| 1913 - 1050 pages
...from any other Power ; and that any attempt to supersede it by an agreement between European Powers would "partake of the nature of an alliance against the United States, and would be regarded by this Government as an indication of an unfriendly feeling." In a further instruction... | |
| American essays - 1889 - 874 pages
...a sort of outburst against the ca1 Essay« on some Disputed Questions in Modern International Law, page 80. It may be said that some of these questions...European states. The purpose was to head her off, to inliil.il the exercise of her sovereign rights. This dispatch was the starting-point of a diplomatic... | |
| 1901 - 1092 pages
...fleets, and whose interests in the canal and its operation can never be so vital and supreme as ours, would partake of the nature of an alliance against the United States, and would be regarded by this Government as an indication of unfriendly feeling. It would be but an... | |
| United States - 1900 - 834 pages
...fleets, and whose interest in the canal and its operations can never be so vital and supreme as ours, would partake of the nature of an alliance against the United States, and would be regarded by this government as an indicatiou of unfriendly feeling. It would be but au... | |
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