burden of proof will rest upon those who hold
that instead of carrying on the commerce of
the country in light of existing conditions it
should be continued to be carried on as was
necessitated by the unsatisfactory transporta-
tion conditions which at one time existed.
Tae LABOR SITUATION
. Mr. Eugene G. Grace, president of the
Bethlehem Steel Corporation, in a recent arti-
cle in the Saturday Evening Post, stated that
“hand-to-mouth™ buying insofar as the Beth
lehem Steel Company is concerned, has had
a very stabilizing effect with respect to their
labor situation. - It is interesting to note that
Mr. Willard is of a different opinion insofar
as rélates to the labor situation on the rail
roads. Commenting upoii this Mr. Willard
makes the following statement:
“There is one thing that might be urged in favor
of a departure from the so-called ‘hand-to-mouth’
method and that is the expectation that such a
course would tend to stabilize labor employment, and
I believe it would be helpful from that point of view.
It is a fact that at certain seasons of the year the
railroad facilities at least in certain parts of the
country are used to the utmost because of the crop
movement. There are seasons of the year when the
coal movement is heavy, with alternate seasons when
it is light. To the extent that the needs of the peo-
ple for certain staple commodities could be foreseen
and the transportation service in that .connection
performed during what might be called the periods
of light traffic, such an arrangement would tend to
stabilize railroad employment and it might be help-
ful in other directions. I have in mind particularly
the anticipated requirements of coal which could be
met by transporting more coal than currently needed
during certain seasons of the year in anticipation of
the enlarged requirements later on. The same
thought would perhaps apply in greater or less de
gree to the movement of cement for road building.
Other instances might be cited”
Tar VreNniaNn Rainway CoMPANY
Mr. Craries H. Hix, president of Vir
ginian Railway Company, believes that with
improved railway and transportation facili-
ties it is possible to get quicker transportation
and therefore delivery of material in one-third
of the time in which it was formerly possible
to secure it. From the standpoint of railroad
requirements he states that a standardization
of railroad track and equipment has.been
worked out to such an extent that a large
portion of the material is interchangeable, and
in that way a substantial reduction has been
made possible in the store stock carried by the
railroads. Mr. Hix's own efforts in this re-
spect are interestingly illustrated by the fig:
ares which he gives. He states that in Janu-
ary, 1919, the store balance of the Virginian
Railway was $2,302,504.86; in May, 1926,
it was $1,221,212.77, a decrease of $1,081,
292.09. The outside material balance in
January, 1919, was $3,330,691.19, and in
May, 1926, it was $2,556,023.57, a decrease
of $774,667.62—or a total reduction of
$1,855,959.71, and these reductions, he
points out, were made even in the face of a
large accumulation of electrical material to be
ased in the electrification of the line.
Mr. Hix also gives an interesting example
of the results of forward buying under former
methods. He states that they have about
$100,000 worth of engine material and plates
on hand, of which one-half is obsolete, and
‘hat they have in the neighborhood of $60,
J00 worth of bar iron of obsolete sizes that
they will have to work up in small lots in
order to get anything at all out of the invest
ment. He believes that this was caused by
either unnecessary buying or bad judgment
on the part of the purchasing agent or the
mechanical people at the time the purchases
were made, and states that it looks to him as
though they were purchased for the same rea
son that it was reputed the old woman bought
a barrel of gimlets “because they were cheap
—not because thev were needed.”
Tae NORFOLK AND WESTERN RAILWAY
COMPANY
Mr. A. C. NeepLgs, president of the Nor-
‘olk and Western Railway Company, be
lieves that “hand-to-mouth™ buying within
reasonable limits should not be curtailed; that
it has been made possible by better and more
dependable transportation service, and that
in turn its adoption has aided in establishing
dependable service through, to some extent.