VHPTT'' AUGUST, 1917 he Commoner T'urw' Cost of Alcoholic Beverages to Nati By A. CASWELL ELLIS, The University of Texas. To start out in a .ight for life with a keg of beer strapped on your back is madness, no mat ter how much you enjoy a glass on occasion. FAILURE TO STOP GREAT WASTE NOW IS TREASON The United States is face to face with a. crisis in her own history and in the history of the hu man race. Whether government of the people, by the people, and for the people shall perish front the earth rests largely in our hands. Op posed to us is the greatest miLItary and indus trial machine the world has ever seeu. For three years it has withstood the attacks of twenty million brave men armed with all the weapons of scie- cer adding each year new areas to its conquests and today having in the field more men and equipment than ever before. Seveu million able-bodied, men havo already been killed and over fifty million more are either in the trenches and training camps or are busy making munitions and army supplies. It is im perative that those left for the factories and field be brought to the highest possible efficiency, and that every useless expenditure of material and men be stopped at once. Failure to strip our nation of its greatest needless handicap to efficiency as we enter this war would be a col losal mistake, to dodge the iscue from cowardice or from selfish, considerations fs treason. THE LIQUOR BUSINESS: THE LARGEST SINGLE WASTE The nation's largest single waste i& undoubt edly in the liquor traffic The loss from the use of alcoholic beverages falls mainly under five heads: (1) The amount of foodstuffs used in their manufacture, and. the human energy, the houses, and transportation facilities employed in the business; (2) the sickness and death re sulting from the use of alcoholic beverages; (3) the lowered efficiency in work resulting from drinking by millions; (4) the crime due to drink; (5) the waste of public funds due to de bauchery in public office because of the liquor fight. THE FOOD WASTE Th internal revenue reports for 19 1G show that 3,603,911,916 lbs. of grain and molasses went that year into distilled spirits, and the census of 1909 CVol. V, p. 602) shows that 2,260,266,146 'pounds of corn, malt and barley went that year into fermented liquors. The fifty percent increase from 1900 to 1916 in the amount brewed would make 3,390,399,219 lbs. as the amount used for fermented liquors in 1916. A group of the most distinguished and reli able physiologists and economists in Harvard and Yale have shown thatufter taking out one- sixth of this 6,994,311,135 lbs. of foodstuffs to produce denatured alcohol, there is left enough wasted food material each- year to supply the energy requirements, of seven million men for a year. Why should we waste this enormous food supply and then ask the women to peel the po tatoes a little thinner and force millions of poor women and children to go on half rations? Is such saving drops at the spigot while wast ing a stream at the bunghole a reasonable act? THE MEN AND MATERIAL WASTED But the' waste of foodstuff is only the begin ning. "The Other Side" (April 2, 1917), pub lished by the National Wholesale Liquor Dealers Association, gives 1,600,900 as the number of wage earners employed In tie liquor business in the United States. The recent advertisement Tby the brewers states that hundreds of thousands of men are employed by them alone. I can not vouch for the reliability of these figures, but even half tha .nany, or 800,000 men, are work ing in the alcoholic beverage business, they are badly needed now in tie new places created by the war and hose tLat will be left vacant by the two million men who are going to the trenches. Je are short of clerks, accountants, carpenters, tmckmasons, bunding material, freight cars, teams and wagons, autos, industrial alcohol, and Klass jars. Our nation needs now for more use ful service to humanity mot merely the seven MUion pounds of foodstaff worse than wasted, out the hundreds of thousands of men, distill es, breweries, warehouses, stores, freight cars, on nHvn?!:Iir5 CXaCtl' ,,ow """ oc-ctv pays fnrt ..mi U'. 8upport " a " "ray of men and billions of pounds of material .n,i T mont employed in the liql,0r has L The" iow-' est estimate made by a responsible par Iv and III I bv'oTH rCVC"U rOI,orla' "' "E ! -mount paiu oy our nation over tho hire rn i u fhiu'V;!50'000'000- ; '-" the value of the average corn crop of the nat'on and nearly three times the value of a Average cotton crop at ten' cents a pound. it in mo ? a amUnSf the SI,ecial v'r les for the iffj; i J-naS bt?e" 8l,own clear,y ' inter ested scientific men that even the little food value of the two ounces of alcohol that the boay can use m a day is in nearly every case more than made up for by bodily wastes produced by the presence in the body of alcohol, this vast sum is just as completely wasted by the nat'on as if we used all those .hundreds of thousands of men and myriads of tons of food and equipment in shovelling sand on the beach to the right all the morning and then back to the left aga'n all afternoon for the period of the war. Is that the act of intelligent beings? COST OF SICKNESS AND DEATH RESULTING FROM ALCOHOL But what we are doing is worse than paying two billion a year for shovelling sand on the , beach. We are allowing the sand to be shovelled into the organs of our bodies and the wheels of industry. Sixty-eight thousand mer. and women (valued at $1,700.00 each, or a total of $116, 000,000.00 worth) die in the United States each year frqjn diseases produced by alcohol. The records of 43 'American insurance companies from 1885 to W8 covering two million policy holders, rliov a death rate in excess of the aver age for very moderate drinkers ot 18 percent, for those occasionally drinking to excess ot 50 percent, and for heavy drinkers of 86 percent. A number of large separate companies here and abroad have recently published results of their experience that are more striking even than the above. (See Atlantic Monthly, Nov., 1916.) Similarly, the reports t the South Australian sick benefit societies show that societies admit ting both drinkers and non-drinkers have 92 percent more cases of sickness per member than do societies admitting only abstainers, and that the members remain sick, or the average, 70 percent longer. The records of the Leipsic sick benefit societies show that between 25 and 45 years of age habitual "drinkers" were sick 2-7(10 times as often as the average insured person. American, English and other records show similar facts. One-fourth of our insanity (costing $40,000,000.00 per year) and probably one fifth of feobfemindodness. are due to alcohol. Also, every commission that has investigated vice has reported alcohol as responsible for a large part of moral debauchery, and probably over 50 percent of venereal disease. Half of the houses of shame in Cincinnati actually had to close for want of support when the selling of alcoholic drinks was forbidden in all such places. Laboratory experiments have clearly shown that minute quantities of alcohol in the blood lower the powers o the blood serum and blood cor puscles to resist the germs of many diseases. These and numerous other similar facts make It very conservative to say that 10 percent of the preventable dis.ase of the nation is due to the use of alcoholic beverages. As our annual loss from preventable disease is admitted to be SI 500 000,000.00 this means that at least $150,000,000.00 is wasted by us each year through diseases caused by alcohoL $600 000,000.00 WASTED THROUGH LOW 5 'BRED WORKING CAPACITY No one knows exactly how much the produc tive capacity of the nation is lowered by reduc Inn of working power in moderate drinkers when LT s5ck Tests made by unbiased jcient 5L in Germany and Switzerland showed that Jfn J, little as two to four mugs of beer a day and mcreaseu percent. Memory power percent or more, although In thlo and In tho simple activities the subjects thought they wore doing better whoa under tho Influence of Iho al cohol, Numerous studies made in school nnd lactory work lrve shown that alcohol usually reduces working power cons'dcrabjy and in creases accident- .md the destruction of ma terial. While there may bo some exceptions to the ru'e, it is certainly a a;c estimate to as sume that moderate drlnlccn are on tin average 10 percnt logs efneient beca-'sa of alcohol. If one person it live is a mo.lciatc drinker, then - percent of our national efficiency Is destroyed by alcoholic h veragCB. The products of human dlllc enr? on farms, and In mlncH, factories, etc., n the Uniteu States, are worth about thirty nni nAAPCVar' fWC lWCOIlt Of this, or $000,- 000.000.00, Is therefore the price we pay In lower-id efficiency for uilng alcoholic bovoragoa very temperately. $300,000,000.00 WASTED IN CRIME Conservative est'matoH by well Informed men fen '.Tl811 Crlmc in thc UnIlC(1 Stfttc at $600,000,000.00 per year. The lowest estimate made of the part of this crime due to alcohol Is JO rercent and tho highest Is 70 percent. Prob ably ahout GO percent, or $300,000,000.00 worth, is tho amount of crime due directly or Indirectly to our toleration of alcoholic drinks. UNKNOWN MILLIONS WASTED THROUGH DEBAUCHERY OP PUI3LIC OFFICE While we have many worthy offic'ala, both pro's and antl's, who are well prepared for the duties ot their offices, It Is painfully obvloui that hundreds of millions of money and Invalu- able opportunities for development of our re sources arc wasted by officials elected not foi their fltnes8 for the office, but because either oi their friendliness for or hostility to thc Hquoi interests. This will continue as long as anj considerable body of voters is left who attack the saloons, and It looks as If such a body will continue at least for the period of this war. TOTAL PRICE PAID FOR HAVING ALCO HOLIC IJEVERAGES For the privilege of using alcoholic beveragct indiscriminately, then, we are paying each yeai this price: The lahor ot ahout a million men; 7 billion pounds of ood stuff; houses, land, transport ation, etc., all to the value of $1,750,000,000.00 68,000 men and women killed by alcohol 1 IG, 000, 000. 00 Sickness produced by alcohol.. 150,000,000.00 Lowered efficiency In work due to alcohol 600,000,000.00 Crime due to alcvhol 300,000,000.00 Debauchery in public office.. 1 Total yearly cost of alcoholic beverages $2,916,000,000.00 This is nearly double the amount of the spe cial taxes asked lot the support of the war for the first year Can any rational man Justify the waste during this emergency of three billion a year. Including the use of seven billion pounds of foodstuff, and the labor of a million men, merely in order that drunkards may have better oppcrtunities to get drunk and moderate drink ers may lower their working efficiency with greater convenience? WHAT CAN BE DONE? " Plainly the manufacturedfstribution and sale of alcoholic beverages ought to be stopped at once. The property employed in the business and f.ie stock of liquors on hand should be taken over by the govern -lent Immediately and paid for ft a price that is fair Go the owners as well as the public. Every reasonable help should also be extended to those now employed in the business in finding promptly another employ ment. Such a plan would really benefit all con cerned, as 't would give thc liquor men the only chance they are likely ever to have to dispose of their property before it is confiscated. On the other hand, the government can now with com parative ease find a use for most of the distill eries, breweries, and ether equipment in making mun' !ons, industrial alcohol, and other supplies urgently needed. The supplx of liquors on hand could be converted Iro munitions or sold for medical purposes as seemed nest. In this way neither the liquor men nor the public will uffer seriously, while the nation will step up on plane of vastly higher efficiency in this war aad In the peace that will follow. -t