The Commoner MACHv 1921 it The Federal Reserve Bank The following editorial Ib taken from the .: March 4th issue of "Wallace's Farmer', published hit Des Moines, Iowa, under the editorial man- agement of Henry C. Wallace, the new secretary of agriculture in President Harding's cabinet: "What is the proper function of the Federal Reserve Bank? Is it to be simply a great re serve bank institution, where the credit reserve vol the country can be mobilized and loaned as the needs of bus ness make necessary? Or be sides being a banking institution for the mo- ibilization of credits is it to have the right, through the arbitrary extension or contraction 'of these credits,, to raise or lowir- prices general ly and in particular, and thus make good I business or bad business according as the mem bers of the Federal Reserve Board in their wiBdom may decide? . ' -" "It is highly Important that its proper func tions be defined. For tills Federal Board now taeems to have in it the- -power to make and mmake business as it may choose. And further the power to make or break almost any of the great industries of the nation. "If the Federal Reserve Bank is to be a great "banking institution, and nothing else, then it is e entirely proper that it should be run by bankers, the very best bankers in the entire country. 'If, on the contrary, it is to exercise almost absolute power over the business of the country, make and unmake it as it may think wise, tend prices up and down at its own sweet will, then it is highly important that the members of the .Reserve Board should be not bankers .alone, but icapable men whojinderstand the business of the -country and who are representative of the vari- ibus great industries. "We have had an illustration during the past mix months, of the power of the Federal Reserve RBoard over the business of the country. It is meing hejd responsible for bringing about the Irastic deflation. Perhaps It had not intended deflate prices to the extent they have been ifiated. Perhaps the thing got away from them. Be that as it may, they started it and Rthe results are serious. "At the present time the Federal Reserve iBank has excess reserves amounting to a little tover live hundred million dollars, more tnan tat any time in the past eighteen months. Last Hummer its excess reserves were two hundred Bind fifty million dollars, At that time It could lave expanded the credit of the country at least Ive hundred million dollars without imperiling Its reserves. Now its reserves are sufficient to feerve as the source for five billion dollars worth Ibf extra credits. "The increase In the reserves of the Federal jReserve Bank during the past three months is pointed to as reassuring. That all depends upon Sliow we look at it. They indicate that credit has been restricted; that liquidation has been i going on at a terrific rate, They do not, how- sever, tell the story of what this liquidation has rcost the people who have liquidated, nor what it has cost the farmer. "If the Federal Reserve Board is to be allowed ' to continue to exorcise such a powerful influence over the business of the country, then the mem bers of the board should not be bankers alone but representatives of the various industries, the most intelligent representatives who can be found in the entire nation. There should be one or two farmers on the board, because farm prices are more easily influenced by the yaction of the Federal Reserve than prices of anything else. There should be a representative of the manufacturing interests. "Wer should have a showdown on this whole business right away. The theory On which the Federal Reserve Board has operated during the past yefir places altogether too much power in the hands of men who are not thoroughly repre sentative of the various industries of the nation." "COME ACROSS" i Yit WANT BlfiC&ST I TOP NAVf M i.iiu.1 , . m- M.3.n7,v-mt jmr.. .' a '"rZtiiX'faiWtTZ-t New York World. young man at his home In Washington Court house, Ohio, and as member of the town coun cil he championed a dry. ordinance, and that, too, at a time when such leadership was rare. Through all the intervening years and through all the many hot contests leading up to. national prohibition Mr. Daugherty unhesitatingly espoused the dry side of the question. In 1918, the year Ohio adopted the state pro Hibition amendment, Mr. Daugherty was chair man pf the committee on resolutions in the Re--publlcan state convention. Wets anddrys lined up for the decisive battle In November. The war-time prohibition law had just been enacted by Congress and the federal constitutional amendment had been submitted but not ratified by the necessary number of states. The report of the resolutions committee was submitted by Mr. Daugherty and contained this" plank: "We favor supportTof the Prohibition Amend ment to the state constitution and the enactment of necessary legislation to make it effective. Ad vocating and supporting Federal Prohibition legislation as a war-time measure, we neverthe less realize that sUch legislation automatically repeals itself at the close of the war. Therefore we favor ratification of the Prohibition Amend ment to the Federal Constitution as a perma nent solution of the liquor question." The drys of the country will be pleased to have a friend of prohibition in the office of At torney General rather than a person who through prejudice might interpret the laws to the injury of the cause. American Issue. CHAMP CLARK ATTORNEY-GENERAL DAUGHERTY Regardless of the political complexion of the new national administration the drys of the country are pleased with the selection of Harry M. Daugherty of Ohio for Attorney General in the Harding cabinet. His appointment assures a '' friend of prohibition at the head of the legal department of the government and at a time When such a friend is needed. Through the years Mr. Daugherty has:- con sistently advocated the dry cause. .When a praisement of his own powers ho declined tho proffer of an appointment to tho Senate. He re majnod where ho felt lilmsolf best qualified to servo tho stato. That ho served tho stato well there Is attested by his repeated ro-olections, and by tho friend ships ho established among his associates. And no greater regret Is felt at his passing than by those who encountered him in tho conflicts of tho chamber, and had opportunity to appreciate the temper of his steel and the strongth of his arm. Washington Star. Cha'mp Clark is best, and Tery accurately, de scribed in the term, "a rugged American." He had forpe and fight In him was sturdy and in corruptible. He was distinctly a man of the people understood them, and all his life re mained close to them. He possessed the strong qualities purpose and conviction, and both moral and physical courage. A warm and dependable partisan, and a party asset of great value in time of controversy, he yet was broad and fair in all matters not freighted with party duty. He had won his way to the chair in the House by aggressiveness on tho- floor, but while in the chair he held the scales as strictly true as a judge on the bench. Both sides of the chamber accepted his decisions, the Republicans questioning them as little as tho Democrats. Mr. Clark was an orator of power. He early acquired the House manner. He had brought the stump manner with him, and he amalga mated the two very successfully. An educated man, of wide reading, he was a master of colloquialisms, and employed them in. his ad dresses with taste and effect. His speeches in the Houso had a wide vdrcula tion, and gave him wide reputation. An excellent specimen is the one delivered in opposition to tho repeal of the law granting to American coastwise vessels freepassago through the Panama canal. The question will be presented to the new Con gress, and upon the grounds taken' by Mr. Clark in his admired deliverance. He was a HouseKman. Ho liked the Houso atmosphere, and shone Jxl it. With true ap- LET'S SHARE WAR SPOILS EQUALLY, SAYS COLBtf A Washington, D. C, dispatch carried by the Associated Press, under date of February 22, snys: Equal opportunities for tho citizens of all tho allied and associated powers, whether mem bers of tho loaguo of nations t)r not, in former enemy territories to bo administered by the allied governments undor mandates, is insisted upon in a note dispatched by the state depart ment to tho council of the league, now in session at Paris. Tho noto wont forward last night to Am bassador Wallace, who is to present it to the council tomorrow. Its text was withhold, but stato department officials described It today as being virtually identical .with tho one on tho same subject sent to tho British government last November by Secretary Colby. That note was couched In exceedingly firm language. In it Mr. Colby took issue with the British position that mandate agreements and treaties wore to bo considered only by states, members of tho loaguo, and declared that the United States as contributor to tho common vic tory in tho world war could not consider "any of the associated powers, the smallest not, less than itself, debarred from participation in tho rights and privileges secured undor the mandates provided in tho treaties of peace." Initiation of this, tho flrst action to bo taken by the United States to the council of the loaguo of nations,, was at the suggestion of one of tho allied powers, understood to have been Great Britain.s The British foreign office never" has replied to Mr. Colby's noto in which he asked that tho United States he permitted to examine the draft . mandates before their submission to tho league council for approval. Meantime, however, Great Britain has sent the draft mandates for Mesopotamia and Pale-, tine to the council and it is understood that it was for this reason that it suggested that the United States presentits views to the council. Action by the council on the mandates at the present session had been expected and it was explained that it was on this account that the present administration decided to present its arguments direct tp the council despite the fact that only a little more than two weeks remain before the new administration will como into power. Dispatches from Paris today said that inde pendent of the action of the American govern ment, consideration of the mandates goyerning Mesopotamia, Palestine, and Syria had been postponed until the April meeting of the coun cil so that Winton Churchill, tho recently ap pointed British secretary for tho colonies, .could have an opportunity, to study the questions In volved. The principal point at Issue between tho United States and Great Britain is tho so-called San Remo agreement between Great Britain and France for the development of oil resources in the mandate territories In the near east. MRS. BRYAN GIVES PORTRAIT The gift of a framed portrait of Mrs. W, J. Bryanjhas beon accepted by the library board, to bo hung in the city library. The offer came through a letter from Mrs. Bryan to Mrs. A. S. Raymond and was acted upon at tho last meeting of the board. The portrait is in storage in the city and the presentation has not yet taken place. As Mrs. Bryan had several portraits taken while in Lincoln, It's not known which of the paint ings is to become the property of Lincoln. It is supposed to bo half or three-quarter length, life size. c The library in considered a fitting place for the permanent bestowal of the gift, as it was through Mrs. Bryan's initiative that the present library building was secured. She wrote per sonally to Andrew Carnegie to ask for funds for the building and has always retained keen inter est in the whole library plan. Nebraska Stato Journal, Lincoln, -Feb. 23, 1921. ' ,.( ti. i 'm