﻿50 
  HUNTING 
  LICENSES. 
  

  

  citizenship 
  and 
  doraicil 
  united; 
  that 
  is 
  to 
  say, 
  by 
  virtue 
  of 
  a 
  citizenship 
  confined 
  to 
  

   that 
  particular 
  locality. 
  

  

  The 
  planting 
  of 
  oysters 
  in 
  the 
  soil 
  covered 
  by 
  water 
  owned 
  in 
  common 
  by 
  the 
  

   People 
  of 
  the 
  State 
  is 
  not 
  different 
  in 
  principle 
  from 
  that 
  of 
  planting 
  corn 
  upon 
  dry 
  

   land 
  held 
  in 
  the 
  same 
  way. 
  Both 
  are 
  for 
  the 
  purposes 
  of 
  cultivation 
  and 
  profit; 
  and 
  

   if 
  the 
  State, 
  in 
  the 
  regulation 
  of 
  its 
  public 
  domain, 
  can 
  grant 
  to 
  its 
  own 
  citizens 
  the 
  

   exclusive 
  use 
  of 
  dry 
  lands, 
  we 
  see 
  no 
  reason 
  why 
  it 
  may 
  not 
  do 
  the 
  same 
  thing 
  in 
  

   respect 
  to 
  such 
  as 
  are 
  covered 
  by 
  water. 
  And 
  as 
  all 
  concede 
  that 
  a 
  State 
  may 
  grant 
  

   to 
  one 
  of 
  its 
  citizens 
  the 
  exclusive 
  use 
  of 
  a 
  part 
  of 
  the 
  common 
  property, 
  the 
  conclu- 
  

   sion 
  would 
  seem 
  to 
  follow, 
  that 
  it 
  might 
  by 
  appropriate 
  legislation 
  confine 
  the 
  use 
  

   of 
  the 
  whole 
  to 
  its 
  own 
  People 
  alone. 
  

  

  