| 1900 - 240 pages
...disturbed its tranquility, which shocked the moral sense of mankind, and which could no longer be endured. "It is my earnest wish that the United States, in...as it was just and humane in its original action. * * * "Our aim in the adjustment of peace should be directed to lasting results and to the achievement... | |
| Union Pacific Railway Company - 1900 - 114 pages
...disturbed its tranquillity, which shocked the moral sense of mankind and which could no longer be endured. "It is my earnest wish that the United States in making...be as scrupulous and magnanimous in the concluding 1 settlement as it was just and humane in its original action. . . . "Our aims in the adjustment of... | |
| MURAT HALSTEAD - 1901 - 514 pages
...disturbed its tranquillity, which shocked the moral sense of mankind, and which could no longer be endured. "It is my earnest wish that the United States in making...as it was just and humane in its original action. The luster and the moral strength attaching to a cause which can be confidently rested upon the considerate... | |
| French Ensor Chadwick - 1911 - 556 pages
...disturbed its tranquillity, which shocked the moral sense of mankind, and which could no longer be endured. It is my earnest wish that the United States in making...as it was just and humane in its original action. The lustre and the moral strength attaching to a cause which can be confidently rested upon the considerate... | |
| James Henderson Blount - 1912 - 704 pages
...* * and that we had no designs of aggrandizement and no ambition for conquest, the President * * * eloquently says: "It is my earnest wish that the United...high rule of conduct which guided it in facing war." The next day, October 26th, came this laconic answer: The cession must be of the whole archipelago... | |
| James Henderson Blount - 1912 - 708 pages
...subsequently so nobly expressed by Mr. McKinley in his instructions to the Paris Peace Commissioners: The United States in making peace should follow the...same high rule of conduct which guided it in facing war.1 "I did not know what the action of our Government would be," said the Admiral to the Committee,3... | |
| 1914 - 732 pages
...disturbed its tranquillity, which shocked the moral sense of mankind, and which could no longer be endured. It is my earnest wish that the United States in making...as it was just and humane in its original action. The luster and the moral strength attaching to a cause which can be confidently rested upon the considerate... | |
| David Saville Muzzey - 1915 - 634 pages
...all and more than our object, let us simply keep our word. ... At the very least, let us adhere to President's instructions, and if conditions require...magnanimous in the concluding settlement as it was just and human in its original action." This and more, of which I earnestly ask a reperusal, binds my conscience... | |
| David Saville Muzzey - 1915 - 632 pages
...all and more than our object, let us simply keep our word. ... At the very least, let us adhere to President's instructions, and if conditions require...magnanimous in the concluding settlement as it was just and human in its original action." This and more, of which I earnestly ask a reperusal, binds my conscience... | |
| Maximo Manguiat Kalaw - 1916 - 388 pages
...after stating that we took up arms only in obedience to the dictates of humanity and in the fulfilment of high public and moral obligations, and that we...reperusal, binds my conscience and governs my action. GEORGE GRAY. Wednesday, 12 :30, night. The next day, October 26, however, came a final and definite... | |
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