This report naturally falls into two separate and almost completely unrelated parts. The final chapter, “Proposals and Remedies”, is wholly admirable. For the judgments expressed in it the writer has the greatest respect. The first four chapters are another matter. They contain some useful information, a great deal of banal comment on facts already known, some statements which are plainly false, and others which, while not altogether wrong, are likely to give a wholly distorted impression of the facts which they are supposed to report. It is the purpose of this article to cite some of these statements, to give the facts which they are supposed to summarize, to show that these facts were brought to the attention of the Commission, and thus to prove that this condemnation is justified.
All of the statements to which exception is taken are, with one exception, concerned with the relative operating efficiency of the Canadian National and Canadian Pacific Railways. (The exception charges, by implication, the Canadian National with extravagance in branch-line construction costs.) The form of railway operating accounts has been worked out in the very greatest detail by the Interstate Commerce Commission of the United States. They are designed to show the costs of performing particular functions, maintenance of way and structures, maintenance of equipment, conducting transportation, etc. Every general rate case and many of the cases involving rates on particular commodities have turned on the question of costs, and on the significance of such factors as density of traffic and length of haul in causing variations in unit costs.