Congressional Serial SetU.S. Government Printing Office, 1895 Reports, Documents, and Journals of the U.S. Senate and House of Representatives. |
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Page 252
... Congress might lay a tax of $ 10 on the importation . 2. That Congress had no power to interfere with slavery in the States , either to emancipate or to regulate the treatment of slaves . It remains alone with the several States to ...
... Congress might lay a tax of $ 10 on the importation . 2. That Congress had no power to interfere with slavery in the States , either to emancipate or to regulate the treatment of slaves . It remains alone with the several States to ...
Page 285
... Congress . ( 2 ) " Congress may admit new States into this Union . " This clearly implies the right to refuse , and also to indicate upon what terms it will consent . The question respecting slavery in the old thirteen States had been ...
... Congress . ( 2 ) " Congress may admit new States into this Union . " This clearly implies the right to refuse , and also to indicate upon what terms it will consent . The question respecting slavery in the old thirteen States had been ...
Page 372
... Congress which were printed in French and English and circulated extensively among the people . The instructions of the commissioners were to assure the Canadians that their interests and ours were inseparably united and to urge them to ...
... Congress which were printed in French and English and circulated extensively among the people . The instructions of the commissioners were to assure the Canadians that their interests and ours were inseparably united and to urge them to ...
Contents
Inaugural Address by Dr James B Angell President | 13 |
The Value of National Archives by Mrs Ellen Hardin | 25 |
American Historical Nomenclature by Hou Ainsworth | 33 |
24 other sections not shown
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