Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 3.djvu/497

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From Franklin, Howard county, to Chariton.

From St. Louis, by Florisant, to St. Charles.

Kentucky.In Kentucky.—From Hopkinsville, by Williams’s and Boyd’s Landing, to Long Creek, Caldwell county.

From Columbia to Hazle Patch.

From Danville, by Lancaster, to Somerset.

From Bowling Green to Sparta.

From Lewisville, by Woodsonville, Glasgow, Burksville, and Seventy-six, to Monticello.

From Lewisville to Hardensburgh.

From Elizabethtown to Bowling Green.

From Newburgh, by Ewingsville, to Clarkesville.

From Port Royal, by Ewingsville, to Hopkinsville.

From Glasgow, by Tompkinsville, to Burksville.

From Barboursville, by Whitley Courthouse, to Somerset.

From Flemingsburg, by the mouth of Fleming and Carlisle, to Millersburgh.

From Paris, by North Middleton, to Owensville.

Tennessee.In Tennessee.—From Murfreesborough, by Labanon and Gallatin, to Glasgow, Kentucky.

From Lebanon, by Trowsdale’s Ferry, to Mount Richardson.

From Lebanon, by Marysville, in Wilson county, to Liberty.

From Greenville, by Newport, Dandridge, and Hill’s, to Knoxville.

From Winchester, by Marion Courthouse, to Pikeville.

From Rogersville, by M’Cann’s store, and Black Water Salt Works, to Lee Courthouse, Virginia.

From Blountville to Paperville, on Sinking Creek.

Mississippi.In Mississippi.—From Natchez, by Sweazy’s Ferry, Woodville, and Pinkneyville, to St. Francisville, in the state of Louisiana.

Alabama.In Alabama.—From Fort Claiborne, by Fort Montgomery, to Blakely.

From Huntsville, by Milton’s Bluff, Falls of Black Warrior, and French Settlement on Black Warrior, to St. Stephens.

From Huntsville to Cotton Port, in Limestone county, by Pulasky, to Columbia, in Tennessee.

From Fort Mitchell, by Fort Bainridge, Fort Jackson, Burnt Corn Springs, Fort Claiborne, and the town of Jackson, to St. Stephens.

From Fort Jackson, by Cahaba Valley, to the Falls of Brick Warrior.

From St. Stephens, by Winchester, to Fort, on Pearl river, in Mississippi.

From Mobile to Blakely.

Illinois.In Illinois.—From Bellville, by William Padfield’s and the seat of justice of Bond county, to Palmyra, in the Illinois territory.

From Edwardsville to the seat of justice of Bond county.

From Kaskaskia, by Wideman’s, on Kaskaskia river, to Bellville, St. Clair county.

Approved, April 20, 1818.


Statute I.


April 20, 1818.

Chap. XCIV.An Act to increase the salaries of the judges of the circuit court for the District of Columbia.

Act of March 3, 1811, ch. 40.
500 dolls. additional to each of the judges of the circuit court for the district of Columbia.
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, That in addition to the compensation heretofore allowed by law to the judges of the circuit court for the District of Columbia, the sum of five hundred dollars per annum be paid to the chief justice of the said court, and the same sum per annum to each of the assistant judges of said court, payable quarter yearly; the first quarterly payment to be made on the first day of April, one thousand eight hundred and eighteen.

Approved, April 20, 1818.