WeRead Powered by ReaderPub
The Mentor: Uncle Sam, Vol. 7, Num. 11, Serial No. 183, July 15, 1919 cover

The Mentor: Uncle Sam, Vol. 7, Num. 11, Serial No. 183, July 15, 1919

Chapter 7: THE STORY OF UNCLE SAM The Postal Service
Open in WeRead

Explore more books like this:

About This Book

A concise survey of federal domestic functions presents how national agencies address public health, education, and agricultural needs. It describes the Public Health Service’s quarantine, epidemic control, research, and hospital work for disabled veterans; the Bureau of Education’s role as a national clearinghouse, supporter of land-grant institutions, promoter of school gardening, and organizer of vocational training; and the Department of Agriculture’s broad assistance for farming and food production. The account emphasizes cooperation with state and local authorities, expanding vocational funding and obligations, and the administrative measures used to improve hygiene, schooling, and national food resources.

THE STORY OF UNCLE SAM
The Postal Service

FIVE

In the year 1790 there were 75 postoffices in the United States. In 1918 there were 54,345. The number of pieces of mail handled in a year approximates twenty million. In order to operate this vast business enterprise Uncle Sam requires the services of 300,000 people.

The Postoffice Department, constant in service, day and night, probably has no rival among Government institutions. In 1863 the free delivery of mail was undertaken in half a hundred cities, with 449 carriers. In 1918 there were 2,000 city delivery offices, with 35,000 carriers. The first rural free delivery routes, three in number, were established as an experiment in 1896. There are now considerably more than a million miles of such routes, employing over forty thousand carriers. Special delivery service was established in 1885. In an average year the number of pieces of mail handled by special delivery approximates fifty million. In 1865 there were 419 money-order offices and the money orders issued amounted to $1,360,122. In 1918 only a very small percentage of postoffices did not issue money orders, and the value of the orders amounted to $940,575,219.

The postal savings system was begun in 1911. Within six years there were upward of six thousand postoffices that received deposits and the amount to the credit of depositors was nearly $150,000,000. The smallest deposit accepted is $1, but smaller amounts may be saved by purchasing a 10-cent savings card and affixing 10-cent savings stamps. Interest is allowed at the rate of 2 per cent.

The parcel post system dates from 1913. It has gradually been made more serviceable to the public by the removal of restrictions regarding the size, weight, packing and nature of shipments and by the increased use of motor vehicles. The Department estimates that 3,000,000,000 parcels were handled in 1918.

On May 15, 1918, the first regular air mail route was established in this country between Washington, Philadelphia and New York. The flight between Washington and New York requires approximately two hours, as compared with five hours by the fastest railway trains. Other routes are in course of development.

During the latter part of the World War the Postoffice Department operated the telegraph and telephone systems of the country.

In the year 1918 the Department inaugurated a system of motor-truck parcel post routes, especially to facilitate the distribution of food stuffs. The trucks are owned by the Government and many former Army trucks are now utilized in this service. A great variety of merchandize is hauled along these routes; all sorts of farm products are carried to the city markets and the merchandize purchased in the city is distributed through the rural districts on the return trip. The trucks pick up parcels anywhere along their routes—not merely at postoffices, but at farmhouses—and deliver in the same way. Produce from the country is delivered directly to the consignee in the city, house-to-house delivery being made wherever the houses are easily accessible to the regular routes of the trucks. While certain produce cannot be shipped through a postoffice, under the postal regulations, all kinds of produce, including live poultry, are accepted by the trucks where the delivery can be made directly without having to go through a postoffice.

Besides these routes operated directly by the Government, many of the so-called “star routes” (routes operated by contractors) are now equipped with motor vehicles.

PREPARED BY THE EDITORIAL STAFF OF THE MENTOR ASSOCIATION
ILLUSTRATION FOR THE MENTOR, VOL. 7, No. 11, SERIAL No. 183
COPYRIGHT, 1919, BY THE MENTOR ASSOCIATION, INC.


DISABLED SOLDIERS LEARNING TO WEAVE RUGS AT AN ARMY HOSPITAL