| Education - 1911 - 404 pages
...whatever organ it thinks proper, whether king, convention, assembly, committee, president, or anything else it may choose. The will of the nation is the only thing essential to be regarded." The new government has mapped out an ambitious program for itself. The financial budget is to be arranged... | |
| United States - 1912 - 896 pages
...whatever organ it thinks proper, whether king, convention, assembly, committee, president, or anything else it may choose. The will of the nation is the only thing essential to be regarded." The Secretary of State also quotes from Mr. Webster to the same effect, and as a complement to these... | |
| George Hubbard Blakeslee, Granville Stanley Hall, Harry Elmer Barnes - International law - 1913 - 540 pages
...whatever organ it thinks proper, whether king, convention, assembly, committee, president, or anything else it may choose. The will of the nation is the only thing essential to be regarded." The establishment of the Second Republic occurred on the 24th of February, 1848, and less than a week... | |
| History - 1913 - 552 pages
...whatever organ it thinks proper, whether king, convention, assembly, committee, president, or anything else it may choose. The will of the nation is the only thing essential to be regarded." The establishment of the Second Republic occurred on the 24th of February, 1848, and less than a week... | |
| George Hubbard Blakeslee - China - 1913 - 440 pages
...whatever organ it thinks proper, whether king, convention, assembly, committee, president, or anything else it may choose. The will of the nation is the only thing essential to be regarded." The establishment of the Second Republic occurred on the 24th of February, 1848, and less than a week... | |
| Willis Fletcher Johnson - United States - 1916 - 600 pages
...whatever organ it thinks proper, whether king, convention, assembly, committee, president, or anything else it may choose. The will of the nation is the only thing essential to be regarded." In January, 1793, the King of France was put to death, and in February Mr. Ternant, the French minister... | |
| John Bassett Moore - Political Science - 1918 - 508 pages
...whatever organ it thinks proper, whether king, convention, assembly, committee, president, or anything else it may choose. The will of the nation is the only thing essential to be regarded." In a word, the United States maintained that the true test of a government's title to recognition is... | |
| State Bar Association of North Dakota - Bar associations - 1921 - 470 pages
...whatever organ it thinks proper, whether king, convention, assembly, committee, president, or anything else it may choose. The will of the nation is the only thing essential to be regarded." Thus Jefferson showed, even then, that so long as a nation was ready to transact, and willing to transact... | |
| Edmund Aloysius Walsh - International law - 1922 - 328 pages
...whatever organ it thinks proper, whether king, convention, assembly, committee, president, or anything else it may choose. The will of the nation is the only thing essential to be regarded." Jefferson prescribed no particular tests by which this national will was to be ascertained, whether... | |
| Electronic journals - 1923 - 946 pages
...whatever organ it thinks proper, whether king, convention, assembly, committee, president, or anything else it may choose. The will of the nation is the only thing essential to be regarded. The will of the nation, however, is two-fold. The will to claim its rights; the will to perform its... | |
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