- m v - MABCH 3, 1905 The Commoner. 11 TWij"WwWAiWw'tlVilWiWwj mmmmwmwimmmmm'' Newspaper Guessing Contests Illegal j WWWWlWW)MIWWW In June, 1903, noting the growing prevalence of the "newspaper guess ing contest," Mr. Bryan wrote a letter to Postmaster General Payne. Mr Bryan took the position that these so-called contests were, more demoralizing than the ordinary lottery, as well as less lair, and asked if the postoffice depart ment had issued any order on the sub ject. The letter follows: Postmaster General Payne, Washing ton, D. C. Dear Sir: I enclose a cir cular sent out by a St. Louis company which is conducting a guessing contest based upon the number of admittances to the Louisiana Purchase Exposition. You will see that the sum of $85,500 is offered in prizes, the estimates being sold for 25 cents each, or Ave for a dollar. The company is soliciting the aid of newspapers throughout the coun try to advertise the contest. It is ap parent from the advertisement that this is even more demoralizing than the ordinary lottery, because the low price of the ticket and the large capi tal prizes promised are more alluring to those who are susceptible to the temptations offered by a lottery, and because the contestant has no way of knowing how many competitors he has. In the public lottery the prizes usually bear a fixed and known propor tion to the amount received for tick ets, but in this case the company may take in ten or a hundred times the THE VALUE OF CHARCOAL Fw Pcoplu Knew How Useful it is in Preserving Health and Beauty Nearly everybody knows that char coal is the safest and most" efficient disinfectant and purifier in nature, but few realize its value when taken into the human system for the same clean sing purpose. Charcoal is a remedy .that the more you take of it the better; it is not a drug at all, b.ut simply absorbs the gases and impurities always preseni in the stomach and intestines and car ries them out of the system. ' Charcoal sweetens the breath after smoking, drinking, or after eating onions and other odorous vegetables. Charcoal effectually clears and im proves the complexion, it whitens the teeth and further acts as a natural and eminently safe cathartic. It absorbs the injurious gases which collect in the stomach and bowels; it disinfects" the mouth and throat from the poison of catarrh. All druggists sell charcoal in one form or another, but probably the best charcoal and the most for the money Js in Stuart's Charcoal Lozenges; they are composed of the finest powdered Willow charcoal, and other harmless antiseptics in tablet form or rather in the form of large, pleasant tasting loz enges, the charcoal being mixed with honey. The daily use of these lozenges will soon tell in a much improved condi tion of the general health, better com plexion, sweeter breath, and purer blood, and the beauty of it is, that ro possible harm can result from their cci-tinued use. but on the contrary, great benefit. A Buffalo physician in speaking of the benefits of charcoal, says: "I ad vise Stuart's Charcoal Lozenges to ail patients suffering from gas in stom ach and 'bowels, and ''to clear the com plexion and purify the breath, mouth and throat; I also believe the liver is greatly benefited by the daily use of them; they cost but twenty-five cents a box at drug stores and al though in some sense a patent prepara tion, yet I believe I get more and better charcoal in - Stuart's Charcoal Lozenges .than .in. any of the ordinary charcoal .tablets.". amount paid out in prizes. The con cluding paragraph of the advertise ment discloses tho gambling character of the institution. It reads as follows: "A good investment. Better than stocks and bonds. Wo are receiving from shrewd business men from the large trading centers, monthly ordere for certificates, they claiming that the investment is safer and thn. nnssthn. ,ity of large gain greater than invest ments in bonds, life insurance or any of the speculative stocks offered on the boards of trade in the various commer cial centers. Most of them purchase certificates systematically, that is, send in every month for from one to five dollars' worth. Almost every one can economize a few cents a day, and the funds thus saved can be Invested in certificates, and with a hundred or more certificates in your possession you are likely to wake up some morning and find yourself the lucky possessor of an independent fortune. It hardly seems reasonable that with a hundred certificates one could miss ALL of the 1,880 prizes." Please let me know whether the de partment has issued any order on the subject and whether or not such a non- test is regarded as a violation of the anti-lottery laws. Yours truly, W. J. BRYAN. Mr. Bryan's letter was referred by Postmaster General Payne to C. H. Robb, assistant attorney general for the postoffice department, who made the following reply: Office of the Assistant Attorney Gen eral for the Postoffice Department, Washington, D. C, June 23, 1903. Your communication of the 10th inst. ad dressed to the postmaster general, sub mitting a circular of the World's Fair Contest company, S't. Louis, Missouri, and expressing the view that the prize scheme advertised therein is a lottery, has been referred to this office. It is unquestionable that the effect upon -the public of these so-called guessing contests considering the elaborate plan upon which they are op erated, the very large prizes offered, etc. is almost as pernicious as that of ordinary lotteries, and it is the disposi tion of the postoffice department to scrutinize very carefully all such schemes and to deny the use of the United States mails where authority of law can be found for so doing. You of course understand, however, that in all such cases the department must be governed by decisions of the federal courts and opinions of law officers of the government. In this same connection your atten tion is directed to the 'opinion of At torney General Miller, 19 Opinions of Attys-Gen, 679; opinion of Attorney General Griggs, 23 Opinions of Attys Gen. 207; opinion of Attorney General Knox, 23 Opinions of Attys-Gen. 492; and to the decision of the United States circuit court for the southern district of New York, in United States vs. R03 enblum, set forth in the inclosed cir cular. From a consideration of the author ities above cited you will observe that the scheme to which you call attention is beyond the reach of the postoffice department, unless it shall develon that fraud is being practiced in its op erations. Very respectfully C. H. ROBB, Assistant Attorney General for the Postoffice department. Hon. William J. Bryan, Lincoln, Neb. On November 2, 1904, the postmaster general, aroused by the growing pro test against the eVIl3 of the "newspaper guessing contest" referred the matter to Attorney General Moody, and The Commoner takes great pleasure in pi-inting in full the opinion written by Mr. Moody. That opinion is in line with There ci7e Many Imitations of Baker's Cocoa -.ind Baker's Chocolate Mh eWTYB. .FBkF "ncF ft I If. Ill Hittn Don't be misled by them i Our trade-mark is on every package of genuine goods. Under the decisions of several United States Courts, no other chocolate or cocoa than Walter Baker &r Cos is en titled to be sold as "Baker's Lookioi ihuTcodcMuk Cocoa" or "Baker's Chocolate" Our handsomely illustrated recipe book sent free. Walter Baker & Co. Ltd. Established J 780 Dorchester, Massachusetts 45 Highest Awards in Europe and America all that The Commoner has said in opposition to this insidious form of gambling and beara out the contention made by Mr. Bryan in his letter to the postmaster general in June, 1902. At torney General Moody's opinion is as follows: Department of Justice, Washington, D. C., November 28, 1904. The honor able the Postmaster General. Sir: I have the honor to acknowledge the re ceipt, on the 17th instant, of your let ter dated November 2, relative to so called "guessing contests," and asking an expression of my opinion as to whether you have authority to exclude from the mails advertisements and lit erature relating to the World's Fair Contest Company, which you refer to as typical examples of "guessing con tests." The scheme of the World's Fair Con test Company, as stated by you, is as follows: It offers ?85,500, divided into 1,180 prizes, to the persons submitting the nearest estimates of the total number of paid admissions to the World's Fair at S't. Louis, Mo., from its opening to its close. For the privilege of submit ting an estimate in this enterprise 25 cents Is charged, jr for $1 five estimates may be submitted. This scheme has been syndicated; that is to say, a verv large number of magazines and other publications are advertising It, and giv ing to their subscribers the privilege of submitting guesses. The National Contest Company, ac cording to the advertisement accom panying your letter, 'proposes to distrib utes 3,415 cash prizes, aggregating ?100, 000, to "3,415 men, women and chil dren who can estimate nearest to the popular vote cast for the winning can didate for the. presidency of the United States for 1904,' the largest prize amounting to $25,000, and, the .smallest to $5.00. I assume for the purpose of,this opin ion that the mails are still being used to bring these contests to a close. The question is whether these schemes are within the language of sections 3929 and 4041 cf the Revised Statutes, which iri effect authorize you to deny the use of the mails to "any lottery, gift enterprise, or scheme for the distribution jf money, or of any real or personal property by lot, chance, or drawing of any kind." Similar schemes for the distribution of prizes have been considered by my predecessors, and the conclusion reached that inasmuch as "calculation, foresight, knowledge, Inquiry, and in formation enabled the participants to approximate the correct result, the use of the mails in promoting such enter prises was not a violation ol the law in question." (10 Op. A. G., 679; 23 Op, A. G., 207 and 492.) Tho conclusion reached in these, opinions rested upon the theory that since the distribution of prizes under the schemes considered was not dew pendent wholly upon chance sucbj schemes were not within the law. Sinc these opinions were written section; 3929 and 4041 hae been construed bj the Supreme Court of the United States! in Public Clearing House vs. Coyne (194 U. S., 497) ; and since the decision in the Coyne case the court of appeals of New York in c unanimous decision (August 5, 1904), in the case of Peo-. pie vs. Lavin, has ruled that a guess-; ing contest identical in principle tcf those under consideration is within, the New York statute, which, a3 thej (Continued on page 13.) Ktittfll mm vtUMUua SE A momt wonderful modiolno fop all bronchia mffOOtlOilSm Avmld Mttrffe', H$EF '. -. lA C tA-Jfc .ttt a . .. r-. an jafty , ri ,.. a