Letter from President Theodore Roosevelt to Secretary of the Interior E. A. Hitchcock
This item contains a copy of the original letter as well as a newspaper clipping.
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OCR Page 1 of 4Mr. Roosevelt's Opportunity.
The American people demand another
special message, this time a message in
defence, encouragement and champion-
ship of the Hon. ETHAN ALLEN HITCH-
cock, Secretary of the Interior.
Here Opportunity awaits the Presi-
dent with widespread, rosy arms and
heaving midriff. Mr. HITCHCOCK has
been striving in his modest way to save
the people's property from plain pillage.
Hereby he has launched a number of
more or less prominent citizens on the
pathway to the penitentiary, with others
yet to come. But he is especially anxious
to stand between the Indians and their
would-be looters and despoilers. This
is where he has incurred the opposition
of the mighty and set loose the dogs of
rapine and con piracy. On several oc-
casions within the last three weeks he
has been haled before a special commit-
tee of the Senate, to be browbeaten and
denounced by statesmen of far off West-
ern affiliations and responsibilities. The
now famous chin whiskers of Tom
CARTER-of Montana or elsewhere-have
bristled in a wind of eloquent reproach.
WARREN and CLARK, twin jewels of
Wyoming, let down their respective and
of course illustrious chins in order to
release a bawl of special devastation.
Other members of the select committee
in question shoot with force and accuracy
at Mr. HITCHCOCK.
It is the psychological moment for
another message of peculiar fervor from
the White House. The people have been
educated to an appetite. The occasion
titillates the people's honest hunger.
This is the appointed time for a fulmina-
tion of potent, overwhelming violence.
Mr. ROOSEVELT'S charge at San Juan
was wonderfully picturesque, a blaze of
gallantry and so forth; but when he
rides, with lance in rest, to the rescue
of a quiet, honest gentleman trying to do
his duty and sore beset by enemies, he
will have done a finer and a nobler thing
than the storming of heights or the capt-
ure of Spanish outworks.
Will he do it? COf course he will!
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