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SCHEDULE.

That no inconvenience may arise from the alterations and amendments in the Constitution of this Commonwealth, and in order to carry the same into complete operation, it is hereby declared and ordained:

1. That all laws of this Commonwealth, in force at the time of making the said alterations and amendments in the said Constitution, and not inconsistent therewith, and all rights, actions, prosecutions, claims and contracts, as well of individuals as of bodies corporate, shall continue as if the said alterations and amendments had not been made.

2. That the president and supreme executive council shall continue to exercise the executive authority of this Commonwealth as heretofore, until the third Tuesday of December next; but no intermediate vacancies in the council shall be supplied by new elections.

3. That all officers in the appointment of the ex cutive department, shall continue in the exercise of the duties of their respective offices until the first day of September, one thousand seven hundred and ninty-one, unless their commissions shall sooner expire by their own limitations, or the said offices become vacant by death or resignation, and no longer, unless re-appointed and commissioned by the Governor. Except that the judges of the Supreme Court shall hold their offices for the terms in their commissions respectively expressed.

4. That justice shall be admisistered in the several counties of the State, until the period aforesaid, by the same justices, in the same courts, and in the same manner as heretofore.

5. That no person now in commission as sheriff shall be eligible at the next election for a longer term than will, with the time which he shall have served in the said office, complete the term of three years.

6. That until the first enumeration shall be made as directed in the fourth section of the first article of the Constitution as established by this convention, the city of Philadelphia and the several counties shall be respectively entitled to elect the same number of representatives as is now prescribed by law.

7. That the first Senate shall consist of eighteen members, to be chosen in districts formed as follows, viz: The city of Philadelphia, and the counties of Philadelphia and Delaware shall be a district, and elect three Senators; the county of Chester shall be a district, and shall elect one Senator; the county of Bucks shall be a district, and shall elect one Senator; the county of Montgomery shall be a disstrict, and shall elect one Senator; the county of Northampton shall be a district, and shall elect one Senator; the counties of Lancaster and York shall be a district, and shall elect three Senators; the counties of Berks and Dauphin shall be a district, and shall elect two Senators; the counties of Cumberland and Mifflin shall be a district, and shall elect one Senator; the counties of Northumberland, Luzerne and Huntingdon shall be a district, and shall elect one Senator; the counties of Bedford and Franklin shall be a district, and shall elect one Senator; the counties of Westmoreland and Allegheny shall be a district, and shall elect one Senator; and the counties of Washington and Fayette

shall be a district, and shall elect two Senators; which Senators shall serve until the first enumeration before mentioned shall be made, and the representation in both houses of the Legislature shall be established by law, and chosen as in the Constitution is directed. Any vacancies which shall happen in the Senate within the said time, shall be supplied as prescribed in the nineteenth section of the first article.

8. That the election of Senators shall be conducted, and the returns thereof made to the Senate, in the same manner as is prescribed by the election laws of the State for conducting and making return of the election of representatives. In those districts which consist of more than one county, the judges of the district elections within each county, after having formed a return of the whole election within that county, in such manner as is directed by law, shall send the same, by one or more of their number, to the place hereinafter mentioned, within the district of which such county is a part; where the judges, so met, shall compare and cast up the several county returns, and execute, under their hands and seals, one general and true return for the whole district; that is to say, the judges of the district composed of the city of Philadelphia and the counties of Philadelphia and Delaware, shall meet in the State house in the city of Philadel phia; the judges of the district composed of the counties of Lancaster and York, shall meet at the court house in the county of Lancaster; the judges of the district composed of the counties of Berks and Dauphin, shall meet at Middletown, in the county of Berks; the judges of the district com

posed of the counties of Cumberland and Mifflin, shall meet in Greenwood township, in the county of Cumberland, at the house now occupied by David Miller; the judges of the district composed of the counties of Northumberland, Luzerne and Huntingdon, shall meet in the town of Sunbury; the judges of the district composed of the counties of Bedford and Franklin, shall meet at the house now occupied by John Dickey, in Air township, Bedford county; the judges of the district composed of the counties of Westmorejand and Allegheny, shall meet in Westmoreland county, at the court house in the town of Greensborough; and the judges of the district composed of the counties of Washington and Fayette, shall meet at the court house in the town of Washington, in Washington county, on the third Tuesday in October respectively, for the purposes aforesaid.

9. That the election of the Governor shall be conducted in the several counties in the manner prescribed by the laws of the State for the election of Representatives, and the returns in each county shall be sealed by the judges of the elections, and transmitted to the president of the supreme executive council, directed to the Speaker of the Senate, as soon after the election as may be.

Done in Convention, the second day of September, in the year of our Lord one thousand seven hundred and ninety, and of the Independence of the United States of America, the fifteenth. In testimony whereof, we have hereunto subscribed

our names.

James Wilson,
Hilary Baker,

THOMAS MIFFLIN, President.
William Lewis,

Thomas M'Kean,

George Gray,

Robert Hare,

Enoch Edwards,

Samuel Sitgreaves,

William Robinson, Jr., John Arndt,

Peter Rhoads,

Samuel Ogden, Thomas Jenks, John Barclay, Abraham Stout, William Gibbons, Thomas Bull, James Boyd, Edward Hand, Robert Coleman, Sebastian Graff, John Hubley, John Breckbill, Henry Miller, Henry Slegle, William Reed, Benjamin Tyson, Benjamin Pedan, Matthew Dill,

William Irvine,

James Power,

Joseph Hiester,

Christian Lower,

Abraham Lincoln,

Paul Groscop,

Baltzer Gehr,

Joseph Powell,

John Piper,
Charles Smith,
Simon Snyder,
William Findley,
William Todd,
Alexander Addison,
John Hoge,

David Redick,
James Ross,

John Smilie,
Albert Gallatin,
James M'Lene,
George Matthews,
James Morris,
Lindsay Coates,
Jonathan Shoemaker,
John Gloninger,
William Brown,
Alexander Graydon,

Timothy Pickering,
Andrew Henderson,
John Gibson,

Thomas Beale,

John Sellers,

Nathaniel Newlin,

ATTEST-JOSEPH REDMAN, Secretary.

JACOB SHALLUS, Assistant Secretary.

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