Western Times, Volume 1, Number 26, Richmond, Wayne County, 21 February 1829 — Page 1

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L-7 ' i:in t:o, v ii :!usnc:, by n. smith, n cent?i:ville, waynk county, Indiana. 1 1TO. 56. am 5

lk 'M 1 lit I A K LT. u rn:::t. rivrmt r ionics! i;r t;.'iut .m !nm t ;.,' form, ? r 'c.":irt t toin f al)i iita nr !. t K n, 1 . t I r .V. a' tin- vt inter taMninf. v . . ,,.', ' 8 W l. ",. i . v . . I); . ! v nm m .an. tt.p i'ooui ." it ar I.arn !, tow o -.., n ) lie pprtfu .:.'; ., t . nu iu T ti i! i' r etr.

Au.l i rn.i iv.o- imaitrr in t! c fr i ri'i.aia t .Toi.m, C t-c J r to 't V '' Ai.J Ui.twitt. fc!i:t.inr fr.n' n it ' t rui.n ! ? itt L n ! i''.i o.or.t to rn V r lua-t. An 1 t i tj v. f it aiu '.t l..niir ont Uf r- kot. t vl. it a !..--.-'n tl,H, t ti..,;!- i.i ', ! 1. v t, pti.n.t :tL inMracTI" SA- . I.i!' li V f;ttt , r itt.fii " ! 'i 't f t-K"ti.i! v. tnlih, ill in v, i.trt oi J J : ce e.iii.p on. ii '.fi, t t A .J I' .ivt :l,U ' rrn- ( ' i ' V I . II) .;! ' . ir tor or rr ill :nl!i, :r'jr r-'lurii, l it f-.jr i. 'i tii i' : 1. . ti. ruit: I .'.Ii u.i. . .f t Pi: pcJ tt.i- tender I 3.1 . ;'. ? !wj'i.Hic it.to h- H t ; . i;'..t tl hut it j n i.:i .a a', it rutt'ii- t.r.vuty; Si"' t . .1. v. '.(.'i i.i; ;tJ ly Jt-t5., in ; .: ..'i-c tU lid liu. .) -( ia v ir.'t n, oi v. .libti' ruirr. i' tiiii ';uvsl- tl.C t.o'.low yic ; , , r, iiiu'ir to vuy ol.1 ; 1: i u. iri'! ti.? '.isi of f .t.iy i.ew 1 ncm T Mtoi l wir.tcr Cuiuii.c ; ej ' or A ! ? r . t..e w.iiJ p.i. 1 trni,t tot, l.t.i ..'er t :.wi rittrt.M I iH t t . .no i. .ii. .ih r ' ao.v .tr. 'ir.: r t v T k) i.i I, VI ' li II rT ir i I k. !, n ill. 1 1 h i ri-.rr- l i t'.l; ot'.rf is .i :i !, .h 1 i. U l.r r l..i :i, : r a t . . j v onr, tl tide t.t tiru . i !.at !. c I ifin- N-.Tt n.! f,t!ij' g.ootL n.' , tn- ! ..'v ti tt'r-" o-i 'it tjfow: cv 'titii in: lot,;, tn.ttd t.f ii.nii r. Ti.c t:.r, A rn! tur jct i- k ll.r ti e of 1 1 t r . t 10 junlli, V,;i, j ro,.: ri! .! !::., uJ.fij t nt m virtue: 'I:..i:rtrt t.'." y rr. i i 'if o. 1 r, i.xvijr lit l-.ndi i.. n I f"' t r t,i(T I comi l..tj It j ro-'-c. . .f !. - hi. I tl! i . .r i, . - r -I A oRI) I;R! rt. TZZJ IlUiKS Or TIME. St." f r ! . -,twry,tl.f , It n.e, t'.f wrrith, i'f - a i i.i't lioir. t'l.t Vtilt u! fale tS- trivtr. i i. c! ti i U ' ri u.i w ii c.i ii l.rcntt.e 'i ' it if ia i'; M;!.t ! tt.c 1 ! Jy k.'a i; ii M tC.I ot t in. ' rHr. I;l.ut:i. O. i.i ire h-u.i the earth completed her ii ii ' . i t-i" . roou.l the eun.ing urnl i.iiili i'ii i i f lb iven. 'I h lb ,. Ihe wht.ls o tune . . .n-l burv CVerv inoi.ienl ID Hie , ei.,f. tie wre.Asot Ioiiim r revolution.,' 'ilt r.o'.en.ent of att and genius the ten,- . . . . ... . . .1 i liV"Ul.llllOi' I.I'l.' .llH4 1,111111, .nil ,o,c-u:. n-.J a.e l.mlrd to the

Mrth ui the path of man. rvnd m ,ve te ,(.. ; When the conjut ring arm of Ilonr spioad ur.rclled to them the go-pel ofthe SaUo:.d bin. cf the m-itubibtv of all human ;l,4' hnjeii ti banner above her wa her j vtiur had never sounded ir.lhe ears ofthe gre'atnei and all human grandeur. To ; bteratuie and learning surv ived the fi!!; poor children of the forest. They heard l-n low ire"r..,i.t v ith int ru 1 1 , :.ie the hen the second time siie fell bo.H -ith ; the voice of their God il the morning

jre.l and iuu.. arid levobitiof '.I time. 'I I a v aie t'.e i le ui agf--t b y rptak like a t."imil fior-i fie t nii'u. They 1 . c . u V o.i. t.t I' n e: to the be nt. A voice nut lainres-.ve :,an the tongue of, Tub v, m )i e tli t'i the hai p Ct" II '.ner, m )i e ii u i . - i i ti, aa the r.r :inl of Appelb . 1 see t! .venerable shade cf time ?s 1.": -ti ad 1 r a in Kneiit C;i tlC. ye iet i! of ye r; hi whitt I ;c I; s stream

in the w;n winter; his age., lia:,d',, tbe. crumbling tragroents ot other age,

p .: it::.g to the rn is ofempiir.. a.,d Iron Miri" form bvr. !r, cover t!ic lo-.,! or ( )i i t il gi niu. w Lore tV- la:ni e.f glorv stdl trn. the bulii (d i:n not ta!.: v 'tie inis . . .. . . " . - Ro!! b the billowy tide t'i lin.- I - V.r.rul tl.e hi i j! I e tang record ot age . Co arc pi .". ited to the stulbd i;nagtt.it: a of ti.a-i. lie beholds hi ow tidestit, a i 1 the d o:n ..f his noblest a'hicv e tn ": .". He bu l 1 the c,,!o-tl temple t f li r - iv.vn lie do Uc ate it t i otnei age t4 .-in len a rock, an J bathe-, its high b tle r.out, iu the blur -u is of II ie a.-bu b "hob I, triumph ant time but'.s ituith all ii grandeur 1 1 th du-t. Sili-n fh in m h niself, whoe h t ailhuiK i txi-N nce prrcipilates the ho';r ! his own tli obi And o it iJ w it ti t empire" oi the r-trth- t'fiviike. .lout ih. and n a-s awnv. ! i " . . 1 i,vi t hem .Vi..M-e i:im J aucient Lgv k t t'i !av.l ofrieuca aad'

, sacred recollections.' Where are her

thor.inds of cities, her Thebes, her Memphis, her orat le ot' Amnion The red arm cf the Cloth and the Vandal hath levelled jthem with the dn-t; the serpent now in habits tho tempi? where the worshipper once knelt the knee of adoration; the orak le hath been silent lor ages, and the prieste? rnjr il:cc has llcri from her lallin" shrine. And where are the cloud-capt ipwamids of I'.gypt, the wonder of the iwc ild? Alas, thcy still stand as mournful ! monuments oi human ambition. Iut r.diere Jarc the kings who planned nnd the millions ji ,1" miserable slaves who erected them .' 'Gone down to the grave; the rank u.ed

waes over the sepulchre of their moul-!of

luering l ones.- .nu sucn snail tie the late !f those pyiamida which have stocd tr ;age : ho beacons of misguided ambition - fi i a I i l it (he wave of time shall roll over them and

bury them forever in the general raaufjo-jand

t1(, ,v or, tV,,. x ieldcd to the ictnrin.i tor.th of time? (Jo seek and answer amid the wiecks ofralmyra, I'.albec and Jerusalem. Tel, old the ntv oftJoil hath fallen; through her totte;ing temides and ru mf t;i nauiemenis me snaue I'orn luetic whet Is his dreary llight, and the roaring I. ion of the desert hath made his lair in the sepulchre of the Saviour. The musing traveller in vain searches f:-r the splendid te'nple of Solomon; its crumbling columns are beneath hi feet; its sublime imagery i- pictined m the landscape of imagination, Lot the glory of the world hath departed forever. O, r. here are the millions of once active beings who inhabited the aciedtitv, and w hoe voices enrc made ;he temple vocal with the songs of praise? Ala they are lost among the undistini;uishal le wrecks f time. Their bones are bleaching in their native hills: even imjto desolate than their once celebrated j rdy. Time, like death, is imnnrtinl mnrer. The tiionutu rits of . e-e-iius ,

the ait fdl alike U f re hira in the pall. ,( i,.v 's n ruins her philosopher she is in of hi irrc-.tib!e r.i.ght. lie hath ujuoot-' l' r dust; ani whete are bi might; enet'ithcl.iin fa.t.dati. ns ( greatness and. ot "war? They ate swept iron the

grandeur, n r lrs I . 'i I iC i'vs":;.i!C' the i garde ot e"f :tl rsee him pointing with triumph to the t-i. teung temple- of Greece, and smiling at the ruu of tiiens and para. the L,..4 s of that illu-t: ions philosopher who g av ei b-. lining to the imperial son cf I'hilip, an d vhere Solomon and I.vrure-u. Kuvr ir. l!ie world. l.ut these cities aie in rumstheir ihiloi.hers are dumb indeath. Tiie academy, the Torch, and the Lvceum no : longer reso.m.I with tnedoctrn.es ol I'lato, ' - 1 . t . ' .11. ... . ... .eno, ;.ni ineir inu-inouf compeiiiors. Their fame alone has survived the general i wreck. What a lesson is this for the 1 Greece, tiie gbiiy t the woild, the bright luminary of leannng, liberty and law?, prostrate inthcdut; her light of genius and the atts are quenched in the long ntrht cf tine. her inloopl.eis, heroes, statesmen and poets, mingling w ith the fragments of her fallen gian 'eur. Go to the temple of Diana, at Kphesijs, and the oracle of Delphos, and .isk the story of her renown, the story of her i enow n, the stei y of her disolution. Mas. tint temple hath long since dissolved m a do .d r( dame, and the last echo of ; that oracle hath died on the lips of Jvdus. ! '. I . il ,1 . I . . I j M:e le, not nenue tne naming sword j in A ih.itnrd Uit v.iiir i cfiiKvr h. I .......

-. .-i.m.... ti uViiuu.iijf is uiukii uunn, ,-.ii.i lac " ' I1S

- - uu.t.. . a .utu i.r'...t..v.......,rtt....r-.T i. ""-trim, race, ami her tall was like that ofthe Odl.us at iihodes-she vva r cn-; - ni7.f.l alone hy tl.e li iga.ents o! 't5'e Tatt.tr hrrde, the lat gleam of Gre-

ian giory was cxu.iguisncu in Lzantium i tn.-.t rose m wratli Irom the west ; they actomh. k' owledged his universal bcrehcence in

Moumful to the mind of man are the lrr,,ids ofdeparted greatness. Where i the itr.pt-rifil city ofthe Caesars, the once prou 1 mi-tiess ot a subjugated wrld. She lies low, but still mighty in the lut. Methinks 1 am seated among the melan choly ruins of Home. Around meare strew - belorc me are the tumbling temples once i ''.".'.lowed by the footsteps of the Caesars. ' ' '':t wI(re is the cottage of Itomulus, the ' I I . ... 1 . C IV . 1 . 1 I . . i ''ooeii paiat e oi iero, aim me snrme oi 1 p!l and the Mu s? They arc mingling witli the wiecks oi other timen. And ; w here is the great Roman Forum, in w hich tint thunder" of Cicero ' eloquence once -titii k tenor to t) rants? There the shepherd boy roam, and the fleecy flocks novV feed. There, where the Tribunal and the !Itctrum, the Cemitium and the Curia ,)f,rC 'tood, tltc lean lizard noT crawls, and the rank gras waves in the night breeze Those wall are now silent, where the tongue of Tullv once thundered and the applause of iisiening lenates rcverbcratr.i3 . 1 And wiiviie is that stupendous pile of Co-!i-ium w I. ich stood iu ancient days like a unt a in of .M iii Ue, raid w -he re U:e st rong - r:n ed gl:'.diatorl!ed,aiid'i:t vi.'T.r.ci ti

per of the forest died.' Belrrdd it still stands tottering in decay, but th thousands of spectators have departed, and the thunders of ap.-lause have died in echos along the ruincl arches. T: e red sun now $oes down xnd sheds his last ray upon its gray battle nenis, and ti e mellow moon beams gl. Timer throug'i the ivy crow ved w alls and gloomy g;ill 'ries. The fo(steps ofthe solitary traveller now echoes alone where the mijrhtv Caesars once applauded, and the cah cf tie combat sounded. Let is this all? Ala Home ieloquent in rum the city ofthe sex en hiis is stiewed v.ith the fr.rtaents lr.j;os. Lift uii?e o or the f.dlen I ni:n

Traian, Xerva, and Dointian a few pillars or l enan marnie aloie remain to tell the world that they ones have been, (in gn;.e on the rem litis of ..e p; V; r,f the Caesars descend into i.e. cat act mbs ruminate nm.d the .V.ng bones of the iirlj cL istiuaf., pet - to X l. by. the demon of superstition even : death. Co climb the lofty towers ofRjrrie and survey t!ie melancholy mementoes of other timer, and other men. And was thi the mighty Home that once stood agaitstthe legions of Carthage, led on by the rictorious Hannibal? It is the same, thonfh fallen. And where is Carthage? Buried in the vortex of oblivion. Could the shsdes of the immortal Cicero, Horace and Virgil revisit the earth and stra through those scenes which they have immortalized in song and eloquence, how would they be struck with the mutability of all human grandeur. O lime, mighty is the strength of thy arm. The wonders ofthe world have

fallen before thee. Witness ye trails of .'n heart the once extended limits ofthe Iiabylon, covered with aerial garden, and j Indian empire. The grief of years is in thou gieat statue of Olvmpitn Jove. Thelhissool. and he be 1 Iiis hnte in meek

most celebrated cities of antiquity have been burled beneath the irrcitatde v av e oftirae. Go read an exanrle in the f.. te oi Syracuse, the city of Archimedes, v !.. -.e single arm repelled the ho-ts of Ilou.e. and dared to move the w rld if he might have , . . , . - , . . i 'unoaiions ior ins icei. j nat siaea !id rtr idlection of man. Go and vr.vl anolh- ; Seek there for the palace ofPrian:, onre 'dluminatcd w ith the smiles fthe tickle, 'ouyh beautiful Helen, for t horn Spatta i'ju?lt and 'I . oy le II. Alas those p.d.ict , ;,re "dent, ami the ' ion lie level with the dm owers of 11 - Oi l I'riam hath long since departed tym the earth, j and the graves oil arw and his paramour ;ire unknown. The mightv Hector, too, "e rave au. .gouisi oi wiK.es is no , I lift ivlrif r Ha K .iijn I ' ... . .v I ",",t 4 v t iinui hath departed forever. Th invaders and ,'lP 'invaded sleep together i 1 V e cammon iA in aivl r tv rt 1 1 n o irvil ihfjfr 4 r r , ' a 1 1 v r Iv in the tide of Homer's -.n. i Such area few instances fi"thc u lov'edl ot time. ior less natn ott ov !-.nd been the 'enc of drsl Here may bo seen the ruins ofan Jadian empire,; more extended than tiie empires ct lite . ea""t; and though thev were the chiidreu of the forest, and theagh they left no nonnmcnts of sculpture, painting ;'.n i poev , , yet great were they in their tali, and .r- j rowful is the story of their wrongs. Thev I once had cities, but where are thev ? They are swept from the fu e cf the earth. " . . , , hey had llic.r temple ot the sua, but the ..v ....... I , 1 1 . 1 , i'r.ia:. - - ii : .:... i . n uie ..emeu lumiuarv exu igu-nei . Uis

true they worshipped the G.e A spud and;"" y' . . , , 1 V the Geniu, f sterns And d L. e.s-ihe A 1 utki " V'eial read t.othirg

- - - ... breeze; they saw him in tie da;k e!..jd : the setting sun as he sunk to his burning bed Here another race nice liv ed and loved here, along these shores, the council fire bla.ed, and the war-whoop echoed along their native hills. Here the dark browed Indian once bathed bis manly limbs in the river, andhis light canoe was seen to glide nver his own loved lakes. Centuries pasl away, and they still roved the undisputed masters of the western w orld. lut at length a pilgrim bark.e'eep - i i- t . . 1 f .1 . I ireignieu irom me east, came uaiKening on the shores. They yiel led not their empire tamely, but they could not stand against the sons of light, :hey tied. With slow and solitary stops ihev took up their mournftil march to the tvest, and yielded with a broken h;ai. their native hills to another race. r j,t v b ft their homes and the graves hf Uirir fathers to explore western w;)01,s wj,ly,n0 human foot had eve' trn.! .. I r,,-. 4v . er pen, r.,tc,i From ,lmp ,o (iu,c thcy '.'c "hern driven back, and ti e net remove will be to the bosom of the btormy Pacific. Unhappy children! ihe tear of pity has been $hed over vour wrongs II'' 1111 .'I1 .T and vour su.'lei inrt YYh bosom but - 'bcp.ts w-'di yuvpathy over ;ie mournf.;!'

story of their woes. As a race of men, (hey are fast fading from the f ice of the earth, and tre many centuries shall have passed they will have te u swept from the annals of ages. Ere long the last wave of the west will roil over them, and their deeds only live rn the traditions tbev shall have left behind them. The mnroh of mind I :.'!; been to them the march to the srave. Ilvcry ae they have rapidly decline I. a a a lingering remnrut is now left :.. !h cr the. ruins of tht ir empire arui ;!, raemory ol "their bi :: , e progenitors. The gol Jen har e?t now waves over the tuib rf tKeir JaUtn f..lir rs, ami iUe ii lh.it ( nr.o echoed to ihe w ar daac i- now

leovered with the rising citv. Where th w ivvam once stood, the tall temple dedi cated to (.iod. new fditiers ia the setting ;;,a, i. d t' iv tv. i'ir pide but i. the lr . , caiior, is row v h to v.ith the sails of -maierce. And w 1:. a they shall li.tv. p;u-sed away,--when tne h.st'lndlan shall have stood upon his native hills in the west and shall have wo'rhippeJ the setting sjn for the last time, perhaps svue youth mayrove t the green mound of Indian sepul ture, and ask with wonder what manner of beings they were. How must the poor child ofthe fores! weep, and how must his heart throb with anguish, when he muses on the ruins of ids race, and the melancholy destiny of his children. The ploughshare hath pased over the bones of his ancestors, and they sleep in the land of strangers ,v. id ofthe conquerors of their dying race Methinks 1 see the stately Indian, as ;.o bends from the brow cf the mistv mountain, and -urvevswith a twellisn mi-ion before ti "rlreat Spirit in th louds. 1. nhat-Dv chi'.d! mv soul mourns over the rimmed hopes of your fading race MU.rOIlD MAUD . ,M S C L , L. A c L 0 VIS"." j i f Air:ifti j'rct.'i Dr. Jl lLJSs "Journey. Il-Mtr. Tbis simple and estimable sn'' iMP has rot vet f'-ui.d its way in Vlu" "ird tr.ui!a'ed but'er into ttie be; ipunes did t.ot iik p.i. th substance we call by name. Cheese and and .ire universal where there arc CRtJtb - but butter is is little krovTn and ; jk.w n. the cast as foirar rlv. The u uish lierJianen abuu. d in cattb . 'in a temperate climate, unci daily make cheese, curds and other prepara ti,,ns of miik but ti,t.y have-not yet . . - learned ihe tiinple art of separating the cream and shakim; it into bultcr. All the butter used bv Ihe Turks it ncid, tallowdike stu!!, brought irom Russia, ir. b jtralocs1 thine. '"aiZNg ih Turkey. A printing es'tablisl.it. ".t and pper manufactory vvi le fjrm.-d at Constantinople by a uu, m uui n.c pnests pio h'ited him from puLlishing the Koran d book containirg the doctrine of Mhomet. The reaion they assigned was thai it would be an impiety if the v.oid of God should be sonee.-od and pressed together: hut the true cause ' a tU . nnmW K.m ... rn,t 1IM Vl'.l' UIVHV lltlllit,l U tUVIII V.UIIIVU a fou,ilicri(,)lc income by wrilinp out J r tl,. ..- ha. !. K.i,i wnnld h A. .tr.w. , ... . Mn'ra ,n ,;r.t- 1 - - - i - j ielse but stitli books us the rcnegado , was not permitted to print, the printing thee was soon discontii ued. Sehm, the piedevcssor of the present Sultan, revived the printing and paper making establishment, and thcy were in opera tioiivvben Dr. Waish went to Constan tinople in 1C21. He visited the printing eilhe, where he found the typesetter fcitting cioss logged on a cushion, with his crises, placed aroud him in a s micircular form. This establish. mcnt scon declined, and when Dr. Walsh left Constantinople there wcie no remains of printing cilice or papermill. Greek Church The Greek Church in Turkey, in some rcFpeceB,ha3 departed even farther from ;nc simplicity of the Gospel than t,e Catholic. The chuiche are men nnd dirty, and are fiiktl with tawdv paintincs and idetures, which ihe people kneel to and kiss with the deepest respect. The Greeks buve excluded images from their worship ns idolatrous, but their adoration of pictincs is ardent. Many of the :nper tlassea think as lightly of the fooleries of their present mode of worship astho protectants, and this feeling has been extended hy tho distribution of the Scriptures among them by the a gent ofthe British 13ible Society. Greek Children. Dr. WaUh met j t j with forcaaics of soldiers uhc v;ru

returningfrom Greece. Some of them had horses, with baskets on eacb side filled with Greek bo)s and girl-, froftj three or four, to nine or ten years old whom the) had carried off as plunder, and were bringing to the elave market

of Constantinople to sell. The unfaitunate beings resemble latnb6 in a mar ket cart. The poor creatures seemed delighted witu riding, and were uncon scious ofthe late that awaited tuean. CAVE QF COL. BOO.V. Ii i a fact, wc believo not generally known, that Col. Daniel Boon, the tm adventutcr to this Slate, resided foy some time in a cave, in this (Fayette county. Thi cave has been frecuenf ly pointed out to us. It js situated it! the fidt?of a hill, on a little stream called Raven Creek, near the Kentucky river. The bottom of the creek is filled tlh stones, for 6ome distaucji abov ill !.. f r .1 Hiia oeiow, ana just at id-' cave th rc is a smootlv f lbc abh d him to reaclj without leinT trace From tliis cave he y h uptly , be ) about trough Ue wa Hed by on his hunting ory' jgair.st the In( ibscnt for scv; five milet dis; where lf Huilt. iN . I. - l2 uie can? eei mg ; deer, buf hborod of this We saw. onoriXu Cto if. hood of thi some charcoal, which waiAicrto haro been left there by him, and upon which he was to broil his meat. This cave is surrounded by the most beautiful ami picturesque scenery that we ever 6aw; und the loverof nature would find much to amuie him by visiting it. KerJudx? Gazette. The Shizrls. In the year 1623, James VI. died. He was the least dignified and accomplished of ail his tamily, but, at the same time, the most fortunate. Robert 11. the first of the Stuart family, died, it is true in peace; but Ilobet Nf. had sunk under the family losses li had sustained : James I. was murdered ) James II. killed by the bursting of a anon; James III. (nhem James VI. chiefly resembled,) w as privately slain after tht battle of Saueh'cburn ; James IV. fell at Flodden; Jam?? V. died of a broken heart; Henry D in lev, the fath er of James V!. wa?treaii.ercusly murdered; and his mother Queen Mary, was tyranically beheaded. lie himself alone, w ithout courage, without sound sagacity, without that feeling of dignity which should restrain a prirco from foolish indulgences, became kir.fc cf tho great nation which had for agts threat ened to subdue that of which lie was born monarch; nnd the good fortune of the Stuart family, which seems to havft existed in his person alone, declined and, totally decayed in those of tiis successors. Talcs oj a Grandfather, ScccrA $c rics. NATIONAL MEMORANDA. Compiled fur tiie Washington CAronicaVi I'rcsidenti. George Washington from Virginia, frcm 1.7G9 to 179T, John Adams of Massachusetts, frm t701 tolCOt. Thoxca? Jeiftffton, of Vw ginia, from 1801 to 1C09. Jam Madison, of Virginia, from JXZOO to 1817. James Monroe, of Virginia, from 181? tn 182.). .Tnhn Oiiinrv'A'!ns. nf Ifna sachusett?, from 1G25 to 182?.. Vice Presidents. Jchn Adam?, of Massathusetts, frcm 1TT.9 to 1707. Thomas Jefferson, cf Virginia, frcm 1797 to 1801. Aare n Burr, of NewYork, from 1C01 to 1&00. Geo. Clinton, N. Y., frcm 1C05 to !ol3. !! dridge Gerrv, of Massachusetts, from 1813 to 1817. Daniel D. Tompkins, cf Ncw-Yoik, from 1 GIT to lG2v. John C Calhoun, of South Carcliua, frcm to . Secretaries rf SU;f Thomas JtffV rson, of Virginia, 20 September, WES'. Edmund Randolph, of Virginia, 2 January, 1794. Timothy rickerins;, of Pennsylvania, 10 Decemper, l?f, John Marshall, of Virginia, 13 Mar. 1800. James Madison, of Virginia, .S March, 1C01. Robert Smith, o! Maty, land, 6 March, 1C09. James Mcnnc,of Virginia, 26 November, 1 James Monroe, (re-commissioned. hi'" ing actl as Secretary of War,) 2S. V Februaiy, 1315. John Quincy Aua-r.?. of Massachusetts, 6tli MaTch, 13T7.. Henry Chyof Kentucky, 7th March,