The Americanism of Theodore Roosevelt: Selections from His Writings and Speeches, Volume 3Houghton Mifflin Company, 1923 - 317 pages |
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Page 15
... treated with utter scorn , and were generally in the end either laughed out , or " hated out , " of the neighborhood , or else got rid of in a still more summary manner . Among a people naturally brave and reckless , this public opinion ...
... treated with utter scorn , and were generally in the end either laughed out , or " hated out , " of the neighborhood , or else got rid of in a still more summary manner . Among a people naturally brave and reckless , this public opinion ...
Page 26
... treat the tribes well and to try to se- cure their good - will , while at the same time putting an immediate stop to ... treated by the Indians , and kept in good health and spirits ; the journals frequently mention the fondness the men ...
... treat the tribes well and to try to se- cure their good - will , while at the same time putting an immediate stop to ... treated by the Indians , and kept in good health and spirits ; the journals frequently mention the fondness the men ...
Page 62
... treat either a smaller child , a little boy or a little girl , or a dumb animal , is just about the meanest boy that you can find anywhere in the world . You should be brave and able to hold your own just because you should be able to ...
... treat either a smaller child , a little boy or a little girl , or a dumb animal , is just about the meanest boy that you can find anywhere in the world . You should be brave and able to hold your own just because you should be able to ...
Page 69
... treated as reason- able beings with rights of their own , and that the rule of the household is changed to suit the changing years , as childhood passes into manhood and womanhood . In such a home the family is not weakened ; it is ...
... treated as reason- able beings with rights of their own , and that the rule of the household is changed to suit the changing years , as childhood passes into manhood and womanhood . In such a home the family is not weakened ; it is ...
Page 81
... treated by those who have had greater suc- cess as nevertheless having shown the fundamental qual- ities that entitle him to respect . We have in the United States an organization composed of the men who forty- five years ago fought to ...
... treated by those who have had greater suc- cess as nevertheless having shown the fundamental qual- ities that entitle him to respect . We have in the United States an organization composed of the men who forty- five years ago fought to ...
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American Belgium believe bird songs blood board of aldermen century Century Company Charles Scribner's Sons citizens civilized Copyright corruption court decent Doran Company duty effort elected elephant evil face fact fear feel fight foes followed force forest G. P. Putnam's Sons hand Henry Cabot Lodge Hermann Hagedorn hold honest honor hunters hunting ideal Indians individual interest justice keep kind labor land liberty live mankind matter mayor means ment merely mighty mind Monroe Doctrine moral nation necessary neighbors never night party peace plains political Powder River Montana practical prairie preach publishers realize righteousness Sagamore Hill sense side social speak stand strength strive success Theodore Roosevelt things tion trail treat trees true unless wilderness words worth wrong York and London