major Cu hjng ;nd myfeff, in which, in his opin for wl.ii -. ; ; conceived it likely that he had used this '■l'.'ho.i of *: jur.vm V)t ; that Mr. Davis had ienned J'urr.r«:"jrl at th information, and said that is never before heard of this quarrel, which, hew « •' r, ic:ou: ted t< Uira for th« condu& major Cufh ing had ot>ferved towards him upon the fubjeA of s U.c, said claim when it w.s beiore the Houf: of Reprefentir ive.N : that Mr. Davis oddedthat he and inajor ha:l s it that time, lodged together, a"... that major Cu.hing had labored to convince him that my claim was uujult—-that the appoint ment of me as ai l de camp given to mt by the commander in chief, not for the good of the service, but merely to serve and gratify me : and that such an appointment never wasnectflary That he (Mr. Strother) had replied, that on my arrival he fbould certainly inform m« of this cir cumstance, for which it was probable major Cufh ing would b<; punished. Of thi I was on my arrival here, informed, by Mr. Strother. Of the truth and accuracy of the information I neither have, rtor ever had the kaft doubt. a full imprefiion of its truth I a»ft «d as has already r.pp a red to the court ; and the question to be determined is, whather, under the tircumftnr.ee* ot the cafe', my behaviour wasy£ drjftvn.t Jhhw, in order to bring the , I beseech you, what mujl my feelings hav<- been when 1 saw the memory of a ganeral, defer vedly dear to every meritorious of ficer and fcJ.dier who had ever fought under him, attempted to be tarnished by a charge of " having appointed me aid de camp merely fir tie purpafe cf ferv *>§, and "without mny regard It tbe good of tbeferviee.' aft yosrfclves what my feelings must have been at feeing malic*, notw«cping likcCaefar at the death of Pompey, over the grave of its objfn terms more mild. Admitting, for the fake of argument, that 1 had mistaken, «tr misapplied the faQ slated in my note, or that it had turned out that Lie-1. Stro 'her's information was unfeanded ; ft til my behavi oar would have fallen far fliort of the terihs bestowed on it. Is it JcutJdons or infamous, or behaving in | such a manner a* is unbecoming en oflicfi and a gen tleman to refcni an injury, which you have every rea son to fuppofc you have received by the improper eonduft of another ? Is it fctndalous or infamous to threaten to punish wrongs, and to express yourfcH in terms commensurate to the insult which you have such reason to believe you have received I If not, and surely no soldier will contend for it, this charge must be groundless. It is the intention with which an act is done that renders it criminal in a greater or lefferdegree, or en tirely innocent. He who beats another upon appa rently well founded information, and under an idea of having been reviled by him, was never yet deemed scandalous and infamous on that account, even though it should afterwards appear that he was mistaken. It is, however stated that, by that note I "J*/*? inftfuitrtcd, that major Cubing had been guilty of w lainotts conduct " To this I answer, that it must ap pear I had fufficient reason for believing his conduft to be such as I mentioned ; and I am so far from believ ing the insinuation to be faife, as to have no doubt on my mind of its being ftri&ly true. Major Cufhing, it is true, denies having ever inter fered with any member of Congress, refpefting my claim. But this evidence ought, in my opinion, to be received with many grains of allowaoce, when the va rious chara&ers in which he appears in this business as mentioned in the early stage of these remarks, are taken into confederation. But further, major Cufhing admits that he was seve ral times i« company with members of Congress when the fubjeft of my claim was mentioned, at which times, it was possible, he might have made such ob servations as he supposed werepropei upon the occasi on ; but ho denies that he ever gave a dircß opinion that the claim wat improper ; and adds, th3t he never introduced the fubjeft to any Senator or Representative. What idea the major meant to convey, with what he may deem a f'afe confidence, when ha fays that he ne ver interfered with my claim, is pretty evident from hia faying that he never introduced the fubjeft to any Senator or Representative, since he admits that he was feversl times in company with members of Congrcfs, when the fubjeft of mv claim was mentioned, and dots not deny having, on those occafsons, made use of such observations as he thought proper. Does the major then mean to convey the idea, that he never in trrfered with mv claim, because he never introduced the fubjeft, although in several conversations with members of Congress tefpe&ingj it, he made use of fueh observations as he supposed weie proper on the occasion ? Is not the interference the fame in either cafe; and can it make anv miterial difference whe ther the fubjeft was introduced by him, or caught hold of and purlued by him whenever it happened to be mentioned by others ? But again, the major, if he is to be believed, does not remember what anyofthefe observations were; therefore, the court cannot, from his evidence, form any udgment of these amounting to au improper interference, or nor, and of course, a correft opinion can only be formed by considering Mr. Davis's statement, as sworn to by lieut. Strother. But there are two parts of the major's evidence in which he seems not to have been fufficicntly guarded, and which, if alluded to, will (hew how much weight is due to the other paru of his evidence. In one of them he fays, 14 He never gave a dirtEl opinion that my claim was improper Surely this is a full admlfli on that he gave an indircQ opinion of its being so ; o therwise he wonld have denied the one as well a* the If I am right in this, J am warranted in faying his conduit was not the less calculated to have its intend ed effeft of doiiigi me an injury, than if it had beso conveyed in dirbß terms, which might have created suspicion, and defeated his objcO. Every body knows, even without Stern's celebrated sermon on Backbiting, that indireS hints infidjoudy iutendrd to convey doubts, under an apparent concern, left there may be too much found -lion for them, generally do more injury than direct charges Again, major Cufhn-g beingafVed if be did not at ' anytime, when my claim was before Congress, tell Mr. Davis, a member from Kentucky "that the ap pointment given me by General Wayne was for the purpose ot serving m-, and not, in his opinion for the good of the service ?" arifwered, that he hadnorecol- Icflion of having fatd so to him, but it is foffiiU he may have made such «* tbjtnatim," but not with a view of injuring me. fuch an admiflton, how can major Cufliing fay he never interfered with my claim f—and what credit can be due to such evidence; aa to his views, and they can only be judged by hisa&ions. * I have now done with this charge, and am only a. fraid that 1 have taken up more time in refuting it than it merited. The next charge is for behaving in a femdahus and infamous manner, &c. io refufing to dcmonjlrate that major Cufhing had interfered as Hated, after he had denied the faft, and called on me to prove it. What kind of demonstration the major required I will not pretend to fav : but it is realonable 10 sup pose it to be nothing short of mathematical, fincetbisis the only kiodsof demonftratim I have any knowledge of I can, heaever, allure him that little short would be necessary to convince me of his innocence. But be this as it may, I had, on a for mer occasion, been made too well acquainted with the major's mode of explanation, after doing*ninjury,andbeingcalled to an account (or it, to consent to meet him for any such pUrpnfe. There is but one kind of personal ai re real inn that I can ever agree to have with him, and I know him too well to believe that be will ever agree to that kind *f personal altercation with me,—So that our disputes ate, probably, drawing toaclofe. In addition to this he knew, andJhntw, that Mr. Davis had returned to Kentucky, and would not be heVe for some time Delays, procraOioation, preva rication, and fubtelties I knew to be his usual wea pons of defence—they were not mine. The wound infliSed on tbe memory of General Wayne, and on my honor could not remain for months without a probe. I therefore determined on a Ipeedy remedy in a cafe that would not admit of delay. In this determination I was certainly j'jflifird by the verbal message brought me by captain Taylor from major Culbing, "That if I persisted in thii thing, he, major CulHing, would disgrace me, and that thit wu the anfwerhe was to bring me." I will not intuit the spirit and fetlinga ofmy judges by a (king them whether there it any one ot them, who, after receiving fuchia meflage, would con»ey an answer through any other medium than the Coffee houfe books, or a newfpaper; or, if he could bring himfelf to expreft in any other language than that made use of by Signed. The court assembled pursuant to adjourn ment. Captain Lewis made bis defence, and the court Jind that the prisoner is not guilty of tbe charge on which be has been tried, and therefore do acquit him. (Signed) MAHLON FORD, Capt. Artillerist & Engineers, and President. (Signed) Charles Willisc Hare, Judge advocate pro hac. The President of the United States having fully considered the proceedings of a General Court Martial, which was convened at the city of Trenton, in the state of New-Jersey*, by virtue of a warrant issued from the War- Office, and sat from the zctb to the 30th, inclusive, October 1798, for the trial of capt. Thomas Lewis on the charge nnd specifica tions thereof, Exhibited in a paper of which the following is a copy, viz. Philadelphia, 20th July, 1798. Captain Thomas Lewis, of tbe army of the United States, is hereby ordered in arrest, on tbe following viz. For behaving in a scandaLus and infamous manner, such as is unbecoming an officer-, and a gentleman : ist. Ia writing me a note, on the 18th instant, July .1798, containing tibese words, viz " For your villainous interference a gainst a just claim kubicb I bad before Con gress,! am determined to punish you," there by falsely iusinuating that I had been guilty of villainous conduct, and in a style as ungen tlemanlike as it is false. 2d. In refusing to demonstrate that I bad interfereas stated in the above note, after I bad denied the fact, and called on him to prove it. 3d. In publishing in the coffee bouse of this city, on this day, (the iotb July 1798) that major (lushing is a paltroon and no gentle man, or words to that effect, all which, toge ther with other specif cations as may be given in full trial, will be fully proven by T. 11. GUSHING, Major\st Heft of Infantry in the service of the U.S. Together with the defence of capt. Lewis, and the sentence of the court, viz.—" That the prisoner is not guilty of the charge on wbicb be has been tried, and therefore do ac quit him." ~ r ' lam commanded to make known, that the President approves of the aforesaid sentence, from a conviction that the court could not have done otherwise, than acquit captain Lewis of behaviour that was scandalous and infamous ; but is of opinion, that captain Lewis t in the style of his frst note to major Cusbing, neglected the urbanity and decorum becoming an officer, and in this particular is therefore reprehensible for bis error. Given at the War-Office of the United States, in Philadelphia, this 14tb day of January, 1799, and in the 33d year of the Independence of said States. (SignedJ' JAMES M'HRNRT, Secretary of War. THE fiirtfdog rtfolution 6f I general Court Mar tiki, which w»cynrf of thft FreUdent, »re truecopievfroni the original*, on file, to the War Once as (hf United Statft, * ? JOHN OALDWm, ,' XV CIV. Dpaat. War Office, 6tb .. December 28, 1798. WHEN (tit claim of major Thomas Lewis at extra aid de camp to general Wayne was before Congrrfs the second tirnr, I aflccd major Thomas Cufhing his opinioftof the claim. He ft id it was not founded oft law, aRd he believed th« appoint ment of extra aid wis ufeltfs arid gi*en to I.ewii as a matter of convenience, to afford him an oppor tunity of fettling his privite bufinffs, "and that major Lewis had told him so, or words to that im port. Other convention did pass, but the parti cular words I ra erpreflion* tc Major Ci'.fti ueen, in tie state of New-Tork ; if Essex county in New- Jersey ; of tbe counties of Philadelphia, York, Northampton, Mifflin, Dauphin, Washington, and Cumberland, in Pennsyl vania ; and of the county of Amelia, in Virginia, complaining of the act, entitulcd " an act concerning aliensand other late ads of Congress, submit tbe following IT is the profcflfed objeft of these peti tions to folitit a repeiil of the two afts pafled during the last feflion of congress, the one " an aft concerning aliens," the other " an aft, in addition to an aft for the punishment of certain crimes againll the United States," on the ground of their being unconftitution a!, oppressive and impolitic. The committee cannot, however, forbear to notice, that the principal measures hither to adopted for repelling the aggreflions and insults of France have not el'caped animad version. T. LEWIS, October 20th. Complaints are particularly direfted against the laws providing a navy—for augmenting the army—authorising fift ß llo t : a pleases, w.thout being liable to punilhrnent if he Ihould abuse this licence to the injury lie and individual*, for any abijfe o{ this permission to their prejudice; in like man ! juftity him .n going by violence into another ; man's house, or in afTaulting any perfoo •• the liberty of the pref*," while in fcveral if not all, their laws provide for the puni/h. men! of libellous publications, which would be a manifeft absurdity and contradiftion, if any and every thing, without being amena. ble to the laws for the abuse of this licence. According to this jsft, legal, a ß d universally admitted definition of " the liberty of the P rc /*.''' a law to restrain its licentioufrefs, in piiblifhing falfe, scandalous, and malicious eonfidered a. « an abridgement" of its " liberty." t> >fi t < It is answered, in the second place, that the liberty of the press did nerer extend, ac cording to the laws of any state, or of the Umt.d States, or of England, from whence our laws are derived, to the publication of 3 wt and malicious writings a gamft the government, written or published with intent to do mifchief, such publications being unlawful, a „d puniffiable in every rtate ; from whence it follows, undeniably, i lat a law, to punish seditious and malicious publications, is not an abridgement of " thr liberty of the press," f„ r it would be a man,'- *■ a^fui 'dity to fay, ihat a man> liberty was abridged by punching him for doing that which he never had a liberty to do. It is answered thirdly, that the aft in quettion canno.t be uneonflitutional, because if makes nothing penal that was net penal before, and gives no new powers to the court, but it merely declaratory of the com mon law, and ufeful for rendering that law more generally ka )wn, and more easi ly undeiltood. This cannot be denied, and if it be admitted, as it mull be, that falfe, fcandalcua, and malicious libels againfl the government of the country, published with intent to do mifchief, are punilhaMe by the cammonlaw; for by the 2d feilion of the 3d article of the constitution, the judical power of the United States is expressly ex tended to all offences ariling under the con stitution. By the constitution, the govern ment of the United States is ettablifhed, for many important objefls, as the govern ment or the country; and libelsagainft that government, therefore, are offences a rising under the •onftitution, and conse quently are puniftiabW at common law by the courts of the Uni ted States. The a&» indeed, is so far from having extended tbs law, and the power of the court, that it has abridged both, and has enlarged in fkad of abridging the «• liberty of the \