Show THE MESSAGE the long expected message of president mckinley to congress was handed in today and appears in full in this I 1 issue of the news it Is an elaborate document fully exhausting the subject extenuating nothing nor setting down aught in malice ands and we cordially it to our readers the president begins at the beginning and traces his subject consecutively from point poin tta to point the state te merit ment down to the present time he omits no salient i the case and has observed a lice of composition I 1 in as putting the together euph euphas as while clely clearly and i dispassionately told and excluding au phases ol 01 0 partisan bias or national prejudice at the same time in ameir unfolding unfold ig weave an indictment which arraigned arra igne the spanish government and people at the bar of at civilization and christianity to answer for their manifold and aad long continued offenses off enges he points out that while troubles of various kinds amounting to war kept thel the island in a state of insecurity and disi order the inability of the home govern ment to establish a better condition of things has been more and more apparent antl antu at last it has become powerless its waning supremacy being characterized by outrages infinite increasing in an inverse ratio this has not only been shocking to the cultivated sense of the civilized world but has been a source of great deprivation to the united states involving severe losses to our commerce and creating unrest land and uncertainty within our domain this condition must be supplanted by one more in accordance with modern methods the president cites the maine tragedy as an illustration of Sp ains inability to control its ita own affairs and officers in cuba and the restoration of af order there by such use of the army and navy of the united states as congress may see fit to employ the arm armistice latice just juat proclaimed Is referred to and left to the consideration of the lawmakers law makers with but little comment altogether the message is a credito the mind and heart of its author he can neither be hounded into war by agencies at home nor intimidated into weakness by those abroad if congress will give it the attention to which it is entitled and then base such action I 1 as may be taken upon their cool and unbiased d juden Jud nent we need have no fear of the outcome i |