. VOL. 3.-XO. 22. S. 1. R(TW. CLEAREEELD, PA, WEDNESDAY, JMI7ARlr 14, 1857. : bi .For the "Raftsman's Journal." .. ..- . - ' ,-MARY. - - . BT JOnX nAMILTOS. ' Mary's sweet, and Mary's fair ; "Iter's is golden, auburn hair; Neat ber person, full of grace ; . ; Mild the aspect of her face. ' Soft her words, and kind her heart ; " Pure her love, and froe irom art; Fit her prudence to control, While her sweetness wins the soul. t . .. - . . , If me she loved as she has spurned, IIow ardently 'twonld he returned ; : : How quickly could a word impart , The pura devotion o my heart, "Which, waiting at her feet to lie, ' " Longs there to lire and there to die ; , While fondest love could not excel Sly love to her, I'd love so well. And hare I loved ; 'twas Mary loved, As Mary"s actions oft have proved : "' Oft have I seen her dancing eye Play light and quick when I was by ; As oft I've felt all fluttering stiil My heart leap out at Mary "s will ; . Her sweetness I've bean still to admire, . . And feel tho glow of Love's own fire. ' , Reported or the "Raftsman's Journal." PASSING AWAY. " BT Jf. nENEIETT4 GOODFEt.LOW. ! Read before th Clexrfi'Iil Tezrhers' Institute, January XI, 1157. Every tiling with which we arc surrounded, Is subject to mutation end decay. The proud aammiis of tho "everlasting hills," as they are called, gradually crumble and fill the val leys at .their base. The solid granite of the .mountains waste by the ravages of time. Ve .getable nature, that annually feasts tho eye .with its beauties, yields to the same law. The -blushing roso that unfolds its vermilion petals to inhalo the ambrosial dew-drop of morn, is swept away by the evening blast. The n!ght . 1)10001103 Cerc.isr whose mignificent corolla challenges a rival, and whose delightful fra grance burdens tiie passing zephyr, does cot permit the sun to add brilliancy to its beauty, but in twilight's calm hour unfolds its charms ard aids sweetness to the moonlight scene, and ere the orb of day visits our fair world, droops to revive no more. No plant nor flow er possessing excellence or beauty, is saved from the invasions of time. Change succeeds change'in quick succession. Spring appears with youthful beauty, but soon gives place to niaturer summer; this soon is lost in autumn, whilst anon tho hoarse winds of witter sweep sil signs of life from the forest. But we do not alone witness tho change of seasons, and of the vegetable kingdom. Where fiourishingempires and populous cities, in our age cf the world, dazzle by their splen dor aud magnificence, the vision of man, in tho next, nought is presented to the gaze but the time-houored vestiges of what had once been great. Man hastens to decay. Our li braries of Literature arc tho labors of the dead ; those whose sublime geuius has un tombed and translated the records of the world, with the band that waked tho tender echoes of the lyre, are numbered with the past. Where are tho iliustVious patriots of tho Revolution, whose glorious deeds entitle them to a chaplct ofhnuioit.il fame? Echo answers, they too hevo mouldered into dust. Our friends are one leaving nought but the feint pencilling of memory to trace to us their virtues. View youth basking in tho sunshine of pleasure surrounded with all that tends to captivate tho heart, or render life desirable joy beams in the eye ; health blooms on the cheek ; tho sprightly imagination entwines a living wreath of future enjoyments. -But, ah! tho scene changes. Diseasa makes inroads upon the tender Cores of this complex tenement. Tho sunken eye and pallid countenance, arc euro premonitors of the invader's approach. The young, beautiful, and amiable fall by his pow er. The furrowed cheek and palsied hand . point tho aged to the grave.' That which tends to sustain, also contributes to its destruction. All with which we arc conversant, bears this inscription "Fas-uno Awat !" "When old Bogus' wife fell ill, he sent for a doctor as sordid and avaricious as himself. Before the doctor saw the patient, he wished to have an understanding with tho miserly husband. IIere"s forty dollars," said Bogus, "and yon shall bavo it whether you cure my wife or kill her." The woman died, and the doctor called for the feo. "Did you kill roy wife ?" asked Bogus. "Certainly not," replied the indignant Doc tor. "Well, yon didn't euro her 1" You know she's dead." Vcry well, then leave the house in double quick time," said Bogus. "A bargain's a bar gain. It was kill or cure, but you didn't do cither." Origin or Tua "Malakoff." The antiqua ries of Sebastopol have made a curious discov ery. Everybody has heard of the Malakoff hill, in the Crimea, upon which was built the tower, now become so famous. Such an im mortality scarcely seemed destined this name, which was that of a certain Lieut. Malakoff, dismissed the Russian Navy on account cl in corrigible drunkenness. Faithful to his pas sion, alter his dismissal ho set up a grog shop on this spot, which was frequented by sailors. These latte.r, in a tit of sarcastic gaiety, gave to tho hill in question the name of their tap master, which, by the accident of a memora- . tie siege having taken placs near the spot, baa. Oow Dttuome imnrQrraf. WASHINGTON GOSSIP. I Public Lands. The Committee on Public Lands are still undetermined as to the final form of tho Pacific Railroad bill. At Mr. Rusk's instance, the King and 'Walker Corpo ration, with other companies were included as grantees for the Southern route; bnt the pre judice raised against the former has tended to damage the prospect of the whole enterprise, and, therefore, it may be reconsidered. This and other causes have produced some reaction on the minds of the real friends of the project, so that hesitation is entertained almost against any effort this session, from tho conflicting in terests involved. The Lane Grant Ststem. The system of granting public lands to aid iu the construc tion of railroads has been run into the ground, and will hardly be further extended except in favor of the Pacific Railroad. True, certain parties are moving heaven and earth almost to secure a grant ol land to aid the Territory of Minnesota in constructing roads therein ; and there is some plausibility in the pleas urged in its favor. But the chances are that the mea sure will fail, as it certainly ought to fail in the shape in which it is now urged. The com mittee on Public Lands in the House has sev eral times agreed upon a bill, and subsequent ly changed its form. They are now prepared with a bill which will be reported to the House whenever the committee is "called, and an ef fort will be made to put it at ence upon its passage. Ma. Bichanax's Pbogramme. The self constituted leaders of the South are by no means satisfied with Mr. Buchanan's pro gramme, so f ir as it is understood or indica ted. Of the men named, not one is regarded as strictly identified with the dominant senti ment. Cobb, of Georgia, it is true, is accept ed cf Stephens and bis interest, but not as a representative man. They had antecedents together a few j'ears ago, and it might not be convenient to separate now. But Floyd, Ben j.isnin, Rusk and that class do not answer tho high-seasoned exactions of the fire-eating gen try. They have said as much to Mr. Buchanan by word of mouth aud by letter, and they mean to repeat the protests when lie appears in Washington a month hence. Nor are some of the selections from the F ree States more pala table. For example, the preference of Clif ford over Toucey is especially condemned, not only because the latter is admitted to be the superior of the former, but because he lias made "sacrifices for the South." They forget he has an eye upon a foreign mission, and will probably have his foot in it bclorc many moons roll ovet his head. If this principle of rewar ding doughlaces be adopted as a rule of pa tronage, Mr. Buchanan will discover that bis pension roll will soon assume a sectional shape. In about fourteen States there are victims e nough lor a citalogne as long as the moral law. MEETING OF THE LEGISLATURE. The Pennsylvania Legislature convened on tho Cth instant. In the Senate, Hon. David Taggart, of Northumberland. was elected Spea ker, and in the House, J. Lawrence Getz, cf Berks, was elected Speaker. The Governor's Message was read to the two Houses on Wed nesday. Tho O ld Fellows in the United States num ber 3,307 lodges, with 193,014 members. They expended in the year ending with June, near ly half a million of dollars for the relief of members and their families, and the education of orphans their total receipts being 51, 180, 325. The Eucampment, a branch of the or der, numbering 23,74!) members, received $102,808, and expended for relief $30,G93. At a "turkey shoot," in Watcrtown, N. Y., the lad who set up the turkeys stationed him self behind a wagon near the mark, with his sideface towards the shooters, and one of the sportsmen, during a flurry of snow, mistaking the boy's bead for the bird, fired a rifle ball into it just back of his eye, severing tho optic nerve and producing blindness. A paragraph is going the rounds of the pa pers commencing thus wise: "In a recent sketch of tho life of Mr. Breckinridge, the au thor says ho commenced life poor and parent less." Rather a poor start that. Perhaps like Topsy bo "wasn't born, ho growed." A little girl about three years old went to church. On her return homo she was asked what the minister s;iid, when she replied, "Oh, he went up on the top of a high mountain, and hurrahed for somebody." "Washington drew his last breath the last honr in the last day of the last week in the last month of the year, and in the last year of the century. He died Saturday night, 12 o' clock, Dec. 31sf, 17U9. Criticus says that the difference between a successful lover and his rival is, that the one kisses bis miss, and the other misses bis kiss. A distinction and a difference. New Orleans papers of a late date state that Gen. Walker had been whipped and compelled to evacuate Nicaragua, and take refuge on the island of Ometepe. The State capitol of Vermont was complete ly destroyed by fire on the 6th int. ANNUAL MESSAGE OF JAMES BOLLOCK. GO VEESOS OF PENNSYLVANIA. To the Honorable the Senators and Members of . the Iomc of Representatives of the General Jtssembly : . Fellow-Citizens: In obedience to theCon stitution and laws of this Commonwealth, you have assembled to discharge the importaut and responsible duties that devolve upon you. To protect the rights and privileges of the peo ple, advance their interests, and promote the welfare and prosperity of the Stat.-, should be the aim and end of all your legislation. In the discharge of my duties, it will be a plea sute to co-operate with you in the accomplish ment c,f these objects. The past year has been one of unusual pros perity. The bounties of a kind Providence have not been withheld from onr Common wealth. A plenteous harvest has rewarded the labor of the husbandman. Honorable in dustry, in all its departments, has been encour aged. No financial embarrassment no com mercial distress no political or social evils, have interrupted the progress, or checked the energies of the people. The great interests of education, morality and religion, have been cherished or sustained. Health and peace, with their attendant blessings, have been ours. To him "who rules the Nations by his power, and from whom Cometh down every good and perfect gift," are we indebted for these mer cies, and to Him should be given the homage of our devout gratitude and praise. The finaancial condition of the Common wealth is highly satisfactory. Every demand upon the Tn-asury has been promptly met and paid, without the aid of loans. The operations of this department will bo exhibited in detail in the report of the State Treasurer. For the fiscal 3-ear ending November SOth, 1850, the receipts at the Treasury (including the b dance in the Treasury on the first of De cember, lf55. of S1.213.C07 S3) have been $t:o21,'.f37 04. The total expenditures for the same period, were 5. 377. 142 22. l!;ilar.ce in the Treasury, Dec. 1. 1830. $1,244,79-3 42. Excluding the balance in the Trcusury on tliu first of December 1353. the receipts, from all sources, were S3, 378,240 33. The ordina ry expenditures for the same period, were $1.113.14177, showing an excess of receipts over ordinary expenditures of $1,205,093 50. The extraordinary payments for tho same year, were $l,203,9'.t7 -13. as follows, viz : To tho completion ol the Portage railroad, and for the payment of debts previously contract ed on that work, 5181.494 11; to the North Branch extension, S122.723 52; to relay the south track of the Columbia railroad 207 01)0 00; for motive power in 1855. S118.04'J 42; to enlarge the Delaware divi.sion of the Penn sylvania canal, S13.90O 00 ; for general repairs in lS-33-"54-".33, $03,903 11 ; to domestic cred itors, $131 03 ; to old claims on the main line, examined bv the commissioners, and paid un der the act'of May 22, 1S5G, $130,51:2 09; to the redemption of loans, $327,824 17 ; aud re lict notes cancelled. $38,217 00. Tho interest on the funded debt which fell due in February and August last, was then paid, and that which becomes due in Februa ry next, will be paid with equal promptness, out of available means now in the Treasury. The punctuality with which the interest on the pabiia debt lias leen paid, and the ability of the Treasury to meet all legitimate demands upon it, have inspired pullic confidence in our securities, and contributed largely to estab lish and sustain the credit of the Common wealth. The Commissioners of the Sinking Fund re port the sum of $722.432 93 as due by the Treasury to the fund. This amount will be ap plied to the redemption of relief notes now iu circulation, and to the payment of the funded debt. Heri-toiore the available means in the Treasury h ive I cen applied, to some extent, in payment of outstanding teniporaiy loans. which bear an anninl interest of six per centum ; it being deemed advisable as a matter of econo my to pay these loans, rather than the funded debt, which bears a much leys rate of interest. It is expected that the balance of the tempo rary loans will be paid before the close of the current year, and the operation of the sinking fund resumed and continued undirected by law. The funded and unfunded debt of the State, including temporary loans, on the first of De cember, 1833. as per reports of the Auditor Gsncral and State Treasurer, was as follows : ' FCNDED DKBT. C per cent, loan, $310,134 93 5 " 38,903,415 04 4 1 " 388,200 00 4 100,000 00 Total funded debt 539,907,799 97 C.NFfNDED DEBT. Relief notes in cir culation, $258,773 00 Interest certificates outstanding, 29,157 25 Domestic creditors, 1,204 00 Balance of tempora ry loan, April 9, 1853. 525,000 00 Balance of tempora ry loan, May 9, 1854, 310,000 CO Total unfunded debt 1,160,194 25 Total debt, Dec. 1,185-3, $41,007,994 22 The funded and unfunded debt at the close of the last fiscal year, December 1, 1850, was as follows, viz : G percent, loan, 5511,781 00 5 " 38.800,994 50 s 4 J " " 388.200 00 4 " " 100,000 00 Total funded debt $39,806,975 50 CNFCNDED DEBT, VIZ ! Relief notes in cir culation, 5220,556 00 Interest certificates outstanding, 24,091 37 Interest certificates unclaimed, 4,448 38 Domestic creditors, 1,164 00 Balance of tempora ry loan,April 19,1853 400,000 00 Balance of tempora ry loan, May 9, 1854, 184,000 CO Total unfunded debt 834,859 75 Total debt, Dec. 1, 1856, 40,701,835 23 Total debt, December 1, 1855 $41 .007,994 22 ' 1, 1850 40,701,835 23 Decrease, 360,158 97 It thus appears lht during the part Cal year the sum of three hundred and sixty-six thousand one hundred and fifty-eight dollars and ninety-seven cents has been paid in liqui dation of the public debt. This, taken in con nection with the fact, that during the year ending November 30, 1855. six hundred and thirty thousand six hundred and one dollars and two cents were paid on the same account, exhibits the gratifying fact, that tile process of reducing the public del t has commenced; and, unless checked by reckless mismange ment and extravagant expenditure, must con tinue until the people and the Commonwealth are relieved from the debt and taxation with which they are burdened. In addition to this redaction of the public debt, large appropria-J tions and payments were made lor the com pletion of the Portage railroad and for debts previously contracted on that work; for old and unsettled claims recently adjusted by the commissioners appointed under the act ot last session; for re laying the south track ot the Columbia railroad; for enlarging the Dela- i ware division ol thex anal, and tor other imr poses. These extraordinary demands upon the Treasury have ceased, or will soon cease, with the necessity that created them ; and thus leave a still larger poi tion of the reven ues to be applied iu payment of the public debt. A careful examination of the financial con dition of the Commonwealth her sources of revenue and the probable future expenditures, has inspired the hope that the time is not far distant when the public debt will be fully paid, and this without increasing the Subjects or ra tio of taxation. It has already been shown that the revenues of the past year exceeded the ordinary expenditures one million two hundred and sixiy-fivo thousand ninety-five dollars and fifty-six cents. The estimated re ceipts and exjenditures for the current year, which will be presented to you in the report of the State Treasury, show that the excess of receipts, over ordinary expenditures, may reach the sum of one and a half million of dol lars. These estimates, although approxima tions, will not be f-r from the true result. Al lowing, then, four hundred thousand dollars for annual extraordinary expenditures and under a wise system of economy in no proba ble contingency can they exceed that sum we will have at least one million of dollars to be appropriated annually for the payment of the public debt. With the rapid development of the wealth and resources of the Commonwealth the increase of population of the value ot real estate, and of the amount and value of property of every description, tho revenues must and will continue to increase. This nat ural and necessary increase of revenue will supply every deficiency and every demand upon the Treasury that fall illiin the range of probability. If, then, the snm uf one million dollars bo appropriated annually in liquidation of this debt, and the accruing interest on the sums paid be applied in the manner of a sink ing fund, the entire indebtedness ol the Com monwealth wiil be extinguished in less than twenty-three years. If these premises are correct and their correctness can only be im paired by unwise legislation, or the imprudent management of our finances the truth of the pioposition is .susceptible of the clearest de monstration. Assuming the public debt on the first day of December, 1850, to be, in round numbers, forty millions five hundred thousand dollars, and that at the end of each fiscal year one million dollars, with the accru ing interests on former payments, will be paid, unerring calculation will determine the result to be as before indicated. Thus, before the expiration of tho year 1879, Pennsylvania may ttand redeemed from the oppression of her pubiic debt, and her people bo released from a taxation imposed to meet its accruing interest, and to maintain the f.ith and credit of the Coinmonweallh. These views are not utopran. By practicing strict economy in all departments id" the government avoiding ex travagant expenditure refusing to undertake any new schemes of internal improvement, and holding to a rigid accountability the re ceiving and disbursing agents of the State, their lealization may Le anticipated with con fidence. I must again call the attention of the Legis lature to a sul ject referred to in my last an nual message, iu the follow itig terms : "By the thirty-eighth section of the act of the loth of April, 1843, entitled "An Act to provide for the ordinary expenses of Govern ment, the repair 'of the canals and railroads of the State, and other claims upon the Common wealth," the Governor was authorized to cause certificates of State stock to be issue:! to all persons or bodies corporate holding certifi cates for the payment of interest on the fun ded debt of the State, which fell due on the first day of August, 1842, the first days of February and August, 1813, and the first day of February and August, 1844, in an amount equal to the amount of certificates so held, upon their delivering up said certificates to the Auditor General. In pursuance of the authority thus given, certificates of State stock to tho amount of four millions one hun dred and five thousand, one hundred and fifty dollarssind twenty cents, bearing interest at the rate of five per cent, per annum, payable semi-annually on the first days of February and August in each year, and redeemable on or after the first day of August, 1855, were is sued. The minimum period fix d by law for the redemption of these certificates expired on the first day of August, 1855. No provis ion has been made f or their renewal or redemp tion. Although by the terms of the Act authori zing these certificates of State stock, as also by the conditions of the certificates issued in pursuance thereof, the time of payment, after the expiration of the minimum period, is. op tional with the debtor, the Commonwealth, yet a due regard for the credit of the State re quires that provision should be inad.tfjrr their renewal or redemption. To redeem tlfese cer tificates, a loan would become necessary, and as a loan cannot be affected, in the present fi nancial condition of the country, on terms more favorable to the State, than those on which these certificates were issued, I would recommend that, authority be given to issue the bonds of the Commonwealth jn renewal of aid certificates, bearing interest at the rate of five per cent, per amim, payable semi-annually, and redeemable on or alter the expiration of twenty years; and that the bonds be issued with coupons or certificates of interest attach ed, in sums equal in amount to the semi-annual interest thereon, payable on the first days Of February and August in each and every year, at such place as may be designated. This chsng in tb fczm and baraetsr of th certificates, it is believed, will - e so ndvsntag eous to the holders, without increasing the li abilities of the Commonwealth, as to induce a willing and prompt exchange, at a premium for the bonds proposed to be issued." The report of the Canal Commissioners will be laid lelore you, and will exhibit In de tail the condition of the public works their general operation, and the receipts and ex penditures lor the past fiscal year. The total receipts at the Treasury, from the public works, for the year ending November 30. 1850, were $2,000,015 GG, being an increase over the revenues of the previous year, ol $03.038 95. Of this sum 51.013.5S9 16 were canal and bridge tolls, and $992,420 GO, tolls of the Columbia and Portage railroads. The aggregate expenditures for the same year were $1,943.890 82, being an increase o vtrr those of the previous year, of $105,105 64, tho revenues exceeding the expenditures only DG2.118 84. The increase of the revennes from these works would be encouraging, were it not for the fact that the expenditures have increased in still greater proportion the expenditures, ordinary and extraordinary, exhausting almost the entire revenue Jroiu this source. The sys tem must be defective, or more care and econ omy should be exercised in its management. The receipts at the Treasury lrom the sever al divisions, were as follows, viz s Main line, 51,229,272 86 Susquehanna, North Branch and West Branch. 420.820 51 Delaware, 349,922 29 Total receipts, $2,CCG,015 CO The extraordinary payments during the year, amounted to $808,892 10; ordinary expendi tures, $1,135,004 00 ; net revenue, (excluding extraordinary payments and lor motive tovier) $871,011 00. On the main line the tolls received at the Treasury from the Columbia road were $091, 070 ijO ; expenditures $528.084 80; tolls on the Eastern division of canal, from Columbia to the Junction, $119 713 SO; expenditures, $53.048 50; receipts from the Junction to Pittsburg, including the Portage railroad, $117.77800; ordiuary expenditures, $3L4, 702 22. - The total receipts en tho main 4ine were $1,229 272 6; aggregate cxpendituies, (excluding $207,010 Co paid f-T re-laying the south track of the Columbia railroad and $153,049 42 for motive power in 18-35. and af ter December 1st, 18-50,) were $885 835 03, be ing an excess of revenue over ordinary ex penditures ot 5340,437 21. Although the receipts from the Delaware! division are less than those of the previous year, yet the general result of its operations is satisfactory. The net revenue at the Treasu ry was 520493 4.0. Its management has been characterized by a degree of economy too sel dom practiced on some of the Hues of our improvements. However important this division may be to the trade and business of that portion ol the State, its proposed enlargement should not W undertaken, i.nless dem md -d ly reasons of o-ve'-rulinjr necessity. The experience of (he past, us connected witii the AJieghery Portg? railroad, and the North Branch extension should warn us again.-t undertakii g. without great caution, any new measure of improve ment, which may drain the Treasury, without aiding materialy, if at all, the public interests. If kept in good order by cHkient and tiiuel-. repairs, its capacity ill be fully equal to ail the demands of its trade and business. The Portage railroad is not fully complete 1. A small addiliodal appropriation ni;-y yet le required to complete, for the fourth time, tlfis road. It is anxiously hoped that this iinpro ductive improvement may soon cease ifs cor morant demand rpun tho Treasury. Every year's experience more clearly reveals the im policy ol the irt.itc in undertaking this work. It gives me no ordinary pleasuie to in'orm Vou that the North Branch extension of the Pennsylvania canal has been so lar compk ted, thatl.i a's frieglited wiih coal :ind other j r duc.ts, were successfully passed through its entire !cni;ta from Pittston to the Jui.c'ion canal. '1 his work was commenced in 1830 suspended in 1811 resumed in 1S19, and fin is:. ed in 1S5G; although iM completion was of ficially announced in 1853. It extends f:om Fittston to the New York State line, a dis tance of about ninety-four miles, following the valley of the Susquehanna to Athens, and thence along the Chemung liver to the State line, where it joins the "Junction canal," an I is thus connected with the New York improve ments. The importance and value of this improve ment cannot easily bo over-estimated. Pass ing through one ot the richest mineral and ag ricultural portions of the State, it oflcis to the immense and valuable products of that region, a safe and cheap transit to the markets ot New York, Baltimore, and Philadelphia. In the completion of this canal the difficulties to be overcome, and the labor to be performed.were great. Both these, to a great extent, have been accomplished under tho superintendency of Wm.R. Mafict, Esq., to whom this work was a -signed. This canal although completed, aa1 before the close of navigation, used for the purpose of transportation, is not perfect. Sinks in the bottom, from the nature of the formation and soils through which it passes, slides from the hills, and breaches may occur, but these, after a lew years of well af p'ied labor, will be diminished, and by vigilance and caro en tirely prevented. . This improvement, although sul ject to the rivalry ot competing railroads, if kept in good condition, under proper management, w ill re ceive its full share ot coal and other tonage. It is anticipated that the revenues, for the current year, will equal, if not exceed the ex penditures; and increasing wiih the facilities afforded, and the rapid development of trade, will, instead of ils heretofore unceasing de mands upon the Treasury, take precedence in revenue over any canal in the Commonwealth. In relation to the propriety and policy r.f the sale of the Main Lino of our pubiic im provements, my opinion has not changed. Every consideration of public policy, of pres ent and futuie interest, requires the separa tion of the State from the management and control )f these works. The expenditures u pon that portion of tlx.' line, between the Junc tion and Pittsburgh, largely exceed the rev enues, the excess averaging annually not less than one hundred and fifty thousand dollars ; and causes are in constant operation that will still more increase this deficiency. This con t iBUftl drain ttpon mnrf t t tAeo&Iu work, so unproductive, should t once bo checked. A sale of the M n Line, for a fair consideration, aud upon terms jus, and liber al to the purchasers, is the proper remedy Such sale, n teims amply protective ol Iho rights and interest of the people, can by prop, er legislation be effected. In connection with the pavment of the public debt, this question becomes deeply important. The sale would constitute a new era in the financial Listory of the State, and assure a still more s-eedy reduction ot the public debt, than that to which ref erence has been made. The subject is earn estly commended to your favorable consider ation. " The sul ject of liar.ks and banking capital In. its relations to the currency the general In terests of trade and commerce and the indus trial pursuits of the citizens, deserve your careful attention. My views expressed in a lormer communication remain unchanged. The incorporation or new, or the recharter of old and solvent banks, when actnally necessa ry, and demanded by the wants of legitiuiato trade in the community where located, s-oate be favored; uuder no other circumstance should either be permitted. In the creation, of banks the interests or the State and pcoplo should be consulted ; and a just discrimina tion as to number, locality aud the demand of trade be exercised. - The rapid increase of population, ths im portance and value ot our home and foreign commerce, the constant development of" tr.e material wealth of the State, the extent of our mauul'acturii g.mechanical and agricultural in dustry, the tact that the State is flooded by a depreciated currency introduced by privatw bankers aud brokers, might justify, under tb restrictions and limitations indicated, a judi cious increase of lianking capital within our Commonwealth. 1 bus, whilst it would aid the operations of trade, and supply the real lusine'ss wants of the people, it would, at th same time, remedy, to some extent, tna evils of a depreciated 1 Jreign and illegal currency. By the Act approved the Cth day ot Novem ber last, the thirtieth section or the Act of 1859, regulating banks, will be after the first day of July next, extended to all incorporated saving fun i. trust and insurance companies. '1 lut section declares "that it sha'l not be Uw lul for Kiiy ot the said banks to issue or pay out any bank notes other than those issued by itself, payable ;n demand in gold and sitxer ; tiotts oliecie paying banks ol this State which aic taken on deposite or in payment of lcl ts, rt p.:r s.t the counter of the t-ank w here p lid out ; or notes of banks issued under tho authority of the Act of the 4th of May, 1341, at the opt.ou tl the person receiving tb sa;ne.r' These enactments were intended to protect' the community against the evils of a depre ciated currency, aud prevent its introduction from other States. However well iutended. they will fail to seci re these objects, unless made to embrace private bankers and other .f that class, whose proSts are largely depen dent upon the introduction into the State of. such a cu:rency. in many instances the note of our own banks are collected by private tankers und brokers, and with these, or with the specie withdraw!! lrom the banks issuing them, they purchase depreciated and foreign bank japtr which is paid out at par at their counters. Ev others large loans are negotia te I with batiks out of the Siate, at less thstt the usual rate of interest, and their notes, of tn of a less denomination than five dolUr, and always at a discount, brought into tbo State and put into circulation in the manner indicated, and this too, under an agreement nith the I an'.i m iking the loan, thnt the notes thus j a d out shall be kept in circulation. The eb'ect ot this system of private banking has leen to l::i.it the circnl ition of the par pa per .fourou:i bal ks, and substitute in its pi xv a foreign!, j rcci tted. and often a worth less currency. In justice to the Biuk, Trust nd Insurance Cofp-inics, paying a heavy an nual tax to the Commonwealth fer their privi h g. 3. a'id f.-r t! e protection of the people -enlist these evils, either the provisions of t jo Act .l 185:.', should be repealed, or rurrher -extended so as to embrace private individual anl Mssj-ciutio.-.s, who may monopolize unl control, to the detriment of the public, this traffic in depreciated hank pal cr, without re s rain and wi.hni.t taxation. Ti e Report of the Supeiintrndent of Coxn nt'in Schools will exhibit to you the number and condition of the Schools the number of teachers and s-.hohirr. and the general opera tions of the system during the past year.-. To the valuable statistical information of the re port, and the us-Tut suggestions for tho im provement of the system. I invito your early ui.d intelligent consideration. From a small and coinT-aratively un'.nipor t in: hidden! of the State Department, tho cre and management of the public schools ot the Commonwealth, with their seventeen bundr-d districts, ten thousand directors, twelve thon smd teachers, ami over five tiundrcd thousand scholars, have become the most important and laborious branch of that Department. The in creased and increasing business of tho system b is been met by a correspondent increase cf zeal, labor and efficiency in the ofUcers to whom the law has committed its general dirctlcn and supervision. They should l sustained by wise and generous legislation. The mag nitude and importance of the system, in i: political, social and nior.il relations to t!.e pre sent and future of the people. requi:e tl.sl this should be dne. The gu.rd:an.-i.ip ct 1.9 n.ind of the State should occupy a distiuit acd prominent place among the nobis ;ns:.t:;ti.r.s of the Commonwealth. It should receive th efficient aid and encouragement of the govern ment, and be sustained by a virtuosi and intel ligent people. If the revenue and treasures of the St ate her public improvements her lands and their. t itles, require and deserve tho marked ami distinctive care of the govern ment, I on- much more should her mental and hitcll-ctiird treasures, richer than gold the social and morn! improvement of her people, more valuable than canals r railways the ti tles of her youth to the boundless fields ot knowledge., higher than any of earth or aught growing out ol its ownership, claim an honor able position, and receive a care and aid com mensurate with their greater value end useful ness. The Connty Snpcrintndincy, wherever it has been committed to faithful and efficient nisn, has tr.lly vindicated the wisdom and pol icy of that measure. It is slowly, but Barely removing the prejudices nod gainirg t'-. con fidence of the people. Whatever defects tiss aud experience msy develop, in this or 37wur hnvDoli of tin &atjc ahitull to