| Howard Walter Caldwell - 1900 - 654 strani
...reasons justifying an appeal to the doctrine enunciated by President Monroe are generally inapplicable "to the state of things in which we live at the present day," and especially inapplicable to a controversy involving the boundary line between Great Britain and... | |
| John Brooks Henderson - 1901 - 556 strani
...Monroe adopted a policy which received the entire sympathy of the English Government of that date. The dangers which were apprehended by President Monroe...It is intelligible that Mr. Olney should invoke, in defence of the views on which he is now insisting, an authority which enjoys so high a popularity with... | |
| 1903 - 62 strani
...nation. He give? what he believes is the British interpretation of the doctrine, and maintains that the dangers which were apprehended by President Monroe...state of things in which we live at the present day, and adds with thinly covered irony that "it is intelligible that Mr. Olney should invoke in the defense... | |
| 1908 - 60 strani
...nation. He give? what he believes is the British interpretation of the doctrine, and - maintains that the dangers which were apprehended by President Monroe...relation to the state of things in which we live at 21 "The dispute between Great -Britain and Venezuela is a controversy with which" said Lord Salisbury... | |
| William MacDonald - 1903 - 464 strani
...reasons justifying an appeal to the doctrine enunciated by President Monroe are generally inapplicable " to the state of things in which we live at the present day," and especially inapplicable to a controversy involving the boundary line between Great Britain and... | |
| 1897 - 898 strani
...reasons justifying an appeal to the doctrine enunciated by President Monroe are generally inapplicable "to the state of things in which we live at the present day," and especially inapplicable to a controversy involving the boundary line between Great Britain and... | |
| Grover Cleveland - 1904 - 304 strani
...Monroe Doctrine and the right or propriety of our appeal to it in the pending controversy, declared: "The dangers which were apprehended by President Monroe...state of things in which we live at the present day." He further declared: But the circumstances with which President Monroe was dealing and those to which... | |
| Thomas Benton Edgington - 1904 - 370 strani
...and maintained that he was supported in his position by his own countrymen, adding, " but the dangers apprehended by President Monroe have no relation to...state of things in which we live at the present day. Great Britain is imposing no system upon Venezuela, but the British Empire and the Republic of Venezuela... | |
| Benson John Lossing - 1905 - 516 strani
...reasons justifying an appeal to the doctrine enunciated by President Monroe are generally inapplicable " to the state of things in which we live at the present day," and especially inapplicable to a controversy involving the boundary-line between Great Britain and... | |
| John Bassett Moore - 1906 - 1056 strani
...Monroe adopted a policy which received the entire sympathy of the English Goveriiment of that date. '* The dangers which were apprehended by President Monroe...It is intelligible that Mr. Olney should invoke, in defence of the views on which he is now insisting, an authority which enjoys so high a popularity with... | |
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