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Food Control Committee.

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The Housing Problem. A—

ISOCIAL AT TtiE CIRLS' CLU…

I BURRY PORT LETTERS. I

[No title]

Mystery Cleared Up. -♦!

IAPPOINTMENT OF TEACHERS.…

TABERNACLE CHURCH. I

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Storage of Potatoes.

A "CAP"-ITAL ATTRACTION. I

CAZETTEDTOT..IER.F.C.I -GAZETTED…

I SCHOLASTIC SUCCESS. I

I What Shall They Read ?

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I What Shall They Read ? FREEDOM OF OPINION. (By Orion). At the last' meeting of the Burry Port Council some discussion took place anent newspapers which the Council had been asked to place in the library. Mr. John Davies rightly wanted to know what those papers were which the Labour Council desired to see in the reading room. "We must be careful," he re- marked, "what we give the public to read." There is much truth in that statement. These are days when there is a. variety of literature available. The longer the war lasts the more "various" becomes the "literature," and the more insidious the nature of some of it. There are papers on the market to-day which ought to be suppressed. Why ? Not bc- cause our conception of "freedom of opinion" has become dangerously con- servative, but because, in the public in- j terest—and the national weal—people should not be fed on deliberate lies, cross f -d perversions of our war aims, an d a general licence-not liberty—of cantank- erous piffle. Let the case for "the other side" be presented fairly, justly, with due deference to the opposing conten- tions, and all will be well The people will chose—and we have confidence in their choice. But "liberty of opinion" does not cover nor include suppression, exaggeration, perversion. There is news I which cannot be told, there is information which must be withheld, because—there is an enemy without. More, I There is an enemy within. I We are not referring to that kind of news, but to statements which appear in a certain type of paper. These are state- ments to the effct that Germany is ready to make terms, that she is ready to give up Belgium, etc., and that, therefore, we —note the "we"—should not prolong the war by turning deaf ears or blind eyes to I these things. That sort of "argument" should not be placed before the people (not because we do not understand liberty or freedm) but because the British working man should not be fed on—Lies » Bigotry. We heartily concur with Dr. J. H. Williams that "bigotry is the greatest creator of infidels." Bigotry is indeed re- sponsible for more evils than we should care to enumerate. But-and Dr. Wil- liams will agree—it is not bigotry to keep blatant inexactitudes (to say the least and mildest) from the minds of thinking men and women. There are periods in history—now is one of them— when suppression is safety and censor- ship sanity. We realize the extreme care with which both functions should be exercised, and it is easy to descend to bigotry, unfairness, injustice and even wilful deception by means of deliberately conceived secrecy. Let those who wish to read that which is not true, let those who desire to in- culcate the doctrines of half-baked cranks do so—themselves Let them buy their papers and read them and "profit" there- by But, in the name of justice, in fairness to the man in the street, let these pernicious wares, these scum pro- ducts of a hypocritical "literature" be kept apart from the masses, and confined to those regions where they find a gross- ly consonant atmosphere. We agree that bigotry is an evil to be avoided. We agree also that "we must be careful what we give the public to read." V. e, therefore, strongly urge the people of Burry Port to think carefully about. some of the contentions which they will mret in these papers we have referred to. A man has a perfect right to read what he likes. At the same time he owes it to himself and to the subject about which he happens to be reading to see to it that he begins not upon a false basis, building there on an intellectual superstructure j which shall (immediately) place him in a tangled morass of fundamental error, and (ultimately) misdirect his mind along those channels which lead to chaos, dis- union, unrest—and Bigotry

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I WOUNDED A THIRD TIME.

BERWICK HAMLET AND THE COUNTY…

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I Carmarthen ProtestI

=- - - - - I Women PoliceI…

PROBLEMS OF THE EARLY CLOS!NCI…

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ASTERISKS. AA STERiSKS<