
Pay all possible heed to the scientific side of your work; perfect yourselves as scientific men able to work with the best and most delicate apparatus; and never for one moment forget—especially the higher officers among you—that in time…
On the record
Quotes from current and former U.S. state governors.
Current governors
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VA-RFormer governors

Pay all possible heed to the scientific side of your work; perfect yourselves as scientific men able to work with the best and most delicate apparatus; and never for one moment forget—especially the higher officers among you—that in time…

You must be doctors and military men and able administrators.

Washington and Lincoln—the man who did most to found the Union, and the man who did most to preserve it—stand head and shoulders above all our other public men, and have by common consent won the right to this preeminence.

It is a good custom for our country to have certain solemn holidays in commemoration of our greatest men and of the greatest crises in our history.

On July 4 we celebrate the birth of the nation; on this day, the 30th of May, we call to mind the deaths of those who died that the nation might live.

Washington and Lincoln—the man who did most to found the Union, and the man who did most to preserve it—stand head and shoulders above all our other public men.

All cruelty is forbidden, and all harshness beyond what is called for by need.

Upon your success depended all the future of the people on this continent, and much of the future of mankind as a whole.

The warfare that has extended the boundaries of civilization at the expense of barbarism and savagery has been for centuries one of the most potent factors in the progress of humanity.

We believe that we can rapidly teach the people of the Philippine Islands not only how to enjoy but how to make good use of their freedom.

There were other crises in which to have gone wrong would have meant disaster; but this was the one crisis in which to have gone wrong would have meant not merely disaster but annihilation.

Peace and freedom—are there two better objects for which a soldier can fight?

All honor to them; and shame, thrice shame, to us if we fail to uphold their hands!

Just at this moment the Army of the United States, led by men who served among you in the great war, is carrying to completion a small but peculiarly trying and difficult war.

Now, Therefore, I, Theodore Roosevelt, President of the United States, by virtue of the power in me vested, do hereby declare and make known that the Executive Orders dated December 57, 1875, and December 29, 1891, are so far modified as…

The American people, through me, extend their thanks to you.

We appreciate to the full all that is implied in this embassy.

We prize this fresh proof of the friendship of the French people.