8 THE STJXDAY -OKECOXIAX,. rOTlTXAXD, JANUARY. 27, 1D18. LDIERS OF THE PRINTED WORD HELPING TO WIN THE W Trained Writers All Over the Nation Volunteer in America's Publicity Battalion and Render Indispensable Service It a cr la W In the i I . . . limrix cms! I " JL 3L J taai tMg IHa f VT '1 'P"5a I V BT JAMES H. COLLINS. rN a crowded little mifrgfnrjf offlcs hlngton from half-past morning till far Into the night Terr often sits an- American author who before the war had a reputation for his careful work and painstaking tyle. The conscientious five hundred words that he wrote In a morning was then considered by him a satisfactory out put. Today a mornlnrn work may easily run to several thousand words, for he keeps two secretaries busy with dictation. At home all his surroundings had to be harmonious before he could write. In Washington his cluttered little office, a third floor, bark room In an old residence, looking out onto an alley fall of cats and cans, la nolsjr with the din of the typewriter and the bustle of visitors coming and going. Mad he been told a year ago that It would be necessary for him to write under such conditions the feat would hare looked Impossible. But today he glories in his work and la rendering Indispensable service to one of the Oovernment department aa a publicity man. - There are many soldiers of the printed word In Washington these days, both men and women. They were among the first volunteers to mobilise, harrying to the capital while the dec laration of war waa pending, because they knew that the national crisis would make Washington a center of news and affairs, and also because they foresaw the part that publicity must play in arousing the American people to the big Issues of war. And Washington waa waiting for them. One woman writer arrived filled with the spirit of service, willing to do any thing, aa she expressed It. even If It were, onlr'to carry a chair. Within a week ah was given a chair aa chairman of on publicity committee and a worker on two others. Correspondents, who came to cover the news for dally papers and maga- slnee, found themselves lending a hand with the problems of this department and that bureau, problems of expla nation which called for the trained writer's knack at presenting facta in Interesting ways, problems of expla nation beyond the abilities of the staid technical and scientific workers In Oovernment service. Wards. Ts, Aasaaesseata. The soldier of the printed word was among the first volunteers, and he will not demobilise until the war la over, for every printed word la as much a part of modern war equipment as air craft, tanks, heavy icuna or subma rine. Of all the war measures passed by Congress during Its Summer session that providing finances for the air craft programme went through In quickest time and with least opposi tion. There was hardly any debate In the Senate or House of Representa tives, and the Nation's sentiment was solidly behind the measure. And the aircraft bill was a typical achievement of the volunteer publicity man. Realising the urgent need for molding public opinion those In charge ef the technical details of the aircraft programme called upon the soldier of the printed word, and the Utters trained news Instinct enabled blm to put the aircraft story before the Amer ican people quickly and dramatically. Accustomed to presenting facta from the angle of his readers' personal In terests, he saw that aircraft, besides the hold they already had upon the imagination of the public as a result of the blrdmen's achievements on the western front, also offered an appar ently aaay way to win the war. Trust ing to the experts' judgment In tech nical matters, the soldiers of the print ed word laid aircraft before the Amer ican people from thla standpoint and col the popular support that the tech nical laen desperately needed. They got such overwhelming sup port that other technical men pleaded for publicity. "We can't fight this war entirely with airplane. " protested the ordnance men. "Guns are needed, too: big pun and plenty of them: hundreds of mil' lion of dollars' worth of heavy artil lery. bU'.lons of dollars worth. He's air a Velaateer. Thereupon the soldier of the printed word enlisted In the artillery and pub lic oplnloa was lined up behind this feramh f the service In a few weeks. And the same with many other de tails of the war programme. From the whirlwind drive that raised f 100.000.000 for the Red Croea In a week to the comparatively obscure little campaign of publicity In the engineering Jour rats which recently raised a regiment of road, builder, the writer baa been on the job ready to use the punted word wherever and however It may be needed. Back of blm throughout the country stand the editors and publish ers, not merely of the great dally papers, but of the magazines and trade Journals and religious and farm publi cations and the humble country weekly with its patent Insides. I Muck of the publicity work of this I wsr la being done en a volunteer basis. rVore f writer are needed to handle lh daily explanation problems of taa Food Administration, the Fuel Admin istration, the Council of National De fense, the committee of public Informa tion, the War. Navy and Treasury De partments and auxiliary war organlxa tions like the Red Cross, the T. M. C. A., the Boys' Working Reserve, the Boy and Girl Scouts. In somecaes work ers are paid, but many are volunteers. drawn from the ranks of authors. Jour nalists, advertising men and publicity experts of the country. And day by day the professional explainer's Job grows more definite and Important. Uncle Sam himself had comprehen slve publicity organizations in peace times. Thousands of bulletins and press stories went out from Oovern ment departments, giving results of technical Investigation In agriculture, chemistry, mining and like activities But much of this Government pub- Icity has been dryly technical, carefully phrased by the scientific expert, who kept In mind first the sanctity of his own professional standing and after that the formalities of the official tatement of fact. Human Interest news value and succinctness were not In his line. War put upon the newspapers and periodicals of the country an enormous pressure. Statements, reports and dla- patches from Washington piled up on editors' desks to such an extent that drastic condensation and elimination were necessary to get them Into the pare available. This situation not only set up an Interesting competition between the volunteer publicity man and the departmental expert, but put the best writers In Washington on their mettle to secure space through their Journalistic skill. Aa the dally releases multiplied In number, and the differ ent departments and bureaus set up rivalries to see which could secure a hearing through the Importance of the stories they had to tell, and the manner of telling them, the dry official state ments, characteristic of Oovernment ac tivities In peace times, were first re shaped so that they had easy points of contact with the average reader, and were then Infused with direct news In terest, and also sharply condensed. Among the volunteers on the pub licity organisations were many sober, technical workers from the colleges and schools. As the battalions of the printed word were licked into shape, these conservative investigators found special deska In connection with the preparation of material for college nstructors, teachers and technical workers In their own fields, while pub licity for the general press was handed over to trained Journalists and au thors. It is difficult to realize that hardly en months ago public sentiment throughout the United States was solidly -against participation In the war, and that our war President had just been re-elected in recognition of his ability in keeping us out of hos tilities. Since then public opinion has been turned right about face. During the Summer, through the printed word, the Nation has been enlisted solidly behind the big war issues, giving not only men, money and food, but making sacrifice and changes In its daily work. In the big war issues the publicity worker has done his Job well. But that Is only a beginning, for skillful professional explanation is now needed to smooth out difficulties in many minor matters, and to solve knotty little problems that are by-products of the big war issues. Talking to the Public. It is amazing to sit In Washington, for instance, and see how inarticulate many of the business Interests of the country have been, despite the fact that this is the greatest reading Nation in the world. Kor years railroad men have pleaded 1 with the public for understanding and co-operation. Millions of dollars were spent to increase the capacity of the freight car so that it would carry 50 and 60 tons instead of 30, and to provide locomotives which would haul longer trains,-and reduce grades, and develop our transportation sys tern along lines of larsje scale, low-cost hauling. Technically, they succeeded in building a transportation machine capable of hauling a ton of freight at a lower cost than' was possible in any part of the world. Yet, while the capacity of the freight car In creased to 60, and 75, and even 100 tons, the average load carried showed vir tually no increase at all when the war began it was less than 15 tons per car. Then suddenly there came the war crisis and the new publicity backed by public co-operative spirit: Within a few months, through skillful printed appeals and the movement for heavy loading with new schedules govern ing the shipment of small freight, the big American freight car has been loaded to something like its actual capacitv, and many of the railroad man's problems have been permanently solved. - The soldier of the printed word has shown him how to talk to the public. For years the hotel .man has found the public solidly behind him as a customer for everything costly and ex travagant. The greater his ingenuity in devising new forms of luxurious service, the greater his patronage. Then, suddenly, almost in a week, the nuhlic goes in for food conservation and economy and denounces the hotel man for his extravagance, while he hastening to bring his establishment around on the new tack. His guests see the waiters carrying out plates of Dartlv eaten food and write to the news papers to advertise him as a slacker. Or. if they find portions reaucea or the meatless days being observed, they want to know why he does not reduce his prices, as well as the portions. In the midst of his problems, while trying to meet this new demand lor economy n the face of difficulties such as rising costs and scarcity of help, the hotel mai all at once realizes that Be De- longs to the Inarticulate classes. He has never learned how to explain his business to the public. He is caught between two crossfires of the war situ ation, and needs the help of the soldier And the latter is CONFISCATED LIQUOR IS TRANSLATED INTO FOOD CROPS IN THE STATE OF OREGON BT BEX HUR LAMPMAN. 1-EATII VALLEY stretched befora I I him limlfless, . gray, menacing. -i and shuddering In heat so fluid and fiery that the horned toads ceased their frolics to lean panting against the dwarf cactua Ho was lost, lrre deemably given to the desert, and he lunged forward without hope withou any sensation save a biasing thirst. It twisted at his throat, and thrust hi tongue forth in the grimace of masque. Tinkle! just like that. And, again. tinkle! tinkle! tinkle! Surely the bells of water, mountain born. cold, clear, dropping in music on chilL wet rock a The little lixards raced before him as he sprang toward the sound sprawled and fell into choking darkness. It was then that John Doe, venturer, vagrant and votary of boose. awaVened, His thirst remained, the desert had vanished, and reality proclaimed his habitat as a eel I. Up through air air shaft and Into the corridor there drifted the tinkle of breaking glass. and something more. Its pungency as sailed him. Sch was the Incense he had offered before the Jesting "har ness bull" had haled him to a corner and called the black wagon. John Doe groaned. abysmally. Hunched on his bunk and powerless, he sat while the sewer drank the yellow vintage of rye and corn. In the free somewhere, down below, the police were smashing many a tidy pint, many a promising quart, at the edict of prohibition. The knell they rang with nightsticks on bottle neck and flask waa the dole of the good old days the days that come no more. "Talk about being gassed on the west front r gaaped the Statistical Ser itant. He smote lustily at a quart of "seven-year-lid." and sent It In crash ing ruin to the gutter grating. "Nobody ever told you. I s'pose. that we're spilling .n crop from the old homestead?" This to his tolling assist ant, a patrolman, wno dragged to the front another trunk from Frisco. "I've been to some pains to get the figures, more or less correct, but not fsr from the mark, take it from me. When we've finished this morning's Job a fair part of what the old farm earned last year will be wandering down to the Willamette. - "Huh!" grunted the patrolman. "It's a fact." bridled the fciatistica! Sergeant. "I wish I waa paying taxes on such a farm aa 1 mean. She covers 'most a quarter section, valley land. all fenced and with modern Improve ment, ion had a notion that bqos butted outa the ground somewhere, like aa oil welL It bulges outa the ground, all right that's what I mean, i "Dou you know," aa continued, wav- i " mi ..I ifi i1 1 i i i i , , I i i f .?, i-i-55rf yi,iMtrX.im:(fMX' H n) 1MB si mmmmami PI I'D -' iri.4 Sr-.U -Mf-t .1- "Si'M JLdt,-iTli9iiXiyAiXXt-ir I 1 'Ml & m tm;li ' at mm!MM!mmmr - Kit M - ures to land, you'd get my drift. . I d Set. Oimma ng the bottle-scarred night stick, "that It sure do. If you was to set down nil i i fellow told me It takes three pounds' the li'iuor that has been uruhlixil in I -of graia to make a quA-t of hooch ? i this city the last year, set 11 down in I figures, and then translate those fig ures to land, you'd get my drift." , l'erhaps the Statistical Sergeant knew what he was talking about. His was the key to the vault where the kegs and boxes, grips, suitcases, milk cans and other ingenious miscellany I of contraband were piled chin high. He had seen the gutter gurgle with many a flood when the order for booze destruction was given. During the year 1917 it Is conser vatlvely estimated that 42.000 quarts of whisky alone., seised by the city, state and Federal officers, were destroyed. or are now heldVin-part in the Court house, City Jail and Federal evidence rooms. The seizures ranged from jouu quarts down to the humble half-pint of the alley bootlegger from the plethoric shipments of San Francisco liquor rings to the casual bottle that some colored porter brought in as a side investment. The combined average yield of rye. corn and wheat for 10 years past, based on the statistics of the Department of Agriculture, was approximately IS bushels per acre, and the average weight of these grains is 57 pounds to the bushels. Local chemists say that approximately three pounds of grain are required to produce one quart of whisky. Pursuing the Statistical Sergeant's lead, it becomes apparent that each of these bushels produced 19 quarts of whisky, and that the average whisky yield per acre was 342 quarts. Thus, if the combined seizures are 42,000 quarts, it bursts upon us that it re quires a farm of 123 acres, and a trifle over for pasture, to grow the grain that trickled shyly into Portland as booze during 1917. The old homestead - of which the Statistical Sergeant spoke, responding to cultivation and clime, came to the fore with its specified average yield ! of 18 bushels per acre, producing 2214 bushels as its crop, or approximately 126,198 pounds of grain to trundle to the shipping point, thence to the dis tillery, and thence by subterranean routes to Oregon and seizure. By the rule of millers, 264 pounds of wheat are required to produce a barrel of flour, weighing 196 pounds. or two sacks, weighing 98 pounds each. For obvious reasons and to spare fur ther statistical meandering, wheat is taken for the Illustrative grain in this instance, although the general average will hold good. The crop of the old homestead thus becomes converted, had It been spared from the distillery, to 478 barrels of flour, or 956 sacks of 98-pound weight. Dr 93.688 ponnds of fine white flour. Further translating the hypothetical :rop it appears that 400 generous one- pound loaves may be produced by the baker from every barrel of flour, or 143,400 loaves. At 10 buns to the loaf. f a far different variety than the "buns" of the good old days, it would furnish forth the accompaniment to ,434.000 cups of breakfast coffee. John Doe. with the tinkle of the last breaking bottle ringing In his ears, irose and rattled thu bars to summon lis jailer. "Say, bo, gimme a drink' of ftvater." said the penitent. of the printed word, ready to help him. Professional Explainers. Knlisted on the Food Administration, both at Washington and in the Stato Food Administration organizations, ho steps in and ihows the hotel man how to explain matters, wilh state ments to the press. That food which the public sees going to waste repre sents its own carelessness in ordering more than it could eat. and the criti cism of menu prices for the reduced food saving portions is probably un just, because prices have actually been reduced without the public realizing it. or smaller meat portions have been made up with vegetables Perhaps this is actually done at a loss, for cost of raw food is less than 20 per cent of the cost of hotel service, the chief ex pense being for cooking and attend ance. The grocer, the butcher and the baker have all come under the same fire of public misunderstanding and without the aid of the publicity man would have found it impossible to make the radical adjustments in their business demanded by war and food conservation. Old trade difficulties, such as duplicate delivery service and liberal granting of credit, have ham pered them in working out more effi cient wartime methods, while they were trying to reduce their prices on staple commodities to conform to ov ernment policies. The public has. al ways been willing to help by carrying home some of its purchases and pay ing cash and patronizing the new fish or cheese department started by the outcner or grocer to meet expenses in the face of decreasing sales on meat, wheat flour and other foods affected by conservation. But the public must understand, and this calls for skillful explanation, and as the different trades and industries hava been brought face to face with their war problems they have found that they, too, were in the inarticulate class and that the aid of the professional explainer was needed. And the professional explainer has been right on the job, enlisted already in the organizations at Washington which are directing these great busi ness changes. He has anticipated dif ficulties and overcome problems by publicity in both the journal and the trade press. Change in Trade Periodicals. There is no more interesting study for the journalist than to compare the grocery, or hotel, or baking trade pe riodical of one year ago with that of today. A year ago such publications were wholly occupied with dry trade matters, while today half their space is given up to war Information sent out from . Washington, showing how to make new war adjustments and Inter linking these adjustments with pub licity in the general press and reflect ing a fervent patriotism and anxiety to serve In the trades and Industries themselves. Last Summer, while the war-revenue measure was being debated in Con gress, the candy manufacturers sent representatives to Washington to at tend to their interests. When they succeeded in securing equitable taxa tion in that bill they went back home satisfied that their chief war problem had Been met. The grocers, bakers, butchers and hotel men were an busy swinging their business methods around to conform to food-saving measures, but candy men saw no cloud on the horizon. The fact that Lnglixli candy manufacturers had been com pelled to modify their products on a basis of 30 per cent sugar, substituting other ingredients, hardly interested the American manufacturers in this line. Then overnight in November the sugar famine was dumped onto the candy men's doorstep, with rumors of railroad embargoes on other ingredi ents- and the possibilities of candy be ing eliminated as a luxury during the war. itt the same time the candy man found public sentiment arrayed against him. People lightly sassumed that candy was a luxury. The young man who had been in the habit of buying assorted chocolates for his best girl saw no hardship in cutting off her supply as a war measure. Gratuitous advice poured in on the candy man through the public press. If he couldn't get sugar, why not make candy out of molasses, or maple syrup, or honey, or fruit and other substitutes? Oa Duty in Washington. In this situation the service of the professional explainer was sorely needed, and the candy man took steps to secure it by sending representatives to work with the Food Administration and set the public thinking straight about their products. They explained. first of alL that they were solidly De- hind the country, ready to make any adjustments in their business necessi tated by wax. If the Goveramen wanted them, to stop making candy they would stop. But they also dem onstrated that candy is a food and that thousands of tons of it are con sumed by the Army and Navy. They corrected popular errors as to possi bilities in making confectionery from substitute materials. Maple syrup and honey make delicious candies, true, but such products are perishable and not adapted to long-distance shipment for National distribution and the thriving export trade which we have built up in that line. Chocolate and cocoa are still plentiful and the candy man is able not only to use fruit and marma lades as substitute ingredients in his goods, but if necessary could probably divert some of his equipment to the making of preserves and like stuff. tConcludode on Page 8.)