FfwwRf'Rwwi s The Commoner" VOL. 17, NO. 3 6 .. . v.. ii fcWs & The Challenge of Prohibition to College Students ' By WILLIAM JENNINGS BRYAN "Young men and women, forgot yourselvea and attach yourselves to a great cause among the greatest causes of this generation is the crUBado against ,the saloon, against alcohol the greatest enemy man has today." The address by Hon. Wpi. J. Bryan was the opening address of the convention on the after noon of Thursday the 28th. The great audience which packed the auditorium to tho limit ac cepted for themselves and for the college stu dents of America tho challenge of tho present national prohibition movement which Mr. Bryan brought in his stirring address. Intercollegiate Statesman. The college man exerts far more than an aver ago influence upon tho thought of the country. If you doubt it examine a list of the college graduates and compare the percentage of prom inent men among them 'with the percentage of those who do not avail themselves of the op portunities offered by our colleges and univer sities. Any gathering of college men and wo mqn is, therefore, worth attending if one has a message to deliver. MEANING OF THIS CONVENTION But this convention is made up of a select group of college students men and women who by r dedicating themselVes to tho work which your association has in hand has given proof of their freedom from an evil influence which can destroy the mind as well as the body. The delegates in attendance here are bound together by a strong and growing interest in an "issue that is soon to be tho dominant political issue In 'the nation tho prohibition issue. I esteem it a privilege, therefore, to appear before you, to encourage you and to co-operate wih you in your work. It would bo difficult to overestimate the infiu- "-ence which you delegates will be ablo to exert, first through the colleges from which you come, and then in that largo sphere in which each of you will bo a center of activity. TWO PHASES OP LIQUOR QUESTION There are two phases of the liquor question. One deals with the habits of the individual and the other with legislation. I shall ask your at tention to both phases, and we shall take up the most fundamental first, namely, the question of total abstinence. I am more and more grateful as tho years go by that I had impressed upon me in my youth a belief in total abstinence and in the signing of the pledge. I began signing when I was so young I can not remember my first pledge, and I have been signing ever since, and while I live I shall stand ready to sign with any one, at any time, and anywhere, a promise never to use in toxicating liquor as a beverage. If-any of you doubt the value of a pledge, let me give you a part of the history of one pledge only little more than two years old. RESULT OF A PLEDGE When I went home to vote at the election of 1914 I found that a neighbor had been drinking to excess. J asked him to sign the pledge with me and he consented to do so. I prepared the pledge in duplicate and we signed it together. It read: "We, the undersigned, promise, God help us, never to use intoxicating liquor as a beverage." I gave one copy to his wife and took the other with me back to Washington. As I approached Chicago I met a man who came out from Mich igan with an invitation from tho high school boys to address them at a meeting to be held near the end of the month at Ann. Arbor. When I read the invitation I found that it began, 'We, the undersigned. The fact that the fitst three words of the invitation were Identical with tho words used in the beginning of tho pledge which I had in my pocket reminded me of the pledge, s, and I asked. him whether there was any objec tion to my asking, the boys ito sign -the pledge c with me. .Heapproved. of the plan-and I pre sented tho pledge at the 'meeting. When a largo number of the boys indicated a willing ness to sign it we circulated slips of paper con taining the pledge and the boys took the slips homo and obtained signatures. In a few weeks I received a book, one of the moBt precious ones in my library. It contains the names, ages "and addresses of 8,200 high school boys in Michigan who signed the pledge with me. . I learned soon afterward that these boys helped to make sev eral , counties dry, arid last month they helped to make Michigan dry. MULTIPLIED 14,000 TIMES Thus within three months'.. time that pledge had been multiplied 8,200 times. In the March following the pledge was presented at a great meeting in Philadelphia where 6,000 signed. Within six months the pledge had been multi plied more than 14,000 times. Soon after, this Philadelphia meeting a lawyer of that city called to explain how in carrying out the pledge . he found that his first convert was his own son, a student in the University of Pennsylvania. CASE AGAINST ALCOHOL The case against alcohol is conclusive. "The experience of the human race is all on one side. From the time when Daniel demanded a test, and when, the test being made, he established the superiority of water over wine, the evidence has been accumulating. You can take a hun dred young men of equal promise in any country in the world, divide them into two. groups and let fifty use alcohol and fifty abstain, and the fifty who do not use alcohol will take the prizes in the colleges and on the athletic field. The government does not allow young men at Annapolis and at West Point to use alcohol while students there. Why? Because the gov ernment is interested in raising these young men to the maximum of efficiency, and alcohol Impairs efficiency. How can any parent be less interested in a son than the government is in its wards? THE ECONOMIC WRONG If alcohol injures the individual who uses it; if it reduces his capacity as a producer, and in addition menaces his morals, how carihwiy com munity afford to permit the establishment of a saloon, that can not exiBt except as it lowers the physical, intellectual and moral standards of the community? We do not license men to spread disease among hogs. Why license them to spread disease among human beings? Why not raise man up to the hog level, and show as much interest in his welfare as we do in the health of our swine? Why license a saloon to make men drunk and then fine men for getting drunk? And why, when a saloon has made a man drunk, do we shut the victim up in the calaboose and leave the saloonkeeper free to intoxicate some one else? Why not compel the saloon to keep its drunkards in a cage behind a' plate glass win dow until they sober up, so that the public can examine their handiwork and judge by the fin ished product the work that the saloon does? Why do we not compel the saloon to take care of the paupers, the criminals and the insane that graduate from it, as we compel stamp mills to take care of their tailings after they have ex tracted precious metal from the. ore-bearing rock? THE MORAL RESPONSIBILITY But tho saloon is not only an economic wrong It is a moral responsibility. Who is willing to become a partner with the liquor dealer, and share with him moral responsibility for the harm that he does? The saloon needs three things besides customers: First, capital to run tho business; second, the liquor to sell, and third, the votes that permit the saloon to exist. And the -votes are just as necessary as the cap ital or the liquor. The man who furnishes the capital receives a dividend or Interest on liis investment. The-man -who. furnishes the liquor receives a profit on his product. Wha't does the voter receive? He is a silent partner in4he business. He draws no dividend, he receives n6 profits; ho simply has the disgrace of heinin to create a business with which he is ashaS to have his name connected. a In addition to the knowledge that we imvn gained from science arid from experience in III own country, we have the evidence furnished hv the countries now at war. They have found that alcohol impairs their power to carry on war. Patriotism, that sentiment intangible in visible, but eternal, which has led countless mil" lions to offer themselves upon their country's al" tar, is no match for the appetite for alcohol" Allegiance to Bacchus and Barleycorn has been found superior to loyalty to King, Kaiser or Czar. The nations have been compelled to turn aside from war to fight a foe at home scarcely less deadly than the foe they meet upon the bat tlefield. Why not profit by their experience? THE COMING ISSUE In a country like ours every issue becomes a party issue when It is ready for political action, because the value of the support of a party or ganization is everywhere recognized. A very considerable nuniber of voters follow the party and support the platform. It is impossible, therefore, to keep the prohibition question out of politics when it really becomes an issue, and it has now become an issue. The question is not whether prohibition will .enter politics. It is al ready in politics. The only question remaining is, which side will the parties take? Jl'here is only' one side to a moral issue, and that is the moral side. No party can afford to champion the immoral side of any moral question. Let me, therefore, adyis you, young men, to take up the work in your respective parties. If you are democrats make it your business to use your influence within your party to put your party on the prohibition side in county, in state and in nation. If you are republicans, work in the republican party along the same line. I need not advise those who belong to the pro hibition party, "because with them prohibition is the central and controlling plank. You will find that the politicians will dodge while dodging is good, but the same instinct of self-preservation that makes them dodge when they think dodging advantageous will make them take the prohibition side when the opponents of the saloon becomes as much in earnest as the representatives -of the liquor traffic have always been. From time to time crises arise in the political Wgrld, and these are the times when young men have an opportunity to come to the front. Old men are more apt to be timid than young men, and successful politicians are more apt to be timid than young men who are without en tangling alliances. . For this reason every crisis brings into the arena of politics a new group of young and courageous men who are willing to risk their future on the righteousness of their cause. The prohibition question has already brought many new men into the arena of politics, and it will bring more. Christ gave the world a great truth when He saidi "He that saveth his life shall lose it, and he that loseth his life, for my sake, shall find it." This is an epitome of history. Those who think only of themselves lead little lives but those who stand ready to give themselves for causes greater than themselves find a larger Hie than the life that theywould have surrenders. Wendell Phillips presented the same thought in a little different language when he said: How prudently most men sink into nameless graves, while now and then a few forget themselves ro- to immortality." Young men and women, forget yourselves, and attach yourselves to 'a great cause. Among the great causes of this generation the greatest .is the crusade against the saloon against al cohol, the greatest enemy that mankind has to day. The objection is made to the plan of l)ermIt: ting the people to vote on the question o whether a nation shall enter war is that a swoop suddenly down upon nations and a"" matters that loom so Xar- ahead that uenDenu action thereon can be taken. The Inct " there has not been a war in centuries y this is true, ot course, does not enter into i ..discussion. Facts that- interfere with j b . consideration do -not - .enter . into discussion .where jingoes tako.p&rt. i&