Treaty of Peace with Germany: Hearings Before the Committee on Foreign Relations, United States Senate, Sixty-sixth Congress, First Session, Part 17 |
From inside the book
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Page 757
... believe to be a superstate to which shall be delegated or turned over powers that belong to the sovereign United States of America . We believe that that is an infringement upon the sovereignty of the country and is an interference with ...
... believe to be a superstate to which shall be delegated or turned over powers that belong to the sovereign United States of America . We believe that that is an infringement upon the sovereignty of the country and is an interference with ...
Page 758
... believe we went to war for the purpose of ending autocracy and all that that means , and that it means not alone militarism , the control of the land , but also navalism , the control of the oceans of the world . We say that if we could ...
... believe we went to war for the purpose of ending autocracy and all that that means , and that it means not alone militarism , the control of the land , but also navalism , the control of the oceans of the world . We say that if we could ...
Page 763
... believe it is un - American , and urge and insist that in it there can be no justice and no just and per- manent peace , and that by adopting it you are only making for a continuance of the war . Senator MOSES . Judge Cohalan , you ...
... believe it is un - American , and urge and insist that in it there can be no justice and no just and per- manent peace , and that by adopting it you are only making for a continuance of the war . Senator MOSES . Judge Cohalan , you ...
Page 779
... believe that she fought unselfishly in the war for the very purposes for which our President says we entered the war , yet her first act after the war was won by us to say that the doctrine of the freedom of the seas could not be even ...
... believe that she fought unselfishly in the war for the very purposes for which our President says we entered the war , yet her first act after the war was won by us to say that the doctrine of the freedom of the seas could not be even ...
Page 780
... believe during the pressure of the war that American public opinion was only the echo of English public opinion , and is astounded now to find that his complete victory at Paris is likely to be turned into com- plete defeat at ...
... believe during the pressure of the war that American public opinion was only the echo of English public opinion , and is astounded now to find that his complete victory at Paris is likely to be turned into com- plete defeat at ...
Common terms and phrases
AMERICAN COMMISSION Arthur Griffith autocracy behalf of Ireland believe Britain British Empire British Government Chairman City claim Clemenceau COMMISSION ON IRISH Commission to Negotiate committee conditions in Ireland Count Plunkett Countess Markievicz covenant DAIL EIREANN David Lloyd-George declared delegates Dublin E. F. DUNNE Eamon de Valera earth elected England English fact favor force foreign France FRANK Friends of Irish gentlemen George Noble George Noble Plunkett Grand Hotel hearing herewith honor House inclose Irish Freedom IRISH INDEPENDENCE Irish nation Irish race convention Irish republic Judge COHALAN June justice land league of nations liberty matter Messrs Negotiate Peace never official Paris peace conference Philadelphia political present President prime minister principles prisoners proposed league protest representatives republican request respectfully ROBERT LANSING Ryan safe conducts seas Secretary self-determination Senator BRANDEGEE Senator FALL Senator KNOX Sincerely soldiers territory tion to-day treaty Ulster United WALSH