T?prTVW - ''ispjir 4"R !"" o- . , M .- J J?, Tfate Commoner ' V-f .!W l DECEMBER, 1918; 11 ' 1 ' i. 'T"3 , nbifi o rid oursolvcslfor a quarter e"inr...-- n trs been "blotted from our f a century n Civilization. TmTrftor ltfrivw. miP WAR AiNJJ inia vAi."Vm .v, mha world is yet to learn the part played by' Tbe ?5?,.i Jnnvfiment in he United States the proniu"'" ,-. fiRfnhHnlimnt. Eh a winning of this war. The establish K .h-e . German-American Alliance. was 1 - Vi-.n,nnv'B well thought out methods for new ubi -- Avwinr wu nU of tho Germanizing ui. """'" - t . f the trauoiuuo ---; ID" u . . ...nalnltir tVtn ttrnrm0 Wrtfhlticr irlnk traiuCKers, eBiicuiijr m mt.vw. ...,v....b ?" . !nriv nnd ftonvinclnKly set forth in the Ba moro ww - ..ij i, wi,ii Sr was revoked. The Alliance, in addition CH . ., rtonri hv thfi brewers, was intensely to DeiHt, "--- ---- -, - . - HHral ana intensely uimuj-w. xiu inuwuoui, ?0U . . ... ,, .UnnKatarl hv fln Irataar Mli0 AllianUO WUO Oou ut,i,ui.u ., nw ..uu. himself because of his effective services in spreading tne uermau yiupugtmuu. j. ouuuua had the Anti-saioon ueujsuu ucbuu tu nwvw imn in the politics of the states for the election of clean, patriotic men to office, than it came tace to face with the liernian-Amencan finance in every city of importance. It was dictating city officials and state legislators; it was putting its ncsty fingers into the -public schools and dic tating what should, he taught andwho should teach it; while certain professors in some of our state universities secured and held their posi tions by virtue of being German or by obeying the mandates of tbe German-American AH-ance by finishing off their education in German uni versities. Does anyone doubt, in the light of the fimmediate past, that if there had not been a (strong, virile, prohibition nuement to combat Sthe propaganda of this disloyal but well financed organization, that America would have been Isufficiently Germanized to lave kept her out of fthe war? The increasing ' power of the drink traffic, with the increasing debauchery of the citizenship in the cities of the country,-fostered. Ihandled and voted by the German-American Alliance, would ere tnis nave driven us oeyond the place where we could liavp been aroused to the point of taking up arms against this de stroyer of the world's civilization, and the very currents of the world's history might have been forever turned. The hand ofra good providence' may be as distinctly seen in the origin of the Anti-Saloon League a quarter of a century ago, as it was in the delivery of the children of Israel from their 'forty years of wandering. A SOBER DEMOCRACY I do not know what can be accomnlished at the peace table to aid this cause, but somehow we should have marshaled there, If possible, the I united voice of the temperance hosts so it- can fspeuK wuii autnomy, and if nothing more can be done, we should secure the opportunity to prosecute our world work unhindered by need less restrictions. America has sent more than tWO millions nf ihtk flnwntv nf Vior. -T.fr.r mnt, Ihjod across the seas to fight and die, not for I annexation or indemnities, but that the world ;uy oe maue safe for the kind of democracy that we enjoy in this "land-of the fred," and ;wnat we believe the whole world will agree to, fi he home of the brave!" and that the integrity fOl the Smallor nnHnnn , 1 ;.-.- J.vl I jnat all peoples shall have-a fair chance to enjoy i "- i'"seiui pursuits in their own wax- While xni ,y l0 TOalce this sacrifice that the pmiin may e made Baf0 or democracy, we are i equally ready to make all needful sacrifice to 'hvl democracy that is safe for the world; , M 1C mtelllgent, sober and patriotic. fnr n, Denocracy can no more be made safe flonri.? iW02d wlth the rum a10 avowed to for fl?Jn lt' than the world can e made safe : flourish inCitaCy Prussianlsm allowed ' to 'in "5 vxtthQ baffle in intoxicating liquors t'on t J P!blic ln the way of ultimate extinc- are rp;f?Ug? mUCh ' remaIn? 7 to be done we a ready t.n lonj n i, .. -i i south n- i,a i T x "ttUU uviohb iue sea, anu 'trlM n ' .u ""-wver way you of these coun- NeiL, 1 P0iJlt out tliat we can be helpful. to oiTri i 'Buage, color nor creed is a -bar the mptifn i t0 be of 8ervice. We only ask that from Inn em?lyed he practical and divorced I not invnw i , . Hpucmc temperance woric and I thines i ?? and hamP6rod by the doing of many i undPBHn2f0m8 ??". when so many things are country. If you doubt the efficacy of tho omni partisan and Interdenominational method, I would refer you to our enemies, "themselves being the judges." Their literature speaks moro eloquently than complimentary of the complete success of this method. THE TIMES ARE RIPE Tho time is opportune for a great, aggressive, world-wide movement against tho alcoholic drink traffic. When this war is ended, we will bo in a new world wherein righteousness will flourish less hindered than at any period in tho past. If weaker nations are to be protected from the brutally strong, weak men and women should be protected from yioso who would coin their weakness and wickedness into caBh. The heart of the race will bo softened and chastened for half a century after we have taken stock of this conflict. Our old men will dream dreams, and our young men will see visions of a better World and we shall be prepared for tho bigger program. When tho roar and smoke of this war of earth and air and Bea has cleared away, and tho calm judgment of history has rendered tho verdict, It will be found that the Junkor, tho kaiser, tho murderer of Arch-Duke Ferdinand and his wife, in fact the very house of tho Hohenzollern, are but the merest incidents In bringing on this world holocaust. The -primary and secondary and all-compelling cause is that a rjxce' of people have arisen who eat like gluttons, and drink like swine a race whose "God is their belly," and whose Inevitable end is destruction. Their sod den habits of life have driven them constantly toward brutality and cruelty until they wero prepared to strike for universal conquest, though millions of lives and oceans of blood was to be the price of reaching that unholy ambition. Beer will do for a nation exactly what it will for an individual. The use of it will destroy the finer sensibilities, develop egotism, which Is always accompanied by cowardice, and foster the un speakably hateful doctrine that might makes right. .The last word as to method in temperance reform has not yet been spoken and no organiza tion or society holds all the-truth or all of the elements of success. We are to plan a movement fdr 'all tho worhl what is a success in-one cofln . try may not be so great, a success in-another. Let us, therefore, divest ' ourselves of all prido of method. Let us hold to no method because it is old, nor yet adopt another because it is new; but let us try the methods that have been successful and hold fast to that which is good. Our business is to so marshal our' energy and means as to bring about the "speediest repres sion and the ultimate suppression' of the bever age liquor traffic. We seek a saloonless and a drunkless world. undertake 7w t, ' wnen. 80 many.things are 1 Porated silii LUO opposition, thereby incor- After mnoi, "&""$ we liquor iramc. Method lc;VexPe"menting, we have found the Ior the solution of the problem In this FREEDOM, OR SLAVERY, OF THE SEAS? (Continued from page 7) and thus he sought to make perfectly palatable . to Brlt'sh sentiment tho old American doctrine of sea law. For in his 14 points the President included the following:- ' Absolute freedom of navigation upon the seas, outside territorial waters, alike In peace and war, except aB the seas may be closed in whole or in part by international act!on for the en forcement of international covenants. It would be a help to clear thinking If every one wduld remember that the great war has toppled over the entire structure of International law in regard to maritime rights and duties in war time. fc Nothing Is left today of the old system because of the wide range of new prec edents made by both Germany and Great Britain in dealing with neutral commerce and private property on the seas. From the neutral view point, both sides violated the law of nations;, but Germany, it is needless to say, passed all bounds in her outrages on life and property and thus forced the United States to take up arms. Today, there Is no such thing in practice as tho freedom of the seas, even in the sense that the principle was understood before the great war began. The navies which yesterday received the surrender of the Gorman battleships are virtually a law into themselves, and in the last analysis that means the unlimited supremacy of the na tion having the strongest battle fleet and tho slavery of the seas for all other maritime states. This conditions of affairs will remain until a new structure of sea law can be reared on the ruins of what has fallen under the blows of the bel ligerent alliances. , , .. The President has evidently approached the difficult problem of the reconstruction of sea law In ,tlrao. of war in tho only way that can ffor hope of reconciling . tho conflicting interest of tho nations, especially the Interests of Great Britain and tho United States, and avoiding in tho future a race botweon them In naval arma ments. Tho potontial war-tima rule ofono navy will not lohg bo ondurcd on tho high seas by" proud and powerful nations and if the world Is now to draw away from that condition, in which tho groat war has virtually loft it, tho way out through tho leaguo of nations scorns the "most promising of all. Unless the United States can get a solution along these lines, it will probably get nothing, for it asks for neither territory nor indemnities. ' The British empire, It Is evident, will bo terri torially cnlargod by the war, for it is tfoflnitely announced that tho claims of tho British over seas dominions to tho Gorman colonies will bo supported by tho imperial government. Are wo to spend 20 billions of dollars and thousands of lives a modest expenditure porhap3 and come away from, VorsailLos empty-handed? Those Americans who aro no busy raising ob stacles in tho path of tho President by attacking his program for n league of nations and Hhe freedom of tho seas, which aro In no respect' selfishly nationalistic although they would safe guard -America from future embroilment In Europoan wars thoso Americans offer nothing constructive as a substitute for tho President's policy. McADOO'S TETTER OF RESIGNATION AND WILSON'H ACCEPTANCE A Washington, D. C, dispatch, dated Nov,'', says: Socretary McAdoo's letter, of resignation dated November 14 follows: ' n4 "Dear Mr. President: Now that an armistc has been signed and peace Is assured, I. feci at liberty, to advise you of ray desire to return, "as", soon as possible to private life. , v, "I have been conscious for some time of t-ho necessity ior this stop but', of course, I could not consider it while the country was at war. ,(i. "For almost six years I have worked inces santly under tho pressure of great responsibllr,. ities. Their reactions have drawn heavily uppn my strength. The inadequate compensation nl , lowed by law to cabinet officers (as you know I receive no compensation as d.'rector general of railroads) and tho vory burdensome cost of liv ing in Washington has so depleted my porsonal resources that I am obliged to reckon with tho facts of the situation. l do not wish to convey .the impression that there is any actual impairment of ray health be-ca-iso such is not tho case. As a result of long overwork I need a reasonable period of genuine rest to replenish my energy. But moro than this, I must for the sake of my. family get back to private life to retrieve my personal fortune. "I cannot secure tho required rest nor tho opportunity to look after my long neglected priyate affairs unless I am relieved of my present responsibilities. "I am anxious to have my retirement effected with tho least possible Inconvenience to yoursolf and to the public service, but It would, I thinjc, be wise to accept ray resignation now, as soc retary of the treasury, to become effective upon the appointment and qualification of my suc cessor so that ho may have tho opportunity, and advantage of participating promptly in tho for mation of the pol'cies that should govern -tho future work of tho treasury. I would, suggest that my rerlgnatlon as director general of rail roads become effective January 1, 1919, or upon the appointment of my successor, "I hope you will understand, my dear Mr, Pre sident, that I will permit nothing but tho-most imperious demands to force my withdrawal from public life. Always I shall cherish as tho greatest honor of my career the' opportunities you have so generously given me to serve the country, under your leadership during thosa epochal times. "Affeotlonatly yours, , "W. G. McADOO."- Washington, D. C, Nov. 22. The President's letter of acceptance, dated I&vcmber 21, folr lows: "My dear McAdoo: I was not. unprepared for your, letter of the 14th because you had moro than once, of course, discussed with me tho circumstances which have long made it a serious personal sacrifice for you to remain in office. I knew that pnly your high and- exacting senio (Continued on jpage 12) v 'i . . i r --.I -' '. M . n ji yl i V" 'At, -. "f v "M V 4 j x Mi m nr "y l i (i ,.Q "..-'', !ia.,:-o. &a ilk tfifoWW. i