It is not believed that any acts of pillage, rapine, or violence will be committed by soldiers or other in the employ of the United States, but should there be persons with this command who prove themselves unworthy of this confidence, their acts will... United States Army in the World War, 1917-1919 - Page 202by United States. Department of the Army. Office of Military History - 1948 - 656 pagesFull view - About this book
| Murat Halstead - Cuba - 1898 - 464 pages
...soldiers or other in the employ of the United States, but should there be persons with this command who prove themselves unworthy of this confidence, their...considered not only as crimes against the sufferers, but as direct insults to the United States flag, and they will be punished on the spot with the maximum penalties... | |
| Murat Halstead - Dummies (Bookselling) - 1898 - 480 pages
...soldiers or other in the employ of the United States, but should there be persons with this command who prove themselves unworthy of this confidence, their...considered not only as crimes against the sufferers, but as direct insults to the United States flag, and they will be punished on the spot with the maximum penalties... | |
| MURAT HALSTEAD - 1898 - 460 pages
...soldiers or other in the employ of the United States, but should there be persons with this command who prove themselves unworthy of this confidence, their...considered not only as crimes against the sufferers, but as direct insults to the United States flag, and they will be punished on the spot with the maximum penalties... | |
| Ramon Reyes Lala - Philippines - 1898 - 346 pages
...soldiers or others in the employ of the United States, but should there be persons with this command who prove themselves unworthy of this confidence, their...considered not only as crimes against the sufferers, but as direct insults to the United States Flag, and be punished on the spot with the maximum penalties known... | |
| Ramon Reyes Lala - Philippines - 1898 - 352 pages
...soldiers or others in the employ of the United States, but should there be persons with this command who prove themselves unworthy of this confidence, their...considered not only as crimes against the sufferers, but as direct insults to the United States Flag, and be punished on the spot with the maximum penalties known... | |
| United States. War Department - 1898 - 848 pages
...should there be persons with this command who prove themselves unworthy of this confidence, their act* will be considered not only as crimes against the sufferers, but as direct instills to the United States flag, and they will be punished on the spot with the maximum penalties... | |
| Marshall Everett - Advertising - 1899 - 590 pages
...soldiers or others in the employ of the United States, but should there be persons with this command who prove themselves unworthy of this confidence, their...considered not only as crimes against the sufferers, but as direct insults to the United States flag and be punished on the spot with the maximum penalty known... | |
| Karl Irving Faust - Manila Bay, Battle of, Philippines, 1898 - 1899 - 474 pages
...soldiers or others in the employ of the United States, but should there be persons with this command who prove themselves unworthy of this confidence, their...considered not only as crimes against the sufferers, but as direct insult to the United States flag, and they will be punished on the spot with the maximum penalties... | |
| Karl Irving Faust, Peter MacQueen - Philippine American War, 1899-1902 - 1899 - 350 pages
...soldiers or others in the employ of the United States, but should there be persons with this command who prove themselves unworthy of this confidence, their...considered not only as crimes against the sufferers, but as direct insult to the United States flag, and they will be punished on the spot with the maximum penalties... | |
| Harry Alexander Smith - Civil-military relations - 1920 - 124 pages
...war continues, Germany remains enemy territory, and there must be no intimate personal association with its inhabitants. A dignified and reserved attitude...sufferers, but as dishonoring the American Army and as a —101— direct insult to the flag of the United States. Such transgressions, should they occur, will... | |
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