Secretary of War Dwight Filley Davis would never think of suggesting that President Calvin Coolidge ought to do his own marketing, or that Mrs. Coolidge ought to be the White House cook. But just such suggestions were made last week by China's Minister of War, the great Marshal Feng Yu-hsiang.
Addressing the Committee of Yuans, on which sit both the President of China and Mrs. Chiang Kaishek, Marshal Feng drew himself up to his potent height of six feet and said:
"I desire to emphasize the necessity of economy, both for our new Nationalist Government (TIME, Oct. 29) and in our private lives. I hope that all members of this government will practice strict economy and avoid bad habits. Don't degenerate! Even our highest officials should do their own marketing, and their wives should do the family cooking."
From a prissy little man such words would sound insufferably priggish. From Marshal Feng Yu-hsiangwho looks like the Great Buddha suddenly galvanized into something strenuous and vitalthe command "Don't degenerate!" rang with significance and power. Chinese know that the largest private army in the world150,000 menis maintained by Feng Yu-hsiang, and that he has inspired his soldiers to a remarkable degree with his own austere strength. Each soldier has been taught a trade. The whole army can support itself indefinitely upon the Chinese countryside in Liberty, Frugality, Fraternity.
Naturally War Minister Feng could not resist the temptation to preach his favorite principles, last week, to the new Nationalist Government and to President and Mrs. Chiang Kaishek. Whether the President will hereafter go marketing every day in his armoured Packard car remained to be seen. But the whole Government paid strictest attention as Marshal Feng developed the thesis of Spartan endeavor against a common enemyJAPAN.
At the passionate climax of his address Marshal Feng boomed: "China has 400,000,000 people, yet we cannot resist the bullying of a nation with only a few scores of millions. Japanese Imperialism is comparable only to the ways of wolves and tigers. What with their gunboat policy and their heavy artillery sometimes we are treated worse than dogs.
"Take the recent Tsinan incident.* How many innocent country men of ours were killed there? The bones of many still lie unburied, yet Japan still occupies Shantung.
"These national humiliations and other disheartening matters confront us for solution, and they are not easy to solve. Our great responsibility is to maintain and protect the legacy of our ancestors and to hand it over intact to our descendants!"
Turning from foreign to domestic problems, Marshal Feng Yu-hsiang concluded his memorable address thus:
"What parasites and pests are the Communists, always plotting to create trouble, trying to poison the minds of our people and upset the social and political balance.
"Gentlemen, under such grave conditions, encroachments from abroad and communism from within, we must work in harmony and cooperate with each other, for we are besieged on all sides by enemies.
