| Arnold Bennett Hall - 1920 - 200 páginas
...to deny itself any future acquisition of territory in which it had so fundamental an interest. The island of Cuba lies at our doors. It commands the...continent, and with its tributaries forms the largest system of internal water communication in the world. It keeps watch at the doorway of our intercourse... | |
| Albert Bushnell Hart - 1920 - 476 páginas
...place without any disturbance of existing foreign relations, and in the natural order of things, The island of Cuba lies at our doors. It commands the...bars the entrance of that great river which drains hah* the North American continent, and with its tributaries forms the largest system of internal water-communication... | |
| Alejandro Alvarez - 1924 - 592 páginas
...place without any disturbance of existing foreign relations, and in the natural order of things. The island of Cuba lies at our doors. It commands the...continent, and with its tributaries forms the largest system of internal watercommunication in the world. It keeps watch at the door-way of our intercourse... | |
| Paul Revere Frothingham - 1925 - 548 páginas
...question.' y^uba [he wrote] lies at our doors. It commands the approach to the Gulf of Mexico, which washes five of our States. It bars the entrance of that great...continent, and with its tributaries forms the largest system of internal water-communication in the world. It keeps watch at the door-way of our intercourse... | |
| Paul Revere Frothingham - 1925 - 544 páginas
...it yet considered the condition of the island ' as mainly an American question.' : Cuba [he wrote] lies at our doors. It commands the approach to the Gulf of Mexico, which washes five of our States. It bars the entrance of that great river which drains half the North American continent,... | |
| Louis Martin Sears - 1927 - 676 páginas
...tradition of our policy. Moreover to guarantee the Cubans to a foreign power was to defy geography. "Cuba lies at our doors. It commands the approach...shores of five of our States. It bars the entrance to that great river which drains half the North American continent." Yet Europe need not fear. The... | |
| J. Reuben Clark (Jr.) - 1930 - 272 páginas
...place without any disturbance of existing foreign relations, and in the natural order of things. The island of Cuba lies at our doors. It commands the...continent, and with its tributaries forms the largest system of internal water-communication in the world. It keeps watch at the door-way of onr intercourse... | |
| Horace Greeley - 1864 - 696 páginas
...place without any disturbance of existing foreign relations, and in the natural order of things. The island of Cuba lies at our doors. It commands the...continent, and with its tributaries forms the largest system of internal water communication in the world. It keeps watch at the doorway of our intercourse... | |
| Henry Mills Alden, Frederick Lewis Allen, Lee Foster Hartman, Thomas Bucklin Wells - 1853 - 868 páginas
...place without any disturbance of existing foreign relations and in the natural order of things. The Island of Cuba lies at our doors — it commands the...shores of five of our States — it bars the entrance to that great river which drains half the North American Continent, and with its tributaries, forms... | |
| 1980 - 272 páginas
...place without any disturbance of existing foreign relations, and in the natural order of things. The island of Cuba lies at our doors. It commands the...continent, and with its tributaries forms the largest system of internal water-communication in the world. It keeps watch at the door-way of our intercourse... | |
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