Havana, fronting a long line of our shores destitute of the same advantage; the nature of its productions and of its wants, furnishing the supplies and needing the returns of a commerce immensely profitable and mutually beneficial, give it an importance... Cuba Past and Present - Page 95by Richard Davey - 1898 - 284 pagesFull view - About this book
| United States. Congress. House - 782 pages
...destitute of the same advantage ; the nature of its productions and of its wants, furnishing the suppies and needing the returns of a commerce immensely profitable and mutually beneficial. — give it an mvpotXatvce in the sum of our national interests with which that of no other fotevgftXEtvXorj ttax\*i... | |
| United States. Congress - 1853 - 412 pages
...the Havana, fronting a long line of our shores destitute of the same advantage ; the nature of ils productions and of its wants, furnishing the supplies...mutually beneficial — give it an importance in the sum ofournational interests with which that of no other foreign territory can be compared, and little inferior... | |
| William Henry Seward - 1853 - 706 pages
...line of our shores destitute of the same advantage; the nature of its productions and of its wante. furnishing the supplies and needing the returns of...— give it an importance in the sum of our national interest* with which that of no other foreign territory can be compared, and little inferior to that... | |
| United States. Congress - 1853 - 414 pages
...destitute of the same advanlage ; the nature of its productions and of its wants, furnishing the supplie« and needing the returns of a commerce immensely profitable...and mutually beneficial — give it an importance in tho sum of ournational interests with which that of no other foreign territory can be compared, and... | |
| WILLIS FLETCHER JOHNSON, A.M., L.H.D. - 1903 - 362 pages
...capacious harbor of the Havana, fronting a long line of our shores destitute of the same advantages, the nature of its productions and of its wants, furnishing...beneficial, give it an importance in the sum of our national interests-with which that of no other foreign territory can be compared, and little inferior to that... | |
| Beckles Willson - 1903 - 290 pages
...political interests of our Union. Its commanding position, the nature of its productions and of its wants, give it an importance in the sum of our national interests with which that of no foreign territory can be compared, and little inferior to that which binds the different members of... | |
| Beckles Willson - 1903 - 288 pages
...political interests of our Union. Its commanding position, the nature of its productions and of its wants, give it an importance in the sum of our national interests with which that of no foreign territory can be compared, and little inferior to that which binds the different members of... | |
| Graham Henry Stuart - 1922 - 430 pages
...advantage; the 1 American State Papers, Foreign Relations, Vol. Ill, p. 571. nature of its productions and its wants furnishing the supplies and needing the...our national interests with which that of no other country can be compared. Such indeed are between the interests of that island and of this country,... | |
| Paul George Minneman, United States. Office of Foreign Agricultural Relations - 1942 - 162 pages
...and capacious harbor of Havana, fronting a long line of our shores destitute of the same advantage; the nature of its productions and of its wants, furnishing...beneficial, give it an importance in the sum of our national interest, with which that of no other foreign territory can be compared, and little inferior to that... | |
| Paul George Minneman - 1943 - 156 pages
...and capacious harbor of Havana, fronting a long line of our shores destitute of the same advantage; the nature of its productions and of its wants, furnishing...beneficial, give it an importance in the sum of our national interest, with which that of no other foreign territory can be compared, and little inferior to that... | |
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