Vincennes Gazette, Volume 3, Number 48, Vincennes, Knox County, 3 May 1834 — Page 2
VINCENNES.
SATIIKHI V, MAY 3, 1K31. On Satin day night last, the thermometer in thi place Kf..-ofl at 26, (as cold a? a' any time in Decfmlwr last,) and ice was formed half an inch in thickness. The fruit and rnat, of ivhich there were indications of abundance, are all destroyed; and many or' the'fcrest trees, Puch as Ihe white oak, &o sre much injured. Most of (he .garden vegetables are cut off. We do not remember ever to have known the coin so infene in flii month here, exceptimr - 'he I 1th April, 1826, when water w as frozen in the open air nearly an inch in thickness. We iriv in to-days paper, on the first pasre, an insertion of a highly interesting letter from our worthy tith! esteemed Representative the Hon John Kwinjr, !o n gentleman in this place. L'ut fr unavoidable ircBrwsta rices it wouldl have apjn-areil last week. It will prove, we louht not, to our renders -s it lias to us, a rich treat. It displays the accustomed ability of our Representative and a spirit of dcvotedne?s to the interest of Ins constituents and to our com-1 rnon cointry pervades .the w hole NEW SCENE IN THE DRAMA. Jn the National hdelligenrer of the 1 St h inst. we find the fallowing: "The moment the Senate wag called to . ii.o Pr.v.io orr. tan; nf; IMiJCTl V C - l C I ' l Y n i. iiu t.ii mi j I the lresnlent of the U S. presented a !Teiqnfe. nro'cstinir ar linst the devolu tions of tlio Si nate. tou- hing the removal;
of the pubtic Depoite. The Meosagp "c 8hin " ;",r '""om. I congratulate teemed to have been expected, atleastj,hp Senate, the counlrv, the nty of New during the mo nin-r ; for there was gather jVork.the fri-nd- of liberty every ivhere. ed an unusual earlv andienre of hothj W'1S a irreat victory. It nust t e so sexes. The Stinle. however, was not j reeaided in evej aspect From a ma full Mr U'tbner. Mr Chambtrs. and j"r" of more than m thouand. which Mr. Reff. were -HU absent; Mr Forsyth. ' domir,Hni party boated a tew month-
Mr. Preston, atid Mr. Prter, were casually abent ami Mr Clay , had accmpa.! rued his Lady, who is in ill health, on her! 'way to a watering place io Virginia j nhcre she is to ta v somi weeks A- soon i as the lat word of the .Vlesiue, at jr ! reading was concluded, fell from the lips f .i t?.. C . i m 9 . . oi me oe ifiiiiv m me aenaie, ,wr rot'i
kxter aiMresred t fie Chair In indignant j l'ancps, ordinary and cx'ia, tro-n the Lvery incumbant has a clear right to exlerms he denounced the Mesage. whicb i Public chests, the enormous -um annually, ercise the elective franchise. I would be
he declared could not be considered an I "f near one million of dollar- M ,r.-halle.i Executive Mes-i"P, as not pertaining to',,r''led, disciplined, r.-moi m!f"t Tle
any of the puMic occasions on "Inch the President ot the United Stales is author ized by the constitution to address himelf' fothe Seiate, IJe considered it an unofficial v iper merely signed by Anilre-jc Jackson In any view, considering it ! document not respectful to the Senate, he! moved that it be nt received. On the mo-1 tion. a debate ensued. hich continued until 5 o'clock, in which the motion was, fuppotted by Mr. Poiudexlen. Mr Spragve, J)r Frelinghuysen. and Mr Southard. and oppOr-ed by Mr Denton and Mr. King "f Alabama. Iut before taking anv question, oa ai'dioo of Mr Leigh the Senate adjourned And s. ihe matter rests. In the Gtobe ol thp I8'h we find the
docair.enlwhirliisrcferredtointheahove;,",,w ,,,,4, . ni ;, have no tire commerce or business; ano rara-r.Mh. lu uue time weshalllav I ,. . v,iM .vo fl aer,,r,tv nf
t)etie the public. 1 is unprece It is unprecedented both in toun and substance; and w ' tv e trutt that the Senate, m-tead of receiving it
... , i i -ii Ma neven, and ot Sampson it an ot you and entering it upon their records, will,' ' -.
tiirow it back with scorn into the face of itg author. The President, if he pleases, mav make his appeals to the people, hut he is not authorized by the Constitution to transmit to the Senate such a Message or "Protest'' as that before us, which does not even profess in give information as fo the State of the Union or to recommend the adoption of any public mea-ures, but sirn ply denounce and villities a co-ordinate branch of Government for the coursp which it has thought proper In pursue. It his no more right to a place upon the Senatorial recordsthau the late insane and miserable ravings of the president in his interviews with the people cotnmit'ees. Our comments, to day, upon the 4 Pro test oi the Lxecutive must ot necessity be brief. The resolution of the Senate. n whidi be is principally exasperated, is the following: ''Resolved, That the president, in the late Executive proceedingin relation to the public revenue, has as-j enmed authority and power not conferred! bv the constitution and laws but in dern galion of both 11 He claims th it the ir.erube.T6nf the Senate, in thus pronouncing an opinion that his conduct is unconstitutional, ure Ihemselves guiltv d a vi olation of that instrument. He holds that they have no right to express any filch belief. He denies lAet'r right to charge him with an infraction of the fun damfutal law, but at the same moment he charges them with a most palpable and monstrous i-ufi action of it. At different periods in Ins Veto messages kwI other .documents, he has spoken not only of the ptesent and every pa! Congress but of af his predecessors in the Chief Magistracy ! gtlllfV ft breaking tlse constiiutinn He fins ar-'Od every Cor.gres" and every President of exercising "power not conferred by the cnffctilution and laws but in ilerorriiuii of both ' He has hatiitually represented the whole ,'cislati' n of the country from first to last a a continued seiiesof usurpations and t'iicr."'"ich meats 11 w piepr.sierotis that one who Ji s t htlbern burling his charges for years an.i S f-till huiting ttif fn in all directions, shouh eem bon ified at w hat he affects to consid rrthelawlesH and outr igeOUi conduct ol the Senate in uttering the belief that hi own acts are uncoubtiiuiional. liuw pre-
posterous thai one, whose constant pas-Jed
1 1 tntx it ha Iippd and still is to make a ' particular charge against all the function aries of Government past and present, should persuade himself that the very foundations of the Republic are sundered or about to be. sundered because the game charge is preferred against him. To morrow we shall endeavor to do his protest some sort of justice Louisville Journal. R F.MARKS OF MR. C LAY. The Kentucky Senator, on the 1 4 h inst. mvte a noble speech on presenting certain memorials from various parts ol New York, demanding from the Govern ment an abandonment of its experiment upon the happiness of the country The orator bad just heard of the glorious re Milt of the election in New Yoik city, and his spirit glowed, and brightened , and fx panded at the intelligence The great
t i. congratulations to Mr. that was cruel. rpi o , .1 i ne senators as well as the audience were amused beyond mea , 'Ml C I tllf IMirUUK MHIdllUIJ U1 Hie V 1 Ce ' pre?,dent and his evident writhinis nd'.,a j . . , - f i
triumpn in me commercial emporium im- gress, which ought to Le the Hi st to yield ed by the multitude with hisses aud defiparted fiesh boldness and energy to his.it, the Senate alone can send forth no act unce, uttering the menacing and ominous thoughts and gave an added loftiness tojof legislation. Unaided , it can do no pos-cry, "To your tents, O hrael his ever lofty tone. He even offered his'j;jve good : but it has rust ..rpv.mi,. We should like to )ftar Ihe burst of in
' p- 1 MC "'",'3": ""Pjcormpfion, a manl v. resolute, and uncomnever knew congratulations ollf red with, promising' resistance; let u adopt two
-.um , .c. r..c.. nun ire Ki;;riiiii irorn nhtrli we will never deviate
on the part of the per-ui co,.rVulated "i Altllrtlinh irP InVP litllp rnnm tusi.iro mol
i,, )1Hte io preserve untarnishen cannot Withhold tlie foHoivmcr temutha nfi.wl . J .i... r-
i " ; - "1 w I l i la ..i.. v. a aiugie way uom . .ii reaoers: Louisville Jour. " J hope you will receive the - tiou with the same heartfelt coi diality . Witll which I tender it. Upon the SUP nf the Lite election ltl the rit V of! l'rk. 1 hpe it wil exrifea patrio f'tro. ., it retain any it is a meagre and Pp"rius majority of less than two hundred n' the Whigs contended with such odd -'g ifi-t them A triple allianre of Slate placemen, Corporation placemen, and ! Eederale pliremen, amou'ituig t about ! thirty-five hundred, and deriving, in the ; form of tal i ri'us compen-i ttions, and al ; struggle was tremendous, but what can withstand the irresistible poier ol the vo,ar'e; ot truth, libery ai.d thir countr ' was an i.-nmoi tal triumph a r i-: '""P'1 ot ,,,p Constitution and the Laws over usurpation here, an I over dubs and -dudgeons and violence there ; Go on, n-jble ciu ! Go.n pa'notic whigs! lollow up n our glorious commence ment; persevere, and panss not until yon have regenerated and disenthralled your splendid city, and placed it at the, head ni Auiei ican cities devoted to civil libeily, as it now stanos pre eminently the' first as the commercial emporium of our cummin country'. Merchant", median ics, tiaders, laborers, never cease to re i-..ii. i t . t..,.. i ... i . "' ... ' V. ' personal iineriv, piopei i , "t , ,rM . , ... 4t . . naeneeu "fin v rtim miu. v .1 im . support of a cau-e dangerous to a American liberty, hasten to review ami cor red your course! Do not forget t ha y ou abandoned the grem field of your native island to escane h it ou believed the tvranny of a Briti-h King! D not I adjure,' you, lend y ourselves, in this land d your asylum this last retreat of the fi eedorn of man, to the establishment here, for you,1 and for us all, of that despotism w hich you had proudly hoped had been left be hind you, in Europe, forever ! There is
m I the wings. Anil thev have assumed for ..-.--. es, ano oe-mweu on men opl. i l. i . . 1. " . I IH,,,P,"S' H denomination, which accor ling io all the analogy ot bi-tory, is strict ly couect. It deserves to be extended throughout the whole country What "as1 iheoiigm among our British ancestors, of those appellations? y',e toriat were the su ppor lers of Executive poyver, of royal prerogative, nf the maxim that the Kirn could do no wrong, of the detestable doc triors of the passive obedience and nonresistance. The Wings were the champions nf liberty, the friends of the people, and the defenders of the poyver of their representatives in the House of Commons. During our Revolutionary war, the tones took sides yith Executive poyver and prerogative, and with the King, against lit.erty and independence. And the Whis Hue to their pi maples contended against Royal Executive power and for freedom aud independence. And yvhat is the present but the same contest in another form? The paitisaus of the present Executive sustain ins poyver in the most boundless extent. I hey claim foi - him all executive authority. 1 hey make his sole yvill the governing i P Wf I - Every officer concerned n, the adnu'dftraiion, from the highest to the Imvest. i o conform to their mandates. Eveo the pullic treasury, hitherto regard-
much I would tain believe, in the consli j ous quai tei s, of the extreme probability ' ed ? By Blair, Kendall, k. Co. by men tutional forms of government. But at last j nf ,J() piesident's actually proroguing w-io supported Mr. Clay aiid Mr. Adorns it is its parental and beneficent operation X'on -less. When we spoke of the check, against Gen. Jackson vho would have that must fix its chaiacter A goyern j .,uu j,ur, H cnuise, in the refusal of Con-'continued their support if a few hundred ment may in form be tree, in practice ty-jjjrps$ to pas the appropriation bills, we dollars per annum more than their servient al; as it may in form be despotic . forgot io add, that this check was, itUlf, res "-e thought worth had been given and m practice lit eral and free jon. eflpCtUal, where the Executive had,to them by men who taken to Mr. Clay It was a brilliant and signal triumph d ,,me rt..rard for the laws that fence the hosom yvhen naked and destitute, and who.
as sacred, aod beyond his reach, is
placed by them under his entire direction and control. The Whigs of the present day are opposing Executive encroach went, and a most alarming extention of Executive power and prerogative They are ferretting out the abuses and corrup tion of an Administration, under a chief magistrate who is endeavoring to conren trate in hi? own person the whole powers of Government They are contending! ior uie rights ol the people, lor civil I ireity, for free institutions, for the supre macy of the Constitution, and the laws. , The contest is an arduous one: but. al-
'hough the struggle may be yet awhile Does the reader remember the 6cene in prolonged, by the blessing of God and the House of Commons, when the tyrant hf spirit of our ancestors, the issue can- Charles Stuart, whose head aftei wards not he doubtful. deservedly rolled in the dust, went thither The Senate stands in the bieach, to de- to arrest in person, the five members, of fend the Constitution, and to releave the glorious memory? The tyrant wassalutdUtressesof the people. But without thejed by the cry of Privilege! and retreat concurrence of another branch of f!nn-1 inrr in confusion and disgrace, yvas tnirsu
- . .. er ft mav avert and arroat Ptil if it j . . . . cannot rebuke usurpation. Senators, let n remain l
j " - 'jr Mil VVIiP(llJUUl it II II IIH?',,; UVIJUIb VWUIIIL'I If J'W'I lltLCIUS
C Oil n t r 1 in thi m.t mt - : ,! I . n ' i ' . rin.nirti.iillieilll! ailil 0 ail in deliberating upon all nominations In 1. : . . I . . " . "u uipsuf i-ticu me iMirnv ot UonPTPis iet us negative the nomination of everv member for any office, high or low , for- - -.- T i i"7' - " oi uo'Tieotic, until the authority or the' 'ngratula-.Constitution and law. is fullv restored I kr,ow not there is anv member of either1 '.-illnnco pmhU .T to... . ..!., ..,) I.. I IrOS!ierl nt ' inlvnnmpnl nrnrnmnlin... I would he the last to make such an insinu-; aliori; but suspicion is abroad, and it is best, in these times of trouble and revolution, to ilefend the integrity of the body against all possible imputations. Forone, whatever others mav do, I here deliherattly avow my settled determination, whil9 I retain a seat in this Chamber, to art in conformity to that rule. And in the next place, let us approve of the original nomination of no notorious brawling partisan and electioneerer : hut. especially , of the re-appointment of no officer presented to us. who "hall have prostituted the influence of his office to partisan and electioneering pnrpngee the last to controvert or denv it. Hut he has no right to employ the influence of his office, to exercise an agencv which he holds in trust for the people, to promote his ' wn selli-h or party purposes Senators who have a highly respectable and arduous position : hut the people are with us, and the path of duty lies clearly marked before us. Let us be firm, persever.ng and unmoved. Let us perform our Juty in manner worthy of our ancestors worthy of American Senators worthy of the dignity of the Sovereign States that we reprejr ot above all. worthy of the name d American freemen! Let n "pledge .ur lives, our fortune, and our sacred honor," to rescue our beloved country frrn all impending dangers. And, amidst the general gloom and darki. ;t. . it w ...evau. iei us continue to pre sent one unextinguished light. teadilv t,nm,n. . ,l,p nf .... L. . f...;. " f. . . ..77 V r' 4"c v uhbu'uiiuii, ami ui i vii uueri y . i . . . f rom the Richmond (I a) 11 his. , a IXtVV lltSUiil!1!. ye nHVe heard from an intelligent eoUrce , lately, that the President contem ,Hted attending the Senate in person,
wiPI, flrnir, ... Kvprnhvp hnsineas. as'd Gen. Jackson when he was out of
., i, oimna-h tho ..tniarn ; now! t0 u, je t,aa a right to do, under the Con r i r ii t ioi We find in the Columbia Teles r0j,Pi u,at the report has reached that pHI,er in a shape to have received credit j qhP Telescope sa vs "Our latest intelligence from Washing ton gives us oisiin- t intimations from van it i.,.u L ni t-tio flirt till r in -" kSOU lias Hie purse in this will he appropri - . . , . , ation bill enoilirll
A new piece of insolence has also got; theses that Gen. Jackson employs to murnto ,i- head. In the outset of General der the reputation of all who refuse to aid Washington's presidency, he adopted, lor' him in accomplishing his daring usurpa ii " i . .i . itinii llin who are revelhn? on the
uuie wnne, a couise, mat ine niti'ioe niencesaud improprieties of the practice! T 1 . isoonmade him abandon-that of taking! his seat, m the Senate (as the Constitu ton alloiveil him to do) yvhenever that hotly yvent into Executive business. Our autocrat, it is understood, says, that, folloyving the example of glorious man, in who-e steps he has so faithfully trod, he will revive the usage, and preside in the Senate, over all executive transactions. Before the actual terrors nf his counten ance, he thinks that the treasonous contumacy of the Senate will not dare to stand Ofcourse, when he adopts this plan, lie w ill go to the Capitol in State, attend ed by his high officers, and surrounded with a guaid. The Kicking out of the Senators yvill then folloyv, m ihe most natural way possible; and will be no doubt, done, in the twinkling of an eye." Ja kson s design in uch a step, if he really meditates it, is sufficiently obvious His presence would certainly neither en lighten the wisdom ol the Senate, nor x pedite business. He expects to intimi date, by Ihe terrors of his counlenauce, the Ireedom ol censorious debate aud the
liberty of decision upon Executive nominations. We wish most devoutly, he may fulfil the intention. Truth from the lips of freemen, could not fail to he salutary to him. accustomed to hear nothing but the incense of flatterers, and the honied accents of parasites, suppliants and slaves We predict that the Kitchen will veto the move.
We should like to be present when the Hero first takes his seat, to witness the -illasbing eye, and the lip curling in proud and lugh disdain, of those master spirits of the age. Clay, Calhoun, Webster, Leigh whose deliberations he came to overawe! D C7. . 'riip - nsirit and thundering defiance, which o o -1 the presence of our would-be master in a . 1 1 .J n nno "rrn Kiir, .ii:. ,r n " r liu tuilliui llic urunci illl'lll"! Ol tt II American Senate, would extort from the men to whom this people look for the vindication ot their rights. s did thev ol England to their illustrious prototypes in . i ii r r-i. i . . ai nouse oi commons ijiioii , rym, i ii i r . i una iiamiKien L.ti mm so. " From the U. S Telegraph. I he uinbe, in pursuit ot its avocation charges the venearable patriot Mane ven) with beiny bribed, for darino to eximo llio iL.nrrc r.vi, j or,, I .InirlnD HOW advanced and ciKtaii.cH l,v fnrl Jackson and the Kitchen Cabinet. This has invariably been the cry which that prostituted vehicle of calumny has raised against all the distinguished gentlemen who haved refused to aid the President in his war on the Constitution, the laws, and the libeities of his country. No man's character, however elevated, however pure, can shield him from 'he vituperative slander of the pensioned libellers who minister thiough the Globe to the depraved appetite of the sanguinary and ruthieps despot If any man could escape the milevolence of the magdalpns who are now w ielding the energies of this country, and spreading desnlution through out the land, we would have supposed that roan should have been Dr Mackneven. lis whole life, from his boyhood, has been devoted to the great cause of civil and religious liberty While the passages of Irish history record the illustrious deeds of her patriotic and eloquent sons, the n line of Macneven will stand among the most gifted of her eminent and devoted champions While the history of Catholic emancipation is remembered, Macneven will be revered for his liberality, eloquence, and generous sympathy towards his native country. Aud when some fu lure Gibbon shall record the events which led to the decline and fall of constitutional liberty in this country, the name of Macneven, wsll be found among those whose eloquence was raided to arrest the desolating march of a corrupt, bold, and sanguinary despot. Instead of being his -bield and armour, the lofty virtues of Dr. Macneveu, his long career of distinguisn ed usefulness,!)! unceo.sing.ind distinguished, efforts in the cause of constitution il liberty, both in his native and adopted country, now serve only to render him a more striking mark for the poisoned ar row s of official calumny and detraction With Dtiane, Ingham, and all the disin terested and devoted friends who sustain power, and before the silver veil yvas drawn aside and his deformity exposed, this eminent patriot must be hunted down; a,-d the charge of being bribed , of being disappointed in pursuit of office, has been boldly ad vanced to ruin his character and , break ,lie lorce ot his ofowns. Hut by iwllm hal'e ,nes:o gentleman been assail wneu wmwieu mo. hit, I.IH.OI ,heir poisoned fangs and slung their benefactoi ! It is these men, and sudi men as IV hen warmed into lite, turned round r - 1 I I J 1 nnn.,kAd ttffllA puuiic piuuuer, wnu a.eCu..u ..j, u.G very despotism which musts ine ptosenty ol the country, and upsets all ine constitutional barriers which stand betiveen General Jackson and absolute power, cry out bribery yvhen their usurpation is exposed and resisted It is certainly high time that every man yvho desires to perpetuate or even to prolong the existence of our institutions, should rouse them selves, and correct the evils which threat en the country. Post Office Reform g 1,5 1 6.531 04. The above sum. (more than a million and a half of dollars) is what has been paid by Post Master General Barry, the past year, over and above yvhat yvas required by contracts tcr carry ing the mails In other yvords the extra-allowances dur ing the past year amount to this sum. h many cases, the earners have received from 20 to 50.000 dollars extra, and in one case, yvhere the annual alloyvance only amounted to 25.000, the extra allowance yvas 1 12,O0u! We cannot publish the detailed account. We only mention the fact.
A history of these extra allowances La been called for by Congress, and it has officially been gireo, and bhow9 clearly where much of the public treasure has gone. Old Virginia has shared largely iQ this business, having received 315,000. while New York has had but 8.000! The peculiar distribution of this extra allowance money, shows a desire to pur
chase public feeling. Where Ihe parly stood fair, but little has been given. Where opinion was doubtful, much has been bestowed. All this may have been the result of accident; but truly it has the appearance of something else of a less honorable nature. At any rate, the extra allowances are enormous, and call for investigation! Fifteen hundred thousand dollars is a tiemendous heavy sum for One man to give away in one short year; pap ticularly so, since he mud have known that he was bankrupting the department over which he was the sworn guardian. hepub and banner. Mr Amos Lane, the Representative in Congress Jioro the district above this, in this state, has been most unmercifully flogged by Mr Chilton of Keniii' ky lie made the hair fly at every lick. Poor Mr. Lane must have felt sore, bui he contents himself with the gloriou- reflection that he would not ''descend to notice small things." The lash was upon his character not his person Hid. Gov Noble ha- made about C8 appointments since his elevation to theGubbernatorial chair Of these, more that one-half, or Up wa rds of Forty have been given to Jaekson-rnen and yet it is attempted on the part of a few demagogues, to make the Ppople believe that Gov. Noble is governed by party ! Comment is unnecessary . - HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES. Till: IMTHMC TUKASUKi:. Mr Wise, of Virginia, now asked leave to offer the folloyv ing resolutions: Resolved, That the ru'tody and contiol of the Moneys of the United States. Resolved. That no change of the Constitution of the United States is necessary to authorise the Congress of the United States to entrust the custody of the public money, not appropriated by law. when ereror hoyvsoever obtained to other agen cv than that of the Executive department, and that the custody of the public money must not bk. necessarily under the Constitution, entrusted to the Executive department. Resolved, That Congress can tke out of the hands of the Execu'ive Depart ment the custody of the public property or money, yvithout an assumption of Executive poyver. or a subversion of the first principles of thp Constitution, by the repeal and enactment of such laws as may he necessary to that end. Objection being made, Mr Wise moved fo suspend the rules of the House, and asked the yea? and nays; whereupon, Mr. Love moved a call of the House; which was agreed to Thp names of the mpmbprs being called over, it appeared that 140 members yvere prespnf. Thp absentees were then called over, yvhen it appeared that 1C3 members had ancvpred to their names The doors of the House yvere then closed, and the names of absentees being again called, excusps were offerpd by their colleagups or friends Most yvere excused; in a few cases, thp Housp refused to admit the excuses offered as sufficient; and for some, no excuses yvere given Repeated attempts yvere made to suspend the call; but they yvere uniformly negatived. At length, on motion, those members who were waiting at the doors, yvere admitted to enter There yvere now 171 members present The Sergeant atarms yvas ordered to notify those who yvere still absent, and within reach, that the House yvas sitting yvith closed doors, and demanded their attendance. It yvas understood, and stated, that many of them yvere iu the Senate Chamber. After much desultory conversation, and an uiisucces-fnl motion to adjourn, (lest fry 4 votes only.) the call was at length suspended, and the doors of the House throyvn open. Mr. Reed noyv moved an adjournment. On this, Mr. Bcardsley demanded the yeas and nays. The motion, hoyvever, was withdrawn When Mr. IVise renewed his motion to suspend the rules of the House, in order to offer his resolutions. On this motion, Mr. Beardslty demand the Yeas and Nays. They yvere ordered, and stood as folloyv s : YEAS -Messrs JohnQ, Adams, ITeman Allen, C. Allan. William Allen, Archer, Ashley, Banks, Barnitz, Barringer, Bales, Baylies, Beale, Beaty, James M. Bell, Boublin Bnggs, Ball, Burges, By num. L.age, L.am pbell, Chambers, Chilton, Claiborne, Wm Clark, Clayton, Clowoey, Connor, Corwin, Coulter, Crane, Crockett, Darlington, Warren R Davis, Amos Davis. Deberry, Dennv, Dickson, Duucan, Ellsworth Evans, Edward Ever ett,' Horace Everett, Ewing, Gilrnore, Foot. Foster, R C Fuller, Fulton. Gamble, Garland, Gholson, Gilmer, Gordon, Goiham, Graham, Grent.ed, Griffin, Hiland Hall, Hardin, James Harper, Ha zeltin, Heath, Hie5ter, JabezW Huntington, W C. Johnson, King, Lay, Lewis, Lincoln. Love Martindale, Marshall, John Y Mason. McCarty, McComas, McKenoan. Mercer, Moore, Patton, Patterson, D. J. Pearce, Peyton, Pinckney, Potts, (amsay, Reed Sehlen, J. II. Shepperd, Wm. Slade, Sloane, Spanglr, Steyvart, Stoddert, Wm. P. Taylor, P. Thomas, Tiveedy, Vance, Viaton, Wulmough, Eli"
