
Mr. Matthews has now been in occupancy of the office to which he was nominated for more than four months.
On the record
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VA-RFormer governors

Mr. Matthews has now been in occupancy of the office to which he was nominated for more than four months.

I have ventured, therefore, in view of the demonstrated fitness of this nominee, to again submit this nomination to the Senate for confirmation.

I transmit herewith a report from the Secretary of State, in relation to the invitation from Her Britannic Majesty to this Government to participate in an international exhibition which is to be held at Adelaide, South Australia, in 1887.

Good government has for its objects the protection of every person within its care in the greatest liberty consistent with the good order of society.

Legislation is needed to execute the provisions of our Chinese convention of 1880 touching the opium traffic.

The claims for interest upon the amount of tonnage dues illegally exacted from certain German steamship lines were favorably reported in both Houses of Congress at the last session.

The moral right and duty of the United States to assist in all proper ways in the maintenance of its integrity is obvious.

The encouraging development of beneficial and intimate relations between the United States and Mexico is at once the occasion of congratulation and of friendly solicitude.

Our Government has consistently maintained its relations of friendship toward all other powers and of neighborly interest toward those whose possessions are contiguous to our own.

The cruel treatment of inoffensive Chinese has, I regret to say, been repeated in some of the far Western States and Territories.

A convention between the United States and certain other powers for the protection of submarine cables was signed at Paris on March 14, 1884, and has been duly ratified and proclaimed by this Government.

I express my unhesitating conviction that the intimacy of our relations with Hawaii should be emphasized.

The paramount duty of maintaining public order and defending the interests of our own people may require the adoption of measures of restriction, but they should not tolerate the oppression of individuals of a special race.

Nothing can be accomplished, however, in the direction of this much-needed reform unless the subject is approached in a patriotic spirit of devotion to the interests of the entire country.

I do hereby revoke the suspension of the discriminating customs imposed and levied in the ports of the United States on the products of and articles proceeding under the Spanish flag from Cuba and Puerto Rico.

If there is anything in the argument last referred to it seems so well answered by the maintenance of the Naval Academy at Annapolis.

I don't see why they should not be paid both compensations.