
Neither the Government nor the citizens in whose behalf the convention has been concluded have any further claims upon the island of Aves.
On the record
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Neither the Government nor the citizens in whose behalf the convention has been concluded have any further claims upon the island of Aves.

I therefore recommend the reconsideration of the subject.

However strong may be my desire to enter into such an agreement, I am convinced that I do not possess the power.

I confess I hail this movement on the part of Virginia with great satisfaction.

I am one of those who will never despair of the Republic.

It is my duty at all times to defend and protect the public property within the seceding States so far as this may be practicable.

I return with my objections to the House, in which it originated.

It will be for Congress to consider whether the precedent established by this bill will not in effect annul all restrictions contained in the mail contracts enabling the Postmaster-General to reduce or curtail the postal service according…

I have no other solicitude upon the subject.

The increase of the sum appropriated in the present bill over that in the bill of the last session, being within a fraction of $20,000, has induced me to examine the question with some attention.

In compliance with the resolution of the Senate of the 19th instant, requesting a copy of correspondence between the Department of State and ministers of foreign powers at Washington in regard to foreign vessels in Charleston, I transmit a…

To the House of Representatives: I herewith transmit to the House of Representatives a communication from the Secretary of the Navy, with accompanying reports, of the persons who were sent to the Isthmus of Chiriqui to make the…

The power to carry on the business of the Government by means of a provisional appointment when a vacancy occurs is expressly given by the act of February 13, 1795.

It is manifest that if the power which this law gives had been withheld the public interest would frequently suffer very serious detriment.

The practice of making such appointments, whether in a vacation or during the session of Congress, has been constantly followed during every Administration from the earliest period of the Government, and its perfect lawfulness has never to…

It must be allowed that these precedents, so numerous and so long continued, are entitled to great respect, since we can scarcely suppose that the wise and eminent men by whom they were made could have been mistaken on a point which was…

It was wise to make a provision which would enable the President to avoid a total suspension of business in the interval, and equally wise so to limit the Executive discretion as to prevent any serious abuse of it.

The lawfulness of the practice rests upon the exigencies of the public service; which require that the movements of the Government shall not be arrested by an accidental vacancy in one of the Departments; upon an act of Congress expressly…