| United States - Law - 1918 - 1138 pages
...hundred representatives, nor more than one representative for every fifty thousand persons. Art. II. No law varying the compensation for the services*....representatives shall take effect, until an election of representative* shall have intervened." [341]a. — People v. Board of Educa- Rhode Island.— State... | |
| United States - Constitutional law - 1920 - 54 pages
...Representatives, nor more than one Representative for every fifty thousand persons. Article the second... No law, varying the compensation for the services...election of- Representatives shall have intervened. Article the third Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting... | |
| James Brown Scott - Constitutional law - 1920 - 638 pages
...Representatives, nor more than one Representative for every fifty thousand persons. Article the second. . . . No law, varying the compensation for the services...election of Representatives shall have intervened. Article the third. . . . Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting... | |
| United States - Constitutional amendments - 1924 - 936 pages
...hundred Representatives nor more than one Representative for every fifty thousand persons. ABT. II. No law varying the compensation for the services of...election of Representatives shall have intervened. Nature, Purpose, and Construction of Amendments The first ten amendments to the Constitution, commonly... | |
| North American review and miscellaneous journal - 1925 - 398 pages
...Article Two of the twelve proposed amendments proposed in the First Congress in 1789. It read as follows: No law varying the compensation for the services of...election of Representatives shall have intervened. John Vining, of Delaware, in reporting the resolution to the House, gave what today sounds like a somewhat... | |
| North American review and miscellaneous journal - 1925 - 406 pages
...Article Two of the twelve proposed amendments proposed in the First Congress in 1789. It read as follows: No law varying the compensation for the services of...election of Representatives shall have intervened. John Vining, of Delaware, in reporting the resolution to the House, gave what today sounds like a somewhat... | |
| Charles Burleigh Galbreath - Biography - 1925 - 844 pages
...the Federal Constitution which had been submitted by Congress on March 4, 1789, was one as follows: "No law varying the compensation for the services...election of representatives shall have intervened." This proposed amendment had never, of course, been submitted to the Legislature of Ohio, since Ohio... | |
| United States. Department of State - 1934 - 40 pages
...Representatives, nor more than one Representative for every fifty thousand persons. Article the second No law, varying the compensation for the services...election of Representatives shall have intervened. According to the records of the Department of State, the "first" proposal of 1789 was ratified by ten... | |
| James R. Acker, David C. Brody - Law - 2004 - 1342 pages
...three-fourths of the state legislatures. Now listed as the 27th Amendment to the Constitution, it provides: "No law, varying the compensation for the services...election of Representatives shall have intervened." The lone proposed amendment of 1789 that was not ratified by the states would have required that at... | |
| The New York Times - Reference - 2004 - 1112 pages
...should be entitled to all the rights and privileges of adults. Amendment XXVII [Adopted May 18. 1992] No law, varying the compensation for the services...election of Representatives shall have intervened. First proposed as an amendment in 1789 along with the first ten amendments but ratified by only six... | |
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