| Hezekiah Niles - United States - 1822 - 514 pages
...instructions, as have appeared expedient to us, yet it is not our meaning, that by these or by any you may think proper to give them, the deputies appointed...agreeing to any measures that shall be approved by a majority of the deputies in congress. We should be glad the deputies chosen by you could, by their... | |
| Hezekiah Niles - United States - 1822 - 526 pages
...be restrained from agreeing to any measures that shall be approved by a majority of the deputies in congress. We should be glad the deputies chosen by...opinions hereby communicated to you, to be as nearly .idltred to, as may be possible: but to avoid difti cutties, we desire that they may be instructed... | |
| Hezekiah Niles - United States - 1822 - 518 pages
...expedient to us, yet it is not our meaning, that by these or by any you may think proper to give tliem, the deputies appointed by you should be restrained...agreeing to any measures that shall be approved by a majority of tl.e deputies in congres.« We should be gUd the deputies chosen by you could, by their... | |
| Samuel Hazard - Pennsylvania - 1829 - 442 pages
...instructions, as have appeared expedient to us, yet it is not our meaning, that by these or by any you may think proper to give them, the Deputies appointed...procure our opinions hereby communicated to you to be as neirly adhered to, as may be possible: But to avoid difficulties, we desire that they may be instructed... | |
| Hezekiah Niles - United States - 1876 - 536 pages
...instructions, as have appeared expedient to us, yet it is not our meaning, that by these or by any you may think proper to give them, the deputies appointed by you should be restrained from agreeing to any measure that shall be approved by a majority of the deputies in congress. We should be glad the deputies... | |
| Arthur Meier Schlesinger - History - 1917 - 658 pages
...such instructions as have appeared expedient to us, yet it is not our meaning that, by these or by any you may think proper to give them, the Deputies appointed...measures that shall be approved by the Congress." It was this last clause which, no doubt, reconciled the radicals in the convention to a pseudo-endorsement... | |
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