-'" """wv I .n ii i mw t. i .- ttt t . . trt- FiT" pV7w.?, tM vMirtJi?'"T-?3rr',rtB'w," - -v1- &'-'? 'Si' t ! S y- EVENING PUBLIC LEDGER-PHIUADELFHIA; WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 8t 1019 ,,'! 16 UtA - ""'" R twzy rw wMJv'-v,.;.--T"wrMw l"Vf Hi VJf'SK,' ."'A.J.'i '.tf?VI V 4i'l ' -to mu A: WM?'. VI, n,.'trk.'l f Wi: im&w te&t& l-v B IN rf p''i .. V pi , St -.:!" . lA,u'f. iY 1 .l J ... irfaMfffe (Hr -xj!Alittg.Mi 1 ,.v. t.AA rp . u. .iJi inc "..i lHHWaHHnHi n .. . "w,ourta tr e : rent ( ." fncr. .. iu.M '"--fAi1 fi Fi.ilTfaltiywftMaT . AMe-mnttv IVih im Rjiv . iwrititaimrf inl firtntn. .r , iL I , iwn v.; erts ; w":r v.-i,y,- r :, ....riif - " -r , """ ""'- jsr,?.V''.'nui.i7: "m. ,,"" w, .uwwn1 ' ' i fegm "..i- MUI-' . 1L - .-.I t :. ,uws -..h w "'..i"i "' flm. twZ.aW'.M. ! "r S3TS2: r e"" on . rTiimr nlli. W n iftA:.y Ill't 1 f HP Mi 1 I III -I I, , litEiKIKF BBffl. O N. I MMHri'l-lt 5Kl5iUT m fttraS rviJ.UK Seven-Cent Charge Restored ! talon nefones Request of Cities to Keep Fared enls I'cndlng Action on zont Byoicm lir- irtmt. Con. tfc. sil niuuv l cue!! !n ct- nr In Inclilnn cUiutlra. !( Utd. for iniUnCf- d tb. pplktion th.t on CMn5t t Itck of Ub la Jtn Hillirty. Newark, otrj, Febrot Mid Mutsli, 1018, Mid Its order of Sept. lb. ier. wTthr, only ibt etn wero itol tbit tbe com fainted. In this connection tie tintru Itg fr from 7 mtnegert tciuraon u raowa m iot April 1. The d Icwi j out lnl ttlpule' At i j... .,-,,, to oolni' rf t-x1 tt 1 nfi Af trark nr nnk tNir which b4J ,.nt fn, th. flr.t h"h """d ' " " f t fare went Into The decUlen point oo !,j 3 board bat beretoforo crl ,, company because of It fall Twos ItONTHS tft, . .uiBelent reeenn. 1 ..t, l.'tn ramaln tlo)i. and Indicated In 1U1 ommljjlcn pastel July 18, 1318, tbe neceeilfl iratem of faret. proper maintenance and r b tba rallwar by railway by mtintainlnaM can B- asss? "ajHWe,;, f tb,, "W1 c TM.tnur.M of tbe .TIofltnn.fMm.i eiflng to loai of ftuinftn. Vpttr tbo delicti 8-cent fare tbere wai In December a I Higher Fare Stems Tide I nistnp; Cost la Cleveland Stoppea by FraneMM.Amendraent- uiiereai c ana in uun hum oi iib starts SlOwly Up 7. oqUUndl'nj TOln't of tba expe. caah fare, aenn tlclceto tot 85 cente. rleneea of tbe Cleveland (Ohio) Railway lent traniftr, 1-oent rebate) wo. In' for tb. calendar year 118 wa. lu final .tailed. After'." ay.- w'.lTt Ktocceas In securing m fare .wbleh r rai ba Ia o. -.t -ii. r? ?m ,. wiwdlb.tclidencyoftiolnUfertfund eaih fare, a.rea -Ucketor M-eent., to disappear la fia faos of hlcher co.ta 1-oent traiufer, ro rebate),' Tbe -.ob-of operation, Tbe .Intereat ' ' nt ).. ).... i.'i. i. .""Jllliai'' i"" l WiiUted an amendment to tb. I 1 f rrant ta-Bah4,ll .lilt M,),. and on Aur..,rate ! (S enU -r-, et iicitte ior It cent., 1. i fanaf.r, no. rebate) becaaia ef- .no rirtC9 I I Thli to U .UiroMd. Tb.' T ? S88 VlU1-0 1llon ot t oendment la effectlr. until ill 17flTCB''U' . th JlVa l ow V th ndoftbe war. Wben. " . . P Cetrt oi ",(.reao ,i r rona exeeU J700,0o0, tbe " w-T. KJ.yi!!Sg--l'MpwttMw ""- Jari"- nnco . wgSRSr .2ST,ta iit WrK w'-A?SU liti.. n 5'.v. !. " ".' Taddin,..V1:LrtacJMl , . . oa. ein j - . . !. - - n a ani v - . r KTVtl -- . 1IIUW- . tt-cniiv -! loei - . a on f los of netrly 18 per cent In trfiTel. I mn- From natural Increwe (o builncis And 10- from returning patronage that pr lel centast.has cradualty dEmlnUhed until h tb In May tb lo wu reduced to 0 per ol of cent. l..a Th f r71ty Wrtt lejej eiw-o. Mor More than 400 Cities have Swept Prejudice Aside Some facts worth remembering , THE electric railways carry more than ii billion 'passengers every year more than loo rides for each man, woman and child in the nation. More than six -billions of the savings of the American people are invested in them. The -total electric car trackage of the country is 48,484. miles; there are about 100,000 electric railway cars. , Only 2,419 new cars were ordered in 1918; even in the panic .year ,of iQfi7 the number was 6,216. 29 companies operating 2,107 miles of track went into receivers' hands in ,1918. More than 400 American cities have, faced these facts frankly and done the square business-like thing. The Electric Railway' Journal believc9 that the fairness of the American people can be trusted to act with equal justice elsewhere, in the interests of the square deal and of better business for everybody. , fr.Mni.'llV" " And have settled the Electric Railwayiprohlem on a clean-cut business basis t;'.?v,i . ? l-W..i'J A !SS.? jfflj k ', ,"!.-I'.1 nrui r.'t.; r,.'AT-'.,.n m$$t mm Httriif -' !.' mm w"T)EOPLE talk about vested interests," j said LloydGeorge."Itis not the vested interests I am afraid of, it is the vested prejudices. We must sweep aside prejudices". Most of us are prejudiced on the ques tion of car fares. We have always paid a nickel, and we find it hard to believe that we ought to pay more. The whole problem of our relation to the electric railways and their relation to the prosperity of the nation is under- dis cussion this week at the convention of the American Electric Railway Association in Atlantic City. r Look through the eyes of The Electric Railway Journal ECAUSE the McGraw-Hill'.Company is in a position to know all the facts it is publishing this-advertisement. One of the ten McGraw-Hill publica tions' is the Electric Railway Journal, which sees the street railway situation nationally and has for more than a quarter of a cen tury been an influence for progress in its field. Its voice, is independent. It has spoken frankly against certain street car companies when they were wrong; and it stands just as frankly -and firmly for them -when. they arerright. " And' in their need for an increased fare the street car companies are right. The best proof of that fact is that more than 400 cities have examined the question carefully and have voluntarily granted increases. A nickel is less than' 2 cents as compared with 1896 A NICKEL is a' nickel no longer. As Professor Irving Fisher of Yale recently pointed out it will buy only half as much as in 1 9 1 4; only one third as much as in 1896. $ Soon the basis of 1896 the street railways are real ly receiving less than two cents a passenger today. No- wonder that more companies went into receiv ers hands last year than in any one of the preceding ten year's. No wonder that fewer new cars were purchased last year; and that less new track was laid. For no amount of economy, no amount of finan cial or engineering genius can make two cents do the work of five. 0 You are one of the owners of the Street Railways ND here is another thing worth remembering. JLx. More, than 6 billion dollars are invested in the electric railways of America. And all of us are among the investors. We may think that we own no electric railway stocks or bonds; but as a matter of fact we do. The savings banks have invested a large part of our savings in dectric railway bonds; the life insurance companies which must protect our families after we are gone depend upon the interest on those bonds for part of their income. Whether we like it or not, the fact remains that the security and prosperity of the electric railways in timately affect the security "and prosperity of every one of us. We win or lose with them. , For the sake of fair play and better business THIS is" not ' a "pessimistic advertisement, but an optimistic one. It is published in appreciation of the more than 400 American'citics that have swept prejudice aside arid settled the street car problem on a clean-cut business like basis. ' By-their action those cities have helped American business everywhere. They have made.it possible1 for their electric railways to place orders for hundreds of millions of dollars worth of new equipment; and to extend their lines farther into the country. Orders for new equipment 'mean better business for scores of industries. New lines extended into the country mean less congestion and the building of new homes. The Electric Railway Journal welcomes this evi dence of clear thinking and unprejudiced action. It believes whole-heartedly that hundreds of cities that have not yet taken such action will shortly do so. For the electric railways are the-great arteries of our city life. In their prosperity business prospers; and no business man can allow them to be permanently injured without endangering his own interests also. McGRAW-HILL COMPANY INCORPORATED JAMES H. McGRAW, President London New York San Francisco Washington, D. C. Cleveland Buenos Aires Philadelphia Chicago ESS mi m ..'... srStti .7.'.W.M:7. 28&&i u5Kw ivm. M4 wj r (..f-tatEfrYyll P:.?JSI '.sT.v.av.ejl '.fAftii-i W'tUS'l W&'j'-l frtf&Wr vW mm, m vur .i'y.j af'.VjrrVSiT hi m ZW W& jB Engineering News-Record Pfiw GLAGE U POWER aECTRICRArLWrTY lUUKMftl, ifi! wJffSfScS frMlTauLxGI&U. ENOIrJEERING Mm Engineering am fcOiugJournaJ ,Bctrlcal I&gchandlslng '!rVC Elccirlcal WotM fcaSJ mm jl. Am, . ... Jal - 11 atjaliafclhit i 11 afi . J' "" ' ' "J ' ' r " T w" ; 'TAT r itfi Ik j&. A ' . J, . ktjs -.a- 2.r.:m w ' y 0$Jfr '4 !' i '