| 1817 - 436 pages
...detain any vessel manifestly built for warlike purposes anil about to depart from the United States, of which the cargo shall principally consist of arms and munitions of war, when the number of men shipped on board, or other circumstances, shall render it probable that such... | |
| Edward Ingersoll - Law - 1821 - 882 pages
...detain any vessel manifestly built for warlike purposes, and about to depart from the United States, of which the cargo shall principally consist of arms and munitions of war, when the number of men shipped on board, or other circumstances, shall render it probable that such... | |
| William Cobbett - Great Britain - 1823 - 430 pages
...any vessel ' manifestly built for warlike pur' poses, and about to depart from ' the United States, of which the ' cargo shall principally consist of ' arms and munitions of war, when ' the number of men shipped on ' board, or other circumstances, shall ' render it probable that... | |
| Thomas Francis Gordon - Commercial law - 1837 - 886 pages
...detain any vessel manifestly built for warlike purposes, and about to depart from the United States, of which the cargo shall principally consist of arms and munitions of war, when the number of men shipped on board, or other circumstances, shall render it probable that such... | |
| United States - 1848
...to detain any vessel manifestly built for warlike purposes, and about to depart the United States, of which the cargo shall principally consist of arms and munitions of war, when the number of men shipped on board, or other circumstances, shall render it probable that such... | |
| William Hickey - 1851 - 588 pages
...to detain any vessel manifestly built for warlike purposes, and about to depart the United States, of which the cargo shall principally consist of arms and munitions of war, when the number of men shipped on board, or other circumstances, shall render it probable that such... | |
| William Hickey - Constitutional history - 1851 - 580 pages
...to detain any vessel manifestly built for warlike purposes, and about to depart the United States, of which the cargo shall principally consist of arms and munitions of war, when the number of men shipped on board, or other circumstances, shall render it probable that such... | |
| United States. Congress - United States - 1854 - 724 pages
...hereby, respectively authorized and required to detain лау vessel bound from the United State«, of which the cargo shall principally consist of arms and munitions of war, when the number of men shipped on board, or other circumstances, shall render it probable there is... | |
| William Hickey - Constitutional history - 1854 - 588 pages
...to detain any vessel manifestly built for warlike purposes, arid about to depart the United States, of which the cargo shall principally consist of arms and munitions of war, when the number of men shipped on board, or other circumstances, shall render it probable that such... | |
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