-V" The Commoner 'AUGUST, 1918 n rrrf HWTM derstand the kind of business they defend. It is the kind of business that has been the center of crime and lawlessness everywhere. The gentleman speaks of 50,000 home brew eries in Oregon and Washington. Did those men who reported them to the convention report them to the authorities? If there Is any violation of law out there, why do they not report it to the authorities? And why is it that he Is so much opposed to "home brewing," unless it is that it takes away the profit of the big brewer who had heretofore supplied them? Gentlemen of the committee, this is the business, and you can not cleanse it. You can not wash it; the only place to clean the saloon is in the morgue, when it lies in state with its victims. The Chairman. Colonel Bryan, your nineteen minutes have expired. Mr. Bryan. I am very much obliged to you, for being so patient. May I add just one. word? I recognize that we are dealing with an evil, and that that evil is nearing its end. Whenever we have, by con stitution or by law, fixed a time for prohibition, it has generally been fixed in advance; we recog nize that there is an argument to be made in favor of giving a reasonable time. Therefore, I would suggest that, when you stop manufacture and sale, ydu give a reasonable time it might he on a sliding scale; they might manufacture not more than 75 per cent for a certain time; then not more than 50 per cent; then not more than 25 per cent; and then nothing; and after that, a date when complete prohibition will go into effect. If you think it is necessary to look after the crop of grapes that is already grown, that can be provided in the law. The present rules prevent increased production of beer. I would prefer the bill to be a separate bill. But everybody knows that a separate bill is very difficult to get through in a time of rush,; and it does not come with good grace from those who do not want prohibition at any time, to find fault with the method of getting it. My under standing is that the .District of Columbia went dry upon an amendment to a bill; we prohibited the .manufacture of wliiskey by an amendment to a bill. The "bone dry" amendment was added to the postoffice appropriation bill as was the amendment against liquor advertisements. This is not an unusual m.rthod; and, Mr.. Chairman and gentlemen, I repeat, those who are opposed to prohibition under any circumstances are not in position to say that those who favor it shall not secure it by the best method possible. My suggestion is that the people who want war prohibition should get together and agree upon the details of the bill. Mr. Chairman and gentlemen of the committee, national prohibition by constitutional amend ment is not far off; but we can not wait even mat long to protect our country from the rav ages of the saloon, if we can get war prohibition sooner. In the interest of the food and fuel consumed, we should Jiave prohibition immedi ately; and in the interest of the man power the saloons destroy, we should have prohibition, we ought to have it for the men at the front, t 7rougll.t t0 have Jt for the men at home, thin ? wInnIn of the war above all other Sm ld not say one word in favor of Prohibition if it would operate against our coun- tw anf,w?y' But l know of no Ste thing brtnVT d d0 more t0 helD win this war and Son a victorIous end tnan war prohibi- hJnll phibtion army should not be disbanded turS nG C tadGl rUm haB been finally cap tion ?,n,S?f8B has Postponed a vote on na- atti?Mf,t,on' and the Plnion ,s Seneral ?tlPk f nSton that if the Prohibition forces Sim. e!P gUns Victory wiU come- Tne an the ; 0' oze is necessary to the winning -of itq Zl hZ Serais of the army have banned ntn?fy VL soldier? at the front because it banned It should bp aeSJ ? y the Industrial army at home for ex dCy the same reason. 4 thf Tii?2S Sfimtion Is t0 aSain come before should i? at,es senate on A"Sust 20th. There aSontinn " 4 nesitancy about its Immediate lions ?nJ t,B i)oor Judgment to spend mil leavp IS FoutIne out spies in our midst and Krain Vwbr?weries of the country to consume SrhMf f Bhould be used at home to release BrodfrA?e soldiers in France and to turn out iffS admIttedly; incapacitate men for effective military service. Facts Show Germany Planned War Following is a special correspondence to Tho Christian Science Monitor, Boston, from its Washington Bureau: Washington, Th C. Reiteration of the Pan German demands published recently shows a perisistent disposition to cling to the old false hood that the war was forced upon Germany. For instance, it is noted here by diplomatists in the last representations from Berlin that the Pan-Germans will demand in the final account around the peace table, "a war indemnity com mensurate with the enormous sacrifices and loss es of our people." The tone of this representation is that tho enemies of Germany took them "by surprise, at tacked them and forced them to a war for their self preservation. Tho Christian Science Mon itor has been able to assemble a number of tho facts that will be placed before the conference in answer to the hypocritical claim of Germany that she was forced into the war. .These facts speak for themselves. They are as follows: 1. Laws of 1911, 1912, and especially 1913, increased the German army in time of peace from 515,000 to 866,000 men. Great increase of machine-gun corps, aviators, etc. Enormous stocks of munitions prepared. Exceptional war tax levied of $226,000,000. Special war fund (for expense of mobilization, etc.) lincrcagea from $30,000,000 to $90,000,000. 2. Reconstruction of Kiel canal (connecting Baltic and North Sea) hastened so as to be ready in early summer of 1914. Fortifications of Helgoland, etc., improved. 3. Strategic railways constructed leading to Belgian, French, and Russian frontiers. "Germany has made ready, at heavy outlay, to take the offensive at a moment's notice, and to throw enormous forces across the territories of two unoffending and peaceful neighbors (Belgium and Luxemburg) in her fixed resolve to break through the northern defenses of France, and thus to turn the formidable forti fications of the Vosges. She has prepared for the day by bringing fully equipped and, admir ably constructed railways up to her neighbors' frontiers, and in some places across them. . . . An immense sum of money has been sunk in these railways, . . . and there is not the least prospect of an adequate return on them as com mercial ventures. They are purely military and strategical preparations for war with Frarice." (See Fortnightly Review for February, 1910, and February, 1914, and New York Times Cur rent history, II, 1000,1040.) 4. Accumulation of war material, etc. Ex portation of chemicals used in making explosives greatly reduced in 1913-14, and importation of horses, foodstuffs ,and fats (used in nitro glycerin) greatly increased. Great purchases of beds and hospital supplies in May, 1914; em bargo on stocks of foreign pneumatic tires in Germany; hasty collection of accounts by Ger man merchants; transfer of bank balances, etc., from beginning of July, etc. (See Le Men songe due 3 Aout, 1914, pp. 9-10.) "The most important document is a circular dated June 9, 1914 (in which the German gen eral headquarters orders all ownerof factories to open the mobilization envelopes in their pos session." (Associated Press dispatch, dated Paris, February 5, 1918, summarizing docu ments published in the newspaper Le Petit Parisien. ) '5. Recall of reservists from South America, etc., in May and June, 1914. 6. Exceptional grand maneuvers of 1914. Ordered in May, these massed "500,000 men in Cologne, the Grand Duchy of Baden, and Al sace Lorraine-for the month of August. (Le Mensonge du 3 Aout, 1914, p. 9.) 7. Preparations for stirring up revolt in the British empire. -,,',. v (a) In South Africa. Reply of the kaiser fin 1913) to a communication from the future rebel leader, Colonel Maritz: "I will not only acknowledge the independence of South Africa, but I will even guaranty it, provided the rebel lion is started immediately." (Speech of Gen eral Botha at Cape Town, July 25, 1915. See Rose, "Development of the European Nations ' "Vin'BHUsL9 India. On July 81915 in dictments were brought in the federal court at San Francisco against 98 porsontf, Jnclttdin German consuls, at which time tho' federal dis trict attorney said: "For more than a year prior to the outbreak of the European war, certain Hindus in San Francisco and cortain Germans wore preparing openly for war with England. At the outbreak of the war Hindu leaders, mem bers of tho German consulate hero, and attaches of the German government, began to form plans to foment revolution in India for tho purpose of freeing India and aiding Germans in their military operations." The leaders of these de fendants pleaded guilty to tho charges against them In December, 1917. (See War Cyclopodial under German Intrigue Against American Peace.") "Consideration of all testimony leads to the conviction that tho India plot now before tho federal court hero (In Chicago) is but a very Nsmall part of tho whole conspiracy Tho defendants appear to have traveled far and wide in promotion of their alleged work. And al ways, testimony indicates, German consuls were aware of what was going on and ready to give things '& push. Pro-Germanism all over ' the United States, Canada, Mexico, Brazil, Hawaii, Manila, China, Indo-China, Siam, Java, .and va rious parts of Africa has been brought into the case. No part, according to the testimony, seems to have been detached. All blended into the whole scheme, which is alleged to have had its inspiration and propulsion in Berlin." (The Christian Science Monitor, Oct. 19, 1917.) 8. Coaling arrangements made for German naval vessels (Juno 14, 1914). "A Gorman crusier, tho Eber, was In dock at Cape Town a few days before the outbreak of war, and got away just in time. An inter cepted letter addressed to tho commander con tained certain instructions from Berlin, which were dated Juno 14, 1914. These instructions revealed a complete system for coaling the Ger man navy on tho outbreak of war through se cret service agents in Capo Town, New York, and Chicago. "Tho commander of the Eber was given the names of shippers and bankers with whom he could deal confidentially, the essence of the plan being that a collier would leave Table Bay iCapo Colony) ostensibly bound for England but re ally to meet a German warship at an agreed - rendezvous. 'Naturally, so far as Cape Town is concerned, the arrangements have been upset owing to the discovery, and this, perhaps, ex plains why German cruisers have been more in evidence in north Atlantic waters than in the southern ocean." (Cape Town correspondent of The London Times, issue of Oct. C, 1914.) The profiteer doesn't care how many harsh words are said about him or how many denun ciatory resolutions are passed by convent'ons. If he could be reached through his humanity or his regard for the public welfare he wouldn't be a profiteer. It is only when a man steps for ward with a program that will improve mark eting facilities and eliminate useless middlemen that he sits up and takes notice and sends out his political missionaries begging people not to do anything to "interfere with the winning of the war." In California the greater part of the p.ower Used is in the form of hydro-electric energy, and that part generated from coal is in the na ture of an emergency or supplementary acr vice. California is located so far from the fuel deposits of the country that she early devel oped her water power. The scarcity. of fuel the country over points to the fact that we have one big job just ahead of us, and that is har nessing the Btreams of the nation wherevpr this is practicable. . Everybody wishes he was of the cheerful, op timistic nature of the gent who writes the war bulletins for the German government. He said not long ago, "We retired from south ,vf. th Marne unnoticed." When It Is recalled that about 20,000 Germans were captured anil more than twice that number killed or wounded, .ono can see readily how difficult It is to attract no tice during a battle. We have always been proud of our manufac turing industry in this country, but the addi tion of 8,000 new millionaires to our preyiou list of 14,696 during the last year does not rejp resent a sort of output that calls for three chr on the part of the people whoso forced eostrt butions achieved this result. H Clr? V glWk&K&M