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You are instructed to insist upon prompt payment of all sums now due claimants who received awards on account of the Hancox claim and other claims of the commission of 1890.

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Caracas, Venezuela, August 20, 1904.

SIR: I have the honor to make the following report about the awards of the mixed commission:

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Paid to the allied powers (Germany, Great Britain, and Italy) up to June 30, 1904.

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Amount of awards.

Bolivars.

9,401, 267.86 2,091,908.75 2,667,079.51 1,974,818. 41 10,898, 643.86 174,359.08 544,301.47 2,313,711.37 2,577,328.10 5,785,962. 19

38,428,580.60 6,880, 450.00

31,548, 130.60

10,398, 688.80 21, 149, 441.80

31,548,130.60

I am, etc.,

HERBERT W. BOWEN.

MESSAGE OF PRESIDENT CASTRO TO THE VENEZUELAN

CONGRESS.

Mr. Bowen to Mr. Hay.

AMERICAN LEGATION,

Caracas, Venezuela, March 2, 1904.

SIR: I have the honor to send to you herewith two copies of President Castro's message and two copies of the report of the minister for foreign affairs to the Venezuelan Congress.

On page 32 of the message you will find an eloquent expression of gratitude to President Roosevelt and the American people.

* * *

I am, etc.,

[Inclosure-Translation.]

HERBERT W. BOWEN.

Extract from the message of the President of Venezuela to the Congress of 1904.

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Our relations with the United States are perfectly harmonious and cordial. Each day the deferential consideration which that great nation is showing us becomes more frank and affectionate. We should remember, as a proof of that

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harmony and cordiality, the interest which the President and the people of the American Union showed toward Venezuela in the unfortunate days of our international disturbance. The good offices of the First Magistrate of that friendly nation were interposed more than once to obtain a pacific solution and avoid the action which was then threatened against us.

With a view to expressing to the people of the great Republic the gratitude of Venezuela for this friendly action, and also for the purpose of strengthening our friendly political relations, it was resolved last year to reestablish the Venezuelan legation at Washington. The compatriot appointed by the Government as the head of the legation has received a courteous reception by the PresiIdent of the United States.

REESTABLISHMENT OF RELATIONS BETWEEN VENEZUELA AND

No. 276.]

soon.

COLOMBIA.

Mr. Bowen to Mr. Hay.

AMERICAN LEGATION,

Caracas, Venezuela, April 17, 1904. SIR: I have the honor to inform you that this afternoon Gen. Rafael Reyes, President-elect of Colombia, after a long conference with President Castro, called on me and told me that General Castro agreed to send consuls to Colombia this week, and that Colombia would then send consuls to Venezuela. No date was named for appointing ministers, but it was understood that they should be named I judge from what General Reyes added that all questions in dispute between the two countries will be submitted to arbitration, and that the arbitrator will be Señor Herboso, the Chilean minister to Colombia and Venezuela. Señor Herboso is in Caracas, and it is principally owing to his efforts that President Castro and General Reyes were brought together. General Reyes wants the Orinoco River opened to Colombia and the Maracaibo district provided with liberal transit regulations and facilities. General Reyes will leave here day after to-morrow, after a visit of less than a week.

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SIR: I have the honor to inform you that President Castro on the 11th instant issued the following decree:

DECREE.

ARTICLE 1. Traffic with the Republic of Colombia is reestablished. ART. 2. Foreign merchandise, fruits, and products imported into Maricaibo in transit to that Republic, as well as her exports, may be carried in steamers, boats, and canoes on the Zulia River between El Guayabo and Puerto Villamizar without any restrictions except those established by law 23 of the Treasury Code.

I am,
etc.,

HERBERT W. BowEN.

NEW CONSTITUTION OF VENEZUELA.

Mr. Bowen to Mr. Hay.

No. 281.]

AMERICAN LEGATION, Caracas, Venezuela, May 14, 1904. SIR: I have the honor to inform you that on the 27th of April last, the ninety-third year of the independence and the forty-sixth of the federation of Venezuela, a new constitution was adopted for the Republic.

It reduces the number of States to thirteen-Aragua, Bermudez, Bolivar, Carabobo, Falcon, Guarico, Lara, Merida, Miranda, Tachira, Trujillo, Zamora, and Zulia-and provides for five Territories Amazonas, Cristobal Colon, Colon, Delta-Amacuro, and Yururari-and the Federal District, which is composed of the departments Libertador, Varagas, Guaicaipuro, and Sucre, and the island of Margarita.

The States enjoy equality and autonomy, having all rights not delegated to the central Government. The Territories are administered by the President.

The Government is divided into three branches the legislative, the executive, and the judicial.

The legislative branch is called the Congress, and is composed of two bodies the Senate and the House of Deputies. One deputy will be elected by every 40,000 inhabitants, and all deputies, as well as senators (two from every State) and the President, will serve for six years. Deputies must be 21 years of age, senators 30, and the President over 30. No extraordinary powers are given to the Congress, except that 14 of its members shall be chosen by itself to elect every sixth year a President, a first and a second vice-president, and to elect a successor to the second vice-president.

The President, besides being charged with the usual executive duties, is authorized to declare war, arrest, imprison, or expel natives or aliens who are opposed to the reestablishment of peace, to issue letters of marque and reprisal, to permit aliens to enter the public service, to prohibit the immigration into the Republic of objectionable religious teachers, and to establish rules for the postal, telegraph, and telephone services.

The judicial power is vested in the Corte Federal y de Casacion (seven judges elected by the Congress) and the lower courts (appointed by the State governments).

All Venezuelans over 21 years of age may vote, and aliens can obtain that right by getting naturalized. No length of time is prescribed for an alien to live in the Republic before he can become naturalized.

Article 15 of the constitution denies the right of natives or aliens to present claims to the nation or States for damages caused by revolutionists.

Article 17 abolishes the death penalty.

And article 120 provides that all of Venezuela's international treaties shall hereafter contain the clause, "All differences between the contracting parties shall be decided by arbitration, without going to war."

In conclusion, the constitution provides that the next constitutional terms shall begin May 23, 1905. Up to that date General Castro will be Provisional President. He took his oath of office as such on the 5th instant, and on the same day Juan Vicente Gómez was made first vice-president and José Antonio Velutini second vice-president.

As Provisional President, General Castro has been authorized to name the presidents of the States, to organize the Federal Territories, to fix the estimates for the public expenses, and, in short, to exercise the fullest powers.

I am, etc.,

* * *

HERBERT W. BOWEN.

INDEX.

A.

Page.

Abduction of Ion Perdicaris by bandits in Morocco_.
Ablahat, Odishu Samuel, passport, application of......
Abynemer, Assad Kalil, Syrian, fraudulent naturalization of
Abyssinia (see Ethiopia) __.

307, 338, 496

656

398

298

Acre Territory, termination of the dispute between Bolivia and Brazil
over the__

98, 104

Activity of secret societies (antiforeign and antidynastic) in China_
Aflak, Habib J., Syrian, fraudulent naturalization of__.

200

398

Agreement. (See Treaty.)

Alaska, delimitation of the boundary of...

324

Alexandretta, Turkey, assault on the American consul at, by Turkish
officials

833

Aliens, citizenship of children of, born in the United States.
Amendments to the constitution of Mexico_‒‒‒‒

853
491

American:

cargoes and American-chartered vessels, seizure, of by Russian naval
vessels

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doing business in Haiti, license tax imposed upon__
imprisonment of, in foreign countries. (See Imprisonment.)
Jews, discriminatory treatment of, in Russia____

371

790

license to do business arbitrarily denied to, in Haiti.
murder of, in foreign countries.

384

(See Murder, etc.)

naturalized, of Syrian origin, protection of, in Haiti_

397

citizenship of persons born in foreign countries of naturalized Ameri-
can parents____

854

citizenship of persons born in the United States of alien parents-
consul, assault on the, at Alexandretta by Turkish officials_
consular offices, asylum for political refugees in_-_-
consulate at Cienfuegos, Cuba, indignity offered to the_.
diplomatic and consular service, designation of, instead of United
States "

853

833

286, 859

236

66

7

institutions, educational, charitable, and religious, in Turkey; negotia-
tions with Turkish Government with reference to official recogni-
tion of, etc.--

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newspaper correspondents, arrest of, by Russian authorities.
property, attack on, by Korean soldiers___

777

451

ship Benjamin Sewall, murder of shipwrecked seamen of, in Formosa_
trade-marks, protection of, in Morocco__.

440

407

transportation companies, discrimination against, in carrying emi-
grants from Hungary (see Transportation of emigrants from Hun-
gary)

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