wjrr-i The Commoner OCTOBER, 1918 .7 PROHIBITION: STATE AND NATIONAL '"jtt-'W s Speech of William J. Bryan, Delivered at Auditorium, St. Joseph, Missouri, September 18, 1918 Ladies and Gentlemen: i lt make3 me feel as ic i were aomownai ageu when I remember that it is twenty-threo years i-aincc I flrflt spotce in yum cit-jr, uU vo miiu- duccd to you uy your vuij uibiiu6ui0uwu "b" Hon Calvin Buroes. I have returned many times since and never with more pleasure thau "i come to-niglit My lire lias been spent for now ' nioro than a quarter of a century upon the olitical battlefield. Twenty-eight years, for that is the length of time since my first Congres- lonal nomination, i. nave oeen laaonng in uu half of reforms, and the latter years of my life have been made glad by the triumph of many reforms for which we negan to ugut more uiau two decades ago; but in all these years I have never taken part in any fight which was as great .in its far reaching influence as the fight in which we are now engaged and my heart has never been so deeply in a cause as in tue cause ..Mnh nnw aoDroaches its complete triumph. And this cause has grown more rapidly than any other cause with which I nave ueen conncccea. We are traveling towards the dawn; the day grows brighter hour by hour, and I am glad to night to find upon this platform men who dare oppose what has been in the past a majority sentiment in this city. It takes moral courage (o face an adverse majority, and there, is no majority that has been as tyrannical and as des potic as the majority which has stood guard over the saloon. I desire, therefore, to express my great delight at, and my appreciation of the fact that you have citizens here who are willing to takd the risk of offending those interested in the liquor business and are making their fight open, direct and positive against the saloon. Allow me to encourage them by telling them that if they will hold out for eighteen months longer there will not be a brewery, a distillery or a saloon in the' City of St. Joseph to terrorize any one. The institution is going. The question that you have to decide is whether you will help to drive it out or be its champions until it is driven out. CAUSE UPPERMOST IN MINDS AND HEARTS OF PEOPLE- ' Before I take up the subject that brings us here I shall dwell for .a little while upon a greater cause, for the cause uppermost in the minds and hearts of our people at this time is the cause in which millions of our men are now engaged; the cause to which we are pledg ing bill'ons of our dollars. I want to speak for just a little while of the war, and frshall draw some parallels between this cause at home and the cause that we are fighting for across the sea. Let me bring you a thought from the stand point of my line of work. It has been my busi ness to compare forms of government, to study methods of government, and to work for im provements in government, and I ask you to consider for a moment the eifect that this war "Will have upon the world's thought on the ub ject of government. When our nation4 entered this war the character of the conflict as a com bat between two forms of government was greatly emphasized, for now, standing face to face upon the battlefiefd, are the greatest re public in all history and that government which in modern times best represents all that is antagonistic to our ideas of government. Ours js a people's government. Here the people rule, fhose who temporarily exercise authority are chosen by the people, and while they act for the people they act within the limits of a written V constitution. Here the people, are the masters, u me ouiciais are but the public -servants chosen to give expression to the people's will. Being a people's government it has hafeguarded Jhe rights of the people and its chief concern has been to secure equality of opportunity to ie people. To show you how fully and com pletely it lias accomplished its purpose let me Present this illustration. If a boy is born in this In t llis Darents die before he is old enough io Know them and ho is reared in an orphan t5iU?' SUch aTe the opportunities that are at ntrS, tt0 American citizenship that if that hn v,an ,oy wlU but improve those opportunities uu nas just as good a chance to become the greatest business man of his generation as has tho son of the greatest business man of the preceding generation. More than that, if that orphan boy will but improvo his opportunities he has just as good a chance to become Presi dent of the United tates lu his day as has the son of any former President. That is our coun try, and this equality of opportunity is worth more to our children than any amount of money that a father can leave to a child. A large f ortuno in anticipation has ruined many young men, a largo fortune In possession has ruined manymoro, and a fortune does not always remain in the hands of tho one who inherits it, but equality of opportunity, such as attaches to citizenship 1n this country, meets the child on the threshold of his life and it is his to improve while his life lasts. That equality of opportunity is a thing so priceless that every man in this country and, If necessary, every woman also can afford to die to keep the path open between the child and the stars. That iff our country. WAR A CONFLICT BETWEEN TWO FORMS OF GOVERNMENT Tho German government is tho very opposito of ours. At its head stands one who claims to julo by right divine, and ho is supported in these absurd pretensions by military power. Tho . German people are not their own masters; they enjoy such privileges as thoir sovereign con descends to grant to them. Now, these two forms of government have met upon tho battlefield and one of them will bo victorious. Both have had their defenders in the past. The champions of autocracy have laid emphas's upon strength. They have insisted that under thoir form of government tho ruler could more quickly and more surely concentrate his entire force against a given object. Wo have dis pute,d ,the claim; we have contended that our form of government is not only the most wise but also tho strongest, and no one has belter expressed our views than the great historian Bancroft who, nearly one hundred years ago, said that "a republic is in truth the strong est of governments because, discardipg the Im plements of terror, it dares to build its citadel in the hearts of men." And, now, the test is to be made and we are to find out which is tho better foundation upon which to build a govern ment, the love of the people or the fear that an autocrat can excite in the hearts of his sub jects. When I was a boy in the college I read a book entitled "Creasy's Fifteen Decisivo Battles," and in that book the author says that a single battle in the past changed the course of civilization lor hundreds of years. If a little battle in the past could thus affect the future who today is presumptuous enough to look ahead and attempt to guess for how many hundreds of years the stream of thought on the subject of government may be colored by this the bloodiest of all the battles of hiBtory, the one that is being fought today upon tho western front. Therefore, in ad dit'on to all other reasons why we"niust win this war let me suggest this reason. We must not only win it for ourselvesand for our allies, and for the world of today, but, as believers in our form of government, as those who would com mend this form of government to the confidence of those who live after us, we must win this war also for the world of tomorrow. Wo can not afford to have an historian write an hundred years from now that when these two forms of government met upon the battlefield an Emperor was better able to mobilize the resources of an Empire than a President and Congress were the resources of a Republic; and the students of history will never be permitted to read that the oppressed subjects of an ambitious Kaiser were more loyal to their government than were the free citizens of this great' republic to those who they themselves had chosen and to a govern ment that had given them more of blessings than any other people had ever enjoyed. We not only must win this ivar but we will win this war. PEOPLE WILL MEASURE UP TO DEMANDS' AND RESPONSIBILITIES I have no more doubt of the triumph of our arms than I have of the rising of tomorrow's sun but my faith- in victory rests upon the be- , if lief that In the days to como as in tho days thus far our pooplo will moasuro up to cvory re sponsibility and moot cvory domand made upon their patriotism. For th'o purpose of what 'I have to say on that subject tonight lot mo divldo our pooplo into threo classes. In tho first class I put our soldlors and our sailors, those who In tho army and navy offor their all and are ready to dio if necessary in thoir nation's dofonso. No matter how willingly these men approach tho battle front on them falls tho heaviest burden of this war. I put no one clso in tho samo class with our soldier boys. In tho second class I put thoso who occupy positions of great rospous'billty, chlof among them our President, who carries such a load of responsibility and caro as has never fallon on any othor President. Near him aro thoso who to a less degrco share the burden that ho bearfe. If you would know how heavy this burden is and what a falso step would mean turn back In memory a few months to tho time when a United States senator charged that tho war department had broken down, and when in somo quarter! there was a demand that Secretary Baker should resign. Had tho chargo boon mado good ha would have boon compelled to withdraw from tho cabinet and the remainder of his days would havo been lived under tho cloud that a forced retirement would havo put upon him. But, for tunatoly, when ho mado his answer it was so complete that ho not only sllonccd his critlcH but established himsolf more firmly than before in the nation's confidonco, and now, a fow months afterwards, a world Is amazed that that same Secretary Baker should havo boon able, in so short a time, to havo carried across an ocean three thousand miles wide one million, six hun dred thousand American soldiers and put them on the battlefields of Europe. " For many months a coterie of newspapers In the northeast tried to drive Joseph uh Daniels out of tho cabinet. They ridiculed him; thoy misrepresented him, and Daniels himself is not happier than I that ho has overwhelmed his enemies; and horo again the world is amazed that that samo Secretary Daniels should havo been able to so safeguard our troops In transit that less than three hundred have perished on tho waters. I mention these two because they wore tho ones singled out for attack, and now I want to tell you that the chief influence back of the attack on them was the liquor interests of this country. Thoy did not like the way Josephus had driven John Barleycorn from the ships of Uncle Sam, and they did not liko the way Baker had made dry zones around the cantonments on land. Had these two men been willing to got down on their knees and worship tho Rum god there would have been no attempt to .drive either one of them out of the cabinet. Outsido of this inner circle there is a little larger circle mado of some five hundred senators and members who deal daily with problems both difficult and delicate,. The President and those associated with him in authority I put in tho second class. DUTY OF ALL TO STAND BACK OF PRESI DENT AND CONGRESS In the third class arc all the rest of the people This is the big class, and wo who arc in the third class, while not required to make tfce sacrifices demanded of tho soldier and not called upon to bear the burden of responsibility that rests upon the President and those near him, have our duties also, and our first duty, as I conceive it, is to stand as one man, without dis sension, division or discord, back of our Presi dent and Congress and supporjt our government jn anything and everything that It sees fit to undertake while this war lasts. That Is our first duty and it is a duty that cannot be discharged by words only. It requires deeds, and deeds along every one of the many lines of our nation's activities. Let me call attention to threo lines and 'that only briefly. In the first place our government is "doing more than it over did before and more than any other government over tried to do to make the lot of the soldier as easy as possible when he is sick or wounded, and his moral wel fare as safe as possible while he Is in the army.- A, ai drt ..''' HI " "jrj VJ 3 Mt ts. fit M m n i-uti,,'. j.iiiiJi