Page:Messages of the President of the United States on the Relations of the United States to Spain (1898).djvu/27

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IV
CUBAN CORRESPONDENCE.

cial commissioner plenipotentiary duly empowered by the President to that end, it has been deemed convenient to leave to the commissioner the preparation of a report in answer to the second part of the Senate resolution, the undersigned reserving to himself the response to the first part thereof, which concerns the political and consular functions of the Department of State. The separate report of the Hon. John A. Kasson, special commissioner plenipotentiary, is therefore herewith independently submitted to the President with a view to its transmission to the Senate, should such a course be, in the Presidents' judgment, not incompatible with the public service.

The Senate resolution, while in terms calling for the submission to that honorable body of all or of a practical selection of the reports of the consul-general and consuls of the United States in Cuba written or received since March 4, 1897, which relate to the state of war in that island and the condition of the people there, appears to leave it to the discretion of the President to direct the scope of the information to be so reported and the manner of its communication. The undersigned, having taken the President's direction on both these points, has the honor to lay before him a selection of the correspondence received by the Department of State from the various consular representatives in Cuba, aiming thereby to show the present situation in the island rather than to give a historical account of all the reported incidents since the date assigned by the resolution.

Respectfully submitted.

John Sherman.

Department of State,
Washington, April 11, 1899.


Department of State, Washington,
Office of Special Commissioner Plenipotentiary.


The President:

In response to the following resolution of the Senate, passed under date of February 11, 1898, and which was referred to the undersigned for report, viz:

Second. That the President inform the Senate whether any agent of a government in Cuba has been accredited to this Government or the President of the United States, with authority to negotiate a treaty of reciprocity with the United States, or any other diplomatic or commercial agreement with the United States; and whether such person has been recognized and received as the representative of such government in Cuba.

I have the honor to submit the following report:

In October, 1897, the minister of Spain at this capital verbally advised the undersigned that, so soon as the new Government in Spain had leisure to take up the question, he would probably be authorized to enter into negotiations with the undersigned for reciprocal trade