carrying the mails be adopted, substituting space
for weight as the principal factor in fixing compensation.
Under this plan it will be possible to determine without
delay what additional payment should be made on account
of the parcel post. The Postmaster General’s
recommendation is based on the results of a far-reaching
investigation begun early in the administration with
the object of determining what it costs the railways
to carry the mails. The statistics obtained during
the course of the inquiry show that while many of
the railways, and particularly the large systems, were
making profits from mail transportations, certain
of the lines were actually carrying the mails at a
loss. As a result of the investigation the department,
after giving the subject careful consideration, decided
to urge the abandonment of the present plan of fixing
compensation on the basis of the weight of the mails
carried, a plan that has proved to be exceedingly expensive
and in other respects unsatisfactory. Under the
method proposed the railway companies will annually
submit to the department reports showing what it costs
them to carry the mails, and this cost will be apportioned
on the basis of the car space engaged, payment to
be allowed at the rate thus determined in amounts
that will cover the cost and a reasonable profit.
If a railway is not satisfied with the manner in which
the department apportions the cost in fixing compensation,
it is to have the right, tinder the new plan, of appealing
to the Interstate Commerce Commission. This feature
of the proposed law would seem to insure a fair treatment
of the railways. It is hoped that Congress will
give the matter immediate attention and that the method
of compensation recommended by the department or some
other suitable plan will be promptly authorized.
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
The Interior Department, in the problems of administration
included within its jurisdiction, presents more difficult
questions than any other. This has been due perhaps
to temporary causes of a political character, but more
especially to the inherent difficulty in the performance
of some of the functions which are assigned to it.
Its chief duty is the guardianship of the public domain
and the disposition of that domain to private ownership
under homestead, mining, and other laws, by which patents
from the Government to the individual are authorized
on certain conditions. During the last decade
the public seemed to become suddenly aware that a very
large part of its domain had passed from its control
into private ownership, under laws not well adapted
to modern conditions, and also that in the doing of
this the provisions of existing law and regulations
adopted in accordance with law had not been strictly
observed, and that in the transfer of title much fraud
had intervened, to the pecuniary benefit of dishonest
persons. There arose thereupon a demand for conservation