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" President to be quite willing to declare, as the sense of the Government of the United States, that the Government of the Sandwich Islands ought to be respected ; that no Power ought either to take possession of the islands as a conquest, or for the purpose... "
The Monroe Doctrine: An Interpretation - Page 288
by Albert Bushnell Hart - 1916 - 445 pages
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United States Magazine and Democratic Review, Volume 13

United States - 1843 - 708 pages
...government of the Sandwich Islands ought to be respected : that no power ought either to take possession of the Islands, as a conquest, or for the purpose...any undue control over the existing government, or for any exclusive privileges or preferences in matters of commerce." And the language of the Message...
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The United States Magazine and Democratic Review, Volume 13

United States - 1843 - 678 pages
...be respected : that no power ought either to take possession of the Islands, as a conquest, or lor the purpose of colonization, and that no power ought...any undue control over the existing government, or for any exclusive privileges or preferences in matters of commerce." And the language of the Message...
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History of the Hawaiian Or Sandwich Islands: Embracing Their Antiquities ...

James Jackson Jarves - Hawaii - 1843 - 408 pages
...them, and subvert the native government. Considering, therefore, that the United States possess so veiy large a share of the intercourse with those islands, it is deemed not unfit to make the declaration, that their government seeks, nevertheless, no peculiar advantages,...
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The Addresses and Messages of the Presidents of the United States ..., Volume 2

United States. President - Presidents - 1846 - 968 pages
...and subvert the native government. Considering, therefore, that the United States possesses so very large a share of the intercourse with those islands, it is deemed not unfit to make the declaration, that their government seeks nevertheless no peculiar advantages,...
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A Residence of Twenty-one Years in the Sandwich Islands; Or, The Civil ...

Hiram Bingham - Hawaii - 1847 - 650 pages
...and subvert the native Government. Considering, therefore, that the United States possesses so very large a share of the intercourse with those Islands, it is deemed not unfit to make the declaration, that their Government seeks, nevertheless, no peculiar advantages,...
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History of the Hawaiian Islands: Embracing Their Antiquities, Mythology ...

James Jackson Jarves - Hawaii - 1847 - 250 pages
...them, and subvert the native government. Considering, therefore, that the United States possess so very large a share of the intercourse with those islands, it is deemed not unfit to make the declaration, that their government seeks, nevertheless, no peculiar advantages,...
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The Diplomatic and Official Papers of Daniel Webster, While Secretary of State

Daniel Webster - United States - 1848 - 410 pages
...and subvert the native government. Considering, therefore, that the United States possesses so very large a share of the intercourse with those islands, it is deemed not unfit to make the declaration, that their government seeks nevertheless no peculiar advantages,...
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A Residence of Twenty-one Years in the Sandwich Islands: Or, The Civil ...

Hiram Bingham - Hawaii - 1848 - 642 pages
...and subvert the native Government. Considering, therefore, that the United States possesses so very large a share of the intercourse with those Islands, it is deemed not unfit to make the declaration, that their Government seeks, nevertheless, no peculiar advantages,...
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A Residence of Twenty-one Years in the Sandwich Islands

Hiram Bingham - Hawaii - 1848 - 637 pages
...and subvert the native Government. Considering, therefore, that the United States possesses so very large a share of the intercourse with those Islands, it is deemed not unfit to make the declaration, that their Government seeks, nevertheless, no peculiar advantages,...
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The Works of Daniel Webster ...: Legal arguments and speeches to the jury ...

Daniel Webster - United States - 1851 - 660 pages
...government of the Sandwich Islands ought to be respected ; that no power ought either to take possession of the islands as a conquest, or for the purpose of...privileges or preferences with it in matters of commerce. Entertaining these sentiments, the President does not see any present necessity for the negotiation...
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