| Orlando Bump - Constitutional law - 1878 - 474 pages
...adoption of measures exclusively beneficial to commerce itself, or tending to its advancement, but in the national system, as in all modern sovereignties, it...other purposes than the mere advancement of commerce is unquestionable. The capacity and power of managing and directing it for the advancement of great... | |
| Henry Adams - United States - 1890 - 530 pages
...line of division between the party of President Washington and that of President Jefferson : — " Further, the power to regulate commerce is not to...delicacy and importance ; but the national right or power to adapt regulations of commerce to other purposes than the mere advancement of commerce appears to... | |
| Henry Adams - United States - 1890 - 514 pages
...radical line of division between the party of President Washington and that of President Jefferson : — "Further, the power to regulate commerce is not to...delicacy and importance ; but the national right or power to adapt regulations of commerce to other purposes than the mere advancement of commerce appears to... | |
| United States. Congress. House. Committee on Labor - Child labor - 1914 - 102 pages
...recent embargo act : Further, the power to regulate commerce is not to be confined lo'dic nl«n»tion of measures exclusively beneficial to commerce itself,...for other purposes of general policy and interest. So, too, the greatest of all commentators on the Constitution, Justice Joseph Story (vol. 2, p. 1060,... | |
| United States - 1915 - 990 pages
...of United States v. William,6 in which he sustained the constitutionality of the recent embargo act: "Further, the power to regulate commerce is not to...other purposes of general policy and interest." The greatest of all commentators on the Constitution, Justice Joseph Story,7 wrote: "Foreign and domestic... | |
| National Child Labor Committee (U.S.) - Child labor - 1915 - 304 pages
...631, Judge Davis, in sustaining the constitutionality of the then recent embargo act, said directly: "Further, the power to regulate commerce is not to...for other purposes of general policy and interest." In an essay on the Commercial Power of Congress, Mr. David Walter Brown, of the New York Bar, thus... | |
| National Child Labor Committee (U.S.) - Child labor - 1915 - 296 pages
...621, Judge Davis, in sustaining the constitutionality of the then recent embargo act, said directly: "Further, the power to regulate commerce is not to...be considered as an instrument for other purposes neral policy and interest." "~ "~ — • — > • — "" In an essay on the Commercial Power of Congress,... | |
| United States. Congress. Senate. Com. on interstate commerce - 1916 - 328 pages
...621) Judge Davis, in sustaining the constitutionality of the then recent embargo act, said directly: "Further, the power to regulate commerce is not to...other purposes of general policy and interest." "The policy of restriction included measures of two kinds: (1) The prohibition of the importation of foreign... | |
| United States. Congress. House. Committee on Labor - Child labor - 1916 - 324 pages
...William (28 Fed. Cases, 614), in which he sustained the constitutionality of the recent embargo act: " Further, the power to regulate commerce is not to...for other purposes of general policy and Interest." So, too, the greatest of all commentators on the Constitution, Justice Joseph Story (vol. 2, p. 1060,... | |
| Electronic journals - 1916 - 770 pages
...community which made possible such legislation as the Child-Labor Act. As early as 1808 it was said : " The power to regulate commerce is not to be confined...for other purposes of general policy and interest. " * While this remark was made in a case involving foreign commerce, recent cases have demonstrated... | |
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