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
... interests of our country . We object , in the first place , to the proposal to establish what we believe to be a superstate to which shall be delegated or turned over powers that belong to the sovereign United States of America . We ...
... interests of our country . We object , in the first place , to the proposal to establish what we believe to be a superstate to which shall be delegated or turned over powers that belong to the sovereign United States of America . We ...
Page 758
... interest of America it is absolutely requisite that no power should be able to control the ocean through the system of navalism any more than any country divided should control all the land under the system of militarism . We believe we ...
... interest of America it is absolutely requisite that no power should be able to control the ocean through the system of navalism any more than any country divided should control all the land under the system of militarism . We believe we ...
Page 759
... interest of a just and permanent peace , if it can be made under these conditions at all , it can be made only by taking care to see that England should not be put in a position where she can menace the commerce of the United States ...
... interest of a just and permanent peace , if it can be made under these conditions at all , it can be made only by taking care to see that England should not be put in a position where she can menace the commerce of the United States ...
Page 760
... interests , and if this peace convention is going to give its attention to the settling of all problems in the future so as to do away with the probability of some great war occurring in the world , it ought to take into question ...
... interests , and if this peace convention is going to give its attention to the settling of all problems in the future so as to do away with the probability of some great war occurring in the world , it ought to take into question ...
Page 761
... interest , against our highest ideals and against our highest ambi- tion , and we point out the facts so well known that if a league of nations had been in existence at the time of the Revolution that France could not have come to the ...
... interest , against our highest ideals and against our highest ambi- tion , and we point out the facts so well known that if a league of nations had been in existence at the time of the Revolution that France could not have come to the ...
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