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Statement of the votes for President and Vice-President of the United States for four years from the 4th day of March, 1861.

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The President of the Senate then announced

That the whole number of electors appointed to vote for President and Vice-President of the United States is three hundred and three (303,) of which a majority is one hundred and fifty-two (152.) That for President of the United StatesAbraham Lincoln, of Illinois, received....

John C. Breckinridge, of Kentucky received.......

180 votes.

72

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of Georgia.

John Bell, of Tennessee, received..
Stephen A. Douglas, of Illinois, received.
That for Vice-President of the United States-
Hannibal Hamlin, of Maine, received..
Joseph Lane, of Oregon, received.....
Edward Everett, of Massachusetts, received.
Herschel V. Johnson, of Georgia, received..
And thereupon

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The President of the Senate declaredThat Abraham Lincoln, of Illinois, having received a majority of the whole number of electoral votes for President, is duly elected President of the United States for four years, commencing with the 4th day of March, 1861. And that Hannibal Hamlin, of Maine, having received a majority of the whole number of electoral votes for Vice-President, is duly elected Vice-President of the United States for four years, commencing with the 4th day of March, 1861.

The business for which the two houses were assembled having been finished, the Senate returned to its chamber.

Mr. Winslow moved, at 1 o'clock and 37 minutes p. m., that the House adjourn.

And the question being put,

Yeas

It was decided in the negative, {Nays

87

88

The yeas and nays being desired by one-fifth of the members present, Those who voted in the affirmative are

Mr John B. Alley
William T. Avery
Charles L. Beale
Thomas S. Bocock
Reese B. Brabson
Lawrence O'B. Branch
Francis M. Bristow
John Y. Brown
James Buffinton
Henry C. Burnett
Martin Butterfield
Charles Case
Horace F. Clark
John B. Clark
Clark B. Cochrane
Roscoe Conkling
Martin F. Conway
Burton Craige
John G. Davis
Henry L. Dawes
Daniel C. De Jarnette
Charles Delano
Henry A. Edmundson
Thomas M. Edwards
Alfred Ely

William H. English

John F. Farnsworth

Thomas B. Florence

Muscoe R. H. Garnett

Mr. Daniel W. Gooch

James H. Graham
John A. Gurley
Chapin Hall

J. Morrison Harris
John T. Harris
John B. Haskin
John Hickman
Charles B. Hoard
William S. Holman
George W. Hughes
John Hutchins
Jacob M. Kunkel
Shelton F. Leake
John A. Logan
Henry C. Longnecker
Owen Lovejoy
Gilman Marston
Charles D. Martin
Elbert S. Martin
John A. McClernand
Jacob K. McKenty
Edward McPherson
John S. Millson
William Montgomery
Thomas A. R. Nelson
William E. Niblack
John T. Nixon
John W. Noell

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Mr. John U. Pettit
Samuel O. Peyton
John S. Phelps
John F. Potter
Emory B. Pottle
Edwin R. Reynolds
John H. Reynolds
Jetur R. Riggs
James C. Robinson
Homer E. Royce
Thomas Ruffin
William E. Simms
William N. H Smith
Thaddeus Stevens
John W. Stevenson
William Stewart
Mason W. Tappan
Eli Thayer

James H. Thomas
Cydnor B. Tompkins
Charles R. Train
Carey A. Trimb'e

Clement L. Vallandigham
E. P. Walton

Cadwalader C. Washburn
Ellihu B. Washburne
Edwin H. Webster
Warren Winslow
John V. Wright.

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Mr. Thomas J. Barr
J. R. Barrett
John A. Bingham
Samuel S. Blair
Harrison G. Blake
Alexander R Boteler
William D. Brayton
George Briggs
John C. Burch
Alfred A. Burnham
James H. Campbell
John Carey
Stephen Coburn
John Cochrane
Schuyler Colfax
Thomas Corwin
John Covode
Samuel S. Cox
James Craig
Samuel R. Curtis
H. Winter Davis
R. Holland Duell
W. McKee Dunn
Sidney Edgerton
Thomas D. Eliot
Emerson Etheridge
Reuben E. Fenton

Mr. Stephen C. Foster

Augustus Frank
Ezra B. French
John A. Gilmer
James T. Hale
Andrew J. Hamilton
Robert Hatton
William Helmick
William Howard
William A. Howard
James Humphrey
William Irvine
Benjamin F. Junkin
Francis W. Kellogg
Willian S. Kenyon
Charles H. Larrabee
De Witt C. Leach
M. Lindley Lee
Dwight Loomis
William B. Maclay
Robert Mallory
Horace Maynard
Robert McKnight
William Millward
Laban T. Moore
James K. Moorhead
Justin S. Morrill

Mr. Edward Joy Morris
Isaac N. Morris
Freeman H. Morse
George W. Palmer
John J. Perry
Albert G. Porter
James M. Quarles
Alexander H. Rice
Christopher Robinson
Charles L. Scott
George W. Scranton
Charles B. Sedgwick
John Sherman
Daniel E. Sickles
Daniel E. Somes
Elbridge G. Spaulding
Francis E. Spinner
Benjamin Stanton
William B. Stokes
Lansing Stout

Charles H. Van Wyck
John P. Verree
Edward Wade
Henry Waldron
Alfred Wells
John Woodruff
Samuel H. Woodson..

Orris S. Ferry

So the House refused to adjourn.

Mr. Sherman, by unanimous consent, submitted the following resolution; which was read, considered, and agreed to, viz:

Resolved, That two members of the House be appointed by the Speaker to join a committee of one member of the Senate, to be appointed by that body, to wait on Abraham Lincoln, of Illinois, and inform him that he has been duly elected President of the United States for four years, commencing on the 4th day of March, 1861; and also to inform Hannibal Hamlin, of Maine, that he has been duly elected Vice-President of the United States for four years from the 4th day of March 1861.

The Speaker appointed Mr. Ellihu B. Washburne and Mr. Burlingame the said committee on the part of the House.

Ordered, That the Clerk acquaint the Senate therewith.

Mr. Theaker, from the Committee on Enrolled Bills, reported that the committee had examined and found truly enrolled a resolution of the following title, viz:

H. Res. 39. Joint resolution directing the accounting officers of the treasury to settle the accounts of the late Robert Stockton, quartermaster, &c.

When

The Speaker signed the same.

The regular order of business being the bill of the House (H. R. 701) "to secure contracts, and make provision for the safe, certain, and more speedy transportation, by railroad, of mails, troops, munitions of war, military and naval stores, between the Atlantic States and those of the Pacific, and for other purposes," with the amendments of the Senate thereto, the same being the special order for this day—

Mr. Curtis moved that its further consideration be postponed until

to-morrow.

And then,

On motion of Mr. Winslow, at 2 o'clock and 6 minutes p. m., the House adjourned.

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1861.

The following petitions, memorials, and other papers, were laid upon the Clerk's table, under the twenty-fourth rule of the House, to wit: By Mr. Pryor: The petition of S. D. Watkins, praying for extra pay for services rendered on mail-route No. 4171; which was referred to the Committee on the Post Office and Post Roads.

By Mr. Longnecker: The petition of citizens of Bucks county, Pennsylvania, in favor of the Crittenden resolutions.

By Mr. Cox: The memorial of citizens of Washington county, Ohio, in favor of the passage of an act by Congress submitting the border State propositions to the people.

By Mr. Moorhead: The petition of citizens of Pittsburg, Pennsylvania, in favor of the Union, the Constitution, and the enforcement of the laws.

By Mr. Longnecker: The petition of citizens of Bucks county, Pennsylvania, of a like import.

By Mr. Kenyon: The petition of citizens of Catskill, New York, praying for the adoption of the border State propositions.

Ordered, That the said petitions and memorial be laid upon the table.

By Mr. Bristow : The petition of citizens of Gordonsville, Logan county, Kentucky, praying for a mail-route from Gordonsville to Furguson's Station; which was referred to the Committee on the Post Office and Post Roads.

By Mr. Tappan: The petition of T. A. Curtis, praying for compen sation for services as chief clerk in the office of the engineer for the Treasury extension; which was referred to the Committee of Claims. By Mr. Niblack: The resolutions of a public meeting at Patoka, Indiana, in favor of the Crittenden amendment; which was laid upon the table.

By Mr. E. Joy Morris: The petition of G. W. English, asking compensation for the discovery of a remedy for the weevil and other destructive pests of the crops; which was referred to the Committee on Agriculture.

By Mr. Conkling: The proceedings of a public meeting held at Utica, New York, recommending a settlement of impending national difficulties by congressional action.

By Mr. Wood: Two memorials of citizens of Montgomery county, Pennsylvania, in relation to our national difficulties.

By Mr. Blair: The petition of citizens of Somerset county, Pennsylvania, in favor of the Union, the Constitution as it is, and the enforcement of the laws.

Ordered, That the said petitions and memorials be laid upon the table.

By Mr. C. C. Washburn: The petition of G. M. Walkins, praying

Congress to authorize the reissue of a certain land patent; which was referred to the Committee on Private Land Claims.

Mr. Edward Joy Morris, by unanimous consent, presented the petition of the Board of Trade of Philadelphia in favor of the "Morrill tariff bill;" which was referred to the Committee of Ways and Means. The Speaker, by unanimous consent, laid before the House a letter from the Acting Secretary of the Interior, transmitting estimates of salaries of superintendents of Indian affairs and agents in Washington Territory; which was referred to the Committee of Ways and Means, and ordered to be printed.

On motion of Mr. Fenton, by unanimous consent,

Ordered, That leave be granted for the withdrawal from the files of the House of the papers in the case of Nancy G. Van Rensselaer for the purpose of reference to one of the executive departments. The above-mentioned papers were thereupon delivered to Mr. Fenton.

On motion of Mr. Sherman, by unanimous consent,

Ordered, That the bill of the House (H. R. 865) making appropri ations for the current and contingent expenses of the Indian department and for fulfilling treaty stipulations with various Indian tribes. for the year ending June 30, 1862, with the amendments of the Senate, be referred to the Committee of Ways and Means, and that the said amendments be printed.

Mr. Pryor, as a question of privilege, submitted the following preamble and resolution; which were read, considered, and agreed to, viz: Whereas the following statements have appeared in the New York Times newspaper: "It is ascertained that, in addition to the other frauds perpetrated by the seceding members of Congress, they have taken from the congressional library, which is, probably, the best in this country, containing many books which cannot be obtained elsewhere, some of the most valuable volumes in the whole collection. Thousands of dollars' worth have been thus abstracted and carried off by these members. Among them, a single South Carolina member, I am informed, has more than four hundred dollars' worth of digests of the most valuable character, and which can never be replaced. Scarcely one of these gentlemen took the trouble to return his books, but, on the contrary, were very cautious to have them carefully packed and sent off. I am further informed that a member from one of the border States, who favors secession, and thought his State sure to secede, sent orders for upwards of one thousand dollars' worth of books recently, which, under the rules of the library, were refused. This is regarded here to be very near akin to what Webster defines as theft:"

Resolved, That a select committee of three be appointed to inquire into the truth of the above accusations, and that said committee have power to send for persons and papers, and have leave to report at any time.

The Speaker appointed Mr. Pryor, Mr. Maynard, and Mr. Edwards the said committee.

The Speaker having announced as the regular order of business the

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