States' rights
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The concept States' rights represents the subject, aboutness, idea or notion of resources found in Bates College.
The Resource
States' rights
Resource Information
The concept States' rights represents the subject, aboutness, idea or notion of resources found in Bates College.
- Label
- States' rights
- Source
- Readex congressional thesaurus
454 Items that share the Concept States' rights
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Context of States' rightsSubject of
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- Woman suffrage. May 29, 1890. -- Referred to the House Calendar and ordered to be printed.
- "Proviso," slavery, the tariff, and the war with Mexico. Resolutions of the Legislature of Texas, in relation to the proviso, slavery, the tariff, and the war with Mexico. May 18, 1848. Referred to the Committee on Military Affairs, and ordered to be printed.
- (Mr. Adams's report.) Massachusetts resolutions. April 4, 1844. Read, and laid upon the table.
- Act giving the assent of the State of Virginia to an act of Congress for laying out and making a road from the Potomac River to the State of Ohio. January 9, 1821. Printed by order of the House of Representatives of the United States.
- Act of the Legislature of Illinois, disapproving of nullification, &c. February 11, 1833. Read, and laid upon the table.
- Addresses by Hon. George W. Wickersham Attorney General of the United States at Syracuse, N.Y., January 19, 1911. Cleveland, Ohio, March 20, 1911. Princeton, N.J., May 1, 1911. Presented by Mr. Lodge May 4, 1911. -- Ordered to be printed.
- Admission of Missouri into the Union. Communicated to the House of Representatives on the 10th of February, 1821
- Admission of Tennessee. (To accompany H. Res. No. 83.) March 6, 1866. -- Ordered to be printed.
- Adulterated food and drugs. March 4, 1882. -- Referred to the House Calendar and ordered to be printed.
- African slave-trade. May 4, 1844. Read, and laid upon the table.
- Against an increase of the duties on imports and a system of internal improvements. Communicated to the House of Representatives, February 6, 1828
- Against increase of duties on imports. Communicated to the House of Representatives, January 14, 1828
- Against increase of duties on imports. Communicated to the House of Representatives, March 21, 1828
- Against the increase of duties on imports. Communicated to the House of Representatives, December 14, 1827
- Alabama -- Legislature of -- tariff -- nullification. February 25, 1833. Read, and laid upon the table.
- Alabama Legislature -- public lands. Memorial of the Legislature of the State of Alabama. March 21, 1836. Laid upon the table, and ordered to be printed.
- Alabama vs. amendment of Constitution. Resolutions of the Legislature of Alabama, relative to the proposed amendment of the Constitution of the United States, by Massachusetts, &c., &c. February 15, 1845. Read, and laid upon the table.
- Alabama. Recommendations of the Legislature of Alabama, to the President of the United States, to the State of South Carolina, and the other states of the Union. February 19, 1833. Read, and laid upon the table.
- Alcoholic liquor traffic commission. March 27, 1880. -- Committed to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union and ordered to be printed.
- Alcoholic liquor traffic. February 17, 1885. -- Laid on the table and ordered to be printed.
- Alien and sedition laws. Debates in the House of Delegates of Virginia in December, 1798, on resolutions before the House on the act Congress called the alien and sedition laws. Presented by Mr. Bailey. July 6, 1912. -- Ordered to be printed.
- Alien land laws and alien rights. Paper presented by Charles F. Curry, member of Congress, Third California District, on antialien land laws of the several states and territories and of the United States, of Japan and other countries; a discussion of their legality and propriety, and a summary and discussion of the rights of aliens. June 2, 1921. -- Ordered to be printed.
- Alleged misgovernment in South Carolina. April 28, 1874. -- Recommitted to the Committee on the Judiciary and ordered to be printed.
- Amend the Bankruptcy Act -- municipal indebtedness. June 7, 1933. -- Referred to the House Calendar and ordered to be printed.
- Amend the Constitution of the United States. Memorial of citizens of North Carolina, upon the subject of amending the Constitution of the United States. April 6, 1836. Read, and committed to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union.
- Amend the maternity act. March 14 (calendar day, March 15), 1932. -- Ordered to be printed.
- Amending Constitution as to the election of President and Vice-President. May 22, 1878. -- Recommitted to the Committee on the State of the Law Respecting the Ascertainment and Declaration of Result of Election of President and Vice-President, and ordered to be printed.
- Amending the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act so as to protect the public health and welfare by providing certain authority for factory inspection. July 6, 1953. -- Committed to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union and ordered to be printed.
- Amending the Judicial Code. May 24, 1940. -- Committed to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union and ordered to be printed.
- Amending the Judicial Code. Message from the President of the United States, returning without approval the Bill (H.R. 7737, 76th Cong., 3d sess.) entitled "An Act To Amend the Judicial Code by Adding a New Section Thereto, Designated as Section 266A, To Provide for Intervention by States in Certain Cases Involving the Validity..." June 10, 1940. -- Referred to the Committee on the Judiciary and ordered to be printed.
- Amending title 18, United States Code, to authorize the enforcement of state statutes prescribing criminal penalties for subversive activities. July 3, 1956. -- Committed to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union and ordered to be printed.
- Amending title 18, United States Code, to authorize the enforcement of state statutes prescribing criminal penalties for subversive activities. May 28, 1958. -- Referred to the House Calendar and ordered to be printed.
- Amendment to the Constitution -- judicial powers. Communicated to the House of Representatives, March 3, 1807
- Amendments to the Constitution prohibiting polygamy, etc. February 27, 1899. -- Referred to the House Calendar and ordered to be printed.
- Annual report of the American Historical Association for the year 1891.
- Annual report of the American Historical Association for the year 1901. In two volumes. Volume II. Prize essay on Georgia and state rights; Report of Public Archives Commission.
- Annual report of the American Historical Association for the year 1911. In two volumes. Vol. II. The correspondence of Robert Toombs, Alexander H. Stephens, and Howell Cobb edited by Ulrich B. Phillips.
- Application of Connecticut for a grant of land for the purpose of education. Communicated to the Senate, December 31, 1821
- Application of Delaware for a grant of land for the purpose of education. Communicated to the Senate, January 28, 1822
- Application of Indiana claiming all the public lands in that state. Communicated to the Senate, February 10, 1829
- Application of Indiana to tax the public lands after sale. Communicated to the House of Representatives, March 1, 1821
- Application of Kentucky for a grant of land for the purpose of education. Communicated to the Senate, January 14, 1822
- Application of Maine for a grant of land for the purpose of education. Communicated to the Senate, January 29, 1822
- Application of New Hampshire for a grant of land for the purpose of education. Communicated to the Senate, December 19, 1821
- Application of New Jersey for a grant of land for the purpose of education. Communicated to the Senate, January 7, 1822
- Application of Vermont for a grant of land for the purpose of education. Communicated to the House of Representatives, January 31, 1822
- Approval of the constitution, and admission of Missouri into the Union. Communicated to the House of Representatives, November 23, 1820
- Arguments in the cases arising under the Social Security Act and the Alabama unemployment compensation law before the Supreme Court of the United States, April 7-9, 1937; Albert A. Carmichael v. Southern Coal & Coke Co.; Albert A. Carmichael v. Gulf States Paper Corp.; Charles C. Steward Machine Co. v. Harwell G. Davis. Presented by Mr. Wagner. April 15, 1937. -- Ordered to be printed.
- Arkansas. Memorial of the General Assembly of Arkansas, in relation to a cession of the public lands to the states in which they lie. April 9, 1838. Referred to the Committee on the Public Lands.
- Assistance to states in matters relating to social protection. June 17, 1946. -- Committed to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union and ordered to be printed.
- Automobiles engaged in interstate commerce. February 28, 1911. -- Committed to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union and ordered to be printed.
- Bank of the United States. Communicated to the House of Representatives, January 22, 1811
- Boulder Canyon reclamation project. December 22, 1926. -- Committed to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union and ordered to be printed.
- California civil fund. Resolution of the Legislature of California, in reference to the civil fund of that state. March 20, 1852. Laid upon the table, and ordered to be printed.
- California land sales. February 17, 1887. -- Committed to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union and ordered to be printed.
- California on state rights and the rebellion. Resolutions of the Legislature of California, on state supremacy and the rebellion. April 6, 1864. -- Laid on the table and ordered to be printed.
- Certain sections of the Revised Statutes relating to lotteries. July 28, 1890. -- Referred to the House Calendar and ordered to be printed.
- Cherokee lands -- North Carolina. January 22, 1828.
- Chicago River tunnels, obstructions to navigation, etc. March 23, 1904. -- Referred to the House Calendar and ordered to be printed.
- Child labor amendment. April 10 (calendar day, April 15), 1924. -- Ordered to be printed.
- Civil rights of institutionalized persons. April 3, 1979. -- Committed to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union and ordered to be printed.
- Claim of Virginia. January 16, 1832.
- Claim of the commissioners appointed by Georgia to examine certain lands on the Tennessee River. Communicated to the Senate, February 1, 1822
- Claims for damages to planted oysters. September 12, 1888. -- Committed to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union and ordered to be printed.
- Claims on the lands ceded by North Carolina. Communicated to the House of Representatives, April 4, 1800
- Claims to land in Tennessee under grants from North Carolina. Communicated to the Senate, January 18, 1819
- Clarification of the intent of Congress with respect to state legislation concerning sedition. August 8, 1958. -- Ordered to be printed.
- Clarification of the intent of Congress with respect to state legislation concerning sedition. June 5 (legislative day, June 4), 1956. -- Ordered to be printed.
- Clarifying the right of states to select certain public lands subject to any outstanding mineral lease or permit. June 24, 1960. -- Ordered to be printed.
- Collection of duties in the seceding states, &c. Letter from the Secretary of the Treasury, in response to a resolution of the House calling for information as to whether duties on imports continue to be collected in the ports of entry in certain southern states, &c. February 21, 1861. -- So much of the document as refers to the collection of the revenue referred to the Committee on Commerce, and the balance to the Committee of Ways and Means.
- Collection of duties on imports. March 14, 1860. -- Laid upon the table, and ordered to be printed.
- Communication from John Tyler, president of a convention, assembled in the City of Washington, to adjust the differences which now disturb the peace of the Union, inclosing the report of that convention, accompanied by a proposed amendment to the Constitution of the United States, and asking its submission to conventions in the states. February 27, 1861. -- Read and referred to a select committee of five, viz: Mr. Crittenden, Mr. Bigler, Mr. Thompson, Mr. Seward and Mr. Trumbull, with instructions to report to-morrow, at 12 o'clock; and that the report be made the special order of the day for 1 o'clock.
- Compromise measures. Resolutions of the Legislature of Iowa, in reference to the compromise measures passed by the Congress of the United States. March 8, 1852. Laid upon the table, and ordered to be printed.
- Compromise measures. Resolutions of the Legislature of New Jersey, in favor of the compromise measures. February 11, 1852. Laid upon the table, and ordered to be printed.
- Connecticut Legislature -- slavery, &c. Resolutions of the Legislature of Connecticut, protesting against the resolution of the House of Representatives of the 21st of December last, in relation to petitions, memorials, &c., touching the abolition of slavery, &c. June 4, 1838. Read, and laid upon the table.
- Consideration of H.R. 7737 over the veto message. August 5, 1940. -- Committed to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union and ordered to be printed.
- Constitution and the Union. Resolutions of the Legislature of the State of Ohio, on the state of the republic. January 18, 1861. -- Laid upon the table, and ordered to be printed.
- Constitutionality of the Social Security Act. Opinions of the Supreme Court of the United States together with the separate and dissenting opinions in the cases involving the constitutionality of the Social Security Act... Presented by Mr. Hayden. May 26, 1937. -- Ordered to be printed.
- Convict labor. May 1, 1888. -- Referred to the House Calendar and ordered to be printed.
- Cooperation of states for conservation of navigability of navigable rivers, etc. May 12, 1908. -- Committed to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union and ordered to be printed.
- Correspondence between the commissioners of South Carolina and the President of the United States. Message from the President of the United States, communicating copies of correspondence with the commissioners of South Carolina. January 9, 1861. -- Read and referred, with instructions, to a select committee of five, and ordered to be printed.
- Cumberland Road & Domestic Manufactures. Resolutions adopted at a meeting of Inhabitants in the State of Virginia, in relation to the Cumberland Road and the Domestic Manufactures of the Country. February 19, 1827. -- Read, and laid on the table.
- Dam across Kootenai River, Mont. June 14, 1912. -- Referred to the House Calendar and ordered to be printed.
- Dealing in futures in agricultural products, etc. February 26, 1889. -- Referred to the House Calendar and ordered to be printed.
- Defence of the northeastern frontier. (To accompany Bill H.R. 1042.) January 25, 1867. -- Ordered to be printed.
- Delaware. Report of the Committee of the Senate, on the ordinance of South Carolina, &c. &c. February 4, 1833. Read, and laid upon the table.
- Development of water power. January 11, 1915. -- Ordered to be printed.
- Development of water power. January 25, 1916. -- Ordered to be printed.
- Distribution law, &c. Preamble and resolutions of the Legislature of New Hampshire, declaring the distribution act, the tariff act, and the bankrupt act, to be inexpedient and unconstitutional, and instructing the senators and requesting the representatives from that state to use their best exertions to procure the repeal of said acts. January 16, 1843. Read, and laid upon the table.
- Distribution of public lands. February 7, 1839.
- Distribution of surplus funds. January 28, 1831. Read, and laid upon the table.
- Disturbed condition of the country. January 14, 1861. -- Ordered to be printed, and made the special order for Monday, the 21st instant, at one o'clock, and continued from day to day until disposed of.
- Doctrine of local obligations. Mr. Bingham presented the following article entitled "The doctrine of local obligations," by Richard Washburn Child, from the Constitutional Review, April, 1929. January 6 (calendar day, March 12), 1930. -- Ordered to be printed.
- Election of President and Vice-President. February 7, 1893. -- Referred to the House Calendar and ordered to be printed.
- Elections for Representatives. December 31, 1838. Read, and laid upon the table one day, under the rule of the House.
- Elective franchise, etc. May 8, 1906. -- Referred to the House Calendar and ordered to be printed.
- Emphatic remonstrance of the people of the State of Arkansas against invasion of their right of self-government, addressed to the representatives of the other United States of America, in Congress assembled. January 6, 1875. -- Referred to the Select Committee to Inquire into the Condition of Affairs in the State of Arkansas, and ordered to be printed.
- Equal educational opportunities act of 1972. August 14, 1972. -- Committed to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union and ordered to be printed.
- Equal rights amendment. March 5, 1946. -- Ordered to be printed.
- Establishing rules of interpretation for federal courts involving the doctrine of federal preemption. June 13, 1958. -- Referred to the House Calendar and ordered to be printed.
- Expressing the intent of Congress with reference to the regulation of the business of insurance. February 22, 1945. -- Ordered to be printed.
- Expressing the intent of the Congress with reference to the regulation of the business of insurance. February 13, 1945. -- Referred to the House Calendar and ordered to be printed.
- Expressing the intent of the Congress with reference to the regulation of the business of insurance. February 8, 1945. -- Referred to the House Calendar and ordered to be printed.
- Expressing the intent of the Congress with reference to the regulation of the business of insurance. January 24, 1945. -- Ordered to be printed.
- Extinguishment of the Indian title to land in Georgia. Communicated to the House of Representatives, January 7, 1822
- Fair labor standards amendments of 1988. March 31, 1988. -- Committed to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union and ordered to be printed.
- Federal aid in domestic disturbances. 1787-1903...March 2, 1903. -- Ordered to be printed.
- Federal aid to the states for the support of public schools. March 19, 1937. -- Ordered to be printed.
- Federal disposition of state waters. An address on the question of federal disposition of state waters in priority states, delivered before the Colorado State Bar Association at Colorado Springs, July 11, 1914, by L. Ward Bannister of the Denver Bar. Presented by Mr. Shafroth. August 25 (calendar day, September 4), 1914. -- Ordered to be printed.
- Florida v. Mellon. An article reprinted from the Cornell Law Quarterly, Vol. XIII, No. 3, April, 1928, entitled the "Strange case of Florida v. Mellon," by Arthur W. Machen, Jr. Presented by Mr. Bruce. May 3 (calendar day, May 11), 1928. -- Ordered to be printed.
- Freedom of choice act of 1992. July 15, 1992. -- Ordered to be printed.
- Fugitive Slave Act. Resolves of the Legislature of Massachusetts, relative to the Fugitive Slave Law. April 4, 1856. -- Laid upon the table, and ordered to be printed.
- Further protection of the public health, etc. March 9, 1906. -- Committed to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union and ordered to be printed.
- Further provision for collection of duties on imports. (To accompany Bill H.R. No. 969.) January 30, 1861.
- Georgia -- resolutions Legislature, and report of Committee on Resolutions of Tennessee. February 4, 1833. Read, and laid upon the table.
- Georgia lands occupied by the Cherokee Indians. Report of a committee, and resolutions of the Legislature of the State of Georgia, in relation to certain lands occupied by the Cherokee Indians, belonging to the said state. January 28, 1828. Referred to the Committee on Indian Affairs.
- Georgia. Report adopted by the Legislature of Georgia on African colonization. February 8, 1828. Referred to the Select Committee appointed, on the 28th ultimo, on the memorial of the American Colonization Society.
- Gradual abolishment of slavery. Message from the President of the United States, in relation to co-operating with any state for the gradual abolishment of slavery. March 6, 1862. -- Committed to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union, and ordered to be printed.
- Hugh A. Garland. Memorial of Hugh A. Garland, touching his conduct as Clerk of the House of Representatives in the 26th Congress of the United States. January 22, 1844. Read, and laid upon the table.
- Human life federalism amendment. Report of the Committee on the Judiciary, United States Senate on Senate Joint Resolution 3. June 7 (legislative day, June 6), 1983. -- Ordered to be printed.
- Human life federalism amendment. Report together with additional and minority views of the Committee on the Judiciary, United States Senate on S.J. Res. 110. June 8, 1982. -- Ordered to be printed.
- In Senate of the United States, April 28, 1828. Mr. Tazewell made the following report: The Committee on Foreign Relations, to whom were referred sundry petitions and memorials, and the resolutions of several legislatures of different states, in relation to the colonization of persons of colour, have had all the said documents under their consideration, and now beg leave to report...
- In Senate of the United States, December 9, 1833. Ordered, that the following report, made to the Senate on 19th January, 1826, be reprinted for the use of the Senate. Mr. Benton, from the select committee, to which was referred the several resolutions proposing amendments to the Constitution of the United States, reported, in part...
- In Senate of the United States, February 1, 1822. Mr. Eaton, from the Committee on Public Lands, to whom was referred the petition of Nicholas Ware and Wm. A. Carr, executors of Thomas Carr, deceased, made the following report: In February, 1784, the State of Georgia, with a view to ascertain the precise quality and situation of that portion of her western territory...
- In Senate of the United States, February 7, 1833. Read, considered, laid on the table, and ordered to be printed. Mr. Poindexter submitted the following resolution: Resolved, That the President of the United States be requested to cause to be laid before the Senate, copies of the orders which have been given to the commanding officer of the military forces assembled in and near to the City of Charleston, South Carolina...
- In Senate of the United States, February 9, 1821. Mr. Thomas, from the Committee on Public Lands, being instructed to inquire into the justice and expediency of granting land for the purposes of education, within the limits of the old states, corresponding with the appropriations which have been made for the same object within the limits of the new states, reported: That, under the laws of the United States, lands have been granted for the purposes of education...
- In Senate of the United States, January 15, 1833. Read, laid on the table, and ordered to be printed.
- In Senate of the United States, January 22, 1833. Read, and ordered to be printed. Mr. Calhoun submitted the following resolutions for consideration...
- In Senate of the United States, January 23, 1833. Read, and ordered to be printed. The resolutions submitted by Mr. Calhoun, on the subject of the relative powers of the state governments and those of the general government...
- In Senate of the United States, January 25, 1833. Laid on the table, and ordered to be printed. Mr. Clayton submitted, for consideration, the following resolution: Resolved, that the power to annul the several acts of Congress imposing duties on imports...
- In Senate of the United States, May 18, 1832. Read, and ordered to be printed, and that 5,000 additional copies be furnished for the use of the Senate.
- In Senate of the United States. December 28, 1837. Submitted, and ordered to be printed. Mr. Norvell submitted the following motions for consideration: Resolved, That the Government of the United States is a national government only for the general purposes specified in the federal Constitution...
- In Senate of the United States. December 29, 1837. Laid on the table, and ordered to be printed. Mr. Morris submitted the following motions for consideration: 1. Resolved, That in the formation of the federal Constitution, the states acted in their sovereign capacity...
- In Senate of the United States. February 19, 1847. Read, and ordered to be printed. Mr. Calhoun submitted for consideration the following resolutions: Resolved, that the territories of the United States belong to the several states composing this Union, and are held by them as their joint and common property...
- In Senate of the United States. February 24, 1846. Submitted, and ordered to be printed. Mr. Breese made the following report: (To accompany Bill S. No. 52.) The Committee on the Public Lands, having had under consideration, "A Bill To Grant to the State of Illinois Certain Alternate Sections of the Public Lands, To Aid in the Construction of the Northern Cross and Central Railroads, in Said State," respectfully ask leave to report...
- In Senate of the United States. February 27, 1851. Submitted, and ordered to be printed. Mr. Bright made the following report: (To accompany Bill S. No. 381.) The Committee on Roads and Canals, to whom was referred the Bill (S. 381) "To Remit the Tolls on the United States Stock in the Louisville and Portland Canal Company, and To Purchase the Shares of Individual Stockholders, and To Make the Navigation of Said Canal Free," have considered the same, and report...
- In Senate of the United States. February 28, 1850. Read, and ordered to be printed. Mr. Bell submitted for consideration the following resolutions: Whereas considerations of the highest interest to the whole country demand that the existing and increasing dissensions between the North and the South, on the subject of slavery, should be speedily arrested...
- In Senate of the United States. January 16, 1850. Submitted, and ordered to be printed. (Motion to print 10,000 additional copies of the report, with the bill annexed, referred to the Committee on Printing. January 21, report in favor of printing, and the report concurred in.) Mr. Butler made the following report...
- In Senate of the United States. January 18, 1848. Read, and ordered to lie on the table, and be printed. Mr. Bagby submitted for consideration the following resolutions: Resolved, That the Constitution of the United States is a compact between co-equal sovereigns, by which they, and each of them, delegate certain specified powers to form a general government for the common benefit of all the parties to said compact, and such as might become parties to it...
- In Senate of the United States. July 1, 1842. Ordered to be printed, and that 3,000 additional copies be furnished for the use of the Senate. Mr. Simmons submitted the following report: The Committee on Manufactures, to whom was referred "so much of the message of the President of the United States of the 7th December last, as relates to a tariff of duties,"...
- In Senate of the United States. July 25, 1848. Submitted, and ordered to be printed. Mr. Downs made the following report: (To accompany Bill S. No. 319.) The Committee on Private Land Claims, to whom the bill to facilitate the entry of pre-emptive claims was referred, respectfully report...
- In Senate of the United States. May 17, 1842. Mr. Allen submitted the following resolutions. May 18, 1842. Ordered to lie. May 23, 1842. Ordered to be printed.
- In Senate of the United States. May 3, 1848. Submitted, and ordered to be printed, and 10,000 additional copies be printed for the use of the Senate. Mr. Butler made the following report: (To accompany Bill S. No. 239.) The Committee on the Judiciary, to whom were referred certain resolutions of the Legislature of Kentucky, "in favor of the passage of a law by Congress to enable citizens of slaveholding states to recover slaves, when escaping into non-slaveholding states," have had the same under consideration...
- In Senate of the United States. Message from the President of the United States, in compliance with a Resolution of the Senate, transmitting copies of orders given to the military and naval commander at the Charleston station, &c. February 12, 1833. Read, and ordered to be printed.
- In Senate of the United States. Report of the Committee on the Judiciary with the views of the minority of that committee on Bill S. No. 350, for the admission of California into the Union as a state. January 15, 1849. Ordered, that 10,000 copies be printed for the use of the Senate.
- In relation to a cession of the public lands in Tennessee to that state. Communicated to the House of Representatives, January 24, 1832
- In the Senate of the United States, March 1, 1827. The Committee to whom was referred the several messages of the President of the United States, of the 5th and 8th February, and a report and certain resolutions of the Legislature of Georgia, ask leave to make the following report...
- In the Senate of the United States. April 2, 1879. -- Ordered to lie on the table and be printed. Mr. Saulsbury, from the Committee on Privileges and Elections, submitted the following report: The Committee on Privileges and Elections, to whom were referred the credentials of the Hon. Charles H. Bell, claiming a seat in the Senate as a senator from the State of New Hampshire, have had the same under consideration, and ask leave to make the following report...
- In the Senate of the United States. April 23, 1896. -- Ordered to be printed. Mr. Call, from the Committee on Woman Suffrage, submitted the following as the views of the minority: (To accompany S. Res. 106.) The undersigned are unable to concur in the report of the majority, recommending the adoption of the joint resolution proposing an amendment to the Constitution of the United States...
- In the Senate of the United States. April 26, 1892. -- Ordered to be printed. Mr. Harris (for Mr. Vance), from the Committee on Finance, submitted the following views of the minority: (To accompany S. 2133.) The undersigned, a minority of the Finance Committee, to whom was referred the Senate Bill 2133, introduced by Senator George, together with others of similar import, proposed by Senators Harris and Vance, not being able to concur...
- In the Senate of the United States. December 14, 1893. -- Ordered to be printed. Mr. Vance, from the Committee on Privileges and Elections, submitted the following report: (To accompany H.R. 2331.) The Committee on Privileges and Elections, to whom was referred the Bill (H.R. 2331) to repeal the statutes relating to supervisors of elections and for special deputy marshals, and other purposes...
- In the Senate of the United States. December 15, 1875. -- Ordered to be printed. Mr. Morton submitted the following resolution: Resolved by the Senate, (the House of Representatives concurring,) that the people of the United States constitute a nation, and are one people in the sense of national unity...
- In the Senate of the United States. December 31, 1860. -- Ordered to be printed. Mr. Powell submitted the following report. The Committee of Thirteen, appointed by order of the Senate on the 20th instant, have agreed upon the following resolution, and directed me to report the same to the Senate: Resolved, that the Committee have not been able to agree upon any general plan of adjustment...
- In the Senate of the United States. December 8, 1873. -- Ordered to be printed. Mr. Clayton submitted the following resolution: Whereas under the provisions of the Constitution of the United States the power is vested in Congress "to regulate commerce among the several states," and "to establish post offices and post roads;"...
- In the Senate of the United States. February 2, 1860. -- Considered, postponed to, and made the special order of the day for Wednesday next, at 1 o'clock. Mr. Davis submitted the following resolutions: 1. Resolved, that, in the adoption of the federal Constitution, the states adopting the same acted severally as free and independent sovereignties, delegating a portion of their powers to be exercised by the federal government for the increased security of each against dangers, domestic as well as foreign...
- In the Senate of the United States. February 25, 1881. -- Ordered to be printed. Mr. Wallace, from the Select Committee To Inquire into Frauds in the Late Elections, submitted the following report: Under the instruction given to it, your Committee has taken up the laws of the United States affecting and regulating the elective franchise, and considered their operation in New York, Philadelphia, and Boston...
- In the Senate of the United States. February 25, 1887. -- Ordered to be printed. Mr. George, from the Committee on the Judiciary, submitted the following views of the minority. (To accompany Bill S. 2171.) The undersigned, a minority of the Committee on the Judiciary, are unable to agree with the majority either as to the expediency or the constitutionality of Senate Bill No. 2171, "To Provide for Inquests Under National Authority"...
- In the Senate of the United States. February 26, 1889. -- Ordered to be printed. Mr. Turpie, from the Committee on Mines and Mining, submitted the following report: (To accompany Bill S. 3871.) The Committee on Mines and Mining, to whom was referred the Senate Bill No. 3871, have examined the same, and report that the object of this bill is to grant to the Home Mining Company...
- In the Senate of the United States. February 29, 1864. -- Ordered to be printed. Mr. Sumner submitted the following report. (To accompany Bill S. No. 141.) The Select Committee on Slavery and the Treatment of Freedmen, to whom were referred sundry petitions asking for the repeal of the Fugitive Slave Act of 1850, and, also, asking for the repeal of all acts for the rendition of fugitive slaves, have had the same under consideration and ask leave to make the following report...
- In the Senate of the United States. January 10, 1876. -- Ordered to be printed. Mr. Whyte submitted the following resolution: Resolved by the Senate, (the House of Representatives concurring,) that the people of the several states, acting in their highest sovereign capacity as free and independent states, adopted the federal Constitution and established a form of government in the nature of a confederated republic...
- In the Senate of the United States. January 20, 1879. -- Ordered to be printed. Mr. Morgan submitted the following resolutions: Resolutions intended to be offered as a substitute for the resolutions of the senator from Vermont, Mr. Edmunds...
- In the Senate of the United States. January 25, 1872. -- Ordered to be printed. Mr. Carpenter, from the Committee on the Judiciary, submitted the following report: The Committee on the Judiciary, to whom was referred the memorial of Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Isabella Beecher Hooker, Elizabeth S. Bladen, Olympia Brown, Susan B. Anthony, and Josephine J. Griffing, citizens of the United States, praying for the enactment of a law, during the present session of Congress, to assist and protect them in the exercise of their right, and the right of all women, to participate in the elective franchise, which the memorialists claim they are entitled to under the Constitution of the United States, together with various other petitions and memorials to the same effect, and various protests in opposition thereto, respectfully submit the following report...
- In the Senate of the United States. January 5, 1864. -- Ordered to lie on the table and be printed. Mr. Davis submitted the following resolutions. 1. Resolved, that the government of the United States was established by the people of states which before had been separate, sovereign, and independent...
- In the Senate of the United States. January 7, 1864. -- Ordered to lie on the table and be printed. Mr. Carlile submitted the following resolutions: Resolved, that the government of the United States, in the language of Mr. Webster, is "the result of compact between the states," each state for itself adopting for its government the Constitution of the United States...
- In the Senate of the United States. July 24, 1861. -- Ordered to lie on the table and be printed. Mr. Johnson, of Tennessee, submitted the following resolution. Resolved, that the present deplorable civil war has been forced upon the country by the disunionists of the southern states...
- In the Senate of the United States. July 9, 1888. -- Ordered to be printed. Mr. Blair, from the Committee on Education and Labor, submitted the following report. (To accompany S. Res. 12.) By direction of the Committee on Education and Labor Mr. Blair submits the following report on Senate Resolution No. 12, entitled "Joint Resolution Proposing an Amendment of the Constitution of the United States in Relation to the Manufacture, Importation, Exportation, Transportation, and Sale of Alcoholic Liquors," recommending its submission to the states...
- In the Senate of the United States. June 7, 1878. -- Ordered to be printed. Mr. McMillan, from the Committee on Privileges and Elections, submitted the following report. (To accompany Bill S. 1341.) The Committee on Privileges and Elections, to which was referred the Bill (S. 1341) to declare the true intent and meaning of Title II, Chapter 1, Section 14 of the Revised Statutes, have considered the same, and submit the following report...
- In the Senate of the United States. Letter from the Secretary of State, transmitting correspondence and information concerning permission to land cable on United States coast since March 1, 1893. December 21, 1893. -- Ordered to be printed.
- In the Senate of the United States. March 1, 1860. -- Ordered to be printed. Mr. Davis submitted the following resolutions: 1. Resolved, that, in the adoption of the federal Constitution, the states adopting the same acted severally as free and independent sovereignties...
- In the Senate of the United States. March 10, 1896. -- Ordered to be printed. April 27, 1896. -- Ordered to be reprinted, with supplemental report as part 2. Mr. Chandler, from the Committee on Privileges and Elections, submitted the following report: (To accompany Senate Res. No. 54.) ...an inquiry concerning the election in Alabama in 1894.
- In the Senate of the United States. March 12, 1856. -- Submitted, and ordered to be printed, together with the views of the minority of the committee upon the same subject. Motion to print 62,000 additional copies referred to the Committee on Printing. Mr. Douglas made the following report. The Committee on Territories, to whom was referred so much of the annual message of the President of the United States as relates to territorial affairs, together with his special message of the 24th day of January, 1856, in regard to Kansas Territory, and his message of the 18th of February, in compliance with the resolution of the Senate of the 4th of February, 1856, requesting transcripts of certain papers relative to the affairs of the Territory of Kansas, having given the same that serious and mature deliberation which the importance of the subject demands, beg leave to submit the following report...
- In the Senate of the United States. March 12, 1888. -- Ordered to be printed. Mr. George, from the Committee on the Judiciary, submitted the following views of the minority. (To accompany Bill S. 1516.) The undersigned are unable to concur in the action of the committee in recommending the passage of Senate Bill No. 1516 "To Provide for Inquests Under National Authority."...
- In the Senate of the United States. March 20, 1860. -- Ordered to be printed. Amendment proposed by Mr. Kennedy to Mr. Davis's resolutions. Resolved, that as the unity of government, ordained and established by the Constitution of the United States, is the main pillar in the edifice of our national existence...
- In the Senate of the United States. March 20, 1896. -- Ordered to be printed. Mr. Mitchell, of Oregon, from the Committee on Privileges and Elections, submitted the following report: (To accompany S.R. 6.) The Committee on Privileges and Elections, to whom was referred S.R. 6, being "Joint Resolution Proposing an Amendment to the Constitution of the United States Providing for the Election of Senators by the Votes of the Qualified Electors of the States," ...
- In the Senate of the United States. May 14, 1890. -- Ordered to be printed. Mr. Wilson, of Iowa, from the Committee on the Judiciary, submitted the following report. (To accompany S. 398.) The Committee on the Judiciary, to which was referred the Bill (S. 398) subjecting imported liquors to the provisions of the laws of the several states, reports...
- In the Senate of the United States. May 28, 1874. -- Ordered to be printed. June 1, 1874. -- Ordered that 5,000 additional copies be printed for the use of the Senate. Mr. Morton submitted the following report. On the 10th day of March, 1873, the Senate of the United States adopted the following resolution: Resolved, that the Committee on Privileges and Elections be instructed to examine and report, at the next session of Congress, upon the best and most practicable mode of electing the President and Vice-President...
- In the Senate of the United States. Resolution by Mr. Brown: That the territories are the common property of the states, and that it is the privilege of the citizens of all the states to go into the territories with every description of property recognized under the Constitution, and held under the laws of any of the states, &c...
- Income tax. Presented by Mr. Kean. A former Vermont Senator describes the power of taxation and defines difference between property taxes, duties, and imposts -- importance of the rights the states are asked to surrender -- Congress now has sufficient power to raise revenue for financing a great war -- dangers of centralization. February 17, 1910. -- Ordered to be printed.
- Indiana - resolutions Legislature -- nullification. January 25, 1833. Read, and laid upon the table.
- Interstate gambling. March 2, 1897. -- Referred to the House Calendar and ordered to be printed.
- Intervention by states in cases involving validity of exercise of United States powers. April 8, 1940. -- Ordered to be printed.
- Intervention by states in certain cases involving validity of the exercise of power by the United States. March 12, 1940. -- Referred to the House Calendar and ordered to be printed.
- Issuance of Writs of habeas corpus by federal courts. July 27, 1894. -- Referred to the House Calendar and ordered to be printed.
- Joint resolution of the Legislature of Indiana, withdrawing its assent to the ratification of the Fifteenth Article of Amendments to the Constitution. February 6, 1871. -- Ordered to lie on the table and be printed.
- Joint resolution of the Legislature of Oregon, rejecting the Fifteenth Article of Amendments to the Constitution of the United States. February 8, 1871. -- Ordered to lie on the table and be printed.
- Joint resolutions of the Legislature of California, relation to the civil fund of California. December 8, 1851. Referred to the Committee on Finance, and ordered to be printed.
- Judicial system. Repeal twenty-fifth section of the Act of 4th September, 1789. January 24, 1831.
- Jurisdiction and authority of Congress over the subject of woman and child labor. February 6, 1907. -- Ordered to be printed.
- Kansas constitution. May 11, 1858. -- Ordered to be printed.
- Kansas. Resolutions of the Legislature of the State of Texas, in response to the Governor's message on Kansas affairs. March 15, 1858. -- Ordered to be printed.
- Kentucky Legislature -- nullification. Preamble and resolutions in relation to nullifying acts of Congress by a single state of the Union. February 25, 1833. Read, and laid upon the table.
- Kentucky resolutions. Resolutions of the Legislature of the State of Kentucky, relating to a United States bank and the public lands. February 6, 1841. Read, and laid upon the table.
- Lake Erie and Ohio River Ship Canal Company. February 15, 1906. -- Referred to the House Calendar and ordered to be printed.
- Land granted to Indiana -- construction of act. Message from the President of the United States, concerning the construction of an act of Congress granting a tract of land to the State of Indiana. December 20, 1838. Referred to the Committee on the Judiciary.
- Lands for schools in Ohio. Communicated to the House of Representatives, January 7, 1825
- Lands within the State of Indiana -- unappropriated. February 17, 1829. -- Printed by order of the House of Representatives.
- Legislature of Alabama. Resolutions of the Legislature of Alabama, responsive to those of South Carolina on the subject of controversy between the States of Maine and Georgia. June 12, 1841. Read and laid upon the table.
- Legislature of Georgia -- call of a convention. February 4, 1833. Read, and laid upon the table.
- Legislature of Georgia on tariff and internal improvement. Letter from the Governor of Georgia, transmitting a report of a Committee of the General Assembly of said state, on the subject of the powers of the general government, for the purposes of encouraging domestic manufactures, and effecting a system of internal improvement. February 6, 1828. Read, and referred to the Committee of the Whole House to which is committed the Bill (No. 132) in Alteration of the Several Acts Imposing Duties on Imports.
- Legislature of Louisiana. February 6, 1840. Read and referred, Nos. 4 and 11 to the Committee on the Public Lands, and No. 9 to the Committee on Private Land Claims.
- Legislature of New Jersey -- South Carolina doctrine, nullification, &c. &c. February 25, 1833. Read, and laid upon the table.
- Legislature of Pennsylvania -- union of the States. December 26, 1832. Printed by order of the House of Representatives of the United States.
- Letter from Ethan A. Brown, governor of the State of Ohio, transmitting a report of the joint committee of both houses of the General Assembly, on the subject of the proceedings of the Bank of the United States against the officers of the state, in the United States' Circuit Court. February 1, 1821. Read, and ordered to lie on the table. February 3, 1821. Printed by order of the House of Representatives.
- Letter from the Governor of Georgia; with a report adopted by the Legislature of that state, on the tariff and internal improvement. February 6, 1828. Referred to the Committees on Manufactures and Roads and Canals, and ordered to be printed.
- Letter from the Governor of the State of Ohio to the President of the Senate, transmitting a report of the joint committee of both houses of the General Assembly, on the communication of the Auditor of State upon the subject of the proceedings of the Bank of the United States against the Officers of State, in the United States' Circuit Court. February 1, 1821. Printed by order of the Senate of the United States.
- Letter of C.H. Howard. Assistant Commissioner of Refugees, Freedmen and Abandoned Lands, in relation to the opinion of Attorney General Jones, of the State of Maryland, pronouncing void the decision of the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States, releasing apprentices bound under the laws of Maryland. February 4, 1868. -- Referred to the Committee on the Judiciary and ordered to be printed.
- Letter of the Governor of the State of Maryland communicating resolutions of the legislature of said state, remonstrating against the right being granted to any railroad therein to connect with the Northern Central Railroad and extending to the limits of the District of Columbia. February 20, 1865. -- Read, ordered to lie on the table, and be printed.
- Letters and circulars concerning lotteries, etc. March 18, 1884. -- Laid on the table and ordered to be printed.
- Levee on the Mississippi River, in the states of Tennessee and Kentucky. (To accompany Joint Resolution No. 47.) February 15, 1859. -- Ordered to be printed.
- Limitations of federal control of water powers. An argument before the National Waterways Commission. Presented by Mr. Root. May 27, 1912. -- Ordered to be printed.
- Limiting the effect of regulations of commerce between the states, etc. June 14, 1897. -- Ordered to be printed.
- Local self-government in Texas. Resolution of the Legislature of Texas, returning thanks to the President for upholding the right of local self-government in Texas. March 9, 1874. -- Ordered to lie on the table and be printed.
- Louisiana affairs. January 11, 1875. -- Referred to the Committee on the Judiciary and ordered to be printed.
- Louisiana affairs. Joint resolution of the Legislature of West Virginia, protesting against federal interference in the civil affairs of the State of Louisiana. February 8, 1875. -- Referred to the Committee on the Judiciary and ordered to be printed.
- Louisiana affairs. Resolutions of the House of Representatives of the Legislature of Pennsylvania, relative to interference of United States soldiers in the organization of the Legislature of Louisiana. January 18, 1875. -- Referred to the Committee on the Judiciary and ordered to be printed.
- Lowering the voting age to 18. March 9, 1971. -- Referred to the House Calendar and ordered to be printed.
- Maintenance of the Constitution and Union. Resolutions of the Legislature of the State of Pennsylvania, relative to the maintenance of the Constitution and Union. January 28, 1861. -- Laid upon the table and ordered to be printed.
- Management of fish and resident wildlife on federal land. November 20, 1969. -- Ordered to be printed.
- Marriage and divorce. May 5, 1892. -- Laid on the table and ordered to be printed.
- Martial law in West Virginia. An address delivered before the West Virginia Bar Association at its twenty-ninth annual session, held in the City of Wheeling, W. Va., on July 16 and 17, 1913. By William Gordon Mathews, President of the West Virginia Bar Association. Presented by Mr. Chilton. November 3, 1913. -- Ordered to be printed.
- Maryland. Resolutions of the House of Delegates of Maryland, protesting against the restoration of the public deposites, and the recharter of the Bank of the United States. April 7, 1834. Read, and laid upon the table.
- Massachusetts -- convention of South Carolina. Resolutions of the Legislature of Massachusetts, upon the subject of a reduction of the duties on imports, &c. &c. January 30, 1833. Read, and referred to a Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union.
- Massachusetts militia claims. January 3, 1826.
- Massachusetts militia. (To accompany S. Bill No. 29.) February 11, 1845.
- Massachusetts. Memorial from citizens of Middlesex Co., Massachusetts, in favor of protecting the industry of the farmer, mechanic, and manufacturer. February 5, 1833. Referred to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union.
- Maternity and infancy. February 4, 1931. -- Committed to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union and ordered to be printed.
- Memorial & remonstrance of the Legislature of the State of Georgia, upon the subject of the extinguishment of the Indian title to certain lands within the said state. April 5, 1824. Read, and referred to the select committee appointed the 30th ult. on the message of the President of the United States in relation to the compact between the United States and the State of Georgia.
- Memorial and resolutions adopted at the anti-tariff meeting, held at Sumter District, South Carolina, on Monday, September 3, 1827. March 21, 1828. Referred to the Committee on Manufactures, and ordered to be printed.
- Memorial of H.D. Johnson, delegate from the Territory of Nebraska, claiming for the people of that territory the right to legislate for themselves on the subject of slavery, and that Congress should leave the question to the decision of their own choice. February 20, 1854. -- Ordered to lie on the table and be printed.
- Memorial of inhabitants of Windsor County, Vermont, in favor of the protective system. February 2, 1833. Laid on the table, and ordered to be printed.
- Memorial of the Bar Association of the State of Mississippi. February 21, 1825. Read and referred to the Committee of the Whole House, to which is committed the bill further to amend the judicial system of the United States.
- Memorial of the Legislature of Alabama, adverse to the distribution of the proceeds of the public lands among the states, and that the settlers on the lands within Indian reservations be permitted to locate pre-emption rights on other lands, &c. February 5, 1836. Laid on the table, and ordered to be printed.
- Memorial of the Legislature of Alabama, against the measures of the abolitionists, and against interfering with the subject of slavery in the District of Columbia. February 5, 1836. Laid on the table, and ordered to be printed.
- Memorial of the conservative members of the Legislature of Louisiana, giving a statement of the revolutionary proceedings in the hall of the House of Representatives, at New Orleans, January 4, 1875. January 20, 1875. -- Referred to the Committee on Privileges and Elections and ordered to be printed.
- Memorial of the members of the Legislature of South Carolina, opposed to nullification. January 23, 1832. Referred to the Committee of Ways and Means. January 24, 1832. Printed by order of the House of Representatives.
- Memorial of the minority of the Legislature of South Carolina, praying that the duties on importations may be reduced to a scale commensurate with the necessary revenue of the United States. January 24, 1832. Referred to the Committee on Finance, and ordered to be printed.
- Message from the President of the United States to the two Houses of Congress at the commencement of the second session of the Thirty-sixth Congress. December 4, 1860. -- Read, and ordered that the message and accompanying documents be printed.
- Message from the President of the United States to the two Houses of Congress at the commencement of the second session of the Thirty-sixth Congress. December 4, 1860. -- Read, and ordered that the message and accompanying documents be printed.
- Message from the President of the United States to the two Houses of Congress at the commencement of the second session of the Twenty-fifth Congress. December 5, 1837. Read, and submitted to a Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union.
- Message from the President of the United States to the two Houses of Congress, at the commencement of the first session of the Thirty-fourth Congress. December 31, 1855. -- Read, and ordered that the usual number of the message and documents be printed; and that 15,000 copies of the message and accompanying documents, in addition to the usual number, be printed for the use of the Senate by the printer of the Senate for the last Congress, at rates not exceeding those established by existing laws. Part I.
- Message from the President of the United States to the two Houses of Congress, at the commencement of the first session of the Thirty-fourth Congress. February 14, 1856. -- Committed to the Committee of the Whole on the state of the Union, and ordered to be printed. February 18, 1856. -- Resolved, that there be printed for the use of the members of the House of Representatives twenty thousand copies of the President's message and accompanying documents. Part I.
- Message from the President of the United States to the two Houses of Congress, at the commencement of the first session of the Thirty-third Congress. December 6, 1853. -- Read, and ordered to be printed; and that 10,000 copies in addition to the usual number be printed for the use of the Senate.
- Message from the President of the United States to the two Houses of Congress, at the commencement of the first session of the Thirty-third Congress. December 6, 1853. -- Read, committed to the Committee of the Whole on the State of the Union, and, together with the accompanying documents, ordered to be printed; and that 20,000 extra copies, with the accompanying documents, be printed.
- Message from the President of the United States to the two Houses of Congress, at the commencement of the first session of the Thirty-third Congress. December 6, 1853. -- Read, committed to the Committee of the Whole on the State of the Union, and, together with the accompanying documents, ordered to be printed; and that 20,000 extra copies, with the accompanying documents, be printed. Part I.
- Message from the President of the United States to the two Houses of Congress, at the commencement of the first session of the thirty-third Congress. December 6, 1853. -- Read, and ordered to be printed; and that 10,000 copies in addition to the usual number be printed for the use of the Senate.
- Message from the President of the United States to the two Houses of Congress, at the commencement of the second session of the Thirtieth Congress. December 5, 1848. Read, and committed to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union, and 15,000 extra copies, with the accompanying documents, ordered to be printed.
- Message from the President of the United States to the two Houses of Congress, at the commencement of the second session of the Twenty-fifth Congress. December 5, 1837. Printed by order of the Senate of the United States.
- Message from the President of the United States to the two Houses of Congress, at the commencement of the third session of the Thirty-fourth Congress. December 18, 1856. Resolved, that there be printed for the use of the members of this House, eighteen thousand six hundred copies of the annual message of the President, together with the accompanying documents, and that two hundred additional copies of the said message and documents be printed and furnished to each of the Secretaries of the State, War, Navy, Treasury and Interior Departments, the Attorney General and Postmaster General.
- Message from the President of the United States to the two Houses of Congress, at the commencement of the third session of the Thirty-fourth Congress. December 2, 1856. -- Read. December 11, 1856. -- Ordered, that the message and accompanying documents be printed, and that 15,000 additional copies thereof be printed for the use of the Senate.
- Message from the President of the United States, communicating, in compliance with a resolution of the Senate, information in relation to military orders issued to the United States officers at Santa Fe, and correspondence between those officers and the War Department in relation to the claims of Texas to jurisdiction over that country. June 17, 1850. Read, and ordered to be printed.
- Message from the President of the United States, in relation to the dispute between the State of Maine and the British Province of New Brunswick. February 26, 1839. Referred to the Committee on Foreign Relations, and ordered to be printed, and that 5,000 additional copies be furnished for the use of the Senate.
- Message from the President of the United States, returning Bill (S. No. 61) "to protect all persons in the United States in their civil rights, and furnish the means of their vindication," with his objections thereto. March 27, 1866. -- Read and ordered to be printed.
- Message from the President of the United States, returning the Bank Bill, with his objections, &c. July 10, 1832. Read, and ordered to be printed, and that 6,000 additional copies be sent to the Senate.
- Message from the President of the United States, submitting to Congress a series of resolutions adopted by the Legislature of Virginia on the 19th instant, having in view a peaceful settlement of the exciting questions which now threaten the Union. January 28, 1861. -- Read and ordered to be printed. Motion to print additional copies submitted by Mr. Mason.
- Message from the President of the United States, to the two Houses of Congress, at the commencement of the first session of the Twenty-first Congress. December 8, 1829. Printed by order of the Senate of the United States.
- Message from the President of the United States, to the two Houses of Congress, at the commencement of the first session of the Twenty-first Congress. December 8, 1829. Read, and committed to a Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union.
- Message from the President of the United States, to the two Houses of Congress, at the commencement of the second session of the Twenty-eighth Congress. December 3, 1844. Read, and ordered that the usual number of copies of the message and documents be printed, and that 10,000 copies extra of the same be also printed.
- Message from the President of the United States, to the two Houses of Congress, at the commencement of the second session of the Twenty-eighth Congress. December 3, 1844. Read, and ordered to be printed with the accompanying documents; and that 3,500 additional copies of the message, and 3,000 additional copies of the message and documents, be furnished for the use of the Senate.
- Message from the President of the United States, to the two Houses of Congress, at the commencement of the second session of the Twenty-second Congress. December 4, 1832. Read, and committed to a Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union.
- Message from the President of the United States, transmitting copies of the proclamation and proceedings in relation to South Carolina. January 16, 1833. Read, and ordered to be printed, and that 3,000 additional copies be furnished for the use of the Senate.
- Message from the President of the United States, transmitting, with his objections, the bill entitled "An Act To Incorporate the Subscribers to the Fiscal Bank of the United States." August 16, 1841. Read, and ordered to be printed, and that 6,000 additional copies be furnished for the use of the Senate.
- Message from the President of the United States, with his objections to the bill for the preservation and repair of the Cumberland Road; also, a paper containing his views on the subject of internal improvements. May 4, 1822. Printed by order of the House of Representatives.
- Message of the President of the United States to the two Houses of Congress, at the commencement of the first session of the Thirty-seventh Congress. July 5, 1861. -- Read, and ordered to be printed.
- Message of the President of the United States, and accompanying documents, to the two Houses of Congress, at the commencement of the second session of the Thirty-ninth Congress. Part I.
- Message of the President of the United States, communicating, in compliance with a resolution of the Senate, the correspondence with foreign ministers at Washington in regard to foreign vessels in the port of Charleston, South Carolina. January 31, 1861. -- Read, ordered to lie on the table, and be printed.
- Mineral lands. Resolutions of the Legislature of Michigan, relative to leasing the mineral lands. May 20, 1846. Read, and referred to the Committee on Public Lands.
- Minthorne Tompkins, deceased, Charles W. Godard, and others. June 6, 1882. -- Committed to the Committee of the Whole House and ordered to be printed.
- Mississippi Legislature -- duties and powers of government. Resolutions of the Legislature of the State of Mississippi, in relation to the acts of the extra session of Congress of 1841. May 10, 1842. Read, and laid upon the table.
- Mississippi in 1875. Report of the select committee to inquire into the Mississippi election of 1875, with the testimony and documentary evidence. In two volumes. Vol. I.
- Motion submitted by Mr. Benton, in relation to the legislative power of the Union, to assume the debts of the several states. December 27, 1839. Submitted, and ordered to be printed.
- National Employment Service. May 1 (calendar day, May 11), 1933. -- Ordered to be printed.
- National and state employment service. April 22, 1932. -- Ordered to be printed.
- National currency. Memorial of Littleton Dennis Teackle, of Maryland; with a plan of national currency and distribution; and praying that its principles and details may be considered and acted upon by the Congress of the United States. September 12, 1837. Referred to the Committee of Ways and Means.
- National wild rivers system. September 28, 1965. -- Ordered to be printed.
- New Hampshire -- tariff. Proceedings of a meeting of the Democratic Republican citizens of Portsmouth, New Hampshire, on the subject of the tariff, nullification, and the public lands. February 11, 1833. Read, and laid upon the table.
- New Jersey -- the public lands. Resolutions of the Legislature of New Jersey respecting the public lands. February 19, 1839. Read, and laid upon the table.
- New Jersey. Resolutions of the Legislature of the State of New Jersey, on the subject of the embarrassed condition of public affairs. January 8, 1838. Ordered to lie on the table.
- New Mexico. January 3, 1849.
- New York -- inhabitants Saratoga -- nullification --President's proclamation -- tariff. February 18, 1833. Read, and laid upon the table.
- Nonapplicability of antitrust laws to the insurance business. September 20 (legislative day, September 1), 1944. -- Ordered to be printed.
- Ohio Legislature. A declaration and resolution passed by the Legislature of Ohio, in relation to the public domain, and the currency, &c. February 14, 1838. Read, and laid upon the table.
- On the distribution of the proceeds of the public lands among the several states. Communicated to the Senate, May 18, 1832
- On the organization and discipline of the militia of the United States. Communicated to the House of Representatives, January 27, 1830
- Opinion and dissenting opinions of the Supreme Court on constitutionality of employers' liability law. January 11, 1908. -- Ordered to be printed.
- Opinions of the judges of the Supreme Court of the United States, in the case of "Smith vs. Turner," and "Norris vs. the City of Boston." February 17, 1849. Ordered to be printed for the use of the Senate.
- Orders given to the military and naval commanders of the United States at Charleston, South Carolina, in 1832-'33. Communicated to the Senate, February 12, 1833
- Organizing militia. January 27, 1830.
- Orleans Navigation Company. Feb. 11, 1828. -- Read, and committed to a Committee of the Whole House to-morrow. January 31, 1829. -- Reprinted by order of the House of Representatives.
- Orleans Navigation Company. February 11, 1828. Read and committed to a Committee of the Whole House to-morrow.
- Our American government. What is it? How does it function? 300 questions and answers a comprehensive story of the history and functions of our American government interestingly and accurately portrayed.
- Pennsylvania -- Delaware County meeting -- tariff. February 18, 1833. Read, and ordered to lie on the table.
- Pennsylvania war claims. February 5, 1892. -- Committed to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union and ordered to be printed.
- Petition of the pilots of Charleston, S.C., praying that the power to regulate pilotage may remain with the state legislatures. January 10, 1848. Referred to the Committee on Commerce, and ordered to be printed.
- Polygamy. May 24, 1886. -- Referred to the House Calendar and ordered to be printed.
- Polygraph protection act of 1985. September 17 (legislative day, September 15), 1986. -- Ordered to be printed.
- Powers of the general government -- rights of the states. Report of a committee, and resolutions of the Legislature of Georgia, upon certain resolutions of the States of South Carolina and Ohio. January 14, 1829. -- Read, and committed to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union.
- Powers of the national government. Mr. Borah presented the following article on "The internal and external powers of the national government," by George Sutherland, United States senator, member of the Senate Committee on the Judiciary. March 8, 1910. -- Ordered to be printed.
- Pre-emption rights, &c. Memorial of the Legislature of Illinois, relating to pre-emption rights and donations to actual settlers. January 14, 1843. Referred to the Committee on the Public Lands.
- Preamble and resolutions adopted at a meeting of the citizens of Albemarle County, Virginia, disapproving the measures of the dominant party in Congress. September 10, 1841. Laid on the table, and ordered to be printed.
- Preamble and resolutions adopted at a meeting of the citizens of Brunswick County, Virginia, adverse to the principles and measures of the present administration. September 1, 1841. Laid on the table, and ordered to be printed.
- Preamble and resolutions adopted at a meeting of the citizens of Norfolk County, Virginia, adverse to the establishment of a national bank, and the distribution of the proceeds of the public lands. August 13, 1841. Laid on the table, and ordered to be printed.
- Preamble and resolutions adopted at a meeting of the citizens of Petersburg, Virginia, adverse to the establishment of a national bank, a protective tariff, a system of internal improvement, and the distribution of any portion of the revenue among the several states. August 25, 1841. Laid on the table, and ordered to be printed.
- Preamble and resolutions adopted at a meeting of the citizens of Philadelphia, in the State of Pennsylvania. February 1, 1833. Read, and referred to the Committee of the Whole House, to which is committed the Bill (No. 641) to reduce and otherwise alter the duties on imports.
- Preamble and resolutions adopted at a meeting of the citizens of Surry County, Va., adverse to the incorporation of a national bank, the distribution of the proceeds of the public lands, the establishment of a protective tariff, &c. &c. September 6, 1841. Laid on the table, and ordered to be printed.
- Proceedings of a public meeting of the citizens of Centresville, Ohio, in relation to the policy and measures of the present administration. July 21, 1841. Ordered to be printed.
- Proceedings of the Committee on Privileges and Elections, United States Senate, on the contested cases of William P. Kellogg and Henry M. Spofford, claiming seats as senators from the State of Louisiana. April 27, 1880. -- Ordered to be printed.
- Proceedings of the Legislature of Georgia in relation to the treaty made with the Creeks at the Indian Springs. Communicated to the House of Representatives, January 23, 1827
- Processes in courts U.S. May 17, 1826. Read, and laid upon the table.
- Prohibition amendment. December 14, 1917. -- Referred to the House Calendar and ordered to be printed.
- Propagation of salt water fish. June 4, 1879. -- Recommitted to the Committee on Commerce and ordered to be printed.
- Propagation of salt-water fish. January 9, 1880. -- Committed to the Committee of the Whole House of the State of the Union and ordered to be printed, with the views of minority.
- Proposition to grant land to the old states for the purposes of education. Communicated to the Senate, February 9, 1821
- Protection -- domestic manufactures. February 27, 1833. Read, and laid upon the table.
- Protection of game and fish in forest reserves. January 12, 1905. -- Referred to the House Calendar and ordered to be printed.
- Protest of North Carolina against the Hopewell Treaty with the Cherokees, &c. March 29, 1830. Laid on the table by Mr. White, and ordered to be printed.
- Public lands. February 15, 1839. Ordered to be printed.
- Rebellion of the seceding states. January 12, 1863. -- Ordered to be printed, and postponed until Wednesday, January 14, at 1 o'clock p.m.
- Recent election in Louisiana. Testimony taken by the Select Committee on the Recent Election in the State of Louisiana. January 16, 1877. -- Ordered to be printed.
- Recent election in South Carolina. February 21, 1877. -- Recommitted to the Select Committee on the Recent Election in South Carolina and ordered to be printed.
- Reclamation of arid lands. February 20, 1901. -- Committed to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union and ordered to be printed.
- Recommendations of the Legislature of Alabama, in relation to the measures of South Carolina and the general government, &c. February 19, 1833. Laid on the table, and ordered to be printed.
- Regulating interstate commerce in certain cases. April 8, 1904. -- Referred to the House Calendar and ordered to be printed.
- Regulating interstate commerce in certain cases. Fifty-ninth Congress, second session.
- Regulating interstate commerce in certain cases. January 24, 1907. -- Referred to the House Calendar and ordered to be printed.
- Regulating the fisheries. May 10, 1892. -- Laid on the table and ordered to be printed.
- Regulation of interstate commerce between the several states, etc. May 9, 1900. -- Referred to the House Calendar and ordered to be printed.
- Relinquishment of the claims of the Creeks to lands in Georgia. Communicated to the Senate, March 1, 1827
- Remonstrance of Alabama against the distribution of the proceeds of the public lands, and in favor of the extension of the pre-emption laws. Communicated to the Senate, February 5, 1836
- Remonstrance of New Hampshire against the exercise of certain powers by the judiciary of the United States. Communicated to the House of Representatives, February 27, 1795
- Remonstrance of the Legislature of New Hampshire against certain powers exercised by the Judiciary of the United States. Communicated to the Senate, May 5, 1794
- Remonstrance of the Legislature of New Hampshire against certain powers exercised by the judiciary of the United States. Communicated to the Senate, March 10, 1794
- Remonstrance of the legislature of Massachusetts against the war, and the formation of new states from lands not within the original limits of the United States, and the protest of the minority of said legislature. Communicated to the Senate, June 28, 1813
- Remonstrance to the Congress of the United States, on the subject of the decision of the Supreme Court of the United States, on the occupying claimant laws of Kentucky. February 9, 1824. -- Committed to a Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union.
- Report adopted by the Legislature of Georgia, on the resolutions of South Carolina and Ohio, in relation to the powers of the general government and state rights, and to the subject of slavery. 1829, January 14. -- Read, and ordered to be printed.
- Report and remonstrance of the Legislature of Georgia, in relation to the Indian tribes within that state, and acts of certain states, extending jurisdiction over the Indian tribes within their limits, &c. In Senate of the United States, March 8, 1830.
- Report and resolutions of the Legislature of Georgia with accompanying documents. January 23, 1827. Printed by order of the House of Representatives.
- Report and resolutions of the Legislature of South Carolina, in relation to the election of President of the United States, the construction of the Constitution, and the future arrangements as to the tariff of duties on imports. January 25, 1841. Ordered to be printed.
- Report of a select committee of the Legislature of New Hampshire, on the subject of internal improvements, tariff, public lands, revenue, &c. January 24, 1833. Laid on the table by Mr. Hill, and ordered to be printed.
- Report of a special committee of the Senate of South Carolina, on the resolutions submitted by Mr. Ramsay, on the subject of state rights. January 11, 1828. Printed by order of the Senate of the United States.
- Report of the Committee on Roads and Canals, upon the subject of internal improvements, accompanied by a bill "Concerning Internal Improvements." February 26, 1825. Read, and, with the bill, laid upon the table.
- Report of the Joint Committee on Reconstruction, at the first session Thirty-ninth Congress.
- Report of the Select Committee of the Legislature of Virginia, agreed to and adopted by said Legislature, in opposition to the tariff system. March 3d, 1829 -- Read, laid on the table, and ordered to be printed.
- Report of the Senate Select Committee on Interstate Commerce. (With appendix.) Forty-ninth Congress, first session. -- Submitted to the Senate January 18, 1886.
- Report of the committee, to whom was referred the constitution of the State of Missouri. November 23, 1820. Read, and committed to a Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union.
- Report of the select committee appointed on the 17th ultimo, to consider of certain treaties with the Creek and Cherokee Indians, and the Articles of Agreement and Cession entered into on the 24th April, 1802, between the United States and the State of Georgia; accompanied with resolutions making appropriations for carrying into effect the Articles of Agreement and Cession entered into between the United States and the State of Georgia, on the 24th of April, 1802, and for other purposes. January 7, 1822. Read, and committed to a Committee of the Whole House on Thursday next.
- Report of the select committee of the House of Representatives, to which were referred the messages of the President U.S. of the 5th and 8th February, and 2d March, 1827, with accompanying documents and a report and resolutions of the Legislature of Georgia. March 3, 1827. Read, and laid upon the table.
- Report of the select committee to which was referred, on the 2d of February, instant, the resolution from the Senate declaring the admission of the State of Missouri into the Union. February 10, 1821. Read, and ordered to lie on the table.
- Report, in part, of the committee on so much of the President's message as relates to roads, canals, and seminaries of learning. December 15, 1817. Read and committed to a Committee of the Whole House on Friday next.
- Resolution of the Legislature of Indiana, "On the subject of the right which that state has to the unappropriated lands within her boundaries." February 10, 1829. -- Read, referred to the Committee on Public Lands, and ordered to be printed.
- Resolution of the Legislature of Missouri, declaring, in their opinion, that Congress has no power to appropriate moneys to aid the American Colonization Society. February 19th, 1829. -- Ordered to lie on the table, and be printed.
- Resolution of the Legislature of Ohio protesting against the action of the United States military authorities in the expulsion of certain members of the Louisiana Legislature. January 20, 1875. -- Read and ordered to lie on the table and be printed.
- Resolutions adopted at a meeting of the citizens of Philadelphia, on the subject of protecting domestic industry, &c. January 30, 1833. Laid on the table, and ordered to be printed.
- Resolutions and report of a committee, adopted by the Legislature of Massachusetts, relative to the measures of South Carolina, and adverse to the tariff bill now before the House of Representatives. January 30, 1833. Laid on the table, and ordered to be printed.
- Resolutions of Mr. Nelson, of Maryland. January 15, 1822. Committed to the Committee of the Whole on the State of the Union. Resolved, that each of the United States has an equal right to participate in the benefit of the public lands, the common property of the Union...
- Resolutions of sundry inhabitants of Muskingum Co., Ohio, in favor of the Executive measures against the Bank of the United States. June 24, 1834. Referred to the Committee on Finance, and ordered to be printed.
- Resolutions of sundry inhabitants of Warren County, Ohio, in favor of Executive measures against the Bank of the United States. June 24, 1834. Referred to the Committee on Finance, and ordered to be printed.
- Resolutions of the General Assembly of Alabama, adverse to the distribution of the proceeds of the sales of the public lands, and refusing to receive any part thereof. January 21, 1842. Read and ordered to be printed.
- Resolutions of the General Assembly of Alabama, in relation to the obligations of the states to surrender fugitives from justice. January 21, 1841. Ordered to be printed.
- Resolutions of the General Assembly of Arkansas, against the passage of any laws for the distribution of the proceeds of the sales of the public lands. January 8, 1846. Ordered to be printed.
- Resolutions of the General Assembly of Connecticut, in favor of the repeal of that proviso in the law for the apportionment of representatives among the several states according to the Sixth Census, which directs that the states shall be divided into districts. January 3, 1843. Read, and ordered to be printed.
- Resolutions of the General Assembly of Georgia, in favor of so amending the Constitution of the United States as to authorize circuit judges of the United States to surrender fugitives from justice. March 11, 1840. Referred to the Committee on the Judiciary, and ordered to be printed, with the accompanying documents submitted by Mr. Lumpkin.
- Resolutions of the General Assembly of Indiana, in relation to the interference by Congress or state legislatures with the domestic institutions of the slave states. February 11, 1839. Laid on the table, and ordered to be printed.
- Resolutions of the General Assembly of New Jersey, in relation to the disposition of the public lands. February 11, 1839. Laid on the table, and ordered to be printed.
- Resolutions of the General Assembly of South Carolina, in relation to the controversy between the States of New York and Virginia, on the subject of surrendering fugitives from justice. February 7, 1842. Ordered to be printed.
- Resolutions of the General Assembly of South Carolina, on the subject of the distribution of the proceeds of the sales of the public lands. February 7, 1842. Ordered to be printed.
- Resolutions of the Legislature of Arkansas, in favor of ceding the public lands to the states on which they lie. April 6, 1838. Laid on the table, and ordered to be printed.
- Resolutions of the Legislature of Delaware, adverse to the measures of South Carolina. February 6, 1833. Laid on the table, and ordered to be printed.
- Resolutions of the Legislature of Florida, on the subject of slavery. February 19, 1849. Ordered to be printed.
- Resolutions of the Legislature of Georgia in relation to the American Colonization Society. February 4, 1828. Printed by order of the Senate of the United States.
- Resolutions of the Legislature of Georgia relative to the federal interference in the affairs of Louisiana. February 1, 1875. -- Ordered to lie on the table and be printed.
- Resolutions of the Legislature of Georgia, in relation to the difficulties between the authorities of the States of South Carolina and Louisiana and those of the State of Massachusetts. February 2, 1846. Ordered to lie on the table, and be printed.
- Resolutions of the Legislature of Georgia, proposing a convention of the people of the United States for considering the propriety of making certain amendments to the Constitution of the United States. January 9, 1833. Read, and ordered to lie on the table, and be printed.
- Resolutions of the Legislature of Georgia, requesting the senators and representatives from that state, in Congress, to use their best exertions to obtain the extinguishment of the title of the Cherokee Indians to land in the State of Georgia. February 4, 1828. Referred to the Committee on Indian Affairs, and ordered to be printed.
- Resolutions of the Legislature of Indiana, on the measures of South Carolina and the general government. January 25, 1833. Laid on the table and ordered to be printed.
- Resolutions of the Legislature of Kentucky, against any interference on the part of the general government, societies, or individuals, on the subject of slavery in the District of Columbia. March 16, 1836. Laid on the table, and ordered to be printed.
- Resolutions of the Legislature of Kentucky, concerning federal relations. January 8, 1862. -- Laid on the table, and ordered to be printed.
- Resolutions of the Legislature of Maine, disapproving of any interference with the subject of slavery in any of the states by the general government. April 8, 1836. Laid on the table, and ordered to be printed.
- Resolutions of the Legislature of Maryland, declaring their devotion to the Constitution, and the purpose of the people of Maryland to uphold and defend it; that the present rebellion is without justification, and approving the course of the Executive in his efforts to suppress it. January 2, 1862. -- Ordered to lie on the table and be printed.
- Resolutions of the Legislature of Massachusetts, in favor of the repeal of the Fugitive Slave Law. February 13, 1856. -- Ordered to lie on the table and be printed.
- Resolutions of the Legislature of Massachusetts, on the state of the Union and the duties of government to the freedmen. April 30, 1866. -- Submitted, ordered to lie on the table and be printed.
- Resolutions of the Legislature of Michigan, relative to donations of public lands by Congress for purposes of internal improvement. April 9, 1838. Referred to the Committee on Public Lands, and ordered to be printed.
- Resolutions of the Legislature of Mississippi, adverse to the bankrupt and distribution laws, the establishment of a protective tariff, and the incorporation of a national bank. April 29, 1842. Laid on the table, and ordered to be printed.
- Resolutions of the Legislature of Mississippi, on the subject of slavery and the questions in controversy between the northern and southern states growing out of that institution. May 8, 1850. Read, and ordered to lie on the table and be printed.
- Resolutions of the Legislature of Missouri, protesting against the use of the Army in preventing the legal organization of the Legislature of Louisiana. January 29, 1875. -- Ordered to lie on the table and be printed.
- Resolutions of the Legislature of New York, in favor of the distribution of the proceeds of the public lands among the several states. June 8, 1841. Referred to the Committee on Public Lands, and ordered to be printed.
- Resolutions of the Legislature of South Carolina, declaring the late proclamation of the President of the United States to be unconstitutional and unprecedented, &c. January 11, 1833. Read, and ordered to be printed.
- Resolutions of the Legislature of South Carolina, in favor of repealing the Tariff Act of 1842. January 30, 1843. Referred to the Committee on Finance, and ordered to be printed.
- Resolutions of the Legislature of Texas on the subject of slavery. April 23, 1850. Ordered to lie on the table, and be printed.
- Resolutions of the Legislature of Virginia, adverse to the movements made for the abolition of slavery, &c. February 29, 1836. -- Read. March 10, 1836. -- Ordered to be printed.
- Resolutions of the Legislature of Virginia, in relation to slavery. February 5, 1849. Ordered to be printed.
- Resolutions of the Legislature of the State of Maine, in relation to the decision of the Supreme Court of the United States in the case of Dred Scott. December 18, 1857. -- Ordered to lie on the table and be printed.
- Resolutions of the Legislature of the State of Texas, in relation to Kansas affairs. March 9, 1858. -- Ordered to lie on the table and be printed.
- Resolutions on the subject of modifying the tariff for the production of revenue, and of retrenching the expenditures of the government. February 7, 1843. Ordered to be printed.
- Resolutions passed at a meeting of the citizens of Northampton County Pennsylvania, in favor of protection to domestic industry. January 28, 1833. Laid on the table, and ordered to be printed.
- Rhode Island -- interference of the Executive in the affairs of. June 7, 1844. Read, and postponed till the first Monday in December next.
- Rhode Island -- protest. Protest of the minority of the members of the Legislature of the State of Rhode Island, against the protest and declaration of the majority of the same legislature. April 16, 1844. Read, and laid upon the table.
- Rhode Island. Memorial of the Democratic members of Rhode Island Legislature, protesting against the course pursued by the President during the late difficulties, and requesting the House of Representatives to make certain specified inquiries in relation thereto. February 19, 1844. Read, and referred to a select committee.
- Rhode Island. Protest of the Legislature of Rhode Island, against the right of the Congress of the United States, or of either House thereof, to decide or inquire into the question whether the constitution of the state, legally, peaceably, and freely adopted by the people thereof, in November, 1842, is or is not the lawful constitution of the state. April 16, 1844. Read, and laid upon the table.
- Richardson vs. Rainey, First Congressional District of South Carolina. May 18, 1878. -- Recommitted to the Committee on Elections and ordered to be printed.
- Right of a state to tax a branch of the Bank of the United States. Communicated to the Senate, February 1, 1821
- Right of states of sue the United States. July 3, 1930. -- Ordered to be printed.
- Right of states to sue the United States. February 28 (calendar day, March 9), 1934. -- Ordered to be printed.
- Right of states to sue the United States. March 22, 1928. -- Ordered to be printed.
- Right of states to sue the United States. May 10 (calendar day, May 13), 1926. -- Ordered to be printed.
- Roads and canals. Communicated to the House of Representatives, December 15, 1817
- Sale of certain lands in New York by the Senecas. Communicated to the Senate, February 26, 1827
- Seats of Messrs. Prentiss and Word. June 11, 1838.
- Seizure of forts, arsenals, revenue cutters, and other property of the United States. February 28, 1861. -- Ordered to be printed.
- Slavery in the District of Columbia. May 18, 1836. Ordered to be printed.
- Slavery in the Territory of New Mexico. (To accompany Bill H.R. No. 64.) May 10, 1860. -- Ordered to be printed.
- Slavery. Resolutions of the General Assembly of Missouri, on the subject of slavery in the territories, District of Columbia, and states. December 31, 1849. Laid upon the table, and ordered to be printed.
- Soldiers as voters in congressional elections. June 3, 1898. -- Referred to the House Calendar and ordered to be printed.
- South Carolina -- Free Trade Party -- York District. February 25, 1833. Read, and laid upon the table.
- South Carolina -- general convention. January 21, 1833. Read, and laid upon the table.
- South Carolina, Virginia, and New York controversy. March 17, 1842. Printed by order of the House of Representatives.
- South Carolina. February 14, 1842. Read, and laid upon the table.
- South Carolina. January 21, 1843. Submitted by Mr. Campbell, of South Carolina, and ordered to be printed.
- South Carolina. Memorial of citizens of Chesterfield, Marlborough, and Darlington, assembled at Cheraw, in South Carolina, against a further increase of duties on imported articles. February 4, 1828. Referred to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union.
- South Carolina. Memorial of the Charleston Chamber of Commerce, and of other Citizens of South Carolina, against an increase of duties on Woollens. December 11, 1827. -- Referred to the Committee on Manufactures. February 22, 1828. -- Ordered to be printed by House of Representatives.
- South Carolina. Memorial of the Legislature of the State of South Carolina, remonstrating against the passing of laws by Congress, increasing the duties upon importations, for the encouragement of domestic manufactures; against the exercise of the General Power to construct roads and canals, either with or without the consent of the states; and against the appropriation of moneys by Congress, for the Colonization Society, or in any manner promoting its objects, as being unauthorized by, and contrary to, the Constitution of the United States. January 14, 1828. Read, and laid upon the table.
- South Carolina. Memorial of the citizens of Laurens District, South Carolina, against any increase of the tariff, &c. January 22, 1828. Referred to the Committee on Commerce and Manufactures.
- South Carolina. Memorial of the inhabitants of Fairfield District, S. Carolina, praying a revision of the tariff, &c. December 14, 1827. Referred to the Committee on Manufactures.
- State of Tennessee -- public lands. (To accompany Bill H.R. No. 140.) January 27, 1846.
- State of the Union. Message from the President of the United States, on the State of the Union. January 16, 1833. Read, and referred to the Committee on the Judiciary.
- State rights and the Jeffersonian idea. Address delivered by Hon. William G. McAdoo at the convention of the Cooperative Club International, Des Moines, Iowa, May 25, 1926. Presented by Mr. Simmons. May 26 (calendar day, May 29), 1926. -- Ordered to be printed.
- Statement of Edwin C. Dinwiddie. Statement in support of the Hepburn-Dolliver Bill (H.R. 4072; S. 1390) by Edwin C. Dinwiddie, Legislative Superintendent American Anti-saloon League, 31 and 32 Bliss Building, Washington, D.C. April 27, 1904. -- Presented by Mr. Gallinger and ordered to be printed.
- Tariff -- Delaware. Memorial of farmers, merchants, mechanics, &c. of New Castle County, Delaware, against reducing duties on goods, &c. February 11, 1833. Read, and laid on the table.
- Tariff -- manufactures. May 23, 1832.
- Tariff -- memorial of citizens of Vermont. February 4, 1833. Referred to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union.
- Tariff. Memorial of inhabitants of the Borough of Easton, Penn., in favor of the tariff, and adverse to nullification. January 28, 1833. Read, and referred to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union.
- Tennessee -- vacant lands. January 24, 1832.
- Tennessee to issue grants, &c. (To accompany Bill H.R. No. 119.) December 22, 1837.
- Tennessee to issue grants, &c. (To accompany Bill H.R. No. 119.) December 22, 1837. January 8, 1839. -- Ordered to be reprinted.
- Texas. Resolutions of the Legislature of Louisiana, relative to the annexation of Texas to the United States. February 3, 1845. Read, and laid upon the table.
- Texas. Resolutions of the Legislature of Missouri, in favor of the reannexation of Texas. January 24, 1845. Read, and committed to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union.
- To amend the maternity act. March 17, 1926. -- Committed to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union and ordered to be printed.
- To make spirituous, malt, vinous, and intoxicating liquors of all kinds, in interstate commerce, etc. February 1, 1907. -- Referred to the House Calendar and ordered to be printed.
- To provide for the establishment of a national employment system and for cooperation with the states in the promotion of such system, and for other purposes. June 26, 1930. -- Committed to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union and ordered to be printed.
- To refund to North Carolina money paid by that state to the Cherokee Indians for certain reservations of land. Communicated to the House of Representatives, January 22, 1828
- Treaty between the United States and Mexico, the proceedings of the Senate thereon, and message of the President and documents communicated therewith; the messages, with correspondence between the Executive Department, General Scott and Mr. Trist, and other papers and proceedings of the Senate in relation thereto, from which the injunction of secresy has been removed.
- Tunnels under the Chicago River an obstruction to navigation, etc. February 11, 1903. -- Referred to the House Calendar and ordered to be printed.
- U.S. Supreme Court upsets tradition, by Dick Kirkpatrick, chief of the Cincinnati Enquirer's Washington Office. January 26, 1967. -- Ordered to be printed.
- Uniform militia. (To accompany Bill H.R. No. 778.) May 11, 1838.
- Union of the states. Preamble and joint resolutions of the Legislature of the State of New Jersey, in in [sic] relation to the union of the states. January 31, 1861. -- Ordered to be printed.
- United States and South Carolina. (To accompany Bill H.R. No. 730.) February 8, 1833.
- United States courts. February 26, 1885. -- Referred to the House Calendar and ordered to be printed.
- United States troops in Rhode Island, &c. Message from the President of the United States, in answer to a resolution of the House of Representatives relative to the employment of United States troops in Rhode Island, and transmitting documents in relation to the recent difficulties in that state. April 10, 1844. Read, and laid upon the table.
- Virginia military bounty lands. Communicated to the House of Representatives, July 31, 1789
- Voting rights. Communication from the President of the United States relative to voting rights. April 27, 1970. -- Referred to the Committee on the Judiciary and ordered to be printed.
- W.C. Reddall. January 7, 1859. -- Ordered to be printed.
- War of the Rebellion: A Compilation of the Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies. [Correspondence, orders, reports, and returns of the Confederate authorities, December 20, 1860 to June 30, 1862; Series 4, Vol. 1].
- White slave traffic. December 21, 1909. -- Referred to the House Calendar and ordered to be printed.
- Whitewood Flume Company. July 1, 1879. -- Recommitted to the Committee on Mines and Mining and ordered to be printed.
- Woman suffrage. May 20, 1919. -- Referred to the House Calendar and ordered to be printed.
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