* A Project Gutenberg Canada Ebook * This ebook is made available at no cost and with very few restrictions. These restrictions apply only if (1) you make a change in the ebook (other than alteration for different display devices), or (2) you are making commercial use of the ebook. If either of these conditions applies, please check gutenberg.ca/links/licence.html before proceeding. This work is in the Canadian public domain, but may be under copyright in some countries. If you live outside Canada, check your country's copyright laws. IF THE BOOK IS UNDER COPYRIGHT IN YOUR COUNTRY, DO NOT DOWNLOAD OR REDISTRIBUTE THIS FILE. Title: For Our Bureau. Being the Bureau Ballads contributed to Volumes One and Two of "Via Vancouver," the journal of the Foreign Trade Bureau of the Vancouver Board of Trade, by the Secretary, Herbert Beeman. Author: Beeman, Herbert (d. 1931) Date of first publication: 1924 Edition used as base for this ebook: Vancouver: Cowan Brookhouse, 1924 [first edition] Date first posted: 20 December 2014 Date last updated: 20 December 2014 Project Gutenberg Canada ebook #1222 This ebook was produced by Al Haines PUBLISHER'S NOTE Italics in the original printed edition are indicated _thus_. As part of the conversion of the book to its new digital format, we have made certain minor adjustments in its layout. For Our Bureau BEING THE BUREAU BALLADS CONTRIBUTED TO VOLUMES ONE AND TWO OF "VIA VANCOUVER," THE JOURNAL OF THE FOREIGN TRADE BUREAU OF THE VANCOUVER BOARD OF TRADE, BY THE SECRETARY, HERBERT BEEMAN. VANCOUVER, B.C.: COWAN BROOKHOUSE, LIMITED 1924 PREFACE On the 11th of November, 1921, under the chairmanship of Mr. Robert McKee, the Foreign Trade Bureau of the Vancouver Board of Trade, inaugurated a six-months' course of weekly Luncheon Lectures dealing with subjects of interest to the members of the Bureau. This experiment met with a large measure of success, but previous to commencing a second series, it was felt that some more distinctive notice should be used than the postcard announcing the subject and speaker that had done duty during the first season. So Mr. McKee, who had been re-elected Chairman, and the Secretary, designed a card which they entitled "Via Vancouver," the Journal of the Foreign Trade Bureau of the Vancouver Board of Trade. It was announced in the first number that the Journal would give the subject and speaker of the current week's meeting, and a brief digest of the correspondence, and other news items, and lighter freight in the form of short and snappy contributions from members. Being somewhat disappointed in the quantity of the last-named, from time to time during the first season that the card was used, the Secretary contributed a set of verses, which generally dealt with the subject of the previous week's lecture, and during the second season, every week. Many requests having been made that the verses should be reprinted, the author has placed them FREE ON BOARD his manuscript, the purchaser paying the cost of transporting them from that state to the printed page, and he trusts that the charges will not be found altogether out of proportion to the value of the goods carried. HERBERT BEEMAN. "VIA VANCOUVER" _Wheat of the prairie, and wealth of the mine, Wood of the forest, and fish of the brine, Ship eastward, or westward, or south of the line-- Via Vancouver._ _Fruit of the orchard, and hay in the bale, Stock of the ranges--by road and by rail, By liner, by freighter, by steam or by sail, Via Vancouver._ _Wood pulp and paper, wrapping and boards, Cedar bolts, spruce bolts, fir-ricks or cords, Steam coal and house coal from underground hoards, Via Vancouver._ _In from the Orient here at our door, Up from Australia, cargoes galore, On to the Old Land, still more and more, Via Vancouver._ CONTENTS Preface "Via Vancouver" The Bureau Notices McKee High School To a Member of the Bureau on His Birthday New Year Resolutions, 1924 The Board "Our Mr. Thomson" The Story of a Spy-er Percy Vere The Port A Long-distance Call Two Harbours A Christmas Carol, 1922 Some Pioneers A Shakespearian Theme with Variations Tremendous Energy It's Needed A Poor Speller The Business Blues Place Names of British Columbia The Song of the Prairie Farmer Ship's Manifests Where Ignorance Is Bliss The Province A "Raw" Proposition The Dominion Can. Government Merchant Marine The Empire The Magician Jack and John and Sam Under the Union Jack Ocean Transportation Trade and Commerce Ross' Far East Ginger-Aid A Lecture Title Words of One Syllable Pronouncing Proper Names Certain Maxims of Mr. McKee Our Mr. Bleakney Wooden-Ware Boxes Here's your Hat, but what's your Hurry? The Law Where did he get it? Foreign Judgments Circumstances Alter Cases An Unstated Case A "Reasonable" Man Sharps and Flats Trade Marks and "Passing Off" Demurrage Marine Insurance The True Story of "The Wreck of the Hesperus" N. O. P. (not otherwise provided for) Lost Illusions "There Was a Great Earthquake" Black Marks A Sneak Thief Santa Claus (1923) [_The letterpress of "Via Vancouver" is printed in red ink, hence the misspelt optimism of the last line of the last verse._] NOTICES! In Moslem lands the muezzin calls The Mussulman to prayer, Day in, day out, it never palls. The Faithful all are there. From our Bureau the word is sent To members, one and all, Week in, week out, with one consent The Faithful hear the call. We've searched to find a way to reach The ones who do not heed, But any means will fail to teach The ones who will not read. First, folded in an envelope, A postcard, then, instead-- But now, at last, we've got the dope, This letter-press is red. [_A local High School bears a name not remotely reminiscent of that of the chairman, and suggested a title for these verses which refer, in the jargon of a temporarily popular cult, to some of our speakers and their subjects._] McKEE HIGH SCHOOL "I here provide," our Chairman cried, "For each subject a trained adviser, As week by week you hear them speak, You are getting wiser and wiser." Our F. G. T. is not at sea On "Carriage of Goods by Water," The rules are vague, quoth he, by Hague! And they should be surer and shorter, McNeely's wit, explained "the Pit," And how to deal in "futures," His sheaf of wheat he tied as neat As any surgeon's sutures. Sir C. H. T. most learnedly Discoursed of arbitration, 'Tis clear as mud, that still M'Lud, We can't oust litigation. B. G. D. P., most welcome he, G. A. and F. P. Ately, We hope he'll deign to speak again, We like his lectures greatly. All this proves true our Chairman's view, Speaking strictly to the letter, That day by day, in a business way, We are getting better and better. [_It was singularly happy that the 70th birthday of a well-beloved member of the Bureau, who is also a Past President of the Board, should fall on a Friday, and so give his fellow members an opportunity to tender him their hearty congratulations._] TO A MEMBER OF THE BUREAU ON HIS BIRTHDAY What time, My Lady, in her chair, With gallant escort, took the air, My Lord, be-powdered and be-patched, Content if one fair glance he snatched; In those far days 'twas quite the mode To humbly dedicate an ode. Conveying due and just applause For efforts in the public cause-- In art, in letters, or in war, 'Midst paths of peace, or cannon's roar, In private life, or parliament, When e'er occasion should present. This introduction serves to show From whence the bard of this Bureau Has filched the form in which to pay Our greetings on this happy day, To one to whom 'tis our delight To render homage, his by right, But better still, by free consent, To the beloved recipient. Linked with the history of the age His past lies writ on many a page; Much of his three score years and ten He's lavished on his fellowmen; And line would add to line if I To duly chronicle should try. But in our records ne'er will fade His talk on "Inter-Empire Trade." When heard, we inspiration drew, And recollection draws anew. And thus, on this red-letter day. These feeble words slight tribute pay To one who puts no pride or pomps on-- That sturdy Briton, Nichol Thompson. [_These New Year resolutions were wished on the Chairmen of the Standing Committees entirely without their permission._] NEW YEAR RESOLUTIONS, 1924 A member of the daily press Last Christmas hazarded a guess, In kindly fun, though mildly mocking, What some folks wanted in their stocking. Our Bureau follows this idea, Resolving that to start the year, Each chairman should for his committee State what they'll do--so hence this ditty. In order of the alphabet: ATTENDANCE first, "Now don't forget Presence assured, and less conjectures Would crowd our weekly Luncheon Lectures. CABLES, correct, receipt from source, No repetitions or re-Morse. Without appeal to Home and Beauty The CUSTOMS crowd will do their "duty." "Now Cinderella 'tis your cue To rub your eyes and find it's true," The Chairman of our GRAIN Committee Sees Montreal salute this city. "LEGAL ADVISORY are we, Willing to serve on land or sea." MAILS, "quick despatch for all your letters, Oppose all departmental fetters." PORT REGULATIONS, "Tete a tete With shipping to co-operate, RECEPTION. "We're for entertaining All folks to Foreign Trade pertaining." Then TRADE and COMMERCE says, in short, "Give us your troubles, we'll report, Investigate for each petitioner, And entertain each Trade Commissioner." [_Mr. J. B. Thomson, President of the Board, 1923-4, headed the delegation to the Old Country in the summer of 1923._] "OUR MR. THOMSON" An old-established firm we are VANCOUVER BOARD OF TRADE. For years in our home town we have A reputation made. And since it chanced, to some in power A wider vision came, We're not unknown at Chilliwack, And Ladner's heard our name. Prince Rupert, Vanderhoof, Prince George, Clinton and Lillooet, The Kootenay and Arrow Lakes, Penticton, don't forget. Peace River, Spirit Lake and all The places in between, Hyder and Stewart, the Island, too, Oh! What a lot we've seen. We all have learnt 'tis wiser far To walk before we run, And thus these local journeyings In wisdom were begun. For as we need to learn ourselves Ere knowledge we impart, We've been to school that we may make The whole wide world our mart. And so in this our year of grace, Our travellers duly trained Departed on their way to spread The knowledge they had gained. Was ever firm so freely served? For each man paid his exes. Now come and hear "J. B." relate Their actions and reflexes. [_These verses have been included among those referring to the Board by reason of the excellent suggestion made by the speaker, Dean Brock, for a method of rewarding the retiring presidents of that organisation._] THE STORY OF A SPY-ER (With apologies to Rudyard Kipling and the "Story of Uriah.") Our speaker went to Fiji Because they asked him to, As Moses sent to Canaan His young men the land to view. Our speaker's back from Fiji And he told us what he knew. Our speaker went to Fiji-- My word! He thought it grand-- He drew a glowing picture Of that pleasant tropic land; They never lack bananas, So that soulful song is banned. Our speaker went to Fiji, And what would please us most He thought would be the railway Running on the Western Coast. For freight is hauled for nothing! Why! We near gave up the ghost. Our speaker said round Fiji Were islands in a ring, A choice of some two hundred For the "man who would be king." It's the rule that all his subjects To his feet their earnings bring. So why should we, the speaker said, Present a smoking set To the Presidents retiring? It would be a better bet To offer each an island; Supreme they'd carry on, Propose and second motions And pass them all nem: con. [_Some of the results of the Board's policy of "keep on, keepin' on," are enumerated below._] PERCY VERE There's a first-rate little fellow And his name is Percy Vere, For he never gives up trying Till he's brought the bacon here. He's extremely well connected, Goes right back to Robert Bruce, Who, learning from the spider, Never said, "Aw, what's the use!" You remember when the railways Charged an arbitrarial rate Starting out five cents on every ton And climbing up to eight. Well, in spite of all objections, We have seen that disappear, And vanish quite completely Like the snows of yester-year. Then the dry-dock that we needed, Where the vessels can repair-- Take a look across the Inlet And you'll see it building there. Now, this Bureau is delighted, And it's not the least afraid, Because his latest efforts Mean a loss of "Foreign" Trade. For it's only right and proper That the products of our land Should be duly landed duty free, Not classed as contraband. So here's a cheer for Percy Vere, Once more bringing home the pork, With the placing of an officer Of Customs at New York. [_One's thoughts naturally turn to Lewis Carroll and "Alice in Wonderland" when trying to describe our topsy-turvy freight rates. The Hon. J. A. Robb, then Minister of Trade and Commerce, acknowledged the feasibility of the Western route._] A LONG-DISTANCE CALL "You are greedy, Fort William," Vancouver complained, "When you want to corral all the wheat, And you crow when you see the high freight rates maintained, Is it nice thus a neighbor to treat?" "I, when youthful," Fort William, replied with a sigh, "Was taught to be seen and not heard. So till you are older I think you should try To learn this--you'd be less absurd." "That's no answer, Fort William," Vancouver replied, We've as much right to live as the rest, And it seems you'll be swamped by a cereal tide, So you'd better send some of it West." "I should worry," thus scorning, Fort William came back, I will ask if I need any aid, And, because as it happens I have what you lack, You pretend for my sake you're afraid." "Here, get this, Fort William, and don't be so bold, Last week a wise man from the East Spoke right up in meeting and said he was 'sold' To the fact we need storage increased." (Operator at Fort William end): "My party has hung up." [_A comparison of docking facilities brought out in an address on "Opportunities in Southern China," by Mr. E. J. Leveson._] TWO HARBORS Eight and forty moorings Out in Hong Kong harbour, Eight and forty moorings Where the big ships lie and wait; The sampans and the lighters Are the bees that suck their honey The sampans and the lighters To and fro with men and freight. Ninety miles of waterfront In Vancouver harbour, Ninety miles of waterfront Where the deep-sea vessels tie; The longshoremen and derricks Lift the cargoes through the hatchways. The longshoremen and derricks As the vessels 'longside lie. [_The dream of yesterday oft-times becomes the reality of tomorrow._] A CHRISTMAS CAROL, 1922 I saw three ships go sailing by On Christmas Day in the morning, 'Twas a trifle thick, but they took no chance, For Calamity Point gave warning. I saw three ships come sailing in, Right in through the dredged First Narrows, They drew 30 feet with five feet clear, So there's never a job for Yarrows. I saw three ships come sailing here Where one had come before--oh! It's the cheapest port, says they to me, On the North Pacific shore--oh! I saw three ships to load bulk grain Get a dandy job o' lining, And the rules of the port made the cost so low There was never a word of repining. I saw three ships go sailing on Till they berthed at the government dock-oh! Two on the East, and one on the West, And they loaded once round the clock-oh! I saw three ships go sailing out-- (The stuff was strong in the barrel, 'Twas a dream mayhap, but never you care, By and by we'll sing this carol.) [_Many seem to fail because they do not entirely succeed. Drake did not find the Northwest passage, because it does not exist. Capt. Vancouver did not see the Fraser River and Simon Fraser did not reach the Ocean, and yet how much this Port owes each one of them._] SOME PIONEERS Sore bruised and tempest-tossed, the Golden Hind Had sought in vain the fabled Straits to find; Brave Francis Drake sailed South from ice and snow, From these our shores, three hundred years ago. And then in seventeen and ninety-two, Vancouver, keen observer, held untrue Tales of the river--Spanish lies said he-- That laves our homesteads on its way to sea. Simon Fraser, dreaming a wondrous dream, Faced countless perils on his mighty stream, Only to find its outlet barred to him When but a stone's throw from the ocean's brim. Though none gained all, each aided wisdom's store, And only 'tis in mythologic lore One sprang full-armoured from the head of Jove-- We win by striving, as our forebears strove. [_Sir Henry Thornton, President of the C. N. R., in the course of a speech made in Vancouver, referred to this Port as "The Future Mistress of the Western Seas."_] A SHAKESPERIAN THEME, WITH VARIATIONS THERE IS A TIDE Likewise the sages say: "While the sun shines, 'Tis time for making hay." IN THE AFFAIRS OF MEN Europe's war hordes Turn peaceful business men Pacific-wards. WHICH, TAKEN AT THE FLOOD, Vancouver! Fore!!! "Dame opportunity knocks once At any door." LEADS ON TO FORTUNE. Not mere money wealth That buys long idle days of cushioned ease-- Rather that destiny Sir Henry told, "The future mistress of the Western Seas." [_Local critics either tell us that we are asleep, or that we talk too much, so let us hear an outside opinion for a change._] "TREMENDOUS ENERGY" In Sunday morning's paper A Winnipeg despatch, 'Neath a rather hostile heading Did my hasty glances catch; And I'm sure you'll guess the reason, For what most appealed to me Was the reference to Vancouver's "Tremendous Energy." We've been told without cessation In the columns of the Press That re shipping grain we're sleeping, Sunk in sloth and idleness: So it needs no explanation-- What a great surprise to me Was this reference to Vancouver's "Tremendous Energy." And the story told how, lately, In the neighboring U. S. A., They were filled with consternation That we'd take some trade away; Buffalo, Duluth and Cleveland, And Chicago seemed to see Future trouble in Vancouver's "Tremendous Energy." Now a caustic commentator Not so many moons ago, Told us all, that in our barnyard Too many roosters crow; But it strikes me, Captain Kettle, That it possibly may be That, combined, they are Vancouver's "Tremendous Energy." [_The establishment of a Chair of Commerce at the University of British Columbia, referred to by President Klinck in his address, has long been advocated by the Vancouver Board of Trade, but the need for education is universal. It would not be so bad if people would keep their lack of knowledge to themselves, but mis-information such as is given in the verses referred to below is very annoying to advocates of Inter-Empire trade._] IT'S NEEDED The question of Commercial Education And a Chair of Commerce at the U. B. C. For long has had the close consideration Of many members of the V. B. T. But the plan for this tuition Has not yet attained fruition, Partly owing to the lack of L. S. D. The burden of the lucid exposition Made before the members of the F. B. T.-- Met for mental and for edible nutrition In the Red Room of Vancouver's Hostelree-- Was the method; this engages Both the business men and sages, And would only seem a question of Degree. The President is right, and well we know it, When for thoroughness his hat is in the ring; For, to quote the well-known words of Pope, the poet "A little learning is a dangerous thing." Once I heard a fellow rant, he Wrote an imitation chantey, When a song of ships and trade, he tried to sing. First the game of coals to Newcastle he played at, For Cardiff coal he'd shipped Vancouver way; And his next suggestion--well, I am afraid that We'd kick him clean to "China crost the bay!" For, his coal dumped at Vancouver To Seattle he would move her And load his ship with wheat from U. S. A.! This sort of fellow takes a little Kipling, And Masefield too, whose Christian name is John; For he's in art though not in years, a stripling, And pretty sounds, not sense, his sine qua non; And really he's quite happy When some places from a map, he Takes like gaily colored beads and threads them on. [_The uncanny adaptibility of the anecdote recorded below is herewith gratefully acknowledged. For the information of those who do not know Vancouver, it is pointed out that the Grand Trunk Pacific pier is at the foot of Main Street, and the verses were written on the opening of the Ballantyne Pier._] A POOR SPELLER The occasion of the opening Of a certain famous pier Reminds me of a story Told at a luncheon here. 'Twas said how once in Winnipeg They took upon the Force An illiterate probationer-- Though a man of some resource. They supplied him with a note book When they sent him on his beat, To record whatever happened, With details, quite complete. Now the first night he's on duty, It chanced there did collide A dairy rig and motor truck-- The milkman's horse, it died. Our hero opened up his book And got his facts down fine, Till he found, on asking, that the street Was known as Ballantyne. He scratched his head, he bit his thumb, And scratched his head again, Then dragged the carcass through the streets Until he came to Main! Now, if he hadn't joined the force He might have gone to sea, And where d' you think he'd tie up here? Why sure, the G. T. P.! But all good sailor-men can spell, So Harbor Board don't fear, Ten letters and three syllables Won't keep them from your pier. [_We should prove hopelessly out of date if we did not get the popular song word "Blues" into one of our titles, though it is quite out of place in recording the wonderful growth of the lumber export business as told to the Bureau by Mr. H. R. MacMillan._] THE BUSINESS BLUES (Not a "fast" Color) Oh! Business men who are inclined To be a trifle blue, Find here ah anti-toxin for That sad cerulean hue. Last Friday when our orator 'Mid cheers resumed his seat, The gentleman presiding Truly said we'd had a treat. To begin at the beginning-- Our chairman did aver That the speaker was ambassador To Good King Douglas Fir. Perhaps he had not made two grow Where one had grown before, But he'd caused the demolition Of many thousand score. Our speaker modestly denied His power to make them grow, But still where one had gone before He'd tried to make two go. Till six years back, for thirty years But little change was shown; But since, not only twice as much, Ten times the trade had grown. He built his case up, fact on fact, And proved, before he'd done, That we hadn't reached the limit But had only just begun. So with the chairman, I repeat, Lumber and grain, these two, Increased and still increasing Leave no room for feeling blue. [_My encyclopaedia says, "The Crow is regarded by many naturalists as the highest family of birds. The intelligence of them is great in the extreme.... they may also be taught to imitate the human voice." We learn further that they live to the age of 100 years, so it is not altogether impossible that our hero was present on that evening in June, 1792, when Capt. Vancouver named our Inlet after his friend, Sir Harry Burrard._] PLACE NAMES OF BRITISH COLUMBIA On Prospect Point, in the evening glow Or a sunset's mirrored glory. I glanced above where an ancient crow Was telling a bed-time story. Perched on a bough, this jolly old bird Recalled, for a young relation, What a hundred years ago he'd heard And seen from his lofty station. "June, ninety-two (Ah! Then I was young), As I sat on this tree in the gloaming, A queer sort of fish with fins outflung In from the sea came roaming. ("I know better now, for the fish was a boat And the fins were oars to move her), There jumped ashore, in a bright blue coat, A man they called Captain Vancouver. "I flew quite near as he spoke to the mate-- Or as sailors say, came fur-rard-- He'd name this place, I heard him state, For his friend, Sir Harry Burrard. "Now I'm getting old, and my hearing's hard, So it may be I'm mistaken; But you'd better look out if you say Burrard, Or George, from his grave will awaken." If this tale of a centenarian crow Smacks rather of myth and mystery, Why then, Dear Reader, we'll let it go As a bit of un-Natural History. [_During the visit to Vancouver this spring of the Prairie Senators and Members of Parliament, Mr. L. H. Jelliff, M.P. for Lethbridge, told us in graphic language of the vision he had had for the past twenty years of this port as an outlet for grain grown on the prairies, which would give farmers a chance to grow grain at a profit. He forcefully claimed that it was not the Rockies, but the railway policies and the government policies in trying to force the prairie wheat in another direction, that had held back development._] THE SONG OF THE PRAIRIE FARMER Out in the open spaces, Away from the strangled town, I plough the lonely furrows Of my long fields, up and down; As the day comes to its closing And the evening-time brings rest, The sun dips behind the mountains In the West. And there's more than grain is nurtured In the fertile prairie soil. For dreams and beautiful visions Ease the weary hours of toil; Above me--a path of promise-- Spans the fabled rainbow of old, At its Westward foot the fairy Pot of gold. But the way is beset with dangers. As in story books, read long since, There are dragons and ogres in plenty, For the rescuing Fairy Prince; Yet the Prince who boldly ventures Will share with the hands that tilled, When the dream becomes a happy Dream fulfilled. [_These verses were suggested by the manifests published monthly in "Harbor and Shipping."_] SHIPS' MANIFESTS If variety is charming, Then this port of many cargoes That attribute possesses in a very high degree, And if "infinite," you fancy As an adjective too far goes, A pretty wide assortment in this little list you'll see. Rice and peanuts come from China, Silk and oranges from Nippon, And--this entry keeps us guessing--Oriental merchandise, Then there's hardwood from Australia, Making floors for rugs to slip on, Gorgeous rugs of glowing color from the East, so old and wise. Don't forget the shipments outward-- Many million feet of lumber. Golden grain from fertile prairies to the Orient and U. K. Fish and apples, pulp and paper-- But we can't begin to number Half the things we are exporting, so we have the right to say. That variety is descriptive Of our multifarious cargo. And "infinite" an adjective not wholly out of place, For you know poetic license Would permit of no embargo When these words described for Shakespeare, Cleopatra's matchless grace. [_On the return of one of our members from a visit to the Old Country and Europe this summer, he said that the fact you came from Canada created little interest, but directly you mentioned Vancouver, people sat up and took notice. So Mr. Louis Tracy can be excused._] WHERE IGNORANCE IS BLISS? "Told me she would rather grow apples in Vancouver than settle down to the vapid life of London. What the blazes put Vancouver and apples into her head I can't imagine."--From "The Token," by Louis Tracy. I read a yarn the other night, A mighty good one, too, But coming to these words, I grinned, A natural thing to do. Suppose instead of standard lamps With glittering globes, opaque, We'd apple trees on Granville Street For naughty boys to shake? Or where our stores on Hastings Street Behind their crystal panes Display such tempting wares to us, We'd rows of raspberry canes? I wondered with the speaker, "What The blazes," as he said, "Put apples and Vancouver Into the author's head." No doubt, of course, he meant B. C., But 'tis not ours to blame. If our fair city has achieved The more familiar name? But then on second thoughts I knew That anyone might make-- Because of blissful ignorance-- A similar mistake. A lesson from this error stands Before us clear and plain, Attend our lectures every week When they begin again! [_Mr. J. B. Thomson, in addressing the members of the Bureau, on "B. C.'s Exportable Products and Prospective Markets," reminded us of the lamentable weakness of our economic policy in exporting our raw materials instead of the finished product._] A "RAW" PROPOSITION We boast of our natural resources-- The wealth from the hills that we take, The timber we fall in our forests-- What use of these gifts do we make? We're proud of the growth of our exports, But it's rather a tragic mistake That other folk reap all the profits From the things that our raw products make. Then see how the youth of our country To live, must their homeland forsake, And it's quite on the cards, our resources, Help elsewhere their living to make. Copper matte, unrefined, all shipped southward, Why shouldn't our Province partake Of the work and the wages provided From the rods and the sheets it would make? With nature so rich in resources Don't be lulled to repose but awake! Don't barter our birthright for pottage But fit and right use of it make. [_"A great advertising medium for Canada, and its products generally ... the name of every ship has the prefix Canadian ... when our ships are in port they fly from the topmast the house flag." (Extracts from speech by the Hon. C. C. Ballantyne, March 23rd, 1920._)] CANADIAN GOVERNMENT MERCHANT MARINE We've a dandy silent salesman And it doesn't stand stock still In some up-country general store, Adjacent to the till. Or line the spacious gangway Of a big department store, Displaying what they ought to buy To those who throng the floor; It's a little bit of bunting That floats upon the breeze In any port you like to name Upon the Seven Seas-- A gaily-colored pennant Of blue and red and white, And the emblem in the centre Is Canadian copyright. Now, Scotland has her Thistle, And England has her rose, And the land that sports the Maple Leaf, 'Most everybody knows! Knows? Well, some think we hibernate Away back in the woods, And here we're at their very doors Delivering the goods! The ships that fly this pennant Carry, fore and aft, a name, And this is proudly prefixed By the country whence they came; So on the way, as when in port, The fact is shown, displayed, And daily demonstrated That we're out for Foreign Trade. [_The week after Mr. Nichol Thompson's great speech on "Trade Within the Empire," the chairman, Mr. McKee, wrote in "Via Vancouver," that "seldom have our members listened to a more masterly handling of a subject than Mr. Nichol Thompson's address to us last week. One could not help feeling proud of our great Empire and anxious to devote a greater portion of his energies to the development of trade within the Empire."_] THE MAGICIAN Some five and sixty pushed their plates away, Sat back, and faced the speaker of the day; A well-known figure, free of guile and trick, Dubbed by our President, "My old friend Nick." He rose, some sheets of paper in his hand-- Simple white sheets, I'd have you understand-- When, lo! We're seated in an aerial stage, A time-and-space-devouring Handley Page-- The magic carpet of the Arabian Nights On which Prince Houssain rode to see the sights. Back through the centuries, Imperial Rome Sinks slowly supine in the spume and foam Of economic fallacies; and next Below us see poor Central Europe, vext Beyond belief, welter of waste and blood, And like to perish in the self-same flood! But what is this unfolds beneath our gaze, The pride and wonder of these latter days, A goodly heritage, prodigious, vast, Which, if we wisely profit by the past, Avoid the errors leading to decay, Humbly, yet proudly, pressing on our way-- This Commonwealth of Nations, this, our own, In splendid isolation, free, alone-- Soon to be self-supporting, self-contained. The speaker paused, slowly his seat regained, Dropped the last sheet--a simple manoeuvre, That landed us back in the Hotel Vancouver. [_The Hon. H. H. Stevens, former Minister of Trade and Commerce, speaking to the members on the 16th of November, 1923, submitted the following startling figures:_ _Total trade of Canada for fifteen years with the United States and United Kingdom:_ IMPORTS EXPORTS U. K., $1,645,000,000...............$5,070,000,000 U. S., $7,084,000,000...............$3,830,000,000 Average annual excess exports to U. K. for 15 years.................. $228,000,000 Average annual excess imports from U. S. for 15 years............... $217,000,000 JACK AND JOHN AND SAM (An Economic Anomaly) Jack and John Are business men, And Sam he is another; And if they go 'Way back, you know, They claim the self-same mother. Sam and John, Some years agone, Got arguing over "duty;" Sam claimed abuse, And cut right loose From "England, Home and Beauty." Jack and John Still carry on With those in mutual tether, Who build in health A Commonwealth To face the world together. Jack, it appears, In fifteen years, Bought twice as much from Sam As he sold him, ('Twas shown with vim, And vivid diagram.) Sam sold to Jack All this while back, Four times Jack bought from Johnny; John bought from Jack (Where Sam did lack), One-fourth as much in money. Jack, we are told, To John has sold, In time of like duration, Three times and more Than bought. Why for This queer discrimination? [_In order to give the members of the Bureau an opportunity to hear the Right Hon. W. F. Massey, P. C., LL. D., address the Canadian Club, the meeting of the 4th of January, 1924, was cancelled._] UNDER THE UNION JACK Our Boss gave us a holiday On Friday of last week, To go to the Canadian Club To hear a Premier speak. Oh, no! Not "Honest John," this time, With Freight Rates on the run, But one who's nicknamed "Square Deal Bill," In Tuesday morning's Sun. Massey, P. C. and L. L. D., New Zealand's Premier, Sans fear and sans reproach, the faith Within him, did declare. "We once were known as Colonies, Now Nations, vigorous, young. Free to direct our own affairs, To our own thoughts give tongue. "Free, but together firmly held By sentiment, not force, Under one King, beneath one Flag, Aye! Freedom's truest source. "Free Trade is merely free imports, And duty paid abroad, It seems to me, but some are not Exactly in accord." (To a would-be "Guardian" of his speech He made some reference; I must admit for that advice He showed no "preference.") "Our Tropic and our Temperate zones All that we need contain." His plea for Empire Trade recalled To me an old refrain. The song--"Under the Bamboo Tree"-- A darkey to his dame: "You like-a me, I like a-you. We like-a both the same." [_The following verses were suggested by an address on this subject which Mr. Thos. Harling made to the members._] OCEAN TRANSPORTATION (A study in evolution) Great oaks from little acorns grow, Both fact and fable tell us so, And ships, once sung as "Hearts of Oak," Are born of steel and hammer-stroke. Once by the great Euphrates stood A man who watched a log of wood, That, as it swiftly seaward sped, Put navigation in his head. This man, U-so-us, took a tree, Stripped off its boughs and put to sea-- So runs the old Phoenician tale-- Soon man's invention added sail. And having proper vessels made, Founded the art of Foreign Trade. And setting out fresh marts to seek, Found rivals in the cultured Greek. Then, bitten by the trading germ, King Solomon took in his firm As partner, Hiram, King of Tyre-- They many shekels did acquire. Scanning the page of history through, The ancient and the modern, too, We see that foreign traders take Civilization in their wake. A taste for cloth of cunning dye, And precious stones that please the eye, Cause merchants to increase the range Of goods to offer in exchange. Through centuries the pride of place Has fallen to our Island race. And, do not think us overbold, But what we have, we mean to hold. [_A more-or-less correct summary of an address by Dr. J. W. Ross, Canadian Trade Commissioner at Shanghai._] ROSS'S FAR EAST GINGER-AID First buy a map of China, And hang it on the wall, And look up all the places At which you wish to call. Then buy a steamer ticket And a nifty travelling cap, And visit all the places You've looked up on the map. Before you pack your samples, First find out what they want-- Unless, of course, your journey Is just a pleasure jaunt. For I have it on my records One brought gramaphones--in vain-- And then he got the needle, As he packed them home again. If you want to sell them salmon. Put a label on the tin; They like a picture on the front To show them what's within. Japan's trade, once, like China's now, Was ten shillings per head, But that has grown in forty years To twenty pounds instead. It's the latest, greatest market, But above all, you must know That the East will not be hustled. Let your motto be, "Go Slow." [_An entirely incorrect translation of the title of a most interesting and instructive address given to the Bureau by Mr. T. W. B. London._] A LECTURE TITLE Now re the latest of Our Luncheon Lectures, The speaker lets me make My own conjectures. * * * * * * A youth, replete of sighs And protestations, Who gazes girlwards-- These are INDICATIONS. Heedless of stocks and shares Or oil flotations, Love lyrics grace his speech With apt QUOTATIONS. Seats for the picture show Deplete his coffers. Candy and gloves and flowers He humbly OFFERS. And then his heart and hand To her he proffers; At last he's reached the stage Known as FIRM OFFERS. * * * * * * Lest you should frown upon These lines in fun done, Please note that they've been passed By Mr. London. [_Written in humble appreciation of Mr. Bevington's excellent address._] WORDS OF ONE SYLLABLE The true co-operation And willingness to pool One's knowledge and experience At the Bureau's weekly school, Was displayed again last Friday; But I 've one remark, to wit, 'Twas Hongkong meals referred to As being paid by CHIT. There's a dunner in the doorway Who demands his weekly dole, Ere we pass the lunch-room portals, And in cash collects the toll. We were told, 'midst other items Of a very useful kind, That, when opening up an office, In Hongkong, we first should find A proper Chinese business name, What's known out there as HONG; But be careful that we take advice, Or we may get it wrong. There was once a most exalted firm, Wise in its own conceit, And the name they chose meant "humbug"-- Maybe true, but indiscreet! The British have the highest name For dealings, just and fair; And this is, as our speaker said, An asset anywhere. Then, to induce your customer To listen, look and stop, Just choose yourself a trademark Known to Chinamen as CHOP; Make it simple, make it easy, A design to catch the eye, Introducing what you want to sell To someone who will buy. [_These lines, though somewhat frivolous, contain a little of the large amount of the information so ably imparted by Mr. B. S. Webb, one-time Canadian Trade Commissioner at Buenos Aires, now stationed at Copenhagen._] PRONOUNCING PROPER NAMES For names improperly pronounced In school-days we were soundly trounced; Now to correctness we aspire, And, seeking knowledge, we enquire. We heard our visitor relate Charms of a city up-to-date; But would they kick you down the stairs, If you should call it Buenos Aires? A port most splendidly equipped, Whence Argentina's goods are shipped; For information, one enquires Whether to call it Buenos Aires? Railways and 'phones, electric lighting, All British capital inviting; My interest in it never varies, But should I call it Buenos Aires? Two million live within the city; If one can't tell me, it's a pity, Whether or not 'tis ultra vires To call the place Buenos Aires? We've been around the city, so Now to the country let us go; But am I subject to a fine If I should call it Argentine? Its sheep and cattle are its glory, Of wheat we heard the cereal story; And though this place I've never seen, I learnt a lot re Argentine. The South is cold, the North is hot; But gathered for a charming spot, We've far to seek a climate finer, Than that of Central Argentina. The market's permanent and growing, Yet there's a word of warning owing, Nowhere is competition keener Than will be found in Argentina. [_That "Honesty Is the Best Policy" is one of the main essentials of a Foreign Trade policy in the opinion of Mr. Robert McKee, was clearly pointed out in his address to the members of the Bureau. That his lesson did not go unheeded, is proved by the fact that indebtedness is acknowledged to Mr. Rudyard Kipling for the use of the form of his "Certain Maxims of Hafiz" in the following verses._] CERTAIN MAXIMS OF MR. McKEE (_Reader, your scribe has selected this difficult measure, Proposing you pause in your reading to pick up the treasure._) Proud, when I ruled you as Chairman, bidding you speeches to make, Humbled, today I'm a doctor forced his own medicine to take, Long deaf to his call, my successor grew harsher in tone, So I yield--water constantly dropping wears away stone. Would you trade--being new to the business--in lands o'er the sea, Take a chart, and consider, my son, what your course is to be. Lay it straight and hold on--for instance, now wouldn't you shudder, If you found yourself 'board of a ship that was minus a rudder? Don't think you'll succeed in securing a foreign connection If your policy's one of a hit or a miss indirection. Your friends overseas with some definite portion endow; Don't say: "I don't want this, so I'll dump it somewhere and somehow." The world is your market; your customers white, brown and yellow, Go after it right, and you'll gain the goodwill of each fellow. [_Mr. A. S. Bleakney, Canadian Trade Commissioner at Brussels, who came to the Coast at the special request of the Bureau, gave a thoroughly informative address on "Trading with Belgium."_] "OUR MR. BLEAKNEY" You remember "Hiawatha," Sung to us by Henry Wadsworth With the surname of Longfellow,-- Though I know it's on a par with Taking candy from an infant To employ this simple metre, Still my story is insisting That I use it, and no other, So here goes: I would remind you That we've met at many luncheons Envoys sent by the discerning Mr. F. C. T. O'Hara. Active in the Trade and Commerce (Up-to-date and live) Department Of the business of our country; Envoys who have travelled widely In the interests of our traders. And last week we welcomed gladly One who came from far-off Belgium. Where was torn the scrap of paper In the days that now seem distant. Yes, we welcomed Mr. Bleakney And the message that he brought us, As he told of re-construction And prosperity returning. In a manner clear and lucid He contrived in twenty minutes To describe the state financial, Both of government and business. And to tell what we could sell them Both to our and their advantage. Stating the depreciation Of the currency at present And the lower cost of labor, And the distance of the market Rendered trading far from easy. He concluded with the statement Though our exports there at present Had but reached an infant stature They would grow and keep on growing. "_A little fire is quickly trodden out, Which, being suffered, rivers cannot quench." --Shakespeare, King Henry VI._ [_We are apt to forget that Canada is a forest country, especially British Columbia, 90 per cent. of which is forest, and the address given by Mr. Robson Black, Secretary and Manager of the Canadian Forestry Association on "Resources and Conservation of Canada's Forest Wealth," was most timely, especially in regard to "Lumber Exports" and "Ocean Transportation." They are far from being remotely related._] WOODEN-WARE When you're driving on the highway And you see a wooden sign With DANGER printed on it, Where you cross a railway line, You stop, and look, and listen; As we did the other day, To hear how careless campers Burn our forest wealth away. We learnt this natural heritage Was a care upon us thrust, Both for our own advantage, None the less to hold in trust, For those who follow after-- Inarticulate appeal From the future's children's children, To be-think us of their weal. From the cradle to the coffin, Be the journey bad or good, Short or long, and rough or easy, We can't get away from wood. The farmer for his fences, The fisher for his pole, The miner for the pit-props Shoring up the seams of coal. And more and more dependent On our forests are we made, To satisfy the markets Of our growing foreign trade. And without this present factor Of our great prosperity, It's not a case of wooden-ware, It's where we wouldn't be? [_An interesting account of steady advancement in the face of many obstacles--protective tariffs, distance from markets and other difficulties--and of success obtained by manufacturing an article of sterling merit and taking it to market, not waiting for the market to come to it, was given by Mr. J. H. McDonald, Manager of the British Columbia Manufacturing Co., Ltd., in his address on "Box Shocks Export."_] BOXES "A masterly account of empty boxes."--Romeo and Juliet, Act V, Sc. 1 (adapted) Immortal William seldom fails To aid me with an apt quotation, But naught he gives me quite avails This case without slight adaptation. 'Tis told how when young Romeo Heard news of Juliet's end, ill-fated, Which was, although he didn't know, To quote Mark Twain, exaggerated. He quickly sought the means whereby He'd end his own, and also where he Could purchase poison, when nearby He spied a poor apothecary. It was a shop he called to mind Where set out on the shelves as proxies For honest goods, you'd mostly find A mean array of empty boxes. But we have nothing like that here. Or any mean and false pretences. The B. C. box, of lumber clear, Though empty's full of excellencies. For quality it's justly famed, That's only different grades of good, As set out in the order named-- Spruce, hemlock, larch and cottonwood. The London merchant has no doubt That ours excel in strength and beauty, Australia cannot keep them out Despite a high protective duty. Soon they will blazon B. C.'s name At the Great Empire Exhibition, And with all modesty we claim They'll take the premier position. [_In the course of an interesting address on "Present Business Conditions in the Far East," Mr. M. H. Brotman read an amusing article clipped from a newspaper he had seen when in China, entitled "Saving the Face," and we have ventured to deal with it as below._] "HERE'S YOUR HAT, BUT WHAT'S YOUR HURRY?" Now once an office manager A secret sorrow had, For one thing that he had to do Would always make him sad. By reason of some glaring fault, Or maybe, things were slack, To one or to another He had to give the sack. It might be Tom, the office boy, A regular young rip, Or perhaps a Toiling Tillie Of the daily comic strip. Now he chanced to hear a lecture And how an ancient race, Help that was inefficient Or superfluous, would chase. The cruel and hasty methods Of this country, young and crude, Beside this ancient courtesy Seemed most extremely rude. You send another party To the one you wish to fire, Who tells the chosen victim That he's worthy something higher. His talents here are wasted, And though "we'd miss you so, We've no right to detain you--" And he takes the hint to go. I can't promise it would answer, Which I very much regret, For my friend, the Office Manager, Hasn't tried the system yet. [_Going home in the street car after listening to Mr. J. Pitcairn Hogg's brilliant address on "The Sale of Goods Act," one of our members came over and whispered mysteriously, "Where Did He Get It?" That member is responsible for these irresponsible lines._] WHERE DID HE GET IT? In the days of prohibition, When the land had ceased to be wet, Before the era of permits And prescriptions were hard to get. If you saw a fortunate fellow With a countenance merrily lit. There was only one possible query That at once to your mind would flit: Where did he get it? One talked to us here last Friday On the law of the "Sale of Goods," So clear of all legal tangles That no one was lost in the woods, Except for one illustration-- And there we don't know where we are, When he said that for five cents only He had purchased a GOOD cigar! Where did he get it? [_What are your chances of recovering from a foreign debtor? Is it worth while taking legal action? What is the proper procedure to follow? All these questions were answered in the clever and witty address on "Foreign Judgments," given by Mr. R. M. Macdonald. He summed up in a hypothetical case which we have endeavored to reproduce in the following verses._] FOREIGN JUDGMENTS Pat Rooney sold some property To Mustapha, a Turk; The deed was drawn in Paris, And a Frenchman did the work. The property was in B. C. They came to close the deal, And some comic complications These verses will reveal. Now, Mustapha, the Turcoman, Poor Pat did sorely vex When he claimed to make the payments For the land, in dollars "Mex." He made the startling statement On their way across the sea, That the papers nowhere mentioned What the currency should be. Right away Pat took a taxi When he reached a New York pier, And hastened to a lawyer To make this matter clear. Worse to come--for in Vancouver, On a search 'twas clearly seen The title was a Scottish Jew's Down in the Argentine. The vendor's law was Irish, The purchaser's was Turk, While a notary in Paris Had done the legal work. The moral is, that as 'twas here The land was held in fee; The only laws to have a say Were the laws of our B. C. "_A rotten case abides no handling._" --_Shakespeare, King Henry IV._ [_The fact pointed out in the above quotation was one of the chief phases Mr. Martin Griffin dealt with in his brilliant address on "Import Damage Claims." The title of our verses deals both with the circumstances of handling the cases of goods during transportation, and the circumstances to be taken into consideration in the case resulting from a claim for damages to these cases. Quite clear, isn't it?_] CIRCUMSTANCES ALTER CASES Let us take two kinds of cases-- First, the one the law embraces; In a "cause" we are invited To consider cases cited. Now, case comes from cado, Latin, Which means fall, so that brings that in Line with case, denoting cover, Sheath or box--which is the other. For the question we've to face is, Goods are shipped from many places, Some by rail, and some by water, 'Round the world, or maybe shorter. They are sent in good condition, Says the shipper, with decision; They may reach us, boxes battered, Or, unloading, dropped and scattered. There's a case our guest related Of a case of wine, ill-fated, (Sadder case you've far to seek, oh! Than this long expected Cliquot!) Not a bottle was remaining: Insult added by explaining That he needn't make a racket-- They'd delivered each straw jacket! Circumstance affects externals, As you crack a nut for kernels; And I think this sad recital Will explain my cryptic title. If the meaning's dim and fading What about a Bill of Lading? So I claim the proper phrase is, "Circumstances alter cases." [_During the course of this very useful address on "Comparison of Liability--Warehousemen and Carriers," Mr. F. G. T. Lucas referred to a case, but gave us no details of it. These have since been obtained and here is our version._] AN UNSTATED CASE We gathered from a learned wight The lia-bil-i-tee Of two distinctive parties, hight, The Bailor and Bailee. The speaker, as he spoke, referred With gusto to a case That forms for all like actions heard, The proved, unshaken base. But as he failed to give a hint What this was all about, Seeing we're bound the news to print We sent to find it out. To match the law, we must be brief, Likewise to fit this card, So hear this summary of grief, In Coggs versus Bernard. Now Coggs he lived in London Town, In London Town lived he, And in his cellar had laid down Some casks of eau de vie. When Barnard heard his friend desire To move from hence a cask, He offered, wholly without hire, To undertake the task. We know that good intentions pave The pathway down to--well, Poor Bernard, clumsy, burst a stave, And then his spirits fell. And men since seventeen o' four Holt's ruling still respect-- The fact that Bernard charged no score Excused no gross neglect. [_The truth of the saying that "Brevity is the Soul of Wit," was proved beyond a doubt by Mr. E. C. Mayers when he addressed the Bureau on "Acts of God and Force Majeure," and the brevity was equalled by the brilliance with which he illuminated his difficult subject so that at the end of fifteen minutes we had a definite idea of the importance of this particular aspect of the Law of Contracts. One of the points he brought out suggested the following verses._] A "REASONABLE" MAN "But Brutus says he was ambitious, and Brutus is an honorable man."--Julius Cæsar, Act III, Scene 2. We learnt at last week's luncheon Certain acts from loss will free Where the loss is caused by something That a man cannot foresee. There's a joker! For to profit By this very useful plan You must exercise the foresight Of a "reasonable" man. Well, who can set the standard? Who this adjective attain? And there came to me while listening-- As a sort of song refrain-- The irony of Antony Like a mob-inflaming fan, Reiterating "Brutus Is an honorable man." You remember how that Caesar On his way to take the Crown, Was by Brutus and his comrades Most unkindly daggered down. And Mark Anthony, an artful Line of propaganda ran, Waxing dangerously sarcastic With his "honorable" man. Now to this ancient story Apply our speaker's test-- Caesar's head was turned by flattery, Brutus yearned for wrongs redressed. Then don't you see there would have been No plot for Shakespeare's pen. If Caesar, and if Brutus Had been "reasonable" men. [_Mr. J. Pitcairn Hogg, who gave us another of his brilliant addresses, this time on "Lien Notes," is a leading member of the Local Parliament, hence the allusion in the first verse._] SHARPS AND FLATS (A Lesson in Notation) We heard one speak last Friday On the law of Lien Notes. And if we joined his Parliament I'm sure he'd have our votes. For he pointed out the pitfalls In a way so clear and plain, That, if previously we've stumbled, We won't fall in again. Now here's an illustration Of the things we must avoid To escape the crooked methods That a man named Smith employed; He purchased a piano On the month-instalment plan, The sale was duly registered, And then the fun began. He sold it to one Robinson, Giving out his name was Brown; Though his victim searched the records, No such name was written down; But the vendor proved possession Entered in the courthouse files, So we'll finish with the chorus Sung to music set to "SMILES." There are notes that start us singing, There are notes that makes us blue, There are notes that swallow up our savings As each month the wretched things come due; There are notes arranged upon the keyboard, That unlock the soul of mel-o-die, But the notes that I gather at these lectures Are the notes that look good to me. [_Mr. R. M. Macdonald's lesson on the iniquities of taking other people's trade marks and passing off their ideas as one's own, was heeded by one of his hearers, who acknowledges his indebtedness to the late W. S. Gilbert and his "Gondoliers" for the metre of the following rhyme._] TRADE MARKS AND PASSING OFF Duly heedful of the warning In your excellent address, "Passing off" I would be scorning As poetic paltriness, So acknowledgment I pay For the metre of this lay. There exist dishonest traders, Mean enough to be invaders Of the rights of business-men benevolent, Bent on bettering conditions, So to stop these impositions We have duly passed an Act of Parliament. But, alas! Who on this legislation leans, May require the courts to tell him what it means! And define in manner, properly acute, The essentials that a Trade Mark constitute. Well, to put the matter briefly, What we seem to gather chiefly Is it's something that's invented--not a simple English word, Not too obviously explaining What your product is containing, This is surely a condition in some cases quite absurd. So you focus your invention On a quite brand new declension, And you broadcast your achievement to the public, far and wide; Make it sonorous and sounding In the joy of life abounding, And your bosom, as proprietor, will swell with honest pride. [_The liability of sellers and buyers in regard to demurrage was the subject of an address by Mr. G. Bruce Duncan, entitled "Some Aspects of Demurrage." Mr. Duncan based his remarks on demurrage incurred from contracts of delivery of goods free alongside the ship, and whether the seller or buyer is liable for payment of demurrage on account of the ship or railway cars to the point of delivery._] DEMURRAGE "An allowance to a master of a ship for staying in a Port longer than the time first appointed."--Bailey's Dictionary, 25th edition, London, 1790. Demurrage! What a harmless thing To simple Mr. Bailey. But he would find it has its sting When costs are mounting daily. And lawyer-like a case I state-- Carriage of goods by water And non-delivery of freight, To wit, Lord Ullin's daughter. A buyer to a seller came Cried "Ship and do not tarry, These goods," and gave the vessel's name That was the goods to carry. The seller did as he was told, The ship was late arriving, The buyer finds the law does hold-- Though none of his contriving The loss of time--that he must pay The railway for demurrage, For cars that had to idle lay; But buyer here take courage And your revenge just quietly bide-- By reason of congestion The cars can't reach the vessel's side, And though it's not in question That Mr. Seller is to blame Or could do aught preventing, In this case he must pay the claim-- So both are left lamenting!!! Demurrage! Though a simple thing It seems to Mr. Bailey, I, with old ballad writers, sing Oh! Willow, willow waly. [_In the course of one of his ever-welcome addresses on some phase or other of "Marine Insurance," Mr. B. G. D. Phillips told a little story which we have ventured to versify._] THE TRUE STORY OF THE WRECK OF THE HESPERUS (With apologies to Henry Wadsworth Longfellow) It was the schooner Hesperus That sailed the wintry sea. And the skipper was freighting some McIntosh Reds, Shipped by the O. U. G. Red were their cheeks like the mountain ash, Or the sun at close of day. And they'll shine on the stalls for the Christmas trade, In the Old Land far away. Then up and spake an old deckhand: "Boss, the ship's afire," says he. "Them blamed old fruits is combustible. And spon-ta-ne-ous it be." Then the skipper he ordered the fire hose laid, And they pumped with might and main, Till they flooded the hold with the decks a-wash, But ever the fire did gain. "Oh! Skipper," a book-learned fellow cried. "There's too much oxygen." So they fetched some flour from the afterhold And they got it smothered then. Smothered it was, but it smouldered still; So, instead of a messy sop, They came into port with a pie-crust brown That covered the main-hatch top. You heard she was wrecked? Why, that's a yarn, But the skipper he was shy, So they changed her name from the "Hesperus" To the schooner "Apple-pie." Now this is a "general average" Of the yarn the speaker spun. Though perhaps a "particular" here and there Is "adjusted" just for fun. [_In speaking on "Trade Possibilities with Siberia," the optimism of Lieut.-Colonel G. L. MacDonell melted the ice and snow of that inhospitable region, and in so doing, destroyed another of our cherished illusions._] LOST ILLUSIONS One by one, our fond illusions Are discarded as delusions-- Just romances. With the plague of joy-deprivers, There will soon be no survivors Of our fancies. Some say Wellington (oh! drat 'em) Never said, "Up, Guards, and at 'em!" Just a whopper. And it's ignorant palaver That George ever told his father Of the chopper. Now each reader of this Journal, Since he heard the gallant Colonel, Well aware is, That the climate of Siberia Is as good, if not superior, To our prairies. Where we pictured convicts weary, Chained and cheerless, he showed cheery Landed gentry. Whose oppressors gave, unknowing, To a land with wealth o'erflowing, Right of entry. So though robbed of cherished errors, We may be relieved of terrors That have scared us; And if truth does cause a flurry, There's no doubt a lot of worry May be spared us. [_The Bureau is greatly indebted to Mr. Percy G. Sills for the graphic story of his experiences in the Japanese earthquake zone, shortly after the terrible catastrophe of the 1st of September, 1923._] "THERE WAS A GREAT EARTHQUAKE" (Rev. VI., 12) We doff the motley, and we cast The cap and bells aside, As we in horror hear one tell How countless thousands died. The fatal day was Saturday, The hour it was high noon, Like youngsters out of school men sought The welcome week-end boon. Mothers and children waited there While father locked the door And left his business cares behind, Then hey! for hills or shore. Life jostled in the busy streets, No word of warning sped-- Next moment Yokohama lay A City of the Dead. One gazing landwards, said it was As if some Titan took The city in his mighty hands, And like a blanket shook. Trembling, and torn, and wrenched apart, By force, relentless, fierce; Then fire exultant, madly leapt Like greyhound from the tierce. From where they lay, the men at sea Saw, as a yellow wall, Dust rise in clouds to shroud the scene Beneath a funeral pall. Yet noble deeds and sacrifice, Of which our speaker told, This cloud a silver living gave, Nay, rather one of gold. [_You all remember the old question: If a herring and a half cost three ha'pence, what will a dozen come to? Well, we've got a better one: If a hundred billion marks cost two and a quarter cents, how many miles is it from the earth to the North Star? Sounds crazy, but it's sane compared with the present self-depreciated currency of Germany, as explained by Mr. G. S. Harrison in his address to the Bureau in March of 1924._] BLACK MARKS "Oh! What a fall was there."--Julius Cæsar, Act III, Scene 2 Holding it not a subject fit To write about at all, Johnson, we know, would never read Gibbon's "Decline and Fall." Had he been here on Friday last He would have found no joy in The story of the base echo Of a, once honest, coin. Pity we have for one whose fall Is unpremeditated. Malice aforethought in this case Can be most clearly stated. We see a nation here descend To wholesale counterfeiting, And think that smart, which honest men Would designate as cheating. For issuing from a printing press, Erected in a cellar, Come marks that can be reckoned, but By computation stellar. These Master Printers ruthlessly Their countrymen controlling For work and raw materials, both, Their worthless paper doling. The goods produced they ship away, To all and sundry nations, Taking good care no cash returns For settling reparations. Clearly, as if we had been there, We hear these wise ones saying, "They'll find their vict'ry dearly bought Before they get through paying!" A SNEAK-THIEF SANTA CLAUS (An interrupted Christmas Carol) (1923) _The cheery chimes of Christmas Are crashing on the air; They clash in cheerful chorus And chase away dull care. Hang up, hang up the holly, Away with melancholy, Let everyone be jolly, Everywhere._ Now, I had got as far as this Before I went to church, And then a burglar came and knocked Pegasus off his perch. For Sunday is the peaceful day On which I write my verses, But he has robbed me of my wits And filled me up with curses. So please forgive, if, like our house, I'm feeling all upset. And then I'll try with Christmas cheer Our losses to forget. _The steaming Christmas pudding, The turkey nicely done, The mince-pie and the rest of it, The liveliness and fun. Hang up, hang up the holly, Away with melancholy, And let us all be jolly, Everyone._ [End of For Our Bureau, by Herbert Beeman]