\<>!, I .7. 2J && SEW SERIES, THE BEDFORD GAZETTE $ PUBLISHED EVERY nun AY MORNING BY MEYERS k BEN FORI), a* the following terms, to wit : fl.f" per annum, CASH, in advance. A .'.'>o " " if paid within the year. " it not paid within the year, i, 'N<> subscription taken for less than six months. So paper discontinued until all arrearage* are r j,.i.iii-le>s at tin opt ion of rhe publishers. It has • e ■ decided By the United States Courts, that the jKigeoJ a newspaper wit hour the payment of ar rcntages, is prima facir evidence of fraud and is a B5 The comts have decided that per-ons are ac- Icn ■ t.,ble lor the subscription price of newspapers, ,)■ ;!.sv laki- t ßern fiom the post office, whetherthe y j'jhsciibe for them, or not. I MTi;i:?.iE (.'onrr or PENNSYLVANIA. I .?(••• ry and finest. R. Company vs. Conner. ~ "-" r I AT.' UMS->r 03' '•s.Bt \ K rot! PEF.'".\ D ANT. I M : i• ' 1?" v III!' * I *xo;;> I lam ol counsel with the ct.-f ncinnt in this I i:-e li would, 'nuveu-r, '• impropi i to con | iI hr.il 1 i;e en 1! .t I njip ar mainly in the lope i saving the rights of the Stat*', for which I | cull-ami" arri mys*U' have been I retai- > car: tJ .or;: .ner... But the I i ' '• 1 per s. in tj be id utiral h those c.f the commonwealth. The disad- j i.u.Mg • v .door urnt rof having such a ques • diteiui:ne:! in a collateral proceeding be-! • ' - full}' to present the whole ! < - ! ->■' -t the at •, must vei v ob i . -to the court. '• i."g as :i..:ch as this ha? *l - in tote a judicial tribunal, and it v. •• nit ( fit n ! .uit a R r; .:n Senate d'-cnie?: '■ ! • qua! fu'r.gnilud •. A suoiin: 'hat V i'.hi in the \ which we and our clients | :.n_' the n l-S Of the penpli ) take of th" VI. it La itiij.-' Illi'VlS eh- ,ll; an at li.'j t V . .1 lilt'.: is to t. ke tile C.Ol.lOtl i' oi leu c:i;i:>ns ofh'-r property for ■ e-v ■■ t ■tJ ol it- value. r can i; be tb'iiieti ilia! !'ie chtracler —the life's life < f the State, i? rf. ply involved, if it shall bo j fii civ set 4 thai there is no p iver in the b i-- : tivt. i x-cuiivt', or judicial, whiicb cn or w ill save cre lie property Uoai plun - "• e must t bear th>- name of Penn -u una t." •: 1 ■ ;.<•! '.vin n.:ihf!i>: ex f rny. J' 1 • ogh ti%.kiol!e the bluxb 'c. 1- n,'V..i n i Arx ■ " ) I• this cas* should go cniY ifcsscd and unpun- ■ But that is* rat ait: *v future prof peri- | /, >■ ie I jt ii a on tiie act IJ~ tile s' • ■"! >' canal: wili form = u'ii un era in the : : ' ry :.} I' •iir.sv'vabia •; the V;Z >0 fraud V. as in th.d oi (ie; rgia; At: J if We are to be well gov , vd hei ill r, we nui:' 'ti -.t it in the am vV. Ts.al CO.'-."art was iy:;oniini-.msly ourni d •.[| , presence ft the e. 1", and i> authoi.y | b-rs afnt jbfltyrs *"i c ■' in'o n 'e :...st ■ . ... i'o ll.is great act of judice (h .>rgia. 0 .v.. it •: nsh■ • now t't • meet thriving Stat. :i ;( it i ITnion. li' PairotUanii will lot law ibat nobl example, her fortunes will he wor thy of fur history. Jf not, she must look for .ui tg' t the iocotrie from the tonnage tav ? Wlsat conii .iencp tan we feel tha' tiie bonds of this plantili will not he handed over as a gracious gift lo tile obligees ? I sav this merely to show the nature of the | , is. as we allege it to be. 1 assume that we are because we believe so in good faith a.-ni sTnceiitv. Hit our convictions, ifiough viucli to us, are nothing to you as an elenaent hi the lot mat km of your jndgment. Wr must. ji; ve what we allege, by isucti facts an.. r a = in- r.s w i.l have no serious doubt in the nnr.d of an inpp.iti.il judge; other wish tne decree, must, an 1 we know it will, be against us, and thi? n. tgiuficent speculation at the exp nse of Mate w ill be pron unced no sin against j die i i jiivafe morality. ] ad :t' the rigid d ike Sfaie to sell h> r pub lic li. just a.-'.iiiy other owner may sell his I'. erty. out I assert that the transaction be tween !t:e majority of the General As- mbiy of the one part, ami'the Snnburj and Erie Raile mad Comjrany of the oth'r part, under wiiicti the canals were handed over to the party of the se tine, I;.aid and c .rrtipfion, that no man could take title under it, or claim advantage liom i , whether at first or second hand, without heme charged with notice of it; and a title tiaud"- lentiy obtained is no title at all. +. It comes in direct conflict with that pro vis!" . m the fust amendment of the constitution adopted last year, and which devotes the in come from the public vv.u'ks, and the proceeds of liit-ir sale, to inc sinking fund. fj. It is m conflict equally direct, not mere ly with the words, hut with the whole spirit of those other provisions in the same aim udment which forbid the Imimonweallh to hmd her credit to, or become a stockholder or joint ow ner in, or asiirar the debt of, any cyipo.alioii. I have conceded the powei of tfn t>ait u *t!l the public works, provided it be done oy the proper department of the government. That rower is derived from the general princi ple that all owners may sell. Hut this gem i. principle limits the power in the hands o a.i officer or agent to a We, and does not authorize * gift, either in whole or in part. The same proposition is sustained >j ano < t argument. These canals were solemnly pledg ed to the holders of the public debt at the time when that debt was created. The State never jyj ! did h. hi them tu her own absolute rilit. Tie functional-i*s of tiie Commonwealth were trus tees appointed by the people for the benefit of their creditors. Those functionaries might self the canals and substitute the price for the pnp erty it.self: but w here did they get the authority to give them away 1 Hut there is another consideration tvhich set tles ail con:roversy on this point. The amend ed constttutimi provi h-s tfiat the net income o? the public tvo; ks, or the proceeds of I heir S.u.r shall be plac-d in the sinking fund. What doe? this mean, it it does not express the deliberate resolution of the people that their officers and agents -h i!! esecote the trust created when the J- of was coiitracten I It us a solemn command of'he fundamental hw that .the public works shall be kept, and th ir income sacredly n -pli ed to a specified purpose, unbss thev shall !:. 'ld: and w hen ih-'y ar -sohl, the proceeds of them shall be a; plied if, thesitne way.!' clud- s and; by the clearest implication, forbids J every other disposition of them. If they are not .sold, they mm: be kept; ami if not' ken!, they "must he SMU. | The source, then, from which the officer-, a gents, or representatives of the State derive in. ir pwrt :(k po.eof public works, lim its >: It power !.-■ a *-i!e; tl:e honor and faith of f!'' .""...ite is pl.'.'g",' to h t] ! them in tlll-t . .v :// fh.-M) to! the us - of fi-'f creditors: and the con stitution expres>ly commands that ple-Jge . be i ri'r.'e, rreat. hi the face of all tf.i--, will -'and up to asx-it that zry man or body nu-n acting on ! half of the Mute osn coristitntirmal !y tiar.- hr trie title of these canals lo u p::'..i?-- cmpoi l ion by means of anv act wich ■ not a ! in ti fair and proper sense of tf.at word? \ \\ 1 am right in : ■ li -ving this to he undeniable, ! It rema '.s only that 1 show this act of fast April not to be a a "ft. : f i- n , 1 Ji is net the exchange of prop ity fi>r other proferty—that is barter.— : [tie constitution would be pa!? r !v vio'aied if a;iv ;.":;je, ,J To sell is t > make a contract f >r the delivery c.i a thing in consideration of eqvi "-ileut tn money paid mto be paid by th" purchaser. Of course I Jo not r an to s3V that every agree ment to S"ll for / s than a full p. ice is voi Where the seller is acting for himself, 3nd is not imposed on bv the purchaser, what the paitit •• i' ink an equivalent i conclusively ta ken to be so. There is, beside?, a derivative use of the word who ii e::p! esses the trar. - i i' of a very valuable ti.i: g for a verv small considera 'ti n. Tor iietince, we say r 'f a public ofßcer that he sells himself it he takes a bribe. Eau iohl his bifthri-r'tt for a nu -s of pottage, and Mark Antonv sohi the. empire of th w..rl i for the srr.i'es of a harlot. Sat if i* surely not in this s-use fl it the amended onstitmi-.-n, and the people who voted on it, understood the, word safe. They meant a contract lor a full price, or a price as near fotfie value a- - could be got bv a diligent effort in any matkei which might be accessible. This is the propular sig niheation of the word, fl is so used by ali writers ami speakers. i his is defined to be its ordinary sense by lexicographer?. This, too, is its legal meaning. No court in the world would lid ! that a pow-r of attorney to sell and apply the proceeds ;o the use of the principal .( fj|*< cierii! )!? is executed Siva gift. The du ty to sell ie p:."s ■ i?ii v ei> a 11 y the duty of seek ing a mark';, .-tifving purchaser?, and getting the full equivalent price, as n- ar a'= may tie.— When ;■! . p rtv is ordered to be gold, it means that the whole of it shall he converted into money. It i. a- pLin a vjulaliou < f such an oid'-r". a 1 J an of as gross dishonesty to nive it awav for iiaif price, as it would be to give i. for no'price at all. Our honorable and learned oi-ponej.'.- will rot contend that the !-pjMatur could bestow the public works on a curj nratsou f. r a Pj,eri' nun-ma! : risideiution, and call it a •ale, merely h'-cause something, however smalt, has been received. That brg conceded, there is nc gionnd on which tiny can stand between ihat and an a leqmde pric-, or a price at b ast ned adequate by 'he actors m the business. VVher- both parties know the price to be ioade piate, it is not a sale, but a gift. The price agreed in l>° given for ikes'- cnnrtls v;os gross!shoe; egi if inodeejontc, onri nil tke parties knew ii lu.ry melt. Ti m is inci.ntesta idy proved bv the records of the auditor gene ral's otiice. L'iek at them. Look also at the rport C'l th" Senate's 50trur.i1 tee. Both are ap pended to our ariswei, and term pa;t uf the re cord bL-furt' you. By these records it i proved, a? conclusively j as any fact can be proved in a court of justice, j thai the canals in (imstim have yielded during the la-t fen Vf us an average income, and j clear (Tail expenses, sufficient to pay the inter- j est on $7,">54,157 120 of I cr five per cent debt. ! Add to Bus the lowest is'imaie an) body has j ever naue for incteas-d value of the Morth Branch recently finished-*! f .500,000—and j the aggregate value is $9,Q5£,1 1) i -0. Ihisj includes the calamitous year of fSf)7, when all business was depressed; nor docs it make any | allowance fur future increase of trade and busi ness. Looking at tiie past growth of their val- j ue, and considering all other circumstances, no ; man can reasonably doubt that in fourtet n \ < ais : they would he worth to the State at feast TWENTY MILLIONS OF DOLLARS. As iniicll ot tt.f public debt as their net income would pay the interest upon, so much are they worth to the lax-payers of the Slate—so much also <>ie thev worth to any man who owns them, if he is content with the same rate of interest. BEDFORD, PA. FRIDAY MORNING, NOVEMBERS,IBSB, 1 After looking at the value of these works, 'urn your eyes ujion (lie pretended bargain of •'a.-t April. "Oh, what a sorry sigbt is there!" ; Ail the prospective value of this great patrimu by cb an gone—two-thirds of hs present value ; delivered over to a private corporation to be! partitioned out according to its own 0 ; ! hey can pocket Iwo hundred nnl sevhty- Jive Ihottmnd dnilars per annum. They can i t !be works be sold when the purchase fl; re. V becomes due, and retire with nearly four mil lions of the people's money in their pockets.-- i'r, tiie}- c.ikeep thein and pay th.- aimtiii! instab'n-nis with iiie annua! income, by a i'lir.u fifty t!;;> isand ooilirs out of then previous gains, j And ah thi h ba-"d upon tlie average va'ue of j ■he w i.y for the ten years, witlu it suppo- ' si'.g that their income will c-uuiaue to i.icn a e, 1 as it certainly will. Do. nut let it be said that tf.i - was a mere r- ! ror. p .Such an en or could not be sanctified by } ci.i v aiii'.'U.'it of" ignorance. But this was not a j mistake. It would in uli your common sense j to tell \ >u that :!; se purcd.aser? i;i i nut l iuk! cireful!c infut'i" valu 'ofthe w rl.. they meant i to buy. A corporation like ibis, not worth as I mariv ecu' :a-; .e canals t!.y purchased are w arth millions of do!! v?, would be sure to com pare the income and the p. jr.. tug, ther. In good on.science, fbey could nt take them at an undervalue of ix millions, bi;cause thev knew that to be no sale. The legislature knew it also—". ere bound to know it. The fact soi ! th- rn in the f lC e, f. wis on their records, i.l it was rad",! to t', sp- i! at ten* ion bv he aip:uj|in Me com ••• tee. ,v, ,j n \- v u ' lis is not ir.; : in point o! Gel.— I";,.- public woiksof thi; *si .t" have, as a g.-ner a! rule, been man -gi-u :*i T. . and mtegsit} . j No coi {>"" alio ver did or •\ r will doit as; well. L i the !• turd, of the State be .smithed ; let the history of the- • im; roveßsents be ex- ! aiuine.i and see if tlu-re i - any I uindati.'ui for | this wlio!. .-aie slander. It is not denied that a j contractor may sometimt ■ hiver!. td, or a ' collector made d- fault. lin se mings a.e in- j separable from every species of financial busi- | m -s. But publir ;.iui i: hold? t! <-m to a strict | ~ctou:,t. The law is sever", and i; is strrniy | adminii:• red Ike canal comn isaioners, by | the accounting dejiaitment, and by the court.?.! At anv rat ,at vv* sporadic ca- sof filching by ; liundreds would be but a paltry excuse tor the ! large-handed robbery which s.veejr away mil- ; lions at once. The simple lat t c- the enormous di-parity he- i | Iwivn the known valuenfthe thing sold and j I the price to b- prod, is sufficient to prove tha* j it V.' JS ct | urci ,( '>V the do:, •s, bo'. < orrupt- I Iv.hikn. It such a disparity existed in the! cased :i sale ma it bv the agent or trustee of a j private j :tv 01 hv a p ron in ltd, you w. aid j pronounce it void at once. Surety a tftist im- j nosed bv the constitute n up n a public officer | i< as sai rt'U as any other. And you have as I much p ever to enforce obedience to the con stitution as you have to k-• p private agent; within the Imilt of thrir delegated authority, i ihinWVou are as cleailv bound to declare this I not to Lea .sale, as you would be if the price | were fx'd at live dollars. There are several other facts which show this u.Lt to be a sale. J. All competition with the Sunbury and Eric Knilroad Corr j any was > ,\< iudi ii, by dei hiring that tie- c in \ is should go to tl;t m, and to llx m only. 2. £ver> in Case ot a r-> d'-, persons living in a certain locality ate given the benefit o| :t, and all others ex< lu di d. 3. There is a provision, that in ca-e of a j ri sale, the surplus over three and a hall millions i shall be divided between the State and the company. J. The company is required to pay i hall a million to another company, which i* in -1 solved, in the shape of a subscription to its i worth Vss stock. It is not possible that either jof th s-' features would have been in tire act, il | the parties had conscientiously believed the | three millions and a half to be a fair and lull . 1 price ior the canals. ! j 11. ibe next point is,that (he Itgishlnre 'ins -j no power to rn .h. a sale of the . pvhUc works. I have said that the State, as the proprietor o! 1 j the woiks. may sell them. But the authority ' j to make the sale has not been specifically given t s j any particular branch ol tire government. Il 1 must th-re fore, be exercised by that branch U | which it belongs according to the general distre - j but ion ot powers. Legislative, executive, anc - judicial powers aie kept by the constitutor o separate and distinct. It is the law-making s power only that is given to the (leneral As t i sembly. It cannot do an executive act mon if than it can pronounce a judicial sentence.— y Thisisan elementary principle ot constitutiona o law, and, I suppose will not be denied. Tin e only possible difficulty about its application ii ,e I any case arises from the obscurity of the lim j which sometimes divides executive from legis Freedom of Thought and Opinion. ! lative functions. Hut I think it is so plain here ! : that nobody can miss it. I ndoubtedly the (ieneral Assembly may ex- ' press the will o! the State that the public works shall he sold, and make all needful rules and j regulations concerning the sale ; /or this is lavv | making. Perhaps that branch of the govern-! i men! may also designate the executive or min- ! isferial agent by whom its laws upon the subject | j shall i,e carried into effect. But it cannot! : :tc, 'jotbj make the sale, because that is manifest iy and necessarily executive. The act of ma- I King a f-ir. open, and honest sale, is IB- its na ture such mat no legislative body can possibly p'-rtom; it. it is nut of the question for compe i ! tng purchasers to bargain, negotiate, and agree ' j public !y y i.ii one hundred and thirty-threel j men divided mlo h vo bodies, and sitting in yr. •; c.iambdrs. Another mode was adop- •' t i.i t!.:s case ; and that was, to hear private . [Tup ; clandestinely whispered into the ears < fuemhrrs by the speculaters who met t tut m in the corners, or dogged them on the t o-.-trd vta; : ,. Hut ii'the character of the State' t- to ,'aved troni utter ruin, or her property i I" ' u'uii plunder, it must be done by COT.U" u G toe legislature to its appropriate du- i lfl ; j-'Ji ••'.'•? tve hails "are not auction- , t r •u.:i-', uid t- e rti. inbets are no! elected to chail- r ! with the keen cu tomer# who come ta Harris-i o t' Jt ill U'|fh the ! f Fhe Pt'cf jiii v ol having gucb a duly peifor j mm! :,y an executive olficrr is perl-ctiy obvi | oris. •: .1 be made th duly of one capable per j on, be U lil iiifurm himself on the subf-ct • j "i a of a hundred, S HV, ; ,H'' fivJ I■u;tiiran: 1 ■ u;tiiran: it. One person will act | witn | ru.i.{>tni-s and alacrity : the slow .•notion I legislature would be fatal to tile , " at.-s interests. Above ail, it concentrates | me resj.oiMMb.lity, and thus insures fail ness in ; torra an., substance. No governor, even if he ■ Uj-I, wfjl l dare to ntake such a sale as arSj it no; Jus conscience, would prevent Lint. W!,enaqu.-s:i > n arises whether a given fnoc- j !< -n Ol government is legislative or executive, ; i .. o. no better rule to determine it by than ! the I n 10wing :If it can be conveniently, just- i Oi.'i. liltsi oy tins test, the act of deal ing _w; .jyccbaserj ol public property, and! getting '-•i-y|est price for it, is executive, and Ki ' i "" :v n " : sons- ; ... ;i. w 'V- : any construction ol the con wrung which naturally ar.d j ii e very nrst seniriie. _ • . cu:i.w:i-i it author was of this ; .or atf nipt is made to get round i', declaring : • i..1 it -.hall be the duty ol the governor to sell and deli' < r, Ac., and then goes on w itb a si-ries ol provisions winch '•■aves the executive not a particle of power. Tr.e act has more than one ; of th' se cunning litth evasions, I or iiistisic-, it ' gives the appointment ol three engineers to toe | .Tovernor, and j rovides that one oi them sb,.!i be j the chief engineer of the company. It declares ! .h;,t the entire proceeds oi tiie sale shall go into j the sinking fund, although a large portion ol the I o;. ce.ds are di-tribute 1 to private corporations. { am aware thai tli.- duty of making such a ' sale has Ihvu called miaisterial by the lode chief pi.-tice of tins call It in Mot I vs. Ptrn'ii li. R. ('v. I think it would be truer to call it j -x tutivr. But that makes no difference now. i It is enough lor me that it is not legislative.— I"i:t- General A.-sembly can no more exercise tiie du i sol a sheriff than it can exercise those ; of a judge or governor. 111. The low— the totally inadequate price, which the legislature agreed to take toi this prop erty, is ol itself suiiicient to stamp it as fiau.lu- i lent on its face. Those members ol the majority who did not know any better were imposed on. and l Lose who did wi-ie—let nie speak it plain-; jy they were dishonest. At aii events, the: purchaser km w that tiie Commonwealth was . ..-.-ossiv cheated. But even if this were not so. j The exclusion of competition—confining the pro- pos.il to one company a;one—would t>' stiili cieut to make the whole transaction detestable. : it dm m t rise to the dignity ot a 'sha:ii auc- ( lion." 1 ru-ed not elaborate this because the oi-inion of the Court in Mott vs. Pennsylvania | lliiirorl Company is lull to tne point, and! | estnoiishes ihe undeniably true doctrine that tne j ! same principles which protect other owners in j the enjoyment ol their property are applied by j 1 liie constitution to the protection ol the Sta.e in I her pioprit I rv rights. Alter you have said, ! as you did in the case cited, that .111 act ot assern i oiy authorir.ing a sale ot public property w'ith- ; I out a .fair chance to ail bidders is void, there | can be little room tor controversy here, lor this ! Cdvd is iiii.i ilk-i'v S\orse than that. i ttat all • pi-i..ons chii niiig under this act are bound to | !.,%• its character, is a proportion too plain to . 1 je ilisciisse.i. IV. This act violates that provision of the ! constitution which requires the income ol tne j public work , and the proceeds ot their sale, to j be placid in the sinking iund. ldie word "income," as used in the constitu tion, means, ol course, the whole income , and I the proceeds of a sale means the whole proceeds i„f " fair sale. 1 his is but an application ol the I principle upon winch it bas often been dec used, ! and never denied, that " judicial power and [oris!alive power f in the constitution, means I all powers properly 50 called. ■ i 1. The terms of this bargain aie such, that ! the Railroad Company may take possession ol 1 the canals and keep them, or partition them out ; ! to others, and neither that company nor lts gran • tees are bound to pay the State more than SI ■ 1 000 per annum, i his will leave at least • 000 per annum, and, in all human probabil. y , I :a much larger portion of the income, to tunc 1 > ! private adventurers. For fourteen years this , enormous loss to the sinking fund must be rhaue i jup by the labor of the tax-payers or else the ■ | public creditors must suffer to that extent. [ 2. The principal of wiiat is called the pur ] chase money is to be paid bv instalments, com j mencing in 1572. Each instalment is about J equal to the present average income—a little! | less than the average often years past, and con- ! i siderabiy more than the average of seven veais. I | You can not believe this to be the whole pro- j i ceeds of a fair sale. The difference is lust to! j the sinking fund, in direct violation of a con stitutional mandate. 3. A part of the proceeds—a portion of th•> '< price actually agreed for, amounting to half a j million of dollars—is to be given to th< ; Allegneny \ alley lOilroad Company. If thej Supreme Conrt needs an argument to convince i it that this is unconstitutional, then [ snr.pose our cause is lost. If thi-half million is to be called no pait of the proceeds, merely because the form is resorted to of a subscription t > the Worthless stock of an insolvent corporation, then our people are leaning on a broken reed when ! they rely on a written constitufi m to protect them. 1 1. The act contemplate? a resale bv the Smi ■' ' : j and Erie Company to other corporations. 1 he sale is to be made Ly ti at company for the Joint use of itself and the Commonwealth. This j wa- the ultimate object of the act, m l. to all it:- ! tents and pnrp s ■>•, the real sale. I'h • proceeds ! sale ougl.t to fa\e gone into the sinking ! fund. Tiie act says, that "the entire proce-ds | ol the sale of raid canals shall be placed in the} siiii.itig liiud, Ac. Now th.se wo:ds either I mciude toe surplus over three millions and a I half, or else they ■:!) not. If they do not, the; sinking fund has lost the whole of that surplus : it they do, tlien the act giv c s to a corporation ore—l turf;i id what is a knitted on its face to be proceeds of the sale. T, is of course, impossi ble fur ineto say, which horn of -his dilemma ooi opponents will prefer : but if thev are not gored ' v one ol them, the constitution must be pierced tbi 'Ugh and through. V. There are lour things which the State of; i * on.-y Ivania cannot d < under her present con stitution. 1. She c-arm >t nwiae the debt of any corporation. 2. She cannot lend her credit to aii v coi jioration. 3. She cannot become a stock iotdci in any corporation. 3. She cannot be come a joint owner with an y corporal ion. But, by the net under consideration, //< Stole Is oubstunlinl'ij made to do all these things. ine rr.auil< A object ol the first mentioned pr nib.! ion was to prevent the Stale government iD?n squandering (lie public money and means on the debt ol tr achcious and insolvent cor i-/ration?, fhe Slate certainly assumes the 1.-'bt of a corporation— t-faal is, takes upon her iier iVOf.ey .( iwviug it when she actually my debts and pay them, i„-..u., j. I with a strict injunction to assume nobody s uefits but mine, he surely disobeys me when he gives mv mune\ t<> John Smith, to he used by him for the t avni nt ~1 his* debts. Any construc tion ol the word assume which stops short of till- wi.l defeat the purpose of the constitution, ind expjse os to the very evils intended to be ciieckt:!. Here the State's money goes into the hands of two c -rporations, with the privilege of using it to pay tin ;r debts. 2. It is idle to deny that this is an attempt to loan the State's credit to the Sunbury an I Erie Company. Let mesopp sea case which might occur, though it doubtless never did. An insolvent corporation, backed by a horde of hungry retainers, conrs to the legislature and says: "Our army lacks pay 5 give us wherewith to content them. Open ihe strong boxes of the Stale ami let us have the money therein deposi ted so that we may satisfy our friend, and car ry on our operations. ' " The answer is given : "The State has no mo ney l.fl ; visitors like you Lave been here 100 often. T"he strong L 'Xes are empty "But," rejoins the corpora! - ! our stock is- of no value in any market, and it never will | be. You are insolvent. You can neither ' ii ake dividends nor carry on your business.— ' In your own bankruptcy y<>u have dragged ; down the public prosperity of a great city, and - put strife between the people. Even it \our . stock were as valuable as it is worthless, we are forbidden to subscribe for it on behalf oi the WHOLE ASTIBER 2s>2*. Hut not withstanding this prohibition, uv wll *** what canjbe done. We will S efl the public works, and we will insert in thecon j !iaci a stipulation that the purchaser, as part of j t..e ir price, s! •!! pay you half a million of dol ; iars and take i .t amount of your stock. This j will come to tne same thing precisely as if the |Na'e lmr.v-ll haJ subsetibed, since it will take j ha,l a mi.lion out of her pocket and put it into I yours. \ ou may tell the judges that we did not j subscribe, and perhaps they will forget tne ! P nnc p! that we do out selves what we tret a • not her to do for us, especially when we pay j him for doing it. Jiut any quibble, if V ou caii | ! Ra f t ' ,l S'Tvethe turn, will be worth 'a i-ood • ua,f nnilion to you, and work a loss of the Tame , amount to the peoph-. L>t the experiment be made." ; And it was made. It remains for vou to de | termine w hethertheconstitutionshall Mvindica | ted, or \i liether this paltry evasion shall triumph ■I . It any one of these outrages upon the con s! it tit ti >n be plainer than another, the plainest of '*' !■ rp-tratecl upon that provision which for ui !!i •St i?e to b-corneajoint owner with (or u>)anv cor| oration. It this means anything ,t re that the State shall not under any circum ; >l.ncv ein ark with a corporation in any busi j ' ' or . ! ' ♦••• ; -"ite or interest in property | SJ,, w time owned in part by a ! 'I nation. Hut k what has been done here. | V -jrant is made to the Sun bury and Erie Corn pa 1 yof all tne , rnals. fj it they are not sold out and out. 1:e State reserves an interest. Sue a.'id the C - rij.-aav are partners in the sale '' t: "' tn,,, i i - in y is to make on joint account, ine reserved ; . of the State may be thus •-'town in figures: 'I- tirunted value of canals $9 500,900 Bonds of bunburv be Erie Company 3,500*,000 _ r ' $0,000,000 One-qr: irter of Sun'. ury be Erie Co. Cr selling 1,500,000 Clear interest of the State $ 1,500,000 The state is joint owner by the terms of the contract to the extent of nearly half the value of the works, il our estimate of the value be ri-ht inu i joint owner to.some extent, no matter what be the true value. I suppose T need not make iti a.gument to prove that whena person agrees to put his property into the hands of another with power to sell, and a stipulation for divi ding the proceeds, the original owner has still an . stale in it. I cannot anticipate what ans wer may be given by this counsel, but J think I know what the court will say. 1 cipated tbami* fWJJus point is made more would go into partnership with a \np.,,me and h-nce the prohibition. The s'x millions of surplus v\ hith these canals ought lo have pro line 1 are sunk t o half a million by the private and clandestine >a!es which the company has made. It is very cei tain that the highest price iias not been obtained for them; and the compa ny. in its repot 1 to the govenor, does not say | p.at it , ven tried to get their value. One more suggestion is all that I have lime to make. Tour minds will probably come to the conclusion that the real actual sale of the canals was not made TO the S. & E. Co., but BY that company to the several other corporations who now have them. The S. &E. Company was tlmn the mere agent of the Commonwealth in i making sale other property. J must ask your | attentive consideration of the question—what | right had the legislature to delegate such a pw er" to an n re-ponsi'de corporation, and pay such i en wmo'is bonds in* public money and public credit ? I nave said a ir-->c-l deal about the injustice done to lb--* State in this sale. Ido not expect you to s-t it aside merely because it is contrary to th use principles of natural justice which lie outside til'the constitution. We must fail ifit be consistent with the requirements of that in strument. But 1 insist, that we are entitled to have its words construed according to their fair intent and hue meaning. Such a construction forbids the frauds which have been perpetrated in this case, and justifies von in rending the prey i from the spoilers. I solemnly trust t!at you I will lift the Commonwealth out of the dust in ! which she has been trampled, wipe the shame ! from Imr brow, and give her the assurance of \ your sympathy and protection. | This paper* is lung, for want of time to make 'it short. In some matters (I hope none that are I very maleriai)it may be inaccurate, because I ! have not iiad all the papers. I did not intend to ; overstate my case, fori know that would wea- I ; v ,. (1 it. Some expressions may seem harsh; I ! meant them only to be just. In a case like this, sarin lhin must be pardoned to the natural fee | ling i,f indignation; the odium spotiatoris is | lawful even in a judge. I have called fraud by i its i ig'nl name. We must all learn, sooner or I later, to look even the members of the legisla | turc in tile face, and tell firmly that their ; evil is not good. Who is there so base as to wish this enormous wrong unredressed? If any, speak, lisr him have I offended. J. S. BLACK. His HUM T; Rncoito.—WESTLEY FROST, th Democratic candidate for Canal Commissioner, received in Brownsville Borough, where lie resides-, a majority of one hundred and thirty one votes. Brownsville usually gives a heavy opposition majority, but we believe the majori ty lor Mr. TROST is larger than was ever before given in the place to any candidate of any par ty. — Genius of Liberty. Of?"A good nalureJ 1.-iend is often an enemy ■ in disguise. !£?"*True worth, like the rose, will blush at | its own sweetness. 1 Saf Remember —Life is short. VOL 2, NO. 14.