V IkfttM 0tltOtt , ! ,li A"' , v: V , r ' The whole art ok Government consists m the art of being honest. Jefferson. 1 VOL 6. PRINTED AND PUBLISHED BY TERMS Two dollars pet annum In advance Two dollars ani a quarter, half yearly and if not puid before the end of tie ve.tr, Two dollars and a half. ThoSc who receive their i.iper by a carrier or stage drivers employed by the proprie Jors, will be churned 37 1-2 nts. per year, extra. No papers discontinued until all arrearages arc paid, except at Uie option of the Editors. l7 Advertisements not exceeding one square (sixteen lines) will be inserte J three weeks for one dollar twenty-fire cents fr every subsequent insertion: larger ones in proportion. A loen discount will bo made to yearly advertisers ' IC7.M1 letters addressed to the Editors must be post paid. STROUDSB.URG, MONROE COUNTY, PA., THURSDAY, JANUARY 15, 1846. No. 32 GOVERNOR'S MESSAGE. To the Senate and House of Representatives : Gentlemen : The general health of the people, the rich rewards of husbandry, the quickening spirit that pervades trade and indus try, the enlarged prosperity of our country, and its advance in moral and intellectual attainments, -these, under a just sense of our dependence, ..well our tirateful acknowledgements, at this time to Him from whose beiuficeuce they all proceed. Nothing has occurred since the ad journment of the Legislature, to interrupt the harmony or check the energies of our Com monwealth. On the contrary, intelligent en terprise has been .every where crowned with success. The exertions of our people lo meet the en gagements of the S'ate, have thin far been sue cessful '1 he payment, by a number ol coun ties of the whole amount of their taxes for 1845, several months before ihe time at which ihey have heretofore ben collected, added more than $300,000 to the effective, revenues of the year; and the last Legislature having excluded certain classes of debts from the claims to be immediately provided for by the Treasury, we have been enabled to pay the interest which fell due on the funded debt within the past fis cal year. On the first day of the present Ses sion, the balance remaining in the Treasury was about $625,000, which, with the accruing revenues, will ho applicable to the demands of the first of next mouth. We have thus the rea sonable and gratifying assurance, that the in terest will then also be punctually paid. The Public debt of Pennsylvania, on the 1st of December, 1645, as appears from the report of the Auditor General, was as follows : Funded debt, $36,73D,257 43 Relief Notes in circtPation. 1,253,572 00 Interest Certificates outstanding with interest thereon, 2,888,803 36 Due to Domestic Creditors, 99,750 43 exhausted o.i the 1st of December last. For the purpose of convenient reference, I have appended to this communication, a summary state ment (marked A.) of the receipts and expenditures of the past year with an estimate, prepared with much care and deliberation, for the current year, ending on the 30th November, 1846. According to this the receipts of the year from all sources, in cluding 1,300,000, from taxes on real and personal estate. will be Which added to the balance in the Treasury on the 1st De cember, 1815, S3i2 17,700 00 The Interest upon which, accord ing to the Auditor General's computation lor 1846, is The balance in the Treasuiy on the 1st December, 1844, was The receipts into the same,during the year ending on the30th No vember last, as appears in de tail by the reports of Auditor General and Slate Treasurer, were Making an aggregate sum of The payments from. -the Treasu ry, during the same period, were, according to the reports of the 3ame officer, which being deducted from the above,-showsthe balance in the Treasury, on the 1st Dec. 1845, being less by S278;9ti5 79, than it was on the 1st Dec. 1844. The nett amount of available out standing taxes on real and per sonal estate, after making al lowances for collections and exonerations, on the 1st De cember, 1844, was estimated by the late State Treasurer at $885,301 71.- It appears, however, from a subsequent estfraate. founded upon more full returns and a more accurate knowledge of the extent of exonerations, that the amount actually outstand ing on that day. was The nett and available amount outstanding on the 1st Decem ber, 1845, is estimated at The amount of outstanding taxes on the 1st December, 1845, is therefore, less thanjt was on the 1st December, 1841, by the sum of Adding to this sum the difference between the balance ju the Treasury on the 1st December,, 1844, and on the Ist'December, 1845, $40,986,393 22 2,023,996 09 663,851 88 Makes an aggregate of Deducting from which, the esti mated payments during the same period, We arrive at an estimated bal ance in the Treasury on the 1st day of Dec. 18-1(5, of Which is less by 296,296 09 than it whs on the 1st of Dec. 1845. The amount of outstanding taxes on real and jrersonal estate, considered available, on the 1st Dec. 1845, was To this is to lie added the as sessment for 1816. which, ac cording to tin- best estimates, will yield a nett revenue, after deducting allowances for ex penses of collections and exon erations, of. Making an aggregate of If from this aggregate, we deduct the estimated collections from these sources, during the vear 1316, The difference will be the estimated amount of taxes, which on the 1st of December, IS 10, will remain outstanding; being $120,000 00 less than was outstanding on the 1st day of December, 1845. When to the reductions, thus to take place, in the outstand ing taxes within the current vear, We add the difference between the balance in the Treasury, on the 1st day of December, 1845, and the estimated bal anco in the Treasury on the 1st December, 1846, Wo arrive at an aggregate re duction of these 384,886 09 $3,602,586 09 3,513,996 09 88,590 00 874,544 50 1,180,000 00 2.054,544 50 J 1,180,000 00 754,544 50 120,000 00 296,296 09 3,010,062 34 3,673,914 22 3,289,028 13 384,886 09 8414,199 30 we have ar aggregate reduction of the balance in the Treasury and of outstanding taxes on the 1st day of December, 1845, as compared with the same items r.n th lot fiDi-pmbflr. 1844. of From this statement, it is apparent,' that the re ceipts into the Treasury, during the year,- derived from taxation on real and personal estate, . and other sources of revenue properly belonging to the vear, weio less than the demands upon the 1 reas ury for the same period, by the amount above sta ted And it is also apparent, that if the Legtsla ture had not postponed the payment of the'domes c creditor, and the interest on the certificates issued for interest, and ttif the, cancellation .o.i.a portion of the relief notes required under exiting laws to he cancelled, Jiad.not been deferred, the -whole balance in the Treasury would have been two items within the fiscal year ending 30t!i November, 1816, of 116.296 09 From this view of the subject it is apparent, j that the assessment of the year 1S46, on real and petsonal estates, and the revenue of the ; year proper, derivable from all other sources, j taken together, will b insufficient to meet the ( deniandi upon the Treasury during the same period, bv the sum of $41(5,296 OS); and that in supplying the deficiency, the balance in the Treasury, on the 1st ol Dpcemher 1S46, will have been reduced to 88,590,00, and the ar rears of outstanding taxes, to the sum of 754, 544 50. It is plain, therefore, that our present financial system is inadequate to supply the means of meeting ail the demands on the Trea sury, except when aided from the balance which had accumulated before the payment of interest was resumed, and bv collections from the ar rearages of taxes of former years both of which j will soon be exhausted. I' am constrained to add, that all these calcu lations and estimates, pie suppose that the de mands on the Treasury will ui be permitted to transcend their ordinary limits, and that no ap propriations will be made by Legislation to new objects. These are not anticipated, because in the present otate of the finances, every appro priation may well be regarded, not as a grant of money unincumbered in the Treasury, but ra ther as an abstraction of funds, specifically ap propriated already, and rightfully belonging to the public credttois. The deficit in our means, under existing Jaws, 874,544 50 J presents for the deliberations of the General AsseitH'iy, a topic oi paiauiuuin niiMiain.i.-. n jiiay be remembered, that in the mouth of Jan uary lft, I expressed the opinion in an Execu tive Message, that our finances had not then reached a condition to enable us permanently, and at once, to resume payment ol the lull in terest on our public debt. 1 regret that subse quent examinations and reflection, ha o urn per mitted me to believe that 1 was then in error. But the Legislative action on thn que lion has changed, the entire aspect of our dunes, and rendered t useless to revert to lormer news of policy. The payment of tmeiet on the funded debt of the Commonwealth, was lit fact, tc .Mirned on the first of February 1845. By lhai act, the State asserted h-r present aiitlpy to meet her eiigagemeiii.s.aiid u mu-t be oui tare that the pjedge, tho renewed, be not again vio lated The credit, fidelity and honor of Penn sylvania, al1 'itimaud. hat, hencoforwHid, the inter-! her public deut shall be punctually and fully paid. tfest-tolore, WB 'nigl'1 l,ave eaded the un expect Uiur he deposito.y Hank of the Stale a few days before the interest was pay 4t.e. ai5 'wtieii Ihe monies approjiriaie.il to lis diachiig -vere accumula'ed Hi her mulia -the '$1,009;778 03 135,238 50 ,4278,965 79 sudden destruction in value of nearly ihe entire currency in general use the prostration of in dividual credit, and the deep and universal pe cuniary embarrassment of the people. But now all are prospering the currency is restored to a good degree of soundness our revenue sys tem, tho' still imperfect, has greatly increased in effectiveness and certainty enterprise is re newed, and the people happy in ihoir institu tions, and confident in themselves, look to the impropriate action of the Legislature to make provision to satisfy the public wants. The present period Is, in truth, the crisis of our affairs. Prompt and effective measures now, to make a moderate addition to our reven ue, will restore to Pennsylvania, for all future time, that proud position from which she has temporally been made to stoop, by a course of policy that never met the approval of her peo plu. Bui the addition must be made at once. Unless the estimates that have been presented, shall prove essentially erroneous, the balance in the Treasury, on the first of December 1S4(, will not exceed one hundred thousand dollars. It is, therefore, obvious, that, if the receipts at the Treasury, during the months of December 184G, and January 1847, do not greatly exceed the receipts of the coi responding months of any preceding year, when the amount of outstand ing taxes was greater than it will be then, a de ficit must occur in ihe means of the Treasury, to pay the interest, which will become due on the 1st of February 1847. The necessity of the adoption of immediate and efficient meas ures, to guard against a result which would be so fatal to the renewed faith and honor of the Slale, cannot be too strongly enforced upon ihe attention of the J,egis!aiure. Intimately connected with the subject of our finances, is that of the Banking system of the Stale. The evils that have resulted from ihe manner in which it has been administered, and .ome of those more essentially connected with its organization and tendencies, have been felt by all. Yet, it may well be doubled, whether the whole of tho mischiefs which it has insti gated, hae been iraee.J back to their fruitful and pernicious cause. Not only has it humil iated individuals to ruin, hut States have been led by its seductive and'eorrnpting influences, into a course of wild extravagance, and conse quent bankruptcy. Public debts have been j contracted, even the interests of which couldi scarcely be met, by the most onerous taxation, while, in other causes, the faith of the govern-j ment, which ought always lo be held sacred, has been violated in time of profound peace. The himry of Pennsylvania, since the be ginning of the year 1836, is a painful illuatra-; tion of this truth. In December 1835, when Governor Wolf retired from office, two mouths t before tho incorporation of the Bank of ihe U.' .u o .i i.. ..e ..i : . i oiuies, me. o'.ii'e ue.ui ui jreimsj iv.iuin wsis 24,580,743 32. It is now, exclusive of the amount received as a deposit from ihe General Government, 40,980,393 22, making an in-J crease of the State debt in len years, of 16,-! 396,649 90, notwithstanding the receipt, in the mean time, of 2,867,514 78 of surplus rev enue from the United States, and of 3,446, 7fa0 21, as premiums for bank charters. In contemplating this startling, fact, we naturally look round for the meritorious objects of State policy, for which this vast aggregate of twenty-two and three-quartor millions of dollars, has been expended, we find none of any magnitude. The main line of Canal and Railway, between Philadelphia and Pittsburg, had been comple ted, and was in successful operation. The Delaware division, the Susquehanna and Nnrih Branch division, to thn mouth of the Lackawa na, ihe West Branch to Queens Run, the Bea ver division to New Castle, tho Franklin line, and the French Creek Feeder, were all sub stantially finished when Governor Wolf left the Executive Chair; and the sum of 344,619 09, was all that remained to be paid for com pleting them. The Stale had readied a point in her im provement system, at which she could have sus pended operations without loss. The scheme of direct taxation, to pay the inferest on the State loans, which had been introduced under Governor Wolf's Administration, was admon ishing the people of the inconvenience of a public (lehi. Every thing indicated that the fun her progress f om Statu improvements was to be deferred, till titim had tested the produc tiveness of i he finished works, and the increas ing dnvelopetnenl of our resources had invited and justified their futiher extension. Ii was, at this time, that the act of I8th February 1836, was passed, entitled, "an act to repeal the Stale lax on real and personal property, and to con tinue aitd extend the improvements of the State by rail-roads and canals, and lo charier a Slate Bank, to be called the "United States Bank." Tne first section of this act rescinded the sys tem of taxes, which had been devised for the protection of the public credit which, by other section, more than two millions of dollars lo be received from the Bank, were appropriated al once to the prosecution of company works, and the commencement of new ones. Under the direct charge .of the Stale. To enable the Commonwealth to coiisutnmnte this wild exten sion of improvement, ts. millions uT'ilullars were promised as a permanent loan to ihe Slate, at an interest of four per cent, and other loans at the same rato were to he made, when re quired, lo the amount of one million of dollars annually. Under ihe impulse of this act, and of the in fluences which effected its passage, a nw sc ries of improvements were begun at once, all of which, after ihe expenditure of many mil lions, now forming pari of the public dabl and the cause of increased taxation have been aban doned by the State, and have passed most of them, into the hands of companies, which have paid no consideration for them. It even seems that the State has not limited its gratuities to the works thus commenced. The Beaver division, and the Wyoming line, on the North Branch, embracing forty-three miles of canal in actual use, and the French Creek Feeder, costing together 1,222,927 81 and all of them finished in 1835, have been given away to companies, and leave the State' with a less extended system of impnnrmeiits now, than it had when the Bank of the United Sfates was chartered. The progress of these works was marked hy the declining credit of the State, until, after the most desperate resorts the sale of a further suspension to the Banks in 1840, and a loan in 1841 by the State to herself, by ihe device of issuing relief notes the proclaimed bankrupt cy of the Commonwealth forcibly arrested them. But the evil did not slop here, when the works were abandoned the State was largely indebted to the contractors, whose claims were regarded as of primary obligation. To satisfy them, a law was passed, requiring the sale of the Bank stock, and other stocks which were owned by ihe State. These stocks, which had cost the Treasury nearly $4,200,000, were, at a most unpropitious moment, sacrificed for a fraction more than 1,405,000. However painful these recollections of pecu niary loss may be, there were attendant circum stances of graver and more momentous concern lo the patriot. A new element of power found its way into our elections. The elective fran chise was violated and abused the declarations of the public will were disregarded and defied and the very existence of our free institution? was menaced with revolution and destruction. I allude to the memorable crisis of 1838, when a direct attempt was made, by the leaders of a minority, to usurp the government, and to sub stitute their dictation for the voice of ihe ma jority of the people. These scenes had their origin beyond doubt, in a spirit of reckless con fidence in the power and corrupting influence of money to control ihe S'a'o. Apart from these political considerations, the influence of a vitiated paper system upon the general and ordinary interests of life, is bane ful and pernicious. Hitherto, there has virtual ly been nothing in ihe organization of Banks, to limit the extent and define ihe character of their action, but ihe discretion of the directors. A few individuals, constituting ihe efficient por tion of the Board of management, are, in fact, the depositories of this discretion ; and as a gen eral rule, subject no doubt to many honorable exceptions, it is exercised with primary, if not exclusive, reference to the supposed interests of the Bank. While the business of the country prospers, ar.d the spirit of speculating enterprise is stim ulated by succes.t, ihey extond their accommo dations liberally, and fill the channels of circu lation with a reduudeut and depraved currency. An unnatural lise of prices is the consequence. Importations increase in defiance of any dis criminating tariff extravagance invades all the departments of society indefinite credit invites to a thriftless extension of indebtedness, till, at last, the laws of trade, tit. changing as those of nature, produce re-action, and the whole artifi cial machinery is crushed. The people of the country are indebted to the cities; tho cities are. indebted abroad, where the promises of the banks are not accepted as money; and the Banks are called upon to redeem their notes in coin. This they can only do by drawing in their means, refusing new accommodations, and pressing their debtors for payment. The circu lation of the country is suddenly contracted; property is sacrificed, in many instances, with out relieving the debtor; and his energies are paralysed by hopeless insolvency. Such, within the recent memory of all of us, has been the action of a vitiated banking sys. tern, on the faith of the State, the stability of her institutions, and the free energies ol her oeonlf' It has liiuohl us a yrievous lesson of suffering ; but it will not have been altogether unproductive of good, if it has impressed on us the solemn and imperative duty of guarding against a recurrence of similar evils. The abuses of the banking system are found in many forma ; but they are essentially the same in their origin and result; excessive issues of paper, and its consequent depreciation. To give the power of manufacturing money, yet ef fectually to limit its exercise, by legislation, is practically impossible. It is obvious, that no en actment can absolutely prevent the unlawiuj issue of paper by a bank, which has the lawful right to issue any Returns of bank officers, how ever exactly prescribed, or honestly made, give no security for tho periods that elapse between them : and inspections of the affairs of the Banks by the commissioners which have been leiortel" to in other States, are apt to induce a dangerous reliance on the vigilance of such officers. It may be, that the principle of individual lia bility for corporate engagements which has re cently been inserted m somelof our charters, may, when properly extended and made more di rectly operative, secure not only the creditor from loss, but the currency from dungerous fluctua tions. The experiment should be fairly made in the case of every bank, that may ask a" renew al of its charter. That jits progress may be the better tested, I respectfully recommend that the banks be required to makejrnonthly returns of their condition to the Auditor General ; and that these be so arranged, as to present a more complete and exact view of the transactions than is furn ished under the existing1 law. This will facilitate the future inquiries of the Legislature ; and tho periodical publication of the returns will secure to such of the banks as are legitimately adminis tered, the revardof their faithfulness, in the in creased confidence of the public. I need scarcely add, that the claims of the banks to general con fidence should be thoroughly investigated and fully ascertained before their charters are extend ed. The recommendations have special reference to applications from existing banks. In my judgment the capital now invested in these insti tutions, is amply adequate to the business wants of the community. The times do not indicate the present necesity'of any additional stimulus to the spirit of enterprise, and I cannot allow myself to hazard, by any act of mine, a possabb; renewal of the excesses which we have witnessed so re cently. Pennsylvania combines in"an'eminent degree the three great elements of individual and nation al wealth agriculture, commerce and manufac tures; and the pursuits and industry of her peo ple are profitably divided among them. Herhilkj and mountains are almost everywhere filled with inexhaustible supplies of iron ore and mineral coal; and her vallies abound with water-power for propelling machinery, in the midst of the finest agricultural regions. She has constructed at great cost, a line of improvements by canals and railways, connecting the waters of the Atlantic with those of the great "West: which not only affords our own citizens a cheap and convenient mode of transporting their products to markets, but also benefits the internal trade and commerce of a large portion of the other States of the Union. The North and W est Branch Canals, and the Delaware LM'vision, in connexion with varioua improvemcnts;owned by companies, besides opening-markets to the productions of the farmer, furnish outlets for our coal and other minerals, by which not only our own citizens are supplied, but also of the neighboring- and Eastern States, to tho great advantage of both. Many parts of the State are, also found most favorably adapted to the growing of Wool, anotherj great staple of National independence ; and the successful appli cation of mineral coal, to the smelting of iron, has given a new impetus, among us, to this most important of all branches of manufactures. It is not surprising.; therefore, that our people feel a deep anxiety in regard to the adoption or the change of any policy, on the part of the fed eral government, which may be supposed to affect such great interests. The regulation of a Tariff on imports, so as to favor the development of our domestic resources, and give satisfaction to the various parts of the Union, has long been a vexed and exciting question. Its influences for good or evil, have no doubt been greatly exaggerated in differentsections of the country. The true policy of the Nation would seem to lie between the extremes of those, who claim high duties for the mere purpose of protecting particular inter erts, and those who would not discriminate at all, in laying revenue duties for the purpose of favoring the productions and industry of our own country. Any course of policy which would have tae effect to check the intelligent and honest enter prise of our citizens; and to retard the develop ment of our national resources, can never receive the sanction or acquiescence of the people of this confederacy. It is readily conceded, that no more moneys ought to be collected from imports, than are necessary to meet the constitu tional requirements of thegovcrnment economi cally administered. But, on the other hand, it is maintained with entire confidence, that in laying duties for this purpose, such discriminations for protection aa well as revenue, ought to be made, as will favor our own productions and industry, particularly in reference to articles which are of primary na tional importance and indispensable in time of WlThis policy was expressly avowed in the first revenue law for levying duties upon imports, passed affer the adoption of the federal constitu tion, and has been recognized and adhered to by the federal government, and sanctioned by the people of the States, from that day to the present; unless indeed the Compromise act of 16S3 be considered an exception; and it will be adhered to, so long as we have a due regard to our indi vidual and national prosperity and independence. A tarilf of discriminating duties, based on the principles indicated, and so adjusted as to eecure permanence in its provisions sustained in it protective effects by the operation of a Constitu tional Treasury in regulating the issues of our banks and checking excessive importations of merchandise, will, it is believed, give more sta bility to the general interests and business of the country, than any otlier system of policy within the control of the federal government I refer to the reports of the Hoard of Canal Commissioners, for a detail of the proceedings drring the past year, on the Public Improvement of the State. This document contains among other tilings, a statement exhibiting the amount of tonnage that passed cv ir those wo?& during the year ; whioh when compared with that ot past yeans wjll show their increasing value, k