The Commoner JANUARY,-3916 23 Preparedness and Peace From The New York Sun, Novem ber 9, 1915. To the Editor of The Sun Sir: I read in last Friday's Sun the state ment made by the lamented William Jennings Bryan about President Wil son's national defence programme. I do not mean to imply that Mr. Bryan is dead, for if he were dead I should not refer to him as the lamented. Some years ago in one of its ad mirable editorial articles the Sun spoke of the ostentatious reticence of Mr, Bryan. That paradoxical ex pression exactly applies to the peer less puerilizer. Not only is Mr. Bry an ostentatiously reticent but he is also pugnaciously meek, malevolently mild and arrogantly unassuming. Even his silence is noisy. Mr. Bryan is of so retiring a dispo sition that in order to advance him self in any way he finds it necessary to go backward. Hid "whole public career hap been a recessional. Mr. Bryan" refers to the national defence programme of President Wil son as a challenge to the -spirit of Christianity. He says that the phil osophy of national defence is a false philosophy. Then he turns upon the President with another "Gqd -bless you" in the shape of a hope that ..the President wilj not be de? ceiyed by the atmosphere of .the Man hattan club, as he puts it. What or who is this spirit of Christianity to which or whom Mr. Bryan refers? He can not refer to the Christianity of he Nazarene, be cause' Christ' never taught Bryahism. MAnd.Jie ,thatPhath npwoxd, tlet him .sell bjis garment and buy one.-r Luke, xxii., 36. Christ ivever, taught non-resistance to wrong; on the 'contrary JHis doc trine was bn6' 6i constant Resistance to wrong. Not only that, but also He taught His disciples tb gird' Up their loins with, a swdrM'belt and go forth and "wage a never yielding warfare' of justice against injustice, of right against wrong. Ghrist taught strength, npt weak ness; taught courage,' not cowardice; 1 aught progress, f not, retrogression; taught pupli, not' passiyeness;, and when He 'said "Thou art Peter, and upon this rock will I build my church,, and the gates of hell shall not pre vail against it." He did not refer to Mr. Bryan, but to St. Peter, and He had in mind adequate defences aga'ihst any prevailing of hell, whether in the shape of war or In other guise. Mr. Bryan's conception of the spirit of Christianity is that of a smug faced specialization of Providence which materialized out of the infinite nascency at Salem, 111., on March 19, 18 GO, and which or who, after it had fledged itself, went to Nebraska and built a tower of. Babel known as The Commoner, and made a tongued con fusion known as the speech of the Cross of Gold, and which (pardon my metaphors) was used as a Jacob's ladder to make a balloon ascension into the sunshine of publicity and na tional political prominence. Mr. Bryan hopes "that the Presi dent will not be deceived by the at mosphere of the Manhattan club." '"hat is a metaphor, no prettier than those I have just used. Perhaps Mr. Aryan's meaning M literal. But Mr. Aryan's chief medium for the effusive effervescence of his ideas and their transmission to others is a caloric at mosphere, therefore it is natural for him. to refer to the, atmosphere as a deceiver.. , , . - In-'Mri BryanJs.eyfis the Manhattan club is made the unholy of unholies by the worshippers of Mammon. Mr. Bryan himself is not noted for his de testation of the sight of money. I never heard of any one Hipping a coin in his presence without his hat being under the coin before It touched the floor. When he is paid $600 a night for a Chautauqua speech he does not cry, "Out of sight, damned five spot," but his worshipful regards would put an overstrain on the elastic limit of the First and Second Commandments, and he palms it and pockets it with as pleased and as clinging a sense as that with which the most exquisite connoisseur of Virginian colonelcy sips a mint julep. I have unhappily been fortunate enough to hear Mr. Bryan speak sev eral times. The most notable speech that I ever heard him make was two years ago at a banquet of the Au thors league, New York, and he spoke somewhat after the manner that the humble servant of Balaam might have spoken. Captain Jack Craw ford says of an imitation of the bray ing of an ass, which he sometimes gives at his admirable recitations, that it is not given as an imitation at all, but as the real thing. Likewise, Mr, Bryan's effusion of asslninities Which he delivered on that occasion was .no. imitation of donkey talk. ' If I was the real thing. Now in his talk about preparedness he is "Bryan" again. "We aro," he ,ays, "without an eneniy, and our, preparedridss is in creasing, while, other nations exhaust themselves," and he continues, "the nations of Europe brought on the present war because of their pre paredness for it, hence, why should we prepare?" It has beeri said of Mr. Bryan that he never areU'esTb'e merely declaims. Thd'Tiest tf'giime'ntcan'ao,is to carry- declamation' can win- ten converts, witliollt argument "or reason,' to ev ery One that can be won by logld. Mr. Bryan knows this. He knows that merely for the purpose of convincing most of his hearers it is not necessary-either to be logical or to adhere to facts. - The European war was not brought on because .of preparedness, but be cause off-the lack.iof preparedness on the part of. the. entente powers. Eng land was pathetically unprepared; so I was Russia. Had the entente powers been prepared there-would have been no war. The European powers are not ex hausting themselves with respect to what most concerns us, and that is" war potentiality; they are becoming stronger every day. They may be poorer after the war, but they will be stronger. At the end of the Civil war the north was much poorer, but infinitely stronger. Financial exhaustion or econ omic exhaustion does not neces sarily mean military exhaustion. Economic weakness constitutes a very strong inducement to utilize mil itary prowess. The poverty of the European nations makes their mili tary powers all the more dangerous to us. Mr. Bryan conceives it to be a folly for us to prepare to defend the coun try because he. believes that our very preparation would anger the other nations and fret them into war with, us, and then he concludes with the paradoxical statement, peculiarly Bryanish, "Why encourage the na tions of Europe in their folly by imi tating them" in the matter of arma ments? If our preparations for na tional defence would harass and an ger the other nations, how can it at the same time be an encouragement to them? Can we encourage them by harassing and angering them, or harass and anger them by encourage ment? . , What a balm for tired .souls it would be if Mr. William. Jennings Former Senator Bailey, of Texas, is Against Preparedness The rjllowing letter states the po sition of Former Senator Bailey of Texas on the "preparedness" ques tion: Washington, D. C, Nov. 15. Ed itor "Wow-Wow," Lorena, Texas: I am always glad to have friends like you write mo at any time when they desire to know my opinion on any question, and I very freely declare to you that I am utterly opposed to the so-called "preparedness" which the President' is now so earnestly ad vocating. If I thought that this coun try was in any immediate danger of coming to blows with any other country, I would insist upon making a suitable preparation for the con flict; but I am utterly unable to un derstand how any intelligent person can think that there is even a re mote possibility of our country on gaging in a war at this time or for many years to dome. The only na tions in the world with which a war would be anything like a serious mat ter to us are now involved in a strug gle among themselves from whltih they will not recover for fifty years. With millions of their best men killed in battle, with other millions crip pled, with other millions diseased as the result of exposure aiid with na tional debts Which will aggregate $40,000,000,000, neither England, nor France, nor Germany, nor Rus sia will be apt to' give any country, and least of all -our country, any just cause of quarrol' during the present century. All of this persuades tnc that thero was never an hour in our history when there was less need of military preparation than there is to day; and if wo spend an additional sum of $200,000,000 a year on our army and navy and before we have gone very far we will dc spending much more than that we will have spent $10,000,000,000 in the next fifty years in the face of a practical certainty that we will have no war, and, therefore, that vast sum, pro vlded by the capital and labor of tlito country, will havo simply Uecn' wasted. I understand, of course, that there are men In this country who believe in a strong government, and who think that a great army and a great navy will make ours a strong one'; but no real democrat entertains that view. Wc have been taught to believe that a military republic is an impos sibility, because the spirit of an- army and the spirit of a republic arc irre concilable. A republic can, it is-true,' maintain a small- army In tiraeof peace without serious injury -lo'its institution, but that can only 'Me done by keeping the army ok small that Its spirit can not permeate thoj great mans of our people. This 7iaaJ always been the positioii of the'dom ocratic party, and this must continue to be the pdBltion of the democratic party,- If It is to remain democratic- Very truly your friend, J. W.' BAILEY. - i w ' IT. Bryan would relegate himself to the Jnflnite quiescence of innocuous desuetude. ' ' iteSsoN' maxim: Brooklyn, "November 8. "' PyTS BAN ON ADMIRALS A Washington dispatch, dated Jan. 4, says: Officers of the navy hereafter will not be permitted to "talk in pub lic" The rule by which Secretary of War Garrison prohibited army offlcers from making speeches has been made applicable to navy officers. This fact became known today when Secretary Daniels wired John W. Scott of the Chicago Commercial club that ho would not give Rear Admiral Austin M. Knight per mission to speak before that organ ization on January 15. The Commercial club had asked Rear Admiral Bradley A. Fiske to speak, but Fiske wired he would not be able to d. so. President Scott then wired President Wilson as fol lows: "The Commercial club of Chicago regrets your refusal to permit Rear Admiral Tiske to address us on the evening of January 15. Will you give your consent to our inviting Rear Admiral Austin M. Knight for the same date? There will be no newspaper publicity given the matter of the address. The courtesy of a telegraphic reply at once is request ed." Secretary Daniels replied: "I had not heard that Ad.miral Fiske had been Invited to address the Commercial club until your tele gram to the President was referred to me. It is my conviction that the expert opinion of the navy depart ment having been givea to the public and congress and the President hav ing outlined a policy for navy con struction it is fpr civilians to lead the fight for enlargement while naval offlcers follow the unbroken policy of not attempting to influence legis lation. i( "Until I became secretary .of the navy the reports of the general board hud been regarded as confidential. I publish all their recommendations for increases of the navy. Thd 'navy's"' experts will give their "views to'htfvtfT''" affairs committees in congress and hearings will be public. This gives to congress and the public th" 6pTtf ions o'fexpertsT ' '' 'tttfu . : Uuii.m ' CLAIMS PAID IN W.'mln, Ida E. Sundeen, Waverly i'j'i?!t0''j Homer E. Aylsworth, Aurora3 5, (Td 6'' fl John, G. Swanson, Osceola'. ,'. ' l,t)b(T "' Emma North, Lincoln ." 2'!50d ' ' - .. . ....',, t .,, Thos. E. Bailey, Pleasant Dale 2,0'flff Thos. C. Swoboda, PlattsmoutlM.OOO " Robert E. Neitzel, Murphy, ' '" .h?; v' ,s,m George Falconer, Omaha i.VfdO1 ' ' - '. Cora B. Alexander, Lincoln.. ltfO ' Samuel J. Boomer, Lawrence 1,000 " Jay L. Pierce, Hartington 2,000' Clair A. Everett, Scottsbluff . .' 1,000 James E. Lawthers, Rising City 1,00.0 E. Ross Hitchcock,. Sterling. . . I,(f00 Delmer McCann, Arlington. . ,10,000 Frences L. Wisner,' Bayard . . . ljfoO ' Total $32,500 TheMidwestLife OF LINCOLN, NEBRASKA A STOCK COMPANY SELLING tttMHTEED COST LIFE IHSUiAHCE &!j&$&Sl&t.liiJ V .JvJSk. &!; "-.' gjt ff-V? v" ' aMaSto e.Mjtimto.1, jt i 'iMtTMH nr &m y atrfAi .-:f,-v- kl imJ&Jm,l