AUGUST; 1917 The Commoner tf question, said tie secretary, it was impossible to foretell the position in which the world would find itself when these problems came to be de cided, and it would be doing a very ill service to the country were he to attempt to define the position now. The government believed that the nationalities composing that heterogeneous state should be allowed to develop along their own lines and to carry on their civilization in their own way, he said. ' "As everbody knows," continued Mr. Balfour, "we first entered the war to defend Belgium and prevent France from being crushed before our eyes. Nobody with the smallest knowledge of the facts supposed that Sir Edward Grey (for merly foreign secretary) and the government, of which he was a member when he made the fateful declaration on August 3, 1914, made it with the smallest thought of the great problems which the course of. the war has opened up. NO SELFISH MOTIVES "We did not eter the war for any selfish pur poses, certainly not for imperialist aim- or to get indemnities. Our purposes were completely unselfish; therefore we stood .n a different" posi tion from any of our allies. We hoped to see Europe freer and more stable." If France asked it, he failed to see Low Great Britain could refrain from going to assist her until she got back to the position which existed before theattack engineered against her by Bismarck in 1871, namely that "she obtain. res toration, of that of which she was robbed more than forty years ago." Mr Balfour expressed an opinion which was simply his own when he said that if France asked for Alsace-Lorraine, Great Britain should support her, bi he declared that France was not fighting for Alsace-Lorraine alone; she was fighting for her very existence. The questions the house had discussed were occupying the at tention of the whole civilized world almost to the exclusion of every other subject. As to the democratization of Germany, said the secretary, it had been hoped that autocracy would give place 0' parliamentary institutions as they are under stood, 1mt nobody was foolish enough to suppose that It would be possible to impose on Ge: many a constitution made outside of Germany. Until Germany was either made powerless or free, he did not think the peace of Europe could be secured. The fight must go on for if this war ended with a German peace, that would only be a prelude to a new European war. "The peace was to be one that England and America could approve, then it would lead to a permanent settlement which would in turn con duce to that great understanding of the nations which would give Europe a security it had never known before," said the secretary. "Germany must work out her own salvation," continued Mr. Balfour. "Nations must make their scheme of liberty for themselves, accord ing to their own ideas based on their history, character and hopes. "But if it be true that the great power of Ger man imperialism is still depending upon the be lief the belief driven into the German nation by the wars of 1866 and 1870 that only under the imperial tystem can Germany be great, powerful and rich, then if experience shows that the imperialistic system can produce not merely a triumph one time, but inevitably lead to cor responding disaster at another, it may well be that the views, which found such powerful ex pression in Germany in 1848, and which ani mated all German teachers for more than a gen eration before the Bismarckian domination, will revive with new lustre and new strength and that Germany, with all her powers of organiza tion and all her inherited cultivation, will be added to those nations which, before the war, 3uld hardly conceive how a universal war of 'his sort could be deliberately provoked in or i'r to further the commercial or political inter f" of any single community. "When Germany has come to the level of the 1 ' ted States and Great Britain in that respect, x ' may hope that one of the great disturbers ' the peace will forever be eliminated. I do J t know who will venture to say for a moment " bat, looking at the internal condition of Ger 1 any, as far as we -are allowed to see it at the resent time, the ideas of which I have been flaking will really grow in such fashion as to 'ise legitimate hopes that in our lifetimes we fcnall see that established. But I am sure that f it is not established, the security of Europe will not be. established either." . Secretary Lansing's Speech United States men, declared his belief that the ocrL nf A P?,ySiCal mlBht o unIted lom- eviTambi?ioi of 0rld,!S8 de8troycd forcvor "o "tLm' hi I he military rulers of Germany." pS of Vhe V"8 thQ Dly Way t0 rC8t0r? th0 thPiTwm ry PePl? 0n carth ablc t0 cxPrc8S their will, there would be no wars of aggres sion," he said, "and, if there were no wars of aggression, there would bo no wars, and lasting peace would come to this earth. The only way that a people can express their will Is through democratic institutions. Therefore, when the world is made safe for democracy, when that great principle prevails, universal peace will bo an accomplished fact. "No nation of peoplo will be fit more than the United States when that time comes. But it has yet to come. A great peoplo, ruled in thought and word as well as In deed by the most sinister government of modern times, is straining every nerve to supplant democracy by the autocracy which they have been taught to worship. When will the German people awaken to the truth? When will they arise in their might and cast off the yoke and become their own masters? I fear that it will not be until the physical might of the unitedv democracies of the world have de stroyed forever the evil ambitions of the mil itary rulers of Germany, and liberty triumphs over its arch-enemy." Mr. Lansing sought to drive home to the stu dent officers the righteousness of the cause for which they had volunteered to go to France and fight, asserting that America would 'win "be cause our cause is the cause of justice and of right and humanity." The immediate cause of our war with Germany the breaking off of her promise as to indiscriminate submarine war fare has a far more deep meaning, he said, than has been thought. "The evil character of the German government is laid bare before the world. We know now that that government Is inspired with ambitions which menace human liberty, and that to gain its end it does not hes itate to break faith, to violate the most sacred rights, or to perpetrate intolerable acts of in humanity. "It needed but tho words reported to have been uttered by the German chancellor to com plete the picture of the character of his gov ernment when he announced the only reason why the intensified submarine campaign was de layed until February last, was that sufficient submarines could not be built before that time to make the attacks on commerce efficient. Do you realize what this means? If it means any thing it Is that the promise to refrain from brutal submarine warfare which Germany made to the United States, were never intended to be kept, that they were only made to gain more submarines and that when the time came to act, the German promises were unhesitatingly torn to pieces like other 'scraps of paper.' "It is this disclosure of character of German government which Js the underlying cause of our entry into the war. We had doubted, or at least many Americans had doubted, the evil purpose of the rulers of Germany. Doubt remains no, longer In the light of events we can read the past and see that for a quarter of a century the absorbing ambition of the military oligarchy which was the master of the German empire, mq fnr world dominion.' Asserting that the future of the United States is at stake, Secretary Lansing said: "If any of you have the idea that we are fighting other's hnttles and not our own, the sooner you get away from that idea, the better it will be for all of us imagine Germany victor in Europe because the United States remained neutral. !iL think vou would be the next victim S"thoSe who aroC'tog to be masters of the Ji. mirth' Would not this country with Its rhormous wlth arouse the cupidity of an 1m enormouo triumphant Germany? P"Wo dn't thls democracy be the only obstacle betwlen the autocratic rulers of Germany and I'ISACKt "I CANT KRIS ANY PLACi: WIIKIII3 I CAN TAKK KOMI OK IT" From Do Nlcuwo AtnHtordammor (Ammonium) her supremo ambition: Do you think that they would withhold their hand from so rich a prize? Every man who fights tho armies of the Gurman emperor, goes forth to fight for his country and for the preservation of those thlngn our fore fathers were willing to dio for. To those who thus offer themselves wo owe tho same debt that we owe to those men who in tho past, fought on American soil In tho cause of liberty." Answering those whom he said might think it improbable that Germany would attack tho United States if Bho won tho war, Mr. Lansing cited things which Germany has Ijecn guilty of which woro thought "Improbable yen, Impos sible," before tho war violation of the treaties, the crimes of mmder, extortion and vandalism in Belgium and Franco, submarine brutality and bomb dropping on cities. "Yot, God help us, these things rave come to pass," he exclaimed, "and iron crosses have been awarded tho per petrators!" "But there is more," he continued, "which might be added to this record of unbelievable things which the German government has done. I only need to montion the attempt of foreign officers at Berlin to bribe Mexico to make war upon us by promising them American territory. Spies and conspirators were sent throughout tho world. Civil discord was encouraged to weaken the potential strength of nations which might be merciless to the lust of Germany's ruler for world masteiy. My friends, I am firmly con vinced that the indepent'ance of not one nation is safe until the military despotism which holds theGerman people In the hollow of its hand, has been made impotent and harmless forever. There is but ono way to restore peace to the world and that is by overcoming tho physical might of German imperialism by force of arms. "If enthusiasm and ardor can make success sure, then we Americans have no cause for anx iety, no reason to doubt the outcome of tho con flict. But enthusiasm of righteousness of your cause, and on a profound conviction of the righteousness of your cause and an Implicit faith that tho god of battles will strengthen the arm of him who fights for tho right." Most of the boasting that is done about the number of automobiles in a city or state is by persons who do not own them. The average man talks harshly about the careless driving of motor cars and the danger that attends walking in a city, but he doesn't move out on that ao- count. The government has decided to fix the prlc of wheat at the primary market, which means where the man who has bought it from the pro' ducer sells it. Just what effect that will haw upon tho consumer is doubtful, unless they either fix the price or the size of the loaf k bread the baker sell? 'l i