'JU&-' ." mTS?" "1 M The Commoner m SEPTEMBER, 1919- "if: i i .- JJM A t Government Bulletin nnvernment by -the' consent of the governed nnnt bo what it should be unless the people hA80 consent is asked understand the issues which they decide. At .present all the avenues nfnformation arj in private hands. Even if we rnuld assume that all th- newspaper owners and Sitors were disinterestedly seeking to promote the public welfare, we would have to take into consideration the unconscious bias which, to a ereater or less extent, impairs the vision. Honest men differ on public questions, and an honest difference of opinion makes it impossible for a journalist to present both sides of a subject Impartially. In order to decide a public question intelligently, the people ought to have -first, a clear statement of the issue, and, second, the arguments on both sides. If the American people understand the issues to be settled and have a chance to weigh the arguments for and against any proposed legislation, they can be trusted to decide wisely and in the interest of the whole country. Unless we believe in the capacity of the people for self-government as well as in their right to govern, we cannot be counted as sup porters of popular government. Confidence in in the people is the first law in a government like ours, and it is a law founded in fact and supported by experience. But the people must have reliable informa tion, and this cannot be ass ired so long as they must rely entirely upon privately controlled newspapers, especially when many of the large newspapers are controlled by representatives of predatory wealth and used, not so much for the dissemination of news as for the misje.ajding of the readers. Such papers are not in any proper sense newspapers, they are merely adjuncts to predatory enterprises their main object being to deceive the public. The only way to insure intelligent action on the part of the voters is for. the government to issue a bulletin not a newspaper, but' a 'bul letin presenting tlie issues upon which'" the people are to act with the interpretation of those issues as made by the leaders on both sides. Such a paper would not cost a great deal, and what expenditure is more fully justified in a government like ours than an expenditure for public information. The government bulletin ought to be managed by a bi-partisan board, the parties being represented on the board by per sons of their own choosing. -For instance, the board might consist of five members, one ap pointed by the President, one appointed by the majority of the house, one by the majority in me senate, one by the minority in the house and tie fifth by the minority in the senaie. This would insure representation by the two dom nant parties, the party represented by the Pres ent having a majority on the board. In order io nsure the publication of every important act Wi xecutivG and cf congress any two of t: a uoara should have power to compel the publica- JI ,,any such official ict or law or measure under discussion. nnn??11!61!11 sllould have editorial space, ap Tlfif Jetw,een rtlle Parties all parties aS g it0 tlieir-representation in congress, renrein?,!?? "W4 a11 "nes of-thoughts to eaS. ,n ih? 4flcussion, thqpace assigned! of S I y 8hal)Pe aportionqd among factions inufnn arty' as represented in congress accords Partv nl JtVng S0f 3th oC those factions, each tative choosing its editorial represent offlTciaeiBb1fetin ?llould UQ furnished free -to all and ,?i ona1, state and loca1' t0 a11 libraries 8chooiH Bnrooins and t0 a11 colleges and. to all w m maeazines and newspapers and with nffiir ?e?,so that every Person intrusted mental! v 1 1 ?ty and evory organized instru would bin nd in,tue distribution of information 'Ornish o!lle advantage of it, and it should be cents aw i noniInal Price, say. twenty-five-scribe for ?f ' n?, QTy Persn- desiring to sub t courBft Vle twenty-fivo cents would not, wuiaiidiS n?riB cost'ot th0 PaPer' hutdt and thtS iS aosIreo the' part of the;voter; u v.:4US serve ,aa iHrninffltR JLtAt. . . UQUU1 Si nd that anyne)fwriHing-to pay-for Bay monthiv alIoulds'ue Published t'lfitervats, apaigno . '' !emi-inonthly or -weekly between 5 ' and as frequently during campaigns 000000000(5j O THE ROLL OP HONOR List of States That Hnvo Ratified the National Woman Suffrage Con stitutional Amendment 1 WISCONSIN, Juno 10, 1919. . 2 ILLINOIS, Juno 10, 1919. 3 MICHIGAN, Juno 10, 1919. 4 KANSAS, Juno 16, 1919. 6 NEW YORK, Juno 16, 1919. 7 PENNSYLVANIA, Juno 24, 1919. 8 MASSACHUSETTS, Juno 25, 1919. 9 TEXAS, Juno 28, 1919. 10 IOWA, July 2, 1919. .11 MISSOURI, July 3, 1919. 12 ARKANSAS, July 28, 1919. 13 MONTANA, July 30, 1919. 14 NEBRASKA, August 2, 1919. 15 MINNESOTA, Sept. 8, 1919. 16 NEW HAMPSHIRE, Sopt. 10, 1919. 00000000 as may be necessary to insure full publicity for all the questions under discussion. Such a government bulletin would bo worth infinitely more than it would cost, and would hasten the settlement of questions as they may arise and thus shorten the period of agitation and uncertainty. Senators and members with out regard to party ought to support a measure .providing for such a bulletin. The newspapers ought to support it, because it would give them . authentic information as to what tho government is doing, together with the best arguments pro and con on the subjects under discussion. Tho time is ripe for such a publication; the welfare of tho nation demands it. W. J. BRYAN. CONTROLLING THE PRESS On another page will bo found an intorvlow With ex-Congressman Barnhart of Indiana. It will be a surprise to the public to know that former Vice-president Fairbanks was three fourths owner of the Indianapolis News and had been for a long while a fact not disclosed even by. the law fathered by Mr. Barnhart, re quiring disclosure of ownership. Secret owner ship of the avenues of information is one of tho gravest menaces of today. Great financial inter ests are at this very moment extending thoir control of the press. A government Bulletin is the only protection within the reach of the peo ple. It must come. 9 Senator Knox says that he is opposed to tho treaty because it works a horriblo injustice on the Germans, and because its enforcement will create 'in the breasts of the Teutons a hatred that will be manifested in war as soon as they are able to make themselves strong again. Then, in order to bo fully consistent, he opposes tho League of Nations which is the only method so far devised that tends to prevent future wars. Several southern legislatures have voted re fusals to ratify tho suffrage amendment to the national constitution. Apparently it will be nec essary to change the personnel of several south ern state legislatures. The section that covered itself with glory and honor in leading the battle to malce this a dry nation certainly will not re fuse the women the right to determine whether it shall continue dry. Theodore Roosevelt, jr., is touring tho country in the interest of the' legion of honor, the war world veterans' association, and, it is also sus nected in the interest of Theodore Roosevelt ?r who has inherited a political estate that may be" well worth cultivating in the future. "The Heart of tho League" and the "First Qfon in the Pyramid" these are two pretty strong endorsements of Mr. Bryan's treaty plan ?o come from such high authority in so short a time. " . Onnosition to prohibition has become so weak w thl wets did not ask for a roll call when fhf enforcement bSl passed the senate. How have the mighty fallen! rhairman Escirof the-Interstate 'Commerce iTJ-f Hift.hbuse does not approve of tho ffiftSwX&tomiBrBUi. but be was enough to give Mr. Bryan a hearing. Who Will Assumed Responsibility? " Prohibition has beon in forco now for nior than two months and ovorywhero the police court records show a falling off not only in drunkenness but In othor crimes. From murder down to tho lowest mlsdoraoanor thoro has been a roductlon In offenses, showing tho closo rela tionship botwoen tho saloon and crime. Domobll izatlon is likely to alow up as it proceeds be cause It will tako Bomo tlmo to clean up the camps and put things in order. Demobilization would have to bo hurried up beyond tho natural spood to comploto it before tho ICth of January, tho dato when constitu tional prohibition goes Into effect. Who will tako tho responsibility of speeding up demobil ization inoroly to glvo tho saloons a chanco to open up for a few days or a fow wooks boforo constitutional prohibition begins? What official will bo willing to tako upon his bouI tho re sponsibility for tho increased murders and othor crimes that would come with the restoration of tho saloon? Tho people have burbd Intoxicating liquor, tho world's groatost enemy, tho man who reopens tho gravo will assurao a respon sibility that fow will bo willing to bear. Tho gravo will not bo rooponod prohibition has come to stay. War prohibition will brighten into constitutional prohibition as the morning opens into day. W. J. BRYAN. ORGANIZED LABOR AND PROHIBITION Labor Temple, Seattle, Washington, Local Union No. 302, August 18, 1919. Mr. Jotfopli'! Proobstlo, Goneral Secretary, International,' Brewery Workers Union, 2347 Vino St., 01 n,-' clnnatl, Ohio. Dear Sir and Brother: Your lottor, of recent dato was received and road before our ( local union, and I am instructed to .Inform you that while many of our members word against prohibition bofore wo got It, thoy wore unani mously In favor of a resolution introduced Uy delegate Duncan at tlio Atlautfc City convention in accordance with instruct! ms by the kcal con tral labor council. It may bo of interest to you to know that while organized labor here was largely opposed to prohibition in the wet days, thoy are now overwhelmingly for it since they have experi enced its good effects. Wo look upon tho demonstration held June 14th, at Washington, D. C, as a disgrace to the labor movement of this country and sometime in the future this vill undoubtedly he the al most unanimous verdict. ,1 further desire to say that the supposed representatives of organized labor would have served labor hotter if thoy had stayed on the job and wound up the busInoHft instead of taking their trip on the "booze apo dal" and having to run ovor two weeks in ses sion. With all duo respect to President Compers and giving him credit for whatever ho has ac complished for the movement, wo look upon him with regard to his attitude on booze as a labor misleader. In rtjly to your request that we notify our congressmen of our attitude upon this question, we will most cheerfully comply. Trusting that our action upon this matter fs perfectly satisfactory to all true champions of labor, I am Yours fraternally, JAMES A. CROW, Secretary, Local 302, Hoisting Engineers. The clothing manufacturers and the retailers say that prices will be 25 to 50 per cent hfgljjft" next spring than they are at present. The rea sons given are that wool lias increased so greatly in price and labor is getting so much more (liaft ever before that it will cost from $15 to $0"O a suit moro. This is propaganda pure and simple, profiteering propaganda. A suit of clothes weighs four pounds or thereabouts. If it is pure wobl the wool therein cost about $5.50, wh,lchcis about twice what it did two years ago. That ac counts for $2.75 of the increase. The' tariff hearings of a fow years ago showed labor cbt to average about 20 per cent. As prices have kept iaeo with wage increases, thfa cost does hot exceed 25 per cent at the present time, it is safe to say. There is no possibility of justifying-'at S20 increase on a ?'40 suit of clothes nnleaa tne' first price represented a grab. ' ' J iKkt&MMjtoM HAili fe