until the very close of his visit, when he said that we were doing as well as anybody could be expected to do under all the circumstances.
XLV
When I referred to the general rule that policemen
are disliked and condemned I should have noticed
certain exceptions. The traffic squad for
instance is generally held in a respect and affection
that is part of the civic pride of the community.
Those fine big fellows on the corner, waving this
way or that with a gesture the flowing traffic of the
street, are greeted with smiles, and, as they assist
in the perilous passage of the thoroughfares, sometimes
with thanks and benedictions. The reason, of
course, is simple; they are not engaged in hurting
people, but in helping people, and so by the operation
of the immutable law, they attract to themselves
the best feelings of the people.
And this is what we tried from the first to have all our policemen do, to help people and not to hurt them. It was what Jones had tried to do, and he had begun with one of the most interesting experiments in policing a city that has been made in our country. He took away the clubs from the policemen. He could have made at first no greater sensation if he had taken away the police altogether, the protest was so loud, so indignant, above all so righteous. What sense of security could a community feel if the policemen were to have no clubs, how would the