M V ! ?' The Commoner OCTOBER, 1018 vw$r w wnen that bill passed the House with only a JTmiful of votes in the negative it included l,e"r as well as whiskey. When it was reported wk to the Senate favorably by the agricultural .nmmittee it still included beer, but the brewers Int busy They threatened to prolong debate, in order 'to hasten the passage of the food ad ministration bill and give the public the im mediate benefit of it the friends of the amend ment more patriotic than its enemies, consented o the elimination of beer and the brewers thus secured a year's lease of life, but now the nuestion is under consideration again and we find that during the past year the brewers have been using bread stuffs to the value of about one hundred millions of dollars worth a year, that they have 1)oen using six million tons of coal and using our railroads and our trains to carry the coal to the brewery and to distribute the beer. The country is aroused. War pro hibition has passed the Senate and it has gone far enough in the House to be sure of its pas sage there. It provides that-on the first day of next May the manufacture of beer shall cease during the war and the period of demobilization, and on the 30th day of Juno the fight of any body to sell intoxicating liquor in this country shall cease, and that war prohibition shall con tinue during the war and during the period of demobilization. It is only a question of a few days now before war prohibition will be a mat ter of statute. The brewers are burning the candle at both ends. They take bread, stuffs 'that we can not spare; they take fuel that we need and they use the fuel to convert the bread stuff into an intoxicating liquor that lessens the capa city of men to produce coal and to produce food. A few months ago the operators in the coal district about Pittsburg to the number of twenty-two hundred met and by unanimous vote sent a petition to Washington asking that dry zones be made around their mines and they promisedr that, if the government would free them from the effect of intoxicating liquor upon the men who mined the coal, they would pro duce two thousand tons of coal jier -day more, or over six hundred thousand tons of coal per year more than they are now able to produce. Now, that is the situation that confronts us, and it is so imperative that 'Senator' KfcHogg re cently introduced resolution, it went through the Senate, went to the House, was reported buck at once and passed without a dissenting vote, a resolution that authorizes the Presi dent to draw dry zones around mines, shipping yards, ammunition factories and other places where the government has a special interest in the efficiency of the men. JThe President by un animous vote is empowered to make districts dry and zones dry. I propose that he make the North Temperate zone dry. SALOON A MENACE TO INDUSTRIAL AND MILITARY FORCES OP NATION Not only does intoxicating liquor reduce the man power of the nation in productive industry but the saloon menaces the strength of those who must fight our battles. A few months ago I had occasion to visit Rochester, New York, and saw an audience of some four thousand, by a rising vote, ask that a dry zone be made around an aviation camp in the suburbs of Rochester. The petition said that four saloons had been planted at the gate of the camp. If there is any time when a man ought to have his brain clear and his nerves steady it is when he takes control of a flying machine. Not long ago Senator Overman of North Carolina exhibited in the United States Senate a brace taken from an aeroplane. He showed that it had been sawed in two in the center and the ends joined together with lead; then it was painted over and put back upon the aeroplane. The purpose was to so weaken the machine that when it rose in the air and, turn ing put a strain upon that particular brace, -the machine would fall apart and an American boy would be, plunged downward to his death. That was the work of a German, spy, and if they find that German spy they will shoot him to death and they ought to shoot him to death; but, my "lends, at a time like this- when we are fighting the most militant power of which history tells, and when we are straining every nerve, the liquor dealer who puts a saloon at the gate of an aviation camp and, for pay, deliberately tries to put weakness. in American boys where there ought to. be streng'th is as much an enemy of "is country as a German spy who tampers with an aeroplane. The man is more important than the aeroplane. ' We have only had one boy to die in disgrace abroad. One million six hundred thousand sol diers have crossed the ocean and ono boy only has died in disgrace, and that boy was under the influence of. liquor. While under the influ ence of liquor he assaulted and killed a littlo French girl seven years old, and they hung him. When the papers came to Washington the gov ernment said it was right, that wo could not afford to allow the French people to think that a crime like that would bo punished with less than the. severest penalty, and so a boy who went across the ocean to die a hero died betwixt earth and heaven, a felon died in disgraco upon the gallows, but the man who furnished the liquor was not hung with him. The time has come when we are not content to punish only the victim of alcohol, wo are going higher up and stop the factories that, for pay, make criminals in this country and through out the world. RATIFICATION OF NATIONAL PROHIBITION A PRACTICAL CERTAINTY I have tried to show you an easy way of com ing from the other side to ours. I have tried to show you how all the old arguments have been strengthened and how patriotic arguments compel you to change your position. Now, I shall bring this home to every voter of this audience; of this country, of this state. I believe it is as certain as any future event can' bo that wo will have ratification by more than thirty-six states before the first day of next March; I be licVe we will have at least forty, and that this amendment will be ratified whether Missouri helps us or not. If anybody tolls you that you ought not to ratify I hope you will remember a story. Two druriken men were going home from a saloon, leaning on each other for support; finally one of them stumbled and fell into the gutter. The other caught hold of a lamp post and saved himself from falling. The man in the gutter tried to get up but found ho could not rise unaided, so he asked the man leaning against the lamp post to help him; but that man, drunk as he was, had sense enough to know that -he was not in position to help any body else. He lookejl down sympathetically and answered: "I can't help you up but I will lie down with you." People of,, 'Missouri, you cannot savo the saloon. It Is gone and the brewery and distillery with it. If you can't help us, 1f you can't share in the glory of the emancipation of our nation from the saloon, your only alternative is to lie down inthe gutter with the saloon and give it what consolation you can during its closing hours. That's all. That is the way It looks. But, my friends, I have missed my guess several times on what was going to happen on election day, and I don't want to be over confident. It is barely pos sible that we may need Missouri. It may bo that . Missouri will be the thirty-sixth state and that without Missouri we can not ratify, and it may bo that Missouri will ratify by one majority in one branch of her legislature. That was the case in Louisiana, 21 to 20 in the Senate, and so it may be that you will have just one major ity in one branch of your legislature. It may be that that one man will be elected where some of you can vote, and It may be that he will be elected by one vote. I mention this to show how your vote may possibly have a tremendous influence. I envy the people of Missouri. You can do what I cannot do. My vote is not as valuable as yours may be. I can come and talk to .you but when I am through you vote as you please, and I do not know whether I shall be able to make a change of a vote. I could not prevent ratification in Nebraska 1f I wanted to. We have already gone dry by twenty-nine thou sand majority. We have had our primary and the House is overwhelmingly dry. Out of thirty three senatorial districts there are twenty-two in which there is no wet candidate; both parties have nominated drys. If all the democrats win we shall have at least ten majority n the Senate and if all the republicans win it will bo unanimous, for all their candidates are dry. Now I am interested In the democratic party but I am more interested in Nebraska than I am in the democratic party, and I would rather see my stale take her place on the roll of- honor with an unanimous vote than see any wet de mocrat elected to any place where he could dis grace his party and Nebraska by voting against ratification. ' Yes, you may have it in your power to io great things, and I ask every voter in this coun ty and stSte to vote just as be would If ho know that result depended on his vote, and I' ask him to register so that he cart Vote. Every one should register, and then every one ahottUl vote. If tho night beforo election there Is one man In this audience who Is intending to vote on tho wet side, either against state prohibition or against ratification, if there Is orio, lot him test his courage in tho way I suggest. Let him got pen and iilk and paper and write like this: "I" and then put in his full name "intend to vote tomorrow on tho sldo of the saloon. I do It, knowing that no saloon can live without doing harm. I do not know who will conduct tho saloons that my vote may help to continue In Missouri or in tho United States, but without knftwing who my partners In the liquor business will be, I hereby declare my willingness to sharo with them moral responsibility for all the harm that their saloons may do." Then sign your name; read it over in black and white and if you aro not ashamed of it have It framed in a gilt frame and hang it on the walls of your homo that your children and your neighbors may know what moral responsibility you are willing to assume in order to continue saloons. Then, if you succeed If your vote does what you want it to do if it helps to continue saloons, read the paper and when you read that some young man in whom a mother has invested a life, and in whom tho community has Invested enough money to educate him, has gone down to a drunkard's grave, write: "I am tho partnor of the man who sold tho liquor and I knew when I voted for the saloon that that was what the saloon would do." If you read in the paper that a husband, under the influence of drink, has broken every vow that ho made at the marriage altar and brought his wife to her grave with a broken heart, write: "I am tho partner of the man who sold the liquor and I knew when I voted for tho saloon that that was what tho saloon, would do." If you read in the paper that a father has, by drink, been converted into a drunkard and then has gone down to death by tho delirium tremens route, leaving his children fatherless, write: "I am the partner of thejnan who sold tho liquor and I know when I voted for the saloon that that was what the saloon would do;" and if, perchance, you read that some young woman, when under tho Influence of in toxicating liquor, was led astray and then covered "with shame, has gone down and down and down until she ends her life with her j)wn hand, write: "I am the partner of the man who sold tho liquor and I know when I voted for the saloon that that was what the saloon would do." I have told you what have read every day. There is not a man in Missouri with intelligence enough to mark his ballot on elec tion day who does not know that the saloon will sell tho virtue of every woman, undermine the valor of every man, is a menace to every homo and to everything high and holy, and that It will be while it Is permitted to curse the earth. That is the saloon. Who will take moral re sponsibility for continuing the saloon today? Will you of Missouri? Is Missouri going to wait until virtue Is forced upon her from without? The day of tho passing of tho saloon is near. When that day comes will this great common wealth rise and complain that a virtue from without has cleansed and purified your state against the protest of its own people? I cannot believe it my friends. You must adopt this amendment. You must bo dry- when tho wave reaches you and not be overwhelmed -by it. STATES THAT WILL RATIFY NATIONAL PROHIBITION AMENDMENT And do you know what the states about you aro going to do on ratification? Arkansas on the south will ratify. On tho west Oklahoma1 and Kansas and Nebraska" will ratify. On the north Iowa will ratify -of these states you have no doubt. Do you know what Illinois fs -going to 3o? They have had their primary over there. We have thirteen majority In the Illinois State Senate and we have a clear majority ini the House. Illinois will ratify this amendment.' Will Missouri be tho black spot on this west ern map? No. Missouri, you must share in the glory of this crusade. Here is the greatest moral, reform of the generation and it Is sweeping on to victory. Missouri, you must have your part in this victory and, then, when our fight Is won wo will raise that standard so high that It Can. be seen around the world, and having cleansed our, own house, we will take the place to which. we are entitled at the head of the. moral forces of all this -world and lead the movement that will drive intoxicating liquor frojn this glob. I thank you. . " ' j nflB M,uEH . ... . -,HM& i" 'i t M ft vfl . i I V! l '..4 ki ..i . f U 4 , fitf .1 V-J is .T3 S .-r 1! '-A .4 m i -?! m s c hi ;t.-ii&L mfi.. .jmrj&i. .M'Zvi u-iv, l :n. (JSijui'-.., iiJLuulUt '--:jiAte (festi.