| Cosmos, Nicholas Murray Butler - 1917 - 160 pages
...agreed to at the Hague Conference of 1899 the delegation of the United States made the following formal declaration: Nothing contained in this convention...traditional attitude toward purely American questions. This reservation was explicitly renewed by the American delegates to the Hague Conference of The basis... | |
| Robert Goldsmith - 1917 - 402 pages
...Convention (1907) for the Pacific Settlement of International Disputes made the express reservation : " Nothing contained in this Convention shall be so construed...traditional attitude toward purely American questions." As a matter of fact the United States is now under contract, by treaties with some thirty nations,... | |
| William Edward Hall - 1917 - 910 pages
...reservation of the declaration made at the plenary sitting of the Conference on the 25th of July, 1899. Nothing contained in this Convention shall be so construed...traditional attitude toward purely American questions. (Pivcis-reitaux, pt. 1, p. 69.) CONvENTION III Germany, Great Britain, Turkey, and United States signed... | |
| Robert Goldsmith - 1917 - 380 pages
...Convention (1907) for the Pacific Settlement of International Disputes made the express reservation : " Nothing contained in this Convention shall be so construed...traditional attitude toward purely American questions." As a matter of fact the United States is now under contract, by treaties with some thirty nations,... | |
| George Louis Beer - 1917 - 356 pages
...declaration and it was subsequently ratified with this reservation attached. The declaration reads: " Nothing contained in this Convention shall be so construed...States of America of its traditional attitude toward American questions." This reservation, which significantly joined together the policy of non-intervention... | |
| United States. Committee on Public Information - 1917 - 52 pages
...upon, interfering with, or entangling itself in the political questions or policy or internal 313784 administration of any foreign State; nor shall anything...traditional attitude toward purely American questions." At The Hague we pledged ourselves, in case we ever went to war, to observe certain broad general rules... | |
| Henry Cabot Lodge - 1917 - 324 pages
...any foreign State, nor shall anything contained in the said convention be construed as to require the relinquishment by the United States of America of...traditional attitude, toward purely American questions. As the American historian of the first peace conference at The Hague, himself one of the American delegates,... | |
| John Holladay Latané - 1918 - 236 pages
...express reservation of a declaration previously read in open session. This declaration was as follows: "Nothing contained in this convention shall be so...traditional attitude toward purely American questions." The establishment of the Permanent Court of Arbitration at The Hague which resulted from the first... | |
| United States. Committee on Public Information - 1918 - 388 pages
...delegates signed the first convention in regard to arbitration, they read into the minutes this statement : "Nothing contained in this convention shall be so...traditional attitude toward purely American questions." If, therefore, the present war has forced us to abandon, for the time being, our traditional attitude,... | |
| John Holladay Latané - 1919 - 232 pages
...express reservation of a declaration previously read in open session. This declaration was as follows: "Nothing contained in this convention shall be so...relinquishment by the United States of America of 68 From Isolation to Leadership its traditional attitude toward purely American questions." The establishment... | |
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