Latin America ...George Hubbard Blakeslee G. E. Stechert, 1914 - Počet stran: 388 |
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Strana vi
... West Coast of South AMERICA . Hiram Bing- ham , Ph.D. , Assistant Professor of Latin - American History , Yale University ..... XIX . SOME OF THE OBSTACLES TO NORTH AMERICAN TRADE IN BRAZIL . John C. Branner , LL.D. , President of Stan ...
... West Coast of South AMERICA . Hiram Bing- ham , Ph.D. , Assistant Professor of Latin - American History , Yale University ..... XIX . SOME OF THE OBSTACLES TO NORTH AMERICAN TRADE IN BRAZIL . John C. Branner , LL.D. , President of Stan ...
Strana 16
... west coast of Latin America to European immigration . It will help to open to trade the countries on the Pacific slope . Through the new water - way , Peru will be in a direct line of communication with Europe and the Gulf and Atlantic ...
... west coast of Latin America to European immigration . It will help to open to trade the countries on the Pacific slope . Through the new water - way , Peru will be in a direct line of communication with Europe and the Gulf and Atlantic ...
Strana 22
... west coast of South America can be considerably improved , it is far better now than it was formerly and will probably be excellent soon after the canal is opened . As for the vessels plying , for example , between New York and the east ...
... west coast of South America can be considerably improved , it is far better now than it was formerly and will probably be excellent soon after the canal is opened . As for the vessels plying , for example , between New York and the east ...
Strana 43
... west coast ports of Latin America . The combined railway mileage from Mex- ico down to Chile and Argentina , including the island coun- tries of Cuba , Haiti and the Dominican Republic , is esti- mated at 65,330 miles , Argentina ...
... west coast ports of Latin America . The combined railway mileage from Mex- ico down to Chile and Argentina , including the island coun- tries of Cuba , Haiti and the Dominican Republic , is esti- mated at 65,330 miles , Argentina ...
Strana 137
... ably treated in an editorial in the American Journal of International Law ( vol . 6 , p . 937 ) that I take the liberty of quoting it in part : Midway in the southerly third of the west coast of SHOULD WE ABANDON THE MONROE DOCTRINE 137.
... ably treated in an editorial in the American Journal of International Law ( vol . 6 , p . 937 ) that I take the liberty of quoting it in part : Midway in the southerly third of the west coast of SHOULD WE ABANDON THE MONROE DOCTRINE 137.
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Strana 295 - that We must prove ourselves their friends and champions upon terms of equality and honor. You cannot be friends upon any other terms than upon the terms of equality.
Strana 109 - we should assume distinctly the principle that the American continents are no longer subjects for any new colonial establishments.
Strana 261 - in order that, trusting to the joint aid and friendship of Mexico and the United States, they might be encouraged to persist in their effort to establish a government which would, both for their advantage and ours, represent their combined wealth, intelligence and character
Strana 109 - governments in those countries, or to transfer any of the possessions heretofore or yet subject to Spain in the American hemisphere to any other European power.
Strana 4 - as to consequences. The companions of Pizarro, Hernando Cortez, de Soto, Almagro, Pedrarias, Vasco Nunez de Balboa, were in marked contrast to the men who came to the shores of New England with the Pilgrim Fathers. To us came the militarists seeking a field for new exploits,
Strana 261 - also said: You cannot impress too strongly upon the government to which you are accredited or upon the public men with whom you associate the importance which the government of the United States attaches to such a confederation of the states of Central America
Strana 4 - To her went the soldiers of fortune, valiant but ignorant, adventurous and daring yet unscrupulous, they came principally from a country where religious bigotry was rampant. They were an admixture of virtues and vices. They came to conquer, to fight if necessary; their one aim was to better
Strana 95 - Under every system since men first congregated, the strong have ruled the weak; but side by side with the rude fact of power have grown the ideals of fellowship and justice, and these have helped to correct the inequality and injustice which condition human life.
Strana 151 - has its place in the code of international law as certainly and as securely as if it were specifically mentioned;
Strana 6 - had never had to do any work, men whose one and only ambition was a high salary, because they had never had any occasion to learn a profession nor to earn a livelihood through industry and toil. From sources so widely different in their components sprang the Anglo-American and the Latin-American. Your men formed an unmixed mass, because, although