| Murat Halstead - 1902 - 496 pages
...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,...international duties no less than international rights. "Inasmuch, however, as the American people have no thought of abandoning the path upon which they have... | |
| William Bittle Wells, Lute Pease - 1902 - 702 pages
...arguments for a great navy as follows : policy, foreign or domestic, is more important than this to the honor and material welfare, and above all to the peace,...in the future. Whether we desire it or not. we must hencefortli recognize that we have international duties no less than international rights. Even if... | |
| Robert Cornelius V. Meyers - 1902 - 638 pages
...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" "It is not necessary to increase our army beyond its present size, but it is necessary to keep it at... | |
| United States. President - 1903 - 448 pages
...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,...if our flag were hauled down in the Philippines and Puerto Rico, even if we decided not to build the Isthmian Canal, we should need a thoroughly trained... | |
| 1903 - 914 pages
...steadily continued. No one point of our policy, - foreign or domestic, is more important than this to the Vdj Kven if our flag were hauled down in the Philippines and Porto Rico, even if we decided not to build... | |
| Robert Marion La Follette - 1906 - 512 pages
...steadily continued. No one point of our policy, foreign or domestic, is 1 more important than this to the honor and material welfare, and above all to the peace,...down in the Philippines and Porto Rico; even if we had decided not to build the Isthmian canal, we should need a thoroughly trained navy of adequate size,... | |
| United States. President, James Daniel Richardson - 1908 - 926 pages
...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,...if our flag were hauled down in the Philippines and Puerto Rico, even if we decided not to build the Isthmian Canal, we should need a thoroughly trained... | |
| United States. President - 1911 - 822 pages
...policy, foreign or domestic, is more important than this to the honor and material welfare, and above ail to the peace, of our nation in the future. Whether...if our flag were hauled down in the Philippines and Puerto Rico, even if we decided not to build the Isthmian Canal, we should need a thoroughly trained... | |
| United States. President - 1916 - 544 pages
...war breaks out. 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,...International duties no less than International rights. * • • The Navy offers us the only means of making our Insistence upon the Monroe Doctrine anything... | |
| Theodore Roosevelt - 1916 - 430 pages
...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." PREPARATION LED TO VICTORY IN l8Oj8 "It was forethought and preparation which secured us the overwhelming... | |
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