TrHff vtf mmtWVWFW'1W!ipij The Commoner VOL. 15, NO. 3 A . a. i Is COUNTY GOVERNMENT EXTRAVAGANCE Citizens of other states may read with profit that portion of the annual message of Governor George M. Alexander, of Idaho, relating to the duties, powers and abuses of county govern "merts. .In reference to this subject, Governor Alexander said: "There is a habit throughout the state in the various counties that runs to extravagance. County governments have become so burden some, in the way of costs and expense, that the people demand relief at your hands. Counties should bo graded into first, second and third class counties. A limitation should be placed upon their power to levy taxes. Counties should also be compelled by law to go on a cash basis and be prohibited from issuing warrants in any sum beyond the amount levied for that one year. "For the year 1913 there was levied by the various counties in this state for the county war rant redemption fund $2G6,320.00. This is simply an item of extravagance that has grown up in the state and that should be prohibited. "Boards of county commissioners often the first year of their official life levy insufficient taxes to make a showing, and the next year following, be fore they go out of office, they pay old indebt edness, make unnecessary improvements, issue warrants in excess of the levy for that year, or else leave a huge indebtedness to be provided for by future tax levies. I would advise you to prohibit the issuing of warrants on any fund in excess of the levy for that year; that the board of pQunty commissioners issuing the same, and. thoPA voting for said issue, should bo guilty of a n!demeanor and should be ousted from office and bo held responsible-'for the amount of the warrants upon their official bond, and further by a' judgment against their property. The 'stronger this law can be made the better it will sei o its purpose." , . f . FUTURE TARIFF DISCUSSIONS Up to tho time of the passage of the federal trade commission bill there had been no admin istrative agency of the government directing its exclusive attention to the procuring of the facts that would be a guide to future legislation. The possibilities of this new act, in connection with tariff legislation, are discussed by the St. Louis Republic, as follows: "Tariffs were formerly made by calling in pros pective beneficiaries and learning from them about how much protection they thought they ought to have. Then, when tho tariffs thus made were questioned at election time the men for whom " they were mado financed the defense and sup plied the facts and arguments most largely used by tariff defenders. The man with a personal interest was there all the while looking out for himself. If tho people at large wished to know how the tariff was working or how truthful were the grounds upon which tariffs were demanded they had no such access to original sources of Information as was available on the other side. The new trade commission wjll have among its other duties the duty of supplying the, public with facts about how the tariff is working. The members will approach this task with their minds open to the truth. They will have no pri vate interest to serve, but will have the right to go to tho bottom of any complaint or demand and to ascertain all the facts needed in making up an unbiased judgment. In future discussions of the tariff the commission will, therefore, be able to contribute materially to intelligent un derstanding of the subject in its capacity as a source of unvarniBhed truth and, indirectly, it should have an oven more important function as a discourager of tariff mendacity from those who ' seek tariff benefits." PUBLIC SERVICE CLUBS NEEDED Th city of Lincoln, Nebraska, has a public service club which holds meetings for tho dis cussion of public utility subjects, with occasional digressions into broader fields of political prob lems. Tho scope of its work includes investiga tions, by committees and discussion by members In proper legislative fashion. The work of this n fiL t Wl, f, IH itv. .k)?". 9Sr club suggests that such organizations could be made a source of profit to communities in other states. In commenting on the need and useful ness of such clubs, the Nebraska State Journal says: "We desire to call the attention of the world more particularly to the Lincoln public service club. This organization is setting an example which people in all parts of the state might with profit emulate. ' Would that Nebraska had a thousand such organizations. We do not take enough interest in public questions. The average man would be astonished at the small ness of the number of letters and telegrams which a legislator receives 'from home.' That is because the people are not keeping track as they should. The average man has no idea, we suspect, of the number of crimes and cynics and misanthropes that proceed from ingrown ideas. Such calamities could have been saved by a chance .to air their views. Contrary to the gen eral view and teaching, men do not talk enough. The tongue is for the elimination of ideas, is as necessary to mental health as are the exhal ings of the lungs and skin to bodily safety. Wo provo it by Shakespeare: " 'Thoughts shut up want air, And spoil like bales unopened to the sun.' "The Lincoln public service club has doubtless saved many a human boiler explosion and will save more. We need more such clubs. The newspapers, for want of space, may be unable to broadcast them all, but no matter. The good will have been undiminished by that." A VICTIM OF BAD ADVICE Recent newspaper dispatches contained ac counts of a prolonged fast of a California man who abstained from food for a period of fifty nine days. Commenting on the futility of fol lowing promiscuous advice on health matters, the San Francisco Star says: "Louis Roth, the Palo Alto tailor who fasted two months in order to cure himself of 'chronic Indigestion,' is dead. He will no longer be trou bled by the failure of his digestive organs to do their work. Some time ago he read a book, 'Vi tality, Fasting and Nutrition,' written by Here ward Carington, and determined to try the vir tues of a prolonged fast. When urged. to take food, on the ground that he was endangering his life, Itfe refused, saying that he would eat when his appetite returned. Of course, his appetite did not return. "Professor Swain, of Stanford university, who watched Roth during the long fast, says that death was not unexpected; that 'the insidious sophistry of the book he had read had wormed itself into his imagination and that the book is dangerous. It must be said that Professor Swain's language is very temperate. It is still true that the lawyer who takes his own case generally has a fool for a client, and that the man who undertakes to repair his internal ma chinery has a fool for a patient. That is espe cially true of a person who goes into a long fast with the idea that it will be time enough to eat when his appetite returns." EVILS OF SCHOOL MHjITABISM The evils of school militarism were set forth by N. C. Shaoffer, state superintendent of public schools of Pennsylvania, in a discussion before the department of superintendence of the Na tional Educational association, at its recent moeting in Cincinnati. Professor Shaeffer said "The introduction of militarism into the pub ic schools of the United State3 would be organ ized insanity. When the demand is mado that militarism forms an integral part of vocational training, the teachers distraction reaches a clim ax. If she should succeed in fulfilling this latest requirement the public schools would develop a race of amazons more fierce than the militant suffragists. "Militarism does not develop the sense of duty such as the Sunday school inculcates, but justi fies spying, lying, forging letters, telegrams and signals to mislead the enemy. Having been taught thaMt is right to suspend the decalogue for his country's sake the pupil afterward re peals the ten commandments for his own sake whenever any advantage can thereby be gained in the political or financial world. "The great powers of Europe have come to judgment and are grinding one another to dust and ashes. Their fate should be a warning to the American people not to introduce and foster militarism in the public schools." SELF-SUPPORTING PENAL INSTITUTIONS There is a growing sentiment towards the un dertaking of enterprises that will help to make our state penal institutions not only self-supporting but that will, at the same time, accomplish the physical, mental and moral upbuilding of the state's charges. An editorial in the San An tonio Express gives an idea of the work being done along this line by the state of Arkansas. It says: "Arkansas boasts a penal institutional system superior to that of most of the other states by reason of the fact that crime is as nearly ade quately punished as elsewhere without the tax payers being overburdened by the cost. "The state farm, which is worked by convicts, not only s self-supporting, but the profits aris ing from its operation are sufficient to maintain the state penitentiary and the state reform school, so that the legislature is not called upon to make annual appropriations for the conduct ing of these institutions. "Since the change in the disposition and care of state prisoners and the abolishment of the convict lease system, with its many repulsive features, there has been wholesome difference in penal conditions, says the Little Rock Democrat. Health problems have been Bolved and unjust and inhumane punishments for minor infractions of rules have been supplanted by model, humane methods. Prisoners on the state farm are, to a greater or less extent, upon their honor, and conduct determines whether one who has been kept under guard becomes a 'trusty.' "The health of the prisoners on the farm is maintained by plenty of exercise, fresh air and wholesome food, and there is such appreciation of the confidence reposed in them by the state that the prisoners give the authorities compar atively little trouble and the cost of providing guards is reduced to a minimum. The system is not altogether experimental, having been in op eration for several years, and, according to re port, it is proving its effectiveness more and more each year." . THE PHILOSOPHY OF THE FRONTIER The part played by the pioneer in the develop ment of this nation was set forth in a recent ad dress by Dr. George E. Vincent, president of the University of Minnesota, before the City club of Milwaukee. Dr. Vincent said: "The philosophy which has been dominating the American people for the last 100 years is the philosophy of the frontier. It is the philosophy of a people who go out into tho wilderness to subdue it, to make homes .in a wild country, and bring nature under the control of men. "We call this philosophy individualism, and it is the only philosophy which a people living under frontier conditions can evolve. Individ ualism holds that every man works out his own destiny. There are no complicated problems to bo considered. "An individualist is one who grapples with na ture in his daily life. When he succeeds he is to be praised for his success, because upon him self alone depends the outcome of his work.. If failure comes tohim he is to blame, for no one has been associated with him, and no one can be accredited for the failure. "On the frontier we must be everything. Frontier life makes a man a jack of all trades. Is it any wonder then, that the Americans of to day are self-sufficient? When a man is able to do many things, and do them all well, he is af fronted at the appearance of a man who says . that he is an expert and that he knows how to do Just one thing, and do it thoroughly. 'Self-sufficiency of the American people, fos tered by their frontier experience is seen every- .. -a !. " f..iAi(