Search for: voting

1581 Ecclesiastical Empire, p. 865.9 (Alonzo Trevier Jones)

This was also rejected, by a vote of forty-one to twenty-five; not voting, twenty-two.

1582 Ecclesiastical Empire, p. 865.12 (Alonzo Trevier Jones)

This, too, was rejected, by a vote of forty-one to twenty-three; not voting, twenty-four.

1583 Ecclesiastical Empire, p. 865.13 (Alonzo Trevier Jones)

… a vote of forty-three to twenty-six; not voting, nineteen.

1584 Ecclesiastical Empire, p. 866.3 (Alonzo Trevier Jones)

But this was rejected by a vote of thirty-nine to twenty-three; not voting, twenty-six.

1585 Ecclesiastical Empire, p. 867.1 (Alonzo Trevier Jones)

… a vote of forty-three to twenty-six; not voting, nineteen. [Page 867] See the whole account in Congressional Record dated Wednesday Feb. 27, 1901. And for the real …

1586 The Edmunds Resolution, p. 5.4 (Alonzo Trevier Jones)

… , by vote of 180 yeas to 7 nays, with 98 not voting. The resolution then went to the Senate, and, August 7, was referred to the Senate Committee on the Judiciary, with …

1587 The Edmunds Resolution, p. 6.3 (Alonzo Trevier Jones)

… a vote of 27 to 15. August 14 the substitute was brought to vote upon its adoption. The vote stood 28 yeas to 16 nays. But as it requires a majority of two-thirds …

1588 The Edmunds Resolution, p. 12.8 (Alonzo Trevier Jones)

… this vote in Congress, the necessary two-thirds, as I believe, would have been obtained, and the Edmunds amendment might now have been a part of the law of the …

1589 The Edmunds Resolution, p. 15.1 (Alonzo Trevier Jones)

… two votes of passing in the Senate. Mr. Blaine’s proposed amendment upon the same topic had the overwhelming support of the House. And now Senator Blair is …

1590 The Edmunds Resolution, p. 16.2 (Alonzo Trevier Jones)

… three votes short of the required two-thirds majority.

1592 General Conference Daily Bulletin, vol. 5 1893, page 44 paragraph 14

… to vote. To his and others surprise the ‘Ayes’ and ‘Noes’ seemed equal, with the volume of tone apparently in favor of the latter. The chairman then said, that a rising …

1593 General Conference Daily Bulletin, vol. 5 1893, page 45 paragraph 10

… who voted against their resolutions as ‘brass interlopers,’ and for having ‘massed their forces to defeat the object of this mass-meeting.’ That opened the way …

1594 General Conference Daily Bulletin, vol. 5 1893, page 45 paragraph 12

… to vote? And to remain silent when directly called upon, both by the gentleman who offered the resolutions and by the chairman, to explain our vote? In view of …

1596 General Conference Daily Bulletin, vol. 5 1893, page 46 paragraph 6

… as voting for the resolutions will have been counted three, four, or five times, and it is almost on the principle of voting early and often—which is so much opposed …

1597 General Conference Daily Bulletin, vol. 5 1893, page 46 paragraph 7

… were voting, that tell what these petitions mean. I deem our legislators thoroughly competent, intellectually and morally, to decide this question without …

1598 General Conference Daily Bulletin, vol. 5 1893, page 46 paragraph 8

… have voted again and again. And when you come to figure out the vast aggregate it is exceedingly delusive, and if the interests of the civil Sabbath—

1599 General Conference Daily Bulletin, vol. 5 1893, page 51 paragraph 10

… a vote of thanks to the Lord for preserving the American Sabbath. They knew that when the constitutional argument was shut out, they had all they wanted.

1600 General Conference Daily Bulletin, vol. 5 1893, page 52 paragraph 6

… their votes to be affected by failure to get what they want. While on the other hand the Church people who are for Sunday closing will, if their wishes are thwarted …