zolga] 17.7. ME TOW A N D GatinbaP 11113rninD, 3nnc 25, 1853. c ititttOi Vottrly. TRUST IN GOO AND PERSEVERE. - 1 IT °LIVID OAKWOOD Brother is life's morning clouded, Has the sunlight ceased to shine! Is the earth in darkness shrouded 1 Wouldst thou at thy lot repine 1 Cheer op, brother !—let thy vision Look above—see ! light is near ; Soot will come the next transition— Trust in God and persevere!" Brother, has life's hopes receded 1 . Has thirs sought its joys in vain Friends proved false when mostly needed, Foes rejoicing at thy pain 1 Cheer up brother!—there's a blessing Waiting for thee—never fear ; Fees forgiving, since confessing, Trust in God and persevere !" Diother,all things round are calling, With united voice," Be strong !" Though the wrongs of earth beguiling They must lose their strength, ere long• Yes my brother, though life's troubles Drive thee near to dark despair, Soon 'twill vanish like a bubble— Trust in God and persevere !" He. from his high throne in heaven, Watches every step you take ; He will see each fetter riven Which your foes in anger make• Cheer up, brother—He has power To dry up the bitter tears : And, though darkest tempest tower, Trust in God and persevere !" Brother, there's a quiet slumber Waiting for thee in the grave ; Brother, there's a glorious number Christ,in mercy reigns to save. Wait, then, nil life's quiet even, Closes round thee calm and clearer; And, till called from earth to heaven, Trust in God and persevere !" A DicoNsoLare. Winow —Less than foie, weeks cr., young man in Medford died after a brief ill leaving a young and interesting wife. The ur one mourned his early decease, but her grief 11 , not su,:h ae often crushes the life-blood from e :inv. Her weeds gage a new charm to her en'y—she won the heart of a sympathising friend tempered her grief by listening to his tales of and on Tuesday last the pair were married. Le2rass lie not yet began to spring upon her late n'und's gra ve .—Boston Chronicle. WiLiws' griefs are short lived. Once upon a .;:re runs an 0: iental story, a young and lovely roman was called upon to mourn the dea h of her A , sho loved him in life.with all the fervor of I...Jralion, her grief at his decease was violent and ,lo:m>lable She filled the air with plaints; dectlar t.: her , e:l lire most wretched of women; and in ir,:en-iry of her grief made "a vow that she mud wed no new lord lull the stream that ran ! , y her bower should reverse its course. A few seeks alter she was observed busily engaged in L:arimg rip the strrtm! in the 'r Citizen of the World," te at, a similar story. A lady on the death of her Likud, vowed that she would not marry another •!,e _rare of lier first loved, perennially mois ned by her own and the tears of heaven, should : , :come dry., Not many days after the dear crea re was seen vigorously fanning the grave, in or der that it might become sooner dry. • Toe vt.ocial blindness of pride is seen in this, thr !foie are :he proudest that have nothing to be Proud of Such pride is the manifestation of es• el self-love—of that love of sell which exists rtlere telt is most vile and unlovely. C~ " Won't you sing a song, s:r ?" said a lady bier tore, as they were alone one evening. The ITer soon commenced the popular air, " I wont go nme till morning." And sure enough he didn't! f A lady, who was not wholly indebted to 4cire for her blooming red cheeks, was seen pass i'reet the other day with a written label on lief back, Beware of paint." • CO - It was told of Lord Newbury that when Da-mag, the Fen e tic e of death upon a man for steal .::g a watch, lie said to the culprit : My good fellow, you made a grasp at time, :Jut caught eternity" man's dress - has a wonderful influence on his character: Dress like a rowdy, and in leas Man a month you will commence acting like one. i• A Western editor says of a contemporary, the only time he ever worked, win the day he tool• castor oil for honey. (0 - Mean men have no email wee. Who oa tr heard of a miser going on a bust, s or speak well of tobacco chewing We pause fora reply. A Contemporary, speaking of the report on ge.n 4ernen'o fashion, says, " there is not much change 4Cen'lenaen's pants this month." Very likely. to' Men scanning the surface count the wicked 4PPY; they know not the frightful - dreams that 4 Dlrti a sad roan's pillow. ro A man wants just so much knowledge as be h ' t the wisdom to use. Eat no more than you W kelt. epaaleis worn by Prince Albert, when in costume, are worth the trifling sum of 500 X. 4 41411 1 farm on each shoulder. e who lives only to tenefit himself giv s es the a benefit when he dies. ........ ~ ~......„.,, , . .. . • r •• f , l''.,' •:-:'' .''.,-. er...... - . -• ••,'••',',. . . ; ~....:' . ‘.. 7 . ,, ,,, :11....: -i - .....• - ..-- .. ~. „ . ._ . . . . . ~. . . . . . _ .. - ~ L. • ' . ~ . . . ~.. .. . . , ..,i, . ~,,,_...,,,,,.. ~...,.. ..,. -:,.....,_:....:,,.....,.. 1 ...., ._, _ ....... ,•:• • l• • • . . IMPORTANT CORRESPONDENCE, BETWEEN GOV. LOWE AND GOV. BIGLER. To His Excem.caci, the Governor of Pennsylvania: Bra have maturely considered the requisi tion made by your Excellency, for the apprehen sion and delivery of Thomas M'Creary and John Merlin, charged with the crime of kidnapping a certain Rachel Parker. I must respectfully de cline to comply with it, for the following reasons: You will perceive by the tostemerd of L. A. Schoolfield, E-q , (the truth of which has not been, and I presume, will not be controverted,) that Thomas M'Creary went to Pennsylvania, not as a kidnapper, but for the sole purpose of capturing Rachel Packer, then supposed to be Eliza Crocus, the fugitive slave of Mrs. Dickeybut, It is also certain that he carried with him the authority of a power of attorney from the owner of the alleged fugitive, or her agent, designing to act under it, in good faith. It is likewise well known that hecap tared Rachel Parker, believing her to be Eliza Cro- cue. Neither can it be denied that be had good reason for so believing, not only horn the informa tion received in the neighborhood,_ but also from the extraordinary I keness which exists between Rachel Parker and DMA Crocus, and upon which some of the most respectable citizens of Baltimore were prepared to swear to the' fact of Wei:any.— From these premises, the conclusion is irresistibly drawn, that Thomas M'Craary is not a criminal The presumption of malicious intent, necessary to constitute crime, is absolutely rebutted by the facts of the case. If guilty at all, under the law, his guilt is purely technical. lie is morally innocent, beyond the shadow of a doubt. The first.iluestion which arises, therefore, is. would it be just for the laws of Pennsylvania to punish a man under such circumstances? The next question is, can I con sent that a citizen of Maryland shall be exposed to the hazard ot an unjust prosecution? It is unne- cessary for me to assure you that the people and government of this State hold the crime of kidnap. ping in the deepest abhorrence, and that our laws visit it with the severest punishments. But, 'bat is not the enquiry here The question is, whether or not, being perfectly satisfied of the moral inuo• cence of the accused, I shalt send him into another State for trial? It is extremely unpleasant to make any allusions whatsoever, which may possibly be supposed to reflect ungraciously upon ar.y of the cilizens of another and a friendly State; nevertt~te• less, it is my duty to remind your Excellency that very strong and unreasonable prejudices, touching the subject-matter of M'Creary's alleged offence, prevail in the county where b 3 has been indicted, which would render the result of his trial exceed ingty uncertain. I could not, therefore, consent to expose him to the I unless I felt constrained to do so by the mandate of the Federal Consitturikin. Without entering into an argument upon this point, it is sufficient to say, that I consider the case of M'Creary fully within the scope of that discretion in regard to requisitions, which has always been claimed and exercised by the Executives of the different States of the Union. Not only the Gover nors, but the C arts also, on I•abeas corpus, have repea.edly gone behind requi.itions, arid hare ex. amined and decided upon the me i its of the cases themselves. I respectfully call your attention to a letter ad dressed to me by the Hon. James Campbell, late Attorney General of Pennsylvania, a copy ol which is herewith enclosed. The late Attorney General expressly states, that, at the trial on the petition for freedom, filed by Rachel Parker, in the Circuit Court for Baltimore county, it was distinctly under stood arid agreed between the counsel for the peti tioner and the claimant, respectively, that no et imi. nal proceedings should be instituted against ISl'Clea ry in Pennsylvania, if the claimant would abandon the claim, and permit a verdict to be taken in favor of the petitioner; and that lie (the late Attorney General) would, without any hesitation, have en tered a t,olle prosequi on the indictment lately found against him (M'Creary) in Chester county, had he the power to do so. From this statement of the late Attorney General, it must be supposed tha M'Creary was not regarded by the counsel as mor• ally guilty, it guilty at all. In pursuance ol the ar rangement entered into between , the counsel, a verdict in favor of the petitioner was rendered by the jury. It is not for me to inquire how far the State of Pennsylvania might consider herself bound by the deliberate act of the counsel appointed by your Excellency, at the request of the Legislature of y our State. I must regard those counsel, thus appointed, as the representatives of Pennsylvania, authorized to act in her behalf. I must, consequent ly, assume that Pennsylvania has admitted the moral innocence of M'Creary; because upon the opposite hypothesis, I should be driven to the con clusion (which is *holly inadmissible) that a fel ony bad been compounded, in order that the free dom of Rachel Parker might thereby be secured. It cannot be doubted that the counsel, on both sides, acted from the highest and purest motives; and that, being satisfied of,the moral innocence of M'Creary, the counsel for Pennsylvania considered that a prosecution for kidnapping would not only be unjust to M'Creary, but might tend very strongly tc excite unpleasant feelings between two great States, which have alwayacherished, and, I sincere ly trust, always will continue to cherish the warm est mutual respect and attachment. Here, then, by the force of the facts themselves, ai well as by the admission of Pennsylvania, clearly implied from the set of her acknowledged legal repreaentatives, am brought to the certain conclusion, that Thomas M'Creary is an innocent man. The case of John • Merritt rests upon the same facts and is governed by the urns principles: lie was but the assistaut of M'Creary ; and of course should not be held accountable, it M'Creary be de clared irresponsible. PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY AT TOWANDA, BRADFORD COUNTY, PA., BY E. O'MEARA GOODRICH. EILCUTIVE DBPARTSIICNT, / Annapolis, Md. May 2, 1853. s== Under these circumstances, I must decline to comply with the requisition of your Excellency. I have the honor to be, with the highest reopecl, your obedient servant, F.XIMUTIvE ClIAMEtft, Harrisburg, May 28, 1853 To His Excellency, E. Louis Lowe, Governor of Maryland : Your Excellency's communication of the 2d in. stunt informing me that you had ( ) echoed to issue a warrant for the arrest and delivery of Thomas M'Creary and John Merrit, alleged fugitives from he justice of this State r came to hand by due course of mail. An unusual pressure of other offi• ciai duties must plead _my apology to your Excel lency for having so long delayed to acknowledge its receipt. I have examined with some solicitude and much care, the masons thus communicated to me by your Excellency, for your refusal to comply with the requisition of the Governor of this State for a warrant to arrest the said fugitives, and regret that I should feel required to say, after all this consid eration, that I cannot regard the reasons assigned as sufficient; indeed I feel constrained by a high sense of official duty to dissent almost entirely from be doctrines promulgated by your Excellency cinching this unfortunate affair Before proceeding to diruss the important tea. ores of Ibis unpleasant controversy, it would seem proper that I should at least attempt to remove from your mind apprehensions, not disguised in your communication, that the prosecution of the fugitives may have proceeded from prejudice or unfriendly feeling on the part ol certain citizens ol Pennsylva nia. I can, lam happy to say, see nothing in the preliminaries of this case to warrant this impres sion. The vindication of the law and the punish. ment of crime, I beg to assure you, were the only objects sought. The very amicable relations which have long existed between Maryland and Penn sylvania should be sufficient, it seems to me, to re lieve yonr Excellency fiom apprehensions as to the just intensions of the authorities of this State. There is surely nothing in the history of Pennsylvania to excite distrust in the justice of her laws or the puri ty of their adminit.ttation. Some excitement very naturally pew out 01 the circumstances connected with ibis affair; but I cannot conceive that it is of such a character as to hazard the supremacy of the law, or endanger the integrity of trial by jury ; and I regret exceedingly that your Excellency should have found it necessary to " make any allusions whatever, which may possibly be supposed to re lint ungraciously upon any ol the citizens ol an other and a friendly State." Excitement and mis directed feeling may, on special occasions, prevail without, but the sacred portals of justice, in this or derly Commonwealth, are seldom if ever invaded by popular clamor. The guilt or innocence of par ties is ever established according to the rules and principles of the law. Far be it from me, there to recognize the right of your Excellency, on the law or rules of comity, to refuse to surren the accused on the allegation that a fair trial might not,be had by a jury of this State; nor can 1 agree with you that the interest manifested tys the citizens of Chester county, in the girls, Elizabeth and Rachel Parker, whom they knew to have been carried off from their mid .1 in violation of law, should be regarded as " a very strong, and unrea sonable prejudice," nor that such a stale ol feeling in a community is to render the ends of justice " ex- ore der der ceedtngly uncertain." I shall not attempt to answer at length the plea ol innocence which you have been pleased to in terpose for the fugitives, for I must deny its legiti macy entirely. One ot two points, however would seem to demand a passing notice. You allege that " Mr M'Creary went to Pennsylvania, not as a kidnapper, but for the soli purpose of capturing Rachel Parker, then supposed to be Eliza Crocus, the fugitive slave at Mrs. Dickeyhut." The an swer to this is, that the laws ot Congress prescribe a mode of reclaiming a fugitive from labor, and had Mr. M'Creary respected these forms there would now be no indictment against him. Had he taken the alleged Eliza Crocus before an United States Commisssoner, to establish her identity, as the law requires, the fact would have been developed that the prson whom he was about to carry off, was not El a Crocus, but Rachael Parker. At beet, M'Creary re, it will be seen that Mr 'Creary car. ) 1 vied o Rachael Parker in violation ol the law and your Excellency will certainly ttgree with me, that he shout I bear the consequences. But this whole inquiry into the guilt or iiintio cence of the accused parties, is unauthorized, and, to my mind, in clear derogation of the letter and spirit of the Constitution and laws ot the United States; nor can I agree with you that the "case of Mr. M'Creary comes within the scope of that dis cretion in regard to requisitions which has always been claimed and exercised by the Executive of the different States ot the Union." I have also searched in vain fur the cases in which " not only the Governors but the courts on habeas corpus, have repeatedly gone behind the requisition and' have examined into and decided upon the merits ol the cases themselves." This examination, so far froth bringing me to a concurrence in your Excellency's views, has confirmed me in the belief, that there is nothing in the Constitution of the United - States, in the laws ol Congiess, or the practice of the Gover nors ollhe respective S ales, to warrant an Execu tive in -going behind a correct resold, to decide up on the facts. Every suggestion which you have made in defence pf the accused, constitutes subject 'matter for the consideration of a Pennsylvania jury when trying the question of guilt or innoceuce,and should not, I apprehend, have attracted the notice of the Executive of Maryland, when enquiring into the forms of the requisition. . The Constitution of tbil railed States, provides it that a porno cluiiged in any Stale with treason, felony, or other crime, wtto shall flee from justice and be found in another State shall on demand of ._t`! ..... r ... -a.c.-;. ..'~`:'..' _ ... ~-"W.'1~:,,= ~,'t; s s;s'x{_^t~.r. , ..~xT~;~t"..Y•.~?>n.. ^"~.P.i/3':fSf~,`:l'~^.'~_as:.s,~:.n:. ~•.,:z ZEGAILDLESS OP DENUNCIATION FROM ANY QUANTE/1." E. LOUIS LOWE the Executive authority of the State from which he fled, be delivered up to be removed to the State having jurisdiction of the crime." The law of Congrerta declares ig that whenever the Executive authority of any State in the Union shall demand any person as a fugitive from justice, of the Execn- ive authority of any State or Territoty to which such person shall have fled, and shall, moreover, produce a copy of the indictment Mend, or an aB• davit made before a magistrate of any such State ror Territory, charging the person so demanded with having committed treason, felony or other crime, certified as authentic by the Governor or Chief Magistrate (.1 the State or Territory from whence the persons so charged fled, it shall be the duty of the Executive authority of any State or Territory to cause him or her to be arrested and secured and delivered to the Executive authority making the demand, or hie agent." In what feature of this plain and mandatory law re found the right to go behind the record and try the easel The injunction to deliver the fugitive under the prescribed forma of the requisition is positive. it it had been contemplated that the-Go vernor upon whom the requisition is made should inquire into the merits of the case, why did not Congress so declare t M'Creary and Merritt are claimed on the indictment of a grand jury, the highest grade of a prima facia cave that can be made out; and still your Excellency has felt re- quired to go behind this charge and inquire into the lacta of the cue, ani even into the feelings of the people who might be called upon to act as jurors. Much controversy has been held between the Executives of the respective States of the Union, as to the meaning of the terms " other crimes" as ex- expressed in the Constitution and touching the forms of requisition ; but in n.► instance that I have been able to discover before the present, has an Execu- tive claimed the right to go behind an admittedly correct record and dismiss the accused on the facts of the case. No objection is made to the form or substance of the requisition, and the crime charged according to the language of your Excellency, is as "odious in Maryland as in Pennsylvania " But whilst admitting the sufficiency of the requisition as to form, you assume or infer from ail unauthoriz • ed inquiry into the facie, the innocence of the ac cused 'and then ask " if it would be right for the laws of Pennsylvania to punish a man under such circumstances" and " if you should give your con sent that a citizen of Maryland should be exposed to an unjust prosecution." The answer is that the law must be administered as it is. It is not for an Executive officer to account for the consequences nor is it safe to doubt the justice of the law. The idea that it is my duty as an Executive to fore know the kind of trial which is to await parties claimed on the requisition of your Excellency or the Governor of any other Sate is truly startling.— Why Sir, to my mind no Executive should pretend to utiderstand the facts or ine consequences; he should be content to obey tbe mandates of the Con stitution, confiding the rights and antelests of ac cused parties to their peers and the laws of the land. Your view of the subjee.i, it will be readily seen would impose upon the Executive a most onerous and delicate duty not contemplated by the act of Congress. If•it be the right of the Executive, up. on 'thom a requisition is made, to go behind the indictment to notice the facts for the protection of the accused, it is his duty to du so. If he has the tight to do so in one case, he is bound to do so in all, a duty utterly impracticable and never should be attempted. Should an Executive be expected to reverse the action of a grand jury in the absence of all the testimony on which the indictment against the accused may have been found 1 Should an ac cased party be tried before arrest! Should judg ment be rendered in the absence of both the pro secutor and accused! The inevitable effect of your Excellency's position would be to lead to daystem thus impracticable and dangerous. 11, therefore, I were entirely satisfied of the innocence of the ac cused, I could not consent to participate in the es te. lishment of a precedent so fraught with danger ous ecntseqnences to the peace of the country and the ends of justice, as to acquiesce in the right of an Executive to go behind the indictment of a jury, and a reqnioltion in regular form, to decide the merits of the case. The provisions of the constitution must have the paramount effect of a treaty stipulation hem een Sovereign and Independent States, and are not on ly positive and mandatory in their requirements, but contain a manifest intimation as to the jurisdic tion of the offence charged. it it had been intend ed to vest the slightest discretionary power in the authority of the State to-which the person charged may have fled, beyond the right to know that the offence charged is a crime in the State %%hem com mitted, then the mandate, that he or she be remov ed to the State having jurisdiction would be super fluous. ft the right claimed by your Excellency exists for the purposes of protection—even as to a citizen of the State to which he has fled, it follows that it also exists fci: all the 'imposes of trial and punishment; a principle entirely repugnant to the well settled policy of the criminal law, the jurisdic tion as to the goat or innocence of the accused be ing vested-exclusively in the 'courts of the State or place wherit the offence was committed. Nor is it necessary to argue that legislative jurisdiction over this subject is vested solely and' exclusively in • Congress. This point has been clearly maintained by the Supierne Cciurt of the United States. Under this view of the cue, as settled by the highest tribunal known to the law, the. position contended for by your Excellency derives no strength from a sop• posed anafrogy to the poundings under a writ of habeas corpus, of the &niers of,a committing mag. istrate. .1n these,.l apprehend the proceeding is regislated by the statute of the respective States, or settled by the practice of the courts, and Call only, in any cue, apply to the arrest and detention, on: der the local law—it cannot interfere with the para. mount - authority of the Constitution and acts of Con. greet', Assuming, for illustration, that your Excel lency had complied with the requisition, and alter the arrest and delivery of the accused to the agent of Pennsylvania, a writ of habeas corpus hail issued fur their liberation, the legality of their detention could be the only subject of inquiry before the court . If, in the language of the Supreme Court, already referred to, the act of Congress supercedee all State Legislation on the subject, and by necessary impli- cation prohibits ii, how can the Executive of a State exercise a power expressly withheld from the -Le gislature, upon the most important considerations. Ewen in the ordinary practice, under the writ of habeas corpus, I subunit, thatt l the only matter pro. perly examinable would be the legality of the de. tendon of the accused and • the bailable nature of the offence. It would seem a novel proceeding in deed to go behind the record of the committing ma gistrate, and inquire in this collateral way into the guilt or innocence of the accused. Be this as it may however, the very point is settled in New- York and doubtless in other States. In the case of Clark, recorded in 9th Wendel, page 212. The person charged bad been.arreated on a requisition to the Executive of New York and delivered to the proper authority, and a writ of habeas corpus award ed for hie liberation, Chief Justice Savage decided that "On habeas corpus, a 'court or judge, before whom is brought a prisoner arrested as a fugitive from justice. by e warrant from the Executive of one State on the requisition of an Executive of an other State, under the Constitution and laws of the United States, will not inquire as to the probable guilt' of the accused. The only inquiry is whether the warrant on which he is arrested states that the fugi tire has been demanded by the Executive of the State from which he is alleged to have fled, and that a copy of the indictment or an affidavit char; lug him with having committed treason, felony or other crime, certified by the Executive 'demanding him u authentic, have been presented." From this view of the question, it !allows then, that the only proper injury by the Executive autlapr. ity of a State upon which a requisition is made, is the strict legality of the proceedings. Your Excel- lency may be understood by your silence to ccn• cede, Ist. That the demand of the Executive of Penns)lvania was in proper form. 2d. Tha,t a copy of the indictment found, accompanied the requist Lion, find 3d. That the offence with which the par. ties were charged is a crime in Pennsylvania. If there has been a doubt on your mind as to the lat ter point, it must be removed by thecase just cited, where it is also held, that an oflerice made indicta- We by a Statute, is a clime within the meaning of the Federal Constitution. By statute, the ()Bence of kidnapping is made indictable in your State as well as in this, and the crime regarded os odious an both. If a State Executive cannot then, under the Con atitution and hue, exercise the right of inquiring into the guilt or: introcuce of a party charged with crime, what is there in public policy or in the char acteristics of the case under cunsideration, to F. 11 9' ain such a dangerous assurophor. of power. That ot trial by jury, the most sawed at time boomed of hu - nan institutions is justly regarded as the great safe guard ot ow liberty and prosperity. Any :eh. er mode of establishing our rights judicially must . be regarded as a usurpation of powrr and danger ous to the integrity of our institutions. Next to this is the right to be flied by jury of the vicinage which in criminal accusation is a day as well as a tight. As already intimated if the power to go behind the record to examine the facts, exist in a particular sense, it cart be exercised in a general•one. If your Excellency has Oat) right to pass upon the guilt ot Isl'Creary and Merril, in Ander to avoid the hazard of an unfair arid prejudicial trial in Pennsylvania, what limit would you assign to the exercise of tiffs power? Where shall the duties of the Executive end and those of the jury commence? Let it be the ordinary case of a fugitive from justice, without the claims of citizenship, and no distinction itt prim ciplt can be drawn, what piotection could the ac. cased have, if the principle contended be a true one 1 11 the right exists all, it exists for the purpose ot trial—and the inevitable-consequences would I e that the accused might be twice tried and jeoparded for the same offence. If tried and even acquitted in the state to s which he hadfled, it would be no bar to a second trial, for the same offence, in the Stare from whence he fled It is thus apparent, that the doctrine or right contended for is not only a virtual dtsrega d of the law, but might, in practice, be et• testy destructive to the rights of the accused. The letter of the Constitution certainly gives no latitude to Executive discretion, and if not a necessary re. sun from its spirit or the policy of the law, when it would follow that the duty of an Executive is a plaid one. If satisfied that the forma required by the Constitution and laws of Congress, have been complied with, and that the offence •charged is a crime where committed, there can be no other de termination than to deliver up the alleged fugi tive from justice to the authority lawlidly demand ing him. A The administration 01 the Constitution and laws providing for,the'rediticm of fugitives from justice:has been confided to the Executive authority of the State aid in the absence of a revisory tribunal some irregularity m practice ,has necessarily arisen.— With the excepion :of a few decisions emanating from individual judges proceedings On habeas cor pus almost the only authorities bearing ou the ques tions arising out of the subject, are the opinions of State Executives. So far as 1 have been able to ex amine:thern I find Ann against the position assum ed by your Excellency. These controvertivs have had reference mainly to the sufficiency of affidavits the forms of requsition and the censtraction - that should be given to the terror" other crimes" as used in the Constitution. Prior to the act of 1793, Mr. Edmund Randolph, the Attorney General of the United :States, in dia• cussing the very point taised by your communica tion of the 2d, says : "In the present instance a grand jury convened before two of the Justices of MEMEB SG the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania bare made it (she charge of goih)and thus Fare famished the ground fur bringing the foregoing persons, for for mal trial. Should such a procedure as this, be de• Glared to be incompetent as a charge, the object of this article in the Constitution' mast either be de- leateJ or be truly oppressive. For, bdwcen an in• dictment anti vial there is.no in'ermediate examin- ation of the facts and to mail fir an examination of an absent euipril, before a demand would com pel a judgment to rendered behind his back. Goverbor Bl'Donald, of Georgia; in a communi cation to Gov. Seward, of New York, in June 1841 when insisting upon the delivery of a fugitive on a requisition sustained by affidavits only remarks " The object of the Constitution is to secure the ar- rest of a crimnial in the State to which they may flee, to be tried in the State within whose jurisdic tion the offence was committed and not to Wm them befbre arrest in the State where they be found. AU that the Constitution intended is, that when a per son charged with treason, felony or other crimes, in one State shall escape into another, the officers of the United, or if your Excellency please, of the State in which he may be found, shall arrest him upon the eame.evidence of guilt and no more than would have justified his arrest in die State whence he fled. An indictment is nailing more, than an accusation or charge of crime," and " it cannot be pretended that !he evidence on which the Grand Jury based their charge should be communicated to enable your Excellency to determine whether their conclusions were erroneousin law " That learned gentleman further remarks ; " that no diAcrelion to pass upon its sufficiency was i►►- tended to be conferred upon the Executive upon whom the requisition is made, by the act of Con- greys requiring a 4op} of the bill of indictment to accompany the demand in certain cases, and yet the submission of a copy of the bill of indictment would " not he an idle ceremony," nor the provis- alone of law directing it " unmeaning and useless,' for as the bill of indictment is an authority in the State where it is Mond to the presiding judge to is sue his warrant for the apprehension of the accus ed, so is an authenticated copy of it authority in the State to which he may have fled for a warrant or order for his arrest there!' le a case before Judge Ray, of South Carolina, decided in 1844, " where certain persons were brought before him by habeas corpus, who were under arrest by order of the Executive of South Carolina for the purpose of being delivered to an agent of the Governor of New York, who had de manded them as fugitives from justice in fiat state, bills of indictment having been found against them, their discharge was moved for on various_grounds; 'but the judge decided that he had no power or au thority to discharge the prisoners, or in any way whatever to interfere with the mandate of the Ex -ecutive—that the rendition al fugitives from justice, is a ministerial duty imposed upon the Executive authority, by the Constitution and laws, and that i must be considered ae a case excepted cut of the State Habeas Co-pus act by the constitution of the United States." As to the plea that an impression was created or an understanding had between the attorneys in the trial for the Leedom of Rachel and Elizabeth Pack er, I cannot see that it can relieve you or myself from our obligation to carry out the demands oldie law, in the prosecution against 111"Creary, I cannot doubt that Judge Bell and Judge Campbell, attor neys on the part of Pennsylvania, as well also as attorneys on the part of your State, did what they considered to be right under all the_ circumstances. But I can recognise no official connection between the trial for freedom of the Parker girls, and the prosecution against Thomas hltreary and John Merritt, for an oflence against the laws of the State Judge Campbell did not appear i.i the defence of the Parker Girls, in the capacity of Attorney Gen eral but as one of the attorneys selected by the Governor, under the resolutions of the Legislature. His powers were the same as those of his associate, Judge Bell, and ho more. But as Attorney Gener al, under the late law of the State, he could exer cise no greater than an advisary power over the proceedings. The power to 'stay the prosecution .against the accused, is vested solely in the Court and District Attorney, Of Chester County. Had these officials seen it. the proceedings in the case of the Parker Girls, reason sufficient for entering a nolleprosequi, the prosecution would have terminat ed. They deem it to be their duty, however, to send the case to the grand Jury, and a bill of in dictment was found against the accused. On the presentation of a copy of this indictment I conceiv ed it to be my tat, under the law, to make a re quisition on your Excellency for the arrest and de livery of the accused and I can see tic, relief for them,.save in a trial by a jury of this State. What ever facts and circumstances there may be con nected with the trial for the freedom of Rachel Par ker, which rhould be plead in defence of M'Creary and Merritt, a ill be subject matter for the considet ation of the court and jury, when inquiring into the facts of the case. In conclusion allow me express my regret that a difference of opinion should have arisen between Excellency and myself on any subject, and to say that I sincerely trust this unpleasant aflair may not, to the slightest "extent, disturb the amicable rela tions which have so long exiated between the peo ple of the two States. With the highest consideration, I remain your ' Excellency's obedient servant, To Ccat Wsarr—Warts on the hand may be cored by washing them several times a day in strong soda water, and allowing them to dry with out wiping. The more we satisfy the demands of conscience the stronger they become. otrWe,carry our •eighbors crimes in sight, but throw our owo over our etrultlers. WM. MU&