Walkerton Independent, Volume 33, Number 47, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 8 May 1908 — Page 2

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JUST now there is no more important question before the American public than the general improvement of the highways to the standard of twentieth century requirements. The volume of traffic over the public highways is equal to or exceeds that of all the railways. The food products of the world pass over these , roads to reach the market. Bad roads 1 Interfere with the regular distribution of these products, resulting in an erratic *2PwK and Inconstant supply for a fixed and regular demand. Bad roads have necessitated the prac- • tice of rushing the crops to market all in a heap; taking but two or three months instead of spreading this delivery over six to ten months. ScientJQcally, farm products should be moved from producer consumer as they are heeded for consumption, but the farmer will find the roads in the winter and spring bad and at times practically impassable, and for this very reason he hurries his grain to market as soon as harvested. This causes congestion on the railroads and works havoc In business conditions. The “moving of the crops" requires an enormous amount of money, and a general upheaval in financial centers every fall is the result of this sudden drain. The hurried disposition of the year’s crop has necessitated the building of large storage houses in the grain centers to care for it. In Chicago the storage charge is nine cents per bushel per year; the carrying capacity of the elevators of that city alone is about 85,000,000 bushels, representing a storage charge of over $5,000,000 per year. The passing of the food supply into the control of the grain kings means a loss to the farmer and an additional and unnecessary cost to the consumer. The general improvement of the highways of the country is vastly more important to the people as a whole than the building of the Panama canal, the ’mprovement of the inland waterways, or the irrigation of the semi-arid lands of the west. Those who have traveled know that the roads throughout Europe are good; the same is true of

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Australia and New Zealand, countries newer than our own, less populous, and with nothing like our aggregate wealth. The fact that the rest of the world has good roada while we have bad ones is significant: it shows that the plan we have been pursuing has not been successful. In three hundred years less than eight per cent of the highways of our country have been permanently improved and at the rate we are going it would require'nearly four thousand years to complete the job. So as roadbuilders the people of Che United States have been a failure. This is all the more surprising when we consider that they are conspicuously successful in every other line of human endeavor. Millions upon millions of dollars have been w'asted in every state in the union upon the public roads by ill-timed or misdirected effort and with really very little to show for the expenditure. It is only within the last ten or fifteen y^prs that any real progress has been made along the Ifhe of permanently improving the conditions. The trouble is we have been endeavoring to untangle the snarl by pulling the wrong string. Without any reason for doing so, the farmers of the country, from Maine to California, from the very first assumed that the country roads belonged to them and it was their business to improve them, and this misconception held sway for nearly 300 years. A few years ago a man in New Jersey made a discovery. It was that the highways are public property, as much so as the state house. This raised the question: “Why, if the highways are public property, should not the public take care of its own; why should not the state and all property therein contribute to building the roads?” Everybody is interested in them, everyoouy is affected through the markets by the road conditions; they are benefited by good roads and injured by bad ones. The new thought spread throughout the state and finally New Jersey led the way to better conditions by passing a law by which the state should contribute one-third the money required to improve the roads. Other states followed, increasing the proportion to one-half and in one case, Massachusetts, to three-fourths. In many cases of the New England states farm property is only a very small portion of the total taxable property, in some cases not ten per cent., and when the cost of load improvement was distributed over all property of the state, the burden was hardly felt, and yet immense sums were raised for road purposes. Best of ail, the roads ’.-.ere built under proper supervision, instead of leaving it to the inexperienced hands of the local path master. Ten years ago New York state began in a small way to aid and appropriated $50,000 to start the work. The plan grew in favor so rapidly that within five years the state by an overwhelming vote passed a constitutional amendment providing for an issue of $50,000,000 in bonds to help bui-d the highways. What a record! In five years from fifty thousand to fifty millions! The tax necessary to pay the interest on this enormous sum and then finally pay off the bonds will hardly be felt by the property owners of the Empire state owing to their immense list of taxable property. Ohio, after 40 years of building roads by the old plan of local taxation and bond issues, in which the farmer had to pay practically the whole bill, has passed a state aid law which will enable it to build three miles of improveo roads where it has been building one. without any increase whatever in taxation upon farm property. Virginia is the iirs, southern state to join the state aid column tor got d roads. Kentucky is alive to the situation and is taking steps to change its constitution in order to .> in a position to spread the road tax over ail the piopert.. in the state. In c'-taln parts of t re country, notably in the Misislsslpp' valley, the e i.-> an entire misconception as to . v.-e t :>L aid '•la?, of toad budding means. Some

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imagine the state would take control of the highways, build expensive roads and tax the people to pat for them; others that it is a scheme to force road building against the wishes of the farmers. Nothing could be : farther from the truth. The state does not in any i manner, under a state aid law, interfere with the ab- “ solute local control of the highways. The voters of every township decide whether any roads shall be im--1 proved, what roads, to what extent, when it shall be done, if at all. The state has absolutely no voice in the matter. If, however, the township, by a majority vote, ‘ decides to build a toad under the state aid plan, it makes application to the state for that purpose; the ■ state engineer thereupon visits the locality, goes over i the road proposed to be improved with the local authorities, and decides upon the character of the improvement best suited to the conditions. He then prepares i plans and specifications and when these are approved ‘ by the highway commissioners or other properly constituted local authorities, the contract is let to the lowest responsible bidder and the work is then done under the supervision of the state engineer. This insures proper i construction and that means durability and low cost ; to maintain the road afterward. Under a state aid law not a rod of road could be ; built unless the residents of a township decided to do so. Not a dollar of state money could be expended unless the farmers who live in the rural township . voted for improvements. If it should be alleged that state aid was a plan to I compel railroads, corporations, merchants and matiu- ' facturers to help build the roads, it would not be far ; from the truth. Under state aid the farmers control the situation; if they decide to improve the roads the other people are obliged to help pay the bill. ; In order to build roads cheaply they should be built extensively. It costs a great deal more proportionately to build a half mile of road than it does to build ten half miles. No contractor cares for a small ■ job but for a large one competition is keen. It takes just as much time and bother to get ready to build half । a mile of road as it does to build ten miles. By building in the larger quantities from 20 to 25 per cent, in cost of construction can be saved. As roads properly built will last for a great many years they should be built as school houses and court houses are built, viz: by a bond issue; thus a township under state aid Could build 10, 15 or 20 miles of roads in one year, have the roads to use, and spread the payment of the same over say 10 or 20 years. If this is done and the state aid plan prevails, there will be very little, if any, increase in taxation. Few people have any idea to what extent bad roads interfere with travel and how they affect the business of the merchant in the country town. The Illinois highway commission has gathered some very valuable data upon the effect of road and weather conditions upon highway traffic. Observations were made at 72 well distributed points in the state and an actual count ■ was made by the vehicles passing upon different days OOr/V':nonrcxVSC)OOmC>DCODC(X)C^^

I The following table compiled from figures gathered by the agricultural department in 1904 shows O the percentage of improved roadways in each state: Q Alabama .... 3.43 lowa 1.62 Nevada 50 South Dakota 25 q Arizona 3.62 Kansas 1.26 New Hampshire 8.55 Tennessee 8.74 Q Arkansas 64 Kentucky 16.60 New Jersey 1f.32 Texas 1-75 Q California 18.87 Louisiana 13 New Mexico ^-61 Utah 8.57 X Colorado 58 Maine 9.10 New York 7.96 Vermont 13.45 Q Connecticut 16.75 Maryland 9.35 North Carolina Z. 02 Virginia 3.08 Q Delaware 2.20 Massachusetts 45.59 North Dakota .35 W . ishington 6.17 Q District of C01umbia.. .68.58 Michigan 10.13 Ohio 33.78 w Virginia 97 O Florida 5.09 Minnesota 7.87 Oklahoma ». ' . 16 72 X Georgia ... 2.85 Mississippi 38 Oregon <-&a . “ X I(i;l ho 1.16 Missouri 2.52 Pennsylvania 2.10 doming 1.4 b V Illinois 8.41 Montana 28 Rhode Island 43.26 O Indiana 34.94 Nebraska 02 South Carolina 4.48 The United States .. nil Q . x n:yXKXXXJOCoocxxxx.xDGW(XX}oooooaDOOQOooooc^

throughout each month of the year, covering all kinds of weather and road conditions. The report shows that traffic over stone or gravel roads was fairly uniform throughout the year, while upon the earth roads it was subject to the widest variations. The following figures are significant and tell more forcibly how great is the burden of bad roads than anything else can possibly do. The Clear Lake earth road leading into Springfield. Illinois, showed an average traffic for four days in March, 1906 ot 65^4 vehicles per day. Over the same road in June and July the average was 359 vehicles! On the same days in Peoria. 60 miles away, under the same weather conditions but over a hard road, the traffic for March was 166, and the average for June and July 153. Observations at Champaign over an earth road showed the average for January. February and March to be 63, as against 200 for September and October. The count at Decatur over a gravel road was March ami April, 240; July and August, 275. Over an earth road leading into Sullivan, the count for January, February and March was 54; August and September, 316. At Elgin on a hard road, the report showed 166 for March, and an. average for June and July of 154. At Effingham on an earth road, March and April, 109: August and September, 399. At Centralia over an earth road, March, 28; June, 187. Think of this. While delivering an address upon good roads, the writer was once interrupted and asked if he would favor taxing the widow’s cottage to help build the roads. He answered that he certainly would, as the annual tax would probably not exceed 10 or 15 cents, and he gave the following illustration of how bad roads burden the people: A woman goes into a grocery store for a dozen eggs and a pound of butter. When told the prices, she protests. The grocer in defense, says: “Well, you see, madam, the roads are so bad now, very few’ farmers aro coming to town, so butter and eggs are scarce She pays three cents more for the eggs and fotjffc ents more for the butter, ami this seven cents repr^iniTs her bad road tax paid that evening. This is repeated from time to time throughout the year, not only in her case but in hundreds of others in that town and in thousands of towns throughout the length and breadth of the land. There is no doubt that the woman in question would benefit through good roads by at least ten times the amount of the tax on her cottage. There is another misconception that is widespread and is holding back road improvements, and that is that a permanent stone or gravel road cannot be successfully built upon the rich black loam soil of the Mississippi valley. We sometimes hear of parties who have tried it and In a few’ years the stone or gravel has sunken into the mud out of sight. Any experienced engineer knows that there is no difficulty whatever in building a good durable and easily maintained road upOOOOOOOOOOOOOC CWOOOOCKXDOCCCWCCCOCCOCCO

on this soil. The only thing necessary is to thoroughly tile the road and give it ’proper crown so the water will readily run oft. Roads have been successfully built upon this soil all over Indiana, and if successful there, why not elsewhere? The stone or gravel covering must be watertight, thoroughly compacted and with a sufficient slope to cause the water to quickly run off. The road material serves two purposes—to furnish a smooth, hard surface, so it will give the least possible resistance to traffic, and second, to shed water and keep the earth beneath the stone or gravel dry. Water is the only natural enemy of roads, but water is a coward and will run away if given a chance. If a road is flat it does not shed water and will break up and go to pieces. It requires three or four times the expense to maintain a flat road it does one properly crowned. There are no difficulties whatever in building roads successfully on the black loam of the corn belt of the Mississippi valley; in fact, it costs less to build roads there than In Massachusetts where stone abounds. This is due to the fact that in the corn belt there is very little grading to be done, few hills to be cut down or hollows to be tilled, and less bridging. The roads will cost less money, even it the road material has to be shipped 50 or 100 miles by train. The railways are benefited by road building and stand ready to contribute to that end by making special rates upon road material. It would be interesting to take a concrete example of state aid. apply it to a typical farm in one of the centra! western states and see exactly what state aid means so far as taxes upon that farm are concerned. For the purpose of illustration, let us take an average farm of 160 acres in the corn belt of Illinois, and see what the effect upon the taxes on that farm would be if the state should undertake a very vigorous campaign of road building under state aid. one that contemplates ^tn expenditure of the enormous sum of $50,000,000 in ten years—enough money to improve all the main highways of the sta >, connect every community with the market town and county seat and give a complete network ot good roads from Galena to Cairo: the plan being that the state should pay one-half the expense and the townships or road districts the others. 11 $a0,000,000 were expended in ten years, the

is in the state property to the total assessed valuation of $1,250,01)0.000. To raise $2,500,000 a year, or $25,000,000 in ten years, would require a two mill tax upon this property; so a two-mill tax applied to all the property of the state of Illinois at the present assessed valuation (and not taking into account the possible increase in value thereof) would produce the sum required. The recoids show that the taxing value of an . average 100 acre farm in the corn belt of Illinois is a little less than $2,000, the actual value being approximately SIO,OOO. A two-mill state tax on this farm assessed on the value of $2,000 would be exactly $4 a year and no more, and in ten years the state tax would be S4O, which would be the farm's proportion of the $25,000,000 total. Where this farm would pay $lO. one single corporation in the city of Chicago would have to pay $570,000. another $190,000, and the railways of the state over two millions of dollars. Thus we see by a state levy of two mills for ten years, one-half of the $50,000,000 is provided for. The other half must be raised by local taxation or by a bond issue. Let us assume that the township in which the farm in question is located votes bonds to the full constitutional limit, that is, goes into debt just as far as it can go and pays the highest interest that the law permits it to pay. The limit of the bond issue is five per .cent, of the assessed valuation, so the amount of bonds resting upon the farm would be five per cent, of $2,000, or exactly SIOO, payable one-tenth each year, with interest at five per cent. The total interest on this bond issue, so far as this farm is concerned, for the ten years would be $27.50. Thus, if we add the bonds SIOO.OO Interest on bonds 27.50 And the state tax of 40.00 We have a total tax on the farm of. ...$167.50 which is exactly the amount of the tax that, would be levied and collected upon this farm for both state aid aMd to pay off the road bonds and interest. This amount is about 10^2 cents per acre per year and the total charge against the farm for the whole ten years would be $1.05 per acre. This amount of money paid by the farm under the state aid plan would enable the state to expend $50,000,000 upon its highways, and the expenditure of that sum would add to the value of farm property at least five and probably ten times as much as the respective farms would be taxed in order to pay the bill. In Illinois less than one-third of the property of the state is represented by farms. Under the present plan two-thirds of the property of the state escapes taxation for toad purposes. The state aid plan is equitable, successful and has proven popular in every state where it has been tried, and the farmers who first oppose it are soon its strongest advocates and can be found upon the firing line every year asking for in creased appropriations to build the roads. The residents of the towns and cities must live upon the farm products; as the roads are used for de livering the same and their necessities are such that the delivery of these products should be regularly and promptly made—and good roads are necessary to ac complish this—it seems only fair that the residents of the towns and cities should contribute to building th • roads, and they in fact seldom object to doing so. The above example of the Illinois farm and how it would be affected by taxation under state aid would apply generally to every state in the Mississippi valley. In the poorer parts of the country where the land is less fertile, the state tax would be correspondingly less, in fact in the southern part of Illinois the tax on a 160-acre faint, instead of being four dollars a year, in many cases would not exceed a dollar to a dollar and a half. So the burden is measured by the ability of the people to pay it. (Copyright, inn. by Wii,-ht A- I’atte son

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