I know very well that we do not harbor any intention of attacking anyone else.
I don't think there is any reason for taking seriously any suggestion that the country at the present time is in danger of being attacked.
I don't know of anything I can add to what I said there.
There doesn't seem to be much of anything the President can do about that.
But I do not agree with the methods that they sometimes employ.
Naturally our Government is pleased with my reception at Havana.
There is nothing I can say about the Pan American Conference that occurs to me, that has not already been said.
As I left there it seemed to me that the conference was in a position to do very much excellent work.
The spirit of liberty is universal.
Next to our attachment to the principle of self-government has been our attachment to the policy of peace.
It is better for the people to make their own mistakes than to have some one else make their mistakes for them.
Our most sacred trust has been, and is, the establishment and expansion of the spirit of democracy.
Democracies are peace-moving.
We shall have to realize that the highest law is consideration, cooperation, friendship, and charity.
Our history reveals that in such expectation we have not been disappointed.
The whole atmosphere of the Conference is animated with the spirit of democracy and good will.
The attitude of the open mind must prevail.
I am not familiar enough with the exact workings and practice of the Federal Reserve System so that comments that I might make relative to t...