REPORTER : Wednesday, February 12, 1845, 444 4 4 44 .111X-720111121411131 0 111 7- AllOILde• The Office of the Bradford Re porter has been removed to CoL Means' Brick Store, (01) stairs.) .entrance on the North side. New York kErie Ran Road. The indications at present are that this road will be pushed to a speedy completion. From the following it will be seen that a new route is con templated. ;,The Monticello Watchman ,sayi:— Ire have learned from a gentleman di. rect from Albany, that, the New York and Erie. Rail Road company have pe titioned the Legislature for leave to cross the Delaware river and pan not only through the counties of Pike and Wayne but through Susquehanna in the State of Pennsylvania : that is, leave to abandon the route contempla ted in their charter through Sullivan and Delaware counties, and part of Broome and Chenango, and to locate through the coal regions of Penneylva- ilia." The Honesdale Herald says that pe titions to the Legislature of this State are circulating in Pike and Wayne counties for consent tcrextend the New York 4 Erie Rail-road into Pike coun ty, without further naming the route to be pursued. This the Herald con strues as an intention eventually to 10- cate the road not only through Pike but also Wayne and. Susquehanna coun ties, in order to communicate with the Pennsylvania coal mines. This has occasioned no little fluttering among the capitalists and others interested from their location in having the road I constructed on the route formerly con templated. Some of the papers along the old route are “pell-melt" against this new project and remonstrances are industriously circulated. Strom in Er MIRA.—The Elmira Gazette of 30th ult., containtithe follow ing accountlofa suicidriccimmitted in that place :—An individual by the name of Israel Skinner, who has been a resident of this village about six months, and saw ed wood for a livelihood, put an end to his existence on Tuesday afternoon last, by hanging himself. There appears to be no reason assigned-for the rash act ; he was as sane as usual, no one suspect ing that he bad any intention of comthit ring the deed ;he apparently went at it very coolyhe wrote two notes to per sons statingthat he couldriotfulglsome en gagement, after which he went up stairs, after about an hour had elapsed his wife began to wonder why he remained so long and started up to see, but found the stair.doorf fastened, which was imme diately forced open and she went up and there found him with a rope around his neck and tied to a rafter, dead but not cold. He was about 41 years old and has left a wife and'one child. . ExectrrioN.—The spectacle of hang ing a man, was witnessed on Tuesday 28th ult., at Troy. Wm. Miller paid the extreme penalty of the law for the murder of West, in May, 1842. He -was attended at the scaffold by a clergy of. the Catholic Church, and protested his entire innocence of the charge with his last breath: He made a statement of 'his past - history, but admitted nothing that would implicate him for the mur der of West, without it may have been at the confessional. COURT PROCREDINOB.—In our paper this week will be found a full and ac- curate report of the proceedings of the let week of court. They are prepared by Mr. 11. C. Kelly, a young lawyer of our borough. and are, we believe, an entire new' feature in a paper in this or any of the adjacent counties. Sr.sionmo.—The long looked for sleighing has at length , arrived. and the bells discourse merry music at the pres ent writing. • COMSTTERFEITS.—Look out for well ' executed counterfeit two dollar bills on the Yalta County Bank. and one dollar bills on the - Bank of Rome. NOT Currunsw—Bader. who es caped from the Wyoming county jail has not yet -been - captured. Me m►ae traced as far as Carbondale. LOST Bow Foinin.- l Extraortlinaty Rontaneoh-A correspondent of the Hartford Times gives an account of the loss and recovery -of a boy who was stolen by the Indians from the town; of Jackson, Michigan, in 1837, and was recovered by his father, Mr. Ammi Finny, about the first of the pre sent month in Greenville, Ct., in the employ of a citizen to whom he had been apprenticed by the overseers of the poor of Albany, N. Y. After wan dering about with the Indian fatally, visiting various crawl and towns be tween Wisconsin and Connecticut, be was taken from them in Albany, N. Y in 1843. and placed in the Alms House on the ground that he was a white child, stolen from his parents. But . the Indians refused to reveal his name , or where he came from. His father came from Michigan to visit his rela tives in Connecticut this winter, and while there heard , of the boy, whom he recognized atonce as his son. The one lost has been returned to his-fami ly, but there is now a dead one absent from the circle, who, it is hoped, has gone to a better world--hit mother.— She died soon after he was carried off by the Indians. Miss Wren-mi.—We find the fol lowing in the Pittsburg Gazette rela tive to Miss Webster. •;! We have seen a private letter from .a gentleman of high standing in Lexington, who states that it is impossible for Governor Owsley to pardon her under the pres ent excited state of the public mind; that petitions against her pardon have been poured in upon him; that her case has been made as tolerable as pos sible, that her' hair has not been cut off, that she has a room to herself, and has little or no option, and that she' will be pardoned as soon as the excited state of the public mind will permit." MR. Pour..—The Glasgow (Scot land) Post contains the following para graph concerning Mr. Polk :—" The new President of the United States is of Scottish origin; and his curious looking name is an abridgement of a good old Scotch one. Mr. Polk's • fa ther or grandfather is said to have been a Ntanarlishire man, of the name of Pollock. In the somewhat peculiar dialect of the upper ward of this coun ty, the name is pronounced " Poke." and hence, probably, the orthography adopted by the transatlantic branch of the family." TEXAS.—The Washington corres pondent of the New York, Express says : Some have doubted' whether the terms of the bill will be acceptable to Texas ; but lam assured, from the beat authority, that there is no doubt Whatever that Texas will agree to it. There are persons from Texas here who know public opinion well enough at home to speak in behalf of Texas, and such persons do not doubt the con currence of Texas in any plan of an nexation likely to be proposed by the U. S. Government." ARRIVAL EXTRAORDINARY! The Southern Stage, on Friday evening says the Vermont Sentinel, brought some forty or fifty of the Canadian ex iles to New South Wales, on their re turn to Canada, having received a free pardon. They appearek in the main, to l,e in good health and spirits. We learn that some fifteen yet remain in captivity, owing to want of funds to pay their passage home. Acpworr.—A man by the name of Farnsworth, belonging to Boston, who was engaged in blasting rocks on Thurs day last, at the new factory in Laneas ter, Mass., war blown up by the acci dental dropping of a spark.-as he vs preparing to touch off the blast. Ho was thrown about one hundred• feet in to the air, and shattered to pieces. AN AFFRAY.—An army occurred in Hartford Conn., on Friday evening, between Mr. E. G. Squier, editor of the Hartford Journal, and Mr. Henry Hudson. The parties were separated, when Mr. Hudson felt blood trickling from his person, and on examination was found to have a cut in his abdomen , about'two inches long, and a half inch deep. A CELESTIAL TERESTRIALIZEDA native of China. named 444ri, was natn•' razed is the 11. S. District Court at Boston, on Friday. He has been for eight yearaa resident-of 'Boston. so declared his-intention to betanne a citi zen in 143. , Correspondence from Harrisburg. (Coireirponikees or the ,Bradford Reporter.] Haim ammo, 7dt Feb., 1845. Yesterday, Gov. Shook transmitted a message to the. Senate, announcing the nomination of Harry Morgan Esq., to be an Associate Judge of the Courts of Bradford County, vice Judge Good- Win, removed from said county. This appointment will doubtless prove a good one, and acceptable to the people of your county. There has been little business of a public character transacted In either ! branch of the. Legislature, since my last letter. The bill providing for resump tion by the State, of the Beaver Divis ion of the Pennsylvania Canal, was in definitely postponed, which was in ef fect a rejection. The bill repealing the law establishing 'a Board of Revenue Coinmissioners passed the Senate by a majority of 19 to 9. This may be re garded l e a measure of g reat importance to the fiiming interestbf the State.— The plan of this revenue Board origi nated with the property holders of Philadelphia, whose object is to in crease the amount of assessments up on all the farms in the Commonwealth, and thus in a measure exempt their own property from the burdens of taxation. There is beyond all doubt some scheme of this kind at the bottom of this mea -1 sure, as its repeal is opposed by all the city and County members, and by the members from the counties adjoining. The whole burden of supporting the government is already cast upon the poor; tiller of the soil, who labors from year to year without being able to clear enough from the fruits of his industry and toil, to support his family and jury his taxes And yet, they would grind him' down still lower, by messing his farm higher, and thus increase the amount of his taxes ! I have been through different estab lishments in Philadelphia io which hun dreds of thousands of dollars of capital was, invested, and, not a dollar—not a farthing of all this money came into the Treasury in the shape of a tax or licence! Capitalists embark in every project of increasing their wealth ex cept fanning! They contrive some scheme by which to avoid paying taxes on their,property , or income—nay more; thCy rack their brains, as I verily be lieve, in devising means by which they may be able to shift upon the laboring poor—the hardy cultivators of the soil, the whole support of government. Why do not some of our law makers introduce a bill to 'revise and correct our revenue laws,! Why do they not look into the system adopted, and stu dy to correct its many abuses ? It I had a voice in our legislative halls, I introduce a bill to tax incomes, Mer chandise,--Manufactured articles of every description—lron Coal 4.c. I would .tax the State debt: In short I would ' lessen the burdens of taxation by making the system equal, by being universal. I sincerely hope the bill establishing a Revenue Board will be repealed.— What Can those commissioners do when they get together How could a com missioner from the county York, de termine the value of real estate in Bea ver, BradfordorCumberland ? In short the old system itself, is betterthan the proposed Board. Perbapsit needs mod ification and amendment, if so let this be done, and the assessment, will be made as they should. Great efforts are being made to pro cure the passage of a law erecting a new county out ofparts of Bedford and Hunt ingdon, to be called Blair. I should not be surprised if the Bill becomes a : 11w. Various other new counties are putitioned for in almost every, part of the State. The contract for rebuilding the Burnt Bridge, of the Cumberland Valley Rail Road, which spanned the Susquehanna at this place, has been allotted to Mr. ktrkhide, of Ohio, who - has gone "up the river" to make contracts with lum bermen to supply 'him with limber. He may visit Bradford County. The Governor and State Treasurer repaired to Philadelphia,- on Saturday to attend to ,the payment of Interest on Stale Debt. The Bill, to erect the - new county of Blair, has just passed the House by a vote of 49 to 44. . . The Bill to remove the seat of Justice of Columbia County, and which pissed the House several days ago was called, up : in the *nate to day andtiade the order of the day for tomorrow, liiradibird - County Court, MONDAY, Feb. 3, 1845. The court Opened at 10 A. M., and the,day was occupied in disposing of the argutn4nt list, receiving returns of constables, dte. TUESDAY, Feb. 4, 1845. Cox. vs. Mom* 19&05.-Surety of the peace. In this ease, the defendant was charged with attempting to set fire to, and burn the buildings, of D. C. Salis bury, of Monroe, on the night of Jan. 28, 1845. The motive which led to this attempt appears to have been her vexation at her failure to have Jerome Salisbury bound over to answer the charge of fornication and bastardy which she had preferred against him. After the ex amination before the magistrate had re suited in the dischatgenfMr. Salsbury, she returned to Monroe, and in the course of the night of the same day at tempted to seek revenge by setting fire to the buildings of Jeromes' brother.— She was detected. however, . with matches in her hand, and prevented from committing the deed that it ap peared she meditated. The Court on Wednesday ordered her tti give security in the sum of two hundred dollars conditioned to keep the peace and be of good behavior to wards all our good citizens, and espe cially towards D. C. Salsbury. for the space of one year, to pay the costs of prosecution, and stand committed till the sentence be complied with. Upon giving the • requisite security, she was discharged. Cost. vs. Damn Cassw—Larceny. Prosecutor, Ezra Long. This was an indictment for stealing a cast steel stone chisel and a long cast steel drill, the property of Ezra Long. After the testimony was closed, the defendant withdrew,_ the plea of not guilty, and pleaded guilty as to taking the chisel and drill, being of less value than twenty shillings. Thus constitu ting the offence- petty larceny instead of grand larceny; and -consequently subjecting the defendant to less pun ishment. The Court sentenced him to restore the stolen goods, if not al ready restored, to the owner, Qr pay the full value thereof, to pay a like amount to the commonwealth, and to undergo an imprisonment in the coun ty gaol for the space of thirty days. WEDNESDAY, Feb. 4, 1845. Cox. vs. GEO. SOPER.—Subornatton of peljury 7 Prosecutor James Buvier. This was an indictment found against George Soper and Samuel S Strait, for procuring Olive Benson to swear falsely in charging James Bovier With being the father of a bastard child, of which she was delivered on the 12th day of October, 1844. Owing to want of time in getting Mr. Strait here, after the indictment was found, he was not placed upon his trial. The principal facts upon which the prosecution relied, rested upon the testimony of Olive Benson and James Bovier, and were substantially as fol- lows Olive testified that: about the last of December 1843, she had illicit inter course with Soper. at one Bakers, and that ho was the father of her child which was born on the 12th'of October following. That some time before the child was born, Soper promised to marry her, if she would charge Bovier with being the . fither of her child, and obtain his farm, or two or three hundred dollars worth of property, telling her, as an inducement to do so, that he and she were both poor, !hailer parents-woad be mad, and would give her nothing&c. That Various representations were made to her by Strait and Soper, for this purpose, and that she protested strong ly against pursuing such _a Course of conduct, declaring that she did not like to take a false oath, that Bovier was not the rather of her child, &c. That she at last yielded to these repeated solicita tions, and on the 29th day of May, 1844, went before Ely Boma. a Jus tice of the Peace, and entered complaint against Bonier. - James Bovier testified that he never pad any criminal connexion with Olive, and never even hinted or intimated to her any dung Of the kind. The testimony on the part of defence was, - that at the time of Soper and Olive being , together at Bakers, it was im possible that the connexion. of , which she swore could have taken place, from 111 the fact that orie Miranda tlakefwas lying on bed in an adjoining room with the door openoand that she was awake all the time, ieing kept so hy the tooth achi 7 Soper was there ! .int! that she lay undressed on the betrin spchi po sition, that they were both constantly in her light. It also appeared from the testimony cdOlive herself and others, that about new- years', she commenced residing in the same house with James Bower,. and remained there some weeks,,osten sibly for the purpose of attending school, The time when she and So per were at Bakers', was placed by the defendant's witnesses in February.— Some of the defendant's witnesses tee tified that Olive bad at various times, declared that the child did not belong to. Soper, and _likewise, that B . ovier confessed at several periods to his un lawful intimacy with Olive. A large number of witnesses v:ais ea amined on both sides, to impeach the credibility of the witnesses of the op posite party, and nearly all were sub jected to this scrutinizing - orde'al. So that it , was very puzzling to decide what to believe. It was contended on the part of the defendant, that the story told by 'this girl was improbable, and that a combi nation had been entered into by Bovier, Olive and her friends, to procure un justly, the conviction of Soper. That Olive stood before the Jury, by her own confession a perjured being, and consequently little reliance could be placed upon her testimony. That James Bovier, whom it was alleged she was corroborated, was directly and deeply interested in the event of the suit, and that it would be dangerous indeed to give credence to his testimo ny.. It was contended on the part of the prosecution, that although Olive had fallen, and the barriers of her influence were broken down, yet that her evi dence taken in connexion with the cir cumstances related by her, corroborated by other witnesses, rendered her wor thy of belief. That the reasons which induced her to swear falsely against James Bovier, had been satisfactorily explained, and that, though a weak and simple-minded girl as she was, she had once been persuaded by the strong est motives, to pe rj ure herself, that she ought not from that fact alone, to be deemed incapable of telling the truth. TI7I7IIBDAY, Feb. 6, 1845. In the case of the Corn. ye. Soper, the jury returned s verdict of guilty. The defendant forthwith moved for a new trial. CON. vs. GEORGE SOPER-.—PrOBeCU - trix Olive Benson. This was an indictment for fornica tion .and bastardy, in which nearly the same testimony has given as in the for mer case. FRIDAY FEB. 7th 1845. SAMUEL A. TENANT 118. POMEROY GORBLINE• This was an action of replevin to re cover -damages for taking unlawfully numerous . articles of personal property, claimed by the plaintiff to- belong to him. The defendant admitted 14 ta king but insisted that he had a right to do so, inasmuch as the property was distrained for rent, and in proof of this, testimony was introduced to show, that a few years since, Caroline leased to Charles Webb a piece offend on shares. That Webb went on and raised good crops, but did not deliver to Gorsline his share, in consequence of which, Gorsline distrained. It appeared that previous to this, Albert Newell obtained a judgement against Webb, and levied upon his share of the buckwheat, oats potatoes, and cornstalks, part of the property in dispute, but,he bid them off, and sold and delivered them to SainuelA. Tenant. After this Tenant went on to the premises, and Caroline distrained for. $175 in money „Instead of so many bushels of grain of the value of 175 dulls. It was contended on the part of the defendant, that Tenant when he went on to Gorsline's premises, became im mediately tenant de facto de lege de nominee (in fact in law in n a me,) and TENANT in every thing, and consequent ly 'l3orsline bad -a right to, take his pro perty in payment' of his rent—which was unpaid. :The case tented on the manner of making, the distress. The court charged the Jury that the distress ought to have been for eo. Many bash: els of grain:of the value of so many dollars, and - directed them to 6nd for th'e pliintir, Which was accordingly dui with one dollar damages, the p ro . perty baying previously been return e d. Fse Bth 1845. In the case of the Commonwealth vs. Soper the Jury'fonnd 'the dth. guit, ty of fornication and bastardy. The motion for a new trial In case was overruled by the Court. DAVID SOPER vs. Saes It This was an action of assumpsit brought to recover upon _ a bargain made by Stratton and Soper with Mille, t h Mills should go down the river in per suit of one Jones, against whom the had claims. Mills accordingly Wen down and succeeded in collecting k m . part of the. amount. Verdict for the plaintiff thirty e t . dollars and fifty cents. MR: POLK'S CABINET.---The CO, pendent ofthe Richmond Enquirer w "that last nights mail brought a ), from the President elect, to a Re sentative in Congress, in which it stated explicitly, that no selection of 6 net officers bad yet been made, nor Col. Polk counselled with any on the subject. He further remarked, in choosing his constitutional adris would be his aim to steer clear cliques and cabals—that it was hisfi determination to ally himself with faction, come from what quarter it migh but to hold himself aloof from each an every connection that could possibly en in involving his administration in tl slightest degree with the questicin \ e , g th succession. This then sets at re n t the rumors relative to the new cabin and is a subject of congratulation ai all those who look as Republica, should, solely to the success of M r. Polk administration. The President el will be triumphantl3 sustained, boi Congress and the people in this co which is precisely the one dreaded b Whigs, as likely to upset all their of profiting by dissensions in our THE PUSEYITE CONTROVERSY.-- disturbance in the Episcopal Church , broken out with renewed vigor in En : land. The excitement is very : Most of the daily press of London, now engaged in the discussion of tb subject, and it would appear that doctrines, or innovations, as they a called by the Oxford divines, now py the public mind to the exclusion everything else. A pastoral letter, cently issued by the Bishop of Ent, appears to have been the chi:•f gen ting cause of this revivification of ti old dissension. KILLING HER HUSIIAND.—WE lea from the Southport Telegraph, of 24 inst., that a man was arrested a few da since, in Lake County, Illinois, 10 mi south of Southport charged with Inuit!. ing her husband. An attachment another man in whose house they re ded, is supposed to have instigated deed. BISHOP ONDERDONK. — Bish o p derdonk, of N. Y. City lately teed an, ecclesiastical court, told suspend from exercising the functions of. hit five, has just published a pamphlet, viewing the evidence given in case,a making a statement of what he deals to be the facts Of the matters laid to charge, Ntw JERSEY.--A resolution adopted in the House of Assembly New Jersey, on Wednesday, by a C' of 33 to 13, and in the Senate on mously, requesting their Represtotati to use their influence and exertions prevent the passage of the resolotp for the annexation of Texas to the States , recently passed by the Ilose Representatives. ANNEXATION IN Mrentoo. - - -04 22d ult. the House of Representsti Of Michigan passed to a third resdi the joint resolution instructing 111 Senators and Representatives in gress to use their exertions for th e mediate re-annexation of Texas to . United States. A proviso probihn' slavery or involuntary servitude fete in the territory of Texas, Was reject BISHOP DELaNcv.—We learn, sa the New York True Sun, that th ere , much dissatisfaction with BishoP tincey in the Western Diocese of N York, for having restored the Rey. Vin Zandt to his clerical fulleti °lls. -- • . --_—_— are dis C"G"sB.—The Senate ging the Texas measure; and the reducing the rates of postage , their constituents are anxiously or ing their action.