The Roosevelt Doctrine: Being the Personal Utterances of the President on Various Matters of Vital Interest, Authoritatively Arranged for Reference in Their Logical Sequence; a Brief Summary of the Principles of American Citizenship and GovernmentR. G. Cooke, 1904 - 181 pages |
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Page 13
... desires it , and in practice each Cabinet officer has a very free hand in managing his own department , and must have it if he is to do good work . But all this advice and consultation is at the will of the Presi- dent . With the Senate ...
... desires it , and in practice each Cabinet officer has a very free hand in managing his own department , and must have it if he is to do good work . But all this advice and consultation is at the will of the Presi- dent . With the Senate ...
Page 14
... desire to secure the best results . But although many men must share with the President the responsibility for different individual actions , and although Congress must of course also very largely condition his usefulness , yet the fact ...
... desire to secure the best results . But although many men must share with the President the responsibility for different individual actions , and although Congress must of course also very largely condition his usefulness , yet the fact ...
Page 16
... desire to do the best possible work that he could for the people at large . Of course infirmity of purpose or wrong - headedness may mar this integrity and sin- cerity of intention ; but the integrity and the good intentions have always ...
... desire to do the best possible work that he could for the people at large . Of course infirmity of purpose or wrong - headedness may mar this integrity and sin- cerity of intention ; but the integrity and the good intentions have always ...
Page 38
... who , without possessing his desire to do right , know only too well how to make the wrong effective . - Banquet to Dr. Nicholas Murray Butler , Apl . 19 , 1902. [ p . 30. ] Work for Work's Sake If you are worth your salt 38 Citizenship.
... who , without possessing his desire to do right , know only too well how to make the wrong effective . - Banquet to Dr. Nicholas Murray Butler , Apl . 19 , 1902. [ p . 30. ] Work for Work's Sake If you are worth your salt 38 Citizenship.
Page 53
... desire to overcome those that are not good , the same pur- poses , the same tendencies , the same shortcomings , the same desires for good , the same need of striving against evil ; if he will realize all this , then if you can get the ...
... desire to overcome those that are not good , the same pur- poses , the same tendencies , the same shortcomings , the same desires for good , the same need of striving against evil ; if he will realize all this , then if you can get the ...
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Aaron Burr administration alike Ameri American anarchistic anti-trust law appointments arid army Attorney-General average benefit Boxer uprising Canal capital citizen Citizenship civil commerce corporations course Cuba deal decent demand dent Department desire duty effect efficiency enforcement evil exercise expenditure fact Filipino foreign forest reserves immense important individual industrial interest irrigation islands labor land legislation liberty matter means ment merely Message first session Minnesota Legislature Monroe Doctrine nation Naval navy necessary ness never Nicholas Murray Butler organizations peace persons phatically Philippines political poration possible practical present President President's problem proper protection qualities Republic ROBERT GRIER second session Fifty-seventh Senate Sept session Fifty session Fifty-seventh Congress seventh Congress ships sion Fifty-seventh Congress spirit stand-point success tariff tion trained trusts United unwise upbuilding vidual vital wage-worker wealth welfare West whole
Popular passages
Page 120 - This doctrine has nothing to do with the commercial relations of any American power, save that it in truth allows each of them to form such as it desires.
Page 49 - It is no limitation upon property rights or freedom of contract to require that when men receive from government the privilege of doing business under" corporate form, which frees them from individual responsibility, and enables them to call into their enterprises the capital of the public, they shall do so upon absolutely truthful representations as to the value of the property in which the capital is to be invested.
Page 103 - American ships is greater than is the case abroad; that the wages paid the officers and seamen are very much higher than those paid the officers and seamen of foreign competing countries; and that the standard of living on our ships is far superior to the standard of living on the ships of our commercial rivals.
Page 63 - Colombia's consent, for the protection of the transit, has disclaimed any duty to defend the Colombian Government against domestic insurrection or against the erection of an independent government on the Isthmus of Panama. The attacks against which the United States engaged to protect New Granadian sovereignty were those of foreign powers; but this engagement was only a means to the accomplishment of a yet more important end.
Page 128 - West various projects are well advanced towards the drawing up of contracts, these being delayed in part by necessities of reaching agreements or understanding as regards rights of way or acquisition of real estate. Most of the works contemplated for construction are of national importance, involving interstate questions or the securing of stable, self-supporting communities in the midst of vast tracts of vacant land. The Nation as a whole is of course the gainer by the creation of these homes, adding...
Page 93 - The work of upbuilding the Navy must be steadily continued. No one point of our policy, foreign or domestic, is more important than this to the honor and material welfare, and above all to the peace, of our nation in the future.
Page 131 - ... manufactured articles will stimulate industrial production, while wider home markets and the trade of Asia will consume the larger food supplies and effectually prevent Western competition with Eastern agriculture. Indeed, the products of irrigation will be consumed chiefly in upbuilding local centres of mining and other industries, which would otherwise not come into existence at all.
Page 61 - No single great material work which remains to be undertaken on this continent is of such consequence to the American people as the building of a canal across the Isthmus connecting North and South America. Its importance to the Nation is by no means limited merely to its material effects upon our business prosperity ; and yet with view to these effects alone it would be to the last degree important for us immediately to begin it. While its beneficial effects would perhaps be most marked upon the...
Page 116 - The navyyards and postal service illustrate, probably better than any other branches of the Government, the great gain in economy, efficiency, and honesty due to the enforcement of this principle.
Page 141 - Many of them need special protection because of the great injury done by live stock, above all by sheep. The increase in deer, elk, and other animals in the Yellowstone Park shows what may be expected when other mountain forests are properly protected by law and properly guarded. Some of these areas have been so denuded of surface vegetation by overgrazing that the ground breeding birds, including grouse and quail, and many mammals, including deer, have been exterminated or driven away.