GAZETTE WEEKLY. WUr&.CisrtI(litod Feb., 1899. CORVALLIS, BENTtXN COUNTY, OUKUON, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 11, UH)3. VOL,. XXXX. NO. 51. v- PRESIDENT . TO CONGRESS Chief Executive People's Lawmakers '- HANDLES MATTERS Favors Lewis and Clark Class of Immigrants Should be Kept Out Ap v point Commission to Inquire Into Needs of Ship ping Extend Rural Free Delivery Better Legis lation for Alaska Panama Canal Question. "WASHINGTON, Dec 7. President Roosevelt's message to Congress was read before the Senate and House today. The text of the message follows: To the Senate and House of Representa tives: The country is to be congratulated on the amount of substantial achievement which- has marked the past year, both as regards our foreign and as regards our domestic policy. With a nation as with a man the most Important things are those of the house hold, and therefore the country is espe cially to be congratulated on what has been accomplished inthe direction of pro viding for the exercise of supervision over the great corporations and combinations of corporations engaged in interstate com merce. The Congress has created the De- partment of Commerce and Labor, includ ing the Bureau of Corporations, with for the first time authority to secure proper publicity of such proceedings of these , great corporations as ' the public has the right to know. It has provided for the expediting of suits for the enforcement of the Federal anti-trust law; and by an other law it has secured equal treatment to all producers in the transportation of velopment of Alaska and the establish th'eir goods, thus taking a long stride ment growing American interests in forward in making effective the work of . regions therefore unsurveyed and imper- the Interstate Commerce Commission. RECEIPT8 AN U tArtnui l unco i Indications Are That the Surplus of the Present Year Will Be Small. From all sources, exclusive of the pos tal service, the receipts of the Government for the last fiscal year aggregated 55t0,36,- 74. The expenditures for the same period j were $506,099,007. the surplus for the fiscal year being $54,297,667. The indications -are that the surplus for the present fiscal year will be very small, if indeed there be any surplus. A large surplus is cer tainly undesirable. Two years ago the war taxes were taken off with the express intention of equalizing the Governmental receipts and expenditures, and though the first year thereafter still showed a surplus it now seems likely that a substantial equality of revenue and expenditure will be attained. Such being the case it is of great moment both to exercise care and economy in appropriations? and to scan sharply any change in- our fiscal revenue system which may reduce our income. Needs of Financial Situation. The integrity of our currency is beyond question, and under present conditions it would be unwise and unnecessary to at tempt a reconstruction of our entire mone tary system. The same liberty should be granted the Secretary of the Treasury to deposit the customs receipts as is granted v-him in the deposit of receipts from other sources. In -my message of December 2. ' 1902, I called attention to certain needs of the financial situation, and I again ask the consideration of the Congress for these questions. - " MERCHANT MARINE. Commission Is Recommended to In quire Into Needs of Shipping. A majority of our people desire that steps be taken in the interests of Amer ican shipping, so that we. may once more resume our former position in the ocean- " carrying .trade. But hitherto the differ ences of opinion as to the proper method Of. reaching this end have been so wide that it has proved impossible to " secure the adoption of any particular scheme. Having in view these facts, I recommend that the Congress direct the Secretary of the Navy, the Postmaster-General and the Secretary of Commerce and Labor, associated with such a representation from the Senate and House of Representatives- as the Congress in its wisdom may designate, to serve as a commission for the purpose of investigating and re- ' porting to the Congress at its next ses sion what legislation is desirable or nec essary for the development of the Amer , lean merchant marine and American com ' merce, and incidentally of a National ' ocean mall service of adequate auxiliary - naval cruisers and naval reserves. IMMIGRATION. Undesirable Class Must Be Kept Out, is That Wanted Better Distributed. We can not have too much immigration of the right kind, and we should have ' none at all of the wrong kind. The need is to devise some system by which unde- i sirable immigrants shall be kept out en tirely, while desirable immigrants are ) properly distributed throughout the coun- try. At present some districts which-need ; liance for the purpose of blockading the immigrants have none; and In others, j ports of Venezuela and using such other where the population is already congest- ! means of pressure as. would secure a set ed. Immigrants come in such numbers as . tlement of claims due, as they alleged, to to depress the conditions of life for those certain of their subjects. Their employ- already there, uunng tne last two years the immigration service at New York has been greatly improved, end the corruption and inefficiency which formerly obtained there have, been eradicated. This service has Just-been investigated by a commit tee of New Tork citizens of high stand ing, Messrs. Arthur V. Briesen, Lee K. Frankel, .Eugene A. Philbln, Thomas W. Hynes and Ralph Trautman. Their report deals with the whole situation at length, and concludes with certain recommenda tions for administrative and legislative action. It is now receiving the attention of the Secretary of Commerce and Labor. FRAUDS IN PUBLIC SERVICE. Appropriations Urged to Investigate Land and Postal Affairs. In my last annual message. In COnneC tt.. vrtft Yo mihlAot of th due rAe-iiln.- nnmWnnHnna nr lanital whiph ami or may become injurious to the public, 1 1 recommend a special appropriation for the better, enforcement of the antitrust law as it now stands, to be expended under the direction of the Attorney-General. Ac- cordingly (by the legislative, executive and judicial appropriation act of February 25, 1903 32 Stat.. 854, 904), the Congress ap- the IIt nt 2J commerce laws, the sum of $500 000 i o b a expended under the direction of the At- torney-General in the ' employnnt of spe-' clal counsel and agents in the Department Sends Message to BEFORE PUBLIC Exposition Undesirable of Justice to conduct proceedings and prosecutions under said laws In the courts of the United. States. I now recommend. as a matter of the utmost importance and urgency, the extension of the purposes of this appropriation, so that it may be available, under the direction of the At- j torney-General, and until used, for the due enforcement of the laws of the United States in general and especially of the civil and criminal laws relating to public lands and the laws relating to postal crimes and offenses and the subject of naturalization. Recent investigations have shown a deplorable state of affairs In these three matters of vital concern. By various frauds and by forgeries and perjuries, thousands of acres of the pub lic domain, embracing lands of different character ard extending through vari ous sections' of the country, have been aisnonestly acquired. ALASKAN BOUNDARY. Decision of the Commission Removes Question Which Caused Alarm. For several years past the raold de- iecuy Known Drougnt into prominence the urgent necessity of a practical demarca- "on 01 me Dounaaries Detween the Juris dictions of the United States and Great Britain. Although the treaty of 1825 be tween tireat .Britain and Russia, the pro visions of which were copied in the treaty of 1867, whereby Russia conveyed Alaska to tne united States, was positive as to the control, first by Russia and later by the United States, of a strip of territory along the continental mainland from the western shore of Portland Canal to Mount St. Elias, following and surround ing the indentations of the coast and in. eluding the islands to the westward,- its description of the landward margin of the strip was indennlte, resting: on the sud posed existence of a continuous ridge or range ot mountains skirting the coast, as figured in the charts of the early navi gators. Tn 1878 Ques tions of revenue administration on the Stikine River led to the establishment of a provisional demarcation, crossine the channel between two high peaks on either side, about 24 miles above the river mouth, in 1899 similar questions erowine out of the extraordinary development of mining interests in the region about the head" of Lynn Canal brought about a tem porary modus vlvendl, by which a con venient separation was made at the watershed divides of the White and Chil Koot passes, and to the north of ' luk wan, on the Klehini River. These partial ana tentative adjustments could not, in the "very nature of things, be satisfactory or lasting. A permanent disposition of tne matter became imperative. After unavailing attempts to reach an understanding through a Joint High Com mission, followed by prolonged negotia uon, conauctea in an amicable spirit, a convention between the United States and Great Britain was signed January 24, 1903, providing for an examination of the sub ject by a mixed tribunal of six members. three on a side, with a view to its final disposition. Ratifications were exchanged on March 3 last, whereupon the two gov ernments appointed their respective mem bers. This tribunal met in London on September 3, under the presidency of Lord Alverstone. The proceedings were expeditious, and marked by a friendly and conslcentlous spirit. The respective cases, counter cases, and arguments pre sented the issues clearly and fully. On the 20th of October a majority of the tribunal reached and signed an agreement on all the questions submitted by the terms of the convention. ie award is self -executing on the vital points. To make it effective as regards the others, it only remains for the two governments- to appoint, each on its own behalf, one or more scientific experts, who shall, with all convenient speed, pro ceed together to lay down the boundary line in accordance with the decision of the majority of the tribunal. , I recommend that the Congress make adequate pro vision for the appointment, compensation and expenses of the members to serve on this Joint boundary commission on the part of the United States. CLAIMS AGAINST VENEZUELA. Reference to The Hague Court a Great Triumph for Arbitration. It will be remembered that during the second session of the last Congress Great Britain, Germany and Italy formed an al- ment of force for the collection of these claims was terminated by an agreement brought about through the offices of the diDlomatic representatives of the United states at Caracas and the Government at Washington, thereby ending a situation which was bound to cause increasing fric tion,! and which jeoparded the peace of the continent. Under this agreement Ven ezuela agreed to set apart a certain per centage of the customs receipts of two of her ports to be applied to the payment of whatever obligations might be ascer tained by mixed commissions appointed for that purpose to be due from her, not only to the three powers already men tioned, whose proceedings against her had resulted in a state of war, but also to the United States, France, Spain, Belgium, the Netherlands, Sweden and ' Norway. and Mexico, who had not employed force for the collection of the claims alleged to be due to certain of their citizens. A, demand was then made by the so- called blockading powers that the sums ascertained to be due to their citizens by Buc$ ixed commissions should be ac- corded &&ymentn f,u1,1 tore anything was Pad uPn the clals of a,jy of the 8:call?d peace T0 7Tla' ,Vhe hehad' In,s.lsted that a f r editors tis dispute it was suggested by the In lnterest tnat ltnould e re to me for decIsl0I1. Dut T was clear. f th oplnlon that a far ser course ouid t0 submlt toe aue8tIon ty tthe permanent court of arbitration at The Hague. It seemed to me to offer an ad mirable opportunity to advance the prac tice of the peaceful settlement ot dis putes between nations and to secure for The Hague tribunal a memorable Increase of its practical importance. The nations Interested in the controversy were so nu merous and, tn many instances, so power ful as to make it evident that beneficent results would follow from their appear ance at the same time before the bar of that august tribunal of peace. Our hopes in that regard have been re alized. Russia and Austria are represent ed in the persons of the learned and dis tinguished jurists who compose the tri bunal, while Great Britain, Germany, France, Spain, Italy, Belgium, the Neth erlands. Sweden and Norway, Mexico, the United States and Venezuela are rep. resented by their respective agents and counsel. Such an imposing concourse of nations presenting their arguments to and invoking the decision of that high court of international justice and international peace can hardly fail to secure a like cub. mission of many future .controversies The nations now appearing there will find it far easier to appear there a second time, while no nation can imagine Its just pride will 'be lessened by following the ex ample now presented. This triumph of the principle of international arbitration is a subject of warm congratulation, and offers a happy augury for the peace ef the world. RELATIONS WITH CHINA. Signing of Commercial Treaty Cause for Satisfaction. The signing of a new commercial treaty with China, which took place at Shanghai on the 8th of October, is a cause for sat isfaction. This act, the result of long discussion and negotiation, places, our commercial relations with the great Ori ental Empire on a more satisfactory footing than they have ever heretofore enjoyed. It provides not only for the ordinary rights and privileges of diplo matic and Consular officers, but also for an important extension of our commerce by Increased facility of access to Chinese ports, and for the relief of trade by the removal of some of the obstacles which have embarrassed it in the past. RURAL FREE-DELIVERY SERVICE System Must Be Extended, and Sal aries of Carriers Adjusted. ' The rural free delivery service has been steadily extended. The attention of the Congress is asked to the question of the compensation of 5 the letter carriers and clerks engaged in the postal service. especially on the new rural free-delivery routes. More routes have been installed since the first of July last . than in any like period in the department's history. While a due regard to economy must be kept in mind in the establishment of new routes, yet the extension of the rural free delivery system must be continued, for reasons of sound public policy. No Gov ernmental movement of recent years has resulted in greater immediate benefit to the people of the country districts. LEWIS AND CLARK EXPOSITION Congress Should Give It Support as Well as Recognition. I trust that the Congress will continue to favor in all proper ways the Louisiana Purchase Exposition. This exposition commemorates the Louisiana purchase, which was the first great step in the ex pansion which made us a continental Nation. The expedition of Lewis and Clark across the continent followed there on, and marked the beginning - of the process of exploration and colonization which thrust our National boundaries to the Pacific. The acquisition of the Oregon Country, including the present States of Oregon and Washington, was a fact of immense importance in our history; first giving us our place on the Pacific sea board, and making ready the way for our ascendency in the commerce of the great est of the oceans. The centennial of our establishment upon the Western Coast by the expedition of Lewis and Clark Is to be celebrated at Portland, Or., by an Exposition in the Summer of 1905, and this event should receive recognition and sup port from the National Government. , DEVELOPMENT OF ALASKA. Legislation Is Needed and the Survey of Public Lands Urged. .. I call your special attention to the Ter ritory of Alaska. The country is develop ing rapidly, and it has an assured future. The mineral wealth is great and has as yet hardly been tapped. The fisheries, if wisely handled and kept under National control, will be a business as permanent as any other, and of the utmost import ance to the people. The forests, if properly guarded, will form another great source of wealth. Portions of Alaska are fitted for farming and stockralslng, although the methods must be adapted to the peculiar conditions of the country. Alaska is situated in the Far North; but so are Norway and Sweden and Finland; and Alaska can prosper and play Its part in the New World just as those nations have prospered and played their parts in the Old World. . Proper land laws should be enacted and the survey of the public lands immediately begun. Coal-land laws shold be provided whereby the coal-land entryman may make his location and se cure patent under methqds kindred to those now prescribed for homestead and mineral entrymen. Salmon hatcheries, ex clusively under Government control, should be established. - The cable should be extended from Sitka westward. Wagon roads and trails should be built, and the building of railroads promoted in all le gitimate ways. Lighthouses should be built along the coast. Attention should be paid to the needs of the Alaska Indians; provision should be made for an officer, with deputies, to study their needs, re lieve their immediate wants, and help them adapt themselves to the new con ditions. HAWAII. Greater Power Should Be Vested in ' the Governor. I recommend that an appropriation be made for building lighthouses in Hawaii, and taking possession of those already built. The territory should be reimbursed for whatever amounts it has already ex pended for lighthouses.' The Governor should be empowered to suspend or re move any official appointed by him with out submitting the matter to the Legis lature. INSULAR POSSESSIONS. Philippines Should Be Knit Closer by Tariff Agreements. Of our insular possessions the Phillp- pines and Porto Rico It is gratifying to say that their steady progress has been such as to make it unnecessary to spend much time, in discussing them. Yet the Congress should ever keep in mind that a peculiar obligation rests upon us to further in every way the welfare of these communities. The Phillippines should be knit closer to us by tariff ar rangements. It would, of course, be im possible suddenly to raise the people of the islands to the high pitch of industrial prosperity and of governmental efficiency to which they will in the end by degrees aain; and the' caution and moderation shown in developing ; them have been among the main reasons why this devel opment - has hitherto gone on so smoothly. Scrupulous care has been taken In the choice of governmental agents, and the entire elimination of par tisan politics from the public service. The condition of the islanders is in material thir-te far better than ever before, while their governmental, intellectual, and moral advance has kept pace with their m. aerial advance. No one people ever benefited another people more than we have benefited the Filipinos by taking possession ol the islands. PUBLIC LANDS. Necessity for Revision of the Laws Is Pointed Out. The cash receipts of the General Land Office for the last fiscal year were $11,024,743.65, an increase . of $4,762,816.47 over the preceding year. Of this sum, approximately, $8,461,493 will go to the credit ' of the fund for the reclamation of arid land, making the total of this fund, up to the 30th of June, 1903, ap proximately, $16,191,836. A . gratifying disposition has been evinced by those having unlawful lno.'os ures of public land to remove their renccs. Nearly 2,000,000 acres so inclosed have ben thrown open on demand. In but com paratively few cases has it been ncccs-sa.-y to go into court to accompl'sh tn's purpose This work will be vigorously probccuted until all unlawful . inclosurr.s have been removed, i Experience has shown that in the Weft em States themselves. as well as in the rest of the country, there is widesoroaJ conviction that certain of the public-.and laws and the resulting administrative practice no longer meet the present r.ceds. The character and uses of the remaining public lands, differ widely from those of the public lands which the Congress had especially in view when these laws were passcft The rapidly increasing rate of disposal . of the public lands is not fol lowed by a corresponding ncrease In home-building. There is a. tendency to mass in large holdings .public lands, es pecially timber and grazing lands, and thereby to retard settlement. I renew and emphasize my .recommendation of last year that so far as they are available fcr agriculture in its broadest sense, an..' to whatever extent they may be reclai;ned urder the national irrigation ".aw, the re maining public lands - should be held rigidly for the home-builder. The' atten tion of the Congress is especially directed to the timber and stone law, the dstsrt land law, and the commutation clause of the homestead law. which In their oper ation have in many respects conflicted with wise public-land policy. The d scus sions in the Congress and elsewhere have made- it evident that there is a wide di vergence of opinions' between '.hose hoic ins: opposite views on these subjects; r-r.d that the opposing sides have strong end convinced representatives of weight Dctn within and without the Congress; the dif ferences being not only as to matters of opinion, but as to matters or ract. Reclamation of. Arid Lands. The work of reclamation of the arid lands of the West Is progressing steadily and satisfactorily under the terms of the law setting aside the proceeds from the disposal of public lands. The corps of engineers known . as the reclamation service, which is conducting the surveys and examinations, has been thoroughly organized, especial pains being taken to secure under the civil service rules body of skilled, experienced and efficient men. . Surveys and examinations are progressing throughout the arid states and territories, plans for reclaiming works be ing prepared and passed upon by boards of engineers before approved Dy tne sec retary of the Interior. In Arizona and Nevada, in localities where such . work is pre-eminently needed, construction has al ready been begun. In other parts of the arid West various projects are well ad vanced towards the drawing up of con tracts, these being delayed in part by necessities of reaching agreements or un derstanding as regards rights of way or acquisition of real estate. Most of tne works contemplated for construction are of National Importance, Involving inter state questions or the securing of stable, self-supporting communities in the midst of vast tracts of vacant land. The Nation as a whole is of . course the gainer by the creation of. these homes, adding as they do to the wealth and . stability ' of the country, and furnishing a' home market for- the products of the East and South. The reclamation law, while perhaps not ideal, appears at present to answer the larger needs for which . it - Is designed. Further legislation is not recommended until the necessities of change are more apparent. PRESERVATION OF FORESTS. Need There, f Is Recognized Now as . Never Before. The study of the opportunities of recla mation of the vast "extent of "arid land shows that . whether this reclamation is done by individuals, corporations, or the state, the sources of water supply must be effectively protected and the reservoirs guarded by the preservation of the for ests at the headwaters of the streams. The engineers making the preliminary ex aminations continually emphasize this need and urge that the remaining public lands at the headwaters of the important streams of the West be reserved to in sure permanency of. water supply for ir rigation. Much progress in forestry has been made during the past year. The ne cessity ior perpetuating our torest re sources, whether in public" or private hands, is recognized now as never be fore. -The demand for forest reserves has become insistent in the West, because the West must use the water, wood and Sum mer range which only" such reserves can supply. Progressive lumbermen are striv ing, through forestry, to give their busi ness permanence. . Other great business interests are awakening to the need of forest preservation as a business matter. The Government's forest work should re ceive from the Congress hearty support, and especially support adequate for the protection of the forest reserves against fire. The forest-reserve policy of the Gov ernment has passed beyond the experi mental stage, and has reached a condi tion where scientific methods are essential to its successful prosecution. The admin istrative features of forest reserves are at present unsatisfactory, being divided be tween three bureaus of two departments. It is therefore recommended that all mat ters pertaining to forest reserves, except tnose involving or pertaining to land titles, be consolidated in the Bureau of Forestry of the Department of Agricul ture. - INDIAN AFFAIRS. Agents Should Not Be Dependent Upon Partisan Politics The Indian agents should t be. depend ent for their appointment or tenure of office upon considerations of partisan poli tics; the practice of appointing, when possible, ex-army officers or bonded super-, intendents to the vacancies that occur is working well. Attention is invited to the widespread illiteracy due to lack of pub lic schools in the Indian Territory. Prompt heed should be paid to the need of edu cation for the children in this territory. ; v , PENSIONS. No Other Class Deserves So Well of the Nation as the Veterans. No other class of our citizens deserves so well of the Nation as those to whom the Nation owes its very being, the vet erans of the Civil War. Special attention is asked to the excellent work of the Pension Bureau In expediting and dis posing of pension claims. - During the fiscal year ending July 1, 1903, the Bureau settled 251,982 claims, an average of 825 claims for each working day of the year. The number- of settlements since July 2, 1903, has been in excess of last year's average, approacmng iwu claims ror each department of the successive confederal working day. and It is believed that the tions known as New Granada and Co work of the Bureau will be current at lombla, has now succeeded to the rights the close of the present fiscal year. I which first one and then the other for rMVit erQuire dim ee I merly exercised over the Isthmus. But as CIVIL SERVICE RULES. j long the lsthmus endures, the mere Competitive Examinations Promote Efficiency and Economy. During the year ended June SO last 25. 566 persons were appointed through com petitive examinations under the civil service rules. This was 12,672 more than during the preceding year, and 40 per cent, of those who passed the examina tions. This abnormal growth was largely occasioned by the extension of classi fication to the rural free-delivery serv ice and the appointment last year of over 9000 rural carriers. A revision of the civil-service rules took ' effect on April 15 last, which has greatly improved their operation. The completion of the reform of the civil service is recognized by good citizens everywhere as a matter of the highest public1 importance, and the suc cess of the merit system largely depends upon the effectiveness of the rules and and the machinery provided for their en forcement. A very gratifying spirit of friendly co-operation exists in all the de partments of the Government in the en forcement and uniform observance of both the letter and spirit of the civil service act. THE ARMY. System of Promotion by Mere Senior ity Is Not Well. The effect of the laws providing a gen eral staff for the Army, and for the more effective use of the National Guard, has been excellent. Great Improvement has been made in the efficiency of our Army in recent years. Such schools as those erected at Fort Leavenworth and Fort Riley and the institution of Fall maneuver work accomplished satisfactory results. The good effect of these maneuvers upon the National Guard is marked, and ample appropriation should be made to enable the guardsmen of the several states to share in the benefit The Government should as soon as possible secure suitable Dermanent camn Bites for mllitarv man. I euvers in the various flpptlnnn nf th mnn. try. The service thereby rendered not only to the regular Army, but to the Na tional Guard of the several states, will be so great as to repay many times over the relatively, small expense. We should not rest satisfied with what has been done, however. The only people who are con tented with a system of promotion by mere seniority are those who are con tented with the triumph of mediocrity over excellence. On the other hand, a system which encouraged the exercise of social or political favoritism in promo tions would be even worse. But it would surely be easy to devise a method of pro motion from grade to grade in which the opinion of the higher officers of the serv ice upon the candidates should be decisive upon the standing and promotion of the latter. Just such a system now obtains at West Point. THE NAVY. There Must Be No Let-Up in Work of Increasing It. Shortly after the enunciation of that fa mous principle of American foreign pol icy now known as the "Monroe Doctrine,' President Monroe, in a special message to Congress, on January 30, 1824, spoke as follows: "The Navy is the arm from which our Government will always derive most aid in support of our . . . rights, Every power engaged in war will know the strength of our naval power, the number of our ships of each class, their condition, and the 'promptitude with which we may bring them into service, and will pay due consideration to that argument. I heartily congratulate the Congress upon the steady progress in building up the -merican Navy. We cannot afford a let-up in this great work. To stand still means to go back. There should be no cessation in adding to the effective units of the fighting strength of the fleet. Meanwhile the Navy Department and the officers of the Navy are doing well their part by providing constant service at sea under conditions akin to those of actual warfare. Our officers and enlisted men are learning to handle the battleships, cruisers and torpedo boats with high effi ciency in fleet and squadron formations. and the standard of marksmanship is be ing steadily raised. The best work ashore is Indispensable, but the highest duty of a naval officer is to exercise command at sea. - The establishment of a naval base In the Philippines ought not to be longer postponed. Such a base is desirable in time of peace; in time of war it would be indispensable, and its lack would be ruinous. Without it our fleet would be helpless. Our naval experts are agreed that Subig Bay Is the proper place for the purpose. The national interests require that the work of fortification and develop ment of a naval station at Subig Bay be begun at an early date; for under ' the best conditions it is a work which will consume much time. ISTHMIAN CANAL. Review of Dealings With Colombia and Recent Events. By the act of June 28, 1902, the Congress authorized the President to enter into treaty with Colombia for the building of the canal across the Isthmus of Panama it being provided that in the event of failure to secure such treaty after the lapse bf a reasonable time, recourse should be had ' to building a canal through Ni caragua. It has not been- necessary to consider this alternative, as I am enabled to lay before the Senate a treaty provid ing for the building of the' canal across the Isthmus of Panama. This was the route which commended Itself to the de liberate judgment of the , Congress, and we can now acquire by treaty the right to construct the canal over this route. The question now, therefore, is not by which route, the isthmian canal shall be built, for that question has been definitely and irrevocably decided. The question is simply whether or not we shall have an Isthmian canal. When the Congress directed that we should take the Panama route under treaty with Colombia, the essence of the condition, of course, referred not to the Government which controlled that route. but to the route itself; to the territory across which the route-lay, not to the name which for the moment the territory bore on the map. The purpose of the law was to authorize the President to make a treaty with the power In actual control of the Isthmus of Panama. This purpose. has been fulfilled. In the year 1846 this Government en tered into a treaty with New Granada, the predecessor upon the Isthmus of the Republic of Colombia and., of the present Republic of Panama, by which treaty it was provided that the Government and citizens of the United States should al ways have free and open right of way or transit across the Isthmus of Panama by any modes of communication that might be constructed, while In return our Government guaranteed the perfect neu trality of the above-mentioned isthmus with the view that the free transit from the one to the other sea might not be vested in the United States a substantial property right carved' out of the rights of sovereignty and property which New Granada then bad and possessed over the said territory. The name of New Granada has passed away and its territory has been .7 1.. I .3 .3 T. L .1 . f . uiTiucu. lis eui:i;tB9ui , uie uuvciiuucui of Colombia, has ceased to own any prop erty in the isthmus. A new republic, that of Panama, which was at one time a sov- ereign state, and at another time a mere rcvsi uviiKiti mil ui us existence, ana the peculiar Interest therein which is re quired by our position, perpetuate the solemn contract which binds the holders of the territory to respect our right to freedom of transit across it, and binds us in return to safeguard for the isthmus and the world the exercise of that ines timable privilege. The true interpretation of the obligations upon which the United States entered in this treaty of 1846 has been given repeatedly in the utterances of Presidents and Secretaries of State. Repudiation of Treaty by Colombia. Last Spring, under the act above re ferred to, a treaty concluded between the representatives of the Republic of Colom bia and of our Government was ratified by the Senate. This treaty was entered Into at the urgent solicitation of the people of Colombia, and after a body of experts appointed by our Government especially to go into the matter of the routes across the isthmus had pronounced unanimously in favor of the Panama route. In draw ing up this treaty every concession was made to the people and to the Govern ment of Colombia. We were more than just in dealing with them. Our generos ity was such as to make it a serious ques tion whether we had not gone too far in their interest, at the expense of our own; for In our scrupulous desire to pay all possible heed, not merely to the real, but even to the fancied rights of our weaker neighbor, who already owed so much to our protection and forbearance, we yield ed in all possible wtys to her desires in drawing up the treaty. Nevertheless the Government of Colombia not merely re pudiated the treaty, but repudiated it in such manner as to make it evident by the time the Colombian Congress .ad journed that not the scantiest hope re mained of ever getting a satisfactory treaty from them. The Government of Colombia made the treaty, and yet when the Colombian Congress was called to ratify it the vote against ratification was unanimous. It does not appear that the government made any real effort to se cure ratification. Immediately after the adjournment of the Congress a revolution broke out in Panama. The people of Panama had long been discontented with the Republic of Colombia, and they had been kept quiet only by the prospect of the conclusion of the treaty, which was to them a matter of vital concern. When it became evident that the treaty was hopelessly lost, the people of Panama rose literally as one man. Not a shot was fired by a single man on the Isthmus in the interest of the Colombian Government. Not a life was lost In the accomplishment of the revolution. The Colombian troops sta tioned on the Isthmus, who had long been unpaid, made common cause with the peo ple of "Panama, And with astonishing unanimity the new Republic was started. The duty of the United States In the premises was clear. In strict accordance with the principals laid down by Secre taries Cass and Sward in the official docu. ments above quoted, the United States gave notice that it would permit the landing of no expeditionary force, the ar rival of which would mean chaos and de struction along the line of the railroad and of the 'proposed canal, and an inter ruption of transit as an inevitable conse quence. The de facto Government of Panama was recognized in the following telegram to Mr. Ehrman: "The people of Panama have, by appar ently unanimous movement. dissolved their political connection with the Repub lic of Colombia and resumed their Inde pendence. When you are satisfied that a de facto government, republican in form and without substantial opposition from its own people, has been established in the State of Panama, you will enter into relations with it as the responsible gov ernment of the territory and look . to It for all due action to protect the persons and property cf citizens of the United States and to keep' open the isthmian transit, in accordance with the obligations of existing treaties governing the rela tions of the United States to that terri tory." The Government of Colombia was noti fied of our action by the following tele. gram to Mr. Beaupre: "The people of Panama having, by an apparently unanimous movement, dis solved their political connection with the Republic of Colombia and resumed their Independence, and having adopted a gov ernment of their own. republican In form. with which the Government of the United States of America has entered into rela tions, the President of-the United States. in accordance with the ties of friendship which have so long and so happily existed between the respective nations, most earn estly commends to the Governments of Co lombia and of Panama, the peaceful and equitable settlement of all questions at Is sue between them. He holds that he is bound not merely by treaty obligations, but by the interests of civilization, to see that the peaceful traffic . of the world across the Isthmus of Panama shall not longer be disturbed by a constant succes sion of unnecessary and wasteful civil wars." ' The control, in the Interest of the com merce and traffic of the whole civilized world, of the means of undisturbed tran sit across the Isthmus of Panama has be come of transcendent importance to the United States.' We have repeatedly exer cised this control by intervening In the course of domestic dissension, and by protecting the territory from foreign in vasion. In 1853 Mr. Everett assured th Peruvian Minister that we should not hes itate to maintain the neutrality of the isthmus in the case of war between Peru and Colombia. In 1864 Colombia, which has always been vigilant to avail Itself of Its privileges conferred by the treaty, expressed Its expectation that In the event of war between Peru and Spain the United States would carry Into effect the guar antee or neutrality. j - . rw aujmHiSiuuua ui me etaie department in which this treaty has not. either by I me one siae or ine otner. been used as a basis of more or less important demands. it was said by Mr. Fish in 1871 that the Department of State had reason to be lieve that an attack upon Colombian sov ereignty on the isthmus had, on several occasions, been averted by warning from this Government. Every effort has been made by the Gov- ernment of tne united states to persuade (JOlomDia to loiiow a course wnicn was essentially not only to our Interests and to the interests of the world, but to the interests of Colombia Itself. These efforts have failed, and Colombia, by her persist- ence in repuising me auvanccB mat nave our own honor, and of the Interest and well-being not merely of our own people, but of the people of the Isthmus of Pan ama and the people of the civilized coun tries of the world, to take decisive steps to bring to an end a condition of affairs which had become intolerable. The new Republic of Panama Immediately offered to negotiate a treaty with us. This treaty herewith submit. By it our interests are better safeguarded than in the treaty are Detter saieguarueu man in mo treaty with Colombia, which was. ratified by the , Senate at its last session. It is better In its terms than the treaties offered to us I bv the Republics of Nicaragua and Costa Rlca. At last the right to begin this great undertaking Is made available. Panama I has done her part. All that remains is I for the American Congress to do its part. I and forthwith this republic will enter upon the execution of a project colossal i.m .1.. t wait. nlh InitalmiLhl. . possibilities for the good of this country and the nations of mankind. THEODORE ROOSEVELT. White House, December 7, 1903. EVENTS OF THE DAY GATHERED FROM ALL PARTS OF THE TWO HEMISPHERES. Comprehensive Review of the Import ant Happenings of the Past Week, Presented In Condensed Form", Most Likely to Prove Interesting to bur Many Readers. Germany is much pleased with the message of the president. An independent company to fight the beef trust is to be established, in St. Louis. . t . ; f After an elapse of 16 months the . Tracy reward is to be paid by tbestate of Washington. ; Dowie has straightened out his financial tangle and the receivers have been discharged. Russia has made a counter proposit ion to the demands of Japan, which, it is believed, will be accepted. American marines have gone into camp near Panama, and the Colombian invasion has received a set back. The secretary of . war has asked con gress for $1,600,000 to deepen the chan nel through Wrangel Narrows, Alaska. Revenue figures sent to the senate show that the nation can liberally recognize the fair, and then be still deep ly in debt to Oregon on a revenue basis. . The Panama canal treaty has started n its way to the United States. Japan has postponed the meeting of the diet in the hope of receiving an answer from Russia. Both houses of congress entered upon regular from special session without any notable transition. 1 T Dowie alleges his assets are four times his liabilities, and - makes an offer to settle with his creditors. Secretary Shaw estimates that the entire appropriations needed for gov ernment use for 1905 will be $624,502, 146. The steel trust will reduce expenses a hundred thousand dollars a year by dismissing a number of "Carnegie's -pets." Minister Lifton, of Canada, declares that country is loyal to Britain . and regrets its infantine attitude over Alas ka decision. ' A party of Colorado nonunion minerp were ambushed near Trinidad. Of five only one escaped to. give the alarm. The sheriff with bloodhounds has gone to the scene. An epidemic of diphtheria at Stan ford university has put 12 in the hos pital. - ' , - Pope Pius is trying to secure more cardial jflations between France and the charch. . ; The British consul finds the outrages in Congo Free States fully equal to the first reports. The wages of something . like 14,000 miners at Birmingham, Ala., have been reduced. " More creditors of Dowie have . come to hisr escne and it is thought he will yet come out all right. Secretary Hitchcock refuses to rein state Asa B. Thomas as receiver of the La Grande, Oregon, land office. Senator Foster, of Washington, has introduced a bill giving the Puyallup Indians the right to sell or lease their lands. Speaker Cannon gave the best house committeeships to old members, and Oreogn got only ' minor positions. Washington fared but little better. Edward L. Wentz, the young Phila delphia millionaire, who ; has been missing since last October,' has been found in a demented condition wander ing in the mountains of Tennessee. , ( Martial law has been proclaimed at Cripple Creek, Colo. ; ' An international administration is proposed for Macedonia. : , .. Herbert Spencer, the famous writer, is seriously ill in London. Seven large creditors' of Dowie oppose the move to declare him bankrupt. The simplest solution to The Dalles canal right-'of-way muddle appears to i 1MhaRP hv th stat nf fWwnn 06 Purcnase Dv tDe 8tate 01 Oregon It -m-..,- . n . -congressman vvnnam ivi. &pnng- er, ol Illinois, and a Democratic leader, is dead. In his annual report Secretary Moody strongly urges a general staff for the navy, similar to that at the head of tne army. A forest fire which is raging in the mountains northeast of San Bernar dino. Cal.. has already destroyed abont. 000,000 feet of sawed lumber and other property and is not yet extin guished. The loss will reach at least $100,000. Emil Roeski, one of the Chicago ban dits recently arrested, will plead hyj notism. - j. The submarine boat Pixie has 4 j j .!, . stranded on the Virginia coast. The two Chilean warships supposed to have been sold to Japan' were nur- chased by England. I r u -, . t; . ' , , , ,. ., , , . Bix hundred coolies sailed for China from San Francisco on the steamer Lothian a few days ago. o Japan has demanded an answer from Russia to the former's latest note on the Manchurian question.