PRESIDENT M'KINLEY
WASHINGTON, March 5. Amidst intermittent rain, Mr McKinlev was sworn in for the second term as President, on a platform erected for the occasion on the eiast front of the Capitol, Washington. . The President, who receivecrsan ovation, addressed a gathering numbering 40,000. The keynotes of his speech were —(1) The duties and privileges of Greater America; and (2) the necessity for liberal reciprocal trade relations with other countries. ' Mr McKinley, in his speech, justified America’s policy of moderation and fairness towards China; the desire for close friendship with Cuba, and to assist her into a position as a. separate nation; and the determination to. give the Philippines self-government as soon as the inhabitants were ready for the change. Colonel Theodore Rosevelt was sworn in as Vice-President. Thirty thousand troops marched 1 to White House, where President McKinley reviewed them. A feature of the military display was a native Porto Rican regiment.
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New Zealand Mail, Issue 1514, 7 March 1901, Page 31
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153PRESIDENT M'KINLEY New Zealand Mail, Issue 1514, 7 March 1901, Page 31
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