Chapter Four
DURING the week he was in receipt
of numerous letters commenting on the
absence from the News of the account of
the prize fight. Two or three of these
letters may be of interest.
Editor of the News:
Dear Sir -- I have been thinking
for some time of changing my paper. I
want a journal that is up to the times,
progressive and enterprising, supplying
the public demand at all points. The
recent freak of your paper in refusing
to print the account of the famous
contest at the Resort has decided me
finally to change my paper.
Please discontinue it.
Very truly yours,-------
Here followed the name of a business man
who had been a subscriber for many
years.
Edward Norman,
Editor of the Daily News, Raymond:
Dear Ed.--What is this sensation
you have given the people of your burg?
What new policy have you taken up? Hope
you don't intend to try the "Reform
Business" through the avenue of the
press. It's dangerous to experiment much
along that line. Take my advice and
stick to the enterprising modern methods
you have made so successful for the
News. The public wants prize fights and
such. Give it what it wants, and let
some one else do the reforming business.
Yours,-------
Here followed the name of one of
Norman's old friends, the editor of a
daily in an adjoining town.
My Dear Mr. Norman:
I hasten to write you a note of
appreciation for the evident carrying
out of your promise. It is a splendid
beginning and no one feels the value of
it more than I do. I know something of
what it will cost you, but not all. Your
pastor,
HENRY MAXWELL.
One other letter which he opened
immediately after reading this from
Maxwell revealed to him something of the
loss to his business that possibly
awaited him.
Mr. Edward Norman,
Editor of the Daily News:
Dear Sir -- At the expiration of my
advertising limit, you will do me the
favor not to continue it as you have
done heretofore. I enclose check for
payment in full and shall consider my
account with your paper closed after
date.
Very truly yours,-------
Here followed the name of one of the
largest dealers in tobacco in the city.
He had been in the habit of inserting a
column of conspicuous advertising and
paying for it a very large price.
Norman laid this letter down
thoughtfully, and then after a moment he
took up a copy of his paper and looked
through the advertising columns. There
was no connection implied in the tobacco
merchant's letter between the omission
of the prize fight and the withdrawal of
the advertisement, but he could not
avoid putting the two together. In point
of fact, he afterward learned that the
tobacco dealer withdrew his
advertisement because he had heard that
the editor of the NEWS was about to
enter upon some queer reform policy that
would be certain to reduce its
subscription list.
But the letter directed Norman's
attention to the advertising phase of
his paper. He had not considered this
before.
As he glanced over the columns he
could not escape the conviction that his
Master could not permit some of them in
his paper.
What would He do with that other
long advertisement of choice liquors and
cigars? As a member of a church and a
respected citizen, he had incurred no
special censure because the saloon men
advertised in his columns. No one
thought anything about it. It was all
legitimate business. Why not? Raymond
enjoyed a system of high license, and
the saloon and the billiard hall and the
beer garden were a part of the city's
Christian civilization. He was simply
doing what every other business man in
Raymond did. And it was one of the best
paying sources of revenue. What would
the paper do if it cut these out? Could
it live? That was the question. But was
that the question after all? "What would
Jesus do?" That was the question he was
answering, or trying to answer, this
week. Would Jesus advertise whiskey and
tobacco in his paper?
Edward Norman asked it honestly,
and after a prayer for help and wisdom
he asked Clark to come into the office.
Clark came in, feeling that the
paper was at a crisis, and prepared for
almost anything after his Monday morning
experience. This was Thursday.
"Clark," said Norman, speaking
slowly and carefully, "I have been
looking at our advertising columns and
have decided to dispense with some of
the matter as soon as the contracts run
out. I wish you would notify the
advertising agent not to solicit or
renew the ads that I have marked here."
He handed the paper with the marked
places over to Clark, who took it and
looked over the columns with a very
serious air.
"This will mean a great loss to the
NEWS. How long do you think you can keep
this sort of thing up?" Clark was
astounded at the editor's action and
could not understand it.
"Clark, do you think if Jesus was
the editor and proprietor of a daily
paper in Raymond He would permit
advertisements of whiskey and tobacco in
it?"
"Well no--I--don't suppose He
would. But what has that to do with us?
We can't do as He would. Newspapers
can't be run on any such basis."
"Why not?" asked Norman quietly.
"Why not? Because they will lose
more money than they make, that's all!"
Clark spoke out with an irritation that
he really felt. "We shall certainly
bankrupt the paper with this sort of
business policy."
"Do you think so?" Norman asked the
question not as if he expected an
answer, but simply as if he were talking
with himself. After a pause he said:
"You may direct Marks to do as I
have said. I believe it is what Christ
would do, and as I told you, Clark, that
is what I have promised to try to do for
a year, regardless of what the results
may be to me. I cannot believe that by
any kind of reasoning we could reach a
conclusion justifying our Lord in the
advertisement, in this age, of whiskey
and tobacco in a newspaper. There are
some other advertisements of a doubtful
character I shall study into. Meanwhile,
I feel a conviction in regard to these
that cannot be silenced."
Clark went back to his desk feeling
as if he had been in the presence of a
very peculiar person. He could not grasp
the meaning of it all. He felt enraged
and alarmed. He was sure any such policy
would ruin the paper as soon as it
became generally known that the editor
was trying to do everything by such an
absurd moral standard. What would become
of business if this standard was
adopted? It would upset every custom and
introduce endless confusion. It was
simply foolishness. It was downright
idiocy. So Clark said to himself, and
when Marks was informed of the action he
seconded the managing editor with some
very forcible ejaculations. What was the
matter with the chief? Was he insane?
Was he going to bankrupt the whole
business?
But Edward Norman had not yet faced
his most serious problem. When he came
down to the office Friday morning he was
confronted with the usual program for
the Sunday morning edition. The NEWS was
one one of the few evening papers in
Raymond to issue a Sunday edition, and
it had always been remarkably successful
financially. There was an average of one
page of literary and religious items to
thirty or forty pages of sport, theatre,
gossip, fashion, society and political
material. This made a very interesting
magazine of all sorts of reading matter,
and had always been welcomed by all the
subscribers, church members and all, as
a Sunday morning necessity. Edward
Norman now faced this fact and put to
himself the question: "What would Jesus
do?" If He was editor of a paper, would
he deliberately plan to put into the
homes of all the church people and
Christians of Raymond such a collection
of reading matter on the one day in the
week which ought to be given up to
something better holier? He was of
course familiar with the regular
arguments of the Sunday paper, that the
public needed something of the sort; and
the working man especially, who would
not go to church any way, ought to have
something entertaining and instructive
on Sunday, his only day of rest. But
suppose the Sunday morning paper did not
pay? Suppose there was no money in it?
How eager would the editor or publisher
be then to supply this crying need of
the poor workman? Edward Norman communed
honestly with himself over the subject.
Taking everything into account,
would Jesus probably edit a Sunday
morning paper? No matter whether it
paid. That was not the question. As a
matter of fact, the Sunday NEWS paid so
well that it would be a direct loss of
thousands of dollars to discontinue it.
Besides, the regular subscribers had
paid for a seven-day paper. Had he any
right now to give them less than they
supposed they had paid for?
He was honestly perplexed by the
question. So much was involved in the
discontinuance of the Sunday edition
that for the first time he almost
decided to refuse to be guided by the
standard of Jesus' probable action. He
was sole proprietor of the paper; it was
his to shape as he chose. He had no
board of directors to consult as to
policy. But as he sat there surrounded
by the usual quantity of material for
the Sunday edition he reached some
definite conclusions. And among them was
a determination to call in the force of
the paper and frankly state his motive
and purpose. He sent word for Clark and
the other men it the office, including
the few reporters who were in the
building and the foreman, with what men
were in the composing room (it was early
in the morning and they were not all in)
to come into the mailing room. This was
a large room, and the men came in
curiously and perched around on the
tables and counters. It was a very
unusual proceeding, but they all agreed
that the paper was being run on new
principles anyhow, and they all watched
Mr. Norman carefully as he spoke.
"I called you in here to let you
know my further plans for the NEWS. I
propose certain changes which I believe
are necessary. I understand very well
that some things I have already done are
regarded by the men as very strange. I
wish to state my motive in doing what I
have done."
Here he told the men what he had
already told Clark, and they stared as
Clark had done, and looked as painfully
conscious.
"Now, in acting on this standard of
conduct I have reached a conclusion
which will, no doubt, cause some
surprise.
"I have decided that the Sunday
morning edition of the NEWS shall be
discontinued after next Sunday's issue.
I shall state in that issue my reasons
for discontinuing. In order to make up
to the subscribers the amount of reading
matter they may suppose themselves
entitled to, we can issue a double
number on Saturday, as is done by many
evening papers that make no attempt at a
Sunday edition. I am convinced that from
a Christian point of view more harm than
good has been done by our Sunday morning
paper. I do not believe that Jesus would
be responsible for it if He were in my
place today. It will occasion some
trouble to arrange the details caused by
this change with the advertisers and
subscribers. That is for me to look
after. The change itself is one that
will take place. So far as I can see,
the loss will fall on myself. Neither
the reporters nor the pressmen need make
any particular changes in their plans."
He looked around the room and no
one spoke. He was struck for the first
time in his life with the fact that in
all the years of his newspaper life he
had never had the force of the paper
together in this way. Would Jesus do
that? That is, would He probably run a
newspaper on some loving family plan,
where editors, reporters, pressmen and
all meet to discuss and devise and plan
for the making of a paper that should
have in view--
He caught himself drawing almost
away from the facts of typographical
unions and office rules and reporters'
enterprise and all the cold,
businesslike methods that make a great
daily successful. But still the vague
picture that came up in the mailing room
would not fade away when he had gone
into his office and the men had gone
back to their places with wonder in
their looks and questions of all sorts
on their tongues as they talked over the
editor's remarkable actions.
Clark came in and had a long,
serious talk with his chief. He was
thoroughly roused, and his protest
almost reached the point of resigning
his place. Norman guarded himself
carefully. Every minute of the interview
was painful to him, but he felt more
than ever the necessity of doing the
Christ-like thing. Clark was a very
valuable man. It would be difficult to
fill his place. But he was not able to
give any reasons for continuing the
Sunday paper that answered the question,
"What would Jesus do?" by letting Jesus
print that edition.
"It comes to this, then," said
Clark frankly, "you will bankrupt the
paper in thirty days. We might as well
face that future fact."
"I don't think we shall. Will you
stay by the NEWS until it is bankrupt?"
asked Norman with a strange smile.
"Mr. Norman, I don't understand
you. You are not the same man this week
that I always knew before."
"I don't know myself either, Clark.
Something remarkable has caught me up
and borne me on. But I was never more
convinced of final success and power for
the paper. You have not answered my
question. Will you stay with me?"
Clark hesitated a moment and
finally said yes. Norman shook hands
with him and turned to his desk. Clark
went back into his room, stirred by a
number of conflicting emotions. He had
never before known such an exciting and
mentally disturbing week, and he felt
now as if he was connected with an
enterprise that might at any moment
collapse and ruin him and all connected
with it.
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