| United States. Department of State - Clayton-Bulwer Treaty - 1882 - 212 pages
...be respected, we shall expect that these rights will be exercised in a spirit befitting the occasion and the wants and circumstances that have arisen....just demands of other nations than they have been, woulU be permitted, in a spirit of Eastern isolation, to close these gates of intercourse on the great... | |
| United States. Department of State - Clayton-Bulwer Treaty - 1882 - 218 pages
...be respected, we shall expect that these rights will be exercised in a spirit befitting the occasion and the wants and circumstances that have arisen....as its rights, and none of these local governments, eveu if administered with more regard to the just demands of other nations than they have been, would... | |
| Francis Wharton - Government publications - 1886 - 846 pages
....spirit befitting the occasion and the wants and circumstances that have arisen. Sovereignty has its duty as well as its rights, and none of these local Governments, even if administered with more regard to the jast demands of other nations than they have been, would be permitted in a spirit of Eastern isolation... | |
| Francis Wharton - International law - 1887 - 842 pages
...befitting the occasion and the wants aud circumstances that have arisen. Sovereignty has its duty as vrell as its rights, and none of these local Governments, even if administered with more regard to the jast demands of other nations than they have been, would be permitted in a spirit of Eastern isolation... | |
| Law - 1904 - 926 pages
...be respected, we shall expect that these rights be exercised in a spirit befitting the occasion and wants and circumstances that have arisen. Sovereignty has its duties as well as its rights." The quotation goes on at some length to declare that no local State would be permitted to... | |
| Canals, Interoceanic - 1900 - 580 pages
...be respected, we shall expect that these rights will be exercised in a spirit befitting the occasion and the wants and circumstances that have arisen....duties as well as its rights, and none of these local govermnents, even if administered with more regard to the just demands of other nations than they have... | |
| George Park Fisher, George Burton Adams, Henry Walcott Farnam, Arthur Twining Hadley, John Christopher Schwab, William Fremont Blackman, Edward Gaylord Bourne, Irving Fisher, Henry Crosby Emery, Wilbur Lucius Cross - American literature - 1901 - 504 pages
...the imposition of unreasonable or discriminating restrictions. "Sovereignty," said General Cass, "has its duties as well as its rights and none of these local governments . . . would be permitted to close the gates of intercourse on the great highways of the world, and... | |
| American periodicals - 1904 - 498 pages
...always be respected, we shall expect that these rights be exercised in a spirit befitting the occasion, and the wants and circumstances that have arisen....permitted in a spirit of eastern isolation, to close the gates of intercourse on the great highways of the world, and justify the act by the pretension... | |
| 1903 - 406 pages
...always be respected, we shall expect that these rights be exercised in a spirit befitting the occasion and the wants and circumstances that have arisen....permitted in a spirit of eastern isolation to close the gates of intercourse on the great highways of the world and justify the act by the pretention that... | |
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