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" I shall have a more suitable occasion to speak on this topic hereafter, when I come to consider the treaty which ceded Louisiana to the United States. But I will say a few words upon it now, of a more general application than it will in that branch of... "
Some Account of the Life, Writings, and Speeches of William Pinkney - Page 582
by William Pinkney, Henry Wheaton - 1826 - 616 pages
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American Oratory: Or Selections from the Speeches of Eminent Americans

1836 - 550 pages
...restriction, in this case, is toe act of Missouri itself ; that your law is nothing without its consent, and derives its efficacy from that alone. I shall...can do so as to the whole. For where will you stop? If it does not cease to be a state, in the sense of the constitution, with only a certain portion of...
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American Oratory: Or Selections from the Speeches of Eminent Americans

1836 - 552 pages
...restriction, in this case, is the act of Missouri itself; that your law is nothing without its consent, and derives its efficacy from that alone. I shall...can do so as to the whole. For where will you stop ? If it does not cease to be a state, in the sense of the constitution, with only a certain portion...
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American Oratory: Or Selections from the Speeches of Eminent Americans

1836 - 552 pages
...itself ; that your law is nothing without its consent, and derives its efficacy from that alone. 1 shall have a more suitable occasion to speak on this...can do so as to the whole. For where will you stop ? If it does not cease to be a stale, in the sense of the constitution, with only a certain portion...
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American Oratory, Or, Selections from the Speeches of Eminent Americans

1840 - 554 pages
...restriction, in this case, is the act of Missouri itself; that your law is nothing without its consent, and derives its efficacy from that alone. I shall...can do so as to the whole. For where will you stop? If it does not cease to be a state, in the sense of the constitution, with only a certain portion of...
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Library of Oratory: Embracing Select Speeches of Celebrated ..., Volume 1

1845 - 564 pages
...restriction, in this case, is the act of Missouri itself; that your law is nothing without its consent, and derives its efficacy from that alone. I shall...can do so as to the whole. For where will you stop ? If it does not cease to be a state, in the sense of the constitution, with only a certain portion...
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Annals of the Congress of the United States, Volume 1; Volume 35

United States. Congress - 1855 - 714 pages
...topic hereafter, when I come to consider the treaty which ceded Louisiana to the United States. But 1 will say a few words upon it now of a more general...can do so as to the whole ; for where will you stop ? If it docs not cease to be a State, in the sense of the Constitution, with only a certain portion...
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American Eloquence: a Collection of Speeches and Addresses: By the ..., Volume 2

1857 - 650 pages
...argument be necessary to use. A territory cannot surrender to Congress by anticipation, the whole, or part, of the sovereign power, which, by the constitution...can do so as to the whole. For where will you stop? If it does not cease to be a State, in the sense of the constitution, with only a certain portion of...
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American Eloquence: a Collection of Speeches and Addresses: By the ..., Volume 2

1857 - 690 pages
...argument be necessary to use. A territory cannot surrender to Congress by anticipation, the whole, or part, of the sovereign power, which, by the constitution...can do so as to the whole. For where will you stop? If it does not cease to be a State, in the sense of the constitution, with only a certain portion of...
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American Eloquence: a Collection of Speeches and Addresses: By the ..., Volume 2

1857 - 656 pages
...argument be necessary to use. A territory cannot surrender to Congress by anticipation, the whole, or part, of the sovereign power, which, by the constitution...can do so as to the whole. For where will you stop? If it does not cease to be a State, in the sense of the constitution, with only a certain portion of...
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American Eloquence: a Collection of Speeches and Addresses: By the ..., Volume 2

1857 - 642 pages
...argument be necessary to use. A territory cannot surrender to Congress by anticipation, the whole, or behold that the place is not undistinguished where...that event, to every class and every age. We wish nnder the government of Congress; if it can barter away a part of its sovereignty, by anticipation,...
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