5 9 mm AND FARMERS' AMD;' KECIlAf JIGS' RESiSTER. cir NOT PAID WITHIN THE TEAS. I 52 50 WILL BE CHAKUED. TWO DOLLARS PER AN? IIALF-YEARLT IX ADVA.CL.3 FRINTED AND PUBLISHED WEEKLY BY JONATHAN BOW.,: SOMERSET, SOMERSET COUNTY, PA. i r i r 'I i I 111 I Hew Series. XOit at a ?mcf). A country girl cm morning went To market with a Pig; The little cur-tail not content. Squeaked out a merry jig. A gentleman, on passing by. Laughed much ami jeering spoke: 'I wonder, Miss, your child will cry. When wrapped up'in a cloak." "Why. Sir," quite pert die girl replies, bad a breeding has he, . That ever and anon he cries Whene'er he skes ins Daddt!" J ousrc00fonal. SPEECH OF THE HON. A. STEWART, Of Pennsylvania. On Internal Improvements and tlie Tariff. Delivered in the II. of Representatives oftlie Cni ; ted States, Marca 11, IS4G. Mn. Stewast. of Pennsylvania, said, he had not intended to address the com mittee on the subject now r. ne'er debate, but some of the remarks of the gentleman from Virginia, (Mr. Bayly.) who had just resumed his scat, had induced him to de part Iram that purpose, and to throw him eeif cn the indu'.'fnce cl the committee. , That gentleman opposed this bill on two grounds: 1st, he denied the constitu tional power of Congress to pass it; and 2diy, he denied the expediency of doing soil the power existed. He wished to say a few words, in the first place, jn reply to the constitutional objection, and then notice some of the other ren:3rks ofthe gentleman, in the or der thev mirht occur to him, for he had taken no notes. As to the power, it seem ed to him if Congress had not power to pass this bill, ithad not power to pass any of the three hundred bills now upon the calendar. "What are those bills! What is their end and purpose! They arc all introduced in pursuance of that povision of our admirable Constitution, which de clares thai '-Congress shall have power to psss a!! laws necessary and proper to car ry into execution the foregoing power?.'" The eranis of p.vwer were, In a rery few words, thus "Congress shall h.v.e power to regelate commerce with foreign nations, and among the States," -declare war, Tzi armies, provide and maintain a nary, establish posi ofilcc-s and post roads; and having thus bricdv indicated the ureal and substansive powers of the Government, it wisely declared, that Congress should have power to select the means "necessa ry and proper" for carrying into effect these powers. This, perhaps, would have followed as a matter of course; but, to remove all doubt, it had been expressly inscrted. Now. what was the character of ail, or nearly all, the bills on your cal endar, and all the laws in your statute booke? They were but the means pro vided for carrying into effect the sreat and express powers of Government, and if this bill to improve harlnrs or rivers, to taeuitaie the commerce and defence of the country, was unconstitutional, then all our bilis are rqualiv unconstitutional, antiCoTi- grc;? might r.s vvci. adjourn snu no home, .11 and lor all the zool th arc likely to do, he thought ihe fx;ner th-? be tier. Th? repeal of th2 tariiT, the su-ireasurv, and var.wiih sii their hitter n.i disastrous fruits, he feared were the c:i!y mrasu to be expected from the continued del ib- orations of the present Congress. The Southern strict constructionists, however, found ibeir constitutional doctrines cr-C3tiin-ly convenient: whatever they wish C out tue ist shadow of a doubt; but wiu'nci er a measure is proposed which ; they dislike, and want to defeat, they have j Court, as delivered by Chief Justice Mar rn eisy expedient always ready they Vet I shall. Some gentlemen think it constitu brhirul the Constitution; it does not suit j tional to make a long road, or improve a ihtrirtat?: tbf-y d nt relish its provis-i long river, but not a. short one. Length - - i i t" v.i a i ions: ana cl course it is contrary. to tne Coristiu't'cri.. But wht?ver pleases Southern notion, or Southern interests, is all njrhi z perfectly constita tional. Mr. S. did not derive the power to pass 2 bill lor internal improvements from anv on-2 special grant in the Cen; .itution; it d?per.ded cpon the' character of the im provement proposed upon its end and o'ljecL If it was intended to facilitate commerce amor.g the Stues, the power to pis it resulted from the power "to regu l.? commerce amonj the Sttts.' If it wjs intended rs a rcilitarv- road or canal, it referred itself to the military powers. If it" was designed for mail purpose?, then the right to p?.ss it was derived from the post ctti-c poorer. Thus each and every constitutior.r.l grant of power carried with 1L as a necessary incident, its own appro priatf. m"ans cf execution; and without this the Constitution would have been a dead 'ctter, and this Government could never have hern p;:t in notion. The CT.tit:;;i.r. did not, cf course, tnrmenite alt the things that Congress nr,y in; i cor.Id not indicate all the laws thni Counress miht pr.?3 to carry on the Ooifrrm'.nt in all time to come; that was irr'pr.fsib!?., the attempt would have K::u p;rpc5ter6i. The Constitution in t.. e.-f-e, would Ma-- trrn, not law, but a ccde of taw? for a an organic jreat aud ! growing nation throughout all time. The ; railroads, and with improved rivers, ren i Cons litution conferred on the Government dered navigable as highways, you can of the country great and leading substan- gather your strength at any requisite 1 rnanrtpr. lt$ail t noinU and that at the shortest notice. that the Government should have power 1 to defend the countrv; power to regulate ; it.s commerce; power to transmit intelii gencc. Then it declared that the Con j grcss mightdo whatever was "necessary j and proper' to carry out and make effee i tire these general grant, and suit them to . the want and exigencies of the country. ; as they should be developed in the pro f 2Tess of time and the arts. "Congress,' says the Constitution, "shall have power to establish post odlces and posts roads," and there it stopped; and there, according to the doctrines of the gentleman Irom Virginia, the power of Congress to act j stonned also. Yet how was" it that Con- 1 Tcss,bv virtue of this "rant, had passed j volumes upon volumes of laws establish ing a Post Oince Department, providing for the transportation of the mails, the punishment of offences, and so on; if the doctrines of the geaUeman were correct, all these laws were unconstitutional and void: and so of all the laws passed for linht-houses, buoys, beacons, seawalls, forts, arsenals, and every thing of the kind, from the foundation of the Government up to the present hour. The gendeman's constitutional metaphysics subverted the whole of them, "and like the baseless fab ric of a vision left not a wreck behind.' When a gentleman proposes any mea sure to Congress for ti action, and the in quiry was raised as to the constitutional power to enact it, his answer must depend on the subject matter; his first task was to show that k was "necessary and prop er,"' as a means ot carrying into execu tion some one of the granted powers. When he had shown that, he had aright to ask its adoption, .nd if a majority of both Houses of Congress concurred with him it would le adopted, if not it would be rejected, and here was the scrutiny, and the only scrutiny, against unconstitu tional legislation. Suppose the subject was a road, the military power in the Constitution empowered Congress to make military roads for the transportation of armies and munitions of war. And so the commercial power authorized Congress to make commercial roads, whether over the land, or by the channels and course of rivers. The miiitarv power cave Con gress a riht to build a fort, but a fort inhiht bv so situated as to be useless with out a road leading to it; therefore. Con gress has the same power to make the road that they have to erect the fort. If gendemen would give themselves the trouble to look into the decisions of the Supreme Court, they would find that.that enlightened tribunal had laid down the doctrines he advocated, as the true 5c just interpretation of the Constitution. In the case of MtCuIi'ock vs. the State of Mary land, reported in -1th Wheaton.Chicf Jus tice Marshall declared this to be the clear and undoubted meaning of that instrument. The powers Congress ordinarily exercise, are but in their nature meaus of executing powers; and ihe only limit, or restriction, imposed by the Constitution on the dis cretion of Congress, is, that the means shall be 4frcs?flry and proper' to the end of earn ing out of the granted power. Within that limitation Congress can do whatever they judge expedient in carry ing out the express powers. Who is 'to juuee whether a measure j proposed is "necessary and proper"to the execution o: an express power? Con gress must judge for itself: the degree of necessity is not indicated. The Constitu tion docs not say the means employed mustbe absolute' tf or indispensably ne cessary not at all; all that it requires is, that the means employed shall be fit and useful for the purpose indicated, Such is the unanimous opinion cf the Supreme or orcauui, or locality, nave notninirto (Jo with the question. Whether the road he live miles long or five hundred, is a matter perfectly immaterial, the true question is, what is its purpose! Suppose a road to a fort be but a mile long, if it is needed to reach the fort it is constitutional to make if. as much so as if it were a thousand miles long. ' " - - Mr. S. contended, that, as a means of national defence, a general system of rail road connecting our cities on the sea board, and penetrating the interior, was better and more effectual (in an extended country like ours) than any system of for tifications that could be devised. Should an enemy make a demonstration on any point on the seaboard, before he could ap proach and e3?ct a landing, troops could be collected sufficient to prevent the suc cess of bis enterprize. Had we posses sed such roads in the last war, this city would never have fallen into the hands of the enemy; in two hours troops micht have been brought from Baltimore, who would hare effectually checked the march of the invaders, and thev never would have wrapped this Capitol in flames. , But forts, except in verv particular cases, may j be avoided; the invading force can get j round them; and thev car. choose their j own piace.of landing, and they wiU choose sccordirgly. But with a good net-work of TUESDAY, APIRIi 21, 1846, The gentleman would bring us back unaer uic system oi me um vviueutri tion; but that has been tried, and found insufficient for the well being of a country so extensive as ours. In a time of peace, (and in our past history, as I trust in our future,we shall have comparatively but lit tle war.) lorts are useless. Cosung mil lions and millions to erect them, they are utterly without value; while, at the same time, they continue tr cost large sums to keep them in a state of repair and suita bly manned. But rail roads are as useful in peace as in war. They are well worth ad they cost lor purposes of commerce and intercourse. What are forts worth in time of peace! They are not only use less, but a source of continual expenditure. And if railroads are a better means ot defence than forts, then thev are more constitutional, being more "necessary and proper' for earning out the defensive power conferred upon Congress. Ilaviug thus given my views of the constitutionality of this bili, I will say a word or two as to tha expediency of the measures it proposes. The gentleman from Virginia (with many other gentlemen from the South,) arc terribly alarmed at this system: they apprehend it is going to bankrupt the Treasury to waste the hard earned n;o nev of the people; that it is a licentious ond abominable proceeding, wholly with out legal warrant or useful end. What! Wasteful, profligate, unconstitutional to improve the country? hy, has it not been done from the very foundation of the Government? Has it not been done by every Congress from that day to this. Why, then, has not the Treasury been bankrupted by this horrid system long be fore now? WThy should gentlemen con fine themselves to the future? It is easy to prophecy but, on their own princi ples, why has the thing not occurred long ao? I believe we have a Treasury still not. indeed, a verv fall Treasurv, but with a present surplus of seven or eight j millions lying idle and useless useless to the Government, but not useless to the banks in which it i deposited But the gentleman thinks that this svstem will in- 1 vclve appropriations to the tune of ahun- dred millions of dollars per annum, and read the veto message containing this frightful phantom In IS24, with the powerful aid of Mr. McDuffie, and many other tlistingushed Southern gentlemen, a general system of internal improvement was adopted, and a board of internal improvement, organized by Mr. Calhoun, the Secretary of War, ordered toexamine the whole country ,and lay down a plan, accompanied with esti mates, for improving the entire I'nion, so as to enable Congress to seleet ihe rrccl national and important. The board, sfter a general recognizance, made a repnri ac cordingly, proposing the appropriail.v. cf perhaps a hundred millions of d!lars;and ibis was wjjat was put into the message to frighten the people; it answered its pur pose well it did alarm the couutry. But then tlie gentleman and the message for got to state, that u was to be spread over perhaps a hundreI years: and even now. the gendeman talks of a hundred millions bcin voted immedialelr, and tlie Treasu rr liankrupt. These attempts to frighten the people, bv talking about hundreds of millions, is all sherc humbug. Nothing of the sort was ever dreamed of, and gentle men know it. Every power confided to cur hands, maybe abused; but docs that prove that the power does not exist! Wliat power do we hold, according to the gentleman's own admission, which we may not abuse! We have the power to levy taxes, and we may carry this so far as to bankrupt, not the Treasury, but the People. We have tlie power to raise ar mies and build fleets and will the gen tleman deny the existence of these pow ers because they may be abused? , But how is it that gentlemen from the South now talk so loud and long about tlie inequality of the system -it is now all at once a system of Western robbery and plunder. At the last session, these gentlemen were exceedingly kind and ac commodatmg to the est. But why: 'fhnf wanted Western votes for Texas they wanted iheW 7ags rolled." These western rivers were then inland seas' all right, constitutional, and expedient plenty of money for the V'est no objec tion. But their los are now at the mill they have got Texas and don't, want Orejron, and now all at once their tune is changed. Now the crv is, ch! vcu west ern robbers, you cormorants, yon raven ous wolves, nothing will satisfy you short Gf "all of Oregon," and the last doUar in the Treasury. But Mr. S. contended that j the people of the West had been the mere ; step-children of this Government... When its good thirds were being distributed a- racng its favorites, the West has received comparatively nothing. Ana whvl ihe scat of power was on the seaboard. They cae the West a few crumbs, and they had S to be "thankful for fnial! favors. He would venture te say, that if a line should ! be drawn one mile above the flow of the t tides, and fror the lake sr orn our Whesternborndary and round this whole Union, it ! would be found Lhat the whole of the pronation made far all .the rivers and " ' ... . ,to n u:a,, r ;nrnrp. ment, in the whole of the 'interior embra-1 naorc than twenty tunes as much as the ced in this vast boundary, from the foun-. le of our wasted foreign commerce, dation of this Government up to the pres-'j Yet gendemen still go for foreign com cnt bnnr. would nnt smnnnt tn as much mcrce; notlung but foreign commerce ent bnnr. would nnt smmmt tn as much GU1 Un rrnomUtnn Trt r.r to the Delaware breakwater and the" Rip orcaKwater on tne seaooaru lie reierreu Raps." . Scarcely "as much as it had cost tn Prpn tbp npn,!;,1 txWZro in wliih wp are now deliberating. And vet it was - said the West had got more than their share, and ihat nothing could satisfy their ravenous appetites. Last session,thc har- j bor and river bill, which for the first time j made some liberal appropriations to wes- ; tern objects, was vetoed by the accident at j President, wh o had never received a sin- j gle vote for that office an act of usurpa tion which would have produced anuni W,t r,f -inHiminn. hnt fnr lh- r .u , . - who reaches ew l ork or Boston first, insignmcance of the man. i Resolved. Tliat this Convention is - , , . - c r . o nuuuu, iwi mis v-uuiui i ' is not hkelv to reserve h:s funds for a Mr. Cobb here desired to ask Mr. assembled under an impulse of self Pre- i vjsjt elsewhere. Baltimore, except as to Stewart, whether he had not voted for servation, at a crisis of overwhelming Groccrieg shc joes not resr3ni as a for that man as President? Mr. Stewart re- interest. Alreatly, at cne session of thj j jjjV.j,. ccrnnetitor. It is" her great in plied, neverfor President, never, sir; Legislature, bae our claims to justice j tcWthenV'to render the Southern routs but he would not stop to bandy words been billled and repulsed; and there is j s 2ltractjT(, as possible. All who cm about Tyler the subject was too low and ( reason to fear that every hour may bear j pVv U'raust pass .through Philadelphia disgusting. (A laugh.) v?on its wings the shout of final triumph re reschi yew Yo"rk, and thus ba Though the people of the West had over our -hasted hopes and rumed for brought, with luU purses, in reach of her contributed millions on millions to the tunes. slocg of Gootls aJ of her hospitable at- Treasury, what had they ever received? j Resolved, That it would nl comport , temioaSi Let ternv;nu5 be at a point like her rreat rivers, had flowed m per- petual streams to the Atlantic, never, nev- pr in rptnrn YKpi-r n'prp hrr arT!rnnri- " - " r auons tor buoys, light-houses, iacons, forts, breakwaters, and all the tlK-usasd objects which carried the contents of the Treasury to the East? The interior ami the West had none cf these objects: and objects: if appropriations for works of internal jra- piUYEUltil.s IQUll Ui; ucuiru, rr i wlo she ever to receive? The doctrine of these ultra constructionists would take from the Government all power to appropriate a dollar to the West. Where was our ar my? on the seaboard. Our navy? on the seaboard. Our ship yards? on the sea board. Our forts! on the seaboard. Our buoys and beacons? on the seaboard. Our piers, harbors, breakwaters, and oth er defences? on the seaboard. Take away from us our. internal improvements, and what have we left? Nothing, sir, abso lutely nothing. What Western man could vote for such doctrines? it would be treason to his country and constituents to do so. But he would turn the atten tion of gentleman to one fact that seemed to be ib.-gottea in some quarters. In times past, the West was as nothing in the esti mation of certain transcendental construc tionists, while the Atlantic States were the whole Union. To the backwoodsmen, they gave out cf mere condescension; but with a sparing hand. The seaboard took 4 i - v, . ... cut of the. head cf the heap, while the West got the sweepings cf the gra'n floor. The prime dishes cn the Government ta ble were for the princes of the Coast, while the West must be content with the crumbs. But a period was fast approeh ing when the West could no longer be found beggingfor crumbs, and having even the crumbs refused, cr jriven with a nig gardly hand. No, sir! If the people of the West were at this moment fully represen ted, according to their present population, in that Hall, thev would Cummund what they now hid to ask in vain. If they had their rights on this floor to-day, they would control the legislation cf this coun try. But a few years would set this mat ter right. Four or five years would bring the next census, and then the people on the west of the Alleghanies would demand with k voice that would not be disregard ed it would then be their turn to 'ire and take; and let gentlemen beware in time, Gendemen said the States ought tomake these improvements. But what was the character of these works? Were they not national in every respect? The great rivers cf the West belonged to no State or States they were the prop erty of the whole counirr. They consti tcd the States boundaries, as did the Atlantic- they were as national as the ocean. These rivers wereamon? the intemalcon cerns of no State. What 'ight had any StalR In rarrv 0:1 imnrnvf-monts in rivrs which were not theirs? "The- centleman J from Virginia said that the States had ru- ! at Pliladelphia utterly incongruous to the j of those whose vital interests are at stake, ined themselvt 5 by theirinternal improve- functions cf a Court oi" Error. An unlcr- ; The day will be an appropriate one. Wo ments. That made against his argument. ! lunate wretch has lingered in the Pitts- mav have to decide whether the Anniver They had mined themselves in doing.out j burg Jail, for upwards of seventeen ' sary shall hereafter be 1 joked upon by us of their own State funds, what ought to j months, under Scnteuce of Death, because without a deep ser.ee cf humiliation. have been dona cut of the National Trf a- the Jubees will not decide on the Writ of . The spirit of our fathers then severed. sury. The. execution of works strictly national, had been improperly cast upon the States; and if they had been ruined, it was because the General Government had refused to exercise it3 cwn legitimate powers and perform its legitimate duties. A sense .of common justice would lead Congress to appropriate something to en able the West to clear out her rivers, and build her roads, and develop her boundless resources. The improvements provided for in this bill, m:ght save, an call v, hun dreds ol lives and millions of nronertv When gendemen formerly talked about ihe commerce of the United States, no- body thought of anv thln-r bnt fnrehrn commerce, ihat was the commerce of i wish the attention 01 lacorDmcnweaitn ; o.e ie, wii.i-. .uz:igrzs Tly ex ilic countrv. Internal commerce was I steadily fixed upon the policy which is 1 tended tn us ih$ rirh; hand cf iehow'hh? 4 nothing ;t was forgotten and overlook - ap-'ed. Every tiling mustbe done for our ' Jortign commerce, nothing tor u,if ruat . i t. :. . i coir. ir.crcc, mourn It UU'.T aillUuJiXU mcrce; nouung out loreign was constitutional. Foreign labor for -foreiirn evcrv thine." AH was & bv" foreign, foreign, foreign. All was British nothing American, .vir. naa no idea that this Government had no duty, no ob- ligation to any body but foreigners. He thengnt cur erst uu was to ourselres, . our country, and our own people. fjtEXUNDER NEXT WEEK. 31 ASS CO.WCXTIOV IX AL.L.E- t;iit:v. The following are the resolutions a - dopted bv ;he Mass Convention held in AlWh-nv Citv. on the Sth instant: ; occa sion to indulge m t!i 'menace. But we cannot tn tho truth, tht nn rO.1 . - ; c?.n long endure, w nica is leu iy a larbe , portion only thrcugh its power to op - ! press. Ourhumhie request has been for j permission to open a road over our own property, guarded bv the necessary legis- lative sanctions Every inch of tlie soil eges ena appurtenances, in consiueriuu i - : .1 .: uuulI6a " llxJ "-sv the terminus oi the Kailroad, wiii at once j wish. They hold it under a direct grant j lhrown out of any schca3 of iRtarnal i from lh Cnmmftriwpsltn. with ail Tmvil- 1 . . - f i r .i ui uiuiicja jmiu iu;u u.c v ind h be abandonej forever, bv corn- Most ot the owners along the route havemon conaentf t0 thcse sarc3sra3-at it, heretofore known the government only as j vexaliocs obstructions in which men cf a Collector ot 1 exas, and as having ren dered useless or unproductive, the roads constructad by private enterprise. Yet now in the attempt to make one of the most obvious and familiar uses of their property, they are arrested by a malign usurping the, name of the Common wealth! The united owners may run a plough through the whole distance, but shall not be smlered to open a road ! No instance of tyrtny so highhanded; so ex asperating; so faul to ail the motive's that impel men to Lbor, and the acquisition of property, C3n be found even in the histo ry of Ireland's oppression by the power st Iondon. That power seeks rather-to soothe the pang of political subjection by munificence and bv lavish aid to everv project of improvement. An attempt to deprive Irishmen of the free use of the soil beneath their feet would over-rule all political and religious dissensions, and j enable thcai to cast off the oppressor for ever. Aud we, I reemen of Pennsylva nia, will not tamely submit to be stripped by a power at Philadelphia, of tha advan tages which God and Nature have pla ced within our reach. Who can under take to fix a limit to these crurroachmcnis if not now resitted. The same influence which has been brougnt to bear against the South-western counties, will equally interdict the owners of property along tlie Allegheny River, from constructing -a Railroad or a Canal through their lands. And whil3 we are thus made to feel, at i every turn, the galling- evils uf our polit ical association with Philadelphia, the minutest scrutiny cannot enable us to dis cover a single countervailing benefit. It has been said, with truth, that tlie great purpose of social organization is to secure a prompt and faithful adml-.:trction of justice. How is it with us! Before the Supreme C curt, sitting at Pittsburgh, may be brought irom the est, tne Norih, and the Soudi, all theliihraticn, springing ou thn vast and multifarious transactions of those regions, even though it ordinate before a Justice of the Peace. Yet for a long series of years, we have seen here only a broken Bench, because all the Judges reside east of the Mountains, and i because, forsooth, business to be done Error in his case, without a full Court, and no one can predict when that con summation shall be witnessed. These crying evils' mav drive us to a remedy which will leave'us life, liberty, rroncrtv ana in: a tne pursuit 01 happiness, no longer ol every peopic a:: a..i yijsuuiu is m pendent upon the arbitrary caprice of j the blood that riss at injustice and op ose whose interests and whose passions . press ion. We owe a duly to the past dei . 1 moss wnose interests ana whose p array them in an attitude of hostility to- wards us. " Resolved, That the coarse of PhHa- delphia, however it may be reconciled with a narrow selfishness, w one f i ; r - jlv in con Act with the interests cf every other part cf the State. It begins ar.d I ends within her own curb-sire.?. We ' avowed by her most shrewd sad able Vol, 4. No. 23. men, who smile at the array - cf public cq iu , uu irKn ,rmt th rrrnpc r I a Lpr.lrsl Kail rwtiV auiio. w.v. j-. vj w . . road to be a mere imposture of the hour to distract the friends of the Biil. They hold it to be for the interest of Philadel phia, as a Mart, that the Baltimore ami Ohio Rai'roed should strike as low powx the Ohio as possible, and for rea sons not very difficult to comprehend. The great rival of Philadelphia is New York. The vast natural advantages of the latter, with her spirit and entcrpriso ia improving them, gnc to her aa ascend- ency which threatens to be irresistable. The current is towards her from every 1 quarter, however remote. t.vcn tne 1 Cross-cut. nnitin'T the Pennsylvania and : Ohio Canals, which it was supposed T - v ?! i would divert all the trade on its progress ! towards the Lakes, proves, in fact, a ' tn!?i3r to the II ! rl 'I. -tL 1 L 1 "e'P ttnnr irtr 1 ter tc Such are her rejections, and ) si,;h her Ucv; a3j lhese slje is reajr to not only the in:crcsts cf ; wstern pe,nsviTin;a. bnt of the rest of , -., mUtto tV1( Tr- The river between Pittsburg and , w fofCC Congress; all political parties have successively in dulged. Resolved, That in the enormous Philadelphia speculation in Lands in Western Virginia we recognize another mntive lor ii.imorons outrrv aTiinst m proposed right of way hiding itself behind the mask of zeal for the general welfare. Resolvep, That the policy which would regard our sister Stales as enemies to be plotted against, is not only at war with the best interests of Pennsylvania, but is derogatory to the ac in which we live, and to the Constitution, whose sa cred iwnd hold us together. The cher ished object of the framers of that instru-t ment was to break up any such misera ble jealous- to make us all feel that, 'We, the people of the United Slates,' had entered into a perpetual league of brotherhood aud good office to prove how wonderfully our interests entwine and run into each other and to view every new channel of intercommunication as tending to strengthen the Union, and to advance the cause of free government. But a new doctrine is started which would, erect a wall of brass around our borders, with only a single gate at Philadelphia. It reproaches tlie Almighty for having; made rivers out of our own State, la its stupid blindness it would offer up daily prayers that the sources cf the Del aware and the Allegheny, of the Susque hanna and Monongahela minht be dried up, because they water soil of New York, Maryland and . Virginia. The curse of. God and man must rest upon such a creed ! Resolved, That the ofiicers of this meeting be authorized to open a corres pondence with the Mansgers of the Balti more and Ohio Railroad, to ascertain whether legislative action may net ba j j dispensed with on the unanimous cession t ; of the owners of the soil, and to convey i a" assurance tnat, m such event, ihe :ch vork shall be guarded against molestation i a H hazards. j Resolved, That this Convention will ! adjourn to re-assemble on the -4 th day of ' Jul v next. Time will thus be afforded j for reflection and for a full representation forever, the sonnection with Britain on her attempt to draw too tltrht die cords of colonial subjection. Shall their descend ants tamelv'submit to be tr-.d'Ien under ' fool ? There are moments in the hi'torr to ourselves to the latere. When j our children shall wander ever this re- ! gion cl d?sertrJ fields and cmmblir j miss, they may well tcm with scorn cp-: on tne memrr. 01 v eir oasiaru sirrs- rv'-.t saw wrested I'-om them, wiihout gic, the choicest b!es.-irgj o." ocjntrouj nature. And h-storv wj.i ,. tn ir.c ir.eTt - ' ad support, an afssssia ragr, tun as far below Pittsburgh as possible, ana e lanrruase of j , u 4 r, nnA ,,t shut our eyesjp . f hr. ?3tion oi men I. , i . i . , r-- i imnrnvement. wmrn me nower oi me