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The Great Round World and What Is Going On In It, Vol. 2, No. 10, March 10, 1898 - A Weekly Magazine for Boys and Girls by Various
page 37 of 52 (71%)
is about fourteen thousand eight hundred miles. If they could pass
through a canal at the Isthmus it would be reduced to under five
thousand, or about one-third of the distance. Think of the saving in
time and money that this would mean!

The great advantages of such a plan are evident in a moment.

We have referred to the speech of General Tracy, who, you will remember,
was, during President Harrison's administration, Secretary of the Navy.
In that speech he stated that, were this canal completed, we would need
to have but one navy where now we practically must have two,--one to
guard the Atlantic coast and one the Pacific coast.

If the canal were open, vessels of our navy could be sent from one coast
to the other in a very short time.

Moreover, the canal would make trade with the East--China, Japan,
etc.--much more direct than now, and, because the voyage would be easier
and quicker, greatly increase that trade.

It has been said that the nation that controls such a canal will hold
the "key to the Pacific," and with the considerations of our shipping
interests, and the desirability of having our war-ships easily
transferable from one coast to the other, and our great expanse of
country, it would seem that the United States should control it.




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