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" If the member be called to order for words spoken, the exceptionable words shall immediately be taken down in writing, that the president may be better enabled to judge of the matter. "
Elements of the Law and Practice of Legislative Assemblies in the United ... - Page 112
by Luther Stearns Cushing - 1856 - 1063 pages
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Register of Debates in Congress: Comprising ..., Volume 1; Volume 4; Volume 47

United States. Congress - Law - 1828 - 770 pages
...order, lie shall sit down until the President shall have determined whether he is in order or not ; and every question of order shall be decided by the President, without debate ; but, if there be a doubt in his mind, he may call fur tk sense of the Senate. " 7th. If the member...
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Niles' National Register, Volume 30

1826 - 506 pages
...order, he shall sit down, until the president shall hare determined whether be is in order or not; and every question of order shall be decided by the president, without debate; but if there be a doubt in his mind he may call for the sense of the senate. "If the member be called...
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Manual of Parliamentary Practice

Parliamentary practice - 1826 - 220 pages
...order, he shall sit down until the president shall have determined whether he is in order or not; and every question of order shall be decided by the president without debate ; but if there be a doubt in his mind, he may call for the sense of the senate. 7. If the member be...
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The American Annual Register for the Years ..., Or, the ... Year ..., Volume 1

Joseph Blunt - History - 1830 - 806 pages
...declaring that when a senator was called to order, " by the president or a senator, he shall sit down ; and every question of order shall be decided by the president,...without debate, subject to appeal to the senate." This simple proposition excited a long and eloquent debate in the senate, in which the opposition generally...
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A Manual of Legislative Practice and Order of Business in Deliberative Bodies

Joel Barlow Sutherland - Parliamentary practice - 1830 - 404 pages
...6. When a member shall be called to order, by the President, or a Senator, he shall sit down ; and every question of order shall be decided by the President without debate, subject to an appeal to the Senate ; and the President may call for the sense of the Senate on any question of...
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The Political Grammar of the United States: Or, A Complete View of the ...

Edward Deering Mansfield - Constitutional law - 1834 - 284 pages
...? The then Vice-President, Mr. Calhoun, decided that he had not. In 1823, how-ever, the Senate made a rule, that " every question of order shall be decided...without debate, subject to appeal to the Senate." $ 65. 5th Clause. The Senate shall choose their other officers, and also a President pro tempore, in...
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The Political Grammar of the United States: Or, A Complete View of the ...

Edward Deering Mansfield - Constitutional law - 1834 - 284 pages
...? The then Vice-President, Mr. Calhoun, decided that he had not. In 1828, however, the Senate made a rule, that " every question of order shall be decided...without debate, subject to appeal to the Senate." § 65. 5th Clause. The Senate shall choose their other officers, and also a President pro tempore,...
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Annals of the Congress of the United States

United States. Congress - Law - 1834 - 708 pages
...order, he shall sit down until the President shall have determined whether he is in order or not; and every question of order shall be decided by the President, without debate; but, if there be a doubt in his mind, he may call for the sense of the Senate. XVII. If a member be...
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American Annual Register, Volume 3

Joseph Blunt - History - 1835 - 810 pages
...declaring that when a senator was called to order, " by the president or a senator, he shall sit down ; and every question of order shall be decided by the president,...without debate, subject to appeal to the senate." This simple proposition excited a long and eloquent debate in the senate, in which the opposition generally...
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The Political Grammar of the United States, Or, A Complete View of the ...

Edward Deering Mansfield - United States - 1836 - 304 pages
...Senate? The then Vice President, Mr. Calhoun, decided that he had not. In 1828, how-ever, the Senate made a rule, that " every question of order shall be decided...without debate, subject to appeal to the Senate." §65. 5th clause. The Senate shall choose their other officers, and also a President pro tempore, in...
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