Monday, Nov. 26, 1923
Antis
The opponents of the bonus have made their arguments chiefly on two points:
1) That a bonus would be bad for business and would react to the disadvantage of every citizen including the ex-service men, draining the Treasury of several millions a year for two or three generations.
2) That the majority of ex-service men do not want a bonus. Edward L. Allen, National Director of the Ex-Service Men's Anti-Bonus League, wrote to Representative Green: "There are approximately 3,700,000 ex-service men in the country. But a few more than 400,000 of them are members of the American Legion. If the ex-service men were in immediate need, if they were even demanding assistance at some future date, is it not indeed strange that they have so carefully refrained from becoming identified with an organization that devotes its energies to bonus-seeking ? "
The United States Chamber of Commerce compiled the following statistics on soldier bonuses paid or being paid in this country:
Illinois $55,000,000
Iowa 22,000,000
Kansas 25,000,000
Maine 3,000,000
Massachusetts 32,000,000
Michigan 30,000,000
Minnesota 23,000,000
Missouri 15,000,000
New Hampshire 1,500,000
New Jersey 12,000,000
New York 45,000,000
North Dakota 11,000,000
Ohio 32,500,000
Oregon 30,600,000
Rhode Island 2,500,000
South Dakota 6,000,000
Vermont 1,500,000
Washington 12,500,000
Wisconsin 2,000,000
States' total $380,600,000
Federal Bonus of $60 270,000,000
Grand total $650,600,000
Of 4,582,393 men called into service, 2,348,655 benefited by state bonuses. Arizona, Delaware, Indiana, Kentucky, Nebraska, Oklahoma are the only states which defeated bonus measures. Bonuses are pending the vote of the people in Colorado, Montana, Pennsylvania.
The total of $650,600,000 in bonuses paid in this country compares as follows with bonuses of other countries:
Great Britain--$275,910,446.
France--$373,371,150.
Canada--$147,600,000.
Australia--$105,000,000.
New Zealand--$18,290,650.
Belgium--$10,592,250.