t HWf nwfx-rti " r$ r-,, The Commoner VOL. . 1G, MO., 1 XM ' v &Y R' I ,'. . B- m x. ft ' k' P ( Our Pan-American Policy Tho United SlalCH government's Pan-Amorican policy was rovcnlcd In detail by President Wilson in an address before the second Pan-American Scientific congress, at Washington, January C. Tho address, as carried in the press dispatches, was in part as follows: "I havo been told so much about tho proceed ings of this congress that I can congratulate you upon tho increasing sense of comradeship and Intimate intercourse which has marked its ses sions from day to day; and it is a very happy cir cumstance in our vlow that this, perhaps JJio most vital and successful of the meetings of this congress, should have occurred in tho capital of our own country. The drawing to gether of tho Americans has long been dreamed of and desired. It is a matter of peculiar grati fication therefore, to see this great thing happen; 1 to soo tho Americans drawing together and not drawing together upon an insubstantial founda tion of mero sentiment. "After all, even friendship must bo based upon a perception of common sympathies of common interests of common ideals, and of common pur poses. Men can not ho friends unless they in (ond tho same thing, and tho Americans havo more and moro realised that in all essential par ticulars they intend the same things. To ho privileged, therefore, to see this drawing together in friendship and communion based up on these solid foundations affords every one who looks on with open eyes peculiur satisfaction and , joy; it has Boomed to mo that tho language of fici'onco, tho language of impersonal thought, tho language of those who. think was a very fortunate language to express this commun ity of interest and of sympathy. . "Hut, ladies and gentleman, our thought can , nqt, pause at the artificial boundaries of the fields , of ,sciepce and of commerce All boundaries that divido lifo into sections and interests are.artl , Uoittl because lifo is all of a piece No ,flpo, who reflects upon tlo progress of science or , ,ih,o spr.ead of tho arts of pqaco or tho extension . an,d perfection of any of tho practical arts of life pari fai,l to soo that there is only ono atmosphere that theso things can breathe, and that is an at osphero of mutual confldqneo and of peace and , of ordered political life among the nations. Ajwa.t war and revolution even tho voice of sci ence must for tho most part bo silent and revolu tion toars up tho very roots of every thing that makes lifo got so steadily forward. For nothing stirs passion like political disturbance, and pas sion is tho enemy of truth. INTERFERENCE OF POLITICS r "Theso things were realized with peculiar viviUnoss and said with unusual eloquence in a recent conference hold in this city for the pur . poso of considering tho financial relations be tween the two continents of America. A financial congress naturally led to all the in terferences of politics, for politics I conceive to bo nothing moro than the scienco of the ordered .progress of society along the lines of greatest usofulneBs and convenience to itself. ' "Tho conference to which I havo referred marked the consciousness of tho two Americas that economically thoy are very dependent upon ono another, that thoy have a great deal that it iSiVery desirable they should exchange and share with ono another, that they havo kept unnatur ally and unfortunately separated and apart when thoy had a manifest and obvious community of interest; and tho object of that conference was to ascertain the practical means by which the financial and political intercourse could be quick ohed and facilitated. And where events move statesmen, if they bo not indifferent or be not asleep, must think and act. "But these gentlemen havo not conferred with out realizing that back of all the material com munlty of interest of which I have spoken there lies and must lie a community of political inter est. I havo been told a very interesting fact I hope, it is true that while this congress has heen discussing science it has been in spite of "Itself led Into the feeling that behind the Science 'ro'T.ymo l?Wfreitoe With regard to politics and that if the Americas Were to be 'united in : thought they must In some degree sympathetic ally bo united in action. What these statesmen who have been conferring from month to month In Washington have come to realize is that back of tho community of material interest there is a community of political interst. "I hope I can make it clear to you in what sense I use those words. I do not mean a mere partnership in the things that are expedient. I mean what I was trying to indicate a few mo ments ago, that you can not separate politics from these things, that you can not have real intercourse of any kind amidst political jealous ies, which is only another way of saying you can not commune unless you are friends, and that friendship is based upon your political re lations with each other perhaps more than upon any other kind of relationships between nations. INTERCOURSE EMBARRASSED "Jf nations, are politically suspicious of one another all their intercourse is embarrassed. The object of American statesmanship on the two, continents is to see to it that American friendship is founded on a rock. "The Monroe Doctrine was proclaimed by the United States on her own authority. It always has been maintained and always will be main tained upon her own responsibility. But the Monroe Doctrine demanded merely that Euro pean governments should not attempt to extend their political systems to this side of tho Atlantic. It did not disclose tho use the United States in tended to make of her power on this side of the Atlantic. It was a hand held up in warning, but there was no promise in it of what America w,as going to do with the implied and partial pro tectorate which she apparently was trying to set up on this side of the water, and I believe you will sustain me in the statement that it has been fears and suspicions on this score which have hitherto prevented the greater intimacy and con fidence and trust between the Americas. The states of America have not been certain what the United States would do with her power. That' doubt must be removed. "And latterly there has been a very frank in terchange of views between the authorities in Washington and those who represented the other states of this hemisphere, an interchange of views charming and hopeful, because based up on an increasingly sure appreciation of the spirit in which they were undertaken. These gentle men have seen that if America is to come into her own, into her legitimate own, in a world of peace and order, she must establish the founda tions of unity so that no one will hereafter doubt them. STATES WILL UNITE uLLli0PenMna l belieVG that this cau be accom plished. Ihese conferences have enabled me to foresee how it will be accomplished. It will be accomplished in the first place by the states of Araorica uniting in guaranteeing to each other absolutely political independence and territorial Integrity. In the second place, and as a necessary corollary to that, guaranteeing the agreement to settle all pending boundary disputes among themselves should they unhappily arise, wUl be handled by patient, impartial investigation n ml settled by arbitration, and the aSS JeS sary to the peace of the Americas that no stoto o either continent will permit revolution expe ditions against another state to be fitted on ts territory and that they will prohibit the exnorta! ion of munitions of war for the purpose of -S SpnS5nt8?0,UUOn,Bta againSt Z$ "o?: "You see that our thought is, gentlemen nnt only the international peace of Amer" ca bul the domestic peace of America. If American state? are constantly in ferment, if any of them are constantly in ferment there will be a stamw threat to their relations with one another. 1 "! just as much to our interest to assist each otiinr to the orderly process within our own borders as it is to orderly processes in our contfoverslSJ with one another, These are very practical sut gestions which have sprung un in SS, BI thoughtful men and I for mypart ioCn they are going to lead the w tolluZt a America prayed for tor many a Srltion absolute JrJSSf ZZi world. These are things, ladies and gqntlemeg, for which' the world. has hoped arid waited Wlith prayerful heart. God grant that ' it may, ,je granted to America to lift this light on higlufor the illumination of the world." Co-operation Abstract of an address delivered by William . Jennings Bryan before the Pan-American Scien- tific Congress, Washington, D. C, January 3, 1916. Mr. President and Members of the Congress: ' Allow me to preface my remarks 'by saying that my object in attending this session of the Pan-American Scientific congress is not so much to make an address as to meet the distinguished delegates here assembled and to testify by my presence to my deep and continuing interest in all that relates to the republics of Central and South America. My concern in their develop ment and welfare, while antedating my connec tion with the state department, was increased during my occupancy of office, and it has not abated since ray retirement. I desire to be en rolled among the permanent friends of these neighboring republics, and shall hold myself in readiness to respond to their call whenever I can render them any assistance. In casting about for a theme for my brief; re marks today it occurred to me that the word '.'co operation" might well serve as the point about which to group certain suggestions, for which I ask your consideration. , Co-operation is the growing word of the twentieth century. There. is ' noticeable everywhere an increasing tendency on the part of individuals and nations . . to act together in matters of mutual concern. In business life the idea is accentuated by the mul- ; tiplicity of corporate organizations, in whicli in- dividuals associate themselves together for the advancement of their joint interests. Nations, -too, are more and more considering matters of common interest, and lending to each other, the assistance that comes from joint action. While . the unprecedented struggle now raging across the Atlantic has for the time being interrupted . international co-operation in that section of the world, it should be regarded as a temporary sus pension of co-operation rather than a permanent surrender of the idea. Co-operation in the western hemisphere has been more general than in the east because of the greater similarity of our institutions and polit ical aims, and also because of the absence of the issues and prejudices which have made interna tional dealings less intimate there than they are ' on this side of the ocean. Then, too, the pres ent conflict in Europe. has tended to draw the re publics of the western hemisphere nearer to gether, as their dependence upon, and, their ppw- -er to aid each other have become more appar-' ent. With this introduction permit me to suggest a few lines of action along which I believe it is ' possible for us, with mutual advantage, to co operate to a larger extent than we do now First, the language tie which binds nations to gether is a strong one; ability to speak to, and understand each other lies at the foundation of both business and social intercourse. The two languages spoken in the Americas are the grow ing languages of the present century. The rapid increase in the population of the United States would alone greatly increase the English-speaking population of the world during tire next cen tury, and, m addition to this, the use of the Eng lish tongue is rapidly spreading in the Orient and in the commercial centers of the world. As the I T s?utu American countries are likely to repeat during this century the development witnessed in the United States during the plst century, the Spanish language seem! desthied to fill an increasing place in the world's future Every possible encouragement should, there fore, be given to the teaching of the English language in Latin America and to the teaching of Spanish in the United States. There are sev' eral ways in which this encouragement can be given An exchange of professors would be an advantage. If arrangements could be made bv which the colleges and universities of Central and South America would accept American in structors .in return for Latin speaking instruof ora sent to the United States theTemnorarv ex S?T MUld' not only be hft in. extencling the two languages but a larger acquaintancl would follow, and acquaintance-is, after all ?hS Iv- U I a C V- v. V " V