v-sTm-Sy nt , -(- , The Commoner. E FEBRUARY 19, 1909 5 "yyi7V-TWflgJJ"Wg!)'lIW'1111 'iU'mw P"W".'-!H'H'Wg"8'jl-riijpi w jr i-HQ(Tnr- EDUCATIONAL SERIES EDUCATIONAL CLUBS Tho Commoner has received a number of let ters of which the following from Niotaze, Kan., Is a sample: "I have talked with a few friends on tho proposition of organizing a club to discuss the articles in the Educational Series. They seem to think it would be good policy to do so, as we might draw some fair-minded republicans into it and convince them of the error of their way. I don't know just how to go about organiz ing. If you could find time and opportunity to give me a few pointers as to how to go about it I think I could make it go." The work of organizing such a" club need not be complicated. Let some one invite several others to a preliminary meeting. The club may be organized at that meeting or arrangements may be made for a later meeting to which others will be Invited and at which organization may be affected. The officers of the club may be a president, secretary and treasurer. It might be a good plan to designate for each Bubject under discussion a leader whose business it would bo to read to tho club the article ap pearing in tho Educational Series, supplement ed by other matter on tho same subject selected by tho leader. Then might follow a general dis cussion of the subject by the other members of the club. It should be remembered that the organiza tion of such a club need not depend upon a large number of persons. It might well be organized with say two members whore a larger number could not be persuaded to join in the work. It is not difficult to believe that in any coramu .ity whore two or three persons meet for the pur pose of improving their mind? through tho study of public questions there will be many others who will want to avail themselves of tho oppor tunity for study thus afforded. As soon as one of these clubs Is organized the fact of its organization, its name and tho names of its officers, should be communicated to The Commoner. Postal Savings Banks With the increasing interest in the banking question the postal savings bank proposition is now a pertinent subject for investigation and discussion by American citizens and particularly by young men and women upon whose success ful education, along governmental lines, the permanency of popular government must de pend. So important is this question that both of the great political parties took cognizance ' of it In their national platforms for 1908. The republican national platform for 1908 declared: "We favor the establishment of a postal savings banks system for the convenience of the people and the encouragement of thrift." The democratic platform dealt more exten sively with the subject. The following is the plank in the democratic national platform for 1908: "The panic of 1907, coming without any legitimate excuse when the republican party had for a decade been in complete control of the federal government furnishes additional proof that it is either unwilling or incompetent to protect the interests of the general public. It has so linked the country to Wall Street that the sins of the speculators are visited upon the whole people. While refusing to rescue the wealth producers from spoliation at the hands of the stock gamblers, and speculators in farm products, it has deposited treasury funds, with out interest and without competition, in favor of banks. It has used an emergency for which it is largely responsible to force through con gress a bill changing the basis of bank currency and inviting market manipulation, and has failed to give to the fifteen million depositors of the country protection in their savings. "We believe that insofar as the needs of com merce require an emergency currency, such cur rency should be issued and controlled by the federal government and loaned on adequate se curity to national and state banks. We pledge ourselves to legislation under which the national banks shall be required to establish a guarantee fund for the prompt payment of the depositors of any insolvent national bank, under an equitable system which shall.be available to all state banking institutions wishing to use it. "We favor a postal savings bank if the guar anteed bank can not be secured, and believe that it should be so constituted as to keep the deposited money in the communities where the depositors live. But we condemn the policy of the republican party in proposing postal savings banks under a plan of conduct by which they will aggregate the deposits of the rural commu nities and redeposit the same while under gov ernment charge in the banks of Wall Street, thus depleting the circulating medium of the produc ing regions and unjustly favoring the specula tive markets." In an article relating to postal savings banks and printed in the Woman's World of Chicago, Mr. Meyer, the postmaster general, declures that the adoption of this system will bring into cir culation fully half a billion dollars now hidden away; owing to lack of confidence or facility. Mr. Meyer says: "As an evidence of tho demand for postal savings banks we have reports from postmasters that they have been compelled to refuse to ac cept deposits offered by foreigners for safe, keep ing, and also that our own people, haye bought' postal money orders during the last year pay able to themselves to the extent of $8,104,447, on which amount fees of $25,000 were paid. These money orders were bought to tho great est extent in Arizona, Colorado, Kansas, Mis souri, Montana, Nebraska', Nevada, Oklahoma, Ohio, Oregon, Texas and Washington. "A postofflce Inspector has reported that one family residing near a small postofflce In the state of Washington has $11,000 on deposit in the postal banks of British Columbia. "In some parts of the United States the need of postal savings banks Is not as urgently felt as in others. In New England tho average dis tance of the savings bank from the postofflce is about fifteen miles; in the middle and western states it is about twenty-five miles; in the south ern states thirty-three miles, and in the Pacific slope states fifty-five miles. The postal savings bank would reach every community. "While the money in savings banks amounts to $3,660,653,945, only 1.6 per cent or $70, 308,543, is in thirty-two states. The fourteen other states are fortunate in possessing savings bank deposits to the amount of $3,590,245,402, 98.4 per cent. This is of great advantage to the latter states, as It Increases their financial resources and thus aids in their development. "In the thirty-two states referred to there are many localities where there are no savings banks and in some cases no banks of any kind. It Is there that considerable money is held in hiding, which -is neither absolutely safe nor in circula tion for the benefit of the community. It has been estimated that altogether fully half a bil lion dollars not today placed in any bank, due to want of opportunity or lack of confidence might be brought back into circulation through the agency of postal savings banks. "The additional opportunities for saving that can be afforded the people by postal savings banks In this country are made apparent by the fact that there are 60,624 postofflces, 40,000 of which are money-order postofflces. "The foreigner should be encouraged to de posit his earnings, because after he has accumu lated a few I irhdred dollars he will not be con tent to receive merely a two per cent interest, but will seek to purchase a home. The rate of interest which '.he department has recom mended, two per cent per annum, is evidence that It is not the Intention to go into the bank ing business or to compete with existing sav ings institutions, which pay, In a great many In stances, four per cent per annum. On tho con trary, it is proposod to redeposit tho' money which Is brought to tho postofflces In national banks in tho locality where it is first roceived, thus making it immediately available for tho financial and business transactions of tho com munity in which it properly belongs. "The expense to tho government in connec tion with tho operation of postal savings banks would not bo great. In Canada, whero $465, 000,000 has been received and returned to de positors in tho last thirty-nine years, and where at present $50,000,000 is on doposit, tho total expense to the central establishment at Toronto is given as $60,000 annually. Outside of that city the work incident to tho system is Included in tho duties of rogular postal employes. In tho United States the work could be performed In money order offices by the dorks handling such orders, and it Is not belloved that additional employes would bo needed." THE CARNEGIE PENSION Macon, Mo., February 8. Editor Commoner: I am reading, with care, your educational series. As one of those who asked you to wrlto theso articles, I reserved tho right to comment thore on, approvingly or. otherwise, and I will do so as each article appears, rather than try to re view several at once. You are exactly right as to tho Carnegie fund for teachors, and your logic is good, but you fail to touch tho keynote, when speaking on tho subject of pensions to teachers. The only pension in America that can, consistently, with our American form of free government, bo granted, is to tho citizen who Is forced or called to take up his gun in de fense of tho government, and he, only on con dition that such forced service results in his physical injury, so that when returning to pri vate citizenship his ability to earn a living ha been impaired by such service. A professor or teacher is no more entitled to, and there is no more authority for giving him, or her a pension, than to their washerwoman. I have a supreme and irrepressible contempt for men who, claiming to be democrats, urge the pensioning of ex-presldonts on the ground that they were too honorable to work, after having been elected to the high office of president. Such sentiment is abhorrent to a man. who has a drop of American blood in hfm, or wIioao heart ever throbs in sympathy with that deop sense of liberty for which our fathers gave their lives, and established a government upon tho theory that all men are equal before the law, and In Which there are no born kings, and one which creates every citizen dopendent upon his own energies for his support, and which guarantees to him all the fruits of his labor, save only his proportional part In support of the government which protests him; or in support of objects of charity. Theso advocates of this pension business are admirers of hereditary rulers of tho people. This admiration for monarchical theori. j is a viper at whose head you should strike a deadly blow whenever it appears. -Yours truly, WEB M. RUBY. INTERESTED IN THE WORK Flatwood, Ala., February 11, 1909. Editor. The Commoner: I note that In Tho Commoner of the 5th inst. you inform William R. Kemp of St. Clair, Mich (my boyhood home county) that you will discuss the Des Moines plan of city government In the educational series. I hope you will also give an article on proportional rep resentation and the preferential ballot. Also, on what is known, and what would be the prob able result of direct taxation of land values and the exemption of persons poll tax and per sonal property from taxation. I note what you have written In this educational series regard ing tho Carnegie pension for teachers. I con sider the reasons you give why the gift (?) should be declined as being based on high moral ground and good judgment. I trust your legis lators will see this matter in the light that you do and that they will reject the proffered fund, thereby setting a good example to less fortunate democratic states, especially to those that are yet suffering from the blight of chattel slavery. My home was In Nebraska for a number of years and I still have a lively interest in what is be ing done in the state. . Yours truly, M. M. COPE. i - !... T J. ,