The United States and Cuba: A Study in International RelationsMacmillan, 1934 - 268 pages |
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Page 61
... Wood's biographer , Hermann Hagedorn , cites an illuminating Cuban reaction to the Post Office scandal : " " The Spaniards stole everything ' , remarked the wife of an official whom Wood had deposed , ' and now the Ameri- cans are ...
... Wood's biographer , Hermann Hagedorn , cites an illuminating Cuban reaction to the Post Office scandal : " " The Spaniards stole everything ' , remarked the wife of an official whom Wood had deposed , ' and now the Ameri- cans are ...
Page 65
... Wood then verbally explained that " they had been elected to frame a Constitution for Cuba . That was their plain duty . The matter of relations which should exist between Cuba and the United States was another matter . " The Convention ...
... Wood then verbally explained that " they had been elected to frame a Constitution for Cuba . That was their plain duty . The matter of relations which should exist between Cuba and the United States was another matter . " The Convention ...
Page 77
... Wood sanitation program . The inclusion of this provision had been suggested by General Wood in a letter to Secretary Root . Article VI temporarily excluded the Isle of Pines from the boundaries of Cuba , appar- ently because of Senator ...
... Wood sanitation program . The inclusion of this provision had been suggested by General Wood in a letter to Secretary Root . Article VI temporarily excluded the Isle of Pines from the boundaries of Cuba , appar- ently because of Senator ...
Contents
PART I | 1 |
PART II | 22 |
FORMATION OF TREATY RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN | 47 |
Copyright | |
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accept administration affairs Ambassador Ameri April Article bankers banks cane capital cent Colonial Committee concession Congress Constitution of Cuba coöperation Crowder Cuba's Cuban Constitution Cuban Government Cuban independence Cuban sugar diplomatic Dupuy de Lôme duty economic elections Embassy ernment established Gómez government adequate Government of Cuba Havana History of Cuba Ibid independence of Cuba individual liberty interest intervention island of Cuba Isle of Pines José junta land Latin America letter loan López McKinley ment military Monroe Doctrine nations naval obligations Office opinion ordinary revenues peace Permanent Treaty Pierre Soulé Platt Amendment political present President Machado President Palma production propaganda proposed protection provisions public debt reforms Republic of Cuba respect to Cuba revolution Root's Secretary Root sent Soulé Spain Spaniards Spanish Government sugar industry tariff tion Treaty of Paris United States Government Washington Wood yellow fever York