fit. MESSAGE FROM TUE GOY. To the Senate and !louse of Repreoenta live•+ of the Commonwealth of Pcnn aylvania: GENTLeneN: —The Bill entitled "An Act relating to Canal Commissioners" has been presented to me for the Execu tive approbation. As I cannot approve the Bill, I return it to the Senate, in which it originated, with my objectiorrs thereto. in order to such further action thereon as is provided by the Constitution. The Bill provides for the election and appointment of three Canal Commission ers, to wit: the election of one Commis sioner by the Senate and one by the house of Representatives, and the ap.. pointmeot of the third by the Governor. This mode of appointment, as to any of• ficers of government, is novel and with out precedent; and I confess I can see in the system here proposed, nothing but dis cord and confusion. It is an event to be easonably expected, that different par ties, interests and combinations in each !louse, and it may be with the Governor, will lead to frequent removals and chaff;_, ges of the incumbents, and thus bur im provement system, instead of being con ducted as it should 1 3e, v ;th consistent, steadiness, will be constantly undergoing the changes and experiments incident to our daily political mutations. Collisions will take place in the Board of Commis• sioners, embarrasstnents will be thrown in the way of its action by the minority of its own members, and public interest will be sacrificed to promote the objects of private or local or political designs. BY , the appointment of the Board by each, House, and by the Governor, nearly the who:e responsibility is destroyed. For wrongs done, should they be done, it will be quite impossible to reach all the delin quents at once. The adherence of the Gove,nor or of either House to its favor ite, will place him beyond the reach of popular opinion, although his associates. who are responsible to an appointing pow er differently eleeted, may be promptly dismissed. The Governor, the Senators and the members of the House, are not all elected at once, nor by the same con. stituents. The members of each House are the immediate representatives of de tached portions of the people, with pecu• liar local interests to advance, all of which must 'mire or less conflict with those of the State at large; and although each House, in the aggregate, no doubt, repre sents the peopie of the whole State, it is through the mediont of thirty-three mem bers in one, and one hundred in the ()thee. Responsibility thus divided, vanishes al most entirely, and ceases to afford an ad equate guarantee to the public. Should Commissioners thus appointed, be guilty of official misconduct, how are they to he punished? The House impeach es, and the Senate tries--but here the House is impeaching an officer whom it has just confided in, and appointed; and the Senate is to try justly and impartial ly, for misdemeanors in office, the man whom it has but a few days before trusted and honored. What a spectacle of absur dity would this exhibit? Would not corn binations among the friends of each in the respective !louses, defeat the ends Ojos tice, and laugh to scorn all efforts to en flict punishment? 'rite history of all representative govern ments shows, that although their legisla tures, especially when numerous, are ad mieably adapted to the enactment of gen eral laws, and the promotion of the rights and liberties of the people, they are, from the very nature of divided responsibility, the most easily tampered wi!!, by politi cal intriguers and demagogues, in ilivr appointment of officers of any other branch of the government; and in the se lection of their officers, have been often, made the dupes of intrigue, of venality and corruption. I beg you to understand me as speaking in the abstract, and not in regard to any past or future legislation in Pennsylvania. I cannot, however, con sent to forgo, altogether, the salutary les sons of experience. We have no right to forgo, altogether, the salutary lessons of experimence. We have no right to ex pect entire exemption from evils that other people have suffered, and I am de termined, so far as I am concerned, to share none of the responsibility of intro ducing them into Pennsylvania. If done by others, theirs be the honor, I want it not. But I am satisfied that neither agree lily to the spirit of our constitution, not on the ground of expediency, ought tht appointment to be vested in the legislature. The legislature have the power of enact ing the laws making the appropriations to purposes of internal improvement; and the spirit of the constitution, as well as the legislation of the commonwealth, has provided that the dutLursement of tht monies and settlement of the accounts of the commonwealth should be in the hand, of officers differently appointed, evidently to prevent combinations or collusion, of the operation of the same influences in tht appointment of each. To give to tilt branches of government which appropri ate moneys, the appointment of the offs cers who are to disburse them, would, my judgement, tend to break down flit safesguards provided by the conatitutim in the disbursement of public moneys. The bill before me presents other chili culties. The constitution vests the legis lative power in the General Assembly the Executive power in the Governor, an , declares the duties of both. The leadin ; duty of the former is to enact laws, and of the latter to take cave that they are faith t illy executed, To enable him to perforn hat duty, the constitution declares "hr shall appoint all officers whose offices art- P.staldislied by the constitution or shall lir established by law, and whose appoint meets are not herein otherwise provided for." A plausible argument may be drawn Iron the bill before me, that it establishe, a mode of appointment within the lattei clause above recited: but when we look at another part of the constitution, which lieclars that "110 member of the Senate or Rouse of Representatives shall be appoint ed by the governor to any office during the term for which he was elected," It mani festly shows that the people intended to confine the principle duties of their Re presentatives to direct legislation. If this bill becomes a law, and they principle ex. tended, the might fill all the offices out of their respective bodies, which would des troy their purity, and destroy the incom patible principle in the con'stit'ution, Which restrains the governor from making ap pointments from tither house, during the time for they shall have been elec ted. I point of expediency I think the bill ought not to become a law, and this I think is manifest from our previous legis lation on this subject. Under the acts of 27th March, 1824, 11th April, 1825, 10th April, 1826, and 16th April, 1927, the canal commission. ers were appointed by the executive. At first the board consisted of three mein• hers ;—it was then increased to five; and by the act of 10th April 1826, it was in• creased to nine; at which number it con tinued until 1850. By the act of the 16th April, 1829, nine persona named in the c law, were appointed canal commissioners, and authority was given to the governor to fill any vacancies which might occur in the 'board, from death, resignation, or other wise. On the sixth day of April, 1830, in less than a year after its passage, the Act of 16th April, 1829, was repealed, and the Governor was authorized to appoint three persons as a Board of Canal Commission ers : public opinion having decidedly pro nounced against the appointment by the Legislature. By the act of 28th January 1836, the time of appointing Canal Com missioners was changed from the first of June, to the Ist of February, and by the provisions of that law, the then existing Board of Canal Commissioners were legis lated out of office four months before the expiration of their commissions, but no change as to the number of the Commis sioners, or their mode of appointment, was made. It will be within the recol lection of all, that the leading reasons „i: o -n t! ! for the passage of the last men tinned act were, iiiui !!: was more proper that the duties of the Canal Commission ers should be exercised by persons ap pointed by and having . the confidence of the Executive, for the t u na being, than to have the whole internal improvement sys tem, under the control and direction of persons, who might not harmonize with the Executive in opinion, while he is, in a measure at least, held responsible for the administration of the Government. Every set of men have the right, I sup pose, to change their opinions, when and as often as they please; but I confess 1 find some difficulty in keeping pace with some of the changes of modern times for what was then right cannot now be ,considered wrong. 'lhere is another, and to my mind an I insuperable objection to vesting the power in the Legislature, as provided in this Bill ; and that is, the fact that from the mariner in which the State is districted for Senators and Representatives by the Act of Ifith June, 1836, the political character of both branches of the Legis lature does not correspond with that of a i majority of the people of the State ; and jit is impossible not to see that the effect of 'the Bill in question, till be to give a po litical complexion to the Board of Canal ,Commissioners, different from that of a majority of the people. The whole ob- j Best of the Bill is, to remove from office men holding one set of political opinions, and to appoint political opponents in their stead. Any attempt to conceal it from the people betrays a gross ignorance of their understanding and intelligence. I conceive it to be a duty which I owe to them to speak thus plainly and explicitly un the subject. The appointing power is the most em aarrassing part of the Executive duties. I have no desire to increase its amount, ior even to retain that which is now yes ed in the Governor, when it can be safely •xercised elsewhere. If a change is deem td essential to the prosperity of the pub. lie works, and that the power of appoint nent of Canal Commissioners is not safe n the hands of the Executive, I have no lesire to retain it. Let it go to the whole ieople, at their annual elections. The Legislature will at all times find me ready to cooperate with them, in enabling the ieople to elect all officers, whose appoint nent is not specially provided for in the Constitution ; but I never can sanction a law which takes away, not only the rights it the Executive but the people, and gives iowers to the Legislature not contempla ed by the Constitution, and which, in my ,udgment, would be a usurpation of pow , by the Legislature, pregnant with evil. however indisposed I may be to retain ill the powers of the Executive, tt is my .worn duty to protect the rights of the 'topic from legislative encroachments, nd I intend to do it. The issue is now before the people of his Commonwealth for decision; and vith that decision, whatever it may be, I hall be perfectly satisfied. Should a ma. ,jority determine that I have done wrong n refusing to sanction this change in the l node of appointing Canal Commissioners, oat this contemplated alteration is wise, _prudent and sate—and that better selec ions would have been made by the two louses of. the Legislature than by the people, or the Executive, they can easily proclaim this opinion, and execute their „purpose by some other Executive agent; put if they think otherwise—if they agree with me—if they can see in the Proposed Istem only political scrambling for utfice, discord and dissension, they will also pro nounce that judgment for the guidance of our future course, and will thus settle on a certain basis, the organization of the Board of Canal Commissioners, in refer ence to which, we now unfortunately en. tertain such conflicting opinions. DAVID R. PORTER. EXECUTIVE CHAMBER, February 10, 1841. THE JOURNAL. One country, one conotitution one destin Huntingdon, Feb. 244 18411. Democratic Convention. The firiends of General Harrison in Penn sylvania are respectfully requested to e lect Delegates to a State Convention to be held in the Court House of Harrisburg. at 10 o'clock S. M., on Wednesday, the 10th day of March, 1841, for the purpose of selecting a candidate for Governor, to be supported by the dem ocratic party of the State,at the approach ing general election. Each county and the city of Philadel• phia will send delegates to the convention equal in number to their niembers in the State Legislature. 7'. H. Burrows. Jos, tl 3. P. ci olherild, Jam'l. Alexander, J. a Monsgemery, Bela Eager, Francis Park, Jas. Gregory, If . John H. 14 altar, T. Elder J. D. (JuU'erteon, James Steel. The old Democratic day for nominating the candidate for Governor (4th of Match) is departed from in the present instance, in order to afford all who desire it an op-'' portunity to attend both the State Con vention and the inaugeration of President Harrison. 0::r We now return our thanks to Messrs. Mothers, Miles, Williams, and Wade, for their attentions to us, in send ing public documents. ~:ime: Canal Commissioners, THE VETO AGAIN. As promised, in our last, we this week give our readers the veto of the Governor on the Canal Commissioners Bill; and we intend calling the attention of our rea ders to some portions of it, in as brief a manner as possible. In the first place, then, he vetoes r bill which carries out the spirit of the New Constitution, notwithstanding, he profes sed a decided preference for it in his in augural address. In which he plainly told the people that he had supported the amendments, because, it took power and responsibility from the Executive. Ou. readers cannot, certainly, have forgotten this. Yet, now, when the attempt is made to carry out that doctrine, he vetoes it. But let us dissect this message, and see whether his objections are good. His first objection is, that the plan was novel,--the house to elect one, the senate one; and himself to appoint the other; and he objected, because the Board may not at all times be constituted of one party. This is the very reason why the people should support the Bill; because, if there are members of both parties in the Board they will watch each other, (and by the by, they will all bear a little matching) neither will they be subject to 'the impe rial nod of such a Governor as we now have in this state. He also advances a position—one of his cunning maxims, we suppose, which we consider every thing else but democratic, and is very strongly tinctured with the dogmas of a Monarchy; 1• is this: "Responsibility thus divided (that is, taken from one man and given to the representatives of the people) vanish• es, almost, entirely, and ceases to aford an adequate guarantee to the public." 1 , e doubt whether an American people will agree to this'old British notion. The second objection is, that the House And Senate would have to impeach and try the man they had elected, provided he was guilty of any misdemeanor. This the Governor considers "a spectacle of ab surdity," because, he says, the friends of the accused wolld "combine and defeat the ends of justice." 'fills is veiy com plimentary to the Legislators of Pennsyl vania. The third objection is, because, the Leg islative bodies are "easily tampEred with by political intriguers and demagogues.", Another compliment to Pennsylvania's Legislature. lie does not wish this bill' to pass, fearful that the 100 members and 33 senators will be bribed, which of course he implies, cannot be the case while the power remains in his sovereign hands. Here is more of his British one man pows er. His fourth objection is, that it gives the Legislature the appointing of the very officers who are to disburse the money they appropriate. What an objection! Does not every citizen know, that under the law, as it now is, the same one man appoints the whole three of the Board who disburses the money he appropriates. His signature is as necessary to a bilt, un less, passed by two thirds, as is a majori ty in either of the Houses. The next paragraph is the one in which he introdu ces the extract of the 91(1 Constitution. Our readers may make out of it, and the supplementary message, what they can !I lie cannot see that it means any thing. His next reason for vetoing the Bill is, because, by a law of 1829, the Legisla ture did appoint the Canal Board, and, that, in less than one year, the law was repealed, because it did riot suit the peo• ple. David Rittenhouse Porter is Gover nor of Pennsylvania, rand, of course, a very knowing man; but, just allow us to tell him that the law of '29 was repealed, because it was manifestly unconstitution al; and it any one will take the trouble to read .that little extract from the OLD Constitution, inserted by (mistake) Da vid Rittenhouse Porter, in this very mes sage, they will discover that the Legisla ture had not the power, uder it, to elect any; for it said that "the Governor shall appoint all officers established by law, whose appointments are not herein pro• vided tor." We, therefore, must be al lowed to say, that, our great statesman, is again mistaken; and en that very mis take, he argaes, that, what was then right cannot ba now wrong. He says, too, he finds difficulty in keeping pace with the changes of the times; very true, and he'll' find considerable more difficulty from the changes, than he is aware of,,before anelt. er year transpires. The next objection is an insuperable one, and that is, that it will make the Ca nal Commissioners, from among a party that has not a majority of the people with them. Let us be allowed to ask Mr. Da, vid Rittenhouse Porter, what he meant by a certain proclamation, issued last De cember, which went on to insinuate, that the Harrison party had a majority in this state? Was it true? Or, was your proc lunation false? Or, is your statement in this message untrue? Ilang yourself on which horn of the dilemma you think the most honorable. The Governor then closes his messag' with a little twaddle about giving the a nointment directly to the people; entirely forgetting, that every exertion had been made, when his party was in the majority, to have such an act passed; but, then, they were none of them in favor of it; and vet, he, poor fellow, cannot keep up with the changes of the times. Another Veto. Vetoes have become fashionable, since the days of the U. S. Bank veto by Jack son• Before that time, they were hardly thought of. The voice of the Legislature, was considered the voice of the people.-1 Not so now. The Legislature is said to be easily tampered with, and the people have to depend upon the sterling integrity and long established honesty, (established since 1819) of such men as David Ritten house Porter, to preserve them from the corrupt acts of their Representatives. Governor Porter has again vetoed the bill for the payment of the money, bor rowed to repair the big break ; thus evin cing a determination to cheat the Banks out of their just dues— money that was loaned to benefit the State. The reason why he has done so, we presume is, that he thinks it anoys some of the citizens of this county, who know him. In one cf his former messages, he said, the work was so badly (lobe on that breach• that it would require immediate repairing' to render it secure. Yet the work still stands, to prove the faithfulness of the then agents, and the falsity of the Gover nor's message. This veto message costs the state $3O a day. for she is now paying double interest ' fur the amount borrowed of the Panks,— • and this is Porter economy. subject,Alr. iMiles, liust r i a n t e a s n t a h r e g d u i u n t e y n o t f o i t t h t e h i s s t v a e t t e . y , ;Ithus clearly. ..Suppose a case of a man who owned a valuable estate, and, going from home, had left in the care of an agent. During the absence of the owner, the storm and the tempest demolish his buildings, and sweep away his mill dams. fits agent calls upon a kind friend of the owner, ii ho gen. erously advances the money, and the agent goes on to repair the devastation which had, been committed upon his toaster's proper ly during his absence, by the act of Cited. I Thus his property is saved from further destruction, and the profits again flow in upon him. The owner returns, anti he is, required to pay the money thus advanced ' for his benefit. Ile refuses, and alleges that some of his own sub agents have squandered, or misapplied a portion of the money lent by his friend. Would any one in his sober sense, say that this property owner was acting the part of an honest man, or a good citizen? Would it not be considered a vioktion of one of the stiong• est obligations of honor and morality, for him thus to attempt to cheat his friend out of the money he had disinterestedly and generously loaned him? Just so contend. ed Mr. Miles was the case of the Com monwealth. The Legislature was riot in session. The owners were not at home, and the money had been borrowed by her au that hied agents, and had been Avanced by these banks." The following supplementary message, was sent in by the Governor, when it was discovered that he had got into the wrong Constitution. We leave it to all to judge whether it was a mistake or not. SUPPLEMENT TO THE SECOND VETO, GENTLEMEN: In my objections to the bill entitled "An act relating to Canal Commis sioners," communicated to the legislature on the 10th inst., a manifest error has oc curred in quoting from the Constitution in copying these words:— "He shall appoint all efficers whose of fices are established by the constitution nr shall be established by law, and whose ap pointments are not herein otherwise provi ded for." The quotation intended to be embodied was and is the first clause of the Bth section of article 6th, and is in these words "All officers whose election or appoint ment is not provided for. in this constitution, shall be elected or appointed as shall be di rected by law." Which et ror I have to request my be cor rected before printing. DAVID R. PORTER. Itarrisonls Cabinet. ft is now universally admitted, that the Cabinet of the President elect will be as follows: Daniel Webster, of Mass. Secretary of State. Thomas Ewing, of Ohio, Secretary of the Treasury. John Bell, Secretary of War. George E. Badger, of N. C., Secretary of the Navy. Francis Granger, of N. Y., Post Mas ter General. John J. Crittenden, of Ky., Atlorney General. That such will be the Cabinet, we have no doubt ; and that it will satisfy the friends of "old Tip," there is as little.— With such a Cabinet, there will be some hope once more of our unfortunate coun try. The names of the whole Cabinet are familiar to most of our readers, with perhaps one exception—Mr. Badger; but judging from the following notice of him, by the NN ashington letter writer of the N. Y. American, lie may be considered one of the ablest men of our country.— He says: early life Mr Badger w::s the pupil of Wm. Gaston : at a later period, his ri val for professional fame, but always and now, his valued fritnl. It were no small ioraise to say of Mr. Badger, that John Marshall eegarded his among the first intellects of the bar. Occasionally Mr. Badger has been a member of the popular branch of the North Carolina Legislature, hut until the recent and great political struggle through which the country has passed, Mr. Badger has but sparingly mingled himself in the contentions of po litical parties. Men of all parties, how ever, in North Carolina, acknowledge with great pride his superior endow. meats." Another Fire Occurred in Hollidaysburg, on Mon day night of last week. The two new frame houses owned by M. Kelly, were entirely destroyed by fire. It is suppo sed the fire originated from sonic ashes People cannot be too careful of fire. The people of that borough, seem to be, ilmost, at the mercy of a fire now when it takes place—they have no engine. We dirndd think that a very good subject, on which, to show sonic of their boasted en terprizv. Mitchell's System of School Geography. We find upon our desk the following books, intended fur the use of schools,— ".11iickell's Geography awl /Mae; Mitch• (ell's Geographical Reader, and Mitchell's Atlas of Outline Mops." Of the first, we can say, it is one of the most accurate, land withal the most perfect Geography land Atlas, we have ever seen. The maps are from original drawings, and are clear, I distinct, and not characterized by thit apparent confusion of most school maps ; land eminently calculated to facilitate the 'progress of the pupil. The "Outline ttlaps" are merely outline sketches of ,ounti ies (anti are seven in number), and intended to fix upon tha mind of the pu pil, the precise locality of every place, without pursuiag the common or ordinary plan of drawing. This method we con miler decidedly superior; and for this reason, the pupil can fill up the names in 1 . the map without the tedious and useless process of attempting to draw the rivers, &c.,and their courses. The Geographical Reader is calculated for a reading book, which at the same time it teaches to read, instills into the mind a fund of useful Geographical fact, Lint being mingled with matter which interest the pupil, leaves an impression upon the mind which time can hardly efface. ‘Ve commend the books to our school directors. State of the Bank of Lewis town Rbatary 9th. 1841 Dr. To Capital paid in, • - $107,035 00 Notes in circulation, - 198,843 00 Due to Banks, - - 9,831 10 Commonwealth of Penna., - 283 33 Dividends unpaid, - - 1,974 80 Contingent Fund, - - 9,887 97 Interest account, - • - 4,023 96 *lndividual deposites, - 40,448 05 DAN, 460,329 2'2 Cr• By Bills discounted, - 5338,924 23 ' Notes of other Banks, - 1,700 00 • Specie, - - - - 33,696 13 Due from Banks, • - 73,685 34 • Lewistown Bank Stock, - - 250 00 ' Expenses, •• - 834 98 B inking House & Fixtures, 9,783 57 ' Lewistown Witter Company 1,000 5)0 '„ Profit & Loss, - - - 435 87 Suspense account, - - - 19 10 Dull's. 460,:129 22 '119,950 Cannot be drawn lor, unless applied to bills discounted. At a meeting of the Board of Directors of the Bank of Lewistown, held at the Banking House on Monday the eighth (lay of February 1841, the following reso lutions were unanimously adopted: Resulted, That the highest credit is due to the Farmers, Mechanics and other citizens, of Mifflin, Centre and the ad joining counties, for their forbearance and courtesy towards this Bank during the ex citement necessary attendant upon a re , sumption of specie payments. Resolved, That the Cashier be and is hereby instructed to make out a statement 'of the affairs of this Bank up to and in cludinr, this day, and have the same pub lished, and a copy thereof forwarded to all of our Stockholders, • Resolved, That we do, hereby, pledge our credit, fortune, anti honor, for the re detnpt;on by the Bank of Lewistown, of every dollar of its notes now in circula. tion. Joseph Milliken, Joseph B. Ard, James Pctler. R, C. Hale, Henry Long, illiam Shaw, F. If . Bowie, .lamas Burn*, Niel. Creswell, John Sterrett, IY. Butler. A public meeting, has been called at Washington, for the purpose of devising suitable inauguration ceremonies. HYMENEAL REGISTER. The silken tie that binds two willing hearta. MARRIED—On the 18th of February, last, by John Thompson, Esq., Mr. JOHN BROOKS, of West township, to Miss MA 'LILUA JANE HENRY, Oflrl'ee township. OBITUARY RECORD• "In the midst of lye we arc in death." DIED, —On Monday the 22nd inst., MARGARET daughter of Jacob and Catharine FOcKLER. aged ten years. —On Sunday evening, the 21st inst. at his 'residence in Hendeison township, Col. SAM'L HARGESHIDIER, late of Philadelphia. —ln Hollidaysburg on Friday the 12th inst., MART wife of Mr. William Snosso— in the 30th year of her age.