XXXII. Aggregate Value of Breadstuffs and Provisions exported each Year, from 1821 to 1848, inclusive. [From the Report of the Secretary of the Treasury, Dec. 11, 1848.] INDIVIDUAL STATES. I. MAINE. Government for the Year ending the 2d Wednesday in June, 1850. the second Wednesday in May, 1850,) Ezra B. French, of Nobleboro', Moses M'Donald, of Limerick, of Augusta, of Belfast, of Oldtown, of Palermo, of Augusta, Alfred Redington, William G. Crosby, Samuel Cony, Simeon Strout, of Franklin, Bank Commissioners. President of the Senate, $4 per day. Speaker of the House, 4 " 66 Samuel S. Heagan, of Prospect, JUDICIARY. Supreme Judicial Court. Amount of expenditures from May 1, 1848, to April 30, 1849, 323,330.56 79,038.26 402,368.82 The resources of the State are estimated at • Among which are enumerated, besides cash on hand and proceeds of annual taxes, U. S. six per cent. stock due in 1856, interest semiannually, $944,705.16 150,000.00 10,000.00 6,548.49 $979,000.00 65,000.00 82,350.00 II. NEW HAMPSHIRE. Government for the Year ending on the 1st Wednesday of June, 1850. John Sullivan, of Concord, of Exeter, of Meredith, of Northfield, of Canaan, 600 School Commissioner, Pres. of the Senate, $2.50 per day. of Hillsborough, Speaker of the House, $2.50 per day. of Conway, Clerk of the Senate, Clerk of the House, Fees. Fees. of Portsmouth, Commissary-General. Executive Council. Counties. Councillors. Joseph Clough, of Canterbury. Dana Woodman, of N. Hampton. John L. Hadley, of Weare. Alvah Smith, of Lempster. JUDICIARY. The Superior Court of Judicature consists of a chief justice and four associate justices, who hold one term annually in each of the ten counties of the State, for the hearing and determining of questions of law and petitions for divorce. This court is also vested with chancery powers. The judges of the Superior Court of Judicature are, ex officio, judges of the Court of Common Pleas. This court, before whom all actions for the recovery of debts and the enforcement of contracts, and all jury trials, are brought, consists of one of the justices of the Superior Court, and of two county judges, who are generally appointed from among the yeomanry, whose principal duty it is to attend to the ordinary business of the county, its roads, expenses, &c. Terms are held semiannually in each of the counties. At the last session of the Legislature, the Circuit Court was abolished, and the judges were made justices of the Superior Court. |