Life and Letters of Sir Wilfrid Laurier, Volume 2McClelland and Stewart, 1965 |
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Pagina 30
... considered representa- tive , and that it would be discourteous to the Queen to decline an offer which had already received her approval , and had already been intimated to the public . Irritated by what he considered officiousness on ...
... considered representa- tive , and that it would be discourteous to the Queen to decline an offer which had already received her approval , and had already been intimated to the public . Irritated by what he considered officiousness on ...
Pagina 64
... considered the British case un- answerable , and would prepare the opinion . On October 12 he read to the tribunal a memorandum upholding that contention , in which his Canadian colleagues concurred . On the morning of October 17 , when ...
... considered the British case un- answerable , and would prepare the opinion . On October 12 he read to the tribunal a memorandum upholding that contention , in which his Canadian colleagues concurred . On the morning of October 17 , when ...
Pagina 67
... considered sometimes a judge , sometimes an advocate or diplomat , the difficulty remained . A judge would presumably seek a judicial finding , not a political compromise ; a diplomat would presumably consult his diplomatic colleagues ...
... considered sometimes a judge , sometimes an advocate or diplomat , the difficulty remained . A judge would presumably seek a judicial finding , not a political compromise ; a diplomat would presumably consult his diplomatic colleagues ...
Inhoudsopgave
THE FIRST LAURIER MINISTRY | 1 |
THE FLOOD TIDE OF IMPERIALISM | 27 |
THE UNITED STATES 18961903 | 50 |
Copyright | |
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accepted administration affairs agreed agreement appointed arbitration attacked attitude bishops Blair Borden Bourassa Britain cabinet campaign Canada Canadian government Canadian Northern Catholic Chamberlain Clifford Sifton colleagues Colonial Conference colonies concessions conference conscription Conservative contingent debate declared defence Dominion duty election Empire England English favour federal fight force foreign Frederick Borden French French-Canadian Grand Trunk Henri Bourassa honourable imperial imperialist interest Israel Tarte issue judgment justice Laurier government leader Liberal party London Lord Alverstone Lord Dundonald Lord Minto Manitoba Manitoba school question ment military militia minority Montreal Nationalists naval navy negotiations offer Oliver Mowat Ontario opinion Ottawa parliament political position premier prime minister principle proposed protest province Quebec railway reciprocity refused resignation Robert Borden Rome Senate separate schools session settlement Sifton Sir Charles Tupper Sir Wilfrid Laurier South Africa tariff tion Toronto trade treaty United urged vote