The Commoner MAY, 1921 11 $ -vmSEm ' ' ' AsHoffff.' i. WtAtaaM Jfefl i-y i. ' A d J,! ' a . v. a . . "! , : ..i -" f -a .. Ki -! 1 ill jti -iffl " jv V - m -B. rifctV ,mr s'JVram-i S 011 t ' , , '.1 '- a 5T77 !Vrt i i-L' i ,m IVJ- ..', f Sy i',m "-j, Wi '$! 't'v, HI J&s ' L f J- ". i . "J Jj1t BS AC jij TK. M . " fcjjrt,- i i -eW-r ;y Hraaro Flays Tariff Bill as Lobby Measure i Washington dispatch, dated May 9, says: y lines wore broken in the Senate today dur- fthe debate on the emergency tariff bill, Sena- Moses, Republican, New Hampshire, delivor- & scathing denunciation or it, ana senator iirst, Democrat, Arizona, warning his col- ues not to let "the folks back home" learn stood for free trade. Senator Moses charged a great lobby was pressing for passage, and kcd the leadership, of his party for its part eking to enact such legislation. It was not epublican measure, he said, and had no sup- from the white house insofar as it proposed continue wartime restrictions on importations 3yes. Senator Ashurst said Democrats had lost elec- ms in the past on the issue of free trade, and day had come when the rights of the agri- Mlturists must be given equal consideration with of the manufacturers. r. Moses' drive againBt the lobby, which he V otai V. 'I1n.nnf wtsrt4- Vtfrrltlfr nftranirtnA WHO lUO IU15COI.) IUUOI. lUfamj UlbttiimvU paid and most arrogant of any thlff capital Seen," brought N a rejoinder from Senator x, Republican, Pennsylvania, who sponsored Sip amendment restricting dye importations. r Knox argued that the senator's attitude was HWbased on the views of future needs of the rernment in time of war. Lr. Moses submitted what he described as a fcement of expenditures by the American dyes titute covering, he said, its activities in be lt of the tariff bill with the dye amendment. e alleged expenditures, he said, totalled ap- clmately $104,000. The Dupont interests were brought in by Mr. Moses as supporter le dye industry. They were represented, he $,by M. R. Pouthier whom he described as ring a large measure or control over tno tuff industry in the United States. Recalling that he had opposed the bill in the rious congress, Mr, Moses Ba'd he had hoped mi its reconsideration was begun by the Sen I finance committee that he would be able "to mllow it, even though holding my nose, while ting for it." Its appearance, however, did justify his hopes, he saidv THE COLOMBIAN TREATY jhus endeth an eighteen-year-old quarrel. Ihe United States congress had voted to build 'anama canal. It had accepted an offer to m $40,000,000 for the rights of the French ial company, subject to the completion of an reement with Colombia, whose territory the aal was to traverse. A treaty had been 1 ormu- ted under which Colombia was to receive $10,- 1,000 and an annuity of $250,000 a year. The Mate ratified it. The Colombian congress Hied. ?he impression prevailed in this country that delay in Colombia had a sinister meaning. ire the Colombian congressmen waiting to be tght? No need to answer. Of a sudden there is a revolt in the Colombian state of Panama. mama declared itself independent. Senator hn Sharp Williams insisted the other day that Wt& revolting army consisted of ninteen negroes end a mule. However that was, President Roose- slt recognized the new republic and made with fthe contract which Colombia had failed to Ftify. Then the canal was built. sColombia naturally insisted that the United rates had robbed it of Panama. To this day las refused to forgive us, and its hostility has a reflection throughout all South America. f. Bryan negotiated as secretary of state, a seaty of friendship with Colombia under which le tatter was to receive $25,000,000 Jn recom- ms.e for the loss of Panama. This treaty, minus clause in which the United States expressed gegret for the events leading up to the quarrel, las now been ratified by a republican senate, tather, it is ratified by af combination of the emocrats and the non-Roosevelt- Republ'cans. he group of "senators who were the Roosevelt rogressives of a dozen years ago voted vainly Kgainst ratification. whether this is an indictment of President oosevelt's course is n question for historians tot Kettle. The motive of ihe adminstration and of the senators had little to do with history. The democrats, of course,, were glad of the chance to vindicate the Democratic administration rhleh negotiated the treaty. But the adminis tration seems to be thinking of the matter wholly A NEW DAY mmHMFr &&&tfz. c? Louisville Courier-Journal. as a basis for future trade -relations with Colom bia and with South America; That may prove to be important matter. With Europe largely barred from trade with us by ad verse exchange conditions, South America be comes a natural and rather essential recourse. Nebraska State Journal. GENERAL JOHN J. PERSHING ON WAR - As we contemplate the causes of war and real-, ize its horrors, every right-thinking man and woman must feel like demanding that some steps be taken to prevent its recurrence. An im portant step would be to curtail expenditures for the maintenance of navies and armies. The estimates recently presented to our con gress for the naval and military services con template an appropriation for the next fiscal year of more than $5,000,000 for every working day in the year. It is a gloomy commentary upon world condi tions that expenditures several times graater than ever before' in peace times should be con sidered necessary, especially when the most rigid economy in governmental administration is essential if we would avold national bank ruptcy. The world does not seem- to learn from experi ence. It would appear that the lessons of the last six years should be enough to convince everybody of the danger of nations striding up and down the earth armed to the teeth. But no one nation can reduce' armaments unless all do. Isn't it, then, time for an awakening among enlightened peoples to the end that the leading powers may reach some rational agreement which would not only relieve the world of this terrible financial load, but which in itself would be a long step toward the prevention of war? Ours is not an aggressive nation. We want no territory and we have no designs on other people. If other nations have the same attitude, - it seems unreasonable not to believe that all will be willing to prove it by consenting to limit armaments. , Unless some such move be made, we may well ask ourselves whether civilization does not really reach u point wliere it b3g ns to , destroy itself and whether we are thus doomed to go headlong down through destructive war and darkness to barbarism. Address at New York, December 29, 1920. ' s, LACKING DRINK, ARE FOLK NOW TAKING - TO DRUGS? In the merry old days it used to, be a ques tion what, if anything, drove thispreson or that to excessive drink. One of the strong question produced by the prohibition law is whether Jack of the potable alcohols, such lack as there is of them, is driving people from drink to drugs. -. An expert on such a subject whom The Globe has consulted answers this question with a gen eral No and an exceptive Yes. Commissioner Carleton Simon must be regarded as a convinc ing authority by reason of his experience in charge of the narcotic division of the city police department and by reason of his being a psychia trist and criminologist. Dr. Simon gives it as his observation and conclusion that most people accustomed to spirituous drinkables are not turned by depri- vatlon or rarity of them in the direction of the narcotics. This thing Jo quite as true, he seems to say (and the point is a little surprising), of immoderate drinkers, even drunkards, as of temperate consumers. In short, the most com prehensive aggregation of people who can be called normal come within this rule, the rule that absonce of desired drink does not open the avonuo (or the alloy) of vitiating drugs. But ho non-normal group which bites its sharp sector into the circle of this immensely inclusive generality is the underworld classos. Denial of liquor or difficulty in getting it does press the hypodermic syringe into the hand of the criminal. A pickpocket or a cracksman, or about any other malefactor, wants stimulus and steadying for his adventure. Formerly ho got both from a stiff glass of spirits, which ho could buy for a few cents, but now ho often Iiqh not the multiple higher price of a whisky or brandy in his pocket. Hence ho carries a heroin or co caine outfit In. his pocket So, as Commissioner Simon pronounces, (ho only member of society whom the eighteenth, amondment Is driving from drink to drugs is he who is only contractively a mombor of it at all the criminal. The country is both fortunato and unfortunate in this exception. It is fortunate because pro hibition influences to narcoticlsm only the crim inal few; but unfortunate because the vil will nwke them the more dangerous. For the ?iar cctic renders the user clear and fearless and without conscience. While not all who are given to tho hypodermic vice are directly classifiable as criminals, Dr. S.'mon is startling in the proportion he attributes to those with criminal histories among all drug addicts. They number 77 2-5 per cent If this is true, and. true also the drug habit promotion by prohibition among criminals, it is evident enough that we are in for a worse underworld. But it is welcome to be assured at tho same time, however, that prohibition is not acting 0 the drug recruitment of tho crookdom ciusws which It does bedrug. New York Globe and Commercial Advertiser. BRITAIN'S GROWING DRINK BILL Mr. George B. Wilson, Political and Literary Secretary of the United Kingdom Alliance, in h;s statement of "The National Drink Bill of 1920," says that the consumption of intoxicating liquors In the United Kingdom during 1920,, measured in terms of absolute alcohol, showed an increase of 15sper cent over 1919, but is still about 24 per cent less than in 1913. "The expenditure on intoxicating liquors ' showed an advance of 21 per cent over 1919, ana ot no less than 183 per cent; that is, for every 100 spent-on these liquors in 1913 the nation spent 283 in 1920. "Although the funds available have been suffl cient to maintain the total consumption of al- ?Xn1ICx,!Iquors at an even higher level than in 1919, there are indications that the industrial depression is already affecting consumption: and, in the opinion of tho trade, is likely in creasingly so to do. "I estimate the amount spent on intoxicating liquors in the United Kingdom in 1920 at 469,700,000, as against 380,000,000 in 1919 and 100,000,000 in 1913. ' "The expenditure per head of the population was therefore, in 1920, approximately 10 per adult of 21 years and upwards ' (including ab stainers) 16, 16s., as against 3 12s and 5 19s. in 1913. The expenditure for each of the three kingdoms, though not capable of strict statistical verification, was probably about:-- Total. Per head. England and Wales. . .391,000,000 10 7 0 Scotland 45,000,000 9 3 0 Ireland v 34,000,000 7 3 2 0 "The taxation collected by the trade from con sumers' of intoxicating liquors in 1920 was- Spirits, 71;000,000; beer 123,000,000;. wine 3,000,000; or 97,000,000 in alh ' Total Drink Total BUI. Taxation. JJlil "' 166,700,000 38,200,000 1920 469,000,000 197,000,000 Per cent, of Net Drink , . Taxation to T't'l Bill. JJJJ ' 23 128,500,000 192Q 42 272,700,000 "During 1920 , an increased consumption of alcoholic liquors has coincided with- a marked increase In public drunkenness, both of men and women." From an English newspaper. 'S LS'