PHOTOGRAPH OF V113 I" a half-tone of -a remarkable photograph taken by F. A. Shogren. staff photographer of The Orego nian, on bright flay in October. It -was made with a trfc-photo lens from The Oregonian tower, the object being WHAT is a freight rate? That question has been puzzling thou sands since the plan to place the establishment of rates In the hands of the Interstate Commerce Commission has come up In Congress. "What Is all this great pother and newspaper agitation about?" says the man In the street, to whom the matter of fixing the charges for the transportation of commodities seems, in the casual consideration, some thing simple enough something that any one familiar with the broad principles of railroading could reduce to a National system as inflexible as algebra, some thing that must bo guided by the simple .facts of the weight of the commodity and the number of miles It Is carried. But the Inquisitive person will still ask. "What is a freight rater The query was put to several experienced railroad men. One defined it as "the value of the commodity (namely transportation) that a railroad has to sell." Another called it "the price charged for transporting a commodity between two points." Such a thing seems astonishingly simple. As a matter of fact, a rate is as elusive as a greased .pig. The Man Behind the Rate. Among the highest paid railroad men are the freight traffic managers. On all the great roads these men have under tfcrm. a large staff of freight experts, tvho are constantly hunting and pursu ing and .studying and adjusting in the matter of rates. If the traffic manager Is paid such a high salary and has such an elaborate staff ' under him. obviously is work must be. of a supreme import ar.e to the railroad. It Is. He la the man behind the rate. His main business Is to catch the greased pig, to fix the rate, A traffic manager can no more estab-1-sh a freight rate by taking Into con sideration merely the length of the haul ard the tonnage of the commodity than a publisher can establish the value of a book by considering the number of words and the cost of binding. Some of the things the traffic ' manager has to con sider In fixing his rates are the value of the freight, the danger of damage to It and tno costs of such damage, the costs cf service, the conditions of competition to the shipper, not only at the shipping point "but also at all other points from which competition may come, and the laws of supply and demand. These are all In addition to considerations of tonnage and mileage. Considerations Simple Enough. Certain of these considerations are sim ple enough. Fine furniture, for Instance. Is more valuable than grain and it Is natural that the rate for It should be higher. The same tonnage of silk or of gTnHe might bo packed in a freight car; but xh rate for silk will.be higher, bo- WHAT IS AN EQUITABLE FREIGHT RATE? cause it might easily be damaged If the car was overturned, while the granite could remain In tho open without injury. Crockery, in the same way, is much more damageable than pig iron. Again, a haul over a country of steep grades and many turns will entail a higher rate than a straight and level run. Thus, on level regions a road may move 30 or 40 cars more easily than 15 or SO could be moved on a stretch of sharp grades or hills. At times a road may have great quantities of freight moving in one direction, while empty cars are clattering back on the other, and this waste of energy must modify prices. A community that manu factures a product in which there Is prac tically no competition can pay a higher rate than one in whioh there is much competition. And the rate Is affected by the fact that the commodity may be a luxury or necessity, for naturally It makes less difference to the shipper of jasper and onyx what rate he pays than to the man whose commodity is building stone. "When ho reaches the consideration of competitive conditions against his road, the freight traffic manager has a more delicate situation to handle. For Instance, In the export side the competition in for eign markets of like articles coming from and going to other ports than those oi the United States Is a big complication, "as for Instance," points out Mr. James B. Dill, of New York, "grain from Rus sia, the Danube, the Baltic, India, Aus tralia. Canada and Argentina; cotton from India, from Egypt, and, perhaps, in the future, from other parts of Africa; and so on, of each and every article, in the varying stages of its manufacture." To such competition the railroad rate here must be receptive. Water Competition. The railroad freight rates from Kew York to Son Francisco are lower than from New York to some intermediate points because of the competition by water. A similar situation exists in the rates between Boston and Port land. Me.; and again between New York and New Orleans and between New York and Buffalo. Tho fact that the Hudson River and the Brie Canal are open to navigation seven months of the year affects the railroad rates not only for these months, but also for the -entire year. The traffic manager must make his rates high enough to insure a profit, but at the same time low enough to attract the shipper who is willing to pay something over the water-route freight rate, in considera tion of the quicker transportation by rail. Railroad rates in the case of lines running from port to port on the Gr,eat Lakes, where the roads mus.t compete with the great freight-carrying steamships, are ground down to a minimum, while on parallel reads 100 miles Inland rates may be considerably higher. Moreover, tho freight traffic manager may have to consider a peculiar prob lem of competition by other roads. For instance, from Boston 'to. Worctater-by. THE SUNDAY MOUNT HOOD TAKEN AT SIXTY MILES RANGE the Boston & Albany Is a distance of 44 miles, while It Is 70 miles by the Boston & Maine. Hates must be kept practically the same on the two roads. In spite of the divergence in mileage. The freight traffic manager Is contin ually confronted by odd general condi tions like this In his never-ending problem of the adjustment of rates. From Chicago to New York 21 routes, ranging from 912 to 137C miles, com pete for traffic, and between Omaha and San Francisco there are five lines, of which the shortest Is 1865 and the longest 2724 miles. The Rate Man an Arbiter. The rate adjuster is to a large extent the arbiter between the cosiness inter ests In the communities through which his road passes. He must know the commercial conditions of those communities like a book. His rate sys tem must be a barometer that will re flect exactly the commercial weather of his territory. If his rate toward one i community is too high, the discrep ancy is immediately reflected by the breaking down of business and manu factures in that community and an im mediate falling off In the business of the road as regards that point. If, on the other hand, his rate is too low, the road suffers directly. He must study each community as to every article of commerce it produces and the markets therefor. The rate above all else must be flex ible. The freight traffic manager must often rely on his expert judgment as much as on broad, general principles of rate making. He must have the knowl edge and the sense of commercial sym pathy to reflect ever-changing condi tions and novel contingencies that keep "unexpectedly arising. His watch over the communities his road trav erses must be as close as that of a physician over his patient or rather he Is the physician who must at once time the pulses of a hundred, a thou sand patients. And as no physician can conduct his practice on general princi ples of medical application, but must be guided also In each case by an In timate knowledge of the patient's physical and neutral makeup, so the traffic manager must nave the sympa thetic knowledge of his communities to apply In separate cases, or he falls. "But what," railroad men are asked, "if your rate adjuster is made respon sible not to the road, but to the Gov ernment merely? . "Would he care enough about the prosperity of the road to maintain this delicate balance and conserve the interests of the com munities affected?" Official Versus Private Efficiency. One Eastern railroad officer an swered the question this way; "Suppose the Government selected your physician and hn was responsible to the state only. Do you think that ha would take as much.' interest in your OEEGONIAN, PORTLAND, 60 miles distant from the camera. The exposure was only .three this the best picture of Mount Hood ever made; that is to say. the welfare as a man paid by and respon sible to you? Would he not be likely to sacrifice certain patients to certain others whose political Influence might be used to his advancement. And, fur thermore, having un assured Govern ment position which might as likely have been obtained through political pull as through peculiar qualifications and expertness would he have the same Incentive toward general excel lence and care for detail as he would If his livelihood and standing depended on his success In individual cases? Even If he were a man of high honesty and efficiency, I believe that the an swer would be "No." And the same rea soning must hold good In the case of the rate adjuster." A Diversified Problem. How diversified a problem Is the making of rates Is not easily illustra ted, because of the vastness of the thing. The New Yorker who sits at his dinner-table uses silver utensils brought as ore from the Far West; his table is made of lumber which may nave, been brought from Maine or Cali fornia and manufactured in Connecti cut; his sugar Is drawn from Louisi ana; "his bread is made from flour ground In Minneapolis from wheat grown in the Dakotas; his beef Is raised in Texas and slaughtered in Chicago; his bacon was cured in San Francisco or Omaha; the milk ne drinks Is brought possibly from 200 miles up the state; the eggs ho eats may have been laid in Iowa, and his fruit dish may display at once the pro ducts of Jersey, Florida and Oregon. "What innumerable freight problems have gone toward producing for us even a simple repast! What a factor the 'rate is upon our very table. And it Is woven In the very clothes we wear. The working man In New York is clothed In wool from Oregon, or cotton from Texas, woven Into fabrics in the factories of Connecticut. Results From Slight Changes A slight change in rates is produc tive of consequences which might be termed colossal. According to Presi dent Mellen. of the New York, New Haven & Hartford railroad, any one. of the big railroads of the country spends more money each year In the adjustment of freight rates than tne entire expense of the Interstate Com merce Commission. A change in its freight, rates of only one per cent per houndred pounds costs the New Haven road $11,300 to prepare new schedules. President Lucius Tattle, of the Boston & Maine, recently elucidated, in a speech to the Brotherhood, of Locomo tive Engineers, that the average freight rate received by. all railroads in 1S93 was S.93 mills per ton per mile, while In 1903 the rate was 7.S1 mills. This reduction of 2.12 mills in the av--verage Irelfbt rate aaeount in a yx MARCH 5, 1905. to $191,000,000. President Tuttle gave significant and inconsequential, but state Commerce Commission for 1904, a further illustration of the large con- which, when averaged over the year's the gross earnings of the railroads for sequences of a slight change in the freight tannage, became a balance of the year were $1,966,633,821 and their rate. He recalled that in 1903 the em- nearly $800,000, an amount almost suf- combined capitalization was $12,533, ployes demanded and received an in- ficlent to make good the year's wage 990,25?. There were 2,358,960 railroad crease In the wage schedule amounting . increase." tariffs on file, the annual average being In all to $800,000. He said: "For that How vast a task is that of rate mak. over 130,000, and more than a third of same year the company fortunately re- ing in this country Is indicated by the commission's clerical force (appar celved an increased average rate of railroad statistics alone. The internal ently about 30 clerks was kept con-forty-seven one-hundredths of one commerce of the country for last year stantly busy filing, indexing and furn mill a ton a mile upon Its total freight has been estimated at $22,000,000,000. ishlng information in reference to movement, a sum In itself wholly In- According to the report of the Inter- them. Little Sermons - - By Elbert Hubbard Aphorisms by the Editor of "Tne Philistine," Author of "Little Journeys," Etc. THE employe who drives a sharp bargain and Is fearful that he will not get all hb' earns, never will. There are men who are set on a hair-trigger1 always ready to make demands when there is a rush of work, and who threaten to walk out If their demands are not acceded to. Such men are out of employment about half of the- time, and the curious part of It Is. they never know why. GOOD health! "When you go out of .doors, draw the chin in, carry the crown of the head high and fill the lung? to the utmost; greet your friends with a smile and put soul into every handclasp. Do not fear being misun derstood, and never waste a minute thinking about your enemies. Try to fix firmly in your own mind what you would like to do, and then without any violence of direction you will move straight to the goal. Fear Is the rock on which we spilt, and hate Is the shoal on which many a bark is stranded. ETTERs,occasionally oe deceived tnan to oe always aisiruauuu WB learn in moments of joy; play is education; pleasurable anima tion Is necessary to growth; and. when you have robbed a child of its play spell, you have robbed It of its life. I WISH to meet all men on an abso lute equality; to face any obstacle and meet every difficulty unabashed and unafraid. WB reap as we sow. We hear that quite often, don't we? But it is only a half-truth, for not only do we reap as we sow but we reap as other men have sown. We are heirs to the past its good, and ill, and all the mil lion o f men -who have gane'b-efor-u.3- seconds. Professional photographers as well as skillful amateurs consider best picture of the mountain as. seen from Portland. Thousands of Experts Ever Busy Adjusting the-Delicate and Flexible Problems. havo for us prepared' the way. Not only do we reap the ripe grain that others have planted, but our bare and bleeding feet tread the thistles sown by those long dead. Be careful how you sow! LET us work to make men free! Am I bad because I want to .give you freedom, and have you work In .glad ness Instead of fear? Let's abolish .'the devil. MEDIOCRITY always fears when the ghost of genius does not down at. its bidding. DO not stop to think about who are with you and what men are against you. It matters little at the last both the ability to harm and the ability to help are over-estimated. NATURE punishes most sins, but sacrilege, blasphemy and heresy are things that Nature does not pro vide any punishment for; therefore man has to look after these things him self. THERE Is no secret spciety that has corralled truth. Truth is in the air, and when your head-gets into the right stratum you know it. No one fcan Impart it to you until the time. Is ripe, and when the time' is ripe lor you to know, you do not have to ride a goat in order to understand. AT hotels tho man who complains Is the man against whom the serv ants are always in league, and the man who complains most is the' man-who has the least at home. EVERY employer is constantly look ing for people who can help him; naturally, he is on -the-lookout among .Ms .employes .for thoaa who do . sot 33. help, and everything and everybody that Is a hindrance has to go. This la the law of trade do not find fault with it; it Is founded on Nature. The re ward is only for the man that helps, and' In order to help, you must have sympathy. BE pleasant until 10 o'clock -in the morning and the rest of the day will take care of Itself. THE ostrich's plan of disposing of difficulties is not without its dis advantages. Could Not Escape. The following telephone conversation Is reported to have been neard between a certain well-known young financier and a society woman whose functions are con sidered somewhat boring: "Is this Mr. ?" "Yes." "This is Mrs. . Won't you1 give- us the pleasure of your company at dinner on Monday?" Tm so sorry, Mrs. but I have an engagement for Monday." "Can you come Tuesday, then?", "Why, it Is most unfortunate, J but I havea partial engagement for Tuesday, also." ' "Well, now about Wednesday?" "Ob, hang It! I'll come Monday." Her Family's Longevity. A Virginia Representative In Congress says that two ladles In Richmond with whom he Is well acquainted were one day discussing the relative longevity of the members of their respective families. "I have no doubt," said one of the ladies, "that, everything; considered, we Blanks are the most notable family In, Virginia when it comes to a question of longevity. Do you know, my father died at S3, while my grandfather reached the advanced age of 97.'" "Is that so?" queried the other lady. "And which grandfatherwas. that?" "Oh," replied the first speaker, ---"that was- the grandfather of my-ffirat "huebaad."