Government towards the commerce of the world is that all nations will be treated alike, and no discrimination made by the United States against any one of them observing the rules adopted by the United States. Zeitschrift für internationales Recht - Stran 83uredili: - 1913 - 645 straniCelotni ogled - O knjigi
| 1913 - 364 strani
...United States that the Canal shall be neutral and all nations treated alike and no discrimination made against any one of them observing the rules adopted by the United States. "In other words, it was a conditional favoured-nation treatment, the measure of which, in the absence... | |
| Lewis Nixon - 1912 - 52 strani
[ Prikaz vsebine te strani ni dovoljen ] | |
| 1913 - 1114 strani
...neutral ; that the attitude of this Government towards the commerce of the world is that nil nations be treated alike and no discrimination made by the...by the nations to whom we extended that privilege. Tbe privileges of all nations to whom we extended the use upon the observance of these conditions were... | |
| 1913 - 914 strani
[ Prikaz vsebine te strani ni dovoljen ] | |
| Lassa Oppenheim - 1913 - 72 strani
...made against any one of them observing the five conditions enumerated in Article III, Nos. 2 — 6. The right to the use of the Canal and to equality...use depends upon the observance of the conditions by the nations to whom the United States has extended that privilege. The privileges of all nations... | |
| 1913 - 20 strani
[ Prikaz vsebine te strani ni dovoljen ] | |
| United States. Department of State - 1913 - 32 strani
...States that the Canal shall be neutral and all lo 17 nations treated alike and no discrimination made against any one of them observing the rules adopted by the United States. "In other words, it was a conditional favoured-nation treatment, the measure of which, in the absence... | |
| 1913
...United States that the Canal shall be neutral and all nations treated alike and no discrimination made against any one of them observing the rules adopted by the United States. "In other words, it was a conditional favoured-nation treatment, the measure of which, in the absence... | |
| M. E. Whittaker - 1913 - 332 strani
...United States that the Canal shall be neutral and all nations treated alike and no discrimination made against any one of them observing the rules adopted by the United States. " In other words, it was a conditional favoured-nation treatment, the measure of which, in the absence... | |
| United States. Department of State - 1914 - 630 strani
...declaration of policy by the United States that the canal shall be neutral, that the attitude of this Government towards the commerce of the world is that...no discrimination made by the United States against anv one of them observing the rules adopted by the United States. The right to the use of the canal... | |
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