Imágenes de páginas
PDF
EPUB

The "privileges and immunities of citizens of the United States," mentioned in the petition as secured by the fourteenth amendment, do not include the right of suffrage. If they did, the right must necessarily exist in all citizens of the United States, from the mere fact of citizenship, without the power in any State or in Congress to abridge the same in any degree; and in such case, therefore, no qualification of any kind could he imposed, and all persons, (being citizens,) males and females, infants, lunatics, and criminals, without respect to age, length of residence, or any other thing, would be entitled to participate directly in all elections. Every provision in every State, which experience has proved to be essential to security and good order in society, would thereby be overthrown. It is enough to say that the rights secured by this amendment to the Constitution are of an altogether different character.

The committee is unanimously of the opinion | Utah, in person or by deputy, to attend all sesthat this question must be answered in the neg- sions of the supreme and district courts in said ative. Territory, and to serve and execute all process and writs issued out of, and all orders, judg ments, and decrees made by said courts, or by any judge thereof, unless said court or judge shall otherwise order in any particular case. All process, writs, or other papers left with said marshal, or either of his deputies, shall be served without delay, and in the order in which they are received, upon payment or tender of his legal fees therefor; and it shall be unlawful for said marshal to demand or receive mileage for any greater distance than the actual distance by the usual routes from the place of service or execution of process, writ, or other paper, to the place of return of the same, except that when it shall be necessary to convey any person arrested by legal authority out of the county in which he is arrested, said marshal shall be entitled to mileage for the whole distance necessarily traveled in delivering the person so arrested before the court or officer ordering such arrest. Said The fifteenth amendment does apply to rights marshal is hereby authorized to appoint as many of suffrage, and to those only. By it the State deputies as may be necessary, each of whom shall of Rhode Island, in common with every other have authority, in the name of said marshal, to State, is forbidden to deny or abridge the right perform any act with like effect and in like of citizens of the United States "to vote on ac- manner as said marshal; and the marshal shall count of race, color, or previous condition of be liable for all official acts of such deputies as servitude." But, plainly, the constitution of if done by himself. Such appointment shall not Rhode Island does not preclude any citizen from be complete until he shall give bond to said voting on either or any of the grounds thus pro marshal, with sureties, to be by him approved, hibited. No fact of race, or color, or previous in the penal sum of $10,000, conditioned for the servitude prevents any citizen from voting in faithful discharge of his duties; and he shall also Rhode Island. Neither of these qualities de- take and subscribe the same oath prescribed by pends in any degree upon the place of his na- law to be taken by said marshal; and said aptivity. This seems too obvious to need discus-pointment, bond, and oath shall be filed and sion. It is also a fact, appearing in the public records of Congress, and doubtless known to petitioners, that when the fifteenth amendment was under consideration by Congress it was proposed to embrace in it a prohibition of any denial of suffrage on account of “nativity," and that this proposition was not agreed to, for the reason that Congress did not think it expedient to restrict the ancient powers of the States in these respects any further than appeared to be absolutely needful to secure to the whole people the great results of the overthrow of the rebellion.

The committee is, therefore, of opinion that there is nothing in the provisions of the constitution of Rhode Island referred to in conflict with the Constitution of the United States.

Whether these provisions are wise or right in themselves is a matter over which neither the committee nor Congress has any control. That subject belongs to the people of Rhode Island, who, it must be presumed, will correct any and all errors that may, from time to time, be found to exist in her internal affairs.

The Utah Bill.

IN HOUSE.

1874, June 2-Mr. POLAND, from the Judiciary Committee, reported back with amendments House bill 3097:

Be it enacted, &c., That it shall be the duty of the United States marshal of the Territory of

remain in the office of the clerk of the supreme court of said Territory. In actions brought against said marshal for the misfeasance or nonfeasance of any deputy, it shall be lawful for the plaintiff, at his option, to join the said deputy and the sureties on his bond with said marshal and his sureties. Any processes, either civil or criminal, returnable to the supreme or district courts, may be served in any county by the sheriff thereof or his legal deputy, and they may also serve any other processes which may be authorized by act of the territorial Legislature.

SEC. 2. That it shall be the duty of the United States attorney in said Territory, in person or by an assistant, to attend all the courts of record having jurisdiction of offenses as well under the laws of said Territory as of the United States, and perform the duties of prosecuting officer in all criminal cases arising in said courts; and he is hereby authorized to appoint as many assistants as may be necessary, each of whom shail subscribe the same oath as is prescribed by law for said United States attorney; and the said appointment and oath shall be filed and remain in the office of the clerk of the supreme court of said Territory. The United States attorney shall be entitled to the same fees for services rendered by said assistants as he would be entitled to for the same services if rendered by himself. The territorial Legislature may provide for the election of a prosecuting attorney in any county; and such attorney, if authorized so to do by such Legislature, may commence prosecu

tions for offenses under the laws of the Territory | and from the judgments of the probate courts an within such county, and if such prosecution is appeal shall lie to the district court of the district carried to the district court by recognizance or embracing the county in which such probate appeal, or otherwise, may aid in conducting the court is held in such cases and in such manner prosecution in such court. And the costs and as the Supreme Court of said Territory may, by expenses of all prosecutions for offenses against general rules framed for that purpose, specify any law of the territorial Legislature shall be and designate, and such appeal shall vacate the paid out of the treasury of the Territory. judgment appealed from, and the case shall be tried de novo in the appellate court. Appeals may be taken from both justices' and probate courts to the district court of their respective districts in cases where judgments have been heretofore rendered and remain unexecuted; but this provision shall not enlarge the time for taking an appeal beyond the periods now allowed by the existing laws of said Territory for taking appeals. Whenever the condition of the business in the district court of any district is such that the judge of the district is unable to do the same, he may request the judge of either of the other districts to assist him, and, upon such request made, the judge so requested may hold the whole or part of any term, or any branch thereof, and his acts as such judge shall be of equal force as if he were duly assigned to hold the courts in such district.

SEC. 3. That there shall be held in each year two terms of the Supreme Court of said Territory, and four terms of each district court, at such times as the Governor of the Territory may by proclamation fix. The district courts shall have exclusive original jurisdiction in all suits or proceedings in chancery, and in all actions at law in which the sum or value of the thing in controversy shall be $300 or upward, and in all controversies where the title, possession, or boundaries of land, or mines or mining claims shall be in dispute, whatever their value, except in actions for forcible entry or forcible or unlawful detainer; and they shall have jurisdiction in suits for divorce. When a bill is filed by a woman to declare a marriage or pretended marriage void, on account of a previous subsisting marriage of the defendant to another woman, the court or judge thereof may grant such rea- SEC. 4. That within sixty days after the passonable sum for alimony and counsel fees as the sage of this act, and in the month of January circumstances of the case will justify; and may annually thereafter, the clerk of the district likewise, by final decree, make such allowance court in each judicial district, and the judge of for the maintenance of the complainant and her probate of the county in which the district court children by the defendant as may be just and is next to be held, shall prepare a jury list from reasonable. And whenever, in any proceeding which grand and petit jurors shall be drawn, to for divorce, or in any civil cause, or in any crim- serve in the district courts of such district, until inal prosecution, it is necessary to prove the a new list shall be made as herein provided. existence of the marriage relation between two Said clerk and probate judge shall alternately persons, it shall not be necessary to prove the select the name of a male citizen of the United same by the production of any record or certifi- States who has resided in the district for the pecate of the marriage, but evidence of cohabitation | riod of six months next preceding, and who can between the parties as husband and wife, and read and write in the English language; and, as the acts, conduct, declarations, and admissions selected, the name and residence of each shall be of the parties shall be admissible, and the mar- entered upon the list, until the same shall conriage may be established like any question of tain two hundred names, when the same shall fact. Probate courts, in their respective coun- be duly certified by such clerk and probate ties, shall have jurisdiction in the settlement of judge; and the same shall be filed in the office the estates of decedents, and in matters of guard of the clerk of such district court, and a dupliianship and other like matters; but otherwise cate copy shall be made and certified by such they shall have no civil, chancery, or criminal officers, and filed in the office of said probate jurisdiction whatever; they shall have jurisdic-judge. Whenever a grand or petit jury is to be tion of suits of divorce for statutory causes concurrently with the district courts; but any defendant in a suit for divorce commenced in a probate court shall be entitled, after appearance and before plea or answer, to have said suit removed to the district court having jurisdiction, when said suit shall proceed in like manner as if originally commenced in said district court. All judgments and decrees heretofore rendered by the probate courts which have been executed, and the time to appeal from which has by the existing laws of said Territory expired, are hereby validated and confirmed. The jurisdiction heretofore conferred upon justices of the peace by the organic act of said Territory is extended to all cases where the debt or sum claimed shall be less than $300. From all final judgments of justices of the peace an appeal shall be allowed to the district courts of their respective districts, in the same manner as is now provided by the laws of said Territory for appeals to the probate courts; I

drawn to serve at any term of a district court, the judge of such district shall give public notice of the time and place of the drawing of such jury, which shall be at least twelve days before the commencement of such term; and on the day and at the place thus fixed, the judge of such district shall hold an open session of his court, and shall preside at the drawing of such jury; and the clerk of such court shall write the name of each person on the jury lists returned and filed in his office upon a separate slip of paper, as nearly as practicable of the same size and form, and all such slips shall, by the lerk in open court, be placed in a covered box, and thoroughly mixed and mingled; and thereupon the United States marshal, or his deputy, shall proceed to fairly draw by lot from said box such number of names as may have previously been directed by said judge; and if both a grand and a petit jury are to be drawn, the grand jury shall be drawn first; and when the drawing

in relation to marshals and attorneys," approved March 3, 1852, and all laws of said Territory inconsistent with the provisions of this act, are hereby disapproved. The act of the Congress of the United States entitled "An act to regulate the fees and costs to be allowed clerks, marshals, and attorneys of the circuit and district courts of the United States, and for other purposes,' approved February 26, 1853, is extended over and shall apply to the fees of like officers in said Territory of Utah.

[ocr errors]

Mr. CESSNA offered the following substitute for the fourth section:

shall have been concluded, the clerk of the dis- | lature of the Territory of Utah entitled "An act trict court shall issue a venire to the marshal or his deputy, directing him to summon the persons so drawn, and the same shall be duly served on each of the persons so drawn at least seven days before the commencement of the term at which they are to serve; and the jurors so drawn and summoned shall constitute the regular grand and petit juries for the term for all cases. And the names thus drawn from the box by the clerk shall not be returned to or again placed in said box until a new jury list shall be made. If during any term of the district court any additional grand or petit jurors shall be necessary, the same shall be drawn from said box by the United States marshal in open court; but if the attendance of those drawn cannot be obtained in a reasonable time, other names may be drawn in the same manner. Each party, whether in civil or criminal cases, shall be allowed three peremptory challenges; and in the trial of any prosecution for adultery, bigamy, or polygamy, it shall be a good cause of principal challenge to any juror that he practices polygamy, or that he believes in the rightfulness of the same. In criminal cases, the court, and not the jury, shall pronounce the punishment under the limitation prescribed by law. The grand jury must inquire into the case of every person imprisoned within the district on a criminal charge and not indicted; into the condition and management of the public prisons within the district; and into the willful and corrupt misconduct in office of public officers of every description within the district; and they are also entitled to free access, at all reasonable times, to the public prisons, and to the examination, without charge, of all public records within the district.

SEC. 4. That whenever a judge of any district court of said Territory shall determine that a grand or petit jury will be needed at a term of such court, the said judge, the clerk of such court, and the United States marshal shall, without regard to the religious, political, or social opinions of such citizens, make a list in writing of two hundred male citizens of the United States above the age of twenty-one years, who shall have been residents in such district for a period of six months next previously, and shall affix thereto their certificate to the effect that the same is the list from which the grand and petit jurors are to be drawn for the terms of such court to be holden within the year next following, and shall cause the same to be filed in the office of the clerk of said court; and whenever the judge shall order the clerk to issue a venire, the clerk, in the presence of the said judge and marshal, or his deputy, shall write the names contained in the said list each on a separate slip of paper, all the slips being of the same size and kind, and shall fold them uniformly, so that the name written thereon shall be concealed, and shall then place them in a covered box and thoroughly mix and mingle them, and shall then not select, but shall draw, as by lot, therefrom the requisite number of names. If a grand jury be required, it shall be drawn first, and consist of the number before provided. The number of petit jurors thus drawn shall be such as, in the opinion of such judge, is needful to discharge the entire jury duty for such term, so that there shall always be three more jurors than the number required for each separate panel; and the panel in each trial shall be twelve men. The clerk shall make a list in writing of the names of the persons so drawn, and the clerk and the marshal shall affix thereto their certificates of the time and place of such drawing, and file the same in the office of said clerk, who shall forthwith issue a venire to the said marshal, commanding him to summon the persons so drawn to attend and serve as such jurors at the time and place previously designated by the said judge, and such jurors shall constitute the regular jurors for such term of the court for all cases, whether arising under the laws of the United States or under the SEC. 7. That the common law of England, as laws of said Territory. If at any time a talesman the same is defined and modified by the courts or talesmen shall be required, his or their names of last resort in those States of the United States shall be drawn from the said box by the clerk in where the common law prevails, shall be the open court, and if the attendance of such juror rule of decision in all the courts of said Territory or jurors cannot be procured in a reasonable time so far as it is not repugnant to or inconsistent other names shall be drawn, and so from time to with the Constitution and laws of the United time until the jury is obtained. No challenge States and the existing statutes of said Territory. shall be allowed on the ground that a juror had SEC. 8. That the act of the territorial Legis- I been summoned or had served at a previous term

SEC. 5. That there shall be appointed by the Governor of said Territory one or more notaries public for each organized county, whose term of office shall be two years, and until their successors shall be appointed and qualified. The act of the Legislative Assembly of the Territory of Utah entitled "An act concerning notaries public," approved January 17, 1866, is hereby approved, except the first section thereof, which is hereby disapproved: Provided, That wherever in said act the words "probate judge" or "clerk of the probate court" are used, the words "secretary of the Territory" shall be substituted.

SEC. 6. That the Supreme Court of said Territory is hereby authorized to appoint commissioners of said court, who shall have and exercise all the duties of commissioners of the circuit courts of the United States, and to take acknowledgments of bail, &c.; and, in addition, they shall have the same authority as examining and committing magistrates in all cases arising under the laws of said Territory as is now possessed by justices of the peace in said Territory.

IN SENATE.

of court. Each party, whether in civil or crim- | Eden, Eldredge, Giddings, Hancock, H. R. Harinal cases, shall be allowed three peremptory ris, Hereford, Herndon, Holman, Lamar, Lamichallenges; and in the trial of any prosecution son, Leach, Magee, Marshall, Milliken, Mills, W. for adultery, bigamy, or polygamy, it shall be a E. Niblack, Potter, Randall, M. Sayler, Sheats, good cause of principal challenge to any juror Sloss, J. A. Smith, Southard, Speer, Standeford, that he practices polygamy, or that he believes Stone, C. Y. Thomas, Wells, Whitthorne, Willie, in the rightfulness of the same. In criminal E. K. Wilson, J. D. Young-55. cases the court, and not the jury, shall pronounce the punishment under the limitation prescribed by law. The grand jury must inquire into the case of every person imprisoned within the district on a criminal charge and not indicted; into the condition and management of the public prisons within the district; and into the willful and corrupt misconduct of officers of every description within the district; and they are also entitled to free access, at all reasonable times, to the public prisons, and to the examination, without charge, of all public records within the district.

Mr. BARBER moved to amend the committee's bill by adding to the last section these words:

But the district attorney shall not, by fees and salary together, receive more than $3,500 per year; and all fees or moneys received by him above said amount shall be paid into the Treasury of the United States.

June 23-The Judiciary Committee proposed to amend by striking out section 7 and inserting the following:

SEO. 7. That the common law of England, as the same is defined and modified by the courts of last resort in those States of the United States where the common law prevails, shall be the rule of decision in all the courts of said Territory, so far as it is not repugnant to or inconsistent with the Constitution and laws of the United States and the existing statutes of said Territory.

The amendment was agreed to.

Mr. FRELINGHUYSEN moved to add after the

word "appeals," nearest to the end of sec. 3, the words: "A writ of error from the Supreme Court of the United States to the supreme court of the Territory shall lie in criminal cases where the accused shall have been sentenced to capital punishment or convicted of bigamy or polyBar-gamy."

Mr. CESSNA'S amendment was disagreed to.
Mr. BARBER's amendment was agreed to.
The bill then passed-yeas 159, nays 55,
YEAS-Messrs. Albright, Ashe, Barnum,
rere, Barry, Biery, Bradley, Buffinton, Bundy,
Burchard, Burleigh, Burrows, R. R. Butler, Cain,
Cannon, Cason, Cessna, A. Clark, F. Clarke,
Clements, S. A. Cobb, Coburn, Comingo, Conger,
Corwin, Cotton, Crocker, Crutchfield, Danford,
Dawes, Dobbins, Donnan, Duell, Dunnell,
Eames, Field, Fort, Glover, Gooch, Gunckel,
Hagans, E. Hale, Harmer, B. W. Harris, J. T.
Harris, Harrison, Hatcher, Havens, J. B. Haw-
ley, J. R. Hawley. G. W. Hazelton, J. W. Haz-
elton, Hendee, E, R Hoar, Hodges, Hoskins,
Houghton, Howe, Hunter, Hunton, Hurlbut,
Hyde, Kasson, Kelley, Kellogg, Kendall, Knapp,
Lansing, Lawrence, Lawson, B. Lewis, Lough-
ridge, Lowe, Lowndes, Luttrell, J. R. Lynch,
Martin, Maynard, McCrary, A. S. McDill, J. W.
McDill, MacDougall, McKee, McLean, McNulta,
Merriam, Mitchell, Monroe, W. S. Moore, L.
Myers, Neal, Niles, Nunn, O'Neill, Orr, Orth,
Packard, Packer, Page, I. C. Parker, Pendleton,
E. Perry, Phillips, Pierce, Pike, T. C. Platt, Po-
land, Pratt, Rainey, Ransier, Rapier, Ray, J. B.
Rice, Richmond, Robbins, E. H. Roberts, J. W.
Robinson, Rusk, Sawyer, H. B. Sayler, H. J.
Scudder, I. W. Scudder, Sessions, Shanks, Shel-
don, L. D. Shoemaker, Small, A. H. Smith, H.
B. Smith, J. Q. Smith, Sprague, Starkweather.
St. John, Storm, Strait, Strawbridge, Taylor, C.
R. Thomas, Thornburg, Todd, W. Townsend,
Tremain, Vance, Waldron, Wallace, Walls, J.
D. Ward, Wheeler, White, Whitehead, WHITE-
HOUSE, C. W. Willard, G. Willard, C. G. Wil-
liams, J. M. S. Williams, Williams of Indiana,
J. Wilson, Wolfe, Woodworth-159.

NAYS-Messrs. Adams, Arthur, Atkins, Bar-
ber, J. B. Beck, H. P. Bell, Berry, Bland,
Blount, Bowen, Bright, BROMBERG, Brown,
Buckner, J. H. Caldwell, J. B. Clark, Clymer,
Cook, Cox, Crittenden, Crounse, De Witt, Durham,

Which was agreed to.

Mr. SARGENT moved to strike out of section 3 the following words:

"When a bill is filed by a woman to declare a marriage or pretended marriage void, on account of a previous subsisting marriage of the defendant to another woman, the court or judge thereof may grant such reasonable sum for alimony and counsel fees as the circumstances of the case will justify; and may likewise, by final decree, make such allowance for the maintenance of the complainant and her children by the defendant as may be just and reasonable. And whenever, in any proceeding for divorce, or in any civil cause, or in any criminal prosecution, it is necessary to prove the existence of the marriage relation between two persons, it shall not be necessary to prove the same by the production of any record or certificate of the marriage, but evidence of cohabitation between the parties as husband and wife, and the acts, conduct, declarations, and admissions of the parties shall be admissible, and the marriage may be established like any question of fact."

[ocr errors]

Which was agreed to.

Mr. SARGENT moved to add after the words 'district court"-ending a sentence below the middle of section 3-the following:

[ocr errors]

'Nothing in this act shall be construed to impair the authority of probate courts to enter land in trust for the use and benefit of the occupants of towns in the various counties of the Territory of Utah, according to the provisions of an act for the relief of inhabitants of cities and towns upon public lands, approved March 2, 1867, and an act to amend an act entitled 'An act for the relief of inhabitants of cities and towns upon public lands,' approved June 8, 1868, or to discharge the duties assigned to the

probate judges by an act of the Legislative | J. D. Ward, Wells, White, Whitehead, Whiteley, Assembly of the Territory of Utah, entitled An G. Willard, C. G. Williams, J. M. S. Williams, act prescribing rules and regulations for the ex- Williams of Indiana, W. B. Williams, J. Wilson, ecution of the trust arising under the act of Woodford-171. Congress, entitled 'An act for the relief of the

NAYS-Messrs. Albert, Albright, Archer, At

inhabitants of the cities and towns upon the pub-kins, J. B. Beck, H. P. Bell, Biery, Blount, Bowen, lic lands."

[merged small][merged small][ocr errors][merged small]

BROMBERG, Brown, Burleigh, Clymer, Cox, Creamer, Crossland, J. J. Davis, Durham, Eldredge, Giddings, Gunckel, Hamilton, H. R. Harris, J. T. Harris, Hereford, Herndon, E. R. Hoar, Hooper, Hunton, Jewett, Killinger, Lamar, Lawson, Magee, McLean, Milliken, Neal, W. E. Niblack, Niles, O'Brien, Orth, E. Perry, Phelps, Pierce, Randall, Read, E. H. Roberts, I. W. Scudder, Smart, J. Q. Smith, Southard, Speer, Sprague, Standeford, Storm, Swann, Todd, W. Townsend, Wheeler, WHITEHOUSE, Whitthorne, C. W. Willard, Willie, J. M. Wilson, Woodworth, J. D. Young-66.

Admission of New Mexico.

IN HOUSE.

As thus amended the bill subsequently passed 1874, May 21-The House, as per order, prothe Senate; the House concurred in the amend-ceeded to consider the bill (H. R. 2418) to enable ments, and the bill was signed by the PRESI- the people of New Mexico to form a constitution and State government, and for the admission of the said State into the Union on an equal footing with the original States.

DENT.

Admission of Colorado.
IN HOUSE.

After debate, engrossment, and third reading, the bill was passed-yeas 160, nays 54, not voting 76:

1874, June 8-Mr. CHAFFEE moved that the rules be suspended and the bill (H. R. 435) to enable the people of Colorado to form a constitution and State government, and for the admis-kins, sion of the said State into the Union on an equal footing with the original States, be passed.

The rules were suspended and the bill passed -yeas 171, nays 66, not voting 52:

YEAS-Messrs. Adams, Archer, Arthur, AtAverill, BANNING, Barrere, Barry, Biery, Bowen, Bradley, Bright, Buckner, Bundy, Burchard, Burrows, R. R. Butler, Cain, J. H. Caldwell, Cannon, Cason, Cessna, A. Clark, J. B. Clark, Clements, S. A. Cobb, Coburn, Conger, Cook, Corwin, Cotton, Crittenden, Crossland, Crounse, Crutchfield, Curtis, Danford, Dawes, Dobbins, Donnan, Duell, Dunnell, Eames, Eden, Farwell, Fort, C. Foster, Freeman, Frye, Garfield, Giddings, Glover, Gunckel, Hancock, Harmer, B. W. Harris, Harrison, Hatcher, Hathorn, Havens, J. B. Hawley, Hays, J. W. Hazelton, Hendee, Herndon, Hoskins, Houghton, Hubbell, Hunter, Hunton, Hurlbut, Hyde, Kasson, Kel

YEAS-Messrs. Adams, Arthur, Ashe, Averill,
BANNING, Barber, Barrere, Begole, Berry, Bland,
Bradley, Bright, Buckner, Buffinton, Bundy,
Burchard, Burrows, R. R. Butler, J. H. Caldwell,
Cannon, Cason, Cessna, A. Clark, J.B. Clark, F.
Clarke, Clements, S. A. Cobb, Coburn, Conger,
Cook, Corwin, Cotton, Crittenden, Crocker, Crooke,
Crounse, Crutchfield, Curtis, Danford, Darrall,
Dawes, Dobbins, Donnan, Duell, Dunnell, Eames,
Eden, Farwell, Field, Fort, C. Foster, Freeman,|logg,
Frye, Glover, Gooch, Hagans, Hancock, B. W.
Harris, Harrison, Hatcher, Hathorn, Havens, J.
B. Hawley, J. R. Hawley, Hays, G. W. Hazel-
ton, J. W. Hazelton, Hendee, Hodges, Hoskins,
Howe, Hubbell, Hunter, Hurlbut, Hyde, HYNES,
Kasson, Kelley, Kellogg, Kendall, Knapp, Lami-
son, Lamport, Lansing, Lawrence, Leach, Lof-
land, Loughridge, Lowe, Lowndes, Luttrell, J.
R. Lynch, Marshall, Martin, McCrary, A. S. Mc-
Dill, MacDougall, McKee, Merriam, Mills, Mon-
roe, W. S. Moore, Morey, Morrison, Nesmith,
Nunn, O'Neill, Orr, Packard, Packer, Page, I. C.
Parker, Pendleton, Pike, J. H. Platt, T. C. Platt,
Poland, Pratt, Purman, Rainey, Rapier, Ray, J.
B. Rice, Richmond, J. C. Robinson, J. W. Robin-
son, Ross, Rusk, Sawyer, H. B. Sayler, H. J.
Scudder, Sener, Sessions, Shanks, Sheats, Sheldon,
L. D. Shoemaker, Sloan, Sloss, Small, A. H. Smith,
G. L. Smith, H. B. Smith, W. A. Smith, Snyder,
Stanard, Starkweather, Stone, Stowell, Strait,
Strawbridge, C. Y. Thomas, Thornburgh, Tre-
main, Tyner, Vance, Waldron, Wallace, Walls,

Kendall, Knapp, Lamport, Lansing, Lawrence, Leach, Loughridge, Lowe, Lowndes, J. R. Lynch, McCrary, A. S. McDill, J. W. McDill, MacDougall, McKee, McNulta, Mills, Monroe, W. S. Moore, Morey, Morrison, Nesmith, O'Neill, Orr, Orth, Packard, Page, I. C. Parker, Pelham, Pendleton, E. Perry, Pike, T. C. Platt, Poland, Pratt, Purman, Rainey, Rapier, Ray, Robbins, J. C. Robinson, Ross, Rusk, Sawyer, H. B. Sayler, J. G. Schumaker, Sessions, Shanks, Sheats, Sheldon, I. R. Sherwood, L. D. Shoemaker, Sloan, Small, A. H. Smith, G. L. Smith, H. B. Smith, J. A. Smith, W. A. Smith, Stanard, Standeford, Starkweather, St. John, Stone, Stowell, Strait, Thornburgh, W. Townsend, Tyner, Vance, Wad dell, Wallace, Walls, M. L. Ward, White, Whitehead, WHITEHOUSE, Whiteley, Whitthorne, Wilber, G. Willard, Williams of Indiana, W. B. Williams, Wilshire, J. Wilson, P. M. B. Young-160.

NAYS-Messrs. Albert, Albright, Ashe, Barber, J. B. Beck, H. P. Bell, Bland, Blount, BROMBERG, Buffinton, Clymer, Comingo, Cox, Darrall, Durham, Gooch, E. Hale, H. R. Harris, J. T.

« AnteriorContinuar »