T V"--JTVr',T V e ' -' fWPJf,WV?3 The Commoner VOL. 15, NO. 5 TWT'-njM! ''-w 20 ft Br-. H. P , Ji - u &T A -' W9IBPWS-M3MPI)iMISB,llltH0lii Asm?.. THE JITNEY JOY REDE Don't Be Bamboozled by Booze A Recital of Startling Figures There are many explanations in these days of expensive living, for for the increase of taxes. Each state thinks it is being victimized by some act of its legislature that has in creased the cost of living by increas ing taxes for some purpose. It may be this or that which gives excuse for kicking about our taxes, but we are prone to complain on the grounds that if we don't the politi cians will turn the tax screws just a little tighter. I am not going to discuss your le gitimate taxes, though they might bear scrutiny in some states. We can well afford to forget common complaints for the moment and delve into one of the real problems that needs solution. I am unwilling to admit that booze is as bad as any preacher, any re former, any rabid prohibitionist ever said it is, and then I'll say it is worse than that, and not take any more space to villify it. What I want to show is that booze increases your taxes and gives nothing in return but woe, woe, and more woe! When you "dig up" a dollar of tax money you expect that dollar to go to some purpose for the public welfare. No body really dislikes to pay taxes if lie gets his money's worth. But when that tax money is squandered, or stolen, you have a right, a duty to complain and atop it, THE FARMER'S INTEREST According to the statements eman ating from the liquor interests it would be an awful calamity upon the farmers to close the distilleries arid breweries because they buy the farmers grain and horses. "Think of what an amount of grain is consumed by the breweries and distilleries, which would be dumped upon the market in competi tion to the grain they sell else- whore!" "It would ruin the market! " Let'sseeif itwould. Less than two per cent of the grain goes into booze. IX a good year increases the grain production two per cent over the pre vious year, or above normal, does it ruin the farmers? If hoppers, or chinch bugsi or rust cuts the grain production, two per cent in any year doe it put the farmers out of busi ne? You know it doesn't. But there's another feature that the liquor men never mention when they try to scare you into support ing the saloon. They forget to tell you that with no saloons or brew eries the two per cent of grain would readily be consumed in legitimate trade because of the increased buy ing, ability of the people who got on the "water wagon." Every time a working man pours a glass of booze down his throat and hands the bar keeper a nickel or a dime for the drink, he puts -that much money where he can't spend it for food, clothing, fuel or shelter. This country isn't cursed with over production, but if anything, with un der consumption, and one of the chief causes for under consumption is booze. Trie town of Nelsonville, Ohio, voted to go wet after being dry, and R. A. Doan says, "I do not think it exaggeration to say we see fifty in toxicated men on our streets to one when the town was dry. Merchants report collections very much worse." Of course collections are worse! S. M. Wilson, a shoe merchant of Waterloo, Iowa, said, "We've been dry a year and I'm still in business. My business in twelve months of no saloons shows a gain on tea months, ana a loss on only two. No saloons, means more shoes and less booze." Here are some more figures from Wa terloo that show what "dry" means in cash. Tax sales fell off 29 per cent; postal receipts gained 10 per cent; building improvements gained 46 per cent; bank clearings gained 14 per cent; cost of maintaining the poor fell 23 per cent; savings bank deposits increased over 10 per cent; cost of running the city fell $12,737, 40, which can be accounted for by a decrease of 35 per cent in arrests o all kinds; a decrease of arresta fr drunkenness of 52 per cent, and a de crease of arrests for vagrancy of 54 per cent. After the saloons were driven out of Coatsville, Tu., one merchant had an increase of $7,000 in his business in May, Juno and July as compared with tho same months the year pre ceding, when the place was wot. One baker in the same town reported an i average increase of $150 a week, and ono butcher had $500 monthly in crease in his business. There was a decrease in applications for aid of seventy-five per cent over "wet" days. WOULD FLOAT A BATTLESHIP We consumed 139,469,331 gallons of distilled liquor, 56,424,711 gallons of wine, and 1,932,531,184. gallons of fermented booze in the year 1912, a total of 2,128,452,226 gallons, or a per capita consumption of 2198 gal lons. Beer retails at five cents a drink and there are, let us say, three drinks to the quart, or twelve drinks to the gallon. That is sixty cents. Whew, what a booze bill! $1,159,518,710. 40 for beer or fermented drinks alone! But wait. Let us figure that all the distilled drinks sell at the low whiskey price of ten cents a drink. It is conservative to say that there are ten drinks to the pint or eighty to the gallon. That figures up $1,115,970,648 for that kind of woe. The wine bill amounts to, let us roughly estimate, fifteen cents a drink. There are many prices, for wine is indulged in by high society, so fifteen cents is conservative. To tal $667,086,532. The total drink bill, figured on these conservative lines amounted to the awful sum of $2,952,575,890 in the year 1912. Practically three billion dollars! The shameful thing of it is that most of this sum is paid out by labor ers who can least afford it men who make the loudest noise about hard times and the high cost of living. There's a wide difference between what brewers and distillers paid for the farmers' grain, and to labor, and our drink bill. Not all drink is made in this country. A large quantity is imported, but let me show you some thing. According to the last census there were only 69,696 persons em ployed in all the breweries, and 20, 983 employed in distilleries. That makes 90,679. The distillers em ployed only one-tenth of one per cent of all employed labor, and the brew ers employed two-tenths of one per cent three-tenths of one per cent thus gain employment through booze. This does not make up for those who lose their jobs through booze, or the 110,000 who die annu ally from the drink, habit. Here's another point. You know changing raw material into finished goods adds to its value. This added value is 12.2 per cent of the total value of the products of slaughter ing and meat packing plants; 14.2 per cent of the total value of butter, cheese and condensed milk; 9 per cent of the cane sugar value; 35.2 per cent of the value of canning and preserving products; 13.1 per cent of the value of flour and grist mill pro ducts; but in the case of malt liquors the added value by manufacture is 74.2 per cent of its total value, and of distilled liquors 82.4 per cent of their total value is added by the pro cess of manufacture. In other words, liquors sell whole sale at a far greater profit than other products that go into our stomachs, to say 'nothing of the enormous profit ot the retailer. That's why the li quor interests have money to burn when it comes to fighting prohibition. woman suffrage, commission form of government and like reforms. The saloon, the retail end of the liquor business, is the only concern which turns out a finished product of less value than the raw material. A log, the raw material of a saw mill, goes into the mill a log but comes out lumber, something useful. Wheat goes into the mill and comes out flour for our sustenance. A real value has been added. The same is true of the cotton that goes into the cottftn mill, the leather to the shoe factory the iron ore to the steel mill, but what of the product of the, saloon? What becomes of its raw product in hundreds of thousands of caRo What of the young men and J j They come out broken in health their self-respect and the respect of their friends gone, the confidence of their employers lost, their future and fortune ruined, criminals in many cases, and nothing left except woe This is the finished product of the saloon. A few there are who can trifle with liquor without serious harm and these talk of "personal lib erty," but can they not afford the small sacrifice it would be to give up their drink for the protection of oth ers? WHAT BECOMES OF OUR MONEY? Where does Ihis three billion dol lars go that passes over the bars of this country? Only 17.6 per cent of the value of the. products of the dis tilleries and 25.8 per cent of the value of the products of the brew eries goes into the purchase of ma terials for the business. And remem ber these- per6entages are based on the wholesale prices and not on the price the consumers pay. The fact is, the booze business doesn't pay back anywhere near what other man ufacturing industries do for mate rials. Look at this-: In the lard refining business, outside of slaughtering and packing plants, 93.3 per cent of the value of their products goes into ma terials; cane sugar" refineries, 91 per cent; peanut roasters, graders and cleaners, 88.5 per cent; meat pack ers and slaughterers, 87.8 per cent; butter, cheese and condensed milk plants, 85.8 per cent; glucose and starch, 75.6 per cent; oleomargarine, 79,7 per cent. The liquor business short-changes the farmers who sell the grain, short changes labor, short-changes the con sumer. You farmers sell good whole some food products, corn and barley, and they make it into stuff that de bauches manhood, ravishes woman- INSOMNIA Loads to Madness, If Not Remedied "Experiments satisfied me, some 5 years ago," writes a Topeka woman, "that coffee was the direct cause of the insomnia from which I suffered terribly, as well as extreme nervous ness and acute dyspepsia. "I had been a coffee drinker since childhood, and did not like to think that the beverage was doing me all this harm. But it was, and the time came when I had to face the fact, and protect myself. . I therefore gave up coffee abruptly and absolutely, and adopted Postum for my hot drink at meals. "I began to note improvement in my condition very soon after I took on Postum. The change proceeded gradually, but surely, and it was a matter of only a few weeks before i found myself entirely relieved the nervousness passed away, my diges tive apparatus was restored to nor mal efficiency, and I began to sleep restfully and peacefully. "These happy conditions have con tinued during all of the five years, and I am safe in saying that I owe them entirely to Postum, for wueu -began to drink it I ceased to use medicines " Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Read "The Road to Wellville," in pkgs. Postum comes in two forms. Postum Cereal the original form must be well boiled. 15c and w packages. , , , .. Instant Postum a soluble pow der dissolves quickly in a cup ofiioi water, and, with cream and sugw. makes a delicious bevorage insuuwy 30c and 50c tins. . -..nfnUCi Both kinds are equally delicious and cost about the same per cup. "There a Reason" for Postum. 1 Sold by uruc" R si