We regard ourselves as trustees acting not for the advantage of the United States but for the benefit of the people of the Philippine Islands. Every step we take will be taken with a view to the ultimate independence of the Islands and as a preparation... Government of the Philippines - Página 194por United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on the Philippines - 1914Visualização integral - Acerca deste livro
| Victoriano D. Diamonon - 1920 - 174 páginas
...regard ourselves as trustees acting not for the advantage of the United States but for the benefit of the Philippine Islands. Every step we take will...to the ultimate independence of the Islands and as preparation for that independence. And we hope to move toward that end as rapidly as the safety and... | |
| Victoriano D. Diamonon - 1920 - 176 páginas
...In 1913 Governor General Harrison conveyed this message of President Wilson to the Filipino people : We regard ourselves as trustees acting not for the...advantage of the United States but for the benefit of the Philippine Islands. Every step we take will be taken with a view to the ultimate independence of the... | |
| Francis Burton Harrison - 1922 - 386 páginas
...delivered there a message from President Wilson to the people of the Philippines, which reads as follows: We regard ourselves as trustees acting not for the...independence of the Islands and as a preparation for that independence. And we hope to move towards that end as rapidly as the safety and the permanent... | |
| Charles Edward Russell - 1922 - 468 páginas
...Congress or another power. 1913. President Wilson said, in a message to the Filipino people, October 6: "We regard ourselves as trustees acting not for the...independence of the Islands and as a preparation for that independence." On December 2 of the same year he sent in a message to Congress, referring to the... | |
| United States. Special Mission on Investigation to the Philippine Islands - 1922 - 206 páginas
...in a message to the Filipino people delivered by Governor Harrison in Manila October 6, 1913, said: We regard ourselves as trustees acting not for the...independence of the islands and as a preparation for that independence. And in his message to Congress on December 2, 1913, the President said: By their... | |
| Francis Burton Harrison - 1922 - 384 páginas
...Wilson to the people of the Philippines, which reads as follows: We regard ourselves as trustees aeting not for the advantage of the United States, but for...independence of the Islands and as a preparation for that independence. And we hope to move towards that end as rapidly as the safety and the permanent... | |
| George Arthur Malcolm, Maximo Manguiat Kalaw - 1923 - 412 páginas
...message to the Filipino people delivered by Governor-General Harrison in Manila, October 6, 1913, said, " We regard ourselves as trustees acting not for the...independence of the Islands and as a preparation for that independence." And in his message to Congress, on December 2, 1913, the President said, " By their... | |
| Philippines. Parliamentary Mission to the United States, 1922 - 1923 - 320 páginas
...message for the Filipino people, formulated America's policy thus: "We regard ourselves as trustees not for the advantage of the United States, but for...Islands. Every step we take will be taken with a view to ultimate independence of the Islands and as a preparation for that independence." THE JONES LAW.—-All... | |
| Jorge Cleofas Bocobo - 1923 - 72 páginas
...Commission to the Filipinos, President Wilson said in his message to the inhabitants of the Philippines : "Every step we take will be taken with a view to the...independence of the Islands and as a preparation for that independence. And we hope to move toward that end as rapidly as the safety and the permanent interests... | |
| Vicente M. Hilario - 1924 - 454 páginas
...GovernorGeneral, communicated to the Filipino people the following message- from President Wilson: "We regard ourselves as trustees acting not for the...independence of the islands and as a preparation for that independence. And we hope to move toward that end as rapidly as the safety and the permanent interests... | |
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