Pubdate: Sat, 18 Feb 2017 Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC) Copyright: 2017 Postmedia Network Inc. Contact: http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/477 Author: John Mackie Page: A4 This Week in History: 1922 PAPER CASTIGATED CITY'S DOPE MENACE Vancouver World kept up steady stream of stories on evil of drugs The evil of drugs has been a recurring theme for Vancouver newspapers since the city was founded in 1886. But few papers went as far as the Vancouver World's anti-dope campaign in January and February of 1922. The tone of the campaign is summed up in an illustration by cartoonist Ernest LeMessurier on Feb. 18. A sharply dressed "dope trafficker" cowers before a cat o' nine tails whip being wielded by an arm labelled "public indignation." The title of the illustration is "The Cure." Modern readers may think that a bit harsh, but a local Conservative MP, H.H. Stevens, had already proposed an amendment to the Criminal Code calling for drug dealers to be whipped. "I maintain that a man who is found guilty of selling drugs to young boys and girls with the knowledge that it will result in the degradation of the child's body and soul should be made liable to flogging," Stevens said. His amendment was quashed, but the World kept up a steady stream of stories about the dope menace. Youth were portrayed as the main victims. "Dying lad tells how boys and girls are made drug addicts," read the headline for a Jan. 17 story about a 28-year-old addict whose body "lay twisted out of all recognition to the human body." "Spindling legs that would disgrace a baby," wrote an anonymous World reporter. "Twisted limbs that cannot straighten. Arms that are petrified into misshapen caricatures." The addict shot up every four hours, a habit that cost him $5 to $8 per day. "I've been through hell - plain hell - many and many a night," he said. "If I only had the nerve I'd bump myself off. But I've lost even that, I haven't the guts to croak myself." A World story on Feb. 6 estimated there were 3,000 drug addicts "exclusive of Orientals" in Vancouver, which had a metropolitan population of 231,784. "I know of one cabaret in this town where only a short time ago thirty couples were dancing on the floor, and of those 30 couples only four were free from the drug habit," said Dr. A.P. Procter of the B.C. Medical Association. "In the same cabaret, in the washroom, 10 boys were at one time seen taking dope." Procter didn't mention the cabaret by name, but another Feb. 6 story told of a "snow party" at the Dominion Hall on Pender Street where a young couple "without any attempt at concealment beyond stepping into the shadows, proceeded to indulge in taking cocaine." Many of the World stories had a racist tone toward Vancouver's Chinese population. "All boats from Asia bring in illicit drugs," said a Jan. 16 headline. "Oriental crews largely engaged in traffic." Chinatown was portrayed as the centre of the drug epidemic, and a slum. "Sleep amid filth," read a front page story on Feb. 4. "Chinese lie jammed together like sardines: 38 men in one small bunk room." The story was accompanied by a photo of a ramshackle building labelled "A Chinatown eyesore." The World piled it on with a story about how American drug addicts were being driven out of Seattle by an anti-drug campaign, and were coming north. "Vancouver is facing an invasion of drug addicts, peddlers, traffickers and other hangers-on of the drug ring," said the Jan. 23 story. "The price of 'dope' in Seattle has risen. Many of the peddlers are unable to provide it ( because of the crackdown), and the result is that are forced to come to Vancouver. It is the same with the addicts. Unable to get their 'shot' in Seattle, they are coming to British Columbia." Ninety-five years later it's hard to discern how much of the series was hype, but the Red Cross was sufficiently alarmed to send out a warning to small towns around the province, where dope peddlers were said to be expanding their "nefarious trade." "Dance halls need special watching," it said. "Close chaperonage of girls is the greatest safeguard, and parents should insist on this. Watch the stranger in town. (And) avoid 'snow' parties where snuff (cocaine) is given." - --- MAP posted-by: Matt