| United States. President - 1897 - 844 str.
...message to Congress in February, 1837, he presented them to the consideration of that body, and declared that— The length of time since some of the injuries...unavailing applications for redress, the wanton character of some of the outrages upon the property and persons of our citizens, upon the officers and flag of... | |
| George Lockhart Rives - 1913 - 760 str.
...necessity of again bringing the subject of them to your notice. That hope has been disappointed. . . . The length of time since some of the injuries have...unavailing applications for redress, the wanton character of some of the outrages upon the property and persons of our citizens, upon the officers and flag of... | |
| Clayton Charles Kohl - 1914 - 116 str.
...to decide on the further measures of redress to be employed. T^he length of time since some of these injuries have been committed, the repeated and unavailing applications for redress, the wanton character of some of the outrages upon the property and persons of our citizens, independent of recent insults... | |
| United States. Congress. House. Committee on Education - 1914 - 336 str.
...declared that freedom and independence were impossible for an ignorant and illiterate people. Another President of the United States declared in a message to Congress that any attempt at self-government in a democracy like ours without universal education and intelligence... | |
| United States. 63 Congress 2 session. Congress. House. Education Committee - 1914 - 454 str.
...declared that freedom and independence were impossible for an ignorant and illiterate people. Another President of the United States declared in a message to Congress that any attempt at self-government in a democracy like ours without universal education and intelligence... | |
| Julius Goebel (Jr.) - 1915 - 252 str.
...of our demands. He said : 1 Cong. Globe, vol. iv, p. 214. " Ibid., pp. 194 and 196. 1 Ibid., p. 213. The length of time since some of the injuries have...unavailing applications for redress, the wanton character of some of the outrages upon the property and persons of our citizens, upon the officers and flag of... | |
| Edmund Aloysius Walsh - 1922 - 328 str.
...place had already brought that region within the range of American interest, and, as early as 1842, the President of the United States declared in a message to Congress that the United States would oppose the seizure of the islands by any foreign power. The growth of American... | |
| United States. President - 1897 - 578 str.
...Congress, whose exclusive right it is to decide on the further measures of redress to be employed. The length of time since some of the injuries have...unavailing applications for redress, the wanton character of some of the outrages upon the property and persons of our citizens, upon the officers and flag of... | |
| Ralph Emerson Twitchell - 2007 - 417 str.
...endured. In a message to congress in February, 1837, he said that "the length of time since some of these injuries have been committed, the repeated and unavailing applications for redress, the wanton character of some of the outrages upon the property and persons of our citizens, upon the officers and flag of... | |
| Hermann Von Holst - 1879 - 734 str.
...Mexico, under the circumstances, was harsh, abrupt, and unnecessary." Deb. of Congr , XIII, p. 198. * "The length of time since some of the injuries have...unavailing applications for redress, the wanton character of some of the outrages upon the property and persons of our citizens, upon the officers and flag of... | |
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