r -h T "at1 ; . - Jane, I920 The Commoner Women in Politics n seems very probable that the Suffrage ,.:Indment will be ratified by the necessary 36 iStf boforo the conventions meet, but eyen if iiMMtion is not completed before the conven- law held, it is quite certain that It will be rtmoleted before the election. But even if na tional suffrage should fail to be accomplished in !e to admit all the women of the country to Sittclpate in the election, a considerable ma Erity of them will vote this fall by virtue of itate constitutions or state statutos, and the fly enfranchisement of women is as certain as any future event can be. Tennessee is quite sure toToto for the national amendment next winter, although the state, because a special session is not authorized by the constitution, will be un able to write its name upon the roll .of honor now. Florida too, is quite certain to ratify al though immediate attention is prevented by ' a constitutional provision which denies to the leg Jjlature the right to ratify a measure that was mbmltted before the legislature was elected. Be tides these there are several states which are certain to ratify if special sessions are called. Assuming, therefore, that universal woman suffrage is a matter of less than a year if not a matter of a few months, it is worth while to consider the effect of "women's entrance in the arena of politics. Many well-meaning men have stoutly resisted the proposed enfranchisement of woman out of fear that the exercise of suffrage might in some way work to the injury of the home. This ar gument lacks force, first, because it is a prophecy with nothing in history to support it, and, sec ond, because it is in line with similar objections that have been made to every advance step taken by civilization. There was a time when the education of the masses was believed by sincere people to threaten the destruction of so ciety. That was the aristocratic notion that tome had. They thought the Lord intended only a few to be educated just enough to do the thinking for the people while the uneducated would devote their time to the drudgery of life. Now, universal education is the ideal of civilized countries and we wonder how any person could have brought himself to the point of condemn ing a large majority of his fellow men to the Hignt of ignorance. Even after the value of education for men was wmitted, some good people were afraid to, X. tend education to women for fear that it would Jake them mannish unsex. them, as it were. M now tho young women of America, on the average, carry their school education to a higher Tomt than the young men, as any one will real J9 who visits the high schools. And who now jowts tho value of education for women? When L i4 Mexico some twenty years ago, and joucea the girls in school with the boys, I men ded the matter to President Diaz, and he promptly replied, "It is more Important that the T:men SQall be educated than that the men shall J oecause the mother is the child's first ti er.' teach- AuJi J mann?r there are many good people in i!h really believe thast it would demoralize thS ir.Womn did not veil their faces, al snE l1Bltors to oriental cities soon begin to SI bat tho thickness of the veil varies in to, ?roportIon t0 tho woman's beauty the Asia n face tne thinner the veil. Even in ttoSJL w,omon a$e breaking away from this douhMwd who' in tnis country at least, will Qnaim . Woman is better because of her ac PrXi l ?ith 80ciety and tnat society is lin ger i, r Presence? in no country can in tJ "eT f;und better mothers and wives than lounhr i states and here we come nearer conceal eaucatlon and woman's face is not iithat8HinBeBt areument in favor of suffrage four of Uas bea successful wherever tried. to morn stat08-bave had woman's suffrage there w 25 years and in none ot these haS a movement Tnnkint tt a. return to rnPnnn8xffrag0 alone. Why? If suffrage was di$coverPri Uo homo would not the fact bo BMem? a111,25 yeara experience under that home Bffa ? if tho test hafl shown that th0 tivity wm J"? bocase of woman's political ac H to ? , not woman herself have boon tho on the 11 or Its abolition? It is a reflection thatthfiIm?n in tne suffrage states to suggest oir interest in politics so outweighs their ized husbands to protest against an InsUtuUon destructive of domestic obligations? "Intelligence and morality are tho dualities fhTZVf0 ft citIzenP- The men arc ?n the majority in the penitentiary, while tho wom en are in tho majority in the church. If woman has sense enough to keep out of tho penitentiary and morality enough to go to church, she is fit to go to tho polls. Woman enters politics at a time when tho world has under consideration a number of prob lems which come very near to her, and for tho understanding of which she has special fitness. Take, for instance, the subject of profiteering. Woman, being the financial manager of tho household, has personal knowledge of the in justice done by the profiteer. No amount of fine-spun theory can combat the actual experi ence which she has had in trying to make tho family income cover increasing expenditures. Having intimate knowledge of the labor neces sary to create wealth, whether it is created on the farm or in tho factory, she knows the in justice of allowing middlemen to imposo upon both the producer and the consumer. When, for instance, a grocer buys cabbage from tho farm er at 3 cents per pound and then turns the samo cabbage over to the housewife at 6 cents per pound, making a profit of 100 per cent for handling it, the woman can not bo deceived by any argument advanced in support of the ethics of the transaction. She knows that the man who raised the cabbage had first to invest money in the farm, then to raise the crop, taking all the chances that fall to the farmer, then he has to carry it miles and deliver it to the grocer. There is no equity in allowing the merchant to charge as much for handling it as tho farmer receives for producing it. And likewise, in the matter of shoes. The production of tho shoe requires industry on the part of the farmer who raises the animal that furnishes the hide, in dustry on the part of those who transport the hide to the tannery, industry on the part of those engaged in tanning, industry on the part of those who transport the tanned leather to the factory, industry on the part of those who con vert the leather into a shoe, and industry on the part of those who transport the shoe to the itore The merchant who charges as much for Passing the shoe from his shelf to the customer as is received by all the others engaged in pro ducing the shoe, can not be acquitted before a jury of women. The illustrations might be con- Z 5SSS iV a.nfiS h0w he succeeded i t klllmg 30 Mon introduced in ."SX moans for the reduc of business (which re ally moans tlon of the fSX of pub bills would have authorized nJ . fc, thos0 who lie markets as frep " good deal of reside in the cities There was ization on their arms? Htion of profits Is The women know thaegulauono v not a new idea. e inon community quite an b7S need toBn.Clal much sought afte i by J Jong fii accommodation but too man ag tu learned that o. een,B profits restricted, money lender needs to have amount f and so we have usury laws. per'cent terest collectable range from u freqnentljr with 6 and 7 per c6nt bnnl And remember The limit than 8 or J Pp Jt is for the use that the banker's 6 or r Most of the "f the money for ft Vatics and they can women are good In nbetweGn a banker 7 easi,y eato the rat.0 e m per cent per cent for aeai 6 iay' in? !t tac?8 longor to mac out noto than it doos to sell a head of cabbago. rue war question is ono upou which the jvomen havo a fixed opinion that is not llkoly to bo changed by party platforms or speeches of candidates. Nono fight moro strongly for thoir rights than womon, but thoy shrink from the tragodios of tho battloflold. Thoy, rather than luo mon, havo boen'.tho victims of war. Tho man who dies upon th"o battloflold, dlos glorlous y; ho suffered but for a momont, and his name is written upon monumonts, whilo tho mother moves on to tho gravo with slow and unsteady steps instead ot bolng supported by a stalwart son, and tho wife, because of tho husband's death, assumes a double duty to tho child whom tho soldier leaves dopendont. Wo are hoping that tho lessons of tho awful war out of which tho world has just emorgod will bo sufficient to shako oven mon out of warliko inclination. Dut it is tho finger of woman, now being enfran chised thruout tho world, that tracos tho bow of promiso on tho clouds of war. Tho women may bo expected to throw tho weight of thoir in fluence, now potent at tho ballot box, against appropriations intended to continue tho worn out theory that tho world can bo terrorized into peace. Thoy know history well enough to un derstand that rivalry in armies and navloa can havo no other ond but war; and Instinct, If not logic, will warn them that compulsory univorsai military training is as antagonistic to tho spirit of peace as it is burdonsomo to tho producors ot tho country. Because of woman's implacable hatred of war, I am hopeful that she will bo able to com pel the League of Nations to provido for a ref erendum on war, except in tho caso of actual in vasion. What preventive could be more ef fective than a referendum with womon voting? Woman is needed to stand at tho ballot box and hurl to tho revengeful champions of llquov tho challenge, "Thoy shall not pass." Mothcra whose sons havo been saved from tho snaro of thoso who would deliberately destroy them, and wives, whose husbands havo boon rescued from the net that tho liquor traffic would throw over them th6se aro tho imprognablo wall that shall protect our. fair land from tho return of 0 tho brewer, the 'distiller and the liquor dealer. These aro only a fow of tho questions now bo foro the country but others scarcely loss im portant will como into viow when thoso aro settled. Civilization moves on; each goneratloa rises to higher ground. Each now summit brings into viow possibilities that had not boon visible before, and these possibilities will Involvo ques tions which will appeal with IrrcsJstiblo forco to tho women's moral standards. Benjamin Kidd, in a beautiful book entitled "Science of Power," credits woman with a larger vision than man because she thinks of tho futuro moro than of the present and plans for the things that shall -be whilo she deals with the limitations of to day. Every righteous cause can hope for her aid; and those who profit by abuses that should bo remedied may well be alarmed at her en trance into politics-. While many women will vote as thoir hus bands do or as thoir fathers did, an Increasing number will regard suffrage as a duty rather than as a privilege or oven as a right, and will vote as thoy think as witness tho action of the women in the election of 191C. Woman, as a full fledged citizen, is here and, being here will make her impression on tho Institutions of the land and tho policies of the government. W. J. BRYAN. 2.75 PER CENT BEER INTOXICATING Dr Wiley, food expert, gives a scientific opin ion a's to the intoxicating effect of 2.75 per cent beer Read it (on another page). Tho War de partment ruled that .1.04 per cent would intoxi cate a soldier. But while these opinions fortify the drys in thoir contention, no expert opinion or scientific authority will weigh with tho vet tley -want liquor that intoxicates the more it intoxicates, the better they like it. ' SWITZERLAND STOPS GAMBLING On another page will be fouqd a report of the Swiss vote on gambling. Tho brave little re" nublic puts the ban on one of the worst of vlcefr 1-and the PEOPLE did it with their little bal lots While wo take off our bats to this moun tain leader in reforms let us also make our bow to tho initiative and referendum, the peoples law. swrauis Pi .?A' n WfH '-I VW. v r-i & ,. ft v ' fiJ ', i i-i -h tx v4 m V. ,-t 'in WE "TVS -v"- .aflA-aaiu. -