonable and brutal -demands or lose their positions during the dull season immediately -following the holidays. - -An eminent physician not long ago remarked that it was his personal -opinion, based upon long practice, that less than 10 per cent. of the -girls in our large cities are as strong and healthy as their mothers -were at a corresponding age. This he plausibly explained by the fact -that nearly all of the latter had come from the country where they -lived close to nature, with plenty of fresh air and sunshine, and with -plenty of hard work too, but of the kind which upbuilds and strengthens -the health rather than destroys it. - -Furthermore, the wages paid in such institutions are seldom high enough -to enable the individual to live at the prevailing social standards, -and only too frequently the female employees are compelled to piece out -their salaries by questionable means. It is inevitable that the future -generation of the city-bred population should be as much beneath the -present, as the present is beneath the last, unless radical reforms -take place. Such progressive degeneration must be regarded as a -tremendous social calamity. - -Without trespassing too far upon the field of the sociologist, it -may safely be assumed that an increased concentration of industry -and population is far from desirable. Why then should the government -take active steps to promote it? Would it not be better to allow the -mail-order houses and local retailers to fight out their own battle -for trade supremacy upon equal terms, on the basis of the survival -of the fittest? The retailer would then at least be able to cling -tenaciously to the few natural advantages which he does possess, and -would necessarily retain a considerable portion of the business. In -establishing the parcels-post the government would be taking action -to crush the local dealer, and would thus take away the last economic -basis for the rural community, and accelerate the concentration of -industry in great cities. - -By the elimination of the smaller towns the easiest and most natural -market is taken away from the farmer. His small produce would then have -to be shipped to the large cities, where he would almost certainly -become the prey of commission-house agents, whose methods of operation -are well known. Legitimate competition which means the lowest prices -in view of the quality of the goods offered would be eliminated. The -only competition would then be that of advertising. The one capable of -producing the most attractive advertisements would win in the end. The -American public is so great and so credulous that the house which has -once fooled the public can again under another name and perhaps with -different customers work off the same class of worthless or inferior -goods. - -Furthermore, the nearby location of a small country town gives to -the farmer and his family immense social, educational, and cultural -advantages, which would be almost wholly inaccessible if it were not -for the existence of such communities. Take away the business and -economic support of such a community, and immediately it becomes -stagnant. Its ambitious and progressive citizens immediately migrate to -other fields, and the town is left to decay. - -No parcels-post could be established which would be self-supporting. -The innate desire of the people to get something, as it were, for -nothing, would soon express itself in a demand for a reduction of -rates. No administration could be popular and at the same time -effectively resist such a demand. It has been proved over and over -again in history, that wherever a democratic body politic has -undertaken to conduct a commercial enterprise of a public-service -character, the demand for rates far below the cost of doing the -business has seldom or never been successfully resisted. If this has -proved true of local governments, how much more is it likely to be -true of the federal government which, nearly everybody seems to think, -already has a revenue so great that the principal problem with regard -to it is the determination of the best method of turning it back into -the channels of trade. Even at present with a nominal postal deficit -of from $11,000,000 to $14,000,000, but with an actual deficit as will -be subsequently shown of much more than that amount, it seems that the -demand for penny postage and for the increase of salaries of certain -classes of postmasters and of almost the entire clerical force is too -strong to be resisted effectively. - -The real issue is, therefore, Can the government expect successfully to -compete with the express companies, on a business basis? If it can be -shown that the government would be utterly unable to compete it follows -that the government should not undertake the service. - -Mr. H. A. Castle, former auditor of the Postal Department of the United -States, has shown in its true light the many defects of our present -postal system, and how far it comes from being that which should be -expected of a private enterprise of like character. Speaking upon this -point he says: - - The protracted postal investigations of 1893 revealed to - thinking men the disquieting fact that our national mail - system, which is now the greatest business enterprise in - the world, is entirely destitute of logical, coherent, - business-like organization. - -Among many other striking defects, he points out that there is utter -lack of business methods in the accounting department. Of the one -billion and a quarter dollars of transactions represented in the -accounts of the 70,000 postmasters all over the United States, less -than 10 per cent. have the double audit required by law. Fraud, -peculation, and embezzlement of third- and fourth-class postmasters -have become common occurrences and are exceedingly difficult to detect. -As the salary of these postal officials depends upon the number of -cancellations at their respective offices, all sorts of fraudulent -schemes are continually being practiced to swell the number of -cancellations beyond the legitimate amount. - -Furthermore, there is no method of auditing the number of -cancellations, and the department must accept the word of the -postmaster, which may or may not be true. Several cases have been -unearthed where an agent of a manufacturer has secured a nominal -position of postmaster at some out-of-the-way point, and by drawing -a salary based upon the number of cancellations has practically been -able to secure a rebate amounting to about 75 per cent. on all matter -mailed, the mailable matter being shipped to said point by freight. -Absolutely no account is kept or record made of the number of stamps -issued by the Bureau of Printing and Engraving, and no one has any -means of knowing how many disappear before official record of the -stamps issued is made by the Postal Department. - -The weighing of mail matter handled by the railroads takes place only -at stated intervals of four years. As the payment of the railroads -depends upon the average tonnage during the period in which the -weighing goes on, it is charged that all sorts of fraudulent schemes -are continually being practiced by the railroads to increase the weight -of the mail during this period. - -There is no auditing of railroad accounts. Forty million dollars is -annually paid out by the department merely on the statement of the -railroads that the service has been performed. There is no effort made -to ascertain the truth or falsity of the allegations. - -There is no method of accounting for the actual amount of cash received -by postmasters in payment for second-class mail. The amount of cash -turned in by the various postmasters may or may not bear any relation -to the actual amount of such mail received at their respective offices. -It is impossible to detect dishonest returns except in some of the most -aggravated cases. The average mercantile house which should practice -such methods would be forced out of business in less than six months. - -The slowness of the Postal Department to adopt modern business methods -is strikingly illustrated by the fact that till quite recently the only -method of checking the money-order accounts of postmasters was by a -hasty examination of the stubs of order books turned in. No account was -made or reference taken to the actual receipted orders. Imagine a bank -attempting to settle accounts with its customers by the examination of -the stubs of their check-books, rather than by reference to the actual -checks! - -We are driven to the conclusion, therefore, that the Postal Department -as now organized and operated would be utterly unable to compete with -express companies upon purely a business basis. - -Furthermore, it should not be expected that the express companies -would quietly drop out of business. They would make a tremendous fight -for existence, and would at all events retain such portions of the -business as they are now doing at less than the lowest postal rates. -The equipment for the express service would, therefore, have to be -duplicated in every town and village of the United States. It is folly -to presume that the public would not in the end be required to pay -for the enormous loss which would be involved in such an uneconomical -procedure. - -Would it not, therefore, be better to place the proper safeguards -around the existing organizations which are fitted to perform the -transportation service by the best and most economical means, rather -than that the government should undertake the impossible, i. e., -competition with private companies upon a purely business basis? - - - - -Parcels Post Problem. p. 20. - -Parcels Post in England. - - -One of the most concise and yet comprehensive reviews of the operation -of the parcels post system in England is that of I. A. Fleming, taken -from an exchange, and it is as follows: - -“American friends of so-called ‘postal reforms’ point to the absence -of express companies in the Kingdom of Great Britain as one of the -good results that have been obtained, and say this is entirely due to -the existing postal laws. But if there are no express companies in -Great Britain, there are scores and hundreds of forwarding agents that -perform the functions of our American express companies. The railroads -are themselves engaged in the forwarding business, making low rates -for service by fast express, exceeding in limit of weight and size of -packages received by the limitations of the postal service by many -pounds even by hundreds of pounds. - -“Any attempt at comparison between carrying methods in Great Britain -with those in vogue in the United States is useless, because of the -very short distance between points in the former. - -“I asked the managers of some of the leading stores in Ireland, -Scotland and England if parcels post offered great opportunities for -them to send business into the country, and without exception they -admitted that the business by post was decreasing, while the express by -rail and by forwarding agents looking for assignments was increasing. - -“Eleven pound packages and under are but a small quantity of package -shipments. - -“From the best information at hand, it is evident that the big carriers -have nullified parcels post in Great Britain, and what they have left -the railroads have picked up. These carriers receive all manner of -parcels, put hundreds in baskets, and thus get the very lowest rates -of transportation. They give their patrons lower rates than they could -otherwise obtain, and because of their concessions charge them four -cents on each consignment, a ‘booking charge’ which gives the carrier a -very fair return for his kindness to the shipper. Little packages go -by parcels post as a rule, and many of the larger department stores use -the mails for delivering goods to out of town customers. - -“These rates but add to the burdens of the merchants of the interior. -The independent retailer in the country has few friends. Cheap rates, -co-operative stores, chain stores, mail-order houses by the thousand, -fares paid entirely, special excursions (such as Harrods of London are -now running to the sales) with fares paid and ‘tontine’ establishments -tend but to make the independent merchant, be he a grocer or ‘draper’ -as they call dry goods dealers, only a small potato of the kind that -are many in the hill. - -“Our mutual friends, the English general merchant, the independent -grocer, and the small retailer, have been almost completely relegated -to a parsimonious living by co-operation, mail-order retailing, -the carrier or forwarding agent, and last but not least, by cheap -excursions to the cities. - -“That these same evils will, if they obtain a foothold in the United -States accomplish the same results for the American general merchant -and retailer I firmly believe.” - - - - -A. B. C. of Parcels Post. pp. 4-5. - -C. W. Spofford. - - -Q. What is the plan of the rural parcels-post proposed by -Postmaster-General Meyer? - -A. It proposes to carry packages originating at a local office of -a rural route for 5 cents for the first pound and 2 cents for each -additional pound, with a limit of 11 pounds. Thus, an 11-pound package -would be carried to any point on a rural route for 25 cents. It is -significant that the rates are the same as those proposed by advocates -of a parcels-post applicable to distances within the United States and -its insular possessions. This proposal seems to be but an entering -wedge for general parcels-post. - -Q. Why was rural parcels-post proposed? - -A. It was proposed by the Postmaster General as a special favor to -country merchants. - -Q. Have country merchants asked for any such special favor? - -A. No. On the contrary, they are opposed to it on the following grounds: - -1. They do not seek class legislation. - -2. The plan would be impracticable in its operations. - -3. It would discriminate between towns, favoring the town with the -greatest number of rural routes, regardless of its trading advantages. - -Q. Would rural parcels-post be of any benefit to the farmer? - -A. No. For the following reasons: - -1. The farmer can now arrange with the rural carrier for the delivery -of packages over 4 pounds at rates mutually satisfactory. - -2. The proposed rates would be prohibitive on groceries, machinery -repairs and on the bulky merchandise most likely to be delivered under -this new arrangement. - -3. To secure the rural parcels-post service, the farmer would be -compelled to buy his goods at the particular town where he gets his -mail, when he might prefer to buy elsewhere. - - - - -Parcels Post. pp. 3-9. - -F. E. French. - - -I have the distinguished and pleasing honor of being here today -upon your invitation as a representative of the American League of -Associations, which includes representative wholesalers in nearly every -important city in the United States. The creation of this League has -for its object the development and advancement of the general welfare -and mercantile interest of retail merchants in the smaller communities. -The relations of its members to all retail merchants are intimate and -personal. The retailers desire to buy merchandise from the wholesaler. -The wholesaler desires to sell merchandise to the retailer. In short, -whatever conserves, promotes and advances the merchandising ability and -success of the former, is a direct proportionate benefit to the latter. -Whatever relaxes the intimacy between these interests, deprives the -retailers of their truest and best facilities as merchants and money -makers. The thoughtful and progressive wholesaler and retailer believe -that any rural parcels post bill will unmistakably impair, curtail and -finally dissolve this relationship, which in reality is a partnership -between the wholesaler and the retailer. The proposed parcels post -legislation will gradually eliminate the country store and the very -heart and pulse of country life. Believing this to be absolutely and -unmistakably true, we should stand as a unit in opposition to any -extension of the parcels post system, upon rural routes, even upon an -experimental basis. If the country merchants will co-operate with the -wholesalers in an unyielding resistance to any congressional action -that would in any way interfere with the present system of rural -deliveries, the proposed legislation will be defeated. - -In official words, it is contended that rural parcels post will enable -local merchants to hold and increase their trade. On the contrary, the -well informed wholesaler, manufacturer and retailer contend, and the -entire orthodox system of trade distribution replies, that any parcels -post, whether it be a general parcels post law or a rural parcels post -law, although intended to be of benefit to the retailers and a boon to -the rural population, would, in reality, be a great detriment to both. - -Mark well how the camel enters the tent: First his head, next his -neck, and last his huge and unwelcome body. First on a few routes only -and in experiment only, a local parcels post; next a complete rural -parcels post; and finally a general parcels post. Let us beware of -the beginning lest in the end we be overcome. During the inauguration -of the first and experimental stage, those interests most to be -profited by this perilous innovation will remain silent, while from -the experiment no safe deductions could perhaps be made which would -indicate the effect of parcels post extension upon your prosperity and -posterity. Finally you will discover that the currents of trade are -running past your door rather than through it, and in that day your -elimination becomes a certainty. In that day also every wholesaler who -has so long found in the country merchants a sure and steady outlet -will know even better than he knows now that rural parcels post, and, -much more, the general parcels post is a dangerous blow to country life. - -At the risk of telling you much that you know, let me state some of the -factors of this great problem so that we may think as one man over its -solution. - -The mail order houses, some of the farmers, and various other people -who reason narrowly, even with generous intent are sustaining the -government in its purpose to go into business in behalf of a class -of the American people at the expense of the whole American people, -and through a bill in Congress they ask all of the people to sanction -a trial of this new species of government aid in certain selected -places. Our government reasons that if it is made more practicable for -rural free delivery routes to become shipping lines between their own -termini, everybody depending for income and outgo on such routes will -profit by this enlarged service. On the contrary, the American League -of Associations holds that everybody will eventually suffer. - -The great problem about which we are all trying to think clearly -and think together, has been summarized so effectually by a retail -merchants’ paper in the central west, that I do not hesitate here to -quote its protest against parcels post, endorsed by thousands of retail -merchants in every section of America. The protest reads as follows: - -“Parcels post is wholly unnecessary, since rural delivery carriers are -authorized to carry parcels weighing over 4 pounds, and the matter -of compensation is decided by carrier and merchant or by carrier and -farmer. Merchants and farmers generally have not availed themselves of -this service, for the very good reason that there is no need for it. - -“If adopted, parcels post will be immediately seized upon as a delivery -outlet by mail order houses which would ship orders by freight or -express in bulk lots to local agents for deposit in the post office to -be forwarded by the rural deliveries. The catalogue houses have already -many of these agents selected, and they have been busily engaged in -distributing catalogues for weeks past. As soon as a rural parcels -delivery became effective, these agents would become active in the -solicitation of business in unfair competition with home merchants, as -these agents would have no taxes, no rent, no salaries, etc., to pay. - -“Rural parcels post is admittedly merely an entering wedge for -extension along European lines. That would mean severe demoralization -of our country towns which are dependent almost wholly upon the farmer -trade for existence, and which afford the farmer a good home market for -every dollar’s worth of products he has to sell. If he does not buy -his supplies where he sells his products, he not only demoralizes the -business of his home town, but he also deprives himself of his home -market. If his home market town dwindles into insignificance through -the gradual loss of trade, necessitating the closing of stores and the -emigration of merchants and clerks, then the income will shrink so -seriously that there will be insufficient funds to provide for schools, -churches, libraries, hospitals, good roads, etc. - -“Every farming community and its market center are interdependent. It -is impossible to injure one without injuring the other. The parcels -post would injure both farmers and country merchants. We protest -against it as being designed to further the formation of a mail -order trust that could eventually control all important channels of -distribution and thus levy upon the people any desired tribute.” - -Today the people’s problem is to conserve our natural resources and -keep the farmer on the farm. Will the gradual impoverishing of the -village storekeeper keep the farmer on the farm? Will the decline of -the social center, the decline of the schools and the decline of the -church facilities keep the farmer on the farm? Will long distance -shopping do more for isolated communities than the sight of real goods -and the warm touch of living people? Will the picture catalogue or the -hearty salesman do more to keep vital the currents between seller and -buyer? Would a heavily laden parcels post messenger, running between a -mail order agency and a distant farm, often through a foot or two of -mud or snow, compensate for the disappearance of the mart and congress -of our country’s rural life--the independent, thriving, hospitable -store? - -Fellow merchants, it is our duty to sustain that store, and to do it -now. That store is imperiled by pending legislation, whether by the -institution of a local or a general parcels post. If this new service -be established by the government, even with the best of motives, we -must admit that: - -The postal deficit will be increased, - -The country’s commercial system revolutionized, - -The delivery of legitimate mail delayed, - -The population of rural communities depleted, and their progress -retarded. - -And that the government will promote class legislation, for in seeking -to favor the farmer who needs no such preferment, it will subsidize a -commercial interest whose basic business principle is hostility to the -best trade distribution. - -Every thinking individual agrees that rural free delivery has been -of great benefit, but the masses of the people do not agree that a -financially unprofitable service shall be put upon its feet at the cost -of the man who has been the mainstay of the farmer in season and out of -season--the country storekeeper. - - - - -Why Parcels Post Is Not a Good Thing for This Country. pp. 1-5. - -W. P. Bogardus. - - -Parcels post is a scheme in which it is proposed to utilize the post -office facilities to carry merchandise. Packages under the proposed -bills up to 11 pounds are to be carried in the mails for that sum -varying according to weight, from 2c to 25c. It is claimed by the -friends of parcels post that by adopting the measure the deficit in -the Post Office Department will be wiped out, and a handsome surplus -will result. Claims are easily made. But facts have more value in a -discussion like this. We are cited to the results in Germany as a -substantial proof that post parcels is a paying proposition. They -forget to mention that in Germany there are 340 people to the mile and -an average haul of mail of but 41 miles, while in this country the -average haul of mail is 540 miles and there are less than 23 people -to the mile, and they ignore the difference of conditions in the two -countries. - -But let us look at the report from the German budget. For the year -ending March 31st, 1910, the income, in round numbers, from the Post -Office Department was $168,000,000 and that included the revenue from -the telegraph business. The expenditures were $148,000,000. This on -the face shows a surplus of $20,000,000, but in the statement of -expenditures there is no account taken of the cost for transportation, -on the ground that the government owns the railroads. In this country -it costs 20 per cent. to transport the mails. That is, one-fifth of -the cost of the Post Office Department is for transporting the mails. -Now add 20 per cent to the expenditures and you have $177,600,000, or -a deficit of $9,000,000. In England, the friends of parcel post claim -that there is a surplus of $24,000,000 in the Post Office Department. -But that includes the receipts from the telegraph messages. In England -the average charge for packages is 9.8c per pound. In this country it -is proposed to send parcels post packages over a territory 30 times -larger than England at an average of not quite 3c per pound to a -population only about twice as large as there is in England. - -When the blind Postmaster General of England first introduced post -parcels he reported the results of the measure, but found that there -was an increasing deficit each year, and the reports were discontinued. -It does not seem possible to get exact figures as to the cost of the -system in England, but the presumption is that if there was a large -profit in the plan they would parade the fact. As it is, can we expect -to make parcels post in this country a profitable scheme? With an -average haul of 540 miles to a population of but 23 to the mile, is it -possible to carry goods at less than 3c per pound at a profit, if it -cannot be done in those thickly settled countries at a much higher rate? - -If it cannot be done at a profit, why should the government undertake a -scheme that will result in a loss? Rural free delivery is costing the -country $28,000,000 more than it is getting for the service, and only -about one half of the rural population is supplied with the service. - -If the government enters into the plan, it must needs have a monopoly, -if successful, of the carriage of packages up to the limit of 11 lbs., -else the express companies will take all the short haul packages -and leave the long haul packages for the government to carry. Such -conditions prevail at present. The express companies take all the short -haul packages for less than the government charges and leave the long -haul packages for the government to carry, with the result that there -is no profit in the business to the government. - -If there is a monopoly established on packages up to 11 pounds, what is -to hinder the government raising the limit of weight? - -Are we prepared to let our government enter into competition with -private enterprise? Is it a function of the government to transport -freight? Is it a province of the government to correct abuses of -private corporations, in transportation and other lines, by entering -into competition with them, and using the power the entire people has -given it, to force corporations to be less greedy? It would seem that -the recent decisions by the Supreme Court would justify us in believing -that there is power enough in the laws of the land to protect the -people’s rights. - -Perhaps in Australia the government enters into more radical schemes -than in any other country. And this fact is being developed. That the -extension of the control of industry and business, and the activities -in every field of production and distribution is but an incentive -for a greater demand on the government for further movements in the -same direction. The outcome of such policies is a final ending up -in complete socialism. Do we want our government to be a paternal -one? Are we ready to look to it for our transportation facilities? -If we are is there any reason to feel that the government will stop -at transportation? Will there not be other avenues of commercial -enterprise taken over by the government? One of the great dangers to -us, as a people, is the tendency to a centralization of power in the -government at Washington and a willingness of a great many people to -lean on the government for a solution of many problems that they should -solve without the aid of the government. - - - - -Parcels Post and Postal Savings Banks, pp. 1-2. - -Gilbert N. Haugen. - - -MR. CHAIRMAN: I want to direct attention to the suggestions made -in a very able and interesting address delivered by Mr. Meyer, -Postmaster-General, at a banquet of the New England Postmasters’ -Association, Boston, Mass., October 12, 1907, a part of which I will -read: - - To illustrate the incongruities that exist: Any individual - entering the post-office here in Boston or in any other city or - town in the country, with two parcels, each weighing 4 pounds, - can send one parcel to New York for 64 cents, while for the - other parcel, which is addressed to some one in a foreign land - and goes via New York, he will have to pay but 48 cents, for - the reason that the rate to foreign countries is 12 cents a - pound, while the rate to our own people is 16 cents a pound.... - Therefore I assume that our Representatives in Congress will - realize that they can not afford to stand for a policy that - compels our own people to pay 4 cents more on packages to - people living in the United States. - -This statement is indeed misleading: not that I charge the -Postmaster-General with any intent to deceive or mislead, for I regard -him as a gentleman of integrity, intelligence, ability, and actuated -with the highest motives and with a determination to do justice to all, -and I am not questioning his motives, but will endeavor to present the -facts in the light that I see them. When we have all of the facts, I -will venture to assume that Representatives in Congress will realize -that they can afford to stand for a policy that compels people living -in foreign lands to pay more than people living in our own country. The -Postmaster-General’s statement as to the sending of two pieces, each -weighing 4 ounces, is correct in some cases, and the domestic rate in -some cases is higher than the foreign; but in the majority of cases -foreign rates are the highest. In his excellent address to enlighten -members of the New England Postmasters’ Association and the country, -he might have gone further by saying: “To illustrate the incongruities -that exist, any individual entering the post-office here in Boston, -or in any other city or town in the country, with two parcels, each -weighing 1 ounce, can send one parcel to New York for 1 cent, while for -the other parcel, which is addressed to somebody in foreign lands via -New York, he will have to pay 12 cents, for the reason that the rate -to foreign countries is 12 cents per pound or fraction thereof, while -the rate to our own people is only 1 cent per ounce. Therefore the rate -on the parcel addressed to somebody in foreign lands is 12 times as -great as is the rate on the parcel addressed to New York.” And he might -have referred to the report of the Second Assistant for the year ending -June 30, 1907, pages 25 and 26: - -Or he might have said: “If the two parcels referred to, weighing 4 -pounds each, or 64 ounces each, or 128 ounces for the two, had been -divided into parcels of 1 ounce each, and one-half of them directed -to parties in New York, the rate on the sixty-four parcels would -have been 64 cents to New York, and the postage on the sixty-four -parcels addressed to London would be $7.68.” According to the Second -Assistant’s report, rates on parcels addressed to foreign countries are -not uniform. The rate to Bermuda is 12 cents per pound, and the rate to -Ecuador is 20 cents per pound. The rate to Sweden, Peru, and Denmark is -20 cents per pound or fraction of a pound for parcels which require the -use of the expensive transit across the Isthmus of Panama, and 12 cents -per pound or fraction of a pound for parcels which do not use that -expensive transit. So we find that rates on parcels weighing 1 ounce -addressed to Sweden, Peru, or Denmark which require the use of the -expensive transit across the Isthmus of Panama is 20 cents, or twenty -times as high as the rate on parcels weighing 1 ounce addressed to New -York. Why this incongruity in rates? Rates on mail matter between the -United States, Canada, Cuba, Mexico, and Panama are fixed by treaty -with each country and with all other countries by conventions of the -Universal Postal Union. The last convention was held at Rome, 1906, and -took effect October 1, 1907. The acts of these conventions are binding -on these countries, but have nothing to do with domestic rates, they -being fixed by Congress and the Department. The conventions are simply -agreements as to international mail matter. The rate on parcels post is -fixed with each country, or in thirty-five parcels-post conventions. -The rate is generally 12 cents per pound or fraction thereof, the pound -being the unit of weight. The rate is 1 cent per ounce. The rate on 5 -ounces to the Philippine Islands is 5 cents and to London 12 cents. - - - - -Parcels Post. pp. 8-11. - -S. C. Smith. - - -_In Foreign Countries_ - -The sentiment in favor of this new governmental service has been built -up in this country chiefly by holding up to view more or less highly -painted pictures of what is being done along a similar line in the -countries of Europe. Any fair comparison of the postal service in -those countries and in ours must take into consideration density of -population, expanse of country or length of transportation routes, and -the ownership of the means of transportation. The density of population -and the relative size of the United States and of the principal -countries of Europe having a cheap parcels post are shown by the -following table: - - +---------------+--------------+----------+-------------+------------+ - | | | | | Population | - | | | Ratio of | | per | - | Country. | Area. | size. | Population. | square | - | | | | | mile. | - +---------------+--------------+----------+-------------+------------+ - | | _Sq. miles._ | | | | - | United States | 3,602,990 | 100 | 84,154,009 | 23.35 | - | Great Britain | 121,391 | 3.36 | 41,976,827 | 345.79 | - | Germany | 208,860 | 5.79 | 60,641,278 | 290.34 | - | France | 207,054 | 5.74 | 38,961,945 | 139.87 | - | Belgium | 11,373 | .31 | 7,074,970 | 622.08 | - | Italy | 110,550 | 3.06 | 32,475,253 | 293.76 | - | Switzerland | 15,976 | .44 | 3,315,443 | 207.73 | - +---------------+--------------+----------+-------------+------------+ - -These figures are extremely interesting and important in connection -with this subject. We constantly lose sight of the immensity of this -country and its “magnificent distances,” as compared with the nations -of Europe; but in considering a question of transportation, distances -and density of population stand in the foreground. Let it be observed, -for instance, that while our country is over 300 times as large as -Belgium, the latter has a population of 622 people to the square mile, -while we have but a fraction over 23. Yet we will hear it argued that -“Belgium carries 132-pound parcels by mail; why can not we?” or, “If -Switzerland can carry 110 pound parcels, why not the United States?” -entirely ignoring or forgetting the fact that our country is 250 times -as large as Switzerland and has about one-tenth the population in a -given area. Postal authorities have estimated that the average distance -traveled by a piece of mail, including letters, papers, and parcels, is -40 miles in Great Britain, 42 miles in Germany, and 540 miles in the -United States. Of course it is still less in the smaller countries of -Europe. The admission of paper mail to this calculation greatly reduces -the average, since newspapers circulate chiefly in the vicinity of the -city of their publication. Parcels of merchandise or produce would -certainly move much farther on an average, because they would chiefly -flow to and from the great cities. If one is going to trade by mail, -and the cost of delivery is the same, why not go to “headquarters,” -which, in the popular mind, means one of the larger cities in the -country? - -The maximum parcel carried by the principal nations is as follows: - - Pounds. - - United States 4 - Great Britain 11 - Germany 110 - France 22 - Belgium 132 - Switzerland 110 - Italy 11 - Austria 110 - - -_Railroad Ownership_ - -Another factor of equal importance is the nature of ownership of the -means of transportation. In this country all routes are privately -owned and operated. The railroads--the chief means of transporting -the mails--have been constructed for the most part by private -capital, without the aid of the government, and the government, like -individuals, must pay a rate for its service which will yield a fair -return to the owners. The roads in the foreign countries used in -this comparison are largely owned by the governments, in which case -it matters little whether merchandise and produce move by mail or -by freight. In some of the countries, as in France, the government -guarantees the interest on the capital invested in the roads, and in -return has its mails carried free or at a nominal rate. - -The English writer above referred to says of the mail-carrying -situation in Germany: - - The German post has no occasion to enforce heavy rates. It can - impose its own terms on the railway companies. By law these - have to carry free all parcels under eleven pounds in weight. - Thus the mistake which has crippled the activity of the British - parcels post has been avoided. - -Of course there can be no just comparison between a service carried -on under such conditions and ours, for the basic conditions are so -fundamentally dissimilar. - -The matter of railroad ownership lies at the very foundation of this -question. If this government owned the roads and operated them, it -would matter little what went forward as mail and what under another -designation. But that is not the case now and it is to be hoped never -will be. From this standpoint, as well as from those hereinbefore -mentioned, it is manifestly unfair to argue that because other -countries do so and so in their mail service, therefore we should do -the same. - -It is significant that no country giving a large service of the kind -under consideration undertakes to say that its receipts equal the -cost of the service. I have not been able to find any report showing -the cost of the parcels department. It is stated by some pretty high -authority that the general belief among these nations is that they -are rendering it at a loss. It is hard to reconcile that condition of -the business with any idea of fairness. We may properly carry on the -educational feature of the mail service, in part, out of the general -revenue of the government; but who will say that we may fairly carry -the individual’s produce to market or his merchandise home for him at -public expense in whole or in part? Why should all the people be taxed -to pay a postal deficit created by moving freight for the people at -less than cost of service? Is there any reason why this branch of pure -business should be conducted at public expense which would not justify -the performance by the government of any other department of business? - - - - - -End of Project Gutenberg's Selected Articles on the Parcels Post, by Various - -*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SELECTED ARTICLES--PARCELS POST *** - -***** This file should be named 52996-0.txt or 52996-0.zip ***** -This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: - http://www.gutenberg.org/5/2/9/9/52996/ - -Produced by MWS, Adrian Mastronardi, The Philatelic Digital -Library Project at http://www.tpdlp.net and the Online -Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This -file was produced from images generously made available -by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.) - -Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions will -be renamed. - -Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright -law means that no one owns a United States copyright in these works, -so the Foundation (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United -States without permission and without paying copyright -royalties. Special rules, set forth in the General Terms of Use part -of this license, apply to copying and distributing Project -Gutenberg-tm electronic works to protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm -concept and trademark. Project Gutenberg is a registered trademark, -and may not be used if you charge for the eBooks, unless you receive -specific permission. If you do not charge anything for copies of this -eBook, complying with the rules is very easy. You may use this eBook -for nearly any purpose such as creation of derivative works, reports, -performances and research. They may be modified and printed and given -away--you may do practically ANYTHING in the United States with eBooks -not protected by U.S. copyright law. Redistribution is subject to the -trademark license, especially commercial redistribution. - -START: FULL LICENSE - -THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE -PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK - -To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free -distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work -(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project -Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full -Project Gutenberg-tm License available with this file or online at -www.gutenberg.org/license. - -Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project -Gutenberg-tm electronic works - -1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm -electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to -and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property -(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all -the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or -destroy all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your -possession. If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a -Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound -by the terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the -person or entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph -1.E.8. - -1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be -used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who -agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few -things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works -even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See -paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project -Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this -agreement and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm -electronic works. See paragraph 1.E below. - -1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the -Foundation" or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection -of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual -works in the collection are in the public domain in the United -States. If an individual work is unprotected by copyright law in the -United States and you are located in the United States, we do not -claim a right to prevent you from copying, distributing, performing, -displaying or creating derivative works based on the work as long as -all references to Project Gutenberg are removed. Of course, we hope -that you will support the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting -free access to electronic works by freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm -works in compliance with the terms of this agreement for keeping the -Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with the work. You can easily -comply with the terms of this agreement by keeping this work in the -same format with its attached full Project Gutenberg-tm License when -you share it without charge with others. - -1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern -what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are -in a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, -check the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this -agreement before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, -distributing or creating derivative works based on this work or any -other Project Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no -representations concerning the copyright status of any work in any -country outside the United States. - -1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg: - -1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other -immediate access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear -prominently whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work -on which the phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the -phrase "Project Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, -performed, viewed, copied or distributed: - - This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and - most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no - restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it - under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this - eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the - United States, you'll have to check the laws of the country where you - are located before using this ebook. - -1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is -derived from texts not protected by U.S. copyright law (does not -contain a notice indicating that it is posted with permission of the -copyright holder), the work can be copied and distributed to anyone in -the United States without paying any fees or charges. If you are -redistributing or providing access to a work with the phrase "Project -Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the work, you must comply -either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 or -obtain permission for the use of the work and the Project Gutenberg-tm -trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or 1.E.9. - -1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted -with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution -must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any -additional terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms -will be linked to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works -posted with the permission of the copyright holder found at the -beginning of this work. - -1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm -License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this -work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm. - -1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this -electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without -prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with -active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project -Gutenberg-tm License. - -1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary, -compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including -any word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access -to or distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format -other than "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official -version posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site -(www.gutenberg.org), you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense -to the user, provide a copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means -of obtaining a copy upon request, of the work in its original "Plain -Vanilla ASCII" or other form. Any alternate format must include the -full Project Gutenberg-tm License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1. - -1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying, -performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works -unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9. - -1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing -access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works -provided that - -* You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from - the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method - you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is owed - to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he has - agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the Project - Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments must be paid - within 60 days following each date on which you prepare (or are - legally required to prepare) your periodic tax returns. Royalty - payments should be clearly marked as such and sent to the Project - Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the address specified in - Section 4, "Information about donations to the Project Gutenberg - Literary Archive Foundation." - -* You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies - you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he - does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm - License. You must require such a user to return or destroy all - copies of the works possessed in a physical medium and discontinue - all use of and all access to other copies of Project Gutenberg-tm - works. - -* You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of - any money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the - electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days of - receipt of the work. - -* You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free - distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works. - -1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project -Gutenberg-tm electronic work or group of works on different terms than -are set forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing -from both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and The -Project Gutenberg Trademark LLC, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm -trademark. Contact the Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below. - -1.F. - -1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable -effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread -works not protected by U.S. copyright law in creating the Project -Gutenberg-tm collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm -electronic works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may -contain "Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate -or corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other -intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or -other medium, a computer virus, or computer codes that damage or -cannot be read by your equipment. - -1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right -of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project -Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project -Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project -Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all -liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal -fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT -LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE -PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE -TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE -LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR -INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH -DAMAGE. - -1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a -defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can -receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a -written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you -received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium -with your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you -with the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in -lieu of a refund. If you received the work electronically, the person -or entity providing it to you may choose to give you a second -opportunity to receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If -the second copy is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing -without further opportunities to fix the problem. - -1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth -in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS', WITH NO -OTHER WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT -LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE. - -1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied -warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of -damages. If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement -violates the law of the state applicable to this agreement, the -agreement shall be interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or -limitation permitted by the applicable state law. The invalidity or -unenforceability of any provision of this agreement shall not void the -remaining provisions. - -1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the -trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone -providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in -accordance with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the -production, promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm -electronic works, harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, -including legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of -the following which you do or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this -or any Project Gutenberg-tm work, (b) alteration, modification, or -additions or deletions to any Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any -Defect you cause. - -Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm - -Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of -electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of -computers including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It -exists because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations -from people in all walks of life. - -Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the -assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's -goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will -remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project -Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure -and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future -generations. To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary -Archive Foundation and how your efforts and donations can help, see -Sections 3 and 4 and the Foundation information page at -www.gutenberg.org - - - -Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation - -The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit -501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the -state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal -Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification -number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg Literary -Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent permitted by -U.S. federal laws and your state's laws. - -The Foundation's principal office is in Fairbanks, Alaska, with the -mailing address: PO Box 750175, Fairbanks, AK 99775, but its -volunteers and employees are scattered throughout numerous -locations. Its business office is located at 809 North 1500 West, Salt -Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887. Email contact links and up to -date contact information can be found at the Foundation's web site and -official page at www.gutenberg.org/contact - -For additional contact information: - - Dr. Gregory B. Newby - Chief Executive and Director - gbnewby@pglaf.org - -Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg -Literary Archive Foundation - -Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide -spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of -increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be -freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest -array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations -($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt -status with the IRS. - -The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating -charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United -States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a -considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up -with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations -where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To SEND -DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any particular -state visit www.gutenberg.org/donate - -While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we -have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition -against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who -approach us with offers to donate. - -International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make -any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from -outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff. - -Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation -methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other -ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations. To -donate, please visit: www.gutenberg.org/donate - -Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works. - -Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project -Gutenberg-tm concept of a library of electronic works that could be -freely shared with anyone. For forty years, he produced and -distributed Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of -volunteer support. - -Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed -editions, all of which are confirmed as not protected by copyright in -the U.S. unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not -necessarily keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper -edition. - -Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search -facility: www.gutenberg.org - -This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm, -including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary -Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to -subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks. - diff --git a/old/52996-0.zip b/old/52996-0.zip Binary files differdeleted file mode 100644 index d6a2aaf..0000000 --- a/old/52996-0.zip +++ /dev/null diff --git a/old/52996-h.zip b/old/52996-h.zip Binary files differdeleted file mode 100644 index 9e7b9e8..0000000 --- a/old/52996-h.zip +++ /dev/null diff --git a/old/52996-h/52996-h.htm b/old/52996-h/52996-h.htm deleted file mode 100644 index 1436605..0000000 --- a/old/52996-h/52996-h.htm +++ /dev/null @@ -1,8140 +0,0 @@ -<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN" - "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd"> -<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xml:lang="en" lang="en"> - <head> - <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=utf-8" /> - <meta http-equiv="Content-Style-Type" content="text/css" /> - <title> - The Project Gutenberg eBook of Selected Articles on the Parcels Post, by Edith M. Phelps. - </title> - - <link rel="coverpage" href="images/cover.jpg" /> - -<style type="text/css"> - -a { - text-decoration: none; -} - -body { - margin-left: 10%; - margin-right: 10%; -} - -h1,h2,h3,h4 { - text-align: center; - clear: both; -} - -hr { - width: 65%; - margin-left: 17.5%; - margin-right: 17.5%; - margin-top: 2em; - margin-bottom: 2em; - clear: both; -} - -li { - margin-top: 0.5em; - padding-left: 2em; - text-indent: -2em; -} - -p { - margin-top: 0.5em; - text-align: justify; - margin-bottom: 0.5em; - text-indent: 1em; -} - -table { - margin: 1em auto 1em auto; - max-width: 40em; - border-collapse: collapse; -} - -td { - padding-left: 2.25em; - padding-right: 0.25em; - vertical-align: top; - text-indent: -2em; -} - -th { - font-weight: normal; -} - -table.borders td { - border-right: thin solid black; -} - -table.borders th { - border-right: thin solid black; - border-top: thin solid black; - border-bottom: thin solid black; -} - -table.borders .last-col { - border-right: none; -} - -table.borders .last-row { - border-bottom: thin solid black; -} - -ul { - list-style-type: none; -} - -.bbox { - border: thin solid black; - margin: auto; - max-width: 35em; - padding: 0.5em; -} - -.blockquote { - margin-left: 10%; - margin-right: 10%; -} - -.center { - text-align: center; - text-indent: 0em; -} - -.footnote { - margin-left: 10%; - margin-right: 10%; - font-size: 0.9em; -} - -.footnote .label { - position: absolute; - right: 84%; - text-align: right; -} - -.fnanchor { - vertical-align: super; - font-size: .8em; - text-decoration: none; -} - -.fraction { - padding-right: 1em; -} - -.hanging p { - text-indent: -2em; - padding-left: 2em; -} - -.larger { - font-size: 150%; -} - -.nowrap { - white-space: nowrap; -} - -.pagenum { - position: absolute; - right: 4%; - font-size: smaller; - text-align: right; - font-style: normal; -} - -.right { - text-align: right; -} - -.smaller { - font-size: 80%; -} - -div.smaller p { - padding-left: 2em; - text-indent: 1em; -} - -.smcap { - font-variant: small-caps; - font-style: normal; -} - -.tdindent { - padding-left: 4em; -} - -.tdr { - text-align: right; -} - -.tdtotal { - border-top: thin solid black; -} - -.titlepage { - text-align: center; - margin-top: 3em; - text-indent: 0em; -} - -.transnote { - background-color: #E6E6FA; - color: black; - text-align: center; - font-size: smaller; - padding: 0.5em; - margin-bottom: 5em; -} - -@media handheld { - -.blockquote { - margin-left: 5%; - margin-right: 5%; -} -} - </style> - </head> -<body> - - -<pre> - -Project Gutenberg's Selected Articles on the Parcels Post, by Various - -This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most -other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions -whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of -the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at -www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have -to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. - -Title: Selected Articles on the Parcels Post - Debaters' Handbook Series - -Author: Various - -Editor: Edith M. Phelps - -Release Date: September 6, 2016 [EBook #52996] - -Language: English - -Character set encoding: UTF-8 - -*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SELECTED ARTICLES--PARCELS POST *** - - - - -Produced by MWS, Adrian Mastronardi, The Philatelic Digital -Library Project at http://www.tpdlp.net and the Online -Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This -file was produced from images generously made available -by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.) - - - - - - -</pre> - - -<p class="transnote">Transcriber’s Note: obvious printers’ errors have been corrected -but the spelling, hyphenation etc. in this book is generally inconsistent, -as you might expect from a collection of articles by different authors: -the editor did not impose a uniform style.</p> - -<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_i" id="Page_i">[i]</a></span></p> - -<p class="titlepage"><i>DEBATERS’ HAND BOOK SERIES</i></p> - -<p class="center larger">PARCELS POST</p> - -<hr /> - -<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_ii" id="Page_ii">[ii]</a></span></p> - -<div class="bbox"> - -<p class="center">DEBATERS’<br /> -HANDBOOK SERIES</p> - -<ul> - -<li>Enlargement of the United States Navy (3d ed. rev. and enl.)</li> - -<li>Direct Primaries (3d ed. rev. and enl.)</li> - -<li>Capital Punishment</li> - -<li>Commission Plan of Municipal Government (2d ed. rev. and enl.)</li> - -<li>Election of United States Senators</li> - -<li>Income Tax (2d ed. rev. and enl.)</li> - -<li>Initiative and Referendum (2d ed. rev. and enl.)</li> - -<li>Central Bank of the United States</li> - -<li>Woman Suffrage</li> - -<li>Municipal Ownership</li> - -<li>Child Labor</li> - -<li>Open versus Closed Shop</li> - -<li>Employment of Women</li> - -<li>Federal Control of Interstate Corporations</li> - -<li>Parcels Post</li> - -<li><i>Other titles in preparation</i></li> - -</ul> - -<p class="center"><i>Each volume, one dollar net</i></p> - -</div> - -<hr /> - -<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_iii" id="Page_iii">[iii]</a></span></p> - -<p class="center"><i>Debaters’ Handbook Series</i></p> - -<p class="titlepage">SELECTED ARTICLES<br /> -<span class="smaller">ON THE</span><br /> -PARCELS POST</p> - -<p class="titlepage"><span class="smaller">COMPILED BY</span><br /> -EDITH M. PHELPS</p> - -<p class="titlepage">MINNEAPOLIS<br /> -THE H. W. WILSON COMPANY<br /> -1911</p> - -<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_iv" id="Page_iv">[iv]</a></span></p> - -<hr /> - -<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_v" id="Page_v">[v]</a></span></p> - -<h2>EXPLANATORY NOTE</h2> - -<p>The plan of this volume is very similar to that of the others -of the series to which it belongs. It contains a brief, a bibliography, -and reprints of articles containing the various arguments -for and against the parcels post; also, information in -regard to the present status of the parcels post in this and -other countries. For the convenience of the reader, the articles -have been arranged in three main divisions: the General, Affirmative, -and Negative Discussions. The bibliography is similarly -divided. It is believed that debaters and others wishing material -on this subject will find this book both convenient and helpful.</p> - -<p>September, 1911.</p> - -<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_vi" id="Page_vi">[vi]</a></span></p> - -<hr /> - -<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_vii" id="Page_vii">[vii]</a></span></p> - -<h2>CONTENTS</h2> - -<table summary="Contents"> - <tr> - <td><span class="smcap">Brief</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_ix">ix</a></td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td><span class="smcap">Bibliography</span></td><td class="tdr"></td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>Bibliographies</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_xiii">xiii</a></td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>General References</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_xiii">xiii</a></td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>Affirmative References</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_xvi">xvi</a></td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>Negative References</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_xix">xix</a></td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td><span class="smcap">Introduction</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_1">1</a></td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td><span class="smcap">General Discussion</span></td><td class="tdr"></td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>Carr, D. M. Up to Members of Congress</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_5">5</a></td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>Meyer, George von L. Data Relative to Proposed Extension of Parcels Post</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_9">9</a></td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>Cowles, James L. Our Postal Express</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_16">16</a></td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>Walker, Ernest G. From the Boston Herald. Data Relative to Proposed Extension of Parcels Post</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_18">18</a></td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>Bennet, William S. Post-Office, Our Mutual Express Company</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_27">27</a></td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>Lewis, David J. System of Postal Express</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_32">32</a></td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>Barth, Dr. Letter. Hearings before the Committee on the Post-Office and Post Roads</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_42">42</a></td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>German Parcels Post. Monthly Consular and Trade Reports</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_45">45</a></td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td><span class="smcap">Affirmative Discussion</span></td><td class="tdr"></td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>Sulzer, William. Our Postal Express</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_49">49</a></td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>Rider, Fremont. Parcels Post and the Retailer. World’s Work</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_52">52</a></td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>Mondell, F. W. Star Routes and Rural Parcels Post. Congressional Record</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_58">58</a></td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_viii" id="Page_viii">[viii]</a></span>Bennet, William S. General Deficiency Bill. Congressional Record</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_62">62</a></td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>Walker, John B. Who Will Be Benefited by a Parcels Post? Cosmopolitan</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_72">72</a></td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>Stickley, Gustav. More Efficient Postal Service. Craftsman</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_78">78</a></td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>Parcels Post Once More. Independent</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_80">80</a></td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>Sulzer, William. People Demand a General Parcels Post</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_82">82</a></td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>Let Us Have a Parcels Post. Hampton’s</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_87">87</a></td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>Curtis, Isabel G. Housekeeping by Parcels Post. Good Housekeeping</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_92">92</a></td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>Miller, George E. Parcels Post. Housekeeper</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_94">94</a></td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td><span class="smcap">Negative Discussion</span></td><td class="tdr"></td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>Maxwell, George H. Perils of Parcels Post Extension</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_99">99</a></td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>Clark, Allan W. Objections to the Parcels Post. Independent</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_106">106</a></td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>Burrows, Charles W. Further Thoughts on Parcels Post</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_108">108</a></td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>Burrows, Charles W. One Cent Letter Postage, Second Class Mail Matter, and Parcels Post</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_110">110</a></td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>Ordway, John A. Parcels Post</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_115">115</a></td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>Merritt, Albert N. Shall the Scope of Governmental Functions Be Enlarged so as to Include the Express Business? Journal of Political Economy</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_122">122</a></td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>Parcels Post in England. Parcels Post Problem</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_129">129</a></td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>Spofford, C. W. A. B. C. of Parcels Post</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_130">130</a></td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>French, F. E. Parcels Post</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_131">131</a></td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>Bogardus, W. P. Why Parcels Post Is Not a Good Thing for This Country</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_135">135</a></td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>Haugen, Gilbert N. Parcels Post and Postal Savings Banks</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_138">138</a></td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>Smith, S. C. Parcels Post</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_140">140</a></td> - </tr> -</table> - -<hr /> - -<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_ix" id="Page_ix">[ix]</a></span></p> - -<h2>BRIEF</h2> - -<p>Resolved, That the Federal Government should establish a -Parcels Post.</p> - -<div class="hanging"> - -<h3><span class="smcap">Introduction</span></h3> - -<p>I. It has been claimed that</p> - -<div class="blockquote"> - -<p>A. Our postal rates on third and fourth class matter are -exorbitant as compared with those in foreign countries.</p> - -<p>B. Foreign parcels post systems afford many conveniences -which we do not have.</p> - -</div> - -<p>II. An extension of our present parcels post system is demanded.</p> - -<div class="blockquote"> - -<p>A. Bills providing for it have been presented to Congress.</p> - -<p>B. Postmasters-General Wanamaker, Meyer, and others -have tried to secure it.</p> - -<p>C. It has been recommended in presidential messages, -in conventions, by postal officials and by the people.</p> - -</div> - -<p>III. The plan which has received most favorable attention is -that of Postmaster-General Meyer, providing for</p> - -<div class="blockquote"> - -<p>A. A general parcels post at the rate of 12c a pound, with -a limit in weight of eleven pounds.</p> - -<p>B. A rural parcels post at the rate of 5c for the first -pound, 2c for each additional pound, limit of weight -eleven pounds.</p> - -</div> - -<h3><span class="smcap">Affirmative</span></h3> - -<p>The Affirmative is in favor of the Parcels Post, for</p> - -<p>I. The United States government would benefit financially.</p> - -<div class="blockquote"> - -<p>A. The receipts from the increased volume of business -would more than repay the loss from the reduction -in rate.</p> - -<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_x" id="Page_x">[x]</a></span></p> - -<p>B. Increased receipts from rural routes would be clear -profit.</p> - -<div class="blockquote"> - -<p>1. Rural routes are already equipped for this service.</p> - -</div> - -<p>C. If the post with foreign countries pays now, the government -ought to make a profit from a similar -domestic service.</p> - -</div> - -<p>II. The general public would benefit by this service.</p> - -<div class="blockquote"> - -<p>A. Present transportation charges would be reduced.</p> - -<div class="blockquote"> - -<p>1. The express companies would have to reduce -rates.</p> - -</div> - -<p>B. Greater convenience in sending merchandise would -result.</p> - -<div class="blockquote"> - -<p>1. The express companies would have to improve -service.</p> - -</div> - -<p>C. The cost of living would be reduced.</p> - -</div> - -<p>III. Rural communities would be benefited.</p> - -<div class="blockquote"> - -<p>A. The local dealer would profit.</p> - -<div class="blockquote"> - -<p>1. He could do a larger business with less expense, -and with increased facilities for delivery.</p> - -<p>2. He could meet the competition of mail-order -houses and city merchants.</p> - -</div> - -<p>B. Country towns and villages would have cheap transportation -which is so essential for favorable growth.</p> - -<p>C. The parcels post would turn the tide of civilization -from the cities back to the land.</p> - -<p>D. The farmer would be benefitted.</p> - -<div class="blockquote"> - -<p>1. He would save time and expense in driving to -market.</p> - -<p>2. He could have more of the comforts and conveniences -of city life.</p> - -<p>3. He would have better market facilities for his -products.</p> - -</div> - -</div> - -<p>IV. A parcels post would not be class legislation.</p> - -<div class="blockquote"> - -<p>A. Mail-order houses and city department stores would -not benefit unduly.</p> - -<p>B. Express companies would not be seriously injured.</p> - -<div class="blockquote"> - -<p>1. Their present rates are excessive.</p> - -</div> - -</div> - -<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xi" id="Page_xi">[xi]</a></span></p> - -<p>V. The parcels post has been successful in other countries -and is practicable.</p> - -<div class="blockquote"> - -<p>A. It has paid</p> - -<div class="blockquote"> - -<p>1. Financially.</p> - -<p>2. In comfort and convenience.</p> - -</div> - -<p>B. In nearly every country the rates are lower than in -the United States and the limit in weight is much -higher.</p> - -</div> - -<h3><span class="smcap">Negative</span></h3> - -<p>The Negative is opposed to the Parcels Post, for</p> - -<p>I. The present postal deficit would be increased rather than -diminished.</p> - -<div class="blockquote"> - -<p>A. The cost of the increased service would not be covered -by the increased traffic.</p> - -<div class="blockquote"> - -<p>1. The government cannot compete successfully with -the express companies.</p> - -<p>2. There would be a continual demand for more -and better equipment.</p> - -<p>3. Government undertakings are always more costly -than those under private management.</p> - -</div> - -<p>B. The inconsistencies between our present foreign and -domestic rates are not as great as has been claimed.</p> - -</div> - -<p>II. The general public would not be benefitted by it.</p> - -<div class="blockquote"> - -<p>A. It would have little influence on express rates.</p> - -<p>B. It would increase the centralization of wealth, population, -and manufactures.</p> - -<p>C. The demand for it has been artificially created.</p> - -</div> - -<p>III. Rural communities would be injured by it.</p> - -<div class="blockquote"> - -<p>A. Retailers and local dealers would suffer.</p> - -<div class="blockquote"> - -<p>1. Orders would be sent direct to manufacturing -centers.</p> - -<p>2. Mail-order houses would obtain most of the trade.</p> - -</div> - -<p>B. Rural towns and villages would be injured.</p> - -<div class="blockquote"> - -<p>1. Trade would be drawn to the larger cities and -population would follow.</p> - -</div> - -<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xii" id="Page_xii">[xii]</a></span></p> - -<p>C. The farmer would not be benefitted.</p> - -<div class="blockquote"> - -<p>1. He would not use it nearly as much as has been -claimed.</p> - -<p>2. The market for his products would be largely -destroyed by the removal of population to large -cities.</p> - -<p>3. The rural parcels post alone would be merely an -entering wedge.</p> - -</div> - -</div> - -<p>IV. Legislation for a parcels post would be discriminating and -unnecessary.</p> - -<div class="blockquote"> - -<p>A. Dealers, wholesalers and jobbers in heavy merchandise -could not use it.</p> - -<p>B. Mail-order houses and department stores would benefit -at the expense of the retailers and consumers.</p> - -<p>C. The Interstate Commerce Commission already has the -power to correct excessive express rates.</p> - -<p>D. The rural post alone would increase the business of -the express companies.</p> - -</div> - -<p>V. That the parcels post is in operation in foreign countries -at very low rates and high weight-limits is no argument -for its extension in the United States.</p> - -<div class="blockquote"> - -<p>A. Conditions vary so widely.</p> - -<div class="blockquote"> - -<p>1. Distances are greater in the United States.</p> - -<p>2. The population is more scattered.</p> - -<p>3. The railroads are privately owned, and the government -must pay heavy rates for service.</p> - -</div> - -<p>B. It is claimed that the system is run at a loss in England -and Germany.</p> - -</div> - -</div> - -<hr /> - -<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xiii" id="Page_xiii">[xiii]</a></span></p> - -<h2>BIBLIOGRAPHY</h2> - -<p>An asterisk (*) preceding a reference indicates that the entire -article or a part of it has been reprinted in this volume.</p> - -<div class="hanging"> - -<h3><span class="smcap">Bibliographies</span></h3> - -<p>Kansas. State University. Extension Division. Bulletin. Vol. XI. -No. 10. July, 1910. Kansas High School Debating League, -Announcements, 1910-1911. pp. 26-8.</p> - -<p>United States. Library of Congress—Division of Bibliography. -Select List of References on the Parcels Post. 5p. Typewritten. -15c. Supt. of Doc.</p> - -<p>Virginia. Dep’t of Public Instruction, State University, and the -Co-Operative Education Ass’n. Bulletin. Ser. I. No. 3. March, -1911. Parcels Post. pp. 18-21.</p> - -<p>Wisconsin. State University. Extension Division. Bulletin. Ser. -No. 204: Extension Ser. No. 18. March, 1908. Parcels Post. -pa. 5c.</p> - -<h3><span class="smcap">General References</span></h3> - -<h4><i>Books, Pamphlets and Documents</i></h4> - -<p>Bennet, William S. Freight, Passenger and Intelligence Post: -The Public Need. 14p. pa. Govt. Ptg. Office.</p> - -<div class="smaller"> - -<p>Address William S. Bennet, Representative, Washington, D. C.</p> - -</div> - -<p>*Bennet, William S. Post-Office, Our Mutual Express Company: -Speech in the House of Representatives, May 13, 1909. 8p. -pa. Govt. Ptg. Office.</p> - -<div class="smaller"> - -<p>Reprinted from the Congressional Record. 44: 5174-6. Ag. 5, 09. -[Address William S. Bennet, Representative, Washington, D. C.]</p> - -</div> - -<p>*Carr, D. M. Up to Members of Congress. 8p. pa. March, 1908.</p> - -<div class="smaller"> - -<p>Address D. M. Carr, Editor “The Winning West,” Omaha, Nebr.</p> - -</div> - -<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xiv" id="Page_xiv">[xiv]</a></span></p> - -<p>Congressional Record. 32: Appendix. 208-10. F. 21, ’99. United -States Parcels Post. James L. Cowles.</p> - -<div class="smaller"> - -<p>Printed in connection with a speech by Senator Butler, in the -Senate, F. 20-21, ’99.</p> - -</div> - -<p>Congressional Record. 43: 1866-8. F. 4, ’09. Parcels Post System.</p> - -<p>Cowles, James L. General Freight and Passenger Post: Practical -Solution of the Railroad Problem. G. P. Putnam’s Sons, -New York. 1898.</p> - -<p>*Cowles, James L. Our Postal Express. 2p. Postal Progress -League.</p> - -<div class="smaller"> - -<p>Address the Postal Progress League, 125 E. 23rd St., New York -City.</p> - -</div> - -<p>*Lewis, David J. System of Postal Express to Include Both -Country Merchants and Farmers: Speech in the House of -Representatives, June 8, 1911. 32p. pa.</p> - -<div class="smaller"> - -<p>Reprinted from the Hearings before Sub-Committee No. 4, of -the Committee on the Post-Office and Post-Roads, June, 1911. pp. -10-38, 48-52. [Address David J. Lewis, Representative, Washington, -D. C.]</p> - -</div> - -<p>Monthly Consular and Trade Reports. No. 326. p. 37. N. ’07. -Parcels Post from United States. Govt. Ptg. Office.</p> - -<p>*Monthly Consular and Trade Reports. No. 329. pp. 104-6. F. ’08. -German Parcels Post. Govt. Ptg. Office.</p> - -<p>Monthly Consular and Trade Reports. No. 334. p. 192. Jl. ’08. -Parcels Post from United States. Govt. Ptg. Office.</p> - -<p>Monthly Consular and Trade Reports. No. 335: 179-80. Ag. ’08. -Parcels Post.</p> - -<p>Monthly Consular and Trade Reports. No. 357. Je. ’10. pp. 109-11. -Parcels Post. Germany and Australia. Govt. Ptg. Office.</p> - -<p>Postal Progress. 1907-1911. Post Office: The Minister of Peace. -4p. Postal Progress League.</p> - -<div class="smaller"> - -<p>Address the Postal Progress League, 125 E. 23d St., New York -City.</p> - -</div> - -<p>*United States. Congress, House of Representatives. Parcels -Post: Hearings before the Committee on the Postoffice and -Post Roads. April 20-29, 1910, 322p. pa. 25c. Supt. of Doc.</p> - -<div class="smaller"> - -<p>Recommended for purchase.</p> - -</div> - -<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xv" id="Page_xv">[xv]</a></span></p> - -<p>United States. Congress. House of Representatives. Parcels -Post: Hearings before Sub-Committee No. 4 of the Committee -on the Postoffice and Post Roads, June, 1911, 390p. pa. -Supt. of Doc.</p> - -<div class="smaller"> - -<p>Recommended for purchase.</p> - -</div> - -<p>*United States. Post-Office Dep’t. Data Relative to Proposed -Extension of Parcel Post. (60th Cong., 1st Sess., Senate. Doc. -366.) 15p. ’08. Govt. Ptg. Office.</p> - -<div class="smaller"> - -<p>Reprinted from the Congressional Record. 42: 3041-5. Mr. 6, ’08.</p> - -</div> - -<p>World Almanac, 1911. Postal Information, pp. 99-105.</p> - -<div class="smaller"> - -<p>A summary of the present governmental regulations respecting -foreign and domestic mails.</p> - -</div> - -<h4><i>Magazine Articles</i></h4> - -<p>Arena. 34: 113-9. Ag. ’05. European Parcels-Post. J. Henniker -Heaton.</p> - -<div class="smaller"> - -<p>Reprinted in condensed form in the Review of Reviews. 32: -345-6. S. ’05.</p> - -</div> - -<p>Bulletin. Pan American Union. 32: 365-8. F. ’11. Parcels Post -Convention between the United States and Haiti.</p> - -<div class="smaller"> - -<p>Contains the text of the convention adopted by Haiti and the -United States in 1910.</p> - -</div> - -<p>Catholic World. 81: 353-61. Je. ’05. Parcel-Post System of Germany. -J. C. Monaghan.</p> - -<p>Chautauquan. 64: 7-8. S. ’11. Parcels Post Next.</p> - -<p>Cosmopolitan. 35: 3-10. My. ’03. Governmental Parcel-Post in -Great Britain. J. Henniker Heaton.</p> - -<p>Cosmopolitan. 36: 217*-19*. Ap. ’04. Postal Parcels Delivery One -Cent a Pound. John B. Walker.</p> - -<p>Dun’s Review. 14: 12-4. F. 24, ’06. Parcels-Post System of Germany. -J. C. Monaghan.</p> - -<div class="smaller"> - -<p>Reprinted in the Hearings before Subcommittee No. 4 of the -Committee on the Post-Office and Post-Roads, House of Representatives, -June, 1911. pp. 70-3.</p> - -</div> - -<p>Nineteenth Century. 25: 894-901. Je. ’89. Agricultural Parcels -Post. Henry P. Dunster.</p> - -<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xvi" id="Page_xvi">[xvi]</a></span></p> - -<p>Nineteenth Century. 54: 981-4. D. ’03. Cash on Delivery, or -Shopping by Post. J. Henniker Heaton.</p> - -<div class="smaller"> - -<p>Arguments for and against the extension of the parcels post -system in England to admit the cash on delivery feature.</p> - -</div> - -<p>North American. 187: 330-6. Mr. ’08. Parcels Post. George von -L. Meyer.</p> - -<p>Outlook. 72: 147-8. S. 20, ’02. Cheap Parcels Post from England.</p> - -<p>Outlook. 79: 148. Ja. 14, ’05. Comparison of Postal Rates. James -L. Cowles.</p> - -<p>Postal Progress. Vol. I. No. 6. pp. 1-4. Ag. ’07. Common One-Cent-a-Pound -Postal Rate. James L. Cowles.</p> - -<div class="smaller"> - -<p>Clippings from American Industries, June 15, 1907, and Iron -Age, July 4, 1907, form a part of the article.</p> - -</div> - -<p>Scientific American. 98: 455. Je. 27, ’08. Reduction of Foreign -Parcel Postal Rates.</p> - -<p>Scientific American Supplement. 48: 20008. D. 2, ’99. Parcels -Post Exchanges with Germany.</p> - -<p>Survey. 25: 121-2. O. 22, ’10. Parcels Post Made in Germany.</p> - -<h3><span class="smcap">Affirmative References</span></h3> - -<h4><i>Pamphlets and Documents</i></h4> - -<p>Congressional Record. 42: 3081-4. Mr. 7, ’08. Post-Office Appropriation -Bill: Speech in the House of Representatives, March -3, 1908. James M. Griggs.</p> - -<p>Congressional Record. 42: 6567-8. My. 15, ’08. Special Parcels -Post. George von L. Meyer.</p> - -<p>Congressional Record. 45: 2958-9. Mr. 8, ’10. Amendment for -the Parcels Post. Mr. Hardwick.</p> - -<p>Congressional Record. 45: 3223-4. Mr. 14, ’10. Extension of -Parcels Post: Letter to John M. Stahl. George von L. Meyer.</p> - -<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xvii" id="Page_xvii">[xvii]</a></span></p> - -<p>Congressional Record. 45: 9310-4. Je. 24. ’10. General Deficiency -Bill: Speech in the House of Representatives, June -21, 1910. William S. Bennet.</p> - -<div class="smaller"> - -<p>Reprinted in the Congressional Record. 45: Appendix 382-6.</p> - -</div> - -<p>Congressional Record. 46: 1243-5. Ja. 21, ’11. Proposed Parcels -Post: Speech in the House of Representatives, January 17, -1911. Ralph W. Moss.</p> - -<p>Congressional Record. 46: 1273-6. Ja. 21, ’11. Limited Parcels -Post.</p> - -<p>Congressional Record. 46: 1443-5. Ja. 25, ’11. Why the People -Favor a General Parcels Post: Speech in the House of Representatives, -January 17, 1911. William Sulzer.</p> - -<p>Congressional Record. 46: 1881. F. 2, ’11. Resolution Adopted -by Nebraska Farmer’s Congress in Favor of Parcels Post.</p> - -<p>*Congressional Record. 46: 1941-7. F. 3, ’11. Star Routes and -Rural Parcels Post: Speech in the House of Representatives, -January 19, 1911. F. W. Mondell.</p> - -<p>Congressional Record. 46: 2773-4. F. 9, ’11. Parcels Post: -Speech in the House of Representatives. Ralph W. Moss.</p> - -<div class="smaller"> - -<p>Consists mostly of quotations from the Price Current and other -trade journals.</p> - -</div> - -<p>Meyer, George von L. Address at the Banquet of the New -England Postmasters, October 12, 1907. 14p. pa. Govt. Ptg. -Office.</p> - -<p>*Sulzer, William. Our Postal Express: Speech in the House of -Representatives, June 9, 1910. 8p. pa. Govt. Ptg. Office.</p> - -<div class="smaller"> - -<p>Reprinted from the Congressional Record. 45: 8287-97. Je. 15, -’10. [Address William Sulzer, Representative, Washington, D. C.]</p> - -</div> - -<p>*Sulzer, William. People Demand a General Parcels Post: -Speech in the House of Representatives, February 6, 1911. -15p. pa. Govt. Ptg. Office.</p> - -<div class="smaller"> - -<p>Reprinted from the Congressional Record. 46: 2094-7. F. 6, ’11. -[Apply to William Sulzer, Representative, Washington, D. C.]</p> - -</div> - -<p>United States. Post Office Dep’t. Annual Report of the Postmaster -General. 1907. pp. 9-11. Extension of the Parcel Post. -10c. Supt. of Doc.</p> - -<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xviii" id="Page_xviii">[xviii]</a></span></p> - -<h4><i>Magazine Articles</i></h4> - -<p>Arena. 23: 103-6. Ja. ’00. Needed Postal Reform. Louis E. -Guillow.</p> - -<p>Arena. 35: 212-3. F. ’06. England’s Magnificent Postal-Service -Record.</p> - -<p>Arena. 37: 308-9. Mr. ’07. Postal Service in Japan.</p> - -<p>Cosmopolitan. 36: 379*-81*. F. ’04. Aid Which the Post Office -Department Might Render to Commerce. John B. Walker.</p> - -<p>*Cosmopolitan. 36: 497*-9*. Mr. ’04. Who Will Be Benefited by -a Parcels Post? John B. Walker.</p> - -<p>*Craftsman. 14: 592-4. S. ’08. More Efficient Postal Service. -Gustav Stickley.</p> - -<p>*Good Housekeeping. 53: 2-10. Jl. ’11. Housekeeping by Parcels -Post. Isabel G. Curtis.</p> - -<p>*Hampton’s. 26: 261-4. F. ’11. Let Us Have a Parcels Post.</p> - -<p>*Housekeeper. 31: 11-35. Ag. ’08. Parcels Post. George E. -Miller.</p> - -<p>Independent. 53: 2607-8. O. 31, ’01. Parcels Post.</p> - -<p>Independent. 56: 306-9. F. 11, ’04. Post Office, Our Mutual -Transportation Company. James L. Cowles.</p> - -<p>Independent. 63: 1185-7. N. 14, ’07. Parcels Post.</p> - -<p>Independent. 67: 986-7. O. 28, ’09. It Must Come.</p> - -<p>*Independent. 70: 105-7. Ja. 12, ’11. Parcels Post Once More.</p> - -<p>Nation. 90: 345. Ap. 7, ’10. For a Parcels-Post. Reuben G. -Thwaites.</p> - -<p>Nineteenth Century. 53: 253-63. F. ’03. Agricultural Parcel Post. -J. Henniker Heaton.</p> - -<p>Outlook. 90: 801-2. D. 12, ’08. Postal Deficit and a Rural -Parcel Post.</p> - -<p>Outlook. 96: 567. N. 12, ’10. Express Monopoly versus a Parcels -Post.</p> - -<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xix" id="Page_xix">[xix]</a></span></p> - -<p>Postal Progress. Vol. I. No. 4. pp. 1-2. Ap. 1, ’07. Foreign -Parcels Post Necessary.</p> - -<p>Scientific American. 102: 274. Ap. 2, ’10. Need of an Improved -Parcels Post.</p> - -<p>World’s Work. 21: 13978-86. F. ’11. Post-Office: An Obstructive -Monopoly. Don G. Seitz.</p> - -<p>*World’s Work. 21: 14248-51. Ap. ’11. Parcels Post and the Retailer. -Fremont Rider.</p> - -<h3><span class="smcap">Negative References</span></h3> - -<h4><i>Pamphlets and Documents</i></h4> - -<p>*Bogardus, W. P. Why Parcels Post Is Not a Good Thing for -This Country. 8p. pa. Iowa Retail Hardware Ass’n.</p> - -<div class="smaller"> - -<p>Address A. R. Sale, Iowa Retail Hardware Association, Mason -City, Iowa.</p> - -</div> - -<p>*Burrows, Charles W. Further Thoughts on Parcels Post: With -an Examination of Postmaster-General Meyer’s Recommendations. -19p. pa.</p> - -<div class="smaller"> - -<p>Address Charles W. Burrows, 633 Euclid Av., Cleveland, Ohio.</p> - -</div> - -<p>*Burrows, Charles W. One Cent Letter Postage, Second Class -Mail Rates, and Parcels Post: Address Delivered before the -National Hardware Ass’n, March 30, 1911. pp. 11-25.</p> - -<div class="smaller"> - -<p>Address Charles W. Burrows, 633 Euclid Av., Cleveland, Ohio.</p> - -</div> - -<p>Congressional Record. 40: 3476-82. Mr. 7, ’06. Parcels Post: -Speech in the House of Representatives. Gilbert N. Haugen.</p> - -<p>*French, F. E. Parcels Post: Address before the Southern Merchant’s -Ass’n, Nashville, Tenn., February 28-March 3, 1911. -Leaflet No. 8. 15p. pa. American League of Associations.</p> - -<div class="smaller"> - -<p>Address the American League of Associations, Room 343, Rand-McNally -Bldg., Chicago, Ill.</p> - -</div> - -<p>*Haugen, Gilbert N. Parcels Post and Postal Savings Banks: -Speech in the House of Representatives, March 13, 1908. 8p. -pa. Govt. Ptg. Office.</p> - -<div class="smaller"> - -<p>Reprinted from the Congressional Record. 42: 3548-51. Mr. 17, -’08. [Address Gilbert N. Haugen, Representative, Washington, -D. C.]</p> - -</div> - -<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xx" id="Page_xx">[xx]</a></span></p> - -<p>Hutsinpillar, C. A. Parcels Post: Address Delivered before the -Annual Convention of the Ohio Hardware Ass’n, February -23, 1904, 3p. pa. gratis.</p> - -<div class="smaller"> - -<p>Address C. A. Hutsinpillar, Ironton, Ohio.</p> - -</div> - -<p>*Maxwell, George H. Perils of Parcels Post Extension. Leaflet -No. 7. 35p. pa. American League of Associations.</p> - -<div class="smaller"> - -<p>Reprinted in the Hearings before the Committee on the Post-Office -and Post-Roads, April 20-29, 1910. [Address American -League of Associations, Room 343, Rand-McNally Bldg., Chicago, -Ill.]</p> - -</div> - -<p>Menace of a Parcels Post. 40p. pa.</p> - -<div class="smaller"> - -<p>Address S. R. Miles, Mason City, Iowa.</p> - -</div> - -<p>Miles, S. R. Extracts from an Address Delivered before the -Federated Commercial Clubs of Minnesota, January 17, -1908. 14p. pa.</p> - -<div class="smaller"> - -<p>Address S. R. Miles, President, National Retail Hardware Dealers -Ass’n, Mason City, Iowa.</p> - -</div> - -<p>*Ordway, John A. Parcels Post: Address before the New England -Drygoods Ass’n, March, 1911. Leaflet No. 9. 15p. pa. -American League of Associations.</p> - -<div class="smaller"> - -<p>Address the American League of Associations, Room 343, Rand-McNally -Bldg., Chicago, Ill.</p> - -</div> - -<p>Parcels Post: from the Standpoint of an Iowa Editor. Parcels -Post Circular No. 3, Series 1911. 4p. pa. Iowa Retail Hardware -Association.</p> - -<div class="smaller"> - -<p>Address A. R. Sale, Iowa Retail Hardware Ass’n, Mason City, -Iowa.</p> - -</div> - -<p>*Parcels Post Problem: From the Standpoint of the Towns and -Small Cities. 30p. pa. National Hardware Bulletin.</p> - -<div class="smaller"> - -<p>Address M. L. Corey, Secretary, National Retail Hardware Association, -Argos, Ind.</p> - -</div> - -<p>Shall the Country Towns Be Destroyed by a Local Rural Parcels -Post. Pamphlet No. 5. Home Advancement Series. 30p. pa. -American League of Associations.</p> - -<div class="smaller"> - -<p>Most of this pamphlet is a reprint of pp. 274-96 of the Report -of the Hearings before the Committee on the Post-Office and Post-Roads, -April, 1910. [Apply to M. L. Corey, Argos, Ind.]</p> - -</div> - -<p>*Smith, S. C. Parcels Post: Speech in the House of Representatives, -March 3, 1908. 15p. pa. ’08. Govt. Ptg. Office.</p> - -<div class="smaller"> - -<p>Reprinted from the Congressional Record. 42: 2928-31. Mr. 3, ’08. -[Address S. C. Smith, Representative, Washington, D. C.]</p> - -</div> - -<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxi" id="Page_xxi">[xxi]</a></span></p> - -<p>Spofford, C. W. A. B. C. of Parcels Post; A. Catechism, 11p. pa.</p> - -<p>Trans-Mississippi Commercial Congress, Proceedings, 1907. pp. -232-40. Parcels Post.</p> - -<h4><i>Magazine References</i></h4> - -<p>*Independent. 70: 72-3. Ja. 12, ’11. Objections to the Parcels -Post. Allan W. Clark.</p> - -<p>Independent. 70: 185. Ja. 26, ’11. Parcels Post Again. Sylvester -C. Smith.</p> - -<p>*Journal of Political Economy. 16: 417-35. Jl. ’08. Shall the -Scope of Governmental Functions Be Enlarged so as to Include -the Express Business? Albert N. Merritt.</p> - -<p>North American Review. 174: 807-19. Je. ’02. Defects and -Abuses in Our Postal System. Henry A. Castle.</p> - -<div class="smaller"> - -<p>Parcels Post. pp. 812-4.</p> - -</div> - -<p>North American Review. 178: 222-34. F. ’04. Postal Service. E. -F. Loud.</p> - -<div class="smaller"> - -<p>Parcels Post. pp. 224-6.</p> - -</div> - -<p>Outlook. 96: 794. D. 3, ’10. Parcels Post. George P. Engelhard.</p> - -</div> - -<hr /> - -<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[1]</a></span></p> - -<h1><i>SELECTED ARTICLES -ON THE PARCELS POST</i></h1> - -<h2>INTRODUCTION</h2> - -<p>The parcels post is not a new question. It has been the -subject of popular discussion for years, and several of our -postmasters-general have recommended an extension of our -present system, sufficient, at least, to put it on an equal basis -with our foreign service. Those who are familiar with the -parcels post systems of other countries, and those who believe -that the express companies should not be permitted to monopolize -so large a part of the parcels-carrying trade, are in favor -of these recommendations. On the other hand, those who believe -that the government should not enter into any commercial -undertaking, and those who fear that the change will be -detrimental to the country communities and will result in the -centralization of our population in the large cities, are strongly -opposed to any increase in our present rates, or in the size of -the package to be accepted.</p> - -<p>There are several organizations who are actively engaged -at the present time in supporting or opposing all attempts to -enact parcels post legislation. The Postal Progress League, -with headquarters at 125 East 23d St., New York City, has -for its aim the improvement of our postal service, and is at -present actively promoting the cause of the parcels post. This -organization is made up of manufacturers, wholesalers, publishers -and importers, and is supported by many of the state -Granges. The Postal Express Federation is a new organization, -formed for the express purpose of urging a reform of -our parcels post service, and is supported by many of the same<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[2]</a></span> -organizations which are back of the Postal Progress League. -The American League of Associations (headquarters at Room -343, Rand-McNally Building, Chicago, Ill.), is composed of -wholesalers in all lines of merchandise. Its object is to promote -the welfare of the small towns and country communities, -and to oppose the centralization of population in cities. It is -at present actively engaged in fighting the parcels post.</p> - -<p>These organizations as well as several others, named in the -bibliography given elsewhere in this volume, publish and distribute -literature for and against the parcels post, and the student -of this subject will find it profitable to get into communication -with them.</p> - -<p>Hearings on the subject of a parcels post have been held -before the House Committee on the Post-Office and Post Roads, -at two different times, in April, 1910, and in June, 1911. At -these hearings, have appeared representatives of the associations -named in the preceding paragraph and of others who -approve or oppose the recommendations for an enlarged parcels -post. Among those who have appeared in favor of the parcels -post are the various state Granges and farmer’s organizations, -the American Dyers and Cleaners Association, the Manufacturing -Perfumers Association, the Associated Retailers of St. -Louis, the Pennsylvania State Federation of Labor, the Society -of American Florists and Ornamental Horticulturists, and the -National American Woman’s Suffrage Association. Other societies -opposing the parcels post are the National Retail -Hardware Association, the United Commercial Travelers, the -National Association of Implement and Vehicle Dealers’ Associations, -the National Associations of Retail Druggists and -Grocers, and various Oil, Paint, and Varnish Clubs and -Associations.</p> - -<p>Postmaster-General George von L. Meyer recommended -that our present parcels post system, which is now limited to -parcels weighing four pounds or less, be extended to include -all parcels of eleven pounds or less, and that the rate be reduced -from sixteen to twelve cents a pound. He also recommended -that a similar post be established on the rural routes -for all parcels of eleven pounds or less, with a rate of five cents<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[3]</a></span> -for the first pound and two cents for each additional pound. -Various bills have been introduced into Congress embodying -part or all of these suggestions. Other measures that have been -presented provide that the government be given a complete -monopoly of the parcels-carrying trade. One bill of this kind -introduced by Representative David Lewis of Maryland, provides -that the government shall take over the business of the -express companies and have complete control of the carrying -business in parcels under a given weight. This bill also provides -that the zone-system of rates, now in operation in Germany, -be adopted.</p> - -<p>The General Discussion, following this Introduction, contains -data in regard to our present parcels post systems both -foreign and domestic, also similar data concerning the systems -of other countries. It also contains information regarding -many of the recommendations that have been made for an enlarged -parcels post and the measures that have been presented -to Congress. The student is advised to familiarize himself -with the facts given in this discussion before proceeding to take -up the arguments for and against the parcels post.</p> - -<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[4]</a></span></p> - -<hr /> - -<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[5]</a></span></p> - -<h2>GENERAL DISCUSSION</h2> - -<h3>Up to Members of Congress.</h3> - -<p class="center">D. M. Carr.</p> - -<p>Bills have been introduced in the present Congress, by -Senators Burnham and Kean, with a view of further improving -the postal service. These measures are for the purpose of -enabling the postal department to extend its parcel delivery -service, commonly designated as the “parcels post.”</p> - -<p>There is a large percentage of citizens who strongly advocate -an enlargement of the parcels carrying service performed -by the government. A number of foreign countries have for -years maintained parcels post systems on broad gauge plans; in -fact, in Great Britain, in Germany and a few other countries, -the parcels post is conducted in a manner so as to almost -monopolize the express business. But in these countries conditions, -both geographically and commercially, are vastly different -from conditions that obtain within the United States. In the -old countries, there is greater density of population, and distances -which mail matter traverses are about one-thirteenth the -distance that the average piece of mail matter is carried in the -continental United States.</p> - -<p>In considering any postal innovation, it is essential that not -alone the operation and the revenue of the postal department -be taken into consideration, but also what the effect of the innovation -will be upon the industries located in various districts -of the United States. Some of the bills introduced in -Congress, chief among them, that introduced by Congressman -Hearst during a former session, and the one by Congressman -Henry of Connecticut, during the present session, have elements -that mark them as undesirable and thoroughly impractical -under prevailing conditions, or any possible conditions that -may arise in the United States during the next quarter century.</p> - -<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[6]</a></span></p> - -<p>The postal department is not conducted for the purpose of -profit; rather it is conducted to perform a special service, -which governmental function can best perform for the people. -But the department should be self-sustaining. The revenue -derived for the services rendered the people should be sufficient -to cover all expense of operation economically performed. Any -legislation involving the performance of this service for less -than cost to the government does not appeal to the economist -as wise or desirable. Yet the postal department does perform -certain services at a loss, although there are compensating circumstances -which more than overbalance the expenditure. In -the carrying of newspapers and periodicals, under the present -system, there is probably a loss, but at the same time the -people receive a general benefit far outweighing the cost to the -government by having cheap and good literature and such information -as the press of the country conveys and this at the -minimum of expense. The second class rate, a subsidy granted -the press, has been instrumental to a degree impossible of -estimation in improving the intelligence of the people and raising -the standard of citizenship.</p> - -<p>The proposals set forth in the Henry bill, involving the -establishment of a parcels post system with a maximum weight -of 11-pounds and the maximum charge for maximum weight -25 cents from one postoffice in the United States to any other -postoffice or where mail is delivered, are objectionable from -an economic view. In the first place, such service would entail -heavy losses annually to the department; these losses possibly -reaching $150,000,000 or $200,000,000 annually. Then again -this system of parcels post would be a wonderful factor in -increasing the unequal distribution of business throughout the -nation. Geographical and other conditions greatly vary throughout -the states of the United States. In the thickly populated -districts, where manufacturing is carried on, the cost of labor -and the cost of production of articles of manufacture, ranges -from 20 to 50 per cent less than in other sections, principally -in the agricultural regions. A parcels post that allows the -transportation of merchandise at as low a rate as that provided -for in the Henry bill, would enable consumers residing in agricultural<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[7]</a></span> -districts, where wages are high, to purchase their goods -in the lowest priced markets in the United States, and the results -of this system would be to concentrate industries in the -large cities and densely populated districts to the detriment of -agricultural and other sections now undergoing commercial and -manufacturing development. This would retard the growth -of towns and the upbuilding of manufacturing industries in -those sections. Thus it can be seen that there would be no -compensating effects to justify the installation of a parcels post -of this character.</p> - -<p>The exorbitant charges made by the express companies -and other carriers have caused the people of the United States -to demand that the package carrying machinery of the United -States postal department be enlarged. Recognizing this demand, -Postmaster-General Meyer in his annual report made -the recommendation that the parcels carrying service of the -government be broadened and that the parcels post be extended -so as to make the maximum weight of a package carried -11 pounds with a graduated rate up to one pound and a pound -rate of 12 cents, making the maximum rate for the maximum -weight $1.32. He also recommended that a parcels post be -established over rural delivery routes, starting from the post-office -where the route emanates and ending upon a rural route. -For this service he recommended that the limit of weight be 11 -pounds and the charge 5 cents for the first pound and 2 cents -for each additional pound, making the maximum charge for -an 11 pound package 25 cents, and that this service be limited -to bonafide merchants and others residing along the line of -a rural route.</p> - -<p>In making his recommendation as to parcels post enlargement, -it is evident that the postmaster-general well considered -not alone the welfare of the department as to revenues sufficient -for proper maintenance and the installation of a more -efficient service, but as well carefully weighed the economic -aspects as they relate to geographical and commercial conditions -throughout the Union.</p> - -<p>A careful study into Mr. Meyer’s plan will show that it -does not contemplate any revolution in commercial methods.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[8]</a></span> -Notwithstanding the charges made to the contrary, by those -opposed to his views, it does not appear that should his system -be adopted by Congress that the large houses doing an exclusive -mail order business would have any advantage over the -merchants of the smaller cities and towns. The rural parcels -post would certainly be not alone advantageous to the twelve -or fifteen millions of people residing in agricultural districts, -who are now served by more than 38,000 rural carriers, but -would be of great value to the live merchants in the smaller -towns who at a minimum of expense could utilize the rural -service for the delivery of goods to their patrons in the -country.</p> - -<p>The bills introduced, respectively by Senators Burnham and -Kean, are in perfect harmony with the recommendations of the -postmaster-general.</p> - -<p>With the diversion of small packages from the express -companies to the mails, the revenues to the postoffice department -would be proportionately greater than the increased cost -occasioned by the greater tonnage of matter carried.</p> - -<p>During the past fiscal year, the expense of maintaining the -rural delivery routes was in excess of $26,000,000. The installation -of a parcels delivery over the rural routes would most -likely during the first year place the rural delivery on a self-sustaining -basis. There are 38,253 rural routes. Should each -carrier over a route on his daily trip carry only 88 pounds of -merchandise from the local stores to the patrons on his route, -it would give the government a revenue of approximately -$24,000,000 annually, and this service can be performed without -other carrying equipment than rural carriers now have.</p> - -<p>When every phase of the recommendations of Postmaster-General -Meyer be carefully weighed, it becomes apparent that -his plans are based upon soundest business judgment.</p> - -<p>Opposition to Mr. Meyer’s recommendations comes from -three sources, namely:</p> - -<p>Large manufacturers, jobbers and other classes of business -men who annually spend enormous amounts for letter postage.</p> - -<p>Country merchants who are unduly alarmed over the growth<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[9]</a></span> -of the catalogue houses, and who fear that a parcels post extension -will increase the mail order business to their detriment.</p> - -<p>Express companies, whose revenues would be decreased by -operation of the system.</p> - -<hr /> - -<h3>Data Relative to Proposed Extension of Parcel Post. -pp. 1-6.</h3> - -<p class="right">OFFICE OF THE POSTMASTER-GENERAL,<br /> -<i>Washington, D. C., March 4, 1908.</i></p> - -<p><span class="smcap">My Dear Senator</span>: It affords me great pleasure, in compliance -with your request, to place at your disposal the data which are -available relative to the proposed extension of the parcel post.</p> - -<p>It does not appear to be generally appreciated that a comprehensive -system of parcels post is already in satisfactory -operation in most foreign countries. Exhibit No. 1 gives detailed -information on this subject. I show here the limit of -weight which has been fixed in a number of instances:</p> - -<table summary="Weight limits"> - <tr> - <th></th><th class="tdr">Pounds.</th> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>Great Britain</td><td class="tdr">11</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>Germany</td><td class="tdr">110</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>France</td><td class="tdr">22</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>Italy</td><td class="tdr">11</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>Chile</td><td class="tdr">11</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>New Zealand</td><td class="tdr">11</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>Austria</td><td class="tdr">110</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>Belgium</td><td class="tdr">132</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>The Netherlands</td><td class="tdr">11</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>Cuba</td><td class="tdr">11</td> - </tr> -</table> - -<p>The rates in the countries mentioned are much lower than -those shown in Exhibit No. 2, which have been recommended -for the general parcel post in the United States.</p> - -<p>The present rate on the general parcel post is 16 cents a -pound for people in our own country, the limit of weight being -4 pounds, while the rate from the United States to 29 foreign -countries is 12 cents a pound and the limit of weight to 24 of -these countries is 11 pounds. In other words, our own people -must pay 4 cents a pound more for the privilege of dispatching<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[10]</a></span> -packages to each other than when destined to residents of a -foreign country. I have therefore urged a rate of 12 cents a -pound for packages forwarded through the mails to post-offices -in the United States and its possessions, subject to the same -regulations as exist at the present time, with the exception of -increasing the weight limit to 11 pounds. The service can be -rendered at a cost well within the rates recommended.</p> - -<p>According to the report of the record of weight of second-class -mail matter, transmitted by the Post-Office Department -to the House of Representatives under date of February 1, -1907, the average haul of all second-class matter was 540 miles.</p> - -<p>Of the total receipts of the Post-Office Department 69 per -cent are expended for labor and supplies, and 7 per cent -for conveyance charges other than those paid the railroads for -transporting the mail. A general rate for parcel post of 12 -cents a pound would produce a revenue of $240 a ton. Even -on the basis of a 540-mile average haul, I find the debit and -credit sides of 1 ton of parcel post to be as follows:</p> - -<table summary="Profit"> - <tr> - <td>By postage</td><td class="tdr"></td><td class="tdr">$240.00</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>To railroad transportation, 540 miles, at 5½ cents</td><td class="tdr">$29.70</td><td class="tdr"></td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>Other transportation charges</td><td class="tdr">16.80</td><td class="tdr"></td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>Labor and supplies</td><td class="tdr">165.60</td><td class="tdr"></td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td class="tdindent">Total cost</td><td class="tdr tdtotal"></td><td class="tdr">212.10</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td class="tdindent">Profit</td><td class="tdr"></td><td class="tdr tdtotal">27.90</td> - </tr> -</table> - -<p>A local parcel post confined to rural delivery routes is also -advocated at the rates given in Exhibit No. 3. The Department -favors the establishment of this special service because of its -ability to render it with great advantage to the farmer, the -country merchant, and other patrons of the routes, as the -necessary machinery (over 38,000 routes now regularly covered -by rural carriers) is in operation. There are some 15,000,000 -people living on these routes, which shows the vast possibilities -of the rural service. It has been estimated that if but -three packages of the maximum weight were handled each trip -on the rural routes now established the resulting revenue, -even at the low rates given, would more than wipe out the -postal deficit. The increased cancellations would automatically -advance the salaries of postmasters of the fourth class, and the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[11]</a></span> -remaining revenue, which would be clear gain, would be of -great assistance in making the rural service self-sustaining. -The rural service will, in all probability, cost the government -this year $34,000,000, an increase of $10,000,000 over last year.</p> - -<p>The history and advantages of the rural delivery should be -understood by our people. There is a feeling in many quarters -that it is an extravagance and an unnecessary drain upon the -postal revenues. The first rural route was established in the -latter part of 1896, $14,840 being expended for rural delivery -during that fiscal year. At that time the postal deficit was -$11,411,779. During the fiscal year ended June 30, 1907, the -expenditures for rural delivery aggregated $26,671,699, while -the postal deficit showed a decrease, as compared with 1897, -of $4,800,000, the deficit amounting to $6,653,282. This would -seem to show that while the expense incurred for maintaining -rural delivery is great, yet the rural delivery has been instrumental -in increasing the general postal receipts. However, its -benefits to our people can not be measured in dollars and cents.</p> - -<p>That a local parcel post would be of material advantage to -the retail merchant in competition with mail-order houses is -seen at once when it is pointed out that the latter, at the proposed -general parcel post rate of 12 cents a pound, would be -obliged to pay $1.32 for sending an 11-pound package to a rural -route patron, a difference in favor of the local storekeeper -of about 10 cents a pound, or $1.07 on an 11-pound package.</p> - -<p>Letters and petitions for the extension of the parcel post are -being received from all sections of the country. Many commercial -bodies formerly opposed to any action of this kind are on -record as being heartily in favor of it.</p> - -<p>On the other hand, objections have been raised to the -measures the Department is advocating. Although no sound -argument has been advanced in opposition, the contentions -which have been made are not without interest. I mention -the more important of them, at the same time giving the -replies which they have elicited:</p> - -<p>It has been stated that the Department is not equipped to -deliver 11-pound parcels received in the general mails. The -present postal regulations provide that where a package is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[12]</a></span> -of undue size or weight a formal notice shall be sent the addressee -requesting him to call for it. This practice, would continue -were the weight limit increased to 11 pounds, in the case -of offices having free delivery. Nor would it work a hardship, -for under the present limit of 4 pounds the average weight of -parcels sent through the mails is but one-third of a pound. -Increasing the weight limit would not have nearly as great an -effect on the average weight of parcels mailed as seems to be -commonly supposed. Where packages were addressed to persons -living on rural routes they would, of course, be delivered -to the boxes of the patrons by rural carriers, who would not -thereby be inconvenienced.</p> - -<p>The claim that the special local rate recommended for the -parcel post on rural routes would eventually be extended to include -the entire postal service has been given considerable publicity. -The impossibility of this becomes apparent when attention -is directed to the cost of railroad transportation, which has -no part in the former service. About $45,000,000 were paid last -year for mail transportation and $6,000,000 for postal cars.</p> - -<p>Others have said that large mail-order houses would, under -the proposed law, utilize the special parcel post or rural routes -through agents to the great disadvantage of the country merchant, -first assembling their orders and despatching them by -express or freight to suitable distributing points. The Department -has recommended provisions which will prevent any such -use of the routes. It should be remembered, too, that even in -the absence of a specific prohibition of this nature, any systematic -attempt upon the part of a mail-order house to thus -distribute its wares would necessitate the employment of many -thousands of local representatives. The catalogues of these -concerns indicate in no uncertain way that they attribute their -success, in large measure, to their low selling expense, and that -the absence of any sort of agents is the principal feature of their -argument in accounting for the supposedly low prices of their -goods.</p> - -<p>The cry of “class legislation” has been raised. There is, -of course, no discrimination involved, for all who can be -reached by rural carriers will be accommodated. It would be as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[13]</a></span> -reasonable to decry the laws which permit the delivery of mail -to patrons living on rural routes, while persons differently -situated are obliged to make a trip to a near-by post-office to -obtain their letters.</p> - -<p>Those who claim that an increase in the weight limit would -work an injury to country merchants appear to have the impression -that mail-order houses now deliver their goods extensively -through the postal service, and that this practice would -largely increase if the recommendations which have been made -become law. Upon a moment’s reflection it will be perceived -that the present rate of 16 cents a pound ($16 per hundred-weight), -as well as the proposed rate of 12 cents a pound ($12 -per hundred-weight), are alike prohibitive on practically all -lines of merchandise. Mail-order houses make their shipments -usually by freight or express and would continue to do so.</p> - -<p>Antagonism to the proposed measures, when analyzed and -found not to be the result of selfish motives, appears to be -based upon inaccurate or insufficient information. In illustration, -I desire to invite attention to a communication of the Richmond -Commercial Club, of Richmond, Ind., which appeared -in the Congressional Record of January 4, 1908. In this letter -the statement was made that a certain mail-order house would -save $40,000 a year on the mailing of catalogues alone. Catalogues -are rated as third-class matter, whereas the Department’s -recommendations with respect to parcel post relate to -fourth-class matter only. Catalogues are now mailable at 1 -cent for 2 ounces, or 8 cents a pound, 4 cents a pound less than -the rate proposed for the general parcel post. The mail-order -house referred to, therefore, would gain nothing under the -proposed law in the mailing of its catalogues.</p> - -<p>With the adoption of new conveniences of life by urban -residents, and the ever-increasing attractions of the city, especially -potent in their influence upon the younger generation, the -importance of affording farmers and ruralites generally every -legitimate advantage becomes more and more apparent. The -free rural delivery has improved materially and intellectually -the life of great numbers of these people. Is it too much to -ask that the Department shall make a further use of this<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[14]</a></span> -important system; a use which, while adding appreciably to the -postal revenues, will directly and vitally benefit every man, -woman, and child within reach of a rural route? The countryman -would have the necessities of life delivered at his gate at -an average cost of 2 cents a pound, thereby facilitating and -increasing consumption. This would mean augmentation of -the trade of thousands of country merchants. The commercial -traveler should appreciate the advantages of this system; it -would increase his orders because the country merchant buys -from the jobber or the wholesaler. Every component part of -our commercial system would feel the effects of an increased -prosperity.</p> - -<p>It would inevitably tend toward the improvement of the -roads. Better roads and improved postal facilities in the rural -districts would result in increased values of farm lands. The -rural service as now organized has accomplished something in -this direction; its enlargement will add to the good attained.</p> - -<p class="center">Believe me, faithfully yours,</p> - -<p class="right">G. v. L. Meyer.</p> - -<p>Hon. Henry E. Burnham,<br /> -<i>United States Senate, Washington</i>.</p> - -<div class="smaller"> - -<h4>Exhibit 1.</h4> - -<p>Parcel Post Rates in the Domestic Service of the Countries Named.</p> - -<p>Great Britain.—Postage rates for the first pound, 3 pence (6 -cents), and for each additional pound, 1 penny (2 cents); maximum -weight, 11 pounds; greatest length, 3 feet 6 inches; greatest length -and girth combined, 6 feet.</p> - -<p>New Zealand and the States Composing the Commonwealth for -Australia.—Limits of weight and size, same as in Great Britain. -Postage rates, 6 pence (12 cents) for the first pound, and 3 pence -(6 cents) for each additional pound.</p> - -<p>Germany.—Greatest weight, 50 kilograms (about 110 pounds); -no limit of size. Postage rates: For all parcels conveyed not more -than 10 geographic miles, 25 pfennig (6 cents), and 50 pfennig -(13 cents) for greater distance; if a parcel weighs more than 5 -kilograms (11 pounds av.), it is charged for each additional kilogram -(2 pounds) carried 10 miles, 5 pfennig (1 cent); 20 miles, -10 pfennig (3 cents); 50 miles, 20 pfennig (5 cents); 100 miles, 30 -pfennig (8 cents); 150 miles, 40 pfennig (10 cents); and more than -150 miles, 50 pfennig (13 cents). Unwieldy parcels are charged in -addition 50 per cent of the above rates.</p> - -<p>Austria.—Greatest weight, 50 kilograms (110 pounds); except -that parcels containing gold or silver coin may weigh up to 65 -kilograms (143 pounds). Postage rates: Parcels up to 5 kilograms -(11 pounds) in weight are charged 30 heller (6 cents) for the first -10 miles, and 60 heller (12 cents) for greater distances. A parcel -weighing more than 5 kilograms (11 pounds) is charged for each<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[15]</a></span> -kilogram (2 pounds) in addition to the above rates, for the first -10 miles, 6 heller (1 cent); 20 miles, 12 heller (2 cents); 50 miles, -24 heller (5 cents); 100 miles, 36 heller (7 cents); 150 miles, 48 -heller (10 cents), and more than 150 miles, 60 heller (12 cents).</p> - -<p>France.—Greatest weight 10 kilograms (about 22 pounds); no -limit of size. Postage rates: Up to 3 kilograms (7 pounds), 60 -centimes (12 cents) delivered at the railway station, and 85 -centimes (17 cents) delivered at a residence; from 3 to 5 kilograms -(7 to 11 pounds), 80 centimes (16 cents) at a station, and 1 franc -5 centimes (21 cents) at residence; from 5 to 10 kilograms (11 to -22 pounds), 1 franc 25 centimes (25 cents) at a station, and 1 -franc 50 centimes (30 cents) at a residence.</p> - -<p>Belgium.—Greatest weight 60 kilograms (about 132 pounds); -no limit of size, but unwieldy parcels are charged 50 per cent in -addition to the following rates for any distance: Parcels up to 5 -kilograms (11 pounds), 50 centimes (10 cents)—or if by express -trains, 80 centimes (16 cents); up to 10 kilograms (22 pounds), 60 -centimes (12 cents)—or if by express trains, 1 franc (20 cents); -for each additional 10 kilograms (22 pounds), 10 centimes (2 -cents)—or if sent by express trains, 50 centimes (10 cents) additional. -Fee for delivering at residences, 30 centimes (6 cents).</p> - -<p>Italy.—Greatest weight, 5 kilograms (11 pounds). For ordinary -parcels, greatest size in any direction, 60 centimeters (2 feet), -except rolls which may measure 1 meter (40 inches—3 feet 4 -inches) in length by 20 centimeters (8 inches) in thickness. Postage -rates for a parcel not exceeding 3 kilograms (7 pounds), 60 -centimes (12 cents); and 1 franc (20 cents) for a parcel exceeding -that weight. A parcel which exceeds 60 centimeters (2 -feet) in any direction, but does not exceed 1½ meters (5 feet), is -admitted to the mails as an “unwieldy” parcel and is charged, in -addition to the above rates, 30 centimes (6 cents) if it does not -weigh more than 3 kilograms (7 pounds), and 50 centimes (10 -cents) if it exceeds that weight.</p> - -<p>The Netherlands.—Greatest weight, 5 kilograms (11 pounds); -greatest size, 25 cubic decimeters (1,525 cubic inches), or 1 meter -(3 feet 4 inches) in any direction. Postage rates: 15 (6) cents -(Dutch) up to 1 kilogram (2 pounds); 20 (8) cents from 1 to 3 kilograms -(2 to 7 pounds); 25 cents (10) from 3 to 5 kilograms (7 to -11 pounds).</p> - -<p>Chile.—Greatest weight, 5 kilograms (11 pounds); must not -measure more than 60 centimeters (2 feet) in any direction. Postage -rates: 30 centavos (10 cents) if a parcel does not weigh more -than 3 kilograms (7 pounds); 50 centavos (17 cents) if it weighs -more.</p> - -<p>Cuba.—Greatest weight, 11 pounds; greatest size, 3 feet 6 -inches in length by 2 feet 6 inches in width. Postage rates: 10 -centavos (10 cents) a pound up to 5 pounds; and 6 centavos (6 -cents) for each additional pound.</p> - -<h4>Exhibit 2.</h4> - -<p>Rates recommended by the Postmaster-General in his annual -report (year ended June 30, 1907) for packages forwarded through -the mails to post-offices in the United States and its possessions, -subject to the regulations which exist at the present time, with -the exception of increasing the weight limit to 11 pounds.</p> - -<table summary="Recommended rates"> - <tr> - <th></th><th class="tdr">Cents.</th> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>One ounce</td><td class="tdr">1</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>Over 1 ounce and not exceeding 3 ounces</td><td class="tdr">2</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>Over 3 ounces and not exceeding 4 ounces</td><td class="tdr">3</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>Over 4 ounces and not exceeding 5 ounces</td><td class="tdr">4</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>Over 5 ounces and not exceeding 6 ounces</td><td class="tdr">5</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>Over 6 ounces and not exceeding 8 ounces</td><td class="tdr">6</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>Over 8 ounces and not exceeding 12 ounces</td><td class="tdr">9</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>Over 12 ounces and not exceeding 16 ounces</td><td class="tdr">12</td> - </tr> -</table> - -<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[16]</a></span></p> - -<h4>Exhibit 3.</h4> - -<p>Rates recommended by the Postmaster-General in his annual -report (fiscal year ended June 30, 1907) for packages covered by the -special local parcel post on rural delivery routes.</p> - -<table summary="Recommended rates, rural"> - <tr> - <th></th><th class="tdr">Cents.</th> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>For the first pound</td><td class="tdr">5</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>For each additional pound, up to 11 pounds</td><td class="tdr">2</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>For fractional parts of a pound:</td><td></td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td class="tdindent">Two ounces or less</td><td class="tdr">1</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td class="tdindent">Over 2 ounces and up to 4 ounces</td><td class="tdr">2</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td class="tdindent">Over 4 and up to 8 ounces</td><td class="tdr">3</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td class="tdindent">Over 8 and up to 12 ounces</td><td class="tdr">4</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td class="tdindent">Over 12 ounces and up to 1 pound</td><td class="tdr">5</td> - </tr> -</table> - -</div> - -<hr /> - -<h3>Our Postal Express.</h3> - -<p class="center">James L. Cowles.</p> - -<p>The United States post-office has always been an express -service, although Congress long confined the business to sealed -parcels of very small weights—not over 3 pounds—and at very -high rates graduated according to distance, with no insurance -whatever against loss or damage in the mails. In 1874, however, -the business was extended over all kinds of merchandise -in unsealed parcels at a common rate of one cent each two -ounces, regardless at once of distance and of the volume of a -patron’s business. This placed the humblest citizen in the -most out of the way postal district of the country on a par -with the biggest corporation in our greatest metropolis as to -the cost of the transportation of his produce and of his supplies -in parcels up to four pounds, and, though still with no -insurance against loss or damage, the new postal express immediately -became a dangerous competitor to the private express -company with its distance rates based on what the subject will -bear and always discriminating in favor of the big town against -the little town, the big corporation against the ordinary citizen.</p> - -<p>The private express interests got quickly to work, therefore, -and Congress soon checked up the growing postal express business -by increasing the postal rate one hundred per cent—from -eight to sixteen cents a pound. Later Congress bowed to the -powerful book and seed interests of the country and reduced<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[17]</a></span> -the rate on their merchandise to the old rate of 1874, and -now, for many years, the post-office and the public have been -subjected to two sets of rates on matter indistinguishable both -in character and as to the cost of their transportation.</p> - -<p>The evil of this absurd postal classification, continued these -twenty years by Congress, becomes decidedly evident when -our domestic service is compared with the foreign parcels post -services established by President Taft and Postmaster-General -Hitchcock, with their common 11 pound weight limit at 12 -cents a pound, on all merchandise posted from the United -States to foreign countries and from those countries to the -United States:</p> - -<table summary="Comparison of postal services"> - <tr> - <td colspan="2">From Austria:</td><td></td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td class="tdr">4½</td><td>pounds</td><td class="tdr">.35</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td class="tdr"><span class="fraction">11</span></td><td>pounds</td><td class="tdr">.86</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td colspan="2">From Italy:</td><td></td><td></td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td class="tdr"><span class="fraction">7</span></td><td>pounds</td><td class="tdr">.39</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td class="tdr"><span class="fraction">11</span></td><td>pounds</td><td class="tdr">.79</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td colspan="2">From Norway:</td><td></td><td></td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td class="tdr">2½</td><td>pounds</td><td class="tdr">.16</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td class="tdr"><span class="fraction">11</span></td><td>pounds</td><td class="tdr">.96</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td colspan="2">From Germany:</td><td></td><td></td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td class="tdr">4½</td><td>pounds</td><td class="tdr">.33</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td class="tdr"><span class="fraction">11</span></td><td>pounds</td><td class="tdr">.81</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td colspan="2">From Belgium:</td><td></td><td></td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td class="tdr">4½</td><td>pounds</td><td class="tdr">.35</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td class="tdr"><span class="fraction">11</span></td><td>pounds</td><td class="tdr">1.10</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td colspan="2">U. S. Foreign Rates:</td><td></td><td></td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td class="tdr">2¼</td><td>pounds</td><td class="tdr">.36</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td class="tdr"><span class="fraction">7</span></td><td>pounds</td><td class="tdr">.84</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td class="tdr"><span class="fraction">11</span></td><td>pounds</td><td class="tdr">1.32</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td colspan="2">U. S. Domestic Service:</td><td></td><td></td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td class="tdr">2¼</td><td>pounds</td><td class="tdr">.36</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td class="tdr">4½</td><td>pounds (2 parcels)</td><td class="tdr">.72</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td class="tdr"><span class="fraction">7</span></td><td>pounds (2 parcels)</td><td class="tdr">1.12</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td class="tdr"><span class="fraction">11</span></td><td>pounds (3 parcels)</td><td class="tdr">1.76</td> - </tr> -</table> - -<p>Under the English post-American express arrangement English -postal parcels now come to New York three pounds for -sixty cents; seven pounds for 84c; eleven pounds for $1.08, and -these parcels are forwarded by the American express company -throughout the country at a common rate of twenty-four -cents a parcel, eight cents a pound on a three-pound parcel; -about three and a half cents a pound on a seven-pound parcel, -and less than two and a half cents a pound on an eleven-pound -parcel. Meantime the express company taxes domestic -merchandise of the same weights from 25 cents to $3.20, according -to the distance traversed, while Congress taxes the -public for a similar domestic postal service, three pounds, -forty-eight cents; seven pounds, 2 parcels, $1.12; eleven pounds, -3 parcels, $1.76.</p> - -<hr /> - -<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[18]</a></span></p> - -<h3>Data Relative to Proposed Extension of Parcel Post. -pp. 8-14.</h3> - -<p class="center">From The Boston Herald.</p> - -<p class="center">Ernest G. Walker.</p> - -<p>Postmaster-General Wanamaker first actively urged the establishment -of a parcels post on a large scale. He summed -up the situation epigrammatically in his 100 reasons for it and -only 4 reasons against it—those 4 being the express companies. -Others after him, especially the late Postmaster-General Bissell, -made like recommendations. But Mr. Meyer now has an -advantage in his campaign which none of his predecessors had -in the rural delivery routes. Every one of the many thousands -of routes would be a little parcels service in itself, aside from -being a line of communication, by which small packages could -be conveyed from all parts of the country or to any part of -the country. Mr. Meyer is building much upon that fact. The -local service at cheaper rates will also protect the local store-keepers, -to which the big department stores and mail-order establishments -are bogeys.</p> - -<p>Ever since he announced his intention of urging a better -parcels post service for the United States, the Postmaster-General -has been the recipient of many letters. These come -from various classes of people. Most of them commend his -plan, but the retail associations, such as the associations of -hardware men and grocers, come out in bold opposition. It is -such people as these that the Postmaster-General hopes to -convert when they are brought to understand the details of what -he wants to do. Some of these critics, besides claiming that -the legislation would favor the catalogue houses, argue that -the government should not go into a general freight business -and that if the express companies are charging exorbitant rates, -the Interstate Commerce Commission, which now has authority -over them, should step in and require that the rates be lowered.</p> - -<p>The operations of parcels post in other countries make a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[19]</a></span> -very interesting transportation chapter. They are conducted -on a gigantic scale and, apart from what J. Henniker Heaton, -long an English member of Parliament from Canterbury, and -a great advocate of postal reforms, calls “grandmotherly regulations,” -have worked with practically world-wide success. Shopping -by mail is made easy, whether one in the country would -trade with the local draper or the big metropolitan merchant.</p> - -<p>Great Britain’s conservative enactments will likely be a model -for any extension of the parcels post service by Congress. The -service is almost twenty-five years old over there. It has become -one of the most important and highly appreciated postal -features. Its growth has been continuous and phenomenal. -The scope has frequently been broadened. There was an early -clamor for an agricultural parcels post. The owners of small -farms in remote localities wanted it. The growers of spring -flowers in Kerry said it would enable them to compete with -the south of France and the Scilly Isles. Eventually the agricultural -parcels post was authorized and also spacious dimensions -for packages. Flower growers can now send full length -orchid spikes and long-stemmed roses by post, where formerly -only simple blooms were admissable.</p> - -<h4><i>Send Fish, Eggs and Fruit</i></h4> - -<p>The produce of the culturists goes forward to London and -other big English cities in tremendous volume. Fresh fish, dispatched -from seaport towns to the large hotels, are delivered -with celerity. Meats, cheese, fruits, vegetables, and freshly laid -eggs in mail packages under the 11-pound limit form a very -considerable factor in the commerce of the Kingdom.</p> - -<p>The general rates are low. A 1-pound parcel takes a three-penny -stamp. That is 6 cents in our money. For 2 pounds -an 8-cent stamp is required; for three pounds, a 10-cent stamp; -for 5 pounds, 12 cents; for 7 pounds, 14 cents; 8 pounds, 16 -cents; 9 pounds, 18 cents; 10 pounds, 20 cents, and 11 pounds, -22 cents. Four-pound parcels cost as much as five pounds, and -6 pounds cost as much as 7 pounds. For inland parcels 3 feet -6 inches is the maximum length; 6 feet the maximum measurement -for length and girth. These have been adopted as standard<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[20]</a></span> -dimensions in the services of numerous other countries. -Parcels should not be posted at a letter box, but presented at -the counter of a postoffice. The government virtually guarantees -the sender against loss up to $10. Payment of a registry -fee of 4 cents, in addition to the regular postage, insures the -parcel for $25; a 25-cent registry stamp carries an insurance -of $1,000. There have been demands, not yet conceded, for -the cash on delivery system that several European countries have -adopted.</p> - -<p>The big retail stores of London avail themselves extensively -of the parcels service for delivery of goods. The rates, ranging -from 6 to 22 cents, are not prohibitive. In many cases the -government service is cheaper and quicker. Laundries return -washing by parcels post. In Germany, where the rates are -even cheaper, lads away at school send their soiled linen home -by mail to be washed and it is returned to them by the same -conveyance.</p> - -<p>Sidney Buxton, the postmaster-general of Great Britain, in -his last report, statistically demonstrates the continuous growth, -and consequently the popularity, of the parcels post in the -United Kingdom. The number of parcels delivered in the country -districts of England and Wales in 1896-97 was 41,512,000, -and increased annually by from 3 to 6 per cent, till in 1905-6 -the number was 66,277,000. In the London district for the same -ten-year period the increase was from 11,229,000 parcels to 18,167,000. -A similar increase was shown for Scotland from -6,802,000 to 10,725,000 parcels, and for Ireland, where the increase -was from 4,172,000 in 1896-97 to 6,513,000 in 1905-6.</p> - -<p>The gross amount of revenue the government collected increased -from £1,445,126 for 63,715,000 parcels in the United -Kingdom for the first year of the decade to £2,138,673 for 101,682,000 -parcels in the last year of the decade. The post-office’s -share of these collections increased from £763,307 to £1,142,224. -The average postage per parcel decreased during the period -from about 11 cents to 10 cents. The postmaster-general undertakes -to deliver both letters and parcels at every house in the -Kingdom. They are delivered by the same postman, except in -the large towns, where there is a special staff for parcel work.</p> - -<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[21]</a></span></p> - -<h4><i>Call Swiss Service Best</i></h4> - -<p>Because of competition from private agencies, that have -charges graduated on a basis of distance, there is a tendency -for an unduly high proportion of long distance parcels and -parcels for delivery in rural districts, which are the least remunerative. -The post-office has met this competition by establishing, -for comparatively short distances, a large number of -horse and motor parcel van services, as road conveyance for -these distances makes possible an economy as compared with -conveyance by railway at the charge of 55 per cent of the -receipts.</p> - -<p>The Swiss is cited much as one of the most efficient and -satisfactory in Europe. The mountain villages and resorts of -that industrious little country receive a large portion of their -supplies by post, as a maximum weight of 110 pounds is carried -within a radius of 62 miles. The conditions there are somewhat -the same as with the dwellers in the Appalachian and -Blue Ridge mountains, to whom it has been declared that a -parcels post would be a great boon because there is no prospect -that either the railroads or the express companies will ever -approach their hamlets and villages.</p> - -<p>This Swiss law includes an agricultural parcels post and -likewise a passenger post, agitation for both of which has generally -followed the establishment of parcels post in most countries. -The passenger post of Switzerland is something like -the mail coaches in the United States before the coming of -railroads, except that the coaches are owned by the state and -the fees are prescribed by the same authority. A very large -business is done in sending parcels through the mails. A -treasury official, who was traveling in Switzerland during the -past summer, saw at one railroad station several enormous -baskets filled with hams and provisions. They were samples -of mail parcels under the 110-pound limit.</p> - -<h4><i>Cash on Delivery Plan</i></h4> - -<p>The general rates are more liberal than in any other country. -A parcel weighing 1 pound is carried anywhere within -the boundaries of the Federation for 3 cents, a 5-pound parcel<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[22]</a></span> -for 5 cents, a 11-pound parcel for 8 cents, a 22-pound parcel -for 17 cents, a 33-pound parcel for 23 cents, and a 44-pound -parcel for 33 cents. Parcels weighing as much as 110 pounds -are carried within a radius of 62 miles for 60 cents, which -enables many of the peasants to market much of their light -produce by mail. The rates are so adjustable that housewives -can secure anything by post from a paper of pins to a bag of -flour. The V. P., or value payable, system is a part of the Swiss -postal arrangements, so that purchaser can pay for his goods -on delivery, and there is but one financial transaction connected -with the purchase as far as he is concerned. A provision -for delivery makes the service all the more attractive.</p> - -<p>Belgium’s parcels post has even a higher weight limit than -Switzerland, for it accepts articles of 62 kilograms, or about -132 pounds, in one package, and puts no limit upon the size, -except that unwieldy packages are subject to an extra charge -of 50 per cent. But up to 5 kilograms, which is the conventional -11-pound limit of a majority of the parcels post countries, the -charge is 50 centimes, or 10 cents; for 10 kilograms 12 cents, -and two cents extra for every additional 10 kilograms (22 -pounds). A higher charge is made in Belgium, as in several -other European countries, if the parcel is to be carried on an express -train. It amounts to six cents for five kilograms. The fee -for delivering at residence is six cents additional.</p> - -<p>Germany and Austria maintain the 50-kilogram limit. The -first named country enforces the 50 per cent extra charge for -unwieldy articles. It also has what is called the zone system. -For conveyance 10 geographic miles the charge is six cents -(25 pfennigs), and 13 cents (50 pfennigs) for greater distances. -If the parcel weighs more than 11 pounds there is a charge of -one cent (five pfennigs) for each additional kilogram carried -10 miles, 10 pfennigs for 20 miles, 20 pfennigs for 50 miles, -30 pfennigs for 100 miles, 40 pfennigs for 150 miles, and 50 -pfennigs, approximately 13 cents, for more than 150 miles. The -same rate of charges applies in Austria.</p> - -<h4><i>A Table of Charges</i></h4> - -<p>The French parcels post law requires presentation at the -railroad station. Some other European countries, like Great<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[23]</a></span> -Britain, require it to be delivered at the postoffice. The French -maximum weight is 10 kilograms (22 pounds) without any restriction -as to size. The postage rates are 12 cents up to 3 -kilograms; 16 cents up to 5 kilograms, and 30 cents up to 10 -kilograms. These rates are for delivery at a railroad station. -An extra fee of 25 centimes (5 cents) is charged for delivering -the parcel at the residence of the addressee.</p> - -<p>Certain elementary items of cost enter into the service of -European countries that would not be identical with the maintenance -of a similar service in the United States. In Germany -a considerable mileage of the railroads is state owned. They -carry certain parcels in the mails without compensation. In -large sections of Europe there has never been anything like -adequate service by express companies, and in the absence of -business enterprises in establishing such transportation the people -have been compelled to look to their governments for relief. -The cheap rates for parcels post there were originally, in some -part, intended as an accommodation for the poorer classes.</p> - -<p>The distances for transportation are less and the population -is denser. The United States is 225 times larger than Switzerland, -60 times larger than England, 17 times larger than Germany, -12 times larger than the three countries combined. In -England the average distance a letter or mail package travels -is 40 miles; in Germany it is 42 miles; in the United States it -is said to be 542 miles.</p> - -<h4><i>Difficult to Estimate Cost</i></h4> - -<p>No accurate information is available as to whether the European -parcels posts are in reality self-supporting. They certainly -are nearly so, and in some instances are regarded as profitable -government ventures. Everywhere the service is characterized -by prompt transmission and prompt delivery. The percentages -of loss are very small. The several national constituencies that -have a parcels post system would no more relinquish such -privileges than American cities would relinquish electric lights -or automobiles. One European enthusiast pronounced the establishment -of the parcels post “a service to mankind only less -splendid than that of the transmission of thought.”</p> - -<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[24]</a></span></p> - -<p>In England it is claimed that the parcels post service would -be a source of profit but for the amounts paid to the railroads -for transportation, the share of 55 per cent of the receipts -being regarded as exorbitant. Generally the parcels post is so -joined with the rest of the mail service that its entire cost -can not be counted.</p> - -<p>The international business has grown to enormous proportions. -The figures collected at Berne for 1904, in connection -with the Postal Union, show that the parcels mailed across the -frontiers of 36 nations and colonies that year numbered something -like 38,000,000. The small percentage of that total, where -the value was declared, showed an aggregate of about $162,000,000 -worth of property. In that list the United States would -have stood about eleventh on the showing for the fiscal year -of 1906, when 264,438 parcels of an average weight of 2⅔ -pounds were sent from this country abroad. Tunis sent more -according to the figures than the United States. Germany, -leading all other nations both in the dispatch and receipt of -parcels in international mails, sent a total of 11,675,385, of -which 11,343,516 were classed as “ordinary,” and 331,869 were -“with a declared value” of $23,352,378. Austria, enjoying close -postal relations with Germany, dispatched 10,659,300 parcels to -other countries, of which 1,082,430 had a declared value of -$68,396,578.</p> - -<h4><i>Has Become Great Factor</i></h4> - -<p>The totals of “receipts” and “dispatches” of course balance -for the 36 countries in question, but are not the same for each -country represented. The rank in parcels dispatched runs: Germany, -Austria, France, Hungary, Great Britain, Switzerland, -Italy, Belgium, Netherlands, Tunis, British India, Bosnia-Herzegovina, -Russia, Denmark, Luxemburg, Japan, and Egypt; in -parcels received the order is: Germany, Hungary, Austria, -Switzerland, France, Italy, Great Britain, Belgium, Russia, -Netherlands, Denmark, Roumania, Spain, Bosnia-Herzegovina, -Sweden, Norway, Luxemburg, Tunis, and so on. Switzerland -in 1904 received across her borders 2,788,406 parcels by post, of -which 2,635,090 were “ordinary” and 133,316 were declared of a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[25]</a></span> -value of $9,863,886. Of 6,352,360 parcels that came over the -Austrian frontier, 778,380 had a declared value of $64,788,927. -Germany received 7,337,404 parcels in international mails, of -which 482,472 had a declared value of $35,901,435. The parcels -received by post in the United States during the fiscal year -1906 from abroad were recorded as 131,064, of an average -weight of 2.73 pounds. Probably the actual number was much -larger, perhaps twice as large.</p> - -<p>Sufficient figures have been given to indicate what a great -factor the parcels post has become in the trade of the world. -The value of the merchandise thus transported can only be -roughly estimated, but it will probably exceed half a billion -dollars annually.</p> - -<p>This business is transacted across frontiers, causing little -or no friction with customs officers. Boxes with declared value -are subject to the legislation of the country of origin or destination -as regards payment of stamp duties on articles exported -and as regards the control of stamp and customs duties on -articles imported. The stamp duties and charges for examination -by customs officers involved in the importation are collected -from the addressees when the articles are delivered.</p> - -<h4><i>Provision for Insurance</i></h4> - -<p>Practically the same rules apply for all parcels post. There -is provision for insurance and also for “trade charges,” which -latter term means that goods can be sent c. o. d., the maximum -value being f.1000. The limit of weight is 5 kilograms, or -11 pounds. The cost of conveyance comprises a charge of 10 -cents for each country participating in the territorial transit, -a graduated distance tax for sea conveyance and extra rates -for cumbersome parcels, and may be increased under certain -conditions by delivery fees and, in case of declared values, by -insurance fees. Weights under 2 pounds, however, are transported -for a maximum of 1 franc. Special forms are provided -for registering for customs declaration, for certificate of prepayment, -when that is desired, and for trade charges.</p> - -<p>The United States is not a party to this comprehensive -parcels post convention, by which a vast quantity of merchandise<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[26]</a></span> -is carried to different parts of the world annually, but -Argentina, Bolivia, Chile, Colombia, Guatemala, Uruguay, and -Venezuela are among the signatories. But the United States -has parcels post conventions with 33 different countries on somewhat -different but fairly liberal terms. It keeps the postage for -parcels it sends to other countries and they in turn retain the -postage on parcels sent here. That saves in bookkeeping and -has been found economical, whereas the more comprehensive -convention, under which most of the European and Asiatic countries -operate, divide the postage receipts pro rata. The United -States will not transmit through its mails parcels en route from -one foreign country to another. Among the latest parcels post -conventions the President has ratified under statute authority -are those with Sweden, Peru, Denmark, Ecuador, and Bermuda.</p> - -<h4><i>Customs Easily Collected</i></h4> - -<p>The popularity in this country of the parcels post is well -demonstrated by the great growth in the use of international -facilities. The dispatches from this country for the fiscal year -ending June 30, 1905, amounted to 560,228 pounds and for the -year ending June 30, 1906, was 721,164 pounds, an increase of -28.73 per cent. Only one-fifth of the dispatches of the last -mentioned fiscal year went to Europe, which indicates that a -good share of the parcels business was with Mexico and Central -South America. Parcels for Germany, Hongkong, Japan, -Norway, Belgium, Great Britain, Sweden, and Denmark are -accepted only for a maximum weight of 4 pounds and 6 ounces, -where the maximum weight for the other countries with which -the Postoffice Department now has conventions is 11 pounds.</p> - -<p>The customs officials say that the parcels post business with -foreign countries is increasing by leaps and bounds. Within -recent months better facilities for the collection of customs -dues have been inaugurated, with the result it is said, that many -packages which hitherto passed without being noted are now -being examined and recorded. There are offices of exchange, -so called, in several of the larger post-offices of the United -States where customs officials are stationed to attend to the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[27]</a></span> -collection of duties on these parcels from abroad. In the -Washington City post-office this foreign parcels post business -is said to have increased 300 per cent within the last twelve -months. The Treasury Department keeps about 25 customs -employees now on duty at the New York City post-office to -attend to the foreign parcels post business which goes through -that office. Dutiable packages to minor offices are handled from -exchange offices. Such mail addressed to Plymouth, Mass., for -instance, would be held till the addressee had forwarded to -the postmaster at Boston the amount of duty required.</p> - -<hr /> - -<h3>Post-office, Our Mutual Express Company. pp. 1-3.</h3> - -<p class="center">William S. Bennet.</p> - -<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Chairman</span>: In connection with this subject I take pleasure -in submitting the following views of the Postal Progress -League:</p> - -<h4><i>The Post-Office, Our Mutual Express Company</i></h4> - -<p>From the foundation of our national government, the people -of the United States, through their representatives in Congress, -have always determined the scope of their postal service, -the pay of their mail carriers, their own postal rates; and from -the first they seem to have provided for the postal transport -of merchandise in very small sealed parcels at very high rates—by -the act of 1792, 24 cents an ounce for distances up to 30 -miles, higher rates for greater distances. In 1810 they fixed the -postal weight limit at 3 pounds, and it so remained for many years. -In 1863 the postal rates were made uniform regardless of distance, -and since 1863 Congress has definitely provided for the -transport of merchandise in unsealed parcels, but still with a -weight limit so low and rates so high as to be practically prohibitive.</p> - -<p>In the old era of household industries when the peddler, -with his pack on his back, or driving his own team, was the -chief agency of commercial intercourse, these postal limitations<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[28]</a></span> -worked little harm, but their continuance in our day, when every -industry needs a continent for its development, is no longer -endurable. The common welfare demands the widest possible -extension, the most efficient and economic administration of -our great mutual express company.</p> - -<p>In its report of January 28, 1907, the Postal Commission of -the Fifty-ninth Congress declared that: “Upon the postal service, -more than upon anything else, does the general economic as -well as the social and political development of the country depend.” -And yet the United States merchandise post of to-day -is limited to 4-pound parcels at rates: Sealed parcels 2 cents -an ounce, 32 cents a pound, with no insurance against loss or -damage unless registered; and unsealed parcels, with no insurance -under any conditions, at rates:</p> - -<h4><i>Third-Class Matter</i></h4> - -<p>Some specific kinds of merchandise; printed books; Christmas -cards printed on paper; advertisements on ordinary paper; -seeds, bulbs, etc., for planting, 1 cent for 2 ounces, 8 cents per -pound.</p> - -<h4><i>Fourth-Class Matter</i></h4> - -<p>General merchandise; blank books; Christmas cards of any -other substance than paper; advertisements on blotting paper; -seeds, bulbs for food, etc., 1 cent per ounce, 16 cents per pound.</p> - -<p>In 1874 third-class matter covered all merchandise at one-half -the present general merchandise rate.</p> - -<p>The Postal Report of 1904, pages 593-595, shows the effect -of these limitations on the free rural service. In its daily 24-mile -course, visiting over 100 families, the average rural post-wagon -handles less than 26 pounds of mail per day, collected -and delivered; it collects less than 1 pound. The average rural -family posts hardly one merchandise parcel a year. Its total -merchandise traffic dispatched and received is less than 10 parcels -a year. The postal revenue from its entire merchandise traffic -is less than 50 cents a year. The total cancellations of the average -carrier in 1904 amounted to only $10.64 a month; to less -than $132 a year. With the same limitations in 1909, his postal<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[29]</a></span> -income must remain practically the same. Meanwhile the -4,000,000 families on the rural routes go to and from their -post towns and their homes, carrying their supplies and their -produce at a needless expense—estimated at only 50 cents a -week per family—of over $100,000,000 a year.</p> - -<p>And the postal weighings of 1907 disclose a similar state of -things in the general-merchandise traffic of the post-office. Of -the general postal business, the merchandise traffic represents:</p> - -<table summary="Merchandise traffic"> - <tr> - <th></th><th class="tdr">Per cent.</th> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>In number of parcels</td><td class="tdr">1.12</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>In weight</td><td class="tdr">4.79</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>In revenue</td><td class="tdr">4.44</td> - </tr> -</table> - -<p>The weight of the average merchandise postal parcel is 5.45 -ounces; its average haul is 687 miles. The merchandise tax, -1 cent per ounce or fraction thereof, amounts in practice to -17.23 cents per pound. The average family posts less than 9 -parcels a year—less than 3 pounds—and pays for the service -about 50 cents a year.</p> - -<p>The local merchandise mailed in October, 1907, at 17 representative -post-offices of Alabama weighed only 65 pounds, -at 16 representative post-offices of Arkansas only 14 pounds, -at 18 representative post-offices of Iowa only 116 pounds, at -16 representative post-offices of New Hampshire only 27 pounds, -at 16 representative post-offices of North Carolina only 30 -pounds, at 14 representative post-offices of Oregon only 1 pound, -at 14 representative post-offices of Montana only 1 pound, at -14 representative post-offices of Nevada only 4 pounds, at -12 representative post-offices of South Dakota only 15 pounds, -and at 14 representative post-offices of Wyoming only 1 pound.</p> - -<p>The weight of the parcels posted in October, 1907, by the -4,000,000 people of New York City in their local traffic amounted -to only 55,918 pounds, less than 1¼ ounces per family, and in -their total traffic to only 469,111 pounds, about 8 ounces per -family.</p> - -<p>The post-office is the most important department of our national -government. Its system of rates—regardless of distance, -regardless of the character or volume of the matter -transported, rates determined by the representatives of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[30]</a></span> -rate payers in Congress assembled on the basis of the cost of -the service rendered—its system of uniform rates places our -whole country on a plane of the most perfect commercial equality. -Up to its limits there can be no possible discriminations -either as to persons, places or things. Up to its limits, the -humblest citizen on the most out-of-the-way rural route is -guaranteed the transport of his supplies and his produce at -the same rates as the biggest corporation in our greatest metropolis. -These rates moreover, may be steadily reduced with -the improvement of our transport machinery and its administration. -And yet by our own limitation of this mighty service -we deny ourselves its use almost altogether in local traffic, -and in through traffic confine it to parcels of less than 6 ounces.</p> - -<p>Meantime we pay private express companies what “the traffic -will bear” for the transport of our large parcels, and in our -local traffic cheerfully carry our small parcels in our pockets -or hand bags or dispatch them by private messengers or private -vehicles. Such petty work is beneath the notice of our -great private express companies. In many small places they -have no offices. Even in our great cities they have no regular -daily courses, save in a few business districts. If the ordinary -city resident would dispatch a parcel by express, he must go -after an express wagon on foot or by telephone. The post-man—our -public expressman—comes to our doors one, two, -three, four times a day, or oftener. We have but to substitute -a machine post for our overburdened foot post and, with a -perfected system of collection and delivery of insured parcels -at reasonable rates, we shall have a postal express at hand, -ready and competent to do our bidding on our own terms and -conditions.</p> - -<p>The possibilities of such a service were illustrated some years -ago, when James L. Cowles, of the Postal Progress League, -dispatched an 11-pound suit case from New York City to New -Haven, Conn. Prepaid as a sealed parcel, with a special-delivery -stamp affixed, the suit case was mailed at a branch post-office -on Fifth avenue about 5 o’clock in the afternoon; it was delivered -at its address in New Haven before 10 o’clock the same -evening. On another occasion Mr. Cowles telegraphed from<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[31]</a></span> -Philadelphia about noon for a parcel of stationery to be sent -him from his office, 361 Broadway, New York City. The Philadelphia -postman delivered the parcel at Mr. Cowles’ hotel before -8 o’clock the same evening.</p> - -<p>In his testimony before the congressional committee on railway -mail pay, in 1898, Mr. H. S. Julier, of the American Express -Company, testified that the weight of the average express -parcel is 25 pounds; its average charge is 50 cents; its average -haul in the eastern states is 100 to 125 miles; in the central -states a little more; in the western states from 175 to 200 -miles. In local traffic the ordinary express charge on the smallest -merchandise parcel is 15 cents; in general traffic, 25 cents. -The private express service is chiefly confined to traffic between -cities. To be successful, a business requiring express service -must be located in a large city, where the different express -companies have their headquarters; otherwise their parcels will -often be subjected to two or three express charges before they -reach their destination. The private express company, with -its rates based on the value of the service rendered and determined -according to volume of business, is deadly to the small -place and the small dealer.</p> - -<p>Under the growing differentiation of industry there is a -steadily growing demand for a door-to-door express service of -parcels ordered by telephone, telegram, or by mail. The business -can not be done by private express companies to the public -satisfaction. Their machinery does not reach the rural districts. -An extended postal service is the only public choice.</p> - -<p>As long ago as December 6, 1898, the Merchants’ Association -of New York issued the following statement to the merchants, -manufacturers, and shippers of the State of New York:</p> - -<div class="blockquote"> - -<p>A very large part of every dollar paid by you for express -charges is exorbitant and exacted to pay a monstrous profit to an -unrestrained monopoly.</p> - -<p>Many of you are compelled by present conditions of competition -to use the express service on a large part of your shipments, -and to pay express charges which are from 300 to over 20,000 -per cent of corresponding freight charges. The express charges -on many classes of goods average from 5 to 15 per cent of the -value of the merchandise transported.</p> - -<p>These are the charges that you pay. But many of your strongest -competitors are favored by discriminating rates and pay much -less.</p> - -<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[32]</a></span></p> - -<p>The express companies are now uncontrolled by law and you -have no recourse against exorbitant charges; you must ship by -express and must pay whatever the express companies see fit to -charge.</p> - -</div> - -<p>On the 10th of February, 1909, the Merchants’ Association -of New York again returned to their attack upon the express -companies. Note their charges:</p> - -<h4><i>Exorbitant Rates</i></h4> - -<p>Rates so high in the case of the Adams Express Company -as to enable them to pay dividends of over 80 per cent a year -on the amount actually invested in their business. In 1907 -they made a dividend of $24,000,000.</p> - -<p>Excessive charges for collection and delivery varying, on -100-pound parcels, from 27 cents to $7.79 for similar services.</p> - -<p>Unreasonable restrictions of free delivery service.</p> - -<p>Unreasonable regulation as to size of parcels.</p> - -<p>Unreasonable regulation as to packing.</p> - -<p>Delays in delivery.</p> - -<p>Failure to notify shippers of nondelivery.</p> - -<p>Delays in settlements of claims.</p> - -<p>Delays in returns of undelivered goods.</p> - -<p>Marking parcels 1 to 5 pounds over actual weight, and -compelling consignees to pay for the fictitious increase.</p> - -<hr /> - -<h3>System of Postal Express.</h3> - -<p class="center">David J. Lewis.</p> - -<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Chairman</span>: In December the government issued its first -annual report on the statistics of express companies for the year -1909, which developed the fact that the average pay of the -express companies to the railways for carrying express matter -was about three-quarters (0.74) of a cent a pound, while the -postal reports show that the government paid for its letter or -mail transportation about 4 (4.06) cents a pound, barring the -weight of equipment in both cases. It was apparent to me at -once that the parcels function could not be successfully or economically<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[33]</a></span> -discharged by the government on the basis of letter-transportation -rates. And then the economic significance of -another fact developed: It was that the express companies’ -service was at a disadvantage, even greater than that of the -post office, in regard to the nonrailway transportation of its -parcels. The express companies have no agency and at present -rates can not secure an agency to reach nonrailway or rural -points. In short, it appeared that the express companies had -exclusive control of one of the absolutely essential conditions -of fast package transport, the express rate of three-quarters -of a cent a pound, while the post office had equally exclusive -possession of the other great agency of necessary service—the -rural delivery system. Common sense indicated what the solution -must be; these two advantages, the railway express transportation -rate and the rural delivery system must be made -cooperative; must be united under one control. The express -railway transportation rate would, if the government parcels -amounted to but one-fourth of the express business, save it, -if in its control, at least $50,000,000 a year, while the addition -of rural delivery to the express business would add to this great -service the farming population of our country at practically -no cost to them or the country. The bill I have introduced for -postal express is the result of these conditions.</p> - -<h4><i>Principal Provisions of the Postal Express Bill</i></h4> - -<p>As I have said, the idea of the bill is to unite in one service -the two great instrumentalities above named, in order that a -greatly cheapened and an even more extended service to the -public may be had. For this purpose the bill provides for the -compulsory purchase by condemnation of the railway-express -company contracts and franchises, as well as the equipment and -property devoted to the express business per se, and their subsequent -employment by the postal department in connection -with rural delivery and the postal system. The express-railway -transportation privileges are all the subjects of contracts between -the railways and express companies. They constitute the -primary condition of the express service, and while the equipment -and other facilities are only immediately necessary to a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[34]</a></span> -running plant, and their acquisition is provided for, it is the -contracts which constitute the conditions sine qua non of the -service. Happily, there can be no legal question as to the -right of the government to acquire these contracts and other -facilities upon providing just compensation.</p> - -<h4><i>Necessity for Postal Express</i></h4> - -<p>In addition to those grave needs for such a service, which -the majority of national communities have recognized, as commending -its adoption domestically and internationally, there -exist in the United States supplementary reasons which it is -believed render the institution uncommonly necessary.</p> - -<p>Briefly summarized, they are:</p> - -<p>(<i>a</i>) The greater area over which our population is distributed -and correlatively greater transportation distances which -consume so much time by freight that a fast or express service -needs to be resorted to in a larger number of instances than if -the journey were short.</p> - -<p>(<i>b</i>) The 100-pound minimum and corresponding charge in -railway practice and the inadaptability of railway methods to -diminutive consignments.</p> - -<p>(<i>c</i>) The prohibitive minimum charge of the express companies -in respect to small consignments.</p> - -<p>(<i>d</i>) Absence of railway “collect and delivery” service and -absence of “collect and delivery” service by express companies -as to our farming population and a large portion of our urban -population.</p> - -<p>(<i>e</i>) Incalculable waste of transportation effort, so far as -made, in movement of necessaries of life from the farms to -points of consumption, a serious factor in our high cost of -living.</p> - -<p>Of course, the need for fast service will depend upon the -greatness of the distance, when demand is immediate, as much -as upon the valuable or perishable character of the shipment. In -our country, with an average haul for freight of 251 miles, -from three to ten times as long as in Europe, the demand for -speed to overcome the obstacle of the time lost in distance, -the time-element necessity for an express service is correspondingly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[35]</a></span> -increased; and so the disadvantages of inadequate or ineconomical -express service are vital. The railway organization -of America and its system of practices does not seem adapted -to meet this great need; while its refusal, upon adequate grounds, -to accept a smaller payment than the rate for its minimum -shipment of 100 pounds precludes it from this service even if -speed were not prerequisite. The minimum charge of 25 cents -(average 27 cents) imposes an equally substantial and serious -restriction upon the express service as now conducted; so that -when it is considered that the farmers or nonurban, about half -of our population, are virtually excluded from the service of -this great agency, and the express rates by their prohibitive -costliness substantially minimize the service for the urban population, -it is apparent that instead of possessing an express service -commensurate with its needs, the United States has both -unexampled necessity for, and unexampled deficiency in, its dispatch -or express agencies. Add to this situation the tremendous -waste and corresponding costliness of the unorganized -country-to-town transportation of our necessaries, and such -almost equally wasteful and quite equally costly express service -as we have, and have we not put a finger on one of the big -leaks which swallow so much of the unprecedented productiveness -of our country?</p> - -<h4><i>Prohibitive Express Charges</i></h4> - -<p>We should expect express charges to be higher per ton here -than abroad, as much higher as our freight-per-ton charges. But -no necessary economic cause is known which justifies a substantially -higher proportion or ratio of the express to the -freight charges here as compared with other countries. The -average express charge per ton here is shown to be $31.20, -while the average freight charge is $1.90 per ton, giving a ratio -of the express charge to the freight charge of 16 (16.42) to 1. -This express charge includes the cost of such collect and delivery -service as is rendered, covering, it is thought, about 90 -per cent of the traffic. In the table now inserted this element -of the expense of the express companies for collecting and delivering, -amounting to 11.50 per cent, is excluded, because many<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[36]</a></span> -of the European countries and other data do not include this -factor of cost. The table embraces 10 countries, while the -specific data upon which the ratios are based are set forth in -Appendix B. All countries have been included where the -express data is clearly distinguishable from general freight -statistics.</p> - -<h4><i>Ratios of average express charges to average freight charges in 11 countries.</i></h4> - -<table summary="Ratios" class="borders"> - <tr> - <th>Countries</th> - <th>Average express charge per ton.</th> - <th>Average freight charge per ton.</th> - <th class="last-col">Ratios of average express and freight charges.</th> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>Argentina</td><td class="tdr">$6.51</td><td class="tdr">$1.95</td><td class="tdr last-col">3.2-1</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>Austria</td><td class="tdr">3.77</td><td class="tdr">.74</td><td class="tdr last-col">5.0-1</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>Belgium</td><td class="tdr"><a name="FNanchor_A" id="FNanchor_A"></a><a href="#Footnote_A" class="fnanchor">[A]</a>4.92</td><td class="tdr">.53</td><td class="tdr last-col"><a name="FNanchor_A_1" id="FNanchor_A_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_A" class="fnanchor">[A]</a>9.3-1</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>Denmark</td><td class="tdr">5.49</td><td class="tdr">.87</td><td class="tdr last-col">6.3-1</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>France</td><td class="tdr">6.88</td><td class="tdr">.95</td><td class="tdr last-col">7.2-1</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>Germany</td><td class="tdr">3.80</td><td class="tdr">.76</td><td class="tdr last-col">5.0-1</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>Hungary</td><td class="tdr">3.68</td><td class="tdr">.93</td><td class="tdr last-col">3.9-1</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>Netherlands</td><td class="tdr">2.43</td><td class="tdr">.67</td><td class="tdr last-col">3.6-1</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>Norway</td><td class="tdr">1.90</td><td class="tdr">.49</td><td class="tdr last-col">3.8-1</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>Prussia</td><td class="tdr">4.32</td><td class="tdr">.86</td><td class="tdr last-col">5.0-1</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td class="tdindent nowrap">Average for 10 countries</td><td class="tdtotal"></td><td class="tdtotal"></td><td class="tdr tdtotal last-col">5.23-1</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td class="last-row">United States</td><td class="tdr last-row">27.61</td><td class="tdr last-row">1.90</td><td class="tdr last-col last-row">14.53-1</td> - </tr> -</table> - -<div class="footnote"> - -<p><a name="Footnote_A" id="Footnote_A"></a><a href="#FNanchor_A"><span class="label">[A]</span></a> Belgium delivers parcels.</p> - -</div> - -<p>From this table it appears that while Argentina charges -three times, Austria five times, Belgium nine times, Denmark -six times, France seven times, Germany (including Prussia) five -times, Hungary, the Netherlands, and Norway, about four times -as much for carrying a ton of express as of freight, the express -companies of the United States charge nearly fifteen times as -much.</p> - -<p>No further statement need be made to show that the charges -of American express companies are prohibitively excessive, and -such as to disqualify this service as a national economic agency. -The instances given represent merchandise carried by passenger -trains in all instances, and while higher charges for both the -express and freight tonnage in America are justified by the -longer haul, there is no necessary economic reason for a higher -ratio of express charges to freight charges. The presence of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[37]</a></span> -the “express company” is the only circumstance distinguishing -express transportation here from that of the instances cited. -In those the “express company” has no part; the work is done -exclusively by the railways. As we shall see later, the deficiencies -of the express companies are constitutional, not gratuitous -merely, and are such as can not be remedied through corporate -agencies.</p> - -<h4><i>Inadequacy of Various Proposals—Regulation</i></h4> - -<p>We have seen that the present express fails to reach the -farm, in itself a fundamental objection to its adequacy. It may -be suggested that where its high charges are such as to inhibit -the traffic, they might be corrected by appeals for reductions -to the Interstate Commerce Commission. A glance at the -express report for 1909, it is true, will show that the profits -of the companies are clearly out of normal proportion to the -investment. But it will also show that such profits amount to -but 8.44 per cent of the gross receipts, i. e., to only 8.44 per -cent of the rates charged. So that even if all the profits were -taken away, the modified rates would show but a wholly inadequate -reduction; so that the desired relief could not thus be -obtained. As a matter of course, no such reduction would -even be asked. No one would wish that they conduct the -business without a profit. But in practice even when the -justification for a reduction is present, and the power and purpose -active, the regulating board will always hesitate to even -substantially reduce a rate in the fear of unduly trenching on -private rights.</p> - -<p>It was this principle which Bismarck had in mind when in -connection with a similar subject he spoke of—</p> - -<div class="blockquote"> - -<p>The attempts to bring about reform by (regulatory) laws have shown the -futility of hoping for a satisfactory improvement through legal (regulatory) -measures, without trenching materially on established rights and interests. -(Parsons, The Railways and the People, p. 318.)</p> - -</div> - -<p>With a margin of but 8 per cent of the rate to work on, the -board would feel this constraint in a marked way; for under -substantially reduced rates a very slight perturbation of the -customary traffic might place in danger the whole net return.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[38]</a></span> -Substantial relief in the way of regulation is thus shown to be -wholly impracticable.</p> - -<h4><i>Various Parcels-Post Schemes</i></h4> - -<p>There remains to discuss the numerous proposals for limited -carriage of parcels up to 11 pounds, and so forth, by the postal -department. These all concern the present railway status quo -of the post office. It is apparent that such proposals can only -result in two things—the express companies taking the major -portion of the short-haul, profitable traffic and the postal department -getting the long-haul and losing traffic. But there is -another fact recently disclosed by the express report—a fact -rendering any of these proposals, so far as they involve railway -transportation, wholly untenable.</p> - -<p>The Post Office Department pays an average of 4 (4.06) -cents per pound to the railways for carrying the mail, excluding -equipment.</p> - -<p>The express companies pay an average of three-quarters (0.74) -of a cent per pound for carriage of express matter, excluding -equipment.</p> - -<p>It is manifest that not even the government could render -substantial service under conditions so utterly unequal. It -could not pay—what we shall see when we come to consider -the length of the express and the mail hauls amounts to—about -three times as much as the express companies pay to the -railways for carrying its parcels. One is mail service, which -is naturally more costly; the other more closely resembles a -fast freight service, which lies midway between the mail and -the freight in the weight cost of railway movement.</p> - -<p>Other difficulties in such proposals, based on the status quo -of the post office, need only be suggested:</p> - -<p>(<i>a</i>) The government would have to install urban delivery -wagons at a cost its traffic might not justify.</p> - -<p>(<i>b</i>) The express companies still in the field, the wastes of -service would merely be increased by the entrance of the Postal -Department, and the people would have to pay it all.</p> - -<p>(<i>c</i>) The government, being a moral agent with the inelastic<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[39]</a></span> -rate proposed, would be at the mercy of its unrestrained competitors.</p> - -<p>(<i>d</i>) The express companies’ contracts with the railways permit -them to reduce their compensation to the railways to the -point of 150 per cent of the freight rate—i. e., from the present -ratio of about 8 (7.80) to 1 of the freight rate to about 1½. -Of course, they could not go to this extreme without destroying -their own profits, but their contracts permit them to go as far -as they might wish. Thus, while the government in the beginning -might have to pay about three times as much to the railways -for its parcels per pound, in a struggle the express companies -could exaggerate this disparity to any point they wished -for the purpose of destroying the postal department as a competitor.</p> - -<h4><i>Essential Elements of an Adequate System</i></h4> - -<p>For the sake of brevity we state these elements categorically:</p> - -<p>(<i>a</i>) Fast service.</p> - -<p>(<i>b</i>) Greatest economically feasible extension of delivery and -collect service, necessitating coordination with both urban and -rural free delivery systems.</p> - -<p>(<i>c</i>) Express railway contracts to secure the relatively low -railway rates.</p> - -<p>(<i>d</i>) Cheap capital charges.</p> - -<p>(<i>e</i>) Reliable public-service motive.</p> - -<p>(<i>f</i>) Economies of single organization, in which all existing -serviceable plants should be merged.</p> - -<p>With regard to the element of fast service, discussion is unnecessary. -It is now commonly rendered by the railways for -the express companies in connection with the passenger service. -It seems worthy of suggestion, however, that a single organization -like the post office might on the strong lines of traffic, -where carload lots might be regularly obtainable, employ for -certain kinds of matter the fast freight service, profiting enough -on the carload rate reductions to fully cover the expense of -delivery and collection, the regular railway 100-pound charges -to be paid to the postal express by the shipper. It is further -suggested that in this way agricultural products might be received<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[40]</a></span> -through the rural free delivery in small allotments from -the truck gardeners and farmers, consolidated into carload lots -and conveyed on the trunk lines to the branch lines and distributed -over the branches to destination by passenger trains. -The Prussians do, in fact, have this latter service, for which -the charge is based on a tariff of twice the freight rate, the -regular service by passenger train calling for a charge of four -times the freight rate. The railways would now perform such -service if, of course, the collect service existed to gather the -shipments from the country and assemble them.</p> - -<p>It is obvious that the element most wanting is the service -described as “collect and delivery,” necessary between consignor -and railway at the beginning and railway and consignee -at the conclusion of the act of transportation. Our country is -utterly deficient in this respect as to the “country” or farming -population. In towns of about 3,000 or 4,000 population up the -present express companies do render this service for such traffic -as their rates permit to move; but what is required is a service -as extensive as the postal agency, which reaches cities, towns, -and country with the degrees of efficiency of the urban and -rural deliveries, conceded to far excel such delivery as the -express companies give.</p> - -<p>There can be no doubt that with regard to this collect and -delivery the postal department is the only agency to which we -can look for a service sufficiently extensive to be really efficient. -It only remains to observe that with regard to the farming part -of the country the service already exists in the form of rural -free delivery, equipped and paid for, and actually waiting with -empty wagons to receive and execute the work.</p> - -<h4><i>Advantages of Postal Express</i></h4> - -<p>In three years under a postal administration it is believed -that the reformed system will produce:</p> - -<p>(a) A minimum charge of 7 cents for the first pound, graduated -to 17 cents for a 11-pound package, for average distances.</p> - -<p>(b) General reductions of about 28 per cent in all merchandise -charges.</p> - -<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[41]</a></span></p> - -<p>(c) The extension of the service to the out-of-town and agricultural -population.</p> - -<p>(d) The elevation of the employees to the plane of the postal -service.</p> - -<p>(e) The coordination of country supply of the vital necessaries -with urban demand by a cheap and regular collect and -delivery service.</p> - -<p>(f) As a result, a greater attractiveness in rural life and -improved highways.</p> - -<p>(g) In 10 years’ time, with the development of the traffic, a -reduction of rates to about one-half of the present rates.</p> - -<p>It is as difficult to describe in detail the manifold economic -and social results of a great agency like this as to give a bill -of particulars of the benefits of the postal system. And in this -connection it seems not irrelevant to suggest that a proper coordination -of the railway mail with the railway express service -may indeed render penny postage feasible. As things are now -the rural free-delivery agency does not bring a direct fiscal -return to pay for itself. In a few years, as the traffic develops -in parcels and agricultural products, the proposed system would -enable it to do so. This would assure a considerable financial -gift to the account of penny postage.</p> - -<h4><i>The Agricultural Post</i></h4> - -<p>In the present state of things the truck farmer must devote -a large part of his time to marketing; that is, to the transportation -of his product, however little it may be, to the place of -demand. He must also for this purpose provide himself with -transportation facilities, however small his business. These involve -a horse, and its maintenance and care, and a barn; and -the expense of both during the unproductive seasons. And yet -in a socio-economic sense his work and expense of transportation -is the smallest element in his service to the public, although -it requires the maximum of upkeep work and expense, if not of -capital. The proposed postal collect and delivery eliminates all -these, and would enable the truck farmer to enter into the -business on a minimum of capital, and pursue it on a minimum -of labor and expense. The field service of a horse he could hire<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[42]</a></span> -as occasion might require. Thus the truck-farming industry -would receive a necessary impetus and the cost of such foods -be greatly reduced to the consumer, saying nothing of the advantage -in quality coming from a speedier forwarding to the -market by daily allotments instead of the delays now incurred -to garner a worth-while load.</p> - -<p>This application of postal express, with its thoroughly articulated -service and regular schedules, may be taken as illustrative -of the close relations which may be established between the -rural producer and town consumer, as well as between producers -and merchants generally.</p> - -<p>It is manifestly unfair to the proposition to judge its social -value on a mere computation of the savings in rates which may -be made. While this saving would amount to some $35,000,000 -a year on the traffic of 1909, and from seventy to a hundred -millions a year when the traffic reaches its normal dimensions, -yet as large benefits will follow in clearing the prohibitive rate -clogs from this necessary conduit of commerce that it may -freely discharge its normal output, in placing the 50,000 express -employees on a postal basis, in rendering it easier to engage in -and market food production, to relieve the towns and cities of -high prices for necessaries of life, and relieve them, too, of the -overplus of labor, and, perhaps, too, in aiding in reversing that -tendency of population movement from the country to urban -centers to which is due the most aggravated and most discouraging -social problems of our time.</p> - -<hr /> - -<h3>Hearings before the Committee on the Post-Office and Post-Roads. -April 20-29, 1910. pp. 296-7.</h3> - -<p class="center">Postal Savings Bank and Parcels Post.</p> - -<p class="center">Letter of Dr. Barth.</p> - -<p>Whilst the postal savings-banks system became firmly established -some time ago in Belgium, France, Great Britain, -Italy, Holland, Austro-Hungary, Russia, and Sweden, all efforts -have failed to introduce the system into the German Empire.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[43]</a></span> -In the year 1885 the draft of a postal savings-bank law was laid -before the Reichstag. The draft never came out of the committee. -The principal reason of this opposition lay in the competitive -interest of the many local savings banks existing in -Germany, which are generally under the control of commercial -boards of directors. Since the frustration of the plans for -the law in the year 1885 no further serious efforts have been -made to introduce postal savings banks.</p> - -<p>All the greater has been the development of the parcels-post -traffic with us. This traffic dates in Prussia back to the eighteenth -century. Under Frederick William I there already had -been introduced a postal monopoly (the exclusive right of the -mail to forward packages) for packages up to 20 pounds. Under -Frederick the Great this monopoly was increased to 40 pounds. -By a postal law of June 5, 1852, it was again reduced to 20 -pounds, and only entirely abolished by the law of March 20, -1860. This postal monopoly has never been revived in Germany; -nevertheless, the parcel postal traffic has developed tremendously -without the protection of a monopoly. In Germany -the weight for postal parcels has now been set at 50 kilograms -(110 3-10 pounds); while, as is well known, there has also existed -since 1885 European international parcels-post traffic with -a maximum weight limit of 5 kilograms (about 11 pounds). Only -very few articles within the aforementioned weight limits are -excluded from the postal traffic. Even live singing birds, fish, -crabs, fresh flowers, grapes, etc., are sent by us in postal parcels. -The parcels-post service in Berlin employs about 1,000 officials. -The rate within the postal territories of Germany and Austro-Hungary -is 25 pfennigs (6 cents) for packages up to 5 kilograms -(about 11 pounds) in weight and 10 geographical miles in distance: -at 50 pfennigs (12 cents) for further distances. With -heavier parcels the rate increases rapidly for every kilogram -(2½ pounds) in excess of 11 pounds with the growing distance, -so that, for instance, at a distance of 150 geographical miles -every kilogram over 5 costs 50 pfennigs (12 cents) more. This -rate proves that the post lays its principal stress on receiving -parcels up to 5 kilograms (11 pounds) in weight.</p> - -<p>The parcels-post traffic in 10-pound packages is therefore<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[44]</a></span> -the normal one. For many trades and producing branches a -very strong direct traffic between the producer and the consumer -has grown up in these 10-pound packages, and many -articles which in the locality in which they were produced were -either not utilizable, or forced to sale at a very low figure, -have found a market which without the cheap 50 pfennig (12 -cents) postage they would never have attained. Mushrooms -gathered in the forests of Masuren near the Russian frontier -come to Berlin in postal parcels. Large crabs caught in the -waters of western Prussia come even to Paris. We ourselves, -for example, obtain for our household through the parcels post -meat from Silesia, butter from eastern Prussia, eggs from -Mecklenburg, melons from Hungary, etc. For the household -this is not only cheaper but also more convenient than the -purchase in the market halls, for the post brings the parcels -(for delivery sum of 15 pfennigs; 3½ cents) to the door, also -calls for parcels, cashes in the amount in c. o. d. deliveries, -in short, makes it extremely convenient for the order. It is -clear that this postal traffic forced out many middlemen; the -retailers especially in small places have been made to feel very -keenly the competition of the large forwarding houses in the -capital cities. Their complaints therefore were formerly directed -very actively against the cheap parcels postage. But since -the flat land in turn could derive benefits for its agricultural -products, such as fruits, meats, butter, eggs, etc., from these -self-same cheap rates, the complaints of the retailers became -silenced after awhile as far as the question refers to the cheap -parcels rates. They now turn so much the livelier against -large warehouses and forwarding businesses for whom one is -seeking through all sorts of lawful tricks to make the competition -more difficult. The parcels-post traffic has meanwhile -become so firmly rooted that it seems impossible to upset it. -Considered from a politic-economic viewpoint it presents itself -as a most important and very beneficent branch of the whole -system transport.</p> - -<p>Following the German example in the United States would, -I believe, be of enormous advantage, particularly for the agricultural -districts surrounding the large cities. For the producer<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[45]</a></span> -of eggs, poultry, butter, vegetables, fruits there would -develop, with a cheap parcels-post rate, entirely new market -possibilities; also the decentralization of many branches of industry -would to a certain degree become a possibility.</p> - -<hr /> - -<h3>Monthly Consular and Trade Reports. No. 329. pp. 104-6. -February, 1908.</h3> - -<p class="center">German Parcels Post.</p> - -<p>Consul W. T. Fee, of Bremen, states that the parcels post -system of Germany, as well as most of the railroads, is owned -by and is under the control and operation of the Imperial -government. He adds:</p> - -<p>The express companies in Germany are less developed than -those in the United States, where the largest part of parcels -forwarded are handled by these companies. Under the German -parcel-post system, parcels are divided into five classes namely: -(1) Parcels with value declared; (2) registered parcels; (3) -common parcels, value neither declared nor registered; (4) -collect-on-delivery parcels; and (5) urgent parcels. Each shipment -of parcels must be accompanied by a waybill called -“packet addressee”; and no more than three packages which -must be of the same class, and which must bear the same -address, are to be entered on one waybill. Each c. o. d. or -urgent package, however, must have its own waybill.</p> - -<p>Forms of waybills, with the respective postage stamp of -the amount of the charge printed thereon, are furnished by -the postoffices at the price of the postage charge, while waybills, -without this stamps imprint, are sold by the postoffices -at the price of 1.19 cents for five pieces. Forms of waybills, -which are purchased from other sources, must conform -in every respect with those furnished by the postoffice department. -There are two different kinds of waybills in use, -foreign and domestic.</p> - -<p>At times of increased postal traffic, before Easter, Whitsuntide -and Christmas, a waybill for each package is required.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[46]</a></span> -The prices charged by the postoffice for forwarding parcels -vary according to the weight of the packages and distance. -The fees charged are shown in the following statement:</p> - -<table summary="Fees for forwarding parcels"> - <tr> - <th></th><th colspan="3">For distance up to—</th><th colspan="2">over</th> - </tr> - <tr> - <th></th><th>46<br />miles</th><th>92<br />miles</th><th>230<br />miles</th><th>461<br />miles</th><th>702<br />miles</th> - </tr> - <tr> - <th>For parcels weighing up to—</th><th>cents</th><th></th><th></th><th></th><th></th> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>11 pounds</td><td class="tdr">5.9</td><td class="tdr">11.9</td><td class="tdr">11.9</td><td class="tdr">11.9</td><td class="tdr">11.9</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>15.4 pounds</td><td class="tdr">7.1</td><td class="tdr">14.2</td><td class="tdr">16.6</td><td class="tdr">19.0</td><td class="tdr">23.8</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>17.6 pounds</td><td class="tdr">8.3</td><td class="tdr">16.6</td><td class="tdr">21.4</td><td class="tdr">26.18</td><td class="tdr">35.7</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>19.8 pounds</td><td class="tdr">10.7</td><td class="tdr">21.4</td><td class="tdr">30.9</td><td class="tdr">40.4</td><td class="tdr">59.5</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>22 pounds</td><td class="tdr">11.9</td><td class="tdr">23.8</td><td class="tdr">35.7</td><td class="tdr">47.6</td><td class="tdr">71.4</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>additional 2.2 pounds</td><td class="tdr">1.1</td><td class="tdr">2.38</td><td class="tdr">4.76</td><td class="tdr">7.1</td><td class="tdr">11.9</td> - </tr> -</table> - -<p>The maximum weight for parcels to be forwarded by post -is 110 pounds.</p> - -<p>For registered packages an additional fee of 4.76 cents is -charged, while the insurance fee for packages with declared -value is 1.19 cents for each $71.40 or fraction thereof. For -“not-prepaid” parcels up to 11 pounds a collection fee of 2.38 -cents is levied. Besides this, in places where there is delivery -to the house, an extra fee of 3.5 cents is charged for packages -weighing up to 11 pounds.</p> - -<p>Packages may be sent c. o. d. in the German Empire if the -amount to be collected does not exceed $190.40. These c. o. d. -packages, if payment is not made at presentation, will be held for -seven days. Meanwhile another request will be made on the consignee -to pay the amount charged, and then if payment is -refused the package is returned to the consignor. The fee -charged for c. o. d. packages in addition to the ordinary postage -is 2.38 cents, and the fee for the postal money order, -by means of which the amount collected is returned to the -consignor is charged. The charges for these money orders -for amounts not exceeding $1.19 are 2.38 cents; not to exceed -$23.80, 4.76 cents; $47.60, 7.14 cents; $95.20, 9.52 cents; $142.80, -11.9 cents; and $190.40, 14.28.</p> - -<p>Printed matter, samples without value, newspapers and business -cards do not come under the heading of parcels or -packages, different rates of postage and also different limits -of weight and measure being provided for these classes.</p> - -<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[47]</a></span></p> - -<p>In case of loss the postoffice refunds for common packages -at the maximum rate of 71.4 cents per 1.1 pounds, and -for a registered package at least $10.</p> - -<p>Parcels are handled by the postoffice entirely separate from -letters and other mail matter. A request may be sent to the -postoffice on an unfranked postal card to call for a package, -whereupon the parcelpost wagon will call at the place designated -in the request. An extra charge of 2.38 cents is made -for this service, regardless of the size or weight of the package.</p> - -<p>Under ordinary circumstances, a package sent from Bremen -to Munich, Bavaria, a distance of 470 miles, thus crossing -Germany from north to south, will be delivered on the evening -of the second or on the morning of the third day. If it -weighs up to 11 pounds, it will cost 11.9 cents. If it is a -c. o. d. package for $142.80 it will cost 11.9 cents for postage, -2.38 cents for collection fee, 11.9 cents for return money order, -and 1.19 cents for delivery charge for the money order, -in all 27.37 cents. The same package could be sent at the -same rate from Bremen to Königsberg, a distance of 579 miles.</p> - -<p>There is no restriction as to the size of the packages to be -shipped within the German Empire, as long as they are not -cumbersome, but the size of packages to foreign countries, as -a rule, must not exceed 23.6 inches in each dimension. Exceptions -from this rule are made for goods like umbrellas, canes, -charts, furs, plants, etc., which may measure 39.37 inches in -length, if they do not exceed 7.87 inches in breadth and height. -Besides this there is a space limit of 25 cubic decimeters -(1 cubic decimeter = .035 cubic foot) for packages destined for -Algiers, Tunis, Santo Domingo, and the French colonies, and -20 cubic decimeters for packages to Bolivia, Brazil, and Canada, -while packages for Great Britain and nearly all its colonies may -measure one meter in each dimension, with a space limit of 54 -cubic decimeters. Packages to foreign countries, exceeding the -before-mentioned limit in weight and measurement, may be -shipped as “postal freight.” The rates for such shipments, -however, vary too much to be quoted here, and they are, in -most instances, subject to contracts of the postoffice department -with prominent forwarding agents.</p> - -<p>For packages to the United States—that is New York, Jersey<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[48]</a></span> -City, and Hoboken—the charges are from 30 cents for 2.2 -pounds up to 64 cents for 11 pounds. To all other places in -the United States, Alaska excepted, the rates are 55 cents for -2.2 pounds up to 88 cents for 11 pounds.</p> - -<p>According to a postal treaty between the United States and -Germany, which is in force since October 1, 1907, packages, -which for any reason cannot be delivered will not be returned -after a period of thirty days, as heretofore, but the consignor -will be informed of this fact by the postoffice in order to give -him a chance to dispose of the package in some other way. -If the consignor has not disposed of the package within two -months it will be returned to him as undeliverable.</p> - -<p>For special delivery of a package 5.8 cents is charged, and -for urgent packages, which will be forwarded by the fastest -mail facilities, a charge of 23.8 cents is made, in addition to -the regular postage and the special delivery fee collected for -each package.</p> - -<hr /> - -<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[49]</a></span></p> - -<h2>AFFIRMATIVE DISCUSSION</h2> - -<h3>Our Postal Express. pp. 1-6.</h3> - -<p class="center">William Sulzer.</p> - -<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Speaker</span>: I am in favor of a parcels post. I believe the -people of the country generally favor it, and I feel confident its -establishment will be of inestimable benefit and advantage to all -concerned. The post-office is one of the oldest of governmental -institutions, an agency established by the earliest civilization to -enable them to inform themselves as to the plans and movements -of their friends and foes; and from the dawn of history -the only limit upon this service has been the capacity of the -existing transport machinery.</p> - -<p>The cursus publicus of imperial Rome—the post-office of the -Roman Cæsars—covered their entire business of transportation -and transmission, and with its splendid post-roads, swift post-horses, -and ox post-wagons the Roman post-office was a mechanism -far wider in its scope than that of our modern post-office; -and except for the use of mechanical power, the old Roman -post was far more efficient in its service of the Roman rulers -than is our modern post-office in the service of the American -citizen.</p> - -<p>The evil of the Roman post-office and of the royal postal services -that succeeded it was their common restriction to the enrichment -of the ruling powers. They were the prototypes of -our modern private railway and express companies, which have -for their chief end the enrichment of their managers rather than -the promotion of the public welfare. In this country the citizen -owns the post-office and wants to use it as his transportation -company. Its end is to keep him informed as to what his -representatives are doing at the centers of public business, to -make known to them his wishes, and to provide means by which -he may communicate with his fellow-citizens for their mutual -benefit, and to supply his wants and dispose of his wares at the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[50]</a></span> -least possible cost, in the shortest possible time, and with the -greatest possible security.</p> - -<p>The postal system of rates, regardless of distance, regardless -of the character of the matter transported, and regardless of -the volume of the patron’s business, eminently fits it for this -great service. That it will sooner or later be greatly extended -over the entire field of public transportation, is absolutely certain; -and the people will duly appreciate the aid of those who -assist in its extension and development. As far back as 1837, -Rowland Hill, of England, promulgated to the world the law -that once a public transport service is in operation, the cost -of its use is regardless the distance traversed upon the moving -machinery by any unit of traffic within its capacity, and upon -this law he established the English penny-letter post of 1839.</p> - -<p>Instead of a taxing machine, a contrivance for making -money, the post-office should be an agency for good, reaching -out its multitudinous hands with help and comfort into all -the homes in our widespread land.</p> - -<p>Without the post-office where would be that national unity, -with its guaranty of equal rights to all, which is the glory of -the sisterhood of states?</p> - -<p>The postal savings system and parcels post was inaugurated -in England largely through the efforts of the great Commoner, -William E. Gladstone. Near the close of his life he made the -following statement about it:</p> - -<div class="blockquote"> - -<p>The post-office savings bank and parcels post is the most important -institution which has been created in the last fifty years -for the welfare of the people. I consider the act which called the -institution into existence as the most useful and fruitful of my long -career.</p> - -</div> - -<p>It is because we realize these truths so keenly that we are so -persistent in urging favorable consideration of a parcels post. -Its only fault is its conservatism. What this country now -needs, what Congress should give it, is a parcels post covering -much of the business of public transportation.</p> - -<p>In April last representatives of at least 10,000,000 American -voters, including the great agricultural associations of the -country, National Grange, the Farmers’ Union, the Farmers’ -National Congress, Retail Dry Goods Association of New York, -the Associated Retailers of St. Louis, the manufacturing perfumers<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[51]</a></span> -of the United States, the American Florist Association, -and others, appeared before the House Postal Committee, demanding -a domestic express post as extended and as cheap as -that provided by the Postmaster-General in our foreign postal -service. The argument in behalf of this legislation, with its -4-pound weight limit, had then been before the committee for -many months, but the bill was not up to the demands of these -friends of the post-office. The report of the hearing showed that -the public wanted an 11-pound service at least. Seldom, if ever, -has any proposition received a stronger public support, and it -seemed as if the House Committee on Post-Offices would be -obliged to report at least some legislation back to the House for -its consideration.</p> - -<p>Their answer finally came on the 27th of May in the shape of -H. R. 26348, introduced by Chairman John W. Weeks, which -provides:</p> - -<div class="blockquote"> - -<p>That all mail matter of the fourth class shall be subject to examination -and to a postage charge at the rate of three-fourths of -1 cent an ounce or fraction thereof, to be prepaid by stamps affixed—stamps -of the following denominations:</p> - -<table summary="Postage charges"> - <tr> - <th></th><th class="tdr">Cents.</th> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>1 ounce</td><td class="tdr">¾</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>2 ounces</td><td class="tdr">1½</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>3 ounces</td><td class="tdr">2¼</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>4 ounces</td><td class="tdr"><span class="fraction">3</span></td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>5 ounces</td><td class="tdr">3¾</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>6 ounces</td><td class="tdr">4½</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>7 ounces</td><td class="tdr">5¼</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>8 ounces</td><td class="tdr"><span class="fraction">6</span></td> - </tr> -</table> - -</div> - -<p>On the 1st of June Mr. Weeks wrote to the secretary of the -Postal Progress League as follows:</p> - -<div class="blockquote"> - -<p>It does not seem to me likely that any other parcels-post legislation -than possibly the bill which I introduced last week—this bill—providing -for the reduction in rate on fourth-class matter, will -be considered at this session of Congress.</p> - -</div> - -<p>This means that for at least two years more the American -people are to be left subject to the extortions of the rich and -powerful express companies, while we have in the post-office a -well-equipped service of our own through which much of the -people’s business now carried on by these companies could be -done quicker and at infinitely less cost.</p> - -<p>Mr. Speaker, if the powers arraigned against the post-office -continue their efforts to limit its functions in behalf of private<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[52]</a></span> -interests, they will soon find themselves confronted with a Congress -pledged to extend the service of the post-office to a much -larger degree of the public transmission business; and hence, -I think it wise that my bill should now be brought before the -House for immediate consideration.</p> - -<hr /> - -<h3>World’s Work. 21: 14248-51. April, 1911.</h3> - -<p class="center">Parcels Post and the Retailer.</p> - -<p class="center">Fremont Rider.</p> - -<p>Of all the arguments against a parcels post by far the most -venerable is that of financial disaster; and even April 1911 -finds many an opponent of a parcels post uttering gloomy -prophecies of the enormous losses which the system would entail, -losses which would have to be met, as he takes pains to point -out, by an already bankrupt post office department.</p> - -<p>On the other hand, the men best acquainted both with the -problem of transportation and its cost and with the parcels -post as it has been worked out abroad, go so far as to say, -that so far from being an expense, a parcels post would probably -be the most profitable business venture into which the -United States government ever embarked. In fact a private -parcels post, in certain of the metropolitan districts at least, -would probably be started by private capital were it not for one -thing—the growing agitation for a government parcels post -which would render valueless the plant of the private company.</p> - -<p>The plan of this private parcels post, in direct competition -with the present express companies is no chimera.... Every -thinking person marvels at the economic waste in the present day -methods of city delivery. By your house in Yonkers, for instance, -if you happen to live in Yonkers, there now rattles, once -or twice daily, the wagons of your butcher, your baker, your -laundryman, your milkman, and your grocer, as well as those -of the various butchers, bakers, laundrymen, milkmen, and -grocerymen of your neighbors, all covering in staggeringly -wasteful duplication, the same route. Besides them, up from -the city come, in further duplication and longer distance waste,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[53]</a></span> -the wagons of the nine different New York department stores -that deliver in Yonkers, the wagons of the four local express -companies that divide the “independent” business, and those of -the two general express companies which do the high-priced -long distance business. Yet, when you think of it, one wagon -could come to you three times a day and do the work of all -these people, more effectively and at one-tenth of the present -total expense.</p> - -<p>You buy a dollar’s worth of groceries of John Jones, the -grocer. The whole package, bread, milk, eggs, butter, and -vegetables, weighs, perhaps, ten pounds. A company doing -all the delivery business of a town, centralized, complete, without -waste labor or waste mileage, stopping its motor wagons -two or three times a day at every house on every street, can -make money delivering that ten pounds for six cents. It now -costs Jones, sending out his boy and wagon to a dozen odd -houses scattered all over town, two or three times that amount.</p> - -<p>But such a private parcels post will not be undertaken because -of the fear that the government may enter the field. -Yet so far at least, although in the post office the government -has most of the plant necessary to carry on such a business, -it cannot be persuaded to go into it.</p> - -<p>The most exasperating reason for this inactivity is the legislative -assumption that our present “parcels post” approaches -perfection. The fact is, of course, that the United States has -no parcels post in the sense in which the term is in accepted -international use. The present fourth class rate is but little -used in this country simply because it is prohibitively high. -To send ten pounds of merchandise from New York to Philadelphia -involves, not merely the indefensible nuisance of separating -it for mail transportation into three packages, but a -charge of $1.60. Naturally, instead, the merchandise is sent -in one parcel by express for fifty cents. As the work done -by the express company, it is needless to note, gives them -a very handsome profit indeed, it is evident that by far the -larger portion of the government’s $1.60 in this case would -be sheer profit—if the post office were as efficiently conducted -as the express company.</p> - -<p>The express company, however, does not attempt to carry<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[54]</a></span> -a ten pound package from New York to Seattle for fifty cents. -Such long and profitless hauls they leave for Uncle Sam. Yet, -even so, with all the cream of the parcel business continually -and inevitably going to the express companies, the Post Office -Department according to its reports makes a profit in its -“parcels post” business.</p> - -<p>Of course were the post office rate from New York to Philadelphia -a real parcels post rate, that is, for example, 20 cents -for ten pounds instead of $1.60, there would be 1,000 pounds -of merchandise so sent where there is one sent today. People -will use a parcels post when it becomes cheap enough to be -an economic possibility, and they will use it enormously, as -experience elsewhere has abundantly and conclusively proved. -Until then they will use the fourth class postal rate only for -the occasional cross continental parcel on which the express -rate soars out of all reach, or for the small parcel under a -pound in weight on which the fourth class rate is less than -the express companies’ minimum charge.</p> - -<p>The four vital arguments (the four great express companies) -against a parcels post, once so succinctly enumerated by Mr. -Wanamaker, and the other hoary arguments sampled above, -have, however, of late years been bolstered by another—the -welfare of the “small country retailer”; and round the great -fear of a vague but very horrible something called “trade -centralization” the battle for parcels post is at present being -waged.</p> - -<p>It has been taken for granted that the small country retailer -will be put out of business by the parcels post with its -low delivery charges—yet there are stores in Yonkers, Plainfield, -etc., in spite of the fact that the New York department -stores deliver in these places free.</p> - -<p>Let us examine another aspect of this -death-of-the-small-retailer-fattening-of-the-mail-order-trust-bogey -a minute, and see -whether a parcels post means really a more centralized basis -of distribution, or a less.</p> - -<p>Speaking very roughly, there are in the world two great -tides of merchandise traffic: one of raw materials, of which -food products is the most important, from the farmer to the -urban consumer; one of manufactured products—to wear, to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[55]</a></span> -use, or to eat (as refined sugar or prepared breakfast food)—from -the urban maker to the farmer consumer.</p> - -<p>Surprising as it may seem the parcels post argument has -dealt almost entirely with the latter tide: of the former tide, -even more important, as I think I can show, very little has -been said.</p> - -<p>Let us look for a moment into our existing high cost of -transportation, and therefore, decentralized distribution of farm -products.</p> - -<p>In New York the farmer sells his milk for—these figures -are quoted very roughly and without elaboration but they will -give my point—2 cents a quart. He sells it, usually, to one -of two or three—there is considerable evidence that they all -act in agreement as one—gigantic milk companies (of which -Borden’s is the largest) which bring it into the city and distribute -it. The ultimate consumer—again I give a rough -figure—pays 10 cents a quart. The other 8 cents is the “distributing -cost”; and in each case it goes, mind you, to two -great corporations, a milk company and an express (or a rail-road) -company. Is this that decentralized distribution that -the defenders of the express companies in and before our -Committee have eulogized.</p> - -<p>Take almost any other farm product, strawberries, for example. -The farmer, who grows them, gets 3 cents a basket. -Then begins a long line of tolls: the express company, 3 cents; -the commission merchant, 2 cents (he claims, and often with -reason, that his “spoilage” is high); the jobber 1 cent; the -small retailer—delicatessen store, corner grocery or street cart -vendor—3 cents (it “costs 25 per cent. to do business” he -says, and it does too). The ultimate consumer pays 12 cents -a basket, sometimes more, sometimes, when the market is -glutted, a little less. Here is 9 cents of “distributive costs” -of which but 3 went to our friend, the “small retailer.” The -rest went to more or less centralized distributing agencies. -Now suppose on the other hand that the farmer could send his -products direct to his list of regular customers in the city. -It would be perfectly feasible with a parcels post. Strawberries, -which the farmer would get 6 cents a basket for (double -what he gets now) could be delivered at your breakfast table<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[56]</a></span> -the next morning after picking instead of two or three days -old in the triple transit of commission merchant and his storage -place, jobber and his trans-shipment, retailer and his store, -and finally to you. And for this infinitely better article you -would pay only 8 cents (2 cents for the parcels post) instead -of the former 12.</p> - -<p>There are only three factors, the farmer, the government -parcels post, and you! This is not theory: it is being done in -England, in Germany, in Japan, and in almost every other -civilized country in the world every day; and has been done for -years.</p> - -<p>And as for the mail order business bogey, it would not be -a bogey in the country districts because every farmer would be -running a little mail order business of his own, shipping his -eggs and butter pats and comb honey and fresh fruit and -vegetables by mail right to his customers, on their standing -or postal card orders, getting enough for his produce to make -small farming worth while, but giving the consumer better -goods at a big saving. Cost of living! There is no other -revolution in the methods of distribution that would make so -much difference in the cost of living as a thoroughgoing -parcels post would work. And instead of greater centralization -it would be almost the ultimate of trade decentralization.</p> - -<p>Or, let us look at the thing the other way round. What -is the chain of trade from urban producer of manufactured -articles to the country retailer and consumer? Is there any -decentralized purchasing now except by mail? The farmer buys -of the small retailer. But the retailer buys of the lesser jobber -and he of the main jobber and he of the manufacturer; and -this is true whether the product be canned goods or dry -goods. Freight shipments in bulk can underbid single shipments -by mail or express; and the present system of distribution, -cumbersome and expensive as it is to the ultimate consumer, -is nevertheless cheaper than direct single shipments -at the present mail or express rates. The moment that you -introduce bulk shipments into any distributive system you -necessarily introduce a middleman somewhere to divide up that -bulk shipment for individual consumers; and the greater the -bulk economically shipped the more middlemen there will -be between producer and consumer.</p> - -<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[57]</a></span></p> - -<p>Now where the parcels post could afford a cheaper way of -doing the distributing than the machinery at present in use, -the people ought to have the benefit of it; but in spite of the -obvious benefits of a parcels post it is not wise to jump to the -ultimate conclusion. No one would be rash enough to say that -the present system of retail selling is entirely wrong. Even -if the flat-rate, “zoneless” parcels post were established there -are certain kinds of goods—books, for example, in which every -article is a “novelty” which must be personally handled before -choice and purchase, in which a local retailer with a display -is, if not essential, at least a great convenience.</p> - -<p>But so far we have been considering an ideal, flat-rate -parcels post, without that “zone” provision which is an important -provision in the bills and proposals for a parcels post -which are now being most actively agitated.</p> - -<p>The zone system of parcels post proposes, roughly, a flat -rate per pound and per additional pound within the limits of -any delivery office (that is a service which involves no transfer -from one post office to another) and a rate considerably -heavier (but still much less than the present fourth-class mail -or express rate) for delivery elsewhere in the United States. -This would furnish the cross-roads store with a most convenient -delivery system and furnish it at a cheaper price than its city -rivals could secure it. The local retailer would have the advantage -of the difference between the two charges. To give -this advantage to the local retailer is probably wise from the -standpoint of general public policy. The small retailer in the -country does the public a very actual and very valuable service. -To have a stock displayed for selection is often an assistance -in purchasing; there are certain things which cannot in any -case, be bought by mail; there are other things which may -sometimes preferably be bought direct, just as most people like, -occasionally at least, “to shop”; there is a welcome personal -touch in retailing which is lost in the long distance purchase. -For these and other reasons the retail store will remain, -stripped of overcompetition and non-essential distributive -agents, competing with the parcels post, not in price so much, -as in the kind and quality of service. That is the way the small -retailer in Germany had adapted himself to the parcels post;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[58]</a></span> -and although in his case there is no zone preferential to aid -him, he has made good.</p> - -<p>After all, there is the gist of the answer to those who oppose -a parcels post on anti-centralization grounds. They speak as -though there were but one factor in retailing—price. As a matter -of fact there are many factors, and the best students of -retailing methods consider service one of the most important. -With a parcels post established the public would be getting value -for its money in cheapness or service, as it chose; with the -present express system it gets neither.</p> - -<hr /> - -<h3>Congressional Record. 46: 1941-7. February 3, 1911.</h3> - -<p class="center">Star Routes and Rural Parcels Post.</p> - -<p class="center">F. W. Mondell.</p> - -<p>I do not want to put the entire blame for the hidden, circuitous, -and indirect opposition to parcels post upon the express -companies. There is another class of people who are opposed to -parcels post who do not directly show their hands. They are -the firms and corporations who send out a very large letter mail, -upon which they pay 2 cents for every half ounce. The average -citizen who only writes an occasional letter does not realize -how heavy the burden 2-cent letter postage is to people who -send out great numbers of letters.</p> - -<p>There are many large concerns, like the mail-order houses for -instance, promoters, jobbers, and dealers in special extensively -advertised lines, whose actual letter postage amounts to many -thousands of dollars a year. Such people naturally oppose any -change in the postal service which might increase the postal -deficit, even temporarily, because of their anxiety to have the -letter rate reduced. The yearly income of the Post Office Department -from letter postage is about $132,000,000, and it is -said that some mail-order houses pay several hundred thousand -dollars a year for letter postage. A reduction of that by half -would be well worth working for.</p> - -<p>It would not be fair in the discussion of this subject to overlook -the fact that there are arguments against the establishment<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[59]</a></span> -of a general parcels post which are advanced in perfect good -faith and which are entitled to serious consideration. Those -local merchants who have some misgivings about the matter are -entitled to have their views carefully considered, but as I have -indicated, it is my opinion that in the main their fears are not -well founded, and arise largely from the fact that they have not -had an opportunity to give the matter their personal consideration, -and therefore have been inclined to accept the arguments -of interested parties. There are also a considerable number of -people who are honestly opposed to the parcels post in the belief -that it is an unwarranted extension of government activities -into a field which ought to be satisfactorily covered by private -enterprise, and who still hope that the express service may be -so cheapened and improved as to very largely satisfy the demand -for a parcels post. There are also those who feel that owing to -the vast area of our country it would be difficult to adopt a system -of parcels post which would be generally satisfactory and -at the same time self-supporting.</p> - -<p>The argument is also made that the handling of a large -amount of merchandise by the postal service would make delivery -difficult where city delivery is provided, and delay the transmission -of letters by the loading of the mails with merchandise.</p> - -<p>These arguments do present problems which must have serious -consideration. They are none of them, however, in my -opinion, problems which are insurmountable, but a consideration -of them, as well as of that character of powerful opposition -exerted indirectly to which I have referred, leads thinking -people to the conclusion that the outlook for the establishment -of a general parcels post in the country in the near future is -far from promising. With this as with all progressive legislation, -little progress will be made until the people as a whole -become thoroughly interested in the subject, quite generally -make up their minds what they want, and in no uncertain tone -make their wants known.</p> - -<p>So long as only those who are opposed to the extension of the -parcels post are generally heard from by members of Congress, -there is not much likelihood of definite action being taken, and -the probability is that in any event a general parcels post in -this country can only be secured through the medium of a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[60]</a></span> -modest and limited and more or less experimental beginning -in the way of a local or rural parcels post.</p> - -<h4><i>Local Parcels Post</i></h4> - -<p>President Taft in his last annual message recommended a -parcels post limited to rural free-delivery lines. This recommendation -was made on the ground of economy, to meet the -opposition aroused by the argument that a general system would -create a great deficit in the postal revenues, for a time at least. -The local system would also have the virtue that it would -furnish an object lesson in a partial and limited way, which -might be valuable in determining the propriety of further -extending the system. There is, furthermore, an argument -for rural parcels post which does not apply in the same degree -to a general parcels post, and that is that while the dwellers -in cities and towns have ready access to stores and opportunities -of express service, the dwellers in rural communities -do not have these advantages, and therefore a rural parcels post -which would enable them to have articles delivered on local -routes or to local post offices would be of great benefit and advantage -to them. As we do not have many rural free-delivery -routes in our sparsely settled intermountain country, I am of -the opinion that a rural parcels post, if established, should -also operate over the star routes which supply our country -offices and our people in boxes en route, and therefore the bill -which I introduced provides for such a service.</p> - -<p>Such a rural parcels post as is thus proposed would unquestionably -be helpful in building up the trade of the merchants in -the small cities and towns and of very great value and advantage -to the people who get their mail at the country post offices -and along country routes. This being true, I supposed I would -avoid much of the storm of opposition which those who have -advocated a general parcels post have heretofore encountered. -Much to my surprise, however, the onslaught against this very -modest proposition, intended to help the local merchant and the -people of the country, has been even more terrific than the outburst -against the general proposition; all of which makes one -fact as clear as the noonday sun, and that is that the opponents<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[61]</a></span> -of a parcels post realize that the local parcels post, if it works -well and is generally satisfactory, will be the entering wedge -for the general parcels post. It also illuminates quite as clearly -another fact, and that is that the opponents of parcels post believe -that the rural parcels post will work well and be generally -satisfactory. Another important fact emphasized by this opposition -is that the opponents of parcels post believe that the agitation -for a local parcels post is much more dangerous than the -agitation for the general parcels post, because it is more likely -to be successful. The gentlemen who have been spending their -money so liberally in opposition to the local or rural parcels -post have thus made clear three important facts:</p> - -<p>First. They believe that there is a strong probability of a -local parcels post being established.</p> - -<p>Second. They believe that such a system will work to the -satisfaction of the people.</p> - -<p>Third. They believe that, the local system having proven -satisfactory, it would lead to the establishment of a general -system.</p> - -<p>In this condition of affairs it would seem that it is the duty -of the friends of a parcels-post system to get behind the President’s -suggestion of a local parcels post enlarged so as to include -star routes and country offices.</p> - -<p>Some one is spending a lot of money to defeat the rural parcels -post. One way they are doing it is by sending out petitions -by the tens of thousands, which they ask the local merchants -to sign and send to their Congressman. I have received -hundreds of these petitions. They have various sorts of headings -printed in various kinds of type, but they are nearly all -alike.</p> - -<p>After having in the first paragraph drawn a dreadful picture -of the awful disaster and destruction which the rural -parcels post will bring to the farmers and to the country towns, -in whose behalf they weep and wail—a destruction compared -with which the devastation of Sodom and Gomorrah would be as -the passing of a summer zephyr—they tell us how all these -direful calamities are to come, as follows:</p> - -<div class="blockquote"> - -<p>In every town catalogue agents of mail-order concerns would -establish themselves. They would need no stores, pay no rent,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[62]</a></span> -employ no clerks, require no credit and give none, and carry no -stock. Their whole time would be devoted to soliciting orders from -catalogues. The merchandise would be shipped to them by express -or freight from the retail mail-order houses in the large -cities. When received it would be deposited in the local post office -and the packages delivered by the rural carriers.</p> - -</div> - -<p>The only trouble with this lovely piece of sophistry is they -fail to explain to us why the very game they describe can not -be worked just as well now as it could after a rural parcels -post had been established. There is nothing in the world to -prevent just the sort of a plan, which is thus held up to our -horror and execration, from being carried out now, except that -it would not pay. The mail carriers on rural and star lines -not only have the authority, but they would be very glad to -have the opportunity of delivering packages along their routes -which solicitors for catalogue houses might deliver to them. -And, furthermore, they can now, no doubt would be glad to, -take packages of any size; whereas a rural parcels post only -provides for packages up to 11 pounds. So, when you come to -analyze it, this “local-solicitor-of-the-mail-order-trust” bugaboo -is found to be just another one of the strawmen, the poor miserable -scarecrows, that the express companies are trying to -terrify us with.</p> - -<p>The mail-order houses claim they can sell cheaper than the -local merchants because they do not have any local expense. -The moment they are called upon to pay for the services of a -local agent their expenses are greater than those of the local -merchant. I think this disposes of the “local-agent bogy.” He -is the most transparent of all the scarecrows the express companies -have raised.</p> - -<hr /> - -<h3>Congressional Record. 45: 9310-4. June 24, 1910.</h3> - -<p class="center">General Deficiency Bill.</p> - -<p class="center">William S. Bennet.</p> - -<p>Mr. Speaker: In view of the great interest in the parcels -post question, I submit herewith the views of the Farmers’ -National Congress:</p> - -<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[63]</a></span></p> - -<h4><i>A Brief for a Modern Parcels Post for the United States</i></h4> - -<p class="center">[By John M. Stahl, legislative agent Farmers’ National -Congress.]</p> - -<p>It has been said, and not without justice, that because of -greater density of population parcels can be carried at a less -cost in the domestic mails of Germany or Belgium than in the -domestic mails of the United States, because the average haul -would be shorter in Germany or Belgium. But the disparity -between the domestic parcels post of the United States and of -foreign countries is greater than is warranted by the length of -the average haul. No fact is better established in the science -of transportation than that the cost of transporting an article -bears little relation to the distance transported. But if the -density of population should fix the rate of postage and the -limit of weight in a domestic parcels post, then surely we should -have a lower rate of postage and a higher weight limit than -those countries in which the population is not so dense as is -ours. For example, the area of the Commonwealth of Australia -is 2,974,581 square miles, and the present population is -4,300,000. The area of the United States, excluding Alaska -and the islands, is 3,025,600 square miles. Alaska and Hawaii -would add a shade less than 600,000 square miles. The -area of the Philippine Archipelago is 832,968 square miles, -and the population, according to the 1908 census, is 7,835,436. -It is certain that, including all our territory and all our population, -we have an average population of more than 20 per -square mile. Australia has a population of less than 2 per -square mile. If the argument of the opponents of a modern -parcels post for the United States, founded on the density of -population of Belgium, Germany, etc., is a good argument, then -the rate charged in our domestic parcels post should be much -less and the weight limit should be much greater than in the -domestic parcels post of Australia. But the postage rate in the -domestic parcels post of Australia is as follows: Intrastate, 1 -pound, 6 pence (12 cents); 2 pounds, 9 pence (18 cents); 3 -pounds, 1 shilling; and 3 pence (6 cents) for each additional -pound up to and including 11 pounds, the postage rate for an -11-pound parcel being 3 shillings (72 cents).</p> - -<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[64]</a></span></p> - -<p>The interstate rate in the parcels post among the six states -of Australia is as follows: One pound, 8 pence (16 cents); 2 -pounds, 1 shilling 2 pence; 3 pounds, 1 shilling 8 pence; and -6 pence additional for each additional pound up to and including -11 pounds, making the charge for an 11-pound parcel 5 shillings -8 pence ($1.36).</p> - -<p>New Zealand is 1,200 miles from Australia and extends -for 1,100 miles. It has a population of only 1,000,000. Yet the -rate in the parcels posts between the States of Australia and -New Zealand is just the same as it is among the States of -Australia, and the weight limit is the same.</p> - -<p>Now, if the people of Belgium and Germany should have -a less postage rate and a higher weight limit in their domestic -parcels post than we have because the population of Germany -and Belgium is denser than our population, then we should -have a much less postage rate and a much higher weight limit -in our domestic parcels post than have the people of Australia, -because our population is more than ten times as dense as the -population of Australia. But, on the contrary, the average -postage rate in not only the intrastate but also in the interstate -parcels post of Australia is less than in our domestic parcels -post, and the weight limit is 11 pounds, as compared with -4 pounds in our domestic parcels post. The rule laid down -by the opponents of a modern parcels post for the United States -must apply to Australia as well as to Belgium and Germany, -and by this rule the rate in our domestic parcels post should -certainly be less than 8 cents a pound and the weight limit -should certainly be far above 11 pounds.</p> - -<p>The postage rate in the domestic parcels post of New Zealand -is 4 pence (8 cents) for the first pound and 2 pence (4 -cents) for each additional pound. The population of New -Zealand is less than one-half as dense as our population. The -weight limit in the domestic parcels post of New Zealand is -11 pounds. If the argument of the opponents of a modern -parcels post for the United States, founded on the density of -population is correct, then the rate in our domestic parcels post, -instead of being several times that of New Zealand, should<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[65]</a></span> -be less, and the weight limit, instead of being only about one-third -that of New Zealand, should be greater.</p> - -<p>Our parcels post with foreign countries shows beyond argument -that the postage rate in our domestic parcels post -should be not more than one-third of what it is, at the utmost, -and that the weight limit should be several times what it is. -The domestic parcels posts of other countries and of Australia -and New Zealand show also beyond argument that -the postage rate in our domestic parcels post should be only -a fraction of what it is and that the weight limit should -be several times greater.</p> - -<p>Whether or not the railways are owned by the government -does not touch the argument founded on the parcel post -of other countries. If government ownership of railways lessens -the cost of the postal service, it may be an argument -that our Post-Office Department pays our railways too high -a rate for transporting mail matter, but it has nothing to do -with the character of the mail service our government should -give our people.</p> - -<p>As a matter of fact, government ownership of railways has -no apparent effect on the parcel post of foreign countries. -Both those in which the railways are in large part owned by -the government and those in which the government does not -own any railway mileage have a parcel post much superior to -ours.</p> - -<p>Possibly our government should not conduct a parcel post -at any considerable loss, although it should be borne in mind -that the object of our Post-Office Department is to serve the -people and not to make money. It might be successfully argued -that fundamentally there is no greater reason why the Post-Office -Department should be a source of revenue than that -the War Department should be a source of revenue. The -mails have become so very important in the transaction of -business, in the communication of intelligence, and affect so -many of the operations of our daily life, that each year it -becomes apparent that the test of our Post-Office Department -should be the excellence of the service it gives our people; and -the relation of expenditures, so long as they are judiciously and -economically made, to receipts is of less and less importance.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[66]</a></span> -But we would not advocate any parcel post that, when fully -established and on a normal basis, would add much, if any, -to the net cost of our Post-Office Department. However, it -is apparent from a study of the profits of our express companies -that our Post-Office Department could carry parcels -in our domestic post at a much less rate than 16 cents a -pound without increasing the net cost of the Post-Office Department. -Further, a study of the profits of our express companies -show clearly that we are being charged altogether too -much by these express companies for the service they give -us, and that their charges should be subjected to that most -effective of all control—the competition of a modern parcel -post. This study shows with equal plainness that the present -weight limit on parcels in our domestic post, which compels us -to send by express all parcels weighing more than 4 pounds, -should be raised to a much higher figure, probably 25 or even -100 pounds. Recent investigations and revelations have shown -that our express companies are really subjecting us to extortion.</p> - -<p>The competition of a modern parcels post may not prove -sufficient of itself to make the charges of the express companies -what they should be, but it would certainly be most -effective in accomplishing this result. We are subjected to -overcharges by express companies as are the people of no -other country on the face of the earth. In fact, the most important -countries of Europe, as well as Australia, New Zealand, -etc., are not subjected to any overcharges at all by express companies -for the reason that in those countries and colonies there -are no express companies of the nature of those existing in -this country. On account of the overcharges of our express -companies we have a very good reason, indeed, for a modern -parcels post in this country; and this very good reason is in -addition to those that so many other countries have found -amply sufficient to warrant a modern parcels post.</p> - -<p>And it should not be forgotten that the enormous profits -of our express companies on the capital they actually have -invested in the express business show conclusively that our -government could give us a modern parcel post without increasing -the net cost of the postal service after that parcel<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[67]</a></span> -post had been established and its business had reached normal -proportions.</p> - -<p>In an honest endeavor to arrive at a correct conclusion as -to the features of our domestic parcel post we can not do -better than to study the parcel post of Australia and New -Zealand, for the dominant elements in the population of Australia -and New Zealand are the same as in ours, the people -of Australia and New Zealand have obtained their ideas of -government and the functions of government from the same -source that we have, their institutions and conditions approach -ours nearer than those of other countries, and they -have the same problem of adapting the government service -to a wide expanse of territory in the settlement and development -of a new country. This problem, though much greater than -ours at this time—the area of Australia is nearly the same -as that of our states, while the population is only about one-twentieth -as much—is the same in its nature.</p> - -<p>Another reason is that the postal service of Australia and -New Zealand is so satisfactory in every way. On page 25 of -“L’Union Postale” for 1909 it is stated in regard to the New -Zealand postal service: “The financial results of the administration -were very satisfactory. The receipts increased by 9.04 per -cent and the expenditure by 7.22 per cent over the preceding -year.”</p> - -<p>It will be seen that the postal business of New Zealand -conforms to the rule of good business management that as -a business increases in volume the receipts should increase faster -than the expense.</p> - -<p>In the last published report of the postmaster-general of -New Zealand it is pointed out that notwithstanding several -important reductions in the postage rate the revenue of the -postal service had during the preceding sixteen years increased -by a considerably larger amount than the expense. “From -December 16, 1907, the postage on inland post cards was reduced -to one-half penny. From January 1, 1908, the rates -for inland letters were made 1 penny for the first 4 ounces -and one-half penny for each additional 2 ounces. From January -1, 1908, the commission chargeable on money orders within -New Zealand is 3 pence for each 5 pounds sterling or fraction<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[68]</a></span> -of 5 pounds. Owing to the reduction in postal rates -made the year before, the number of parcels increased 81.57 -per cent.” “The rate of postage for inland parcels was reduced -from 6 pence for the first pound and 3 pence for each -additional pound to 4 pence for the first pound and 2 pence -for each additional pound. The public, moreover, has by the -change been induced to send by parcels post articles which -were previously forwarded as packets.” “The reduction in -postal rates may be practically referred to as having resulted -in a great increase in parcels-post business.” There was a -handsome net balance to the credit of the postal business. “The -net balance on the year’s transactions would be much higher -if the value of official correspondence dealt with were taken -into account.” “The expansion of the business has necessitated -large additions to the staff. The increase of the staff was, -however, below the percentage of increase of the receipts. An -amendment to the post-office act contributed to improve the -financial condition of the postal service.” The experience of -New Zealand and the Commonwealth of Australia in postal -service is well stated by the colonial treasurer, Hon. Sir J. G. -Ward, in one of his recent financial statements, as follows: -“Experience has shown that every concession in postal rates -creates a new class of business which is ultimately to the -profit of the post-office.”</p> - -<p>Of course, in the official publications of the Commonwealth -of Australia and of New Zealand one hears nothing to the -effect that the government should not engage in any competitive -business—one hears that only in the United States. If that -were put into effect, our national government would be compelled -to stop building war ships in the navy-yards, to close -up altogether the government printing establishment, to stop -at once all its irrigation projects, to close up all the land-grant -colleges, to stop at once casting cannon and making small firearms -and ammunition, etc. As a matter of fact, when our -Constitution was framed there was no question among those -that framed it that it should give to the national government -the power to do certain things, in competition with private enterprise, -that would be for “the public welfare;” and there -was never any intimation that the national government should<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[69]</a></span> -not engage in any competitive business. On the other hand, -those that helped to frame the national Constitution and to -secure its adoption participated in and sanctioned legislation by -Congress that put the national government into several lines -of competitive business.</p> - -<p>The publications of the labor officials of Australia and New -Zealand are decidedly numerous, and show plainly that the -working people of these colonies, as well as the other elements -of their population, are heartily in favor of a modern parcel -post. It may truly be said that the parcel post of Australia -and New Zealand has the hearty and universal approval of -the people of those colonies. The officials and the rank and -file of the labor organizations of these colonies are among -the heartiest supporters of their parcel post. And it is certain -that the very large majority of the rank and file of our labor -organizations and the very large majority of our city people, -as well as of farmers, heartily favor a modern parcel post.</p> - -<p>As for the relation of a modern parcels post to the so-called -catalogue houses: In his official reports the postmaster-general -of both Australia and New Zealand frequently emphasizes that -for years a thoroughly modern colonial, intercolonial, and -foreign parcels post has been enjoyed by the people of those -colonies, even in “the most remote districts to which the mail -service penetrates.” Notwithstanding this, in all of the many -publications on Australia and New Zealand, or by the officials -of those colonies, there could not be found a sentence to -the effect that the local merchants of those colonies have been -in the least injured in their business by catalogue houses.</p> - -<p>This fact certainly merits being emphasized. In all the -countries in which there is a modern parcels post the catalogue -house is unknown. In our country, which is the only enlightened -country that has not a modern parcels post, the catalogue -house exists and, to some limited extent, flourishes. -Hence the fact is plain that instead of a modern parcels post -aiding catalogue houses the very opposite is true. If the -universal experience of humanity counts for anything, then the -antiquated parcels post, such as we have, aids the catalogue -house and the modern parcels post puts it out of business and -keeps it out of business.</p> - -<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[70]</a></span></p> - -<p>The rural delivery service has grown to more than 20,000 -routes. Official reports show that the average weight of mail -delivered by each team or single-horse wagon in the rural -delivery service is only 25 pounds. On nearly all the trips the -carrier could practically as well take 500 pounds in his wagon. -The more than 40,000 rural carriers make more than 12,480,000 -round trips each year. If a parcels post on the rural routes -earned $2 for each round trip the gain would be, in round numbers -$25,000,000 a year, and this, with some little reforms that -all agree should be and easily could be made, would wipe out -the postal deficit. Now, if the rate on the pound packages -in a rural route parcels post was 5 cents a pound the carrier -to earn the $2 per round trip would be compelled to carry not -the 500 pounds that he could, but only 20 pounds additional -going and coming or a total load of only 45 pounds.</p> - -<p>This is a fair calculation as to profit to the government, for -the expense for the rural carrier service would not be any -greater whatever, and the small expense for handling the additional -20 pounds at the terminal post-office would be more -than covered by the increased first-class mail (handling which -is very profitable) resulting from the parcels post.</p> - -<p>As, on the average, about 100 families are served by each -rural route, if, on the average, each family had delivered -or sent each trip only one-half pound of parcel, taking into -account that a good many parcels would weigh less than 1 pound -and that every parcels-post bill proposes for them a higher -rate than for heavier packages, the rate could be made much -less than is proposed and yet the postal deficit would be wiped -out altogether!</p> - -<p>And this would be of very great benefit to the 4,000,000 -families served by the rural mail delivery. The rural carrier -passes the farm every week day, yet if the farmer wants a -package from the town he must go after it—each of the 100 -farmers must hitch up and drive to town and back for packages -that the one carrier could have brought them as well as not -with the outfit that he already has. Or these 100 farmers -must hitch up and take to town packages that the carrier could -have taken for them with the outfit he already has. The<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[71]</a></span> -time and labor saved the 4,000,000 families on rural routes -would amount to many times the present postal deficit.</p> - -<p>It is only natural that farmers should be especially desirous -of a modern parcels post, because, as already stated, the -express service stops with the railway station. Hence the -farmer has no express service that reaches to him as have -the people of towns and cities. The express companies have -never cared to carry their business to the farmer, and this must -convict them of only the most reprehensible motives in opposing -a parcels post limited to rural routes, which would -extend the equivalent of an express service to the farmers. -As bearing on the farmer’s need of a modern parcels post, -the following from a letter just received from Hon. W. L. -Ames, Oregon, Wis., a practical farmer and a leader of national -reputation in all agricultural movements, is of interest:</p> - -<p>“One of the things we most need is better and prompter -transportation facilities for rather small articles. I recently needed -a small but important repair for a machine. It weighed -4¼ pounds. It cost 55 cents. The express company charged -45 cents to bring it to Oregon—200 miles. The charge was -altogether too high, but what I felt most disposed to complain -about was that it took a week to bring the repair to me. -Mail matter moves promptly; but the express company knew -that it was certain of the job of carrying that repair to me, -hence no need of haste on the part of the express company. -We need better and added facilities for the prompter moving -of such merchandise. Present delay is a serious handicap, and -undoubtedly a parcels post would give us prompt service at a less -rate, as it would not be expected that the parcels post would -do more than make a moderate profit for the government, -whereas the express business is a constant ‘melon-cutting’ -business. We must not forget, also, that all the equipment -for a parcels post on rural routes is already installed.</p> - -<p>“If the government would take charge of what it already has -and add rules to fix charges for carrying parcels on the rural -routes, it would relieve us of much unjust charge and also -much annoyance and loss of time. Under the rulings of the -Post-Office Department prohibiting rural carriers from acting -as agents for anyone to obtain business, carriers are afraid<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[72]</a></span> -to carry parcels to any extent. But what cuts a yet greater -figure is that no rule can be established to fix the charges -for carrying parcels and make them the same for all. Each -person on a rural route and the carrier cannot dicker for -the transportation of each article. That would soon lead to -great dissatisfaction, as some would think that others were -being favored. And to dicker on each parcel would take so -much time and be so much trouble that the carrier could -not be expected to do it. All we need to put into effect a -modern parcels post on the rural routes is a law fixing a -reasonable and proper rate for the transportation of parcels -and making it the business of the rural carrier to handle parcels -as well as the mail matter he now carries.”</p> - -<hr /> - -<h3>Cosmopolitan. 36: 497*-9*. March, 1904.</h3> - -<p class="center">Who Will Be Benefited by a Parcels Post?</p> - -<p class="center">John B. Walker.</p> - -<p>Those who have been appointed to defend the Post-Office -Department in the sacrifice it has made of the American people -in the matter of postal parcels delivery have replied to the -argument in the last issue of <i>The Cosmopolitan</i> by claiming -that but very few people will be benefited by a parcels delivery -equal to that of Germany. It is therefore necessary to consider -this question: “Who are the people who will be benefited?”</p> - -<p>First. There will be a gross saving amounting to more -than two hundred and fifty millions of dollars per annum. -This annual addition to our national wealth constitutes an economic -factor of the highest importance.</p> - -<p>Second. While this sum will be distributed equally among -the people in proportion to their purchases—especially among -those who make small purchases—the direct benefit will be first -appreciable in the business of the following classes:</p> - -<p>I. <i>The Small Storekeepers of the Country Towns and -Villages.</i> One of the arguments used by those who have been -placed in the Post-Office Department for the protection of special<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[73]</a></span> -interests, is that a parcels post would injure the country storekeeper. -The very slightest consideration of the problem, however, -would have shown that no one is so likely to be its beneficiary -as he. The chief difficulties with which the small merchant -has to contend are these:</p> - -<p>1. Insufficient capital.</p> - -<p>2. Distance from wholesale centers.</p> - -<p>3. Cost of expressage on small parcels.</p> - -<p>The country merchant has the acquaintance of his customers; -he knows their wants and enjoys their good-will, and would -have their patronage if he could be placed in a situation where -he could give them equal, or approximately equal, advantages -with a merchant who buys on a large scale. If one of his customers -is driven to go elsewhere, it is not only because the -merchant cannot afford to keep in stock the particular class -of goods desired, but because he cannot afford to ship these -goods in small quantities, on account of the prohibitive rates -of the government’s postal parcels charges of sixteen cents per -pound, or the almost equally prohibitive rates of the express -companies.</p> - -<p>The country storekeeper has the experience of his customer’s -wants, and he has a knowledge of the best goods, knows -what is a fair price for an article. He is in a position to advise -his customer as to his needs, and if he were not handicapped -by lack of capital and cost of transportation for parcels, he -could, in nine times out of ten, supply the wants of the customer.</p> - -<p>In addition to the trade he has now, the country storekeeper -would, with the advantage of a first-class postal parcels system, -be able to keep in touch with all the great wholesale distributing -agencies of the country. He would earn a reasonable commission -on all goods ordered, and would be in a position to -secure, within a very brief time, by postal parcels, the goods -which the customer, after looking over the catalogues and receiving -the advice of the merchant, should decide to order.</p> - -<p>There would be no investment and no risk, such as is involved -in carrying a stock of goods which may become unsalable. -Without large capital, he is now handicapped by being compelled,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[74]</a></span> -on account of the discrimination against him as a shipper, to lose -the sale of all those articles which he cannot carry in stock in -quantities, and which may, under present arrangements, only -be shipped in bulk. If he attempts to use the mails, the rate -of sixteen cents per pound is prohibitive, while the fact that -the bulk is limited to four pounds is almost equally so; and -the express companies’ charges are so high that in the majority -of cases he cannot utilize their services.</p> - -<p>Let us suppose that, instead of the United States’ charges for -postal parcels being six thousand per cent. greater than Germany’s -they were on a par, and that the country merchant could receive -parcels weighing from one ounce to one hundred and eleven -pounds for a quarter of a cent a pound. <i>It is not even necessary -that the rate should be so low. Let it be made four times -as great as that of Germany</i>, or one cent per pound, and let -us see what advantage the country merchant would have. One -hundred and ten pounds covers nine-tenths of the articles which -he would be likely to sell. Instead of a store equipped with -comparatively few articles, the country merchant would be able -to carry, in addition to his regular stock, an extensive line of -samples. He would familiarize himself with the best that there -is in the market, be able to advise his customer to his advantage, -and then, receiving the order, could, within a brief time, -have the goods sent by parcels post directly to the customer’s -home, saving the expense of handling two or three times—making -more money by a small commission than he does now -by the larger margin on the goods which he is compelled to -carry constantly in stock.</p> - -<p>Good organization is the trend of modern business, and this -is good organization—saving two or three handlings, truckage, -some bookkeeping, et cetera.</p> - -<p>II. <i>The Manufacturers.</i> Next to the country merchant, the -manufacturer will be the largest beneficiary of the postal parcels -delivery. Take, for instance, the hardware business. The -manufacturer is obliged, under the existing conditions of trade, -to maintain large stocks in an endless number of cities scattered -over the country, or do what is the equivalent of directly -maintaining the stocks—that is, to give extended credit. This<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[75]</a></span> -is because there is no way of handling small parcels of hardware -without a cost that is so excessive as to force shipments of -hardware to be made in bulk. With a one-cent-per-pound rate, -more than fifty per cent. of the stocks now carried could be -eliminated and orders sent by the hardware merchant directly -to the manufacturer to be shipped by package. One hundred -and ten pounds would cover the greater portion of the trade, -and leave only nails, barbed wire, and similar articles, for bulk -handling.</p> - -<p>In cotton goods, instead of shipping from the Mills to New -York, trucking them there through the streets, breaking bulk, -repacking, retrucking and reshipping to the merchant there -would be but one operation. A single piece of goods would go -direct from the factory by parcels post at a total cost for -handling not to exceed twenty per cent. of the charges now -engendered by our clumsy, costly and inconceivably stupid -method.</p> - -<p>The same thing would happen in the grocery business. A -factory in Rochester or Pittsburg, manufacturing canned articles, -must ship in bulk to New York, or Chicago, or St. Louis. -There the car-load, after being hauled to a warehouse, is broken -up and transshipped. There is no reason for this transshipment, -no possible excuse for this waste of money, except that -the ownership of the express by a few private companies -has prevented the organization of a parcels post upon lines -which have long been recognized as absolutely successful in -Europe.</p> - -<p>The question here will be asked: Would this shipment -direct from the factory interfere with the business of the -wholesale merchants whose task it is now to repack and reship? -On the contrary, it would simplify their work and reduce expenses -from every point of view. Their business primarily is -one of distribution of credits. They have certain customers -who receive from them certain lines of credit. They furnish -the capital between the manufacturer and the retail dealer. -If tomorrow they could order by letter or telegraph, directly -from the factory, for shipment to the retail dealer by postal -parcels, their business would be greatly simplified and their -profits increased.</p> - -<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[76]</a></span></p> - -<p>III. <i>The Merchants in Large Cities.</i> Perhaps to no class -will the boon of a parcels post be greater than the merchants -in the large cities. All the way from four cents to fifty cents -is now paid for the delivery of a parcel within a radius of thirty -miles around the leading cities of this country. Experiments -have shown that it is possible, where the interests of a considerable -number of merchants are combined, to deliver an -average dry-goods parcel, thirty miles out, at a cost not to -exceed four cents.</p> - -<p>As conducted today, the business of delivering parcels consists -in sending the wagon of one dry-goods house to follow -another into a city block, and deliver each its parcel; then each -wagon goes off to another block, and delivers its parcel. In -New York city thousands of wagons meander through the -two or three thousand miles of streets, each firm doing its -work independently of the others, and each wasting money by -lack of cooperation.</p> - -<p>It is altogether probable that with thorough organization -city delivery could be conducted, within a radius of thirty miles, -upon a basis not to exceed one half cent per pound. This -would mean but two cents per package for the average four-pound -dry-goods parcel, including, of course, the large number -which are transported but a few blocks. But that is not the only -advantage. It would take from the merchants the constant -effort which the maintenance of good delivery systems involves. -I have personally studied the delivery systems of nearly all -the leading merchants in New York, Philadelphia, and Boston, -and have spent a day in the delivery department of Marshall -Field in Chicago. Everywhere I heard the same complaint—that -the brains consumed in managing the parcels delivery -was one of the most expensive items in the cost of operating -a great establishment.</p> - -<p>IV. <i>Book Publishers.</i> The cost of delivering a book by -mail is now eight cents per pound. This, for a four-pound -book, means a tax of thirty-two cents. Just how far this retards -the development of intelligence in the people is not difficult to -estimate.</p> - -<p>V. <i>Stationers’ Supplies.</i> The large class of manufacturers<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[77]</a></span> -and wholesalers who are engaged in supplying the stationery -trade would find the parcels post a great convenience in receiving -supplies and in delivering to customers; a matter of lessened -capital, lessened trouble, and greatly increased profits.</p> - -<p>VI. <i>The Railways.</i> At first sight it might appear that the -interests of the railways would not be favored by a postal parcels -law. But the briefest analysis of the problem shows that the -benefit to them would perhaps be greatest of all.</p> - -<p>To-day vast numbers of freight-cars stand idle, waiting carload -shipments. These bulk shipments are necessarily made at -the very minimum of cost. In the low price of bulk shipments, -American railways lead the world. Even at existing prices, -however, water transportation carries off a large part of the -burden.</p> - -<p>The benefits to the railways, by transferring freight from -the class of bulk to parcels, would be:</p> - -<p>1. Goods being shipped in a constant stream of packages, -instead of intermittently by car-load or train-bulk;</p> - -<p>2. A higher price would be obtained from shipments of the -same freight in parcels as compared with the previous cost in -bulk;</p> - -<p>3. The large increase in traffic due to better, cheaper, speedier -and more direct, and in every way infinitely more convenient, -facilities;</p> - -<p>4. The additional prosperity which a saving of anywhere -from two hundred and fifty to six hundred millions of dollars -per annum would mean to the country at large.</p> - -<p>There are to-day far-seeing railway officials who have given -this problem serious consideration, and who have arrived at the -conclusion just stated.</p> - -<p>VII. <i>The Farmer.</i> Last, but not least in importance, comes -the farmer. To-day, cut off from parcel delivery, he is the victim -of bad government, both in his bad roads and lack of -postal facilities. The one step of progress that the United -States post-office has made of recent years, that is worthy -of respect, is the rural postal delivery. As proposed, however, -it is ridiculous. The idea was advanced by some politicians -for the purpose of creating additional patronage. Merely<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[78]</a></span> -to deliver letters and newspapers to the farmer would, of course, -be to operate a service without hope of placing it on a profitable -basis. It would be as if the New York merchants would -keep a thousand wagons traveling around the streets of New -York to deliver nothing but kid gloves and lace veils—nearly -empty, while other wagons would be carrying the burden of -the goods sold.</p> - -<p>Rural free delivery is absolutely impossible unless accompanied -by a postal parcels law. Giving a rate even four times -as high as that of Germany, the entire rural delivery could -be put on a paying basis to-morrow.</p> - -<p>Here again would be an advantage to the country merchant. -The farmer to-day, when he wishes to buy, hitches up a pair of -horses, drives four or five miles, and makes a few purchases. -If the United States had the postal parcels law of Austro-Hungary, -the farmer would draw a postal check, mail it free, -the merchant would deliver the goods to the post-office, and a -few hours later they would be in the hands of the farmer.</p> - -<p>The life of the farm, which has so many drawbacks, would -thus be made vastly more comfortable. It is impossible to -estimate in dollars how great the saving to the country would -be in this one particular.</p> - -<p>It would be easy to show the endless ramifications of this -beneficial service; but space need not here be taken up for -that purpose. Sufficient has been indicated to show that there -is no man or woman, however poor, however rich, who would -not be vastly benefited and convenienced by a government -postal parcels system.</p> - -<hr /> - -<h3>Craftsman. 14: 592-4. September, 1908.</h3> - -<p class="center">More Efficient Postal Service. Gustav Stickley.</p> - -<p>Speaking of the success of the rural routes, of which there -are more than thirty-eight thousand already established in this -country, Mr. Meyer says: “The isolation which existed in -many parts of the country has been overcome; the people are in -daily communication with their friends in the rest of the world;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[79]</a></span> -the daily papers and magazines come to the door of every farm -house on the rural routes, and enlightenment and information -are being spread broadcast through the land. Medical -men have said that already the establishment of the rural service -is having its effect upon the mentality of our country -patrons, and that because of it insanity is on the decrease. -The extension of the rural routes to include a parcel post,” he -asserts, “will be a boon both to the rural population and to -the store-keeper as the latter can receive his orders by mail -or telephone and despatch the desired merchandise by the rural -carrier. The farmer will be saved from hitching up his horse -and losing the time he needs for planting or harvesting his -crops, and it will enable the store-keeper to increase his sales -and meet the requirements of modern trade.”</p> - -<p>Much of the opposition to this measure has come from the -country store-keeper, who very naturally dreads that such largely -increased facilities for delivery by mail would simply extend the -already wide domain of the department store and drive him completely -out of business. But this objection has been met by the -plan for a special postal service for the rural routes, which -would be given at a much lower rate than that prevailing throughout -the general system of parcel post. This special rate as advocated -by Mr. Meyer would be five cents for the first pound and -two cents for each successive pound up to the limit of eleven -pounds, thus enabling any one along the line of rural route to use -the mails for delivery of packages at a charge of twenty-five cents -for the maximum weight, as opposed to one dollar and thirty-two -cents for the same weight if sent at the regular rate of -twelve cents a pound,—which regular rate would necessarily -have to be used by department stores unless they should go to -the trouble and expense of maintaining a large system of rural -agencies throughout the country.</p> - -<p>The result of such a system in bringing about the general -dissemination of business throughout the country by fostering -small individual enterprises is almost beyond calculation, especially -as a secondary result would be the growth of small -villages and settlements throughout the thinly settled farming -districts. And these two changes in the present state of affairs -would go far toward solving the whole problem of the possibility<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[80]</a></span> -of turning the tide from the city back into the country. The -hardships and discomforts of many of the conditions of city -life, particularly among people of limited means, and the -uncertainty of the wage-earner’s means of livelihood, are now -endured chiefly because of the greater disadvantages that -are attached to farming in remote parts of the country or to -undertaking the responsibility of working independently of any -large commercial or industrial organization. For months, the -Craftsman has been urging the establishment of rural settlements -and the introduction of handicrafts in connection with -small farms. Nothing that is likely to be done in the way of -legislation to this end seems to us to make so possible a general -change for the better along these lines as the postal measures -recommended by the Postmaster-General, supported by the -President and now recognized by Republicans and Democrats -alike as a reform that will not be downed, no matter how -powerful are the interests opposing it. Given the postal savings -bank as an encouragement to thrift, and transportation facilities -that will not only bring all necessary merchandise within reach -of the farmer, but also take the products of his own industry -and a great part of the output of the village workshops to the -nearest market at a reasonable rate, and the rest will follow -almost as a matter of course. When a man has a fund of -several hundred dollars, there is hardly any question as to -what he will do with it if he has a chance. The desire to -own a home and a little patch of land is universal with -civilized mankind and when to the possibility of gratifying -this desire is added facilities that render life in the country -as interesting and as much abreast of the times as life in the -city, the tenement question in cities will soon cease to be the -serious problem it is now.</p> - -<hr /> - -<h3>Independent. 70: 105-7. January 12, 1911.</h3> - -<p class="center">Parcels Post Once More.</p> - -<p>Proportional rural population is not diminishing. We do -not know what the present census will say, but we do know<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[81]</a></span> -that from 1890 to 1900 the country gained enormously on the -city in its proportion of new settlers. The old record of 65 -per cent. for the city tumbled down to a little over 30 per cent., -and we know of no reversal of this tendency. Back to the -country has become a universal cry. Lands are rising in -value steadily, and deserted farms are a myth. At least, Governor -Hughes in one of his speeches said that he should like -to know where they were in New York State, for he could -not find them. Country churches have often died, to be sure; -but they were killed seventy-five years ago, and they do not -note at all any decadence of farm prosperity. They went out -when railroads began to be built. Crossroads stores have not -been run to any extent for half a century, any more than -crossroads taverns. They do not belong to advanced stages -of country life, and are not needed.</p> - -<p>Never was country life more progressive, better organized -or more lifeful and hopeful. The crossroads has been displaced -by the village store, and this village store must deliver its -goods. It wants the parcels post. The trolley is reaching its -fingers up into the valleys and touching the farmyards with -its carrying capacity. The automobile is doing even more to -reach the isolated farmhouse. We might as well forbid these -forces and conveniences as to deny the farmer a parcels post. -The same argument lies with intense force against rural free -mail delivery in every form. It destroys many post offices; -it keeps the farmer at home; it dissolves hamlet life: but it -aids in the great movement of distributing the blessings of a -complete life all over the country.</p> - -<p>We are quite willing to face the frightful proposition which -is offered us, of a community with no business institutions except -the post office and the freight depot. We have seen the tens -of thousands of district schoolhouses blotted out without a -qualm, for we have seen the union schools gloriously taking up -the work in their place. We have seen the little stores and -taverns that used to be convenient for watering horses vanish, -because we find a substitute in department stores, almost invariably -within reach, by aid of the trolley and automobile. -We are not worried at all when we contemplate a picture involving -a more substantial country home, with its isolation<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[82]</a></span> -abolished, hidden among the hills, but visited daily by the rural -free delivery carrier, even tho he shall have in his automobile -a ten-pound package for the housewife.</p> - -<p>Without parley, we believe that the American people, almost -without dissent, demand a parcels post service; and that -if put to popular vote, this demand would be exprest by a -majority of 90 to 1 the country over. The people are growing -impatient over delay, and they are expressing this impatience -very loudly. We believe that the coming Congress will hardly -find it possible to ignore this desire. We quite agree with -one of our contemporaries who says that the next step of -social and economic progress in the United States is unquestionably -bringing the producer and consumer closer together -by reducing the cost of carrying small parcels.</p> - -<hr /> - -<h3>People Demand a General Parcels Post. pp. 7-12.</h3> - -<p class="center">William Sulzer.</p> - -<p>Absence of a parcels-post law enables the railroad companies, -through subsidiary companies called express companies, -to eliminate all competition and prevent all regulation in one -branch of transportation and to escape compliance with the laws -that are being enforced against them in other branches of transportation -by the several state commerce commissions and the -Interstate Commerce Commission.</p> - -<p>That the owners of the securities of these express companies -have made enormous profits is a recognized fact. One hundred -per cent, even 200 per cent, profit when an express company -“cuts a melon” no longer excites surprise when found in -the news columns of our evening paper.</p> - -<p>No one objects to a fair profit for good service, but conditions -seem to indicate that the transportation companies are -not satisfied with the first and are not giving us the second, -while developments before commerce commission hearings indicate -that their backwardness in adopting economical and -scientific business methods causes a tremendous unnecessary -expense. This they are meeting by maintaining and even increasing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[83]</a></span> -already exorbitant rates for service that many believe -are discriminatory, and that grave injury and injustice to business -and to the general public results.</p> - -<p>As an example, W. P. Dickinson, of the Burlington Railway, -is quoted in the Railway Record as saying at a public -hearing that the expenditures of the Burlington traffic department -for printing and stationery in the fiscal year 1910 was -$222,000. Assuming that they are typical for all the railways in -the United States, the cost of printing railroad tariffs alone -under present methods, is $6,000,000 to $10,000,000. In modern -transportation methods, as, for instance, those in vogue in Germany, -this expense is so trifling as to be scarcely worth considering. -Freights move in Germany on a uniform tariff, based -entirely upon bulk, weight, and distance, discrimination is impossible, -and any shipper can learn in a moment, by referring to -the table, the exact freight charge to any point, and can ship -knowing that his competitors must pay the same price for the -same service.</p> - -<p>In the United States the shipper can not know all the tariffs -that are published or how they affect rates. He is supplied -with a few easily understood tables, but it is not within human -possibility for him to even read, to say nothing of comprehending, -the millions that are filed with the commission every year -and how they affect the cost of the transportation he buys.</p> - -<p>So it seems this extraordinary printing expense of millions, -whatever its purpose may be, operates to keep the average -shipper ignorant about rates. Ignorance is always dangerous, -and particularly so in transportation matters.</p> - -<p>Harrington Emerson, the expert, testified at the hearing -before the Interstate Commerce Commission at Washington -last November, that $300,000,000 annually in railroad operating -expenses in this country would be saved if the railroads -adopted better business methods of management.</p> - -<p>To save for the consumers that enormous sum, no better -beginning can be made than for the government to establish -a satisfactory parcels post and adopt scientific business methods -in its management.</p> - -<p>That the interests that control our railroads also own and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[84]</a></span> -control the express companies and that their separate incorporation -is merely a device to cover extortion and discrimination -by complex contract relations is indicated by Senate Document -No. 278, pages 53, 54, and 55:</p> - -<table summary="Ownership"> - <tr> - <td>Stock held by railways in express companies</td><td class="tdr">$20,668,000</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>Railway securities held by express companies</td><td class="tdr">34,542,950</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>Holdings of express companies in the stock of express companies</td><td class="tdr">11,618,125</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td class="tdindent">Total intercorporate ownership express companies June 20, 1906</td><td class="tdr tdtotal">66,829,075</td> - </tr> -</table> - -<h4><i>Express Company Rates Cause Loss to Shippers—Express Company -Methods Cause Loss to the Postal Department</i></h4> - -<p>The peculiar, graduated, increasing rate for small-weight -parcels is absolutely prohibitive for express transportation except -at an actual loss for a considerable proportion of business. -Most express shipments are in small parcels. They therefore -pay the higher scale. This increased rate is exacted for both -terminal and haulage service and is as high as 37½ times the -first-class freight charge.</p> - -<p>The express companies take from the Post Office Department -the profitable business and pocket millions of profits, -but leave the unprofitable for the Post Office Department. The -profits from a parcels post would stop the post-office deficit -and give us a 1-cent letter rate. The annual surplus of the -British post-office department about equals our annual postal -deficit. The British have a serviceable parcels post.</p> - -<p>The men in the mail service have a record of one error -in 18,000 pieces handled. Compare that with your experience -with the express companies.</p> - -<h4><i>The Parcels Post Not Openly Opposed by the Beneficiaries of -Present Methods</i></h4> - -<p>The opposition to the parcels post at the late congressional -hearing was made by persons who appeared in the name of -American Hardware Manufacturers’ Association, Illinois Retail -Merchants’ Association, National Association of Retail<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[85]</a></span> -Druggists, National Association Retail Grocers, National Retail -Hardware Association, National Federation of Retail Implement -& Vehicle Dealers’ Associations, Wholesale Dry Goods -Association, Paint Manufacturers’ Association of the United -States.</p> - -<p>There was no direct opposition by the express companies -to the parcels post.</p> - -<h4><i>Misdirected Energy Benefits Express Companies and Catalogue -Houses</i></h4> - -<p>Since the members of the above commercial associations -can not to any important degree be beneficiaries of the present -confiscatory and restrictive system that has a monopoly -of the transportation of merchandise in packages of 4 pounds -to 20 pounds, some other reason for their opposition to the -parcels post must be found, and in that connection the testimony -given by these gentlemen at the hearing is interesting.</p> - -<p>The main objection to the parcels post was that it would -build up catalogue houses to the injury of retail businesses.</p> - -<p>In reply to questions by members of the congressional committee, -however, some of their specific objections applied only -to the rural free delivery now firmly established and which -nobody dreams of abolishing.</p> - -<p>The other objections advanced were also to conditions already -in existence, some of which at least it would seem would -be less objectionable if we had a serviceable parcels post.</p> - -<p>For instance, the mailing of catalogues by the catalogue -houses. That can be done now to the farmer’s door for one-half -cent an ounce, but even that low rate does not always -get the business. I have seen the catalogue of Sears, Roebuck -& Co. and the Chicago House Wrecking Co. that were sent -by each of these firms to addressees who did not specify how -he wished them sent. They were received since the date of -the hearing; both catalogues came by prepaid express.</p> - -<p>Had we a parcels post competing with the express companies -and reducing their extortionate charges the express -companies would be less able to deprive the government of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[86]</a></span> -that revenue by underbidding the Post Office Department rate -on catalogues.</p> - -<h4><i>Catalogue Houses Don’t Need the Parcels Post, and Oppose It</i></h4> - -<p>At the congressional hearing so much was said by the opponents -of the parcels post about the catalogue houses, how -they were behind the parcels post—that it was for their sole -benefit, etc., etc.—that I went to Chicago and succeeded in -getting an interview with Mr. Julius Rosenwald, president of -Sears, Roebuck & Co. He declined to support the parcels post. -He said they were very well satisfied with conditions as they -are, under which they had built up their immense business, -which was done entirely by catalogue and without salesmen -or commission. He explained that only an insignificant amount -of their sales went by mail, that what did was unprofitable, as -it cost as much to make ready and handle such little sales -as larger shipments, jewelry being the only exception, and even -for that they advised express.</p> - -<p>Evidence that catalogue houses do not want or need, and -do oppose, the parcels post was not lacking at the hearing.</p> - -<p>For example: Marcus M. Marks, of the Merchants’ Association -of New York, after stating that the Merchants’ Association -is not in favor of a general parcels post and has frequently -placed itself in opposition thereto he quoted one of the -large Chicago catalogue houses as in opposition, and for this -reason: “The result would be that instead of shipping goods -in large bulk it would tend to create a demand for small -shipments, which would increase his expense of doing business.” -Marshall Field & Co., one of the largest concerns in -this country, were referred to by both J. G. Baker, president -National Federation of Retail Implements, etc., and H. L. -McNamary, of the Hardware Dealers’ Association, as opposed -to the parcels post.</p> - -<p>All the opponents of the parcels post at the hearing, mostly -retailers in heavy-weight goods, were very insistent to impress -upon the minds of the committee the great injury that is being -done their business by the big catalogue houses, who, they -claimed, are underselling them and are doing a very large<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[87]</a></span> -and increasing percentage of the business that belongs to and -should go to the retail dealer. But is it correct to charge to the -parcels post this great loss of trade which has occurred while -we have no parcels post and that has been brought about -by conditions that can claim no assistance from a parcels post? -Is it reasonable to say that a parcels post would produce such -conditions when no such conditions do exist as above noted -where the parcels post has been in operation for many years?</p> - -<hr /> - -<h3>Hampton’s. 26: 261-4. February, 1911.</h3> - -<p class="center">Let Us Have a Parcels Post.</p> - -<p>There would be some shadow of excuse for refusing to -accept so great a convenience as the parcels post if, in accepting -it, we would destroy a large investment in the business of -the express companies. But, in fact, we would not destroy -any legitimate values in these companies. They own practically -nothing on which they would lose a dollar. Most of their -money is not in the business of transporting freight, but in -banking and investment enterprises. These would not be interfered -with. Their tangible property actually used in transportation -would be required, and would undoubtedly be taken -over at good figures by the government, when it established -a parcels post business. Their investments in stocks, bonds -and banking business would be undisturbed. The express -companies would lose nothing except their graft—the privilege -of charging outrageous rates for the service they render. -In morals and equity that ought to be ended as soon as possible.</p> - -<p>The truth is that it is not the political and financial influences -of the express companies which keeps Congress from -giving this nation a parcels post. It is the pathetic and benighted -ignorance of a considerable section of our own people, -who have been led to believe that the parcels post would injure -them. It is well-nigh impossible to believe that there can -still be millions of intelligent Americans who doubt that national -prosperity must be promoted by every increase of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[88]</a></span> -facilities and cheapening of the cost of transportation. Yet -there is such a section of the American public. Misguided -and ignorant, it has permitted itself to become the chief bulwark -of protection to the express companies’ graft. It persists -in believing, in the face of nearly a century of world experience -to the contrary, that there is danger in too easy, too -cheap and too universal transportation!</p> - -<h4><i>Unwise Opposition of the Small Merchant</i></h4> - -<p>Reference, of course, is had to the fears which the merchants -of the country towns entertain as to the effect of -the parcels post upon their business. The country merchant -has come to accept on this point the sophistical, disingenuous -and dishonest arguments of the express lobby, skillfully put -out through agencies whose real purpose is concealed.</p> - -<p>The argument that cheap transportation of parcels will -injure the country towns is exactly as reasonable as the contention -that London and New York, Hamburg and Liverpool, -Seattle and Sidney, must be injured by the railways and steam-ships -which, bringing all parts of the world into close and -easy communication, would make it impossible for great and -dominating centers of population, commerce and industry to -exist. Everybody can see how absurd such an argument would -be. The best possible transportation facilities constitute the -first requisite to making a great city. Commercial centers -are prosperous and important, in proportion as they have adequate, -efficient and cheap transportation. This is as true of -the country town with a single railroad line as it is -of a continent’s metropolis with half a hundred great railroad -systems pouring their tonnage into its terminals and with the -ships of all the seven seas unloading their cargoes at its -wharves.</p> - -<p>It is an axiom that good, ample and cheap transportation -actually makes commerce. The country town which has no -railroad always wants one. The hamlet which has no post-office -is forever riding the neck of its congressman until it -gets one. Great cities vote millions to build artificial harbors,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[89]</a></span> -to provide wharfage, and to increase every possible facility for -cheap and rapid transportation.</p> - -<p>There are no communities which need improvement of transportation -so much as the country towns which have been -misled into opposing the parcels post. The country merchant -has been made to believe that the parcels post would take -his business away from him and give it to the mail-order house -in the great city. It would do nothing of the kind. On the -contrary, it would give the country merchant the one facility -which he does not now have: it would place him on a parity -with the merchant in a great city.</p> - -<p>Quick, cheap transportation would enable him to buy better -and cheaper. He could sell many articles from catalogues -instead of having to carry them in stock. He could create a -mail-order business of his own in his surrounding territory. -The local merchant who conducts his business well has nothing -to fear from the mail-order house. Farmers and citizens -prefer dealing with the home man, and the parcels post will -give him many advantages that will enable him to increase his -trade to proportions which are now impossible.</p> - -<p>Of course, this does not apply to the country merchant -who buys his goods badly or at high prices, and who gives -long credits and sells at long prices. Parcels post or not, -his day is doomed. More alert men, with better business ideas, -will soon occupy his place. The alert, hustling merchant will -use the parcels post so effectively that the old sleepy head’s -day will end just that much sooner.</p> - -<p>The proof of the pudding is in the eating. Every enlightened -country except the United States has a parcels post. -No country would think of abandoning it, any more than -it would think of disestablishing its letter postal service. In -the experience of all the world the argument about injuring -the country town is sweepingly and completely refuted. The -small town would gain vastly more than the large town by this -tremendous increase and improvement of its transportation -facilities. The whole public would benefit, for precisely the -same reason that it benefits by having fast steamships instead<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[90]</a></span> -of sailing vessels, limited passenger trains instead of stage -coaches, two-cent letter postage instead of five-cent.</p> - -<h4><i>Part Played by the Express Companies</i></h4> - -<p>The people who oppose the parcels post are the innocent -and unwitting dupes of the express monopoly. This is the -one point in the parcels post argument that cannot be too -constantly emphasized. When the dupes are brought to understand -their true interests, Congress will not dare stand -for a single session as the protector of express graft.</p> - -<p>Small wonder that the express companies are fighting with -every resource against the parcels post. They constitute one -of the greatest groups of financial power in the country. They -are united firmly. Most of the companies are large stock-holders -in the others. Thus the United States Express Company -was shown by the report of the Public Service Commission -of New York, issued in 1908, to be capitalized at -$10,000,000. Of this, the Adams Express Company owned -nearly $1,000,000, the American Express Company exactly -$1,000,000, and the Southern Express Company, $70,000. How -tremendously profitable the business of the United States Express -Company has been is shown by the fact that whereas -the company claimed an investment of only $2,042,000 in real -estate and equipment, it had $7,464,000 in investments, $895,000 -in cash holdings, and $2,000,000 in collateral and other loans! -That is to say, while this company had very little more than -$2,000,000 invested in its transportation business, it had more -than $10,000,000, representing surplus and undivided profit, in -general investments!</p> - -<p>It has accumulated such vast profits because it has been -for many years charging unconscionable and scandalous rates -for its service.</p> - -<p>The Adams Express Company is shown by the current -number of Moody’s Manual to have $12,000,000 capital. -After paying large regular dividends and numerous extra -dividends for many years, the company in 1907 found itself -with such a tremendous surplus that it actually paid a special -dividend of 200 per cent in 4-per-cent bonds! Every holder<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[91]</a></span> -of a one-hundred-share of stock was presented with two hundred -dollars’ worth of 4-per-cent bonds! The present, of -course, represented in part the excessive charges which the -company had been permitted to collect from the public.</p> - -<p>But the most startling statistics of express accumulations -are the financial statements of Wells Fargo and Company. For -many years this company’s capital stock was $8,000,000. Its -most recent statement, as published in Moody’s Manual, listed -these assets: Real property, $4,100,000; equipment used in transportation, -$2,044,000; stocks owned as investments, $3,211,000; -bonds owned as investment, $3,750,000; loans, $17,165,000; -cash on hand and in the bank, $5,459,000.</p> - -<p>Such were the accumulations of this company whose own -statement admitted that the equipment actually used in its -transportation business represented only $2,044,000. The company -has always paid large dividends. Its star performance -in this line was the payment, early in 1910, of a cash dividend -of 300 per cent. Every holder of a one-hundred-dollar share -of stock was given three hundred dollars cash!</p> - -<p>This was not all. The stock of the company was worth -in the market exceedingly high prices. In addition to giving -this 300-per-cent cash dividend, the company increased its -stock from $8,000,000 to $24,000,000, and gave the holders of -the original $8,000,000 the right to subscribe at par for two -shares of the new issue for each share of their previous -holding.</p> - -<h4><i>Enormous Profits of the Express Companies</i></h4> - -<p>These figures suggest the profits express companies have -been making. They have been making them because our government -is the only government which permits such a monopoly. -It is a monopoly which not only extorts millions upon millions -every year from the people, but which enables railroad -companies, through their intimate business and financial relations -with the express companies, to conceal a very considerable -part of their earnings. The express companies are -large holders of one another’s stock, and also of railway stock; -in turn, the men who control the great railway combinations<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[92]</a></span> -are themselves big owners of express-company stocks and -bonds. The express companies lease from the railroads the -right to transport freight over the railroad lines. The terms -of these leases represent, not a reasonable and fair charge -for the service, but an elaborate project of covering up excessive -earnings and extortionate charges in a maze of complicated -intercorporation transactions.</p> - -<p>The worst penalty that the American public pays in order -that the express grafters may make these huge profits and -conduct these manipulations, does not lie in the excessive -charges. It lies rather in the stunting and depressing effect -upon general business, which is a necessary and manifest result -of a policy that denies the freest and cheapest transportation -facilities to the entire community.</p> - -<hr /> - -<h3>Good Housekeeping. 53: 2-10. July, 1911.</h3> - -<p class="center">Housekeeping by Parcels Post.</p> - -<p class="center">Isabel G. Curtis.</p> - -<p>What would a parcels post mean to the American housekeeper? -The suburban or rural family could receive the bulk -of its supplies by mail—clothing, food, even eggs and butter -and fresh meat. And the country household that had something -to sell could, by availing itself of the parcels post, eliminate -the expensive middleman and ship direct to the consumer. -Thus the city housekeeper could receive eggs, butter -and other things by mail at much less than she pays now. In -scores of ways the parcels post would tend greatly to decrease -the cost of living, for it would revolutionize the present -cumbrous and expensive methods of retail business.</p> - -<p>The United States Postoffice authorities will accept a package -of not more than twelve pounds in weight and not more -than three and one-half feet wide by six feet long for delivery -at any postoffice in England, Germany or in any one of the -thirty-nine foreign countries blessed with the parcels-post system, -at a rate of twelve cents a pound. But you are denied<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[93]</a></span> -the privilege of sending the same package to any destination -in your own country at any price. A four-pound package -sent to a local point will cost the sender sixty-four cents -while the same package can be sent to New Zealand or Costa -Rica for forty-eight cents.</p> - -<p>The parcels-post rates in foreign countries are very moderate. -In Germany, for instance, weight and distance determine -the amount of the charge. The distance charge is fixed by means -of zones, the first zone having a radius of ten geographical -miles from the sending point, the second twenty, etc. The -charge for an eleven-pound parcel is six cents within the first -zone and twelve cents for every greater distance. For parcels -weighing more, the charge is the same for the first five -kilograms, but varies proportionately for each additional kilogram. -In Germany, the weight limit is one hundred pounds, -in England eleven, in France twenty-two and in Belgium one -hundred and thirty-two pounds. That there is no good economic -reason why any civilized community cannot have a parcels -post seems to be proved conclusively by the earnings of -the postal departments of the governments that have tried -it. The postoffice departments of Germany and France each -has a yearly surplus of more than $14,000,000, and England -enjoys a surplus of more than $20,000,000—a striking contrast -to our own Postoffice Department, with its annual deficit of -millions.</p> - -<p>“Then why don’t we have a parcels post?” you ask. The -answer given to this question many years ago by Mr. John -Wanamaker, when he was Postmaster General, means just as -much today as it did then.</p> - -<p>“There are just four reasons against the establishment of -a parcels post,” said he. “They are the American, the Adams, -the United States, and the Wells Fargo Express Companies.”</p> - -<p>It has been said by some congressmen and postoffice officials -that there is no parcels post because the public has not -demanded it. Why not demand it now? Let every woman -write to her husband’s congressman and speak her mind!</p> - -<p>As pointed out by an Englishman recently in New York,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[94]</a></span> -one of the great advantages of the parcels post is its celerity. -“Before it came into vogue,” he said, “customers often had to -wait days for their goods. Now, within the London radius, -it is a case of only a few hours, for the parcels post makes -several deliveries daily. By paying a small additional fee, -‘immediate delivery’ is secured.</p> - -<p>“The great retail houses, in increasing numbers, employ -the parcels post for sending home the purchases of customers, -instead of using their own delivery wagons. They find the -government does the work for them cheaper and better than -they can do it for themselves. The price charged, which is -paid, of course, in postage stamps, varies from two cents for -a parcel weighing under two pounds to twenty-two cents for -a parcel not exceeding eleven pounds. Many of the London -laundries now send home the week’s washing by parcels post -for the same reason that the big stores are taking to it. The -service cost less than that which they had previously provided -themselves.”</p> - -<p>This gentlemen dwells upon the importance of the fact -that goods thus conveyed by the government are virtually insured -up to the value of most packages sent.</p> - -<hr /> - -<h3>Housekeeper. 31: 11-35. August, 1908.</h3> - -<p class="center">Parcels Post. George E. Miller.</p> - -<p>Now what are the advantages and disadvantages of the -parcel post? The advantages can perhaps best be illustrated by -reference to the work done by the parcels post abroad. There, -especially in Germany and Great Britain, this great modern -convenience has been brought to the greatest perfection. And -there it is worth studying.</p> - -<p>In the first place, it has been demonstrated there that the -parcels post is the greatest stimulant of domestic trade ever -devised by man. In the next place, it has made life in the -country, in both Germany and England as comfortable and -convenient as in the city. And lastly, it has proven so great -a blessing in the cities, towns and villages that in many instances<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[95]</a></span> -merchants have disposed of their delivery wagons and -they depend upon the parcels post exclusively for the delivery -of merchandise to their customers, except in the matter of -goods of too much weight or bulk to go through the mails.</p> - -<p>In London the government runs motor wagons in all directions -into the country for many miles for the delivery -of parcels, and this service is being extended until presently -it will cover the country. Parcels up to the weight of -eleven pounds are carried through the British mails, while in -some other countries the limit is much higher, Italy, Chile, -Cuba, the Netherlands, and New Zealand are the only other -countries holding the weight to the same maximum as Britain. -In Germany and Austria packages weighing one hundred and -ten pounds are received, and in Belgium the limit is one -hundred and thirty-two pounds. In France it is thirty-two -pounds. In the United States alone the limit is as low as -four pounds while the rate with us is so high, sixteen cents -a pound, as to make the service prohibitive for ordinary use. -Abroad the rates vary, but they are always aimed to be not -much above cost, and they are materially lower than the rate -now charged here, and much lower even, than the rate proposed -by the president, which is twelve cents a pound.</p> - -<p>No more enticing tale is told by the traveler returned -from abroad than that relating to the parcels post. In England, -Germany, and some of the other countries, the housewife -particularly luxuriates in the joint convenience of the -telephone and the liberal mail service. Does she want a spool -of thread of a certain color and texture, or a bottle of medicine, -or a cake or loaf of bread from the bakery, or any one of a -thousand small needs, the necessity for which may come with -all too much suddenness, she simply steps to the phone and -makes her request and by the next visit of the postman she receives -that which she ordered. And yet, she may be ten or -twenty miles from the nearest town.</p> - -<p>The farmers of those countries likewise receive untold -benefit from the same service. Not long ago a gentleman -called at the post-office department in Washington to relate -a circumstance coming under his observation.</p> - -<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[96]</a></span></p> - -<p>“I saw a Yankee demonstrating an American potato digging -device to a farmer in Germany,” he said. “Suddenly one of -the parts of the machine broke. It looked like bad business -for the Yankee, but he, with real American resourcefulness, -sprang to the telephone and ordered a duplicate part from his -repository in a village two miles away, and in twenty minutes -the postman delivered it to him and the demonstration of -the digger proceeded to a successful conclusion. Of course, -this was an exceptional instance. Everything connected with -it happened luckily for the man selling the digger. His agent -in the repository happened to be right on the spot when the -telephone message came, and the postman happened to be just -on the point of starting in the right direction to make a speedy -delivery. But it seemed to me to tell an eloquent story of -the parcels post, and its effectiveness.”</p> - -<p>A red-headed, freckled, vivacious manufacturer from Detroit -was in Germany not long ago and he also brought back a -fund of parcels post stories. But his most significant statement -was in regard to the effect of the service upon the country -merchant.</p> - -<p>“No man,” he said, “can study this question abroad and retain -the belief that the parcels post will ruin the country -merchant. On the contrary, it has been the making of him. -The country merchant of Germany is far more solid and substantial -since the introduction of the parcels post than he ever -was before. It has made him a permanent, fixed cog in the -industrial scheme of that country and given him an opportunity -which he never had before of making himself indispensable -to the community in which he does business.</p> - -<p>“How did this happen? By the natural evolution of events. -Nothing else. The wholesale houses of Germany simply -stepped into the field themselves and issued catalogues as -fine as any the mail order houses could produce. And these -they placed with the country merchants in every town and -village in the empire. The result was that each merchant had -several dozen catalogues upon his counters for the benefit of -his customers. He was authorized to say to all who came: -‘Here I am. You all know me. You know whether I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[97]</a></span> -am responsible. If you give me your order and the goods -do not prove to be exactly as represented, you need not take -them and I will refund your money. If you want goods of -the same grade as those sold by the mail order houses, I -can sell them to you, and at the same price. And I also have -better goods which will cost you more. But I can give you -exactly what you want, and as cheaply as any one.’</p> - -<p>“In the meantime the country merchants have been able -to greatly reduce the stocks carried in their stores. This -reduced the amount of capital tied up in their business. And -yet, by means of the catalogues, their customers were able to -select from as large an assortment as they could in the largest -stores, in Berlin.</p> - -<p>“And this latter fact is amply recognized by the people -of Germany. They step into a store in the most remote village -of the country, and make their selections and place their -orders, securely confident that they have seen all they could -have seen if they had made the journey to one of the large -cities. And they are all satisfied. They regard their mercantile -system as the very best on earth, and I think it is. -I had occasion, while visiting at a house out in the country -one hundred miles from Berlin to need a dress suit, and I -didn’t have one on that side of the Atlantic. I rode to the -nearest village one morning, stepped into a little store, was -measured by the storekeeper, and by mail that afternoon received -a very fair ready-made evening suit. I was both pleased -and surprised but the circumstance was a matter of course -to the people I was visiting.”</p> - -<p>These are some of the advantages of the parcels post. Now, -about the disadvantages. These would, in this country fall exclusively -upon the express companies. These unaccommodating -friends, who have been with us so long, and who deliver nothing -at your door unless you chance to live in a large city, would -doubtless suffer the fate of the German mail order houses if -the government of the United States were to inaugurate a -parcels post upon the same scale as that in Germany. They -would have to go, for who would pay the higher price to have -a parcel sent by the nondelivering express company when the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[98]</a></span> -mails would be both cheaper and would deliver the parcel at -your door in city or country?</p> - -<p>As for the country merchant, of course, he would demand -the German system, and equally, of course, he would get it. -Otherwise, he also might have to walk the plank and the wholesalers -of the United States would never permit that. They -could not afford to.</p> - -<hr /> - -<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[99]</a></span></p> - -<h2>NEGATIVE DISCUSSION</h2> - -<h3>Perils of Parcels Post Extension. pp. 13-31.</h3> - -<p class="center">George H. Maxwell.</p> - -<h4><i>A Heavy Deficit Inevitable</i></h4> - -<p>The commercial advocates of larger bulk and lower rates by -domestic parcels post for the shipment of merchandise by mail -do not want either a distance rate or a system limited by territorial -zones. They want the privilege of shipping from any -factory or central store or warehouse, wherever located, anywhere -in the United States, to any customer or consumer, at -any postoffice, however remote or inaccessible, in any state or -territory. The rate desired is a flat rate of so much per pound -without regard to distance.</p> - -<p>It is urged that the same rate should be charged by Uncle -Sam for carrying merchandise by parcels post from a New -England factory to the distant mountain mining camps in Idaho -or Oregon, or to the prairie towns of Texas, as would be charged -for delivering the same package from the same factory by local -trolley car service to a nearby postoffice in the immediate suburbs -of the New England city where the factory happened to be -located.</p> - -<h4><i>Government Bears the Burden</i></h4> - -<p>The national government in each and every case would pay -the full actual cost of transportation and delivery to the point of -destination, whether it were by trolley, railroad, stage-coach, -wagon, pack-horse, mule, sled or snowshoes. Of course it is -not contended that the government could secure an average or -flat rate for the cost to it of transporting merchandise by mail, -the same to all points in the United States, as it is urged that it -should charge. On every package mailed the government would<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[100]</a></span> -of necessity pay the full cost of carrying it from the point of -shipment by mail to the place of delivery to the consignee, no -matter how great the distance or how costly the character of -the transportation.</p> - -<p>In other words, while the government is expected to and of -course must itself pay the full distance cost of transportation and -delivery in every case, and could not give the service unless it -did so, it is expected to look for reimbursement wholly to an -average flat rate, like the rate for letter postage, or the present -rate of the existing domestic parcels post for small parcels—a -rate that is the same everywhere, without regard to the distance -from point of mailing to point of destination.</p> - -<h4><i>Averages Are Misleading</i></h4> - -<p>The argument of averages is relied on to meet this insuperable -objection. It has been suggested that the average haul of -all second-class matter (which comprises only regularly entered -publications, periodicals and magazines) was 540 miles in 1907, -as shown by the report of the Postoffice Department, and on -that as a basis it was estimated that an average rate of 5½ cents -per pound or $29.70 per ton for other transportation charges, -and $165.00 for labor and supplies, a total of $212.00 a ton, -would leave a profit to the government of $27.00 a ton from a -general parcels post rate of 12 cents a pound, which would produce -a revenue of $240 a ton.</p> - -<p>The estimates given above were embodied in an address by -the Postmaster General before the Union League Club at -Philadelphia on October 26, 1907.</p> - -<p>For reasons based on facts that are undeniable and unquestionable, -these averages and the estimates based on them, would -prove utterly delusive and misleading when put to the test of a -practical application of the proposed extension of the domestic -parcels post to include merchandise in larger bulk and at lower -rates than those now authorized by the postal laws. It is not -necessary that the proposed extensions should be actually tried -to demonstrate the deceptiveness of these average estimates. The -conditions are before us and arise from facts so clearly known -and established that he who runs may read.</p> - -<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[101]</a></span></p> - -<h4><i>The Average Haul</i></h4> - -<p>The average haul of second-class mail matter, made up of -printed reading matter, for every copy of which a regular subscription -must be paid, is fixed by and is in proportion to the -average density of the population.</p> - -<p>To illustrate this, take the city of New York as a starting -point. It is the leading publication center in the country, and a -larger number of publications entered as second-class matter -are issued from the city of New York than from any other one -city of the country.</p> - -<p>The population of New York state in 1906 was estimated to -be 8,226,990. The population of the state of New York alone -is as large as that of the whole western half of the United -States, and yet that whole western half of our territorial area -contains only about one-tenth of the entire population of the -country.</p> - -<p>The average number of subscribers receiving regular publications -through the mails as second-class matter in proportion to -population is as large in the one state of New York as in the -entire western half of the United States. So the Postoffice Department -would serve in New York state, within an area of -48,204 square miles of closely settled territory, as many subscribers -for second-class mail matter as it would be compelled -to serve over a sparsely settled region in the west covering -1,513,394 square miles, that being the area of the western half -of the United States, not including Hawaii and Alaska.</p> - -<h4><i>Second-Class Mail Matter</i></h4> - -<p>An average length of haul of second-class mail matter now -carried by the national government would be much greater if -limited to the one state of New York and the western half of -the United States, than if applied to the entire country; for -the very simple reason that the vast sparsely settled area in the -west would comprise one-half of the total number of subscribers -served; whereas if the whole United States were included, then -the western half with its sparse population would embrace only -one-tenth of the whole number served, and nine-tenths would -be located in the more closely settled eastern half of the United -States.</p> - -<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[102]</a></span></p> - -<p>In other words, in averaging the length of haul of second-class -matter, nine-tenths of the people served are in closely settled -territory, where they are reached by the short haul, and only -one-tenth in the thinly settled western half of the country, to be -served by the long haul, and oftentimes by the most difficult -and expensive methods of transportation.</p> - -<h4><i>Conditions That Control Are Reversed</i></h4> - -<p>The principle that controls the average in estimating the -length of the haul of second-class matter is that as the proportion -of density of population increases the average length of the -haul is decreased.</p> - -<p>It is naturally assumed that the same principle would control -in fixing the average haul of transporting merchandise by mail -if the movement for an extension of the domestic parcels post -should prevail; but strange as it may seem at first thought, -the exact contrary would happen. The principle that controls -the average haul in the case of second-class matter would be reversed -in the case of parcels post extension. The greater the -distance the more remote the territory, the more sparse the population -the larger would be the proportion of merchandise shipments -by mail as compared with the whole volume of such -shipments.</p> - -<p>The reasons for this are, first, because the express companies -with their flexible distance rate system would practically surrender -the distant territory and make a rate on nearby points -so much lower than the government rate that the short haul -service would go to them, leaving the long haul shipments for -the government; and, second, because it is the distant market -that merchants and manufacturers desiring to trade by mail wish -to reach by the parcels post system of delivery and which they -would exploit if the opportunity were created.</p> - -<h4><i>Impossibility of Adjustment</i></h4> - -<p>Every effort of the national government to readjust an -average flat rate so as to meet this condition, and command for -the parcels post the desired proportion of nearby business, would -simply be to get out of the frying pan into the fire. To lower -the average flat rate so as to compete with express companies<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[103]</a></span> -in nearby territory and on the short hauls would stimulate the -volume of long distance shipments and still keep the balance -on the wrong side of the ledger. To raise the average flat rate, -so as to secure a larger revenue from the long distance shipments, -would widen the circle within which the express companies -would be able to command the business by a lower rate -and reduce the government revenue by taking away from it -more of the short haul business.</p> - -<p>It has been urged that one reason why the proposed extension -of the domestic parcels post should be adopted is that it -would lower the express rates. If that should occur the rates -would, of course, be lowered in the territory, where by lowering -their rates the express companies could command still more of -the short haul business, and thereby increase the proportion of -long haul business that the government would have to carry at -a loss. Every time the express companies lowered their rates -it would increase the annual deficit that would be incurred by -the government. No business proposition could be more simple. -The government would be in the position of having entered into -a competitive business. It would have done this after adopting -at the start a system that made it impossible for it to cope with -its competitors. Whatever flat rate the government established -would be met by a lower distance rate by the express companies -that would take the short haul business from which the government -could earn a profit, leaving to the government the long -haul business that it could only conduct at a loss. Nothing -that the government could do would prevent this, because it -would make the conditions worse one way or the other every -time it either lowered or raised its flat rate. If the flat rate -were lowered, the proportion of long haul business would be -increased, and the losses be as great as ever. If the flat rate -were raised the proportion of short haul business would decrease, -and the average cost would still create a heavy deficit.</p> - -<h4><i>Act With Open Eyes</i></h4> - -<p>The fact is, the United States government cannot carry -merchandise by parcels post without having to meet an enormous -annual deficit for conducting the service, and the service -should not be undertaken by the government unless such a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[104]</a></span> -deficit is to be deliberately and knowingly created and assumed -by the people at large. The government is asked to undertake -an impossibility, if it is expected to make the service pay for -itself, when it is asked to adopt the proposed extensions of the -domestic parcels post.</p> - -<p>A flat rate system of charge cannot, in the very nature of -things, be operated in this country without loss. The only way -to avoid such loss would be the adoption of a distance tariff by -the government, just as is charged by the express companies. -The proponents of domestic parcels post extensions do not advocate -such a distance tariff system and it will be time enough -to consider its merits if it ever comes before the people for -serious consideration. The fatal defect in the reasoning of the -advocates of the proposed parcels post extensions is that they -disregard the fact that we live in a country as broad as a continent -and extending for over three thousand miles from ocean -to ocean, and that in all that vast territory we have a population -of only something over eighty million people.</p> - -<h4><i>A Subsidy to a Favored Class</i></h4> - -<p>Should the mail trade have a government subsidy?</p> - -<p>That is a very plain and simple question, and the answer to -it will also answer the question whether the shipment and delivery -of merchandise by mail should be facilitated and undertaken -by the government as advocated by the proponents of -domestic parcels post extension.</p> - -<p>If there is any good reason why the mail trade should be -encouraged by government subsidy, it has never been set forth -by any advocate of parcels post extension.</p> - -<p>And yet, that is exactly what the proposition amounts to in -its practical application. It would not be a subsidy that would -create new business where there was none before. If it would -do that it might be an argument in its favor. Instead of doing -so, it would take the trade from the merchants, both wholesale -and retail, who are now doing it, and transfer it to new and -wholly different agencies, who would be enabled to secure the -trade because of a direct advantage given to the new agencies -by the national government at the expense of the general public.</p> - -<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[105]</a></span></p> - -<h4><i>Who Are the Favored Class?</i></h4> - -<p>Whether the seller or the consumer, under this system of a -government subsidy for the mail trade, were to be regarded -as the favored class, the result would be the same. A favored -class would be benefited at the expense of the people at large, -and without any advantage to the general public that would -warrant it.</p> - -<p>For many reasons the consumer in the long run would be -injured more than benefited by the establishment of such a -system for doing the business of the country, and ought for this -reason to be eliminated in defining the favored class. Temporarily, -and considering only immediate cheapness of needed -merchandise, the consumer might imagine himself benefited, -and probably would, but that benefit would be involved and -submerged in far greater indirect losses in the future.</p> - -<p>So the favored class, in the last analysis, would be the great -catalogue concerns, and manufacturers who desire to eliminate -the jobber and the retailer and country merchant and sell direct -to the consumer, using the mail as the agency of transportation -and delivery to the purchaser.</p> - -<p>Without regard to any of the many serious objections to -this system of trading, based on social and economic reasons, -there is no possible ground upon which a subsidy for the encouragement -of this mail trade should be given out of the -United States Treasury and at the expense of the people at -large.</p> - -<h4><i>Effect of a Subsidy</i></h4> - -<p>And when the effect of that subsidy would be to break -down long established commercial customs, and divert the trade -from institutions now successfully and satisfactorily conducting -it, there is no more justification for such a mail trade subsidy -than there would be for the government to carry some new -brand of flour cheaper than the old established brands—in order -to enable the manufacturer of the new brand to introduce and -sell the product of his mills.</p> - -<p>The growth of the mail trade, under its present limitations, -has been stupendous, and multitudes of retail and country<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[106]</a></span> -merchants have been injured, and many driven to the wall by -it. But its future growth would sweep over the country with an -irresistible force and wipe out of existence many thousands of -now prosperous retail and general merchandise stores, if a -subsidy were granted to the mail trade in the form of the proposed -extensions of the parcels post.</p> - -<p>There are many manufacturers who are doing business along -the regularly established lines, selling goods to the jobber or -the retailer, who are not now seeking or advocating any change -in the channels of trade, but those manufacturers would change -their system and enter the field of the mail trade if the advantages -advocated by others were gained for it. If the avalanche -of mail shipments that would follow the inauguration of such -a mail trade system were ever once started no one could foresee -the end or define the limits of the evils it would ultimately accomplish.</p> - -<hr /> - -<h3>Independent. 70: 72-3. January 12, 1911.</h3> - -<p class="center">Objections to the Parcels Post. Allan W. Clark.</p> - -<p>There are probably a hundred really national organizations -of dealers, and several thousand state and local organizations—generally -affiliated with some of these national bodies. These -embrace practically every line of retail merchandising and the -ramifications of various interests among them. The individual, -due paying membership in some of these larger organizations, -like the National Association of Retail Grocers, the National -Retail Hardware Association and the National Association of -Retail Druggists, is from 50,000 to more than 100,000 each. -I have never heard of any association of retail dealers that is -not on record against the extension of the domestic parcels -post in any form, especially the R. F. D. “entering wedge,” -except the organized department stores in one or two cities -(such as “The Merchants’ Association of New York”), who -want this practical government subsidy for the benefit of their<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[107]</a></span> -mail order departments and for cheaper local and suburban delivery.</p> - -<p>I have mentioned only retailers’ organizations, whose resolutions -on this subject, during the convention season, crowd -the pages of all the trade journals. Nevertheless, practically -all the organizations of wholesalers and manufacturers, besides -many local commercial and civic associations, are opposed -to the parcels post, and like the retailers, have been fighting -it for years. Conspicuous among these is the Chicago Chamber -of Commerce, the leading members of which, thru the “American -League of Associations,” are pushing a national campaign -“to assist the retail merchant and to co-operate with other associations -in the protection and development of home trade, and -(the italic emphasis is theirs), <i>specifically, this organization is -now opposing the proposed parcels post legislation</i>.”</p> - -<p>These dealers, jobbers, manufacturers and others interested -in the maintenance and the improvement of the local stores and -the local community, and who oppose any extension of the domestic -parcels post, vie with its advocates in denunciation of -the extortionate charges of the express companies. But they -go further—their associations are fighting in many states to -secure state regulation of express rates and classification; and -they are making practical progress, with every prospect that -their appeals for national regulation will be recognized by the -Interstate Commerce Commission, which has just won its fight -to regulate sleeping car charges. The opponents of parcels -post want lower and equitable rates for the transportation of -small packages of merchandise, but they believe that these rates, -like those on the transportation of larger packages, should be -investigated and regulated by the Interstate Commerce Commission, -especially as various state railway boards have recently -demonstrated the fact that the express companies are chiefly -owned by the railroads and are merely vehicles to bring into -the coffers of the railroads larger profits than can be secured -thru government regulated freight rates.</p> - -<p>That any one can find an example for the United States -in the parcels post systems over government owned railways -in European countries, the largest of which is smaller than -Texas, is incomprehensible to the average business man who<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[108]</a></span> -is not asking for a government subsidy to arbitrarily annihilate -distance and the natural local advantages of thousands of local -business communities in order to increase the present $200,000,000 -mail order business; and this in a nation that maintains a high -tariff wall that may or may not “protect” the American manufacturer, -farmer and workman, but the chief effect of which, so -far as the distributor, the dealer, is concerned is to place him -between the upper and nether millstones—the butt of criticism, -the subject of Congressional inquiry on the high cost of living!</p> - -<p>The mail order houses want a general parcels post; the -general business community is opposed to it. Suppose that -both are actuated by selfish reasons, one to gain an arbitrary -advantage and the other to prevent it—where do the people -come in, those besides the mail order men and the million -retailers and their families?</p> - -<hr /> - -<h3>Further Thoughts on Parcels Post pp. 3-5.</h3> - -<p class="center">Charles W. Burrows.</p> - -<p>Postmaster-General Meyer in an address to the New England -Postmasters’ Association, Boston, October, 1907, and elsewhere, -made recommendations urging legislation giving to the -Postal Department a greatly extended parcels carrying service. -The recommendations made were mainly two.</p> - -<p>First. That the present rate of sixteen cents per pound for -the mail carriage of merchandise with a weight limit of four -pounds per parcel as the maximum shall be changed, reducing -the rate to twelve cents per pound (with fractions at rates from -one cent up) and increasing the weight limit to eleven pounds. -The recommendation was that this should be, like the letter -charge, a flat rate to prevail anywhere within the United States -and its possessions irrespective of distance or accessibility.</p> - -<p>In support of this, his first proposition, he calls attention to -certain inconsistencies now existing in the service. He states -that an individual entering any post office in the country with a -parcel weighing four pounds, addressed to New York city will<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[109]</a></span> -be obliged to pay sixty-four cents for its carriage by post. If -on the other hand it is to pass through New York city to any one -of the thirty-three foreign countries with which we have postal -conventions, the charge will be but forty-eight cents. Further, -should the package weigh more than four pounds, it will be -denied admission to the mails in this country while it will be -accepted and forwarded to any of these foreign lands if it -weighs up to four pounds six ounces, and in the case of some, -twenty-four of the countries it will be accepted even if it weighs -so much as eleven pounds, and it is on account of these inconsistencies -that he urges his legislation.</p> - -<p>Let us first examine this point. General Meyer is quite -correct in his statement that it does cost more to send, for example, -a pair of shoes weighing just four pounds from Brockton, -Massachusetts, to New York city, than it would cost to send -the same pair of shoes through New York city to any one of -the thirty-three foreign countries with which we have postal -conventions.</p> - -<p>General Meyer, however, fails to state that while there is -this large number of foreign countries with which we have -postal conventions, yet not a single one of the twenty-four -countries with which we have an eleven-pound convention is on -the map of Europe. They are all of the nature of Jamaica, the -Windward Isles, Venezuela, Barbados, Costa Rica, Danish West -Indies, etc., countries with which we do not do any great volume -of business.</p> - -<p>It may further be stated that the weight limit with the remaining -nine countries, most of which are European, is in -reality intended to be the nearest approximation to our own -domestic four-pound limit, that is, it is two kilograms—about -four pounds six ounces—and the European countries all closely -scrutinize this weight limit as the business is one that involves -a loss in its operation. Germany, for example, for a number -of years recognized an eleven-pound limit but changed to the -two kilograms about three years ago.</p> - -<p>It should be borne in mind, moreover, that the exchange of -parcels between these countries and our own is made as a matter -of comity or international courtesy, and is permitted because -the amount involved is small. The work is done, too, in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[110]</a></span> -connection with the carriage of first-class mail which produces -a large profit.</p> - -<p>To illustrate this matter, Great Britain carried in her parcels -post last year 104,819,000 parcels. Of these only 2,575,000 (less -than 2½ per cent) went out of the country to all foreign countries, -her own colonial dependencies included, and to the United -States she sent only 61,000 and we sent to her 89,000 only. -The difference which is after all what we make or lose upon, -was some 28,000, and that was but a fraction of a tenth of 1 -per cent of the whole business. With some of the other countries -in question, we exchanged less than 1,000 parcels in the -last fiscal year, and with one of them it was less than 100, -while with all of them aggregated it was a total of but 330,000 -parcels dispatched and 181,000 received; so when we examine -this question of inconsistencies microscopically we find that -it is truly of microscopic proportion only, and may be disregarded -as having no important bearing upon the general -question.</p> - -<hr /> -<h3>One Cent Letter Postage, Second Class Mail Rates, and -Parcels Post. pp. 14-22.</h3> - -<p class="center">Charles W. Burrows.</p> - -<p>Paternalistic, socialistic legislation does not diminish the -expense account, but simply transfers it from one person’s -shoulders to those of others. It is with a people as with a -person. If a father gives to his boy a pair of shoes, the shoes -cost the lad nothing, they are to him as if they had descended -from the skies, but the cost is a charge upon the father, unless -he stole them, and even if acquired dishonestly the cost has -simply been moved back upon the shoulders of the merchant. -The compensation for the labor of producing the pair of shoes -and of transporting them to the place where they are put to -service is just as much a charge upon the community whether -one individual pays for them or another. Similarly if the users -of any governmental service do not pay a high enough tariff for -that service somebody else must foot the bill.</p> - -<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[111]</a></span></p> - -<p>Now to endeavor to demonstrate that whether the rates imposed -for such service be high or low the government will -inevitably be a loser and in large amount. To this end let us -examine for a moment the parcels post systems of foreign -countries.</p> - -<p>In Germany a zone system prevails, but the tariff is always -low. In England, a flat rate prevails, and this also is extremely -moderate. And low rates prevail in other foreign countries.</p> - -<p>But circumstances alter cases, and with other things we -should bear in mind that the total area of Germany is but -208,000 square miles, while the area of the one state of Texas is -265,000; in other words, Germany is but four-fifths the size of -Texas. The area of France is almost exactly that of Germany, -again but four-fifths the size of Texas. The area of England -is 50,000 square miles, less than one-fifth the size of Texas. -We have 26 states, any of which is larger than England, and -several many times larger. The area of Switzerland is just -under 16,000 square miles, and you can put nearly seventeen -Switzerlands into the one state of Texas. The area of Belgium -is but 11,000 square miles; you can put 24 of it in the state of -Texas. Again the density of population in England is over 550 -to the square mile; that of Belgium, more than 600 to the square -mile; of Germany nearly 300 to the square mile.</p> - -<p>Moreover, no haul in England can be long and but few hauls -in the United States would be short. You may perhaps be able -to take 550 parcels from a central originating point like London, -carry them for an average haul of 41 miles, which is the case -in that country, and deliver them all within one square mile of -territory at a small tariff per parcel without material loss, -though even England is losing money upon this service with all -conditions favoring.</p> - -<p>But remember that the density of population of the United -States by the last census was under 25 to the square mile, and -that the parcels post service would not be mainly operative in -densely populated Rhode Island and near the large cities like -Boston, New York, Philadelphia, etc. If we imagine that 550 -parcels are sent from New York city over a long haul of more -than 1,500 miles to the state of Wyoming, where the density of -population is one to the square mile, and have to be distributed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[112]</a></span> -to 550 distinct individuals resident in 550 separate square miles -of territory, no sane business man can doubt that at any tariff -likely to be imposed the government would be a heavy loser.</p> - -<p>According to one expert’s estimate, it is possible to carry -the second-class mail matter for short distances on dense traffic -routes, and in quantity lots to one address, that of a news -dealer, for example, as is done for the average daily paper for -the part of its circulation that goes by mail, up to 45 miles -with little loss even at this low 1c a pound rate, though first-class -mail at the rate paid by it can be transported nearly -5,000 miles before the service shows a loss, and post cards over -11,000 miles.</p> - -<p>Now let us suppose a parcels post statute to be enacted, and -that the rate be put at anything you please from 5c per pound -to 10c per pound. Even at the low rate of 5c per pound the -express companies will do the nearby business. If the rate be -10c per pound, the government will have less to do, but it will -still have much with the weight limit considerably increased -over the present amount. And if the rate be put at 12c per -pound, still the government will not make money, not on a -single parcel that it carries. All service that can be rendered -at a cost of less than the government charge will be handled by -the express companies.</p> - -<p>We cannot have as does Germany a zone system. But -without the operation of a zone system, or a monopoly as on -first-class matter, the government will get all of the losing business -and none of the remunerative.</p> - -<p>A friend of mine made a visit a few years ago to the state -of Washington. First he took from Cleveland a 2,000 miles -railroad ride. He then had a day and a half steamboat ride up -the Columbia river, following that a two days’ stagecoach ride -to the remote locality that he was visiting.</p> - -<p>He remarked to me in connection with this trip that he -should like to see the government handle a parcels post service -for that country at a profit, even at a rate of 25c a pound, and -added that every pound of anything that went in there would -most assuredly be handled by the government were a parcels -post service in operation, for it would be the cheapest method -of getting things there.</p> - -<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[113]</a></span></p> - -<p>Now, the only reason we can have a flat rate upon first-class -mail is because the government makes that a monopoly, -and you can send your letters in no other way than through -the post office. Hundreds of millions of profitable short haul -letters carried between the largest cities of the country where -traffic is very dense take care of the proportionately small number -of expensive long hauls.</p> - -<p>To show how necessary this may be, permit me to inform -you that the first batch of letters the government sent to Circle -City, Alaska, though each was carried upon a 2c stamp, cost -the department some $450 per letter. And it is solely due to -the fact that the carriage of first-class mail is a monopoly that -inheres in the government that, in spite of such expensive -occasional service as this to Alaska just cited, a large part of -the receipts from first-class mail are net profit.</p> - -<p>Now, even at the low 1c per pound rate accorded to the -monthly magazines and other periodicals, not all of their wares -are sent by mail. There is you know no monopoly of carriage. -The publisher can send packages of his magazine ahead of time -by slow freight at less than the 1c per pound tariff, this freight -service being used for the large lots going over main transportation -lines between the great cities and without expensive -changes of route. But upon the quarter hundreds and half -dozens and single copies that go for long distances by expensive -changes of route and to remote rural localities from back of -Portland, Maine, to back of Portland, Oregon, from the upper -peninsula of Michigan to the everglades of Florida, and to the -crossroads and rural free delivery customers of Ohio, New -York and other states of the Union, the government gets the -losing job of carrying the periodicals.</p> - -<p>I have endeavored in the explanation above to show that -the difference in social condition, density of population, length -of haul, ability to inaugurate a zone system, etc., will operate -against our doing at a profit what may be attempted though -even there unsuccessfully, in Great Britain, Germany, etc.</p> - -<p>In Great Britain they pay for transportation but 55% of -the charge, having thus automatically 45% left for other expenses, -and if anybody can do the work at a profit they certainly -are in position to attempt it.</p> - -<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[114]</a></span></p> - -<p>Again the average pay of a British postman is only one-half -what we give our carriers, which is another feature that -must be reckoned with.</p> - -<p>The first year they had this service in operation, it showed -a heavy loss. They were keeping account of the business, so -much in detail that if a man worked in two different branches -they divided his salary. The eminent gentleman who fathered -the system, then said: “Oh, well, you can’t expect that it should -be profitable the first year. This year we will make it profitable.” -The next year the loss was more than doubled. “Well,” -said he, “bookkeeping is expensive, let us discard bookkeeping.” -And since that time they have kept no expense account on the -parcels post system.</p> - -<p>Now let us examine what would result in the United States -if we were to enact parcels post legislation and attempt to get -it in successful operation.</p> - -<p>I wish to make a quotation from the “Catholic World” of -June, 1905, describing the operation of the parcels post system -of Germany by a writer who favors its establishment here. He -says:</p> - -<div class="blockquote"> - -<p>“Anyone who has stood in a German post-office, and has seen -the constant stream of men, women and children, pouring in -through the doors with packages of all descriptions and sizes, and -lining up in never-ending rows before half a dozen and more receiving -officials; who has watched heavy wagons driving up to the -doors and depositing hundreds of packages, and who has noticed -the mountains of parcels heaped up in rear rooms of the post-office, -cannot but have been forcibly struck with the magnitude of -the parcels post system of transportation in Germany.”</p> - -</div> - -<p>Does it not occur to the most casual thinker that if a comparable -service were enacted in this country the postal facilities -of every city would be inadequate to the work? Why, you -would have to have in New York city one hundred times as -great an amount of space at your disposal as the Post Office -Department has or can readily get at present. It would involve -a thorough readjustment and enormous expansion of the -post office facilities in every large and small city of the United -States, involving an equipment expenditure which would run -to hundreds of millions of dollars—this irrespective of the question -whether it would produce a profit or a loss in operating -expenses.</p> - -<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[115]</a></span></p> - -<p>There are in the United States more than 50,000 fourth-class -postmasters of these 50 per cent get $100 per annum or less, -and 25 per cent of them get less than $50.00 per annum. How -long would it be before they would demand an increase of -salary to something like $75.00 per month or more?</p> - -<p>The Vice-President of the J. F. Stevens Arms and Tool Co., -told me that if such a service were inaugurated as that of Great -Britain, it would change entirely the methods of distribution -of his own house. They would be obliged to discontinue their -present freight shipments of arms in carload lots to the Pacific -Coast at a rate of $3.00 per hundred pounds upon a twenty-day -time schedule for transportation, and take advantage of the -pound rate that the government would give to them upon a -six-day time schedule; that while it would involve increasing -their office force from less than 50 to more than 500 to handle -the work, the savings would be so large that they would have -to do this and to inaugurate many other most radical and far-reaching -changes in organization.</p> - -<p>If this meant that the service was going to be reduced in -cost, while at the same time shortening the time schedule by -more than two-thirds, always an important factor in increasing -rather than in diminishing expense account, we should all of us -find it our duty to welcome the innovation, great a wrench as it -might give to our business connections. But the costs of the -service will not be changed, simply it will be a different set of -people who pay them and no longer would all the costs be paid -by the proper parties—the manufacturer and his customer, the -consumer—but a large proportion by the public at large in some -way or other.</p> - -<hr /> - -<h3>Parcels Post. pp. 6-15.</h3> - -<p class="center">John A. Ordway.</p> - -<p>I question whether there is a man in this hall who actually -believes that one cent of benefit will come to the farmer through -reduction in his cost price of anything he buys because of postal -delivery. Each one of us knows from practical experience that -even should the method of distribution be shifted, still the expense<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[116]</a></span> -of reaching the consumer would increase by the methods -advocated, which combined with the profits of inevitable monopoly -would cause the poor farmer to wonder whether this -alluring vision of substantial comfort had vanished. Yet this -sham shibboleth of benefit to the farmer has other advocates -besides this small percentage of theorists. The most persistent, -continuous, noisy clamor has proceeded from those whose selfish -self-seeking is as plain to the searcher for motives as the printed -types upon their pages. The editors of various magazines and -newspapers not in touch with the cost and expenses of mercantile -life have almost universally used their columns to create a -public sentiment to accomplish this commercial revolution. -Their solicitude for the farmer, their keen distress at what they -term his unfortunate dilemma in being forced to supply his -present needs through present channels, would wring the stoutest -heart, were it not for the perhaps uncharitable suspicion -that their tears were of the crocodile variety, and their anguish -a thin disguise for rank cupidity. “The poor farmer,” more -advertisements; “the unfortunate farmer,” for more advertisements; -“we love and would protect the farmer,” still more advertisements; -“we will organize and preach of deliverance,” -for more advertisements; and so on and so forth shall be our -cry until the jobbers’ percentage and the retailers’ narrow -margin shall be diverted into “more advertisements,” has been -the wailing but insistent note everywhere. “No matter if the -actual cash loss of second class matter in 1909 did show a grand -total of $64,128,000, what care we? Still shall our cry be, ‘Help -the poor farmer.’” Shame on such transparent hypocrisy from -a public press that should lead and inspire by truth untainted -by the virus of debased commercialism.</p> - -<h4><i>The Consumer Will Buy Goods No Cheaper</i></h4> - -<p>I may be wrong, but I firmly believe that the development -of the mail order house or the increased adoption of direct -selling by manufacturers, aided by governmental postal delivery, -would not confer one benefit on the consumer in cheapened -prices, because of these facts. The change in the method -of distribution would be merely the shifting of the final price -from one shoulder to the other. The margin between the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[117]</a></span> -actual net cost of manufacture and the price paid by the -ultimate consumer is at present divided in varying proportions -into the profits of the maker, the percentage allowed the jobber -for economical distribution, and the final profit of the retailer -in completing this distribution, and in each case competition, -that most effective friend of the consumer, has forced these -margins down to a low general average. Assuming that the -jobber and the retailer have been eliminated and that the -manufacturer sells direct, is there any possible advantage that -the consumer or the farmer would obtain? Decidedly not. -The manufacturer would, of a necessity, be compelled to make -and hold a stock of goods ready to respond to instant call. -His cost of manufacture would immediately increase for the -reason that his quantity would be wisely restricted, awaiting -the edict of whimsical fashion, and his sole dependence for -the sale of his product would be that obtained from extensive -advertising. I do not believe there is a man here tonight -who has any knowledge of the expense of an advertising -campaign, but will admit that the usual profits of both jobbers -and retailers combined would fall far short of the expense -necessary to continuously maintain any general range of articles -of fashion or utility by advertising alone, and every large -advertiser, even if this stock be protected by trademark or patent, -will bear testimony that not only does the expense of advertising -continuously increase, but also that any cessation of -publicity results in immediate suspension of sales.</p> - -<p>The second argument or sham pretext for action is that -advanced relating to express companies.</p> - -<h4><i>The Interstate Commerce Commission Now Has Power to -Adjust and Regulate Express Rates and Will Regulate Them</i></h4> - -<p>I am aware, and expensively so, that this monopoly is a -menace both to our pocketbooks and to the general prosperity -of the community. Their course of action is guided by those -who fully exemplify the modern greed and relentless clutch -of soulless corporations. Personally, in their private homes, -or in open contact in social gatherings, these organizers and -executives of express companies are attractive as friends or -companions, but officially, and as part of their corporations,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[118]</a></span> -their individuality is lost and the Golden Rule is locked away -to be used only on Sunday or in the imminence of death.</p> - -<p>The dangers that confront a free people when monopoly -obtains a stronghold have been freely discussed during the -past few years, and wise restrictions have been placed among -our laws. At this very moment the rates and methods of -express companies are being considered by the Interstate -Commerce Commission, and from them we may expect the same -fair-minded decision as recently shown in railroad matters. The -laws are on our books. It is for us to urge, argue, even -threaten that they be obeyed, but the appeal of the proponents -of the parcels post bill that we punish the express companies -by starting a government monopoly in opposition has about -the same force to me as an invitation to jump from the -frying-pan into the fire. The power is always ours to regulate -by law, and the law is already ours. One-half of the same -energy in letters, telegrams and petitions asking and insisting -on the immediate action of the law, as has been shown in the -propaganda for the novelty of the parcels post, would have produced -results long ago. If this association, if the various boards -of trade, or chambers of commerce, should manfully and persistently -follow this line of action, results would follow, and -thus avoid the dangerous expedient of increasing the already -formidable list of government officials.</p> - -<h4><i>Objections to Parcels Post</i></h4> - -<p>Passing from the consideration of these elusive and mendacious -appeals by self-seeking interests, I ask your attention to -what in my judgment are positive objections to the parcels post, -objections that are not based wholly on dollars and cents, -but on the broader principles of humanity that are above the -fleeting tribulations of our little hour, and whose laws of action -create or destroy states or nations as they are applied wisely -or unfortunately.</p> - -<h4><i>Will Injure Country Communities</i></h4> - -<p>John Stuart Mill, one of the strongest reasoners in political -economy, stated in an incisive sentence that “The community that -contains the greatest diversity of industries will always be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[119]</a></span> -the most prosperous and intelligent.” It would seem as if his -vision were prophetic of our loved New England, where towns -and villages contain within their borders the farmer, the manufacturer, -the merchant, the teacher, living in useful harmony, -and by their diversity of thought and action producing men -equipped to accomplish the destiny of this wonderful land. -Such environment, such healthy conditions, produce the character -of Americans that the country needs, and the practical -benefit from the New Englander reared in such communities -is impressed upon all sections of this great land. It is to -wither and destroy these safeguards of national security that -the proponents of the parcels post intend. In their infinite -wisdom they would sweep the village aside in their zeal for -the mail order octopus and the magazine advertisements. A -great city whose water supply is polluted is in serious danger; -a great community that stems or hinders the growth and -influx of healthful men is short-sighted, and decay will follow. -Totally aside from personal gain, I believe we should steadfastly -oppose any attempt, open or concealed, to sap the vitality -of the New England town. Boston exists because of New -England, and Boston should protect its own.</p> - -<h4><i>It Will Increase the Horde of Government Employees</i></h4> - -<p>Another objection to the parcels post is that its operation -will add a tremendous force of government officials to the -already swelling list. Excepting always that human hog who -never votes, never reads, never thinks, but roots and grubs -along, grunting out one single word, “Dollars,” which happily -die with him, this objection should be considered by all -thinking men. The stronger the intrenched force of the party -in power, the more difficult will it be to effect needed reforms -when stagnation in office produces disease.</p> - -<h4><i>It Limits the Field of the Individual</i></h4> - -<p>Another objection is that our government of free men was -never intended to block or hinder the pathway of individual -endeavor. Rather was its function to be that of aid or protection -to insure equal opportunity under sane restriction. Following -this connection and not to be lightly regarded, is the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[120]</a></span> -assumption that is clearly foreshadowed, that should the government -engage in the transportation of merchandise the inevitable -result would be the national ownership of the railroads, -thereby still further increasing the centralization of power, -which is diametrically opposed to the conception and scope -of our general system of representative government.</p> - -<h4><i>Extravagance Will Be Augmented</i></h4> - -<p>Again a serious objection is that the transfer of conditions of -transportation with its accompanying word paintings of alluring -advertisements would tend to increase general extravagance, -particularly in those sections where prudence is necessary for -happiness, or precaution for old age. A distinguished writer -has said that more discord and misery are caused in this -country by our national extravagance than from any other -source, not excepting the results from alcohol.</p> - -<p>Still again, it is closely argued with logical coherence that -the various monopolies that now practically control many -branches of trade would welcome the development of large -distributors at the expense of the present countless individuals, -because of the greater ease of organizing in combination. -The tremendous sales and enormous profits of one mail order -house are the subject of daily comment, and should the government -lend its aid to still further increase these figures, the -time would not be distant when similar institutions would start -into life in other sections. Backed by ample capital, and -equipped with the experience regarding methods, their success -would doubtless become immediate, until such time as competition -among themselves endangered profits.</p> - -<p>It is no fanciful assumption that when that point is reached -combination or absorption will add another impregnable monopoly -to the already threatening list.</p> - -<p>The present monopolies have produced such colossal and -unwieldy fortunes that the employment of their surplus is a -constant thought, and so rich a plum would not escape.</p> - -<p>Finally, for I have detained you gentlemen long enough, -is the rank injustice of this proposed measure. If by taxation -of the people as a whole, some permanent benefit be obtained, -two blades of grass be grown where one existed, or even one<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[121]</a></span> -section developed through the agency of the whole country’s -help, no one would more eagerly advocate such action, for -I realize that a healthful growth spreads its benefits everywhere. -But this measure does nothing, creates nothing, carries -with it no lifting of burdens, but simply takes from A to give to -B, without assurance or guarantee of betterment of service or -conditions. As all dry goods retailers know, not one article sold -by mail order houses, in their line, but is daily and usually -sold by them at the same or lower price, without any special -fuss or feather about it, and all of us understand, without -possibility of contradiction, that the advertised brand, in nine -cases out of ten, does not depend on its intrinsic merit for -its sales, but instead relies on the credulity of a thoughtless -purchaser.</p> - -<p>Again, what justice is there in any law that proposes government -aid to the man whose product weighs eleven pounds, -or measures within certain cubic inches, and denies the same -relief to another citizen and taxpayer whose product necessarily -exceeds these limits? If this is not special legislation -bestowing subsidy or patronage on the few at the expense of -the many, then what is it?</p> - -<p>For these reasons, and many more, my friends, I oppose the -parcels post as today presented. I believe it unwise and -manifestly unfair. I believe its passage would cause tremendous -initial loss, without subsequent compensating gain. I believe -it is a move in the wrong direction as it affects the government. -I believe that the people, through their representatives, -and under the constitution, should have and should use the -power to regulate the channels of trade, and I strongly deprecate -any additional departure from the simplicity, the directness of -our form of government, and especially if such action should -hinder or usurp the zeal or ambition of any citizen in his -wage earning capacity, conducted under the law. If an express -company violates the law treat it under the law with the same -justice as would be given a second story burglar, but no more -consider the opening of governmental lines of express in opposition -than you would consider the governmental employment -of other second story burglars as punishment to law -breakers.</p> - -<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[122]</a></span></p> - -<p>The fewer that we have the better, but as self-respecting -citizens let us strive to maintain their standard of even justice, -regardless of special interests or our own personal discomfort.</p> - -<hr /> - -<h3>Journal of Political Economy. 16: 417-35. July, 1908.</h3> - -<p class="center">Shall the Scope of Governmental Functions Be Enlarged so -as to Include the Express Business?</p> - -<p class="center">Albert N. Merritt.</p> - -<p>In the nature of things the local dealer cannot compete with -the mail-order houses on equal terms. He cannot afford to -issue the expensive catalogues, or to keep so large an assortment -of goods. Moreover, the immense volume of business -of the catalogue concerns enables them to quote cheaper prices -on many commodities. Frequently they are able to secure, -on private contracts with manufacturers, large stocks of goods -at prices even lower than the jobber is required to pay. Furthermore, -their expense of doing business is proportionately much -lower, as practically their entire expense of distribution consists -of the outlay in issuing the catalogues and in packing and -shipping the goods when ordered. No experienced force of -salesmen is required to display the goods and argue their -merits. Moreover, it is often the case that the glowing terms -in which goods are described in these catalogues cause the -credulous to believe them superior to what they really are. -Distance always seems to lend enchantment, and abundant -opportunities are offered for deception as to the quality of -the goods.</p> - -<p>The local dealer, on the other hand, in order to fill orders -promptly, must keep a stock of goods which, in proportion to -the amount of business he does, is vastly greater than that -of the catalogue houses. In order to purchase his goods to -advantage, he must lay in a stock in the fall sufficient for six -months or a year, while few, if any, of the larger mail-order -houses would have at any time sufficient goods in stock to -enable them to fill orders for a fortnight. Naturally, therefore, -where the turnover of capital is slower, the percentage of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[123]</a></span> -profit upon individual transactions must be higher, and competition -upon an equal basis becomes impossible.</p> - -<p>But quite apart from a theoretical exposition of causes, the -facts show that the local dealers are rapidly losing trade to -the catalogue houses, and in many districts the local retail -business has become so unprofitable that the number of retail -stores is decreasing, and their volume of business less instead -of greater as might be expected with the normal growth of -population.</p> - -<p>Not only do the mail-order houses excel in the volume of -business, and in the greater assortment of goods, but they are -able to effect the most efficient and economical management -by the employment of the most able managers and department -men, which is rarely or never the case in the ordinary country -store, owing to the natural scarcity of men of that grade. In -fact the business management of the ordinary country store is -lamentably weak. From the economic standpoint, therefore, one -is compelled to admit that, in accordance with the laws of -competition and of the survival of the fittest, the catalogue -houses have already demonstrated their superiority.</p> - -<p>Admitting, therefore, that the economic position of the -mail-order houses is stronger, are there not important social -arguments against permitting the absorption of local business -by the rapidly expanding catalogue concerns at our large trade -centers?</p> - -<p>In the first place, it should be noted that the rapid consolidation -of our manufacturing industries makes it more difficult -every day to conduct such enterprises in small communities in -competition with the large plants in the large communities. -The result has been that for a long time the proportion of the -manufacturing business done in small communities has been -growing smaller. With the gradual and necessary elimination -of the manufacturing business in smaller communities, the -mercantile business is about all that is left as an economic basis -for the existence of such communities.</p> - -<p>These forces tend to a rapid concentration of business in the -large trade centers, and the resulting congestion of humanity -at such points. In one generation the proportion of the population -of the United States living in our large cities has more<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[124]</a></span> -than doubled, and just at present is increasing more rapidly -than ever before.</p> - -<p>It may well be doubted whether this tendency will ultimately -be beneficial to the race. Vice, crime, and disease are rampant -in the slums of our great cities. Human life, under such conditions, -becomes cramped. The unfolding process is impossible. -The exigencies of the situation cause sporadic and abnormal -development. The moral and physical culture of the individual -is almost wholly neglected, and the intellectual development -resulting is nearly always one sided, and too frequently resolves -itself into the attainment of solely those qualities which -make for greater acquisitive power. The social superiority -resulting under the questionable standards prevailing in such -centers may be obtained only with the sacrifice of much that -is higher and nobler in human nature.</p> - -<p>A large proportion of the population is compelled to lead -a sedentary life. It may well be asked whether the conditions -prevailing in our large mail-order houses and department stores -make for the good of humanity. From 8:00 a. m. till 6:00 -p. m. the many children and young girls employed are kept -at close, confining work, frequently straining every nerve far -beyond the limit of safety and human endurance, in order to -make themselves independent, and to meet the conditions which -city life imposes upon them. During the fall rush these girls -are often asked to remain at work till 9:00 or 10:00 p. m. -They realize that it is necessary for them to acquiesce in such -unreasonable and brutal demands or lose their positions during -the dull season immediately following the holidays.</p> - -<p>An eminent physician not long ago remarked that it was -his personal opinion, based upon long practice, that less than -10 per cent. of the girls in our large cities are as strong -and healthy as their mothers were at a corresponding age. -This he plausibly explained by the fact that nearly all of the -latter had come from the country where they lived close to -nature, with plenty of fresh air and sunshine, and with plenty -of hard work too, but of the kind which upbuilds and strengthens -the health rather than destroys it.</p> - -<p>Furthermore, the wages paid in such institutions are seldom -high enough to enable the individual to live at the prevailing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[125]</a></span> -social standards, and only too frequently the female employees -are compelled to piece out their salaries by questionable means. -It is inevitable that the future generation of the city-bred population -should be as much beneath the present, as the present is -beneath the last, unless radical reforms take place. Such progressive -degeneration must be regarded as a tremendous social -calamity.</p> - -<p>Without trespassing too far upon the field of the sociologist, -it may safely be assumed that an increased concentration of -industry and population is far from desirable. Why then -should the government take active steps to promote it? Would -it not be better to allow the mail-order houses and local retailers -to fight out their own battle for trade supremacy upon -equal terms, on the basis of the survival of the fittest? The -retailer would then at least be able to cling tenaciously to the -few natural advantages which he does possess, and would necessarily -retain a considerable portion of the business. In establishing -the parcels-post the government would be taking action -to crush the local dealer, and would thus take away the last -economic basis for the rural community, and accelerate the concentration -of industry in great cities.</p> - -<p>By the elimination of the smaller towns the easiest and -most natural market is taken away from the farmer. His small -produce would then have to be shipped to the large cities, -where he would almost certainly become the prey of commission-house -agents, whose methods of operation are well known. -Legitimate competition which means the lowest prices in view -of the quality of the goods offered would be eliminated. The -only competition would then be that of advertising. The one -capable of producing the most attractive advertisements would -win in the end. The American public is so great and so credulous -that the house which has once fooled the public can again -under another name and perhaps with different customers work -off the same class of worthless or inferior goods.</p> - -<p>Furthermore, the nearby location of a small country town -gives to the farmer and his family immense social, educational, -and cultural advantages, which would be almost wholly inaccessible -if it were not for the existence of such communities. Take -away the business and economic support of such a community,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[126]</a></span> -and immediately it becomes stagnant. Its ambitious and progressive -citizens immediately migrate to other fields, and the -town is left to decay.</p> - -<p>No parcels-post could be established which would be self-supporting. -The innate desire of the people to get something, -as it were, for nothing, would soon express itself in a demand -for a reduction of rates. No administration could be -popular and at the same time effectively resist such a demand. -It has been proved over and over again in history, that wherever -a democratic body politic has undertaken to conduct a -commercial enterprise of a public-service character, the demand -for rates far below the cost of doing the business has seldom or -never been successfully resisted. If this has proved true of local -governments, how much more is it likely to be true of the federal -government which, nearly everybody seems to think, already -has a revenue so great that the principal problem with regard -to it is the determination of the best method of turning it back -into the channels of trade. Even at present with a nominal -postal deficit of from $11,000,000 to $14,000,000, but with an -actual deficit as will be subsequently shown of much more than -that amount, it seems that the demand for penny postage and -for the increase of salaries of certain classes of postmasters and -of almost the entire clerical force is too strong to be resisted -effectively.</p> - -<p>The real issue is, therefore, Can the government expect successfully -to compete with the express companies, on a business -basis? If it can be shown that the government would be -utterly unable to compete it follows that the government should -not undertake the service.</p> - -<p>Mr. H. A. Castle, former auditor of the Postal Department -of the United States, has shown in its true light the many -defects of our present postal system, and how far it comes from -being that which should be expected of a private enterprise of -like character. Speaking upon this point he says:</p> - -<div class="blockquote"> - -<p>The protracted postal investigations of 1893 revealed to thinking -men the disquieting fact that our national mail system, which is -now the greatest business enterprise in the world, is entirely destitute -of logical, coherent, business-like organization.</p> - -</div> - -<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[127]</a></span></p> - -<p>Among many other striking defects, he points out that there -is utter lack of business methods in the accounting department. -Of the one billion and a quarter dollars of transactions -represented in the accounts of the 70,000 postmasters all over -the United States, less than 10 per cent. have the double audit -required by law. Fraud, peculation, and embezzlement of third- -and fourth-class postmasters have become common occurrences -and are exceedingly difficult to detect. As the salary of these -postal officials depends upon the number of cancellations at their -respective offices, all sorts of fraudulent schemes are continually -being practiced to swell the number of cancellations beyond -the legitimate amount.</p> - -<p>Furthermore, there is no method of auditing the number of -cancellations, and the department must accept the word of the -postmaster, which may or may not be true. Several cases have -been unearthed where an agent of a manufacturer has secured -a nominal position of postmaster at some out-of-the-way point, -and by drawing a salary based upon the number of cancellations -has practically been able to secure a rebate amounting to about -75 per cent. on all matter mailed, the mailable matter being -shipped to said point by freight. Absolutely no account is kept -or record made of the number of stamps issued by the Bureau -of Printing and Engraving, and no one has any means of knowing -how many disappear before official record of the stamps -issued is made by the Postal Department.</p> - -<p>The weighing of mail matter handled by the railroads takes -place only at stated intervals of four years. As the payment of -the railroads depends upon the average tonnage during the -period in which the weighing goes on, it is charged that all -sorts of fraudulent schemes are continually being practiced by -the railroads to increase the weight of the mail during this -period.</p> - -<p>There is no auditing of railroad accounts. Forty million -dollars is annually paid out by the department merely on the -statement of the railroads that the service has been performed. -There is no effort made to ascertain the truth or falsity of the -allegations.</p> - -<p>There is no method of accounting for the actual amount of -cash received by postmasters in payment for second-class mail.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[128]</a></span> -The amount of cash turned in by the various postmasters may -or may not bear any relation to the actual amount of such mail -received at their respective offices. It is impossible to detect -dishonest returns except in some of the most aggravated cases. -The average mercantile house which should practice such methods -would be forced out of business in less than six months.</p> - -<p>The slowness of the Postal Department to adopt modern -business methods is strikingly illustrated by the fact that till -quite recently the only method of checking the money-order -accounts of postmasters was by a hasty examination of the -stubs of order books turned in. No account was made or -reference taken to the actual receipted orders. Imagine a -bank attempting to settle accounts with its customers by the examination -of the stubs of their check-books, rather than by reference -to the actual checks!</p> - -<p>We are driven to the conclusion, therefore, that the Postal -Department as now organized and operated would be utterly -unable to compete with express companies upon purely a business -basis.</p> - -<p>Furthermore, it should not be expected that the express -companies would quietly drop out of business. They would -make a tremendous fight for existence, and would at all events -retain such portions of the business as they are now doing at -less than the lowest postal rates. The equipment for the express -service would, therefore, have to be duplicated in every town -and village of the United States. It is folly to presume that the -public would not in the end be required to pay for the enormous -loss which would be involved in such an uneconomical -procedure.</p> - -<p>Would it not, therefore, be better to place the proper safeguards -around the existing organizations which are fitted to -perform the transportation service by the best and most economical -means, rather than that the government should undertake -the impossible, i. e., competition with private companies -upon a purely business basis?</p> - -<hr /> - -<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[129]</a></span></p> - -<h3>Parcels Post Problem. p. 20.</h3> - -<p class="center">Parcels Post in England.</p> - -<p>One of the most concise and yet comprehensive reviews of the -operation of the parcels post system in England is that of I. -A. Fleming, taken from an exchange, and it is as follows:</p> - -<p>“American friends of so-called ‘postal reforms’ point to the -absence of express companies in the Kingdom of Great Britain -as one of the good results that have been obtained, and say -this is entirely due to the existing postal laws. But if there -are no express companies in Great Britain, there are scores and -hundreds of forwarding agents that perform the functions of -our American express companies. The railroads are themselves -engaged in the forwarding business, making low rates for -service by fast express, exceeding in limit of weight and size -of packages received by the limitations of the postal service by -many pounds even by hundreds of pounds.</p> - -<p>“Any attempt at comparison between carrying methods in -Great Britain with those in vogue in the United States is useless, -because of the very short distance between points in the -former.</p> - -<p>“I asked the managers of some of the leading stores in Ireland, -Scotland and England if parcels post offered great opportunities -for them to send business into the country, and without -exception they admitted that the business by post was decreasing, -while the express by rail and by forwarding agents -looking for assignments was increasing.</p> - -<p>“Eleven pound packages and under are but a small quantity -of package shipments.</p> - -<p>“From the best information at hand, it is evident that the -big carriers have nullified parcels post in Great Britain, and -what they have left the railroads have picked up. These carriers -receive all manner of parcels, put hundreds in baskets, -and thus get the very lowest rates of transportation. They -give their patrons lower rates than they could otherwise obtain, -and because of their concessions charge them four cents on each -consignment, a ‘booking charge’ which gives the carrier a very -fair return for his kindness to the shipper. Little packages<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[130]</a></span> -go by parcels post as a rule, and many of the larger department -stores use the mails for delivering goods to out of town customers.</p> - -<p>“These rates but add to the burdens of the merchants of the -interior. The independent retailer in the country has few -friends. Cheap rates, co-operative stores, chain stores, mail-order -houses by the thousand, fares paid entirely, special excursions -(such as Harrods of London are now running to the -sales) with fares paid and ‘tontine’ establishments tend but -to make the independent merchant, be he a grocer or ‘draper’ -as they call dry goods dealers, only a small potato of the kind -that are many in the hill.</p> - -<p>“Our mutual friends, the English general merchant, the -independent grocer, and the small retailer, have been almost -completely relegated to a parsimonious living by co-operation, -mail-order retailing, the carrier or forwarding agent, and last -but not least, by cheap excursions to the cities.</p> - -<p>“That these same evils will, if they obtain a foothold in the -United States accomplish the same results for the American -general merchant and retailer I firmly believe.”</p> - -<hr /> - -<h3>A. B. C. of Parcels Post. pp. 4-5.</h3> - -<p class="center">C. W. Spofford.</p> - -<p>Q. What is the plan of the rural parcels-post proposed by -Postmaster-General Meyer?</p> - -<p>A. It proposes to carry packages originating at a local -office of a rural route for 5 cents for the first pound and 2 -cents for each additional pound, with a limit of 11 pounds. -Thus, an 11-pound package would be carried to any point on -a rural route for 25 cents. It is significant that the rates -are the same as those proposed by advocates of a parcels-post -applicable to distances within the United States and its insular -possessions. This proposal seems to be but an entering -wedge for general parcels-post.</p> - -<p>Q. Why was rural parcels-post proposed?</p> - -<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[131]</a></span></p> - -<p>A. It was proposed by the Postmaster General as a special -favor to country merchants.</p> - -<p>Q. Have country merchants asked for any such special -favor?</p> - -<p>A. No. On the contrary, they are opposed to it on the -following grounds:</p> - -<p>1. They do not seek class legislation.</p> - -<p>2. The plan would be impracticable in its operations.</p> - -<p>3. It would discriminate between towns, favoring the town -with the greatest number of rural routes, regardless of its -trading advantages.</p> - -<p>Q. Would rural parcels-post be of any benefit to the farmer?</p> - -<p>A. No. For the following reasons:</p> - -<p>1. The farmer can now arrange with the rural carrier for -the delivery of packages over 4 pounds at rates mutually satisfactory.</p> - -<p>2. The proposed rates would be prohibitive on groceries, -machinery repairs and on the bulky merchandise most likely to -be delivered under this new arrangement.</p> - -<p>3. To secure the rural parcels-post service, the farmer -would be compelled to buy his goods at the particular town -where he gets his mail, when he might prefer to buy elsewhere.</p> - -<hr /> - -<h3>Parcels Post. pp. 3-9.</h3> - -<p class="center">F. E. French.</p> - -<p>I have the distinguished and pleasing honor of being here -today upon your invitation as a representative of the American -League of Associations, which includes representative wholesalers -in nearly every important city in the United States. The -creation of this League has for its object the development and -advancement of the general welfare and mercantile interest of -retail merchants in the smaller communities. The relations of -its members to all retail merchants are intimate and personal. -The retailers desire to buy merchandise from the wholesaler. -The wholesaler desires to sell merchandise to the retailer. In<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[132]</a></span> -short, whatever conserves, promotes and advances the merchandising -ability and success of the former, is a direct proportionate -benefit to the latter. Whatever relaxes the intimacy between -these interests, deprives the retailers of their truest and -best facilities as merchants and money makers. The thoughtful -and progressive wholesaler and retailer believe that any -rural parcels post bill will unmistakably impair, curtail and -finally dissolve this relationship, which in reality is a partnership -between the wholesaler and the retailer. The proposed -parcels post legislation will gradually eliminate the country -store and the very heart and pulse of country life. Believing -this to be absolutely and unmistakably true, we should stand as -a unit in opposition to any extension of the parcels post system, -upon rural routes, even upon an experimental basis. If the -country merchants will co-operate with the wholesalers in an -unyielding resistance to any congressional action that would -in any way interfere with the present system of rural deliveries, -the proposed legislation will be defeated.</p> - -<p>In official words, it is contended that rural parcels post will -enable local merchants to hold and increase their trade. On -the contrary, the well informed wholesaler, manufacturer and -retailer contend, and the entire orthodox system of trade distribution -replies, that any parcels post, whether it be a general -parcels post law or a rural parcels post law, although intended -to be of benefit to the retailers and a boon to the rural population, -would, in reality, be a great detriment to both.</p> - -<p>Mark well how the camel enters the tent: First his head, -next his neck, and last his huge and unwelcome body. First -on a few routes only and in experiment only, a local parcels -post; next a complete rural parcels post; and finally a general -parcels post. Let us beware of the beginning lest in the end -we be overcome. During the inauguration of the first and -experimental stage, those interests most to be profited by this -perilous innovation will remain silent, while from the experiment -no safe deductions could perhaps be made which would -indicate the effect of parcels post extension upon your prosperity -and posterity. Finally you will discover that the currents -of trade are running past your door rather than through it, -and in that day your elimination becomes a certainty. In that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[133]</a></span> -day also every wholesaler who has so long found in the country -merchants a sure and steady outlet will know even better than -he knows now that rural parcels post, and, much more, the -general parcels post is a dangerous blow to country life.</p> - -<p>At the risk of telling you much that you know, let me state -some of the factors of this great problem so that we may think -as one man over its solution.</p> - -<p>The mail order houses, some of the farmers, and various -other people who reason narrowly, even with generous intent -are sustaining the government in its purpose to go into business -in behalf of a class of the American people at the expense of -the whole American people, and through a bill in Congress they -ask all of the people to sanction a trial of this new species of -government aid in certain selected places. Our government -reasons that if it is made more practicable for rural free delivery -routes to become shipping lines between their own -termini, everybody depending for income and outgo on such -routes will profit by this enlarged service. On the contrary, -the American League of Associations holds that everybody will -eventually suffer.</p> - -<p>The great problem about which we are all trying to think -clearly and think together, has been summarized so effectually -by a retail merchants’ paper in the central west, that I do not -hesitate here to quote its protest against parcels post, endorsed -by thousands of retail merchants in every section of America. -The protest reads as follows:</p> - -<p>“Parcels post is wholly unnecessary, since rural delivery carriers -are authorized to carry parcels weighing over 4 pounds, -and the matter of compensation is decided by carrier and -merchant or by carrier and farmer. Merchants and farmers -generally have not availed themselves of this service, for the -very good reason that there is no need for it.</p> - -<p>“If adopted, parcels post will be immediately seized upon as -a delivery outlet by mail order houses which would ship orders -by freight or express in bulk lots to local agents for deposit -in the post office to be forwarded by the rural deliveries. The -catalogue houses have already many of these agents selected, -and they have been busily engaged in distributing catalogues -for weeks past. As soon as a rural parcels delivery became<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[134]</a></span> -effective, these agents would become active in the solicitation -of business in unfair competition with home merchants, as -these agents would have no taxes, no rent, no salaries, etc., to -pay.</p> - -<p>“Rural parcels post is admittedly merely an entering wedge -for extension along European lines. That would mean severe -demoralization of our country towns which are dependent almost -wholly upon the farmer trade for existence, and which -afford the farmer a good home market for every dollar’s -worth of products he has to sell. If he does not buy his supplies -where he sells his products, he not only demoralizes the -business of his home town, but he also deprives himself of his -home market. If his home market town dwindles into insignificance -through the gradual loss of trade, necessitating the -closing of stores and the emigration of merchants and clerks, -then the income will shrink so seriously that there will be insufficient -funds to provide for schools, churches, libraries, hospitals, -good roads, etc.</p> - -<p>“Every farming community and its market center are interdependent. -It is impossible to injure one without injuring -the other. The parcels post would injure both farmers and -country merchants. We protest against it as being designed -to further the formation of a mail order trust that could eventually -control all important channels of distribution and thus levy -upon the people any desired tribute.”</p> - -<p>Today the people’s problem is to conserve our natural resources -and keep the farmer on the farm. Will the gradual -impoverishing of the village storekeeper keep the farmer on the -farm? Will the decline of the social center, the decline -of the schools and the decline of the church facilities keep the -farmer on the farm? Will long distance shopping do more for -isolated communities than the sight of real goods and the warm -touch of living people? Will the picture catalogue or the hearty -salesman do more to keep vital the currents between seller and -buyer? Would a heavily laden parcels post messenger, running -between a mail order agency and a distant farm, often -through a foot or two of mud or snow, compensate for the -disappearance of the mart and congress of our country’s rural -life—the independent, thriving, hospitable store?</p> - -<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[135]</a></span></p> - -<p>Fellow merchants, it is our duty to sustain that store, and to -do it now. That store is imperiled by pending legislation, -whether by the institution of a local or a general parcels post. -If this new service be established by the government, even with -the best of motives, we must admit that:</p> - -<p>The postal deficit will be increased,</p> - -<p>The country’s commercial system revolutionized,</p> - -<p>The delivery of legitimate mail delayed,</p> - -<p>The population of rural communities depleted, and their -progress retarded.</p> - -<p>And that the government will promote class legislation, for -in seeking to favor the farmer who needs no such preferment, -it will subsidize a commercial interest whose basic business -principle is hostility to the best trade distribution.</p> - -<p>Every thinking individual agrees that rural free delivery -has been of great benefit, but the masses of the people do not -agree that a financially unprofitable service shall be put upon -its feet at the cost of the man who has been the mainstay -of the farmer in season and out of season—the country storekeeper.</p> - -<hr /> - -<h3>Why Parcels Post Is Not a Good Thing for This Country. -pp. 1-5.</h3> - -<p class="center">W. P. Bogardus.</p> - -<p>Parcels post is a scheme in which it is proposed to utilize -the post office facilities to carry merchandise. Packages under -the proposed bills up to 11 pounds are to be carried in the mails -for that sum varying according to weight, from 2c to 25c. It -is claimed by the friends of parcels post that by adopting the -measure the deficit in the Post Office Department will be wiped -out, and a handsome surplus will result. Claims are easily -made. But facts have more value in a discussion like this. -We are cited to the results in Germany as a substantial proof -that post parcels is a paying proposition. They forget to mention -that in Germany there are 340 people to the mile and an -average haul of mail of but 41 miles, while in this country the -average haul of mail is 540 miles and there are less than 23<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[136]</a></span> -people to the mile, and they ignore the difference of conditions -in the two countries.</p> - -<p>But let us look at the report from the German budget. -For the year ending March 31st, 1910, the income, in round -numbers, from the Post Office Department was $168,000,000 -and that included the revenue from the telegraph business. -The expenditures were $148,000,000. This on the face shows -a surplus of $20,000,000, but in the statement of expenditures -there is no account taken of the cost for transportation, on the -ground that the government owns the railroads. In this country -it costs 20 per cent. to transport the mails. That is, one-fifth -of the cost of the Post Office Department is for transporting -the mails. Now add 20 per cent to the expenditures and you -have $177,600,000, or a deficit of $9,000,000. In England, the -friends of parcel post claim that there is a surplus of $24,000,000 -in the Post Office Department. But that includes the receipts -from the telegraph messages. In England the average charge -for packages is 9.8c per pound. In this country it is proposed -to send parcels post packages over a territory 30 times larger -than England at an average of not quite 3c per pound to a -population only about twice as large as there is in England.</p> - -<p>When the blind Postmaster General of England first introduced -post parcels he reported the results of the measure, -but found that there was an increasing deficit each year, and -the reports were discontinued. It does not seem possible to get -exact figures as to the cost of the system in England, but -the presumption is that if there was a large profit in the plan -they would parade the fact. As it is, can we expect to make -parcels post in this country a profitable scheme? With an -average haul of 540 miles to a population of but 23 to the mile, -is it possible to carry goods at less than 3c per pound at a -profit, if it cannot be done in those thickly settled countries -at a much higher rate?</p> - -<p>If it cannot be done at a profit, why should the government -undertake a scheme that will result in a loss? Rural free delivery -is costing the country $28,000,000 more than it is getting -for the service, and only about one half of the rural population -is supplied with the service.</p> - -<p>If the government enters into the plan, it must needs have a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[137]</a></span> -monopoly, if successful, of the carriage of packages up to the -limit of 11 lbs., else the express companies will take all the short -haul packages and leave the long haul packages for the government -to carry. Such conditions prevail at present. The -express companies take all the short haul packages for less -than the government charges and leave the long haul packages -for the government to carry, with the result that there is no -profit in the business to the government.</p> - -<p>If there is a monopoly established on packages up to 11 -pounds, what is to hinder the government raising the limit of -weight?</p> - -<p>Are we prepared to let our government enter into competition -with private enterprise? Is it a function of the government -to transport freight? Is it a province of the government -to correct abuses of private corporations, in transportation and -other lines, by entering into competition with them, and using -the power the entire people has given it, to force corporations -to be less greedy? It would seem that the recent decisions by -the Supreme Court would justify us in believing that there is -power enough in the laws of the land to protect the people’s -rights.</p> - -<p>Perhaps in Australia the government enters into more radical -schemes than in any other country. And this fact is being -developed. That the extension of the control of industry and -business, and the activities in every field of production and distribution -is but an incentive for a greater demand on the government -for further movements in the same direction. The outcome -of such policies is a final ending up in complete socialism. -Do we want our government to be a paternal one? Are we -ready to look to it for our transportation facilities? If we are -is there any reason to feel that the government will stop at -transportation? Will there not be other avenues of commercial -enterprise taken over by the government? One of the great -dangers to us, as a people, is the tendency to a centralization of -power in the government at Washington and a willingness of a -great many people to lean on the government for a solution of -many problems that they should solve without the aid of the -government.</p> - -<hr /> - -<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[138]</a></span></p> - -<h3>Parcels Post and Postal Savings Banks, pp. 1-2.</h3> - -<p class="center">Gilbert N. Haugen.</p> - -<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Chairman</span>: I want to direct attention to the suggestions -made in a very able and interesting address delivered by Mr. -Meyer, Postmaster-General, at a banquet of the New England -Postmasters’ Association, Boston, Mass., October 12, 1907, a -part of which I will read:</p> - -<div class="blockquote"> - -<p>To illustrate the incongruities that exist: Any individual entering -the post-office here in Boston or in any other city or town -in the country, with two parcels, each weighing 4 pounds, can -send one parcel to New York for 64 cents, while for the other -parcel, which is addressed to some one in a foreign land and goes -via New York, he will have to pay but 48 cents, for the reason -that the rate to foreign countries is 12 cents a pound, while the -rate to our own people is 16 cents a pound.... Therefore -I assume that our Representatives in Congress will realize that -they can not afford to stand for a policy that compels our own -people to pay 4 cents more on packages to people living in the -United States.</p> - -</div> - -<p>This statement is indeed misleading: not that I charge the -Postmaster-General with any intent to deceive or mislead, for -I regard him as a gentleman of integrity, intelligence, ability, -and actuated with the highest motives and with a determination -to do justice to all, and I am not questioning his motives, -but will endeavor to present the facts in the light that I see -them. When we have all of the facts, I will venture to assume -that Representatives in Congress will realize that they can -afford to stand for a policy that compels people living in foreign -lands to pay more than people living in our own country. The -Postmaster-General’s statement as to the sending of two pieces, -each weighing 4 ounces, is correct in some cases, and the -domestic rate in some cases is higher than the foreign; but in -the majority of cases foreign rates are the highest. In his -excellent address to enlighten members of the New England -Postmasters’ Association and the country, he might have gone -further by saying: “To illustrate the incongruities that exist, -any individual entering the post-office here in Boston, or in any -other city or town in the country, with two parcels, each -weighing 1 ounce, can send one parcel to New York for 1 cent, -while for the other parcel, which is addressed to somebody in -foreign lands via New York, he will have to pay 12 cents, for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[139]</a></span> -the reason that the rate to foreign countries is 12 cents per -pound or fraction thereof, while the rate to our own people is -only 1 cent per ounce. Therefore the rate on the parcel addressed -to somebody in foreign lands is 12 times as great as is -the rate on the parcel addressed to New York.” And he might -have referred to the report of the Second Assistant for the year -ending June 30, 1907, pages 25 and 26:</p> - -<p>Or he might have said: “If the two parcels referred to, -weighing 4 pounds each, or 64 ounces each, or 128 ounces for -the two, had been divided into parcels of 1 ounce each, and one-half -of them directed to parties in New York, the rate on the -sixty-four parcels would have been 64 cents to New York, and -the postage on the sixty-four parcels addressed to London -would be $7.68.” According to the Second Assistant’s report, -rates on parcels addressed to foreign countries are not uniform. -The rate to Bermuda is 12 cents per pound, and the rate to -Ecuador is 20 cents per pound. The rate to Sweden, Peru, and -Denmark is 20 cents per pound or fraction of a pound for parcels -which require the use of the expensive transit across the -Isthmus of Panama, and 12 cents per pound or fraction of a -pound for parcels which do not use that expensive transit. So -we find that rates on parcels weighing 1 ounce addressed to -Sweden, Peru, or Denmark which require the use of the expensive -transit across the Isthmus of Panama is 20 cents, or -twenty times as high as the rate on parcels weighing 1 ounce -addressed to New York. Why this incongruity in rates? Rates -on mail matter between the United States, Canada, Cuba, -Mexico, and Panama are fixed by treaty with each country and -with all other countries by conventions of the Universal Postal -Union. The last convention was held at Rome, 1906, and took -effect October 1, 1907. The acts of these conventions are binding -on these countries, but have nothing to do with domestic -rates, they being fixed by Congress and the Department. The -conventions are simply agreements as to international mail matter. -The rate on parcels post is fixed with each country, or in -thirty-five parcels-post conventions. The rate is generally 12 -cents per pound or fraction thereof, the pound being the unit -of weight. The rate is 1 cent per ounce. The rate on 5 ounces -to the Philippine Islands is 5 cents and to London 12 cents.</p> - -<hr /> - -<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[140]</a></span></p> - -<h3>Parcels Post. pp. 8-11.</h3> - -<p class="center">S. C. Smith.</p> - -<h4><i>In Foreign Countries</i></h4> - -<p>The sentiment in favor of this new governmental service has -been built up in this country chiefly by holding up to view more -or less highly painted pictures of what is being done along a -similar line in the countries of Europe. Any fair comparison -of the postal service in those countries and in ours must take -into consideration density of population, expanse of country or -length of transportation routes, and the ownership of the means -of transportation. The density of population and the relative -size of the United States and of the principal countries of -Europe having a cheap parcels post are shown by the following -table:</p> - -<table summary="Population density compared to postage prices" class="borders"> - <tr> - <th>Country.</th> - <th>Area.</th> - <th>Ratio of size.</th> - <th>Population.</th> - <th class="last-col">Population<br />per<br />square mile.</th> - </tr> - <tr> - <td></td><td><i>Sq. miles.</i></td><td></td><td></td><td class="last-col"></td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>United States</td><td class="tdr">3,602,990</td><td class="tdr">100</td><td class="tdr">84,154,009</td><td class="tdr last-col">23.35</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>Great Britain</td><td class="tdr">121,391</td><td class="tdr">3.36</td><td class="tdr">41,976,827</td><td class="tdr last-col">345.79</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>Germany</td><td class="tdr">208,860</td><td class="tdr">5.79</td><td class="tdr">60,641,278</td><td class="tdr last-col">290.34</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>France</td><td class="tdr">207,054</td><td class="tdr">5.74</td><td class="tdr">38,961,945</td><td class="tdr last-col">139.87</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>Belgium</td><td class="tdr">11,373</td><td class="tdr">.31</td><td class="tdr">7,074,970</td><td class="tdr last-col">622.08</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>Italy</td><td class="tdr">110,550</td><td class="tdr">3.06</td><td class="tdr">32,475,253</td><td class="tdr last-col">293.76</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td class="last-row">Switzerland</td><td class="tdr last-row">15,976</td><td class="tdr last-row">.44</td><td class="tdr last-row">3,315,443</td><td class="tdr last-col last-row">207.73</td> - </tr> -</table> - -<p>These figures are extremely interesting and important in connection -with this subject. We constantly lose sight of the -immensity of this country and its “magnificent distances,” as -compared with the nations of Europe; but in considering a -question of transportation, distances and density of population -stand in the foreground. Let it be observed, for instance, that -while our country is over 300 times as large as Belgium, the -latter has a population of 622 people to the square mile, while -we have but a fraction over 23. Yet we will hear it argued -that “Belgium carries 132-pound parcels by mail; why can not -we?” or, “If Switzerland can carry 110 pound parcels, why not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[141]</a></span> -the United States?” entirely ignoring or forgetting the fact that -our country is 250 times as large as Switzerland and has about -one-tenth the population in a given area. Postal authorities -have estimated that the average distance traveled by a piece of -mail, including letters, papers, and parcels, is 40 miles in Great -Britain, 42 miles in Germany, and 540 miles in the United -States. Of course it is still less in the smaller countries of -Europe. The admission of paper mail to this calculation greatly -reduces the average, since newspapers circulate chiefly in the -vicinity of the city of their publication. Parcels of merchandise -or produce would certainly move much farther on an average, -because they would chiefly flow to and from the great cities. -If one is going to trade by mail, and the cost of delivery is the -same, why not go to “headquarters,” which, in the popular -mind, means one of the larger cities in the country?</p> - -<p>The maximum parcel carried by the principal nations is as -follows:</p> - -<table summary="Maximum parcel size"> - <tr> - <th></th><th class="tdr">Pounds.</th> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>United States</td><td class="tdr">4</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>Great Britain</td><td class="tdr">11</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>Germany</td><td class="tdr">110</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>France</td><td class="tdr">22</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>Belgium</td><td class="tdr">132</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>Switzerland</td><td class="tdr">110</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>Italy</td><td class="tdr">11</td> - </tr> - <tr> - <td>Austria</td><td class="tdr">110</td> - </tr> -</table> - -<h4><i>Railroad Ownership</i></h4> - -<p>Another factor of equal importance is the nature of ownership -of the means of transportation. In this country all routes -are privately owned and operated. The railroads—the chief -means of transporting the mails—have been constructed for the -most part by private capital, without the aid of the government, -and the government, like individuals, must pay a rate for -its service which will yield a fair return to the owners. The -roads in the foreign countries used in this comparison are -largely owned by the governments, in which case it matters little -whether merchandise and produce move by mail or by freight. -In some of the countries, as in France, the government guarantees -the interest on the capital invested in the roads, and in -return has its mails carried free or at a nominal rate.</p> - -<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[142]</a></span></p> - -<p>The English writer above referred to says of the mail-carrying -situation in Germany:</p> - -<div class="blockquote"> - -<p>The German post has no occasion to enforce heavy rates. It -can impose its own terms on the railway companies. By law -these have to carry free all parcels under eleven pounds in weight. -Thus the mistake which has crippled the activity of the British -parcels post has been avoided.</p> - -</div> - -<p>Of course there can be no just comparison between a service -carried on under such conditions and ours, for the basic -conditions are so fundamentally dissimilar.</p> - -<p>The matter of railroad ownership lies at the very foundation -of this question. If this government owned the roads and operated -them, it would matter little what went forward as mail -and what under another designation. But that is not the case -now and it is to be hoped never will be. From this standpoint, -as well as from those hereinbefore mentioned, it is manifestly -unfair to argue that because other countries do so and so in -their mail service, therefore we should do the same.</p> - -<p>It is significant that no country giving a large service of the -kind under consideration undertakes to say that its receipts -equal the cost of the service. I have not been able to find any -report showing the cost of the parcels department. It is stated -by some pretty high authority that the general belief among -these nations is that they are rendering it at a loss. It is hard -to reconcile that condition of the business with any idea of -fairness. We may properly carry on the educational feature of -the mail service, in part, out of the general revenue of the government; -but who will say that we may fairly carry the individual’s -produce to market or his merchandise home for him at -public expense in whole or in part? Why should all the people -be taxed to pay a postal deficit created by moving freight for -the people at less than cost of service? Is there any reason -why this branch of pure business should be conducted at public -expense which would not justify the performance by the government -of any other department of business?</p> - - - - - - - - -<pre> - - - - - -End of Project Gutenberg's Selected Articles on the Parcels Post, by Various - -*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SELECTED ARTICLES--PARCELS POST *** - -***** This file should be named 52996-h.htm or 52996-h.zip ***** -This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: - http://www.gutenberg.org/5/2/9/9/52996/ - -Produced by MWS, Adrian Mastronardi, The Philatelic Digital -Library Project at http://www.tpdlp.net and the Online -Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This -file was produced from images generously made available -by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.) - -Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions will -be renamed. - -Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright -law means that no one owns a United States copyright in these works, -so the Foundation (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United -States without permission and without paying copyright -royalties. Special rules, set forth in the General Terms of Use part -of this license, apply to copying and distributing Project -Gutenberg-tm electronic works to protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm -concept and trademark. Project Gutenberg is a registered trademark, -and may not be used if you charge for the eBooks, unless you receive -specific permission. If you do not charge anything for copies of this -eBook, complying with the rules is very easy. You may use this eBook -for nearly any purpose such as creation of derivative works, reports, -performances and research. They may be modified and printed and given -away--you may do practically ANYTHING in the United States with eBooks -not protected by U.S. copyright law. Redistribution is subject to the -trademark license, especially commercial redistribution. - -START: FULL LICENSE - -THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE -PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK - -To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free -distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work -(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project -Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full -Project Gutenberg-tm License available with this file or online at -www.gutenberg.org/license. - -Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project -Gutenberg-tm electronic works - -1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm -electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to -and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property -(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all -the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or -destroy all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your -possession. If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a -Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound -by the terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the -person or entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph -1.E.8. - -1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be -used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who -agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few -things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works -even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See -paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project -Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this -agreement and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm -electronic works. See paragraph 1.E below. - -1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the -Foundation" or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection -of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual -works in the collection are in the public domain in the United -States. If an individual work is unprotected by copyright law in the -United States and you are located in the United States, we do not -claim a right to prevent you from copying, distributing, performing, -displaying or creating derivative works based on the work as long as -all references to Project Gutenberg are removed. Of course, we hope -that you will support the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting -free access to electronic works by freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm -works in compliance with the terms of this agreement for keeping the -Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with the work. You can easily -comply with the terms of this agreement by keeping this work in the -same format with its attached full Project Gutenberg-tm License when -you share it without charge with others. - -1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern -what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are -in a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, -check the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this -agreement before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, -distributing or creating derivative works based on this work or any -other Project Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no -representations concerning the copyright status of any work in any -country outside the United States. - -1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg: - -1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other -immediate access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear -prominently whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work -on which the phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the -phrase "Project Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, -performed, viewed, copied or distributed: - - This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and - most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no - restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it - under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this - eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the - United States, you'll have to check the laws of the country where you - are located before using this ebook. - -1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is -derived from texts not protected by U.S. copyright law (does not -contain a notice indicating that it is posted with permission of the -copyright holder), the work can be copied and distributed to anyone in -the United States without paying any fees or charges. If you are -redistributing or providing access to a work with the phrase "Project -Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the work, you must comply -either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 or -obtain permission for the use of the work and the Project Gutenberg-tm -trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or 1.E.9. - -1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted -with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution -must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any -additional terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms -will be linked to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works -posted with the permission of the copyright holder found at the -beginning of this work. - -1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm -License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this -work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm. - -1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this -electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without -prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with -active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project -Gutenberg-tm License. - -1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary, -compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including -any word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access -to or distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format -other than "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official -version posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site -(www.gutenberg.org), you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense -to the user, provide a copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means -of obtaining a copy upon request, of the work in its original "Plain -Vanilla ASCII" or other form. Any alternate format must include the -full Project Gutenberg-tm License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1. - -1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying, -performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works -unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9. - -1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing -access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works -provided that - -* You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from - the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method - you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is owed - to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he has - agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the Project - Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments must be paid - within 60 days following each date on which you prepare (or are - legally required to prepare) your periodic tax returns. Royalty - payments should be clearly marked as such and sent to the Project - Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the address specified in - Section 4, "Information about donations to the Project Gutenberg - Literary Archive Foundation." - -* You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies - you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he - does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm - License. You must require such a user to return or destroy all - copies of the works possessed in a physical medium and discontinue - all use of and all access to other copies of Project Gutenberg-tm - works. - -* You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of - any money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the - electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days of - receipt of the work. - -* You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free - distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works. - -1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project -Gutenberg-tm electronic work or group of works on different terms than -are set forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing -from both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and The -Project Gutenberg Trademark LLC, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm -trademark. Contact the Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below. - -1.F. - -1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable -effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread -works not protected by U.S. copyright law in creating the Project -Gutenberg-tm collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm -electronic works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may -contain "Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate -or corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other -intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or -other medium, a computer virus, or computer codes that damage or -cannot be read by your equipment. - -1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right -of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project -Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project -Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project -Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all -liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal -fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT -LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE -PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE -TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE -LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR -INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH -DAMAGE. - -1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a -defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can -receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a -written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you -received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium -with your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you -with the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in -lieu of a refund. If you received the work electronically, the person -or entity providing it to you may choose to give you a second -opportunity to receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If -the second copy is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing -without further opportunities to fix the problem. - -1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth -in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS', WITH NO -OTHER WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT -LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE. - -1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied -warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of -damages. If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement -violates the law of the state applicable to this agreement, the -agreement shall be interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or -limitation permitted by the applicable state law. The invalidity or -unenforceability of any provision of this agreement shall not void the -remaining provisions. - -1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the -trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone -providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in -accordance with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the -production, promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm -electronic works, harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, -including legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of -the following which you do or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this -or any Project Gutenberg-tm work, (b) alteration, modification, or -additions or deletions to any Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any -Defect you cause. - -Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm - -Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of -electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of -computers including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It -exists because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations -from people in all walks of life. - -Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the -assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's -goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will -remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project -Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure -and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future -generations. To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary -Archive Foundation and how your efforts and donations can help, see -Sections 3 and 4 and the Foundation information page at -www.gutenberg.org - - - -Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation - -The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit -501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the -state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal -Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification -number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg Literary -Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent permitted by -U.S. federal laws and your state's laws. - -The Foundation's principal office is in Fairbanks, Alaska, with the -mailing address: PO Box 750175, Fairbanks, AK 99775, but its -volunteers and employees are scattered throughout numerous -locations. Its business office is located at 809 North 1500 West, Salt -Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887. Email contact links and up to -date contact information can be found at the Foundation's web site and -official page at www.gutenberg.org/contact - -For additional contact information: - - Dr. Gregory B. Newby - Chief Executive and Director - gbnewby@pglaf.org - -Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg -Literary Archive Foundation - -Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide -spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of -increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be -freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest -array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations -($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt -status with the IRS. - -The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating -charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United -States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a -considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up -with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations -where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To SEND -DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any particular -state visit www.gutenberg.org/donate - -While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we -have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition -against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who -approach us with offers to donate. - -International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make -any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from -outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff. - -Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation -methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other -ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations. To -donate, please visit: www.gutenberg.org/donate - -Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works. - -Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project -Gutenberg-tm concept of a library of electronic works that could be -freely shared with anyone. For forty years, he produced and -distributed Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of -volunteer support. - -Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed -editions, all of which are confirmed as not protected by copyright in -the U.S. unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not -necessarily keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper -edition. - -Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search -facility: www.gutenberg.org - -This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm, -including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary -Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to -subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks. - - - -</pre> - -</body> -</html> diff --git a/old/52996-h/images/cover.jpg b/old/52996-h/images/cover.jpg Binary files differdeleted file mode 100644 index 7c2bce9..0000000 --- a/old/52996-h/images/cover.jpg +++ /dev/null |
