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Page 3
... trade , the main bulk of our foreign commerce is derived 1 from and forms an ingredient in the internal trade Rep . No. 741. ' 3 ค ว.
... trade , the main bulk of our foreign commerce is derived 1 from and forms an ingredient in the internal trade Rep . No. 741. ' 3 ค ว.
Page 4
... trade ; and the elements of each are so blended termixed together as to form , in reality , one great common identified with the national prosperity , and presenting equa to the encouragement and protection of government . If ...
... trade ; and the elements of each are so blended termixed together as to form , in reality , one great common identified with the national prosperity , and presenting equa to the encouragement and protection of government . If ...
Page 5
... trade will be equally rapid and wonderful . Considering the wide extent of territory from which this trade is derived , the productiveness of its soil , the large proportion still unoccupied , the cheapness of the land , and the ...
... trade will be equally rapid and wonderful . Considering the wide extent of territory from which this trade is derived , the productiveness of its soil , the large proportion still unoccupied , the cheapness of the land , and the ...
Page 7
... trade , they are strongly entitled to government aid and improvement . Having thus briefly glanced at the internal trade of the country , if we turn our attention to that portion of the Union known as the Atlantic slope , we perceive a ...
... trade , they are strongly entitled to government aid and improvement . Having thus briefly glanced at the internal trade of the country , if we turn our attention to that portion of the Union known as the Atlantic slope , we perceive a ...
Page 8
... trade . What tion of the confederacy can claim to be indifferent to the fac and security of commercial intercourse among the States ? V section so isolated in position as to be unconcerned in the nav ble waters which carry forth our ...
... trade . What tion of the confederacy can claim to be indifferent to the fac and security of commercial intercourse among the States ? V section so isolated in position as to be unconcerned in the nav ble waters which carry forth our ...
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Common terms and phrases
29th Congress aforesaid agent amount appropriations assistant adjutant barrels bill Black creek boats bushels canal Captain cents Choctaw cholera commerce commissioner Committee of Claims Congress contract contractors corn crop deponent Detroit Dibble dollars duty Duval county estimated expense exports farmer Florida flour following REPORT foreign furnished further enacted Gilson harbor hereby horse House of Representatives hundred important improvement Indian Indian Key Jacksonville January John July JULY 19 labor lakes land loss manufactured ment miles Mississippi Mississippi Company mustered Nassau county navigation officers Ohio paid Pensions petitioner Piatt piers port potatoes pounds present President produce quantity received referred respectfully river says Schooner scouts Secretary Senate ship statement steamboats superintendent supply sworn tariff of 1842 Tea Table Key Thomas thousand tion tobacco tonnage tons trade Treasury United United States army vessels WAGGAMAN wheat
Popular passages
Page 5 - Clarkson, whose name is subscribed to the Certificate of the proof or acknowledgment of the annexed instrument, and thereon written, was, at the time of taking such proof or acknowledgment, a Notary Public in and for the City and County of New York, dwelling In the said City, commissioned and sworn, and duly authorized to take the same.
Page 12 - Canada, to be paid to the said sheriff or his certain attorney, executors, administrators or assigns, for which payment to be well and truly made we bind ourselves and each and every of us in the whole, our and each and every of our heirs, executors and administrators, firmly by these presents, sealed with our seals.
Page 11 - Chouteau, Commissioners on the part and behalf of the United States of America, of the one part...
Page 325 - Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the Vnited States of America in Congress assembled, That this Act may be cited as the Bank Holding Company Act of 1947.
Page 354 - ... resolutions of the legislature of Virginia, and a petition of sundry officers and assignees of officers and soldiers of the Virginia line on continental establishment, on the subject of bounty lands allotted to them on the northwest side of the Ohio; and A copy of an act of the legislature of Maryland to empower the wardens of the port of Baltimore to levy and collect the duty therein mentioned.
Page 93 - Each passing hour sheds tribute from her wings ;, And still new beauties meet his lonely walk, And loves unfelt attract him. Not a breeze Flies o'er the meadow, not a cloud imbibes The setting sun's effulgence, not a strain From all the tenants of the warbling shade Ascends, but whence his bosom can partake Fresh pleasure, unreproved.
Page 322 - An act declaring the consent of Congress to an act of the state of Maryland passed the twenty-eighth of December one thousand seven hundred and ninety-three for the appointment of a health officer.
Page 30 - ... expenditure is to be indulged in, combinations of individual and local interests will be found strong enough to control legislation, absorb the revenues of the country, and plunge the Government into a hopeless indebtedness. What is denominated a harbor by this system does not necessarily mean a bay, inlet, or arm of the sea on the ocean or on our lake shores, on the margin of which may exist a commercial city or town engaged in foreign or domestic trade, but is made to embrace waters where there...
Page 325 - An act declaring the consent of Congress to acts of the State of South Carolina, authorizing the City Council of Charleston to impose and collect a duty on the tonnage of vessels from foreign ports...
Page 324 - An act to empower the board of wardens, for the port of Philadelphia, to collect a certain duty on tonnage, for the purposes therein mentioned," so far as to enable the state of Pennsylvania to collect a duty of four cents per ton, on all vessels which shall clear out from the port of Philadelphia for any foreign port or place whatever, to be expended in building piers in, and otherwise improving the navigation of the river Delaware, agreeably to the intentions of the said act. Approved, Feb.