TRANSCRIBER’S NOTE

Some minor changes to the text are noted at the [end of the book].

The original edition did not include a Table of Contents. For the convenience of the reader one has been created:

Presidential Addresses and State Papers[5]
Remarks at the Dinner of the Periodical Publishers’ Association of America. the New Willard, Washington, D. C., April 7, 1904[5]
Address at the Prize Day Exercises at Groton School, Groton, Mass., May 24, 1904[8]
Address at Gettysburg, Pa., Memorial Day, May 30, 1904[21]
Remarks at the Washington Memorial Chapel, Valley Forge, Pa., June 19, 1904[29]
Address at Oyster Bay, N. Y., July 27, 1904, in Response to the Committee Appointed to Notify Him of His Nomination For the Presidency[36]
Letter Accepting the Republican Nomination For President of the United States[47]
Remarks at the White House, Sept. 24, 1904, on the Occasion of the Reception of the Interparliamentary Union[95]
Correspondence, November 4, 1904 - Re: Judge Parker[97]
Address at the Unveiling of the Statue of Frederick the Great, at Washington, Nov. 19, 1904[101]
Remarks at St. Patrick’s Church, Washington, D. C., Nov. 20, 1904[108]
Remarks Introducing Rev. Charles Wagner, at the Lafayette Opera House, Washington, D. C., Nov. 22, 1904[112]
Message of the President of the United States, Communicated to the Two Houses of Congress at the Beginning of the Third Session of the Fifty-eighth Congress[119]
Address to the Forest Congress, Washington, D. C., Jan. 5, 1905[190]
Speech at the Dinner of the American Institute of Architects, at the Arlington Hotel, Washington, D. C., Jan. 11, 1905[201]
Address at Luther Place Memorial Church, Washington, D. C., Jan. 29, 1905[205]
Address to the Graduating Class of the Naval Academy at Annapolis, Maryland, Jan. 30, 1905[209]
Address at the Union League Club, Philadelphia, Pa., Jan. 30, 1905[217]
Address at the Lincoln Dinner of the Republican Club of the City of New York, Waldorf-astoria Hotel, Feb. 13, 1905[224]
Address at the Hungarian Club Dinner, New York City, Feb. 14, 1905[236]
Message from the President of the United States, Transmitting a Protocol of an Agreement Between the United States and the Dominican Republic, Providing For the Collection and Disbursement by the United States of the Customs Revenues of the Dominican Republic, Signed on February 4, 1905[241]
Address at the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pa., Feb. 22, 1905[261]
Inaugural Address, March 4, 1905[269]
Correspondence, March 6, 1905 - To the Senate[273]
Address at the Meeting of the American Tract Society, at Grace Reformed Church, Washington, D. C., March 12, 1905[276]
Address Before the National Congress of Mothers, Washington, D. C., March 13, 1905[282]
Address at the Dinner of the Society of Friendly Sons of St. Patrick, Delmonico’s, New York City, March 17, 1905[292]
Address at the Dinner of the Sons of the American Revolution, Hotel Astor, New York City, March 17, 1905[300]
Address to the Graduates of the United States Naval Medical School, Washington, D. C., March 25, 1905[309]
At Outdoor Meeting at Dallas, Tex., April 5, 1905[314]
At the Banquet at Dallas, Tex., April 5, 1905[319]
To the Legislature of Texas, Austin, Tex., April 6, 1905[324]
Outside of Capitol Building, Austin, Tex., April 6, 1905[330]
In Front of the Alamo, San Antonio, Tex., April 7, 1905[334]
To the Congregation Assembled at the Blue Schoolhouse on Upper Divide Creek, Colo., Sunday, April 30, 1905[345]
At the Banquet of the Chamber of Commerce and Board of Trade, Denver, Colo., May 9, 1905[350]

Theodore Roosevelt
June 6th, 1905

Homeward Bound Edition

PRESIDENTIAL ADDRESSES
AND STATE PAPERS
April 7, 1904, to May 9, 1905

BY
THEODORE ROOSEVELT

PUBLISHED WITH THE PERMISSION OF THE
AUTHOR THROUGH SPECIAL ARRANGEMENT
VOLUME III

NEW YORK
THE REVIEW OF REVIEWS COMPANY
MCMX

The Publishers desire to make clear to the readers that Ex-president Roosevelt
retains no pecuniary interest in the sale of the volumes containing these
speeches. He feels that the material contained in these addresses
has been dedicated to the public, and that it is, therefore,
not to be handled as copyrighted material from which
Mr. Roosevelt should receive any pecuniary return.

PRESIDENTIAL ADDRESSES
AND STATE PAPERS
APRIL 7, 1904
TO
MAY 9, 1905