The Commoner FEBKUMir, 1916 The Yourig Man's Opportunity In popular government every crisis is to tho young man an opportunity. In times of quiet men grow into prominence by slow degrees and the young must serve an apprenticeship beforo they can aspire to leadership, but when a crisis comes; when a great reform breaks the crust of society and' Insists upon being dealt with the old leaders are apt to be too timid to meet the requirements of the occasion. Office holding usually makes the occupant conservative. His obligations to those who have elevated him to the place and his hope of continued preferment make him hesitate to disturb harmony or to alienate those upon whom he has relied. It is at such a time that the young man, free from such restraints, is able to make his way to the front it is the time that tries the mettle of the man. It is the time when the brave go forth to battle while the weaklings wait. Such a time is at hand. The old issues are passing; the new ones are here. The tariff has been a bone of contention for a century first a high tariff and then a low tariff but we seem to have reached a settlement of the issue. The success ,of the present tariff law has been such that eyen the unprecedented disturbances caused by the war have not shaken its foundations. We are not likely to return to the high tariffs of the past; especially if the present administration's policy is endorsed at this year's election. The currency question is also settled. The country, for the first time in half a century, is freed from the grip of Wall street, and there is no likelihood of a return to former conditions. Tho republican party would hardly dare to repeal the present law even if by chance it were able to regain control of the government. And so with the anti-trust legislation, it has come to stay. 'ajw. V ;.h' . j 'We tiow have the. popular election of United States Benators ; -we have the' income tax and we have a primary system- We have also adopted the initiative and referendum in the states, and this still further insures the rule of the people. All these reforms are the result of the move ment that began twenty years ago for the over throw of coroporato domination. One more na tional democratic victory will make these, re forms permanent, and with that victory achieved next year the way is open for the new issues Peace, Prohibition and Equal Suffrage. All of these appeal to young men and furnish themes which they can present with all the en thusiasm of youth. The boy has- caught the spirit of the age and is inspired by a desire to contribute a service to the world, a servipe which will be measured by the help he can ren der rather than by exploits on the battlefield. He is enlisted as a warrior for peace. He is also naturally inclined to Prohibition because he has learned in his youh to avoid in-, toxicating liquor, and, knowing the intelligence with which his mother has safe-guarded his early life, he is not afraid to trust her influence at the polls when she seeks to use the vote to better the environment in which the children are to be reared. . . No trinity of issues could more appeal to the young men and for that matter to the young women than those which are now before us:' PEACE, PROHIBITION and EQUAL SUF FRAGE. 'The political arena calls for the en ergy, the intelligence and the enthusiasm of the new generation, and the call is already heard. The response will come from the country, the village and the city from the school and the college; from all everywhere who are willing to invest their time and their strength in causes that are righteous- and which, because righteous, are sure to prevail; W. J. BRYAN. A SATISFACTORY RECORD With the tariff reduced, the government's right to- issue paper money vindicated, Wall street's grip on business and politics broken, pri vate monopolies "in process of ultimate extinc tion," an income tax on the statute book, popu lar election of senators in operation, and a prom ise of Philippine independence passed by the sen ate with all these reforms secured within three years, Mr: Bryan has reason to be pleased with the progress made on domestic questions. MINISTERS AROUSED On another page will be found a copy of a letter sent by twenty ministers of Bridgeport, Connecticut, and vicinity, to the President on tho subject of preparedness. This lettor is sig nificant for two reasons. First, because it is a protest coming from ministers. It i& gratifying to see the stirring of conscience among the min isters of tho land and the Increased couraga with which they are speaking out against tho policy which the manufacturers of munitions and tho army and navy experts are trying to force upon the country. It is also significant that such a protest should come from Bridge port, Connecticut one of the centers temporari ly enjoying pecuniary benefit from supplying war munitions to the countries at war. The poison of preparedness finds its antidote in the immediate vicinity of the factories. Tho Pres ident, senators and members of congress can not afford to overlook tho protest of those who speak for the Christian conscience qf the nation and who, on matters involving morals, exert an influence far beyond their numbers. "THERE'S A REASON" Why are the special interests so SURE that there is danger of war? Because they MAKE MONEY OUT OF "SCAREDNESS." Why are tho masses SURE that there is uo danger of war? Because they have to PAY THE TAXES made necessary by the "scaredness" program. The special interests are gambling on a sure thing. They will make money oven if their predictions fail, and still more if they can provoke war. Tho people, on the other hand, lose if they have to pay for unnecessary preparation or for prepara tion which provokes war and compels still heavier taxes. WE SHOULD LEAD NOT FOLLOW "Yet I am asked, I, who am one of the legis lators of a Christian country, to measure my policy by the policy of ancient and pagan Rome!" exclaimed John Bright when protesting against the plans of the militarists of Great Britain. And so "the Christian statesman of the United States may protest against the adoption of a diplomacy which imitates tlie blo'od-stained diplomacy of Europe a diplomacy which reeks with threats and revels in tho ultimatum. With the army experts advising a 600 million expenditure on the army, and tho navy experts advising the expenditure of 500 millions on the navy a total of one billion, or twice the net profits of all the farmers in the United States the plain people can get some idea of the fren zied preparedness toward which the President would lead us. How provoking -it must be -to the jingoes to have it leak out that we have the second best navy in the world and were never better pre pared than now to repel invasion. It is real mean in any one to so completely answer the slanders which the jingoes are daily uttering against their country. THE DISEASE IS SPREADING An Associated Press dispatch from 'Havana, Cuba, January 26th, says: "The question of the increase of the army and navy of Cuba continues to come up for oc casional agitation in the press but seems to ex cite no popular response. The few advocates of Cuban 'preparedness' base their argument on the possibility of the United States being drawn into the European conflict, in which event they fear that the wealth of Cuba might excite the cupidity of some of the combatants who might seize upon her attitude of dependency on the United States as an excuse to violate her neu trality. That Cuh.a could raise an army of sev eral hundred thousand men is obvious but there, are very few, if any, Cubans who can see the faintest necessity for it." Here we have it, just as might have been ex pected. Manufacturers of munitions, after try ing to scare the United States are proceeding to scare Spanish America. And why should our neighbors on the south be expected to withstand the temptation, if the United States yields to it. "On with the scare, let war be unconfined!" is the shout of the purveyors of war materials and the professional soldiers. What a pity! Or rather, what a sin hut would It not be really a crime, for this great nation to set such an un christian example to the Spanish speaking re publics as we are now -asked- to set? W. J. BRYAN; Prophecies and Their Interpretation I havo received a fow letters enclosing ser mons In favor of war, or In favor of prepared ness with a view to war, and these sermons are usually based upon prophecies the minister so interpreting tho prophecy as to mean that war is Imminent and inevitable. Tho error Into which these ministers havo fallen is due to a failue to distinguish between a PROPHECY and tho INTERPRETATION of a prophecy. It is a common mistake into which many fall, to give to an uninspired intcrpretati6h tho forco to which only an Inspired prophecy is entitled. Ono can admit that the prophecies of Holy Writ aro inspired without conceding Infallibility to those who so interpret them as to find their fulfill ment In tho present age. A minister ought to bo tho last to claim for his interpretation any more weight than he himself would give to an opinion of another minister who Interprets tho prophecy differently. These Interpretations aro sometimes dangerous, becauso when a man onco convinces himself that his interpretation Is cor rect, he then follows his own opinion as If It had all the binding forco of prophecy, and In so doing he may paralyze his Christian usefulness. Suppose, for instance, a minister construes a given prophecy to mean that AT THIS TIME there Is to be a universal war, and that tho United States Is to play an Important part in it. If ho is convinced that his interpretation is cor rect he is not only useless as an advocate of peace but he becomes dangerous to peace. Ac cepting War as inevitable he becomes an advo cate of preparedness, and, if ho has any influ ence, he may, by helping to engender a military smrlt, bring about the very wars which he pr diets. The safer plan in it not the Christian plan? -is .to accept the teachings of Christ as a mean of pi-eventing war and then apply them, having faith that they will havo tho effect that Christ promised. . If war. is to como lff no Chi;BMivb. responsible for it by a misinterpretation of pro phecies or by lack of confidence In the power of God to employ love .and Christian service for the prevention of wapf . W. J. BRYAN. THE GROWTH OF THE ARMY Oh another page will be found a tabulated statement showing the size of tho standing army from the years 1891 to 1915 inclusive, to gether with the amount appropriated every year, and the amount spent for fortifications. It will bo seen that in the 25 years covered by the sta tistics the number of officers increased from 2052 to 4G16, and the number of enlisted men from 23,398 to 87,384. The appropriations for the support of tho army Increased from 26,000.000.00 to $98,000,000.00. The army Is practically four times as great as it was 25 years ago, and the hospital corps is five times as great as it was then. This does not include the quartermaster corps or the Philippine scouts. The appropriations for the army are practically four times what they were 25 years ago. As the object Is simply to measure the growth o the standing army, no reference Is made In the table to the volunteer army which served in the Spanish war. A CHILLY DAY " 'Twas a chilly day for WHUc when the mer cury went down," is the wdy a witty editor chronicled the death of the lad who swallowed some quicksilver. The lines are recalled" by the chill that ran through the militarists when the military committee was Informed that tho war' department could equip FIVE HUNDRED THOU SAND MEN IMMEDIATELY with arms NOW ON HAND, and. three hundred thousand more in three months. The testimony shows that "the country was never in better position in this re spect." AN APPROPRIATE BUTTON 1 : Miss Margaret Winans of Swissvale, Pa., has designed one of the most appropriate peace but tons thus far brought to the attention of the public. It has In the center a dove with an olive branch in its mouth and in a circle around it the song heard at Bethlehem: "Peace on earth: good will toward men." t rj v.i ,n i A I 3