Rhine as a Trade Route. for Cannnercial Inrasioii 1 i $ ,.j;..r1h rt! 1 4 A A Af . .towiinii i'iwfwi , ..... J i : - "r-Jl RINGSTRASSE, COLOGNE, MADE ON SITE OP OLD WALL, (Copyrlfiht, 1908, by Frank O. Carpenter.) f tOLOONB. April 22. (Special Cor I I respondence of The Bee.) I writ 1 1 tnriuv nt t Via II hi no Nnt th Rhine picturesque, not the Rhine romautlo nor the Rhine of castles nd cathedrals, but the Rhino as a trade route and as the great water avenue of the American invasion of Germany. During this trip In Europe I have studied it from Its sources to its mouth. I was near its beginning on Mount Saint Gothard la Switzerland, I saw It rushing past Basel, the head of navigation, and watched the enormous trafllc moving Into It from Rot terdam near the sea. It Is 626 miles from Basel to the German ocean, and throughout this distance the Rhine is spotted with towns and cities; It Is cut by canals, which lead - to the Seine and the Danube, and others which bring it into connection with the busiest section of this busiest of all the continents. You can get from Ham burg to the Rhine by canal. The ports of Belgium have access to It and a network of railroads leads out from it to every quarter of Europe. Here In Cologne the Rhine is about 1,300 feet wide, and It Is deep enough for boats drawing twelve feet of water. The fall la slight from here to the sea, and the flow Is o slow that It does not impede navigation. A little further south the river narrows, nd in the Seven Mountains tbo current Is o swift that the steamers make only a few miles an hour, and so strong that the banks have to be walled In with stones almost the whole way to keep them from washing. Cologne Is the trade center of the Rhine. It has about 400,000 people, and is largely dependent upon Us river trade. It has built up a great harbor for handling the traffics and Is now a general transshipping point for all parts of Europe. Ships come here from Iiondon, Bremen, Hamburg, Copen hagen and Russia. There are dally boats to England, and three boats which run regularly between Cologne and St. Peters burg. The most of the goods from the United States la transshipped at Rotterdam, Am sterdam, Antwerp or Hamburg, and a large part of it Is sent up the Rhine in barges. ' I have spent much timo on the river, now passlug rafts of logs and boards of Ameri can lumber, now going by utrlnga of narrow barges, each two hundred or more feet long, filled with .American wh at, and other barges piled high with barrels of American petroleum. I have met a tew American travelers and one or two of our drummers, but the most of the travel la European, and the most of our goods go on German and Dutch boats bandied by German Importers. Cologne Is a good place to study the Rhlue t raffle. It Is the headquarters of the leading steamship companies. The trade la carefully watched, it steadily increases from year to year, and it now approximates a million tons annually. Something like 4,000 passenger boats call at Cologne every year, and the freight boats number many hundreds. There are also sailing vessels and an enormous traffic by tugs and bargi s. I saw my first Rhine barges at Rotter dam. They are built for the narrow parts of the river, and are, I venture, the longest boats made In proportion to their width. The average barge la about fifteen feet wide and two or three hundred feet long. It looks like a great black eel aa It is towed op the river. At the back or It is a little cabin, with a stovepipe sticking out of Its roof, and about midway is a hinged mast o fixed that It can be raised and lowered at the bridges. Each barge haa a rudder, sometimes so large that it Is moved by a horizontal cog wheel pushed around by the sailors. On many of the barges families of boat men live. Tou see the washing banging oa the line, the women cooking at the sterna of the boats and the little ones playing about over the cargo. The Rhine haa an Immense passenger business during the season. Tbla Is now At 1U beginning, and It will continue until ONE VIEW OF COLOGNE FROM THE RHINE, UNLOADING AMERICAN GOODS AT COLOGNE. late In the fall. There are two great passenger companies which have regular dally services to Maine and Cologne and Dus8eldorf. They are doing well, paying regular dividends of S per cent and over. Their stocks are considered safe invest ments and they are bought and sold on the exchange. It Is not the foreign travel, however, that makes the boats pay. That Is enor mous, it is true, but It la nothing in com parison with the . local trafllc. The Rhine is one almost continuous village. There are towns everywhere near the river and back from It, except In the ruost moun tainous parts, and on holidays the boats are crowded, and, as the fares are cheaper than those of the railroads, the everyday travel is great. A difference in weather makes a big difference in the profits of the companies. This Is especially so as to the foreign traffic. A cold Whitsuntide means there will be no traffic from Lon dou and a cold season may cut down the dividends more than 1 per cent. There are now about a hundred steamboats on the Rhine, and the averr.Re number of pas sengers exceeds a million a year. Traveling la comparatively Inexpensive, and strange to say, ll cU less to go up the stream than down it. It takes only a day to Bee the most beautiful part of the river and you can have a round trip ticket at reduced rates. Each passenger Is allowed a hundred pounds of baggage free, a sruall charge being made for loading and dl. charging the trunks. All the steamers have eating accommodations on thorn, and the food Is quite an good an on similar boats at home. At 1 oVkck there Is a table d'hote lnuer wlikh costs 75 rents, with reduced rates for children. Breakfast and supper are alto served. Nearly all t'n. Rhine towns aio growing and are ttia.li'y improving their port ar rangements. You see cranes on the land ing j.laies ut many small towns, all the clil.a have wharves and the busy scenes upon th m show that this part of Germany 1st industrially alive. The i:ort at Cologne is formed by an Island In the river. This has been walled In with great stone blocks and paved with cobbles. Bridges connect It with the rail roads and the cars are brought right to the bouts and loaded and unloaded with great steel cranes. There are custom bouses on the Island with bonded warehouses, and the facilities are such that scores of barges and boats can be handled at one time. As I walked along upon this island I saw a barge unloading South Carolina pine. The boards were built out over the sides of the barge so that It seemed to be a pile of lum ber 100 feet wide. 100 feet long and 10 feet high. It bad been towed up from Rotter dam by a steam tug, and when I saw It the hydraulic cranes were lifting up a hun dred boards at a time and dropping them on to the cars, which were to take them to the interior. . Near by were other barges loading goods tor the United States, and I was told that something like $2,000,000 worth of goods are annually shipped from here to our country. Another big Rhine center Is Dusseldorf, about two and one-half hours by Bteamer down stream. It is the chief port of West phalia, an enormous Industrial region un derlaid with coal and iron. Dusseldorf Itself has iron and steel works, foundries, furnaces and rolling mills. It makes rail road cars and electrical equipments and the same Is true of Cologne. Dusseldorf Is also the port for many other towns nearby, and does a great busi ness in selling American machine tools, Carolina pine and some of our best hard woods. It takes a great lot of California fruit, and has until recently Imported con siderable iron and steel tubing, although this ts now furnished by Germany. It is from there that a large part of the Krupp shipments go out, including those to the United States, which are heavy. Up the Rhine above Cologne there are a number of Important porta, and especially Coblenz, Mainz and Mannheim. I am sur prised at the size of Mainz. It is growing like a green bay tree and now has more than 100,000 population. It is situated where the Main flows into the Rhine and gets the traffic of both rivers. It was so rich in Ihe past that it was called "Golden Mainz" and it was at one time the loader of the league of Rbenieh towns, formed during the middle ages to boom the trade of this region. Today It Is overshadowed by Frankfort, but it has an Increasing trade. Mannheim, still further up the Rhine, at the mouth of the Neckar, might be called an American trade center. It has enormous imports of American grain, coal oil and tobacco and Is the head quarters for the transshipment of American goods. The Diamond Match company, the Standard Oil company and the Pure OH company have plants there and our leading exporters or all kinds have their agencies. Mannheim is the head of Rhine navigation for large boats and the chief point or dis tribution for grain, cotton, coal oil, lumber and coal. Over 16,000 boats unload at its docks every year and Its freight runs up Into the millicns of tons. It is a great commercial center, Its banks having a capital of $30,000,000. It Is also a manu facturing city, making dye stuffs and chem icals, corks and cars, beer and glass bottles, agricultural Implements, pianos, cocoanut butter, cigars and a score of other things. Its anallne dye plant Is the largest in the world. Its exports to the United Elates alone amounting to $100,000 a month. It has 4,000 men in its chemical works, 1,400 workmen in its comb and doll factories and other thousands making wood pulp, which, Btrange to say, it exports to the United States. It also sends us patent leather to the value or something like $1,000,000 a year, and at the same time buys a few American shoes. It uses American tobacco and makes millions of cigars every week, which are shipped to all parts or Germany. These Rhine towns are among the newest or the Gorman cities. This btatement seems strange when one remembers, that they thrived in the days or the crusaders. Cologne was rounded about tho time that Caesar overran Gaul. It was so rich dur ing the middle ages that instead of saying "as rich as Croesus" they said "as rich as .a cloth merchant of Cologne," and it has been an important town from that time until now. . And still it is a new town! Since the Franco-Prussian war It has been almost rebuilt. The old wall has been torn away, and a wide street, paved with asphalt, with trees In the center and ridftwayg and driveways on - each side, has taken its place. New houses have been erected along this street, and, indeed, the whole city looks as though it were put up for show. It is only in the older sections that you find antique structures, and the cathe dral, although begun centuries ago, was only completed along In the "80s. It is now the finest cathedral in Europe, and coat, all told, a little less than $3,000,000. Dusseldorf Is also a new town, and there are new buildings all along the Rhine, In cluding the villas of the rich, which have grown up under the shadows of mediaeval castles. . The Rhine cities are new In their systems of government. Municipal ownership is coming to the front along the old river. There Is much city pride, and but little boodling. Dusseldorf owns its own gas and electric light plants. It has public bath houses, where you can bet at cost a Turk ten or Russian bath, first, second or third class. It has Its own slaughter houses and market houses, and Its own ice plants and cold storage establishments. The munici pality acts also as a wine merchant, sell ing wine by wholesale, and making a profit off of it. It has a municipal savings bank, with a pawnbroklng attachment, and also homes for the aged and these who are too feeble to earn their own living. Dusseldorf owns Its street cars and so does Cologne, and the fares in both cities are Just about half what they aro In the United States and the accommodations equally good. My car fares cost me about $5 a month, or $60 a year, while at home In Washington. In Dusseldorf I could have the same for Just half and save $30. Here In Cologne one can buy a yearly P0S3 good on all lines for $30, monthly passes are sold for $2.38 and the ordinary fare for the longest distance Is S cents, while tho shortest distance costs less than 2 cents. Children under 10 years pay lees than 2 cents, and students attending edu cational Institutions have commutation tickets for 1 1-5 cents. The chier advantage that the railroads here have over those at home is In the lower wages for motormen and other employes; for coal, steel rails and car equipments must cost about the same. Aa to wages, motormn receive 83 cents and conductors about 72 cents for a day of ten hours, and other employes are proportionately cheap. It Is wonderful how the Rhine valley Is cultivated. For the greater part or the distance between Cologne and Mains it Is very hilly, but every Inch or available space Is used. The mountains are terraced In places, the earth being held In with walls of stones, and some of It, I am told, tar ried up from the lowlands on the backs of women and men. Some of the patches are no larger than a bed quilt, and a field s (Continued on Sixteenth Page.)