WyW"W, pr y DECEMBEB, 1915 The Commoner U3 -TWSf," dred and thirty-six officers and one hundred and thirty-four thousand seven hundred and seven enlisted men, or 141,843, all told, all services, rank and file, by the addition of fifty-two com panies of coast artillery, fifteen companies of engineers, ten regiments of infantry, four regi ments of field artillery, and four aero squadrons, besides seven hundred and fifty officers required for a great variety of extra service, especially the all important duty of training the citizen force of which J shall presently speak, seven hun dred and ninety-two non-commissioned officers for service in drill, recruiting and the like, and the necessary quota of enlisted men for the 'Quartermaster corps, the Hospital corps, the Ordnance department, and other similar auxil iary services. These are the additions necessary to render the army adequate for its present du ties, duties which it has to perform not only up on our own continental coasts and borders and at our interior army posts, but also in the Phil ippines, in the Hawaiian Islands, at the Isthmus, and in Porto Rico. PLANS TO SUPPLEMENT REGULAR ARMY FORCE AND INCREASE SIZE OF NAVY By way of making the country ready to assert some part of its real power promptly and upon a larger scale, should occasion arise, the plan also contemplates supplementing the army by a force of four hundred thousand disciplined cit izens, raised in increments of one hundred and thirty-three thousand a year throughout a period of three years. This it is proposed to do by a process of enlistment under which the service able men o the country would be asked to bind themselves to serve with the colors for purposes of training for short periods throughout three years, and to come to the colors at call at any time throughout an additional "furlough" period of three years. This force of four hundred thousand men would be provided with personal accoutrements as fast as enlisted and their equipment for the field made ready to be sup plied at any time. They would be assembled for training at stated Intervals at convenient places in association, with suitable units of the regular army. Their period of annual training would not -necessarily exceed two months in the year. It would depend upon the patriotic feeling of the younger men of the country whether they responded to such a call to service or not. It would depend' Upon the patriotic spirit of the employers of the country whether they made it possible for the younger men in their employ to respond under favorable conditions or not. I, for one, do not doubt the patriotic devotion either of our young men or of those who give them employment, those for whose benefit and protection they would in fact enlist. I would look forward to the success of such an experi ment with entire confidence. At least so much by way of preparation for defense seems to me to be absolutely imperative now. We can. not do less. The programme which will be laid before you by the Secretary of the Navy is similarly con ceived. It' involves only a shortening 'of the time within which plans long matured shall bo carried out; but it does make definite and ex plicit a programme which has heretofore been only implicit, held in the minds of the Commit tees on Naval Affairs and disclosed in the de bates of the two Houses but nowhere formu lated or formally adopted. It seems to me very clear that it will be to the advantage of the country for the Congress to adopt a comprehen sive plan for putting the navy upon a final foot ing of strength and efficiency and to press that Plan to completion within the next five years. We have always looked to the navy of the coun try as our first and chief line of defense; we have always seen it to be our manifest course of prudence to be strong on the seas. Year by year we have been creating a navy which now ranks very high indeed among the navies of the maritime nations. We should now definitely de termine how we shall complete what we have begun, and how soon. The programme to be laid before you contem plates the construction within five years of ten battleships, six battle cruisers, ten scout cruisers, fifty destroyers, fifteen fleet submarines, eighty five coast submarines, four gunboats, one hos PifaTshlp, two ammunition ships, two fuel oil ships, and one repair ship. It is proposed that oft this number we shall the first year provide for the construction of two battle ships, two battle cruisers, three scout cruisors, fifteen destroyers, five fleet submarines, twenty-five coast subma- y rlnes, two gunboats, and one hoBnltal shin tho coast S hmnHt8' Ur flCOt BUbra"lncJ3, fifteen sh?D- L?i f3' n0 BUnboat' an one fuel oil cr 1L1 fin d yIar' two battleships, one battle Snf Ii .8C0Ut crulsera. vo destroyers, two fleet submarines, and fifteen coast submarines; crnfi h ycartwo ttlcshlps, two battle cruisers, two scout cruisers, ten destroyers, two fleet submarines, fifteen coast submarines, one ammunition ship, and one fuel oil ship; and the fifth year, two battleships, ono battle cruiser, two scout cruisers, ten destroyers, two fleet sub marines, fifteen coast submarines, ono gunboat, one ammunition ship, and one repair ship. The Secretary of the Navy is asking also for the Immediate addition to the personnel of tho navy of seven thousand five hundred sailors, twenty-five hundred apprentice seamen, and fif teen hundred marines. This increase would bo sufficient to care for the ships which aro to bo completed within the fiscal year 1917 and also for the number of men which must bo put in training to man the ships which will be com pleted early in 1918. It is also necessary that the number of midshipmen at tho Naval academy at Annapolis should ho increased by at least three hundred in order that the force of officers should be more rapidly added to; and authority is asked to appoint, for engineering duties only, approved graduates of engineering colleges, and for service in the aviation corps a certain num ber of men taken from civil life. If this full programme should be carried out we should have built or building in 1921, accord ing to the estimates of survival and standards of classification followed by tho General Board of the Department, an effective navy consisting of twenty-seven battleships, of tho first line, six battle cruisers, twenty-five battleships of the second lino, ten armored cruisers, thirteen scout cruisers, five first class cruisers, three second class cruisers, ten third class cruisers, one hun dred and eight destroyers, eighteen fleet sub marines, one hundred and fifty-seven coast sub marines, six monitors, twenty gunboats, four supply ships, fifteen fuel ships, four trans ports, three tenders to torpedo vessels, eight vessels of special types, and two ammunition ships. This would be a navy fitted to our needs and worthy of our traditions. TIME TO DECLARE OUR INDEPENDENCE BY MEANS OF ADEQUATE MERCHANT MARINE But armies and Instruments of war are only part of what has to be considered if wo are to consider the supreme matter of national self sufficiency and security in all its aspects. There are other great matters which will be thrust upon our attention whether wo will or not. There is, for example, a very pressing question of trade and shipping involved in thi3 great loblem of national adequacy. It is necessary for many weighty reasons of national efficiency and development that we .should have a great merchant marine. The great merchant fleet we once used to make us rich, that great body of sturdy sailors who used to carry our flag Into every sea, and who were the pride and often the bulwark of the nation, we have almost driven out of existence by inexcusable neglect and in difference and by a hopelessly blind and provin cial policy of so-called economic protection. It is high time we repaired our mistake and re sumed our commercial independence on tho seas. For it is a question of independence. If other nations go to war or seek to hamper each other's commerce, our merchants, it seems, are at their mercy, to do with as they please. We must use their ships, and use them as they determine. We have not ships enough of our own. We can not handle our own commerce on the seas. Our in dependence is provincial, and Is only on land and within our own borders. We are not likely to be permitted to use even the ships of other nations in rivalry of their own trade, and aro without means to extend our commerce even where the doors are wide open and our goods desired. Such a situation Is not to be endured. It is of capital importance not only that the United States should be its own carrier on the seas and enjoy the economic independence wh ch only an adequate merchant marine would give it but also that the American hemisphere as a whole should enjoy a like independence and self rufflciency, if it is not to be drawn into the tan B?e of European affairs. Without such inde pendence the whole question of our po itical Xy and self-determination is very seriously clouded and complicated indeed. Moreover, we can develop no true or effective American policy without ships of our own not ships of war, but ships of peace, carrying goods and carrying much moro; creating frlondsM and rendoring indlsponsablo services to all' inters csts on thin nldo tho water. They must more constantly back and forth between tho Amorlciw. They aro tho only shuttles that can weave the dellcato fabric of sympathy, comprehension, con fidence, and mutual dopendonco In which we wish to clotho our policy of America for Amer icans. The task of building up an adequato mer chant marine for Amorlca, private capital muit ultimately undortnko and achieve, ns It has un dertaken and nchlovcd every other like task amongst us In tho past, with admlrablo enter prise, Intelllgonco, and vigor; and It secmg to mo a manifoat dlctato of wisdom that wc should promptly romovo ovcry legal obstacle that mar stand In tho way of this much to bo desired re vival of our old Independence nnd should facil itate In ovory possible way tho building, pur chase, and American registration of ships. But capital can not accomplish this great task of a Budden. It must embark upon It by degrees, ae tho opportunities of trade dovolop. Something must be dono at once; dono to open routes and develop opportunities whore they are as yot un developed; dono to open tho artorles of trad where tho currents have not yot learned to run, especially between the two American contin ents, where they are, singularly enough, yet to bo created and quickened; and It Is evident that only the government can undertake such begin nings and assume tho Initial financial risks. When tho risk has passed and prlvato capital begins to find Its way in sufficient nbundanco in to these now channels, the government may with draw. But it can not omit to begin. It should take tho first stops, and should take them at once. Our goods must not be piled up at our ports and stored upon side tracks In freight cars which are dally needed on tho roads; must not bo left without means of transport to any foreign quarter. We must not await the per mission of foreign ship-owners and foreign gov ernments to send them where wo will. With a view to meeting these pressing ne cessities of our commerce and availing ourselve at tho earliest possible moment of the present unparalled opportunity of Unking tho two Americas together In bonds of mutual interest and service, an opportunity which may never return again If-Vo rnlss it now, proposals will be made to tho present congress for tho purchase or construction of ships to bo owned and directed by the government similar to those mado to the last congress, but modified In some essontlal particulars. I recommend these proposals to you for your prompt acceptance with tho more confidence because every month that has elapsed since tho former proposals were made has made the necessity for such action moro and more manifestly imperative. That need was then foreseen; it is now acutely felt and everywhere realized by those for whom trade Is waiting but who can find no conveyance for their goods. I am not so much Interested In the particulars of tho programme as I am In taking Immediate ad vantage of the great opportunity which await us If we will but act In this emergency. In thf matter, as In all others, a spirit of common coun sel should prevail, and out of it should come am early solution of this pressing problem. FULLER JUSTICE FOR THE PHILIPPINES AND PORTO RTCO PRESSED FOR -PASSAGE There Is another matter which seems to me to be very intimately associated with tho question of national safety and preparation for defense. That is our policy towards the Philippines and the people of Porto Rico. Our treatment of them and their attitude towards us are mani festly of the first consequence In the develop ment of our duties in the world and In getting a free hand to perform those dutfes. We must be free from every unnecessary burden or embar rassment; and there Is no better way to be clear of embarrassment than to fulfill our promises and promote the interests of those dependent on ns to the utmost. Bills for the alteration and reform of the government of the Philippines and for rendering fuller political justice to the people of Porto Rico were submitted to tho Sixty-third congress. They will be submitted also to yoa. I need not particularize their details. You are most of you already familiar with them. But I do recommend them to your early adoption with the sincere conviction that there are few meas ures you could adopt which would more service ably clear the way for the great policies by rA ! " s i L I. Jll utfX'W '.