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sentiment in that great city in favor of a local ancillary commission, to take charge of and control the intraurban municipal utilities of that city, and, I, therefore, favor the creation of such an ancillary commission for the city of Chicago to take charge of and control the intraurban utilities of that city.

TRESPASSES UPON RAILROAD RIGHT OF WAY.

During the years 1911, 1912 and 1913, 1,497 lives were lost and 1,470 persons were maimed while trespassing upon railroad right of way in the State of Illinois.

The number of trespassers on railroad right of way, killed and injured, is increasing year by year. In 1913 alone, 510 trespassers were killed and 521 were injured in this State.

In the interest of the protection of human life and limb rather than protection to railroad interests, I believe that a law should be enacted making trespassing on railroad property a misdemeanor. It is now merely an infraction of civil rights. Such a law would tend to discourage trespassing and result in the saving of life and limb.

LEGISLATIVE REFERENCE BUREAU.

By an Act, effective July 1, 1913, the Forty-eighth General Assembly created the Legislative Reference Bureau, of which I became ex officio chairman, and upon which was imposed the duty of collecting, classifying, and indexing information which may be of value to the Legislature in considering and constructing legislation.

You will find that this work has been diligently prosecuted and there is at your disposal, as a result of the work of eighteen months, a large collection of classified data upon most of the subjects which will come before you.

The methods of this bureau have been modeled after similar bureaus in New York, Pennsylvania, Connecticut, Wisconsin, and other states.

Perhaps the most important duty imposed upon the Legislative Reference Bureau is the preparation of a detailed budget of the appropriations which the officers of the several departments of the State government report are required for their several departments for the next biennium, together with a comparative statement of the funds appropriated by the preceding General Assembly for the same purpose. This task has been carefully and most completely accomplished. A classification of accounts has been prepared after a study of the best public accounting practice and, for the first time in the history of Illinois, the State Legislature will be furnished early in the session with full information concerning the money asked to be appropriated, particularly as to whether the amount sought is an increase or decrease over preceding appropriations, and as to the definite purpose for which the money is to be used. Estimates have been made of the revenue from all sources which may be counted upon in the next two years, so that an intelligent comparison of proposed expenditures with income may be made by every member of the General Assembly.

PRISON REFORM.

Prison reform in Illinois in past years has not kept pace with the progress in the management of our other institutions. In my experience as a judge on the bench, I have been given an insight into the workings of our criminal laws, which has created in me sincere pity for the man who has gone wrong and an earnest desire that the punishment, inflicted by the State, shall not needlessly degrade him and rob him of all ambition, but rather shall assist and lend encouragement to his efforts toward rehabilitation.

To this end I have lent my influence, in the prison administration of the State, to the introduction of more humane methods of dealing with offenders, and the establishment, so far as found practical, of the honor system.

Real progress has been made in all the penal institutions in this direction. In the Illinois State Reformatory, at Pontiac, corporal punishment has been eliminated and a policy of severe restrictions has been replaced by the elimination of the task system of enforced work under penalty and the substitution of the piece work system with rewards for proficiency; the allowance of one hour's recreation each day for all inmates and the development of institution athletic teams, a drill corps, and frequent entertainments. In each of the penitentiaries, recreation periods have been instituted and repressive rules have been changed to extend to inmates' privileges which make for greater self-respect and tend to reform rather than degrade. The result of these changes has fully met expectations.

The improvement so far made should be continued and Illinois should do its part toward assisting in the scientific research into the causes of crime which is now engaging the attention of many other states and learned societies. It would be of great value to the prison wardens and to the Board of Pardons to have the advice of trained psychologists as to the mental condition, the trustworthiness, and the possibilities of reform of the inmates, to guide them in extending liberties and in granting paroles. This, not with the idea of extending leniency toward defectives, but rather in order that those who are incapable of living honestly, if set free, may be detained in custody and those who possess the possibilities of successful careers in honest occupations may be given encouragement and another chance.

For these reasons, I recommend to your careful consideration measures, seeking to provide for the prisons the assistance of a psychological laboratory for the study of criminals and the causes of crime, and would suggest that provisions be made for cooperation between such laboratory, if it be established, and the psychopathic laboratory of the State hospital service now maintained at Kankakee.

PUBLIC CHARITIES.

Upon the public charities of the State a greater proportion of our revenue is expended than on any other single object except public education.

In the last two years, the increase in the population of the institutions under the Board of Administration has exceeded the normal rate. For 1913 it was 4 per cent, and for 1914, 4.2 per cent. The appropriations for maintenance for the biennium 1913-1915 were based upon an estimated increase of 3 per cent. In addition there has been an abnormal increase in the cost of food, which is the chief item of expense in the maintenance of the institutions. Nevertheless, by wise economy and careful management, the institutions have been maintained at the usual high standard and a substantial saving has been made in the maintenance fund.

The Forty-eighth General Assembly appropriated $2,427,304.67 for the continuation of the physical rehabilitation of these institutions and for the construction of the new State Hospital at Alton and a State Epileptic Colony which I urged upon the Legislature in my inaugural address.

The $1,000,000.00 appropriated for these new institutions has been expended or contracted for. After careful investigation, the Board of Administration selected a site for the epileptic colony at Dixon, Illinois, in a beautiful location on the Rock River, and contracts have been let for the construction of nine buildings. At Alton work is progressing upon five buildings. You will be asked to appropriate $500,000, for the completion of each of these new institutions and to provide a fund for the maintenance ⚫ of patients, as both will be ready for occupancy before long.

Owing to the large amount provided for buildings by the last Assembly, which was more than sixty per cent of the amount which had been expended in the previous eight years, the total request of the Board of Administration for all purposes for the next two years is $397,632 less than two years ago, and this in spite of the maintenance increase made necessary by the abnormal growth in population and provision for two new institutions.

It is with sincere pleasure that I can report conditions in the eighteen charitable institutions to have improved in the last two years in all those particulars which increase the comfort and happiness of the wards of the State.

In economical business management, the Illinois institutions are not surpassed by any private corporation. No private sanitarium in this State can furnish medical attention to the mentally afflicted, of a higher standard than that given to the inmates of the State hospitals. No endowed home or school gives more careful training, supervision, nor more humane treatment than is received by the wards of the State in our schools for delinquents, while the institutions for the deaf and blind, the soldiers' homes, and soldiers' orphans' homes are not surpassed anywhere.

Most important in the improvements effected in these institutions during my administration has been the abolition, in the schools under the Board of Administration, of corporal punishment. The old policy of repression and severity has been replaced by patient, persevering encouragement of the better qualities in inmates and freedom from petty restraint that humane treatment, in fact, which is advocated by the best informed students of delinquency as being most effective for the building up of self-control and self restraint.

In the State hospitals all mechanical restraint of patients, including seclusion, has been abolished. Patience and kindness combined with the best curative treatment known to medical science, have worked wonders in obtaining discipline hitherto thought impossible to maintain without straps, straight-jackets, and close confinement.

The merit system among the employees is being faithfully and conscientiously enforced. The promotional system is in vogue in all branches of the hospital service. The "hospital tramp" is being weeded out. Experience, fidelity, honest and faithful work, humanity, and decency are recognized, encouraged, and rewarded. Standards of living and employment are being elevated with all who serve the State. Wages of employees, particularly those receiving the smallest pay, have been increased in all the institutions. The eight-hour system has been adopted by the Board of Administration in several institutions and will be extended to others.

In the adoption of the eight-hour system for hospital service, Illinois is the pioneer in the United States. Better living quarters are being provided for the employees in the institutions. In return for all these considerations the State demands the highest degree of efficiency and humanity from its employees.

GAME AND FISH CONSERVATION.

Consolidation of the former Fish Commission and Game Department, pursuant to my recommendation, in the bill creating the Game and Fish Conservation Commission, effective July 1, 1913, has given substantial proof of the wisdom of combining independent State agencies which handle work that is closely related.

With an appropriation considerably less than that expended by the former departments, the newly created commission has organized an efficient warden force and conducted a vigorous and effective conservation campaign. By strict enforcement of the law requiring licenses and the development of a thorough system of accounting for collection of fines and confiscation proceeds, the new department has been made more than self-sustaining, the cost through these contributions falling upon persons directly interested in the results of its work.

The most important conservation work in the care of this department relates to the fishing industry of the State. Our lakes and streams furnish an enormous supply of excellent and cheap food. Since it is available for all who come to take it, free of charge, wise and strict regulation is required to prevent the wholesale destruction by wasteful methods of this common property. The problem of protecting the natural supply, and increasing it through scientific propagation, has been undertaken in an effective manner by the commission. Large quantities of fry and fingerlings have been placed in the waters of the State during the last season and permanent ponds and hatcheries have been provided for the continuation and extension of this work.

I commend to your careful consideration, as of great importance to the public, all measures submitted for the purpose of improving the present methods of conserving this important natural resource.

Preservation of the game, while not so important from the standpoint of food supply, is of great interest to the hunters of this State, who take out more hunting licenses every year than in any other State in the Union. After years of experience with the State game farm in propagating English pheasants in the hope of adding that bird to the game birds of the State, the commission has reached the conclusion that this expensive effort will never succeed, and recommends that the State game farm be abandoned.

During the last two years, on an appropriation of $12,000, only a fraction of what had hitherto been spent, the operations of the farm have been continued and the distributions of birds and eggs throughout the State has been kept up. A careful canvass has been made through the game wardens, and the conclusion is reached that in spite of the large number of pheasants liberated in the past, there has been little or no increase, and no increase can be hoped for because of the unfavorable conditions in this State.

As a substitute for the game farm, it is recommended that in each county reservations be established-tracts of land rented for a nominal sum -on which grain and cover can be provided at a small cost where the native game birds can find food and protection during the winter and the breeding season, free from molestation or destruction by hunters or others. The expense of maintaining such reservations will be but a fraction of the cost of the State game farm, and, in this recommendation of the commission, I

concur.

RIVERS AND LAKES COMMISSION.

In the work of conserving the natural resources of the State, the Rivers and Lakes Commission has an important part. Public bodies of water are of vital importance to the people, and it is necessary that the State have an active agency to protect such bodies against encroachment, to prevent the drainage of valuable lakes, the obstruction of river flow, and the pollution of rivers and lakes. The much extended power, given to the Rivers and Lakes Commission by the amendment to the Rivers and Lakes Act, in force July 1, 1913, have been put to valuable use in the last eighteen months. The report of that commission details the work accomplished in the prevention of stream pollution and the investigation of complaints of encroachments on public waters of the State. The service of the commission in superintending the construction of State levees at Cairo, Shawneetown, and Mound City, Illinois, for which the Forty-eighth General Assembly appropriated $339,000, merits commendation for business-like efficiency. The work was undertaken immediately the appropriation became available; it was planned and conducted according to the best engineering practice, and was finished well within the authorized cost and in ample time to withstand the high waters of the spring of 1914.

FOOD INSPECTION.

In the vital matter of protecting the public from the peril of impure and unsanitary food, the State Food Commission has made noticeable progress along the most profitable line of endeavor in this work-the education of the public.

With only eighteen inspectors to cover the entire State, it is obvious that this department can accomplish its purpose only with intelligent cooperation from municipal and county officers and from the general public.

Realizing this, the State Food Commissioners has devoted particular attention to enlisting the assistance of local officers, obtaining the enactment of municipal ordinances for the protection of the food and milk supply of cities, and to a campaign of lectures and newspaper publicity for the purpose of instructing the public on the provisions of the law and methods of insuring its enforcement. Moving picture exhibitions have been used with good results and the volunteer assistance of newspapers throughout the State has been of great value in this campaign.

The report of the State Food Commissioner calls particular attention to the widespread practice of using fraudulent weights and measures in the

retail sale of foods. This is a fraud which merits the severest condemnation and the most stringent measures for suppression.

I recommend that a law be passed permitting adequate punishment of persons guilty of this offense and empowering the State Food Inspectors to enforce its provisions. I also recommend the careful consideration of all measures relative to the protection of the public food supply from adulteration and insanitary conditions and the improvement of the present methods of law enforcement.

I am pleased to call your attention to the fact that in this department for the year ending September 30, 1914, that there was a saving of expenditures over the preceding year of over $17,000; while the collections made by the department in the same time were over $10,000 in excess of the preceding year.

NATIONAL GUARD AND NAVAL RESERVE.

During my administration, our State Military and Naval Establishment has undergone changes in organization necessary to conform to the detail of organization found, by the Federal Government, to promote the highest efficiency.

Progress has been made not only in the character and amount of military equipment but in the method of caring and accounting for military stores.

Joint camps of instruction, both within and without the State, participated in by our State forces in conjunction with Federal troops and those of other States, have combined to secure greatly increased efficiency.

The inadequate housing, both of our troops and their military equipment, has been for years a serious handicap to proper training, and has been an almost constant source of complaint. There are at the present time authorized and either being planned or in the course of construction, nine armories for the proper housing of troops and equipment.

The funds appropriated for the National Guard and Naval Reserve have been so advantageously expended that were our troops called into service within the State for State purposes, or needed in National defense, the entire military force could be mobilized at the State mobilization camp at Springfield within forty-eight hours, equipped for field service and prepared for active duty.

HIGHWAY IMPROVEMENT.

In accordance with the recommendation made in my inaugural message, the Forty-eighth General Assembly passed a State Aid Road and Bridge Act, which went into effect July 1, 1913, and has now been under trial for eighteen months.

This Act changed our entire system of highway construction and maintenance, and the first duty of the commissioners, appointed under it, was to construct a new organization for the State and for every county desiring to operate under the Act.

A court test of the constitutionality of the Act caused much delay but so vigorously and successfully has the work been carried on that one hundred county superintendents of highways, whose qualifications have been proved in competitive examinations, are now in office. State aid routes in ninety-four counties have been agreed upon between the county boards and the State commission. A complete uniform system of auditing and accounting for all road and bridge moneys has been installed, allotments from the State aid road and bridge fund have been made to all counties that have qualified therefor, and contracts have been awarded on seventy-four sections of roads having a total length of 91.27 miles.

In many parts of the State work has been completed on sections of State aid roads and the public has had an opportunity to inspect the type of road which the Highway Commission has determined to require. This is a finished driveway thirty feet wide, divided into a pavement proper of brick or concrete from ten to eighteen feet wide, with earth or macadam shoulders on each side to make up the required width. The contracts which have been let for State aid roads are distributed among forty-eight counties.

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