[583] Hyde, op. cit., page 2412.

[584] Ibid., page 2414.

[585] Ibid., volume I, pages 7 and 8.

[586] Ibid., p. 38.

[587] “Since the World War of 1914–1918, there has developed in many quarters evidence of what might be called an international interest and concern in relation to what was previously regarded as belonging exclusively to the domestic affairs of the individual state; and with that interest there has been manifest also an increasing readiness to seek and find a connection between domestic abuses and the maintenance of the general peace. See article XI of the Covenant of the League of Nations, United States Treaty, volume III, 3339.” (Hyde, “International Law,” 2d rev. ed., vol. I, pages 249–250.)

[588] Oppenheim, “International Law”, volume I, (3d ed.) (Longmans, Green & Co., London, 1920), page 229.

[589] State Department Publication No. 9, pages 153 and 154.

[590] Norman Bentwich, “The League of Nations and Racial Persecution in Germany,” Problems of Peace and War, XIX, (London, 1934), page 75 and following.

[591] Ibid.

[592] President’s Message to Congress, 1904. “The Works of Theodore Roosevelt, Presidential Addresses and State Papers”, (P. F. Collier & Son, New York), volume III, pages 178 and 179.