ef and his
Government in the midst of an international crisis.
_From The Memphis Commercial-Appeal._
Mr. Bryan's views, turned into a national policy, would mean national
suicide.
_From The Brooklyn Eagle._
An obstacle has seen fit to remove itself; it has substituted harmony
for discordance.
_From The Boston Post._
Mr. Bryan has shabbily infringed that good American doctrine that
politics should end at the water's edge.
_From The Baltimore Sun._
The Germans torpedo one "Nebraskan." Oh, for a "Busy Bertha" that
could effectually dispose of the other one!
_From The Charlotte Observer._
The country simply was afraid of him.
_From The Cleveland Plain Dealer._
He is a preacher of disloyalty.
_From The Chattanooga Times._
The reason given for his resignation ... approximates disloyalty, if
nothing else; a monstrous statement.
_From The New Orleans Times-Picayune._
His voluntary resignation will give satisfaction.
REPUBLICAN NEWSPAPERS.
_From The New York Tribune._
A man with such a cheaply commercial conception of the post held by so
long a line of American statesmen was by nature disqualified for it.
_From The New York Globe._
Instead of promoting a peaceful settlement, Mr. Bryan practically
throws his influence in the other balance.
_From The Syracuse Post-Standard._
Billy Sunday in the wrong niche.
_From The Rochester Post-Express._
Amazement and contempt for him grow.
_From The Pittsburgh Gazette Times._
He has not filled the place with dignity, ability, or satisfaction,
nor yet with fidelity; a cheap imitation.
_From The Pittsburgh Chronicle Telegraph._
The peace-piffle and grape-juice statesman.
_From The Philadelphia Inquirer._
A peace-at-any-price man.
_From The Wilkes-Barre Record._
An amazing, an astounding blunder.
_From The Cincinnati Commercial Tribune._
The seriousness of the situation is all that prevents Mr. Bryan's
foreign policy from being laughable.
_From The Baltimore American._
The country wants no more vapid theorizing; it wants no more Bryanism.
_From The Hartford Courant._
Those newspapers that said Mr. Bryan was in bad taste made a slight
mistake. He is a bad taste.
_From The Augusta (Me.) Kennebec Journal._
Impossible for a man of Mr. Bryan's ability and love of the limelight
to remain longer wholly obscure in this national crisis.
_From The Portsmouth (N.H.) Chronicle._
Childish policies and sm
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