قراءة كتاب The Railroad Problem

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The Railroad Problem

The Railroad Problem

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
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XI The Railroad and National Defense 181 XII The Necessity of the Railroad 217 XIII Regulation 235   Index 261

 

 


Illustrations

  PAGE
Illustration of rail-power development Frontispiece
The engineer 34
The knight of the ticket punch 54
The section gang 66
The station agent 82
The Pennsylvania’s electric suburban zone 114
Electricity into its own 114
The Olympian 130
Ore trains hauled by electricity 130
The motor-car upon the steel highway 152
The adaptable motor-tractor 152
When freight is on the move 158
The Bush Terminal 166
Freight terminal warehouse at Rochester 166
The railroad in the Civil War 182
The railroad “doing its bit” 186
America’s “vital area” 196
Rock Island government bridge 206
Railroad outline map of the United States 216
The Royal Gorge 244

 

 

ERRATUM

The word “telephone” on page 182, line 2, should read “telegraph.”

 

 


THE RAILROAD PROBLEM

 

CHAPTER I

THE SICK MAN OF AMERICAN BUSINESS

 

On a certain estate there dwells a large family of brothers and sisters. There are many of them and there is great variety in their ages. They are indifferent to their neighbors; they deem themselves quite self-sufficient. But, for the most part they are an industrious family. They are a family of growing wealth—in fact, in every material sense they may already be called rich. And their great estate is slowly beginning to reach its full development.

In this family there are several older brothers who long since attained a strength and dominance over some of the younger members of the family. It is one of these brothers about whom this book is written. It does not assume to be a story of his life. That story has been told by abler pens. It merely aims to be a brief recital of his present condition. For, truth to tell, this older brother has come upon hard times. After a long life of hard work, at a time when his service should be of greatest value to the estate, he has broken down. He has begun to fail—and in an hour when the greedy neighbors grow contentious and he may be of greatest service to his own big family.

The Railroad is the great sick man of the American business family. He is a very sick

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