rm ! mtiUfrU The Gommoner SEPTEMBER, 1919 Punish the Profiteers rrho orntcor alioiiitf exposed and punished. Th b is a duty the . gp(veftimen t owes itself. very manufacturer,, every contractor who ? to do with war contracts should have his rmints thoroughly examined and it it appears fS ho has swindled ttio government his indict- nnt trial and conviction should follow. If this Svpqticatioh cannot he made within the period not covered hy the statute of limitations the" statute of limitations should be extended. It should be made known that no man can defraud the government and .escape behnd tech nicality; that so long as he lives he will be under the shadow of exposure, disgrace and PUIt should be understood that "no influence can protect him, no refuge or Immunity be given To discover and punish every person who has crafted on the government or profiteered is an obligation owing to the 50,000" American dead sleeping in France. It is an obligation to the thousands of wounded soldiers. It is an obligation to the hundreds of thou sands of American youths who shouldered arms. It is an 'obligation to the fathers and mothers of these soldiers living and dead. It is an obligation to the millions of American people who made sacrifice to sustain American arms. When the land was seething and surging with , the struggle and sacrifice of war whs no time for men to conspire and scheme for easy profits.' They had no right in that hour of travail to deliberately coin dividends out of the blood of wounded and dying American soldiers. If they aro shameless enough to have done"it they should he sought out by the: government -and made to pay the penalty that their traitorous conduct so richly merits. " ' ' ' The plundering profiteer is & skulker Of .the lowest and most vicious type. Oregon JTournal. A NEW STANDARD OF VALUE Prof. Irving JFisherj of Yale- university?, is on i quest for an Ideal dollar, one that will not fluctuate to such an extent as gold has done in the past' few years. "The gold dollar,' he says, "is now fixed In weight and is therefore variable in purchasing power. What we need' Is a gold dollar fixed in purchasing power and therefore variable in gold." To bring about this 'laudable purpose is not so' easy as to make such a glib Baying. Like all other plans for a "composite" or really stable dollar we should firsthave to have an official tabulation of current prices for certain staple commodities and their average from time to time. The scheme is" n6t: unlike, that favored by the populists of the fearly' nine ties. They proposed to have money issued against the products of the soil held in sub treasuries. The plan was not as Visionary as then dubbed. If a man who tiad a dollar could always buy the same proportion of certain fun aamental foods and. metals, we might liaVe a less fluctuating standard of value. -; tt. U5 to, 1873 our .country was on a bimetallic Bianuafd. The ratio between gold and silver was ?ii a 6 to 1 lIn t"at year silver was prac i cauy demonetized. Great Britain and the" prin cipal countries of the world had'gbne on a' gold .(i)j)00Q0S)Q JOHNSOX ON PROFITEERING In discussing mothods of curbing tho profiteers, Senator Ed. B. Johnson of bouth Dakota suggests tho following: We aro already limiting the bankers profit and no one over stops to question the authority of tho government to do this," he said. "Why can't wo do tho Same thing in other lines of business? We did it to tho bankers because every body was against the big' money lender and now the same feeling fo growing -against the dealers In food and' clothing. No ono can complain 1'nt tho banker Is injured because he is limited to reason able interest and no business man could object to being limited to a fair profit -on Ills wares." 0000 . basis. From1' 1873 to 189 G the discoveries of silver and its increased production, In connec tion with its demonetization, had Increased tho rates between silver and gold to 30 to 1. Tho bimetallists were, therefore, faced with a difll . cult situation. It was not bellovod that the re monettzatlon of silver would restore tho former ratio. The democrats of 1896, under Mr. Bryan, contended that wo needed a larger circulating medium; that debts were growing harder to pay through tho increasing value of gold, and that the remedy was to niako money of silver again. They were defeated, but a remarkable thing oc curred. Very soon after the discoveries of gold fn the Klondyke and in South Africa, gavo tho world almost as much additional money metal as it would have obtained through the use of silver. Now silver and gold are almost at tho old ratio of 16 to 1. At the same time through the increase in paper money, credit, bond issues, higher wages, the cost of the war and many other causes, prices have gone skyward. But unquestionably the s'tuatlon offers an -. .opportunity to establish bimcJ.qJJ.l3m, or a. cur rency based not only, omOn prnrlou. metals, ;but perhaps on many standard article of value. Chattanooga News. i)lii nr -T-virashJiieton Star. A NEW DANIEL " . ' ' A Washington special to The New York Times, dated August 25, says: State Department offi cials are interested in a statement by General Salvador Alvarado, one of Carrahza's' strongest supporters, Governor of Yucatan, in the fteraldo of Mexico City, which he recently 'established to . be the mouthpiece of the Carranza government, and which has been highly commended by tho government and by Ambassador Bellas, as be ing the newspaper that .would tell .the truth about Mexico. , This statement, which Alvarado. calls "the balance sheet of the revolution", criticises the ' Mexican authorities, declaring that not the least of the evils that beset the government is the fact that jailbirds released by the revolution are now wearing the insignia of Generals of divi sions. He adds: 4 "Tho great social movement which the revolu tion was supposed to inaugurate lias degenerated Into the satisfying of the lowest passions of men of the most questionable' character, crooks who, instead Of being made governors of states and ,put at the head of military operations, should be: behind the bars of prisons." The statement, received here today, Is divided Into sections, and reads, in part, as follows: "Pacification. The pacification of tho country has been Impossible because of tho lack of ap preciation of their duties by the chiefs of opera tions a deficient military organization, and "buses Sf their authority by the military chiefs. "Delayed Weeding-Out Process. In spite of the establishment of constitutional government the wMdtagout process of the worst elements of the WTOlution has not been carried out The dreks of society, released from jails by the re volutionists, have been permitted to remain ft the government and the army, and same of them are SSSS?the insignia of , generals of divisions ArtfoKlM 1M especialfy need regulation and tateMU -Won call for ability in en- noting tho laws contemplated by tho constitution thus far not shown by tho legislature l "Administration of ;iuBtlco.Th4 aUnflnlatrL tlon of juHtlco has never had a good name In Mexico, but it cannot bo raoro prostituted than it is at tho prosout time. A wave of Immorality, opon and cynical, involves every act of tho court. "Tho Petroleum Problem. This is easy of sottlomont. Gonuinq national Interests ,arft ,not incompatible with satisfying the legitimate de mands of tho owners and lessees of oil Ifrnds. "Banking. Tho progress ot tho cduntry 'ian lioVcontlnuo without tho exlstonco of"trafnkd?Tho prevailing economic Instability and unt&tyill not disappear "Until the" banking question' haa boon solvod: "Moral Disintegration. Tfio most alarming symptom Is that public opinion no longer rpaoU whon It hoars of cases of bribery, graft, corrup tion,, and thefts of all kinds. It seems as 'f a wave of immorality has takon possession, of everybody and everything In Mexico. Thlfr "rttato of affairs has boon caused by the fact th'at'!tho dregs of society aro now at largo and holding high places in the councils of the nation. "Urgency of .Bottling Problemfl.T-Thoro Is no time to bo lost. Any frosh incldoht may Jot looso tho storm that has been so long hanging over us. Tho conviction exists abroad that wo aro and will contlnuo to be a nuisance. On tho, other hand, if wo can initio our affairs, millions, of men and millions rf dollars will flow into our country. But lot uj not do bo in any haste,, nor bo actuated by fear, but as a sacred obligation. If we aro unjustly attackod let us not give .our selves up to useless tears like hysterical women; if we hav6 not acquired the virtues to make, us a strong people let us pay for tbo sjns of, our ancestors without useless lamentations," General Alvarado concludes his statement with an appeal to President .Carranza to support hqnestly and sincerely tho formation of a polit ical party which he has not done heretofore. ;Ho also appeals to Gonoral Obrogon and .PabJoCon zoles to settle their difference and to work; to gether for tho public welfare PRESBYTERIAN COUNSELLORS RESOLU ' TION INTRODUCED: AT THE LA8TJ PRKS ' B YTERL1N ASSEMBLY BY MR. BRYAN Resolved, that this general assembly heroby instructs Its executivo commission to take under consideration the desirability of tho selection by tho assembly of a limited number of ministers of apprpyed experience and ability to serve as councellors , or pastors at largo, in order that through these leaders the messago of tho church may be presbnte'd with greater effect. 2. That these councellors or pastors at largo ''shall not pxorclse either administrative or oxecu ' live authority biit render service similar o that 'performed by "our 'moderators in their tour of tho church, and such other servi as the assem bly may appoint'. , 2. ., That- the executive commission b,o In ; styitted to report, on. this raatter.at the, assembly 'of,19.2rf with such recommendations as to plan, yi "any, as U, may deem wise. , i . . Enthusiastic gentlemen who have embarked in the business of making the entire world dry say that it will cost 35 millions. Before getting nil heated over this sum and wondering how it could be expended, we might recall that a year ago we were enthusiastically spending that much every day in support of the war. If it was worth that much per day to make tho world safe, lor democracy to walk through it ought tq botworth .that much per job to enable it to walk straight. Milk producers are getting 5 and '6 cents a quart for their product from the wholesalers who retail It throtfgh wagons for 14 cents a quart. If JL33 1-3 per cent gross profit can bo defended on any ground, we hope the man cap- able of putting up any argument on tho proposition- will also explain why so many farmers are- selling their dairy cows and no town dairy has gone out of business in a decade for the Teason that the farmers are quitting dairying. Sometimes it is difficult to repress a tempta tion. One. of the reporters who was covering a recent food investigation in which it was -hpwfl' wholesalers were making from 25 per cent, tip on their investment wrote it robbers' profit' In stead of jobbers' profit, and It took him fivft minutes to decide that he had better nob depend on the compositor or proof-reader to catch'tka error i I ! ; ' A.A i'( tL r" f 1 t . t ' - i " t.;. u !Ti' ., l.'LSi TtVUi VI tx ( f iTK J- f m (,- It i "- 1 7" '; V r M'v "