The features inherent in the express service and not now in the parcel-post, as the express service and the parcel-post now function, might be preserved by either of two methods. They might be added to the present parcel-post as separate features to be utilized only when especially desired and for which separate fees would be levied. Or else the Government postal express might be organized into two separate divisions—one for the services now rendered by the parcel-post, with possibly certain additional fees for certain secondary features, to be determined by experience in administration; and the other for the services now rendered by the express companies, except those proved by experience in administration to be homogeneous with the parcel post service proper, and hence properly adhering to the first division. Either the method of complete consolidation or the method of two divisions would meet the exigencies of the service—only the results of experience and experiment could award greater merit to one or the other.

The fact that these separate functions of the express service are of too great value and in too great demand to be eliminated is seen by a study of the relation of the express shipments and the parcel-post shipments to the express and the parcel-post rates, this constituting the second point of departure (b) between the public method and the private method of transporting parcels. The differences between the express rates and the parcel-post rates may be graphically realized from a comparative table. As will be seen, the differences between the two sets of rates may be roughly summarized in one sentence—as a rule, the parcel-post rates are lower than the express rates for the shorter distances and the smaller parcels.

Accordingly, if the value of the service rendered by the two systems were nearly identical, the express company's shipments would be almost entirely of larger parcels and for the greater distances. But as a matter of fact it is generally known that a large proportion, a very large proportion, of the shipments sent by express are at weights and for distances at which the parcel-post rates are lower than the express rates, often decidedly lower. Only the need to a shipper of all, some, or any one of the above-discussed features of express service not duplicated at present in the parcel-post system can explain this situation. It is therefore imperative that the Government make provision for all these features in establishing a Government postal express.


COST OF LIVING

A moment's reflection is sufficient to show that a Government postal express would make express facilities available to a far greater number of persons than are served at present by the express companies. For the Government postman and the Government post office cover the country as a whole—the express companies operate only along railroad, electric, steamboat and stage-lines. Moreover, of these four media, 83.7% of the mileage is by railroad and only 2.9% by electric line, 13% by steamboat line, and 410 of 1% by stage-line.

All in all, the mileage covered by the express companies totals 307,400. On the other hand, the mileage covered by the postal system is 1,374,056. Of this amount, 1,112,556 represents the mileage of the rural routes alone, and the number of persons served by the rural routes in 1917 was more than 27,000,000. Of course, it is certain that not all of the persons along these more than one and a quarter million miles were deprived of the benefits of an express service, but it is equally certain that many of them were, and it is probable that the majority of them were.

But it is the extension of the express facilities to just that element of the population living off the railroads and on the rural post routes in which lie the greatest potential benefits that an express service can render to the nation. For, speaking by and large, most of this population is engaged in farming; and, conversely, possibly the majority of the producers of foodstuffs in the country live off the railroads and on the rural post routes. Now, it is stated on reliable authority that of each dollar expended by the consumer for food in New York City, for instance, the farmer gets only from thirty-five to fifty cents. In other words, at least 40% of the cost of food is represented by the cost of getting the products of the farm to the ultimate purchaser. The rôle thus played in the drama of the high cost of foodstuffs and the high cost of living generally is apparent. Equally apparent is the rôle which a simplification of or a reduction in the processes of getting food from the farm directly to the dinner table could play in lowering the cost of living.

But such a simplification and reduction are possible only to a Government postal express. At present the rural free delivery does make provision for sending farm products directly from the farmer to the consumer, but its efforts in this direction are still largely embryonic. For the machinery of the process must be constructed anew and the task of construction is one of those tasks which cannot be hurried. On the other hand, the express companies have built up through the years an extensive and efficient machinery for "farm to table" transactions, but their services in this direction are hampered by the fact that the companies are limited on the whole to the territory adjacent to the railroad lines. The fertilization of the vast farming territory tapped by the post office by the express company facilities should give birth not many months after its consummation to the one most potent factor at present available to lower the retail cost of foodstuffs to an appreciable extent.