lIUNTINGDO JOURNAL - _ - - 71)tbottU to Central iitttelligettet, tibtrttotitg, Volitico,Etterature, Inoratttg, Ztrto, Attentro, ftgritttitttrc, cannot:mut, s ~®no ~~~~cJ ~C~o c'-~C~o PUBLISH. Br THEODORE H. CREMER, ~` ®LP3fi7IIS~o The "JOURNAL" will be published every Wed nesday malting, at $2 00 a year, if paid in advance, and if not paid within six months, $2 50. No subsCription received for a shorter period than six months, nor any paper discontinued till all ar teatimes arc paid. Advertisements not exceeding one square, will be inserted three times for 31 00, and for every subse quent insertion 25 cents. If no definite orders are given as to the time an advertisement is to be continu ed, it will be kept is till ordered out, and charged ac cordingly. "„ "_ .w .~' ~, Froin the Christian Reflector. When. is the time to Die. I asked the iludund happy child, Whose hands . were 11 . 1141 wit flowers, Whose silvery laugh num free and wild Among the vine-wreathed bowers; I crossed her sunny path, mid cried, "When is the time to die , 4 1 Not yet ! not yet !" the child replied, And swiftly bounded by. I asked n maiden; beck she threw The tresses of her hair ; Grief's traces o'er her cheek I knew, Like pearls they glistened there ; A flush passed o'er her lily brow, I heard her spirit sigh : "Not now," she cried, " 0 no ! not now, Youth is no time to die !" I mired a mother, as she pressed Her first born in her arms, As gentle on her tender breast Site hushed her babe's alarms ; In quivering tones her answer came,— Her eyes were dim with tears ; "My boy his mother's life must claim For many, many years." I questioned one in manhood's prime, • Of proud and fearless air; His brow was furrowed nut by time, Or dimmed by woe or care, In angry accents he replied, And flashed , with scorn his eye : • Talk not to Ise of death," he cried. • For only age should die." I questioned age; for him the tomb Had long been ull prepared ; But death, who withers youth and bloom, This man of years had spared. Once more his nature's dying fire Flashed high as thus he clod; " Life ! only life is my desire !" Then gasped, and groaned, and died. I asked a Christian Answer thou When in the hour of death !" A holy calm was on his drow And peaceful wits his breath ; And sweetly o'er his features stole A smile, a light divine: He spake the language of his soul,- 4, My Master's time is mine !" ICIEJOZZALAN3OI:7O. Remarkable Magnetic Rocks, The following facts arc detailed by the Vicksburg (Mississippi) \ Vhig : Near the iron mamitain in Missouri, there is a ledge of stone, extending, for half a mile in length, and several hundred yards in width. This stone is very strongly impregnated with magnetic properties ; so strongly, indeed, that it is impossible to ride a well shod horse over it. A gentleman having his horse newly shod, once attempted it, but before he had made two „ revolutions," his horse " was brought up all standing"—perfectly still. In vain our trav eller urged his gallant steed forward ; persuasion and force proved equally futile, until his patience became exhausted, and ho sent for a blacksmith. The son of Vulcan soon arrived, and found the horse standing stock still, and to all appearance as immovable as the rock of Gibralter. Various expedients were re sorted to, to relieve the horse, but they all failed.— There he stood, and to all appearance there he was likely to stand, with his feet literally glued to the Solid and impervious rock. At last the blacksmith's eyes glistened; he had it sure. Ile sent oft to his smithy for his shoeing tools, which were soon forth coming, when ho proceeded with all possible des patch to unclinch the nails which bound the horse's sho:s to his hbols! One by one the nails were un clinched, the whip was applied to the horse, and as the last nail gave way, ho escaped with a bound, but left his Moo wedded to the rock. Air ANCIENT RECEII'E FOR TUE Cults OP THE GoeT.—The ingredients for this remedie cannot be had without a little thefte, but as no one's stock will bee endangered, the sufferer will bee contents to run a little Mike, in order to obtain greats relief:-Ist. live must pick a handkerchief from the pocket of a maide of 50 years, whenever had a wish to change her condition. 2nd. Hee must wash it in an hon est miller's pond. 3d. Hee must thy it on a par son's hedge that was never covetous. 4th. Hee must scent it in a doctor's shop who never kill'd a patients. sth. Hee must mark it with a lawyer's inke who never cheated a cliente. Applye it to the part affected, and a cure will speedilie follow. COMMODORE Pence.—"ln stature," says .I. Pen nimore Cooper, <, Commodore Perry was slightly above the middle height. His frame was compact, muscular, and well formed, and his activity in due proportion. His voice woe peculiarly clear and agreeable, and, aided by its power, he was a brilliant deck officer." The eccentric Lorenzo Dow, in the year 1830, prophecied that in the year 1843 there would be no King in England, no President in the United States, and that there would be snow in June. His pre diction has been fulfilled to the very letter. / understand," said a deacon to his neighbor, "that you are becoming a hard drinker." "That is a slander," replied hia neighbor. "for no man can conk‘easner." Fnom TITS INDIANA REGISTER, Messrs. Morehead: GemllAmx have received a communication from Judge Woodward upon the subject of the cue of the Flanag,ns, at present confined in the Jail of Cambria County ; accompanied by a suggestion that as there had been much excitement in the public mind about this case, it might be as well to give publicity to his views in relation to the duty he was called upon to perform. I therefore furnish a copy for publication. It needs, no comment on my part, as his sentiments are fully disclosed, and I have neither the right or the disposition to question the ground he has assu med. Having certified the case, as authorized by the Legislature, it has passed beyond my control. Very respectfully Your serv't. THOMAS WHITE. June 12, 1843. In the Court of Oyer and Terminer of Cambria County. Commonwealth of . Penneylvania vs. Indictment for the murder of Bernard Flanagan Elizabeth Holder. Patrick Flanagan, Honorable THOMAS WHITE improve my earliest hour of leisure since returning from the Courts of Clinton County, to answer your letter of the 21st April, which came to me at this place by way of Bellefonte, and which was a long time on the road. To render intelligible the views lam about to present to you, it is necessary that I should j transcribe the first two sections of the Act of Assem lily in reference to the above case ; and this seems the more necessary as the law is not yet published, and you intimate that you have no copy in your possession. They are in these words: „ Be it enacted by the senate and House of Rep resentatives of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, in the General Assembly suet, and it is hereby enac ted by the authority of the balUe, That the Court of Oyer and Terminer of Cambria county are hereby authorized and required to enter, if requested by the defendants, in the case of the Commonwealth against Bernard Flanagan and Patrick Flanagan, indicted for the murder of Elizabeth Holder, a rule to show cosine why the sentence of the Court and the verdict of the Jury should not be set aside in I said case, a new trial be granted, and, if said Court should, on hearing, be satisfied that according to the principles which ought to govern in ouch cases, a new trial should be granted, the said Court are hereby authorized to snake the said rule absolute, and if a stew trial be thus granted, the case shall be pro ceeded in by said Court, as soon as practicable, to another trial and final judgment. I _ Szerros '2, That in case the Picsl.ivin. Judge of said Court should desire that said rule, the hear ing thereof, and the new trial, if one be grunted, should be had before sonio other Judge, then it shall be the duty of the said President Judge to certify these facts to the Presidelit Judge of the Fourth Ju dicial District, who is hereby authorized and requi red to preside in said Court of Oycr and Terminer, and to do and perform, with ono or more of the As sociate Judges of said county, all things specified in the first section of this act touching the rule to show cause and the final disposition of such case, with like effect and force as if done before the proper Presi dent of said Court, and no informality in process or otherwise, shall vitiate tiny proceeding under this act, and said Court shall have all the power neces sary to carry the true intention thereof into full effect, and may adjourn from time to time until said case is fully determined." You have availed yourself of the license contained in the second section of this law, and have certified to me that it is your desire that the rule to show cause why the sentence of the Court and the verdict of the Jury in the above stated ease, should be set aside and a new• trial be granted, &c., should be entered and heard before the President Judge of the Fourth Judicial District, and if a new trial should be gran ted, you certify that it is also your desire that the new trial should bo had before the said President Judge of the Fourth Judicial District. I do not complain that you certified me of a desire which I have no doubt you feel very sincerely. I can readily imagine that after a long and patient trial of the prisoners for murder, resulting in a con viction, andafter overruling a motion for a new trial, and sentencing them to death, you should desire . ' that the proceedings prescribed by this extraordinary act of legislation, should be had before me. But it becomes a serious question with ine whether I have constitutional power under the act of Assembly to perform the duty whirls your certificate has laid on me, and I propose to state as briefly as may be, the grounds on which the constitutional doubt rests, and which will prevent me from entering on the duties required. The prisoners committed the offence, if at all, in Cambria county. They were tried and convicted in thc Court of Oycr and Terminer in that county, and the act of Assembly under consideration pro vides that the proceedings in their cases shall be had in that Court. In the event that has happened the act authorizes and requires me to preside in that Court, with the same effect that you might do. The question is: Can the Legislature make.= the Presi dent Judge of the Court of Oycr and Terminer of Cambria county, whilst that county remains in your Judicial District, and you remain in commission I The Constitution, in the 5111 article, establishes a Supreme Court for the whole State, and Courts of Oyer and Terminer and General Goal Delivery, Courts of Common Pleas, an Orphans' Court, a Register's Court, and a Court of Quarter Sessions of the Peace for each county. The sth section of this article provides that "The Judges of the Courts of Conunon Pleas, in each county, shall by virtue of their offices, be Justices of Oyer and Terminer, and General Goal Delivery, for the trial of Capital and other oftimders therein:—Any two of the said Judges, the president being one, shall be a quorum; but th-7 -;14 hoN Tcan cf 0;c: end 11-c:mincr a-s.SI.X.tI;UU2' cErW'Lla`U'' ie) i) UUEI4II:IBES or Goal Delivery in any county when the * Judges of the Supreme Court, or any of them shall be sitting in the same county. The party accused, as well as the Commonwealth, may under such regulation as shall be prescribed by law, remove the indictment and proceedings, or a transcript thereof into the Supreme Court." Two of the Judges of the Court of Common Pleas af Cambria county, the President being one, are thus made the Constitu tional "Justices of the tourt - of Oyer and Termi miner and General Gdal Delivery for the trial of capital and other offenders- therein." Who, then, are the Judges of the Court of Com mon Pleas of Cambria county I The third section of the amended constitution adopts the then existing system of Courts of Common Pleas, and provides that " until otherwise directed - by law, the Courts of Common Pleas shall continue as at present estab lished." You and your associates in Cambria county were a part of that system, and you became , ipso facto, the Justices of Oyer and Terminer in that county. It has never been n otherwise ordered by law." You have continued in commission, and Cambria county has continued to form part of your district. In the common language of the constitu tion and in every legal sense, you and your associ ates are "the Judges of the Court of Common Pleas" fur that county. It is true that the Judges of the Fourth Judicial District were authorised by an Act of Assembly of the 3d of April, 1837, to hold Special Courts of Common Pleas and Quarter Ses sions in Cumbria county, for the purpose of dispo sing of any cases, motions, or 'natters then pending 1 1 in said county, and in which you had been of coun sel. But this was a very special authority, and temporary, like the necessity which led to its enact ment. In no proper sense could it be construed to make my predecessor or myself a Judge of the Court of Common Pleas of Cambria county within the moaning of the sth section of the sth article of the constitution ; for if it did, I have a right at any time to sit wills you in the Court of Oyer and Terminer; and• thus that court would be provided with two President Judges, the constitution declaring there shall be one. Other consequences equally absurd and unconstitutional would result from the argument that the Act of Assembly of the 3d April, 1837, made me a Judge of the Court of Common Pleas of that county, within the meaning of the constitutional provision. I conceive that the position cannot be questioned that, I do not come under the description ofJudges who are authorized to sit as Justices of Oyer and Terminer in that county, and if I do not, the Legislature cannot by their mandate place me there fur the purposes of a solitary case. It is true the Legislature may remove Cambria county from your jurisdiction as a Judge of the Court of Common Pleas, both because the power is given to them in the 3d section cited above, and be cause, also, having created the Judicial Districts, they have a right to arrange and alter them accost'. ding to the demand of public convenience; and if they should unite Crunbria county to some other Judicial District, the President Judge of that Dis trict would by virturo of his commission, be a Jus tice of the Court of Oyer and Terminer in Cam bria county. It is only by relation to the Court of Common Pleas that any of us are Justices of Oyer and Terminer. Our commissions do not in terms embrace this jurisdiction, but being commissioned as President Judges of the Courts of Common Pleas in and for established and ascertained Districts, we be come, by virtue of the constitution, Justices in Oyer and Terminer within the SUMO sphere. But until an Executive commission and an Act of Assembly, concur to make us Judges of the Court of Common Pleas of a particular county, I hold that we have no power to sit in the Oyer and Terminer of that county. So long os the . re are Judges of the Court of Com mon Pleas in and for Cambria county, the constitu tion vests in them the power which the Legislature have attempted to transfer to me. And how can I be expected to exercise a jurisdiction conferred by the Legislature, when an authority superior to the Legislature has vested it elsewhere This consti tutional organization of the Court of Oyer and Ter miner is not more express than it is exclusive. No power is granted to the Legislature to a order other wise," concerning these Courts, as there is concer ning the Court of Common Pleas. Hence there con be no special Court of Oyer and Terminer pro- vided, corresponding in organization with the spe cial Courts of Common Pleas under the act of As senility of 1834. The legislative power to send a Judge of one District into another to hold a Court of Common Pleas results from the third section al ready quoted, and which is substantially the same in this respect as the 4th section of the sth article of the Constitution of 1790, and this power is con tinually exercised. But neither in the Constitution of 1790 nor in that of 1838 is there any similar grant in respect to Courts of Oyer and Terminer. The right of the Legislature to interfere in the juris diction peculiar to these Courts, is restrained to the removal of the " indictment and,proccedings, or a transcript thereof into the Supreme Court" In civil disputes it often happens that a President Judge is so related to the controversy that every con sideratfon of delicacy as well as justice forbids him to preside at the trial. It is a convenient arrange ment, therefore, to call in a neighboring President to supply his place in thataustartee, and this is a spe cial Court of Common Pleas which the Legislature have, I repeat, by express grant, the constitutional power to provide. But it seldom happens that a President Judge sustains a similar relation to any of ' !!!:h t:nincs which rnu•:t he triad in the Oyer and Tettniner, and when such a case does occur, the Constitution makes ample provision, not only in the authority it gives the Legislatue to remove it into the Supreme Court, but also by the fact that the Judges of the Supreme Court are Justices of • Oyer end Terminer in every county in the State, and can supply the place of a President Judge, if occasion demand. Suclt being the constitutional provition for cases of emergency, it would have been nawise to multiply facilities for bringing crimes to trial before any other than the local Judges.- 1 A paver of this kind lodged in the Legislature might be abused, and the liberty or life of the citizen be en-angered in times of high excitement. If, when a man had been accused of crime the Legis lature by a special mandate, could send whom they pleased to preside on his trial, in the place of the ordinary tribunals of justice, their act would partake strok.ty of the nature of an ex post facto law, and be obnoxious to the same objections. These may have •en among the reasons of the framers of our Constitution for not giving: the Legislature a control over Courts of Oyer and Terminer shaar to that which they possess in respect to Courts of Common Pleas. Whether or not, however, these were the rea sons t:lr the distinction which is apparent in the Constitution, it is enough for me that I find a Court of Oyar and Terminer established by that instrument in Cambria county, and invested with jurisdiction of the case before me in a manner inconsistent with the provisions of the act of Assembly under con ' 'Adoration. In addition to the obvious right of the Legisla ture to refer this case to the Judges of the Supreme Cowl, I suppose they might, if cause satisfactory to themselves existed, have changed the venue of the Indictment, with the consent of the accused, and have given them a trial in another county. And if the prisoners had been sent to either county of my distri I should have felt It my duty to proceed in their •axe with all fidelity, however I might have regretted the necessity for doing so. But so long as Ale prisoners remain in a county where I am not a judg, of the Court of Common Pleas, and where you are, they have a right, indefeasibly secured to them by the constitution, to be tried by you; and you will excuse me for saying that your superior expt , icnce and qualifications make this a highly vale tble right if the prisoners, which nave no &m it they properly appreciate, and which lam um;iilling to deprive them of. On the ground, I therefore, that this act of Assembly is unconstitu i tioiraf, in so fur as it affects to make me a Judge of the Court of Oyer and Terminer of Cambria coun ty for the special purposes of this case, I respectful ly decline to make any order in the premises. Many other objections might be urged against my attempting to execute the purposes of this law, es pecially in deciding the question of a new trial. I was not present at the former trial—no bill of ex ceptions can certify me of evidence rejected or' of points ruled in the progress of the trial. Indeen, it is tiot easy to see how I conid ascertain, certainly and beyond all dispute, what the evidence delivered by witnesses was, and if I could, I could have no knowledge of those many circumstances attending the delivery of the testimony and the progress of the trial which more or less influence a Judge in de ciding on an application for a new trial. And yet the law requires, that the Court of which it is at tempted to make me the President Judge, shall be "satiVied that according to the principles which ought to govern in such cases, a new trial should be granted." If the Legislature meant that the prisoners should have a new trial at all events, they ought to have said so in terms. But if they meant that the question should be decided with a conscien tious regard to principles which govern in applica tions for new trials, they ought to have made it your duty imperatively to pass on this question. For, having presided at the former trial, you are perhaps the only Judge in existence who can properly apply to the question the principles which ought to gov ern in such cases." Notwithstanding, however, the obvious income thence, amounting almost to total impracticability, of deciding the question of a new trial in the man ner prescribed by the Legislature, but I should still have felt it my duty to take measures fur executing, us nearly as might be, the intention of the Legisla ture, if I did nut see obstacles in my way which are insurmountable, because constitutional. That Con stitution I hove sworn to support, and I firmly be lieve I should violate both its letter and spirit, if I went to Cambria county for the purposes required. I must be excused, therefore. I intend no reflection on the members of the Legislature who were pledged like myself to the support of the Constitu tion. Their act was doubtless the result of a strong desire to furnish the prisoners with the means for a review of their case; and probably the constitution al objection did not present itself to their minds.— But, when Ism compelled to sit in judgment on the lives of two fellow beings, I want credentials that are clear. lam not satisfied with those the Legislature have furnished, and the occasion is too grave to admit of the exercise of a doubtful power. Wheth er the prisoners shall be disposed of by you and your associates, or be kept until further legislation shall be obtained, is with you to decide, and I am sure the public will be satisfied with whatever course you deem it your duty to pursue. I am very respectfully, Your oh% servant. GEO. W. WOODWARD. WILKEtiII.IARE, May 23, 1943. After this I felt somewhat easier in mind and bo dy, (fur it is no use to any that ! cannot be alarmed,) and I grasped a firm hold of the aides of the cur, determined to abide the result with as much compo sure and observation as the nature of thecase would admit: as it appeared evident that discharging bal last would not let me up through the storm, nor dis charging gas let me down, by this huge monster of the air for at least 20 minutes. I was finally releas ed, and found myself between the cloud and the earth, receiving the benefit of a pouring rain, in which I descended on Mr. UOUIrr Eileti farm, five mike from Carlisle. The density of this cloud did not appear alike all through, as I could at times see the balloon distinctly above me ; also occasionally pieces of paper, of which u considerable quantity was blown out of my car. I also noticed a violent convultionary action of the vapor, and a promiscu ous scattering of the hail and snow. such is the history of this sltort but magnificent trip, and I can assure soy readers, that when I again meet clouds of this character, (which I shall name the Cloud of Terror,") I will ascend sufficiently high before I reach them, to sail over them, or keep sufficiently low to pass underneath thorn. I cannot forego this opportunity of rendering my warmest thanks to the Committee for their ardent labors in my behalf, as also to my esteemed friend, Mr. Tawas. Very Respectfully, the public's obedient servant. JOIV.'" (7 1!:21 7 , 1 • Bunker Hill Monument cost 1t130,000 im al'. Carlisle, June 19, ISt 3. • Another Balloon Ascension. The following narrative of Mr. Wine's forty-first rerial voyage we take from the Carlisle Herald, to whose editor it is addressed. It will be found to possess much interest. Mx. EDITOR :..According to announcement, on Saturday, the 17th inst.. I set out on my forty-first serial excursion, from the centre square of your bo rough at 15 minutes past two o'clock. A slight breeze from the west wafted me a short distance when the ascent became more perpendicular. The first thing that drew my attention was the immense ocean of heads that presented itself in the square. There appeared to be infinitely more people on the imme diate ground than I have witnessed for some time at a balloon ascension, and the whole affair appear ed more animated from the fine appearance of the military, together with their repeated firing after the departure of the " Comet." When I had reached a point about two miles east of the town the Balloon commenced a rapid and perpendicular ascent, which soon brought me to the base of an immense black cloud, and as it has always created a deep interest in spectators to see a balloon passing through clouds, I did not hesitate on this ec ssion to give my numerous audience an ex hibition of this kind ; although I might have avoi ded it, and kept beneath the clouds, which current would have token me to Harrisburg, and which was already distinctly in my view. This part of toy feat, however, I had reason soon after to regret, al though at the present time it gives me more gratifi cation to contemplate its reality than any thing that has lately transpired in my serial adventures. The details that I shall here give of this terrible scene, may be relied on, as I was sufficiently composed to appreciate its grandeur and observe its physical op eration. The cloud to the best of my judgment, covered an area of from four to six miles in diame ter. It appeared of a circular form and considera bly depressed in its lower surface, or I might say it presented a great concavity towards the earth, with its outer edges very ragged ; it was also of a dark smoke color. I noticed at some distance from where I entered the cloud, the appearance of a heavy de scending rain. The first sensations that I experi enced when entering the cloud were extremely tm plelsittallk suffocating aensation immediately en sued which was shortly followed by a sickness of the stomach—thin„ however, shortly after somewhat abated. The cold in the meantime became intense, and every thing of a fibrous nature heetune thickly covered with hoar frost, the cloud at this point which was in the midst of it, had not the black appearance, but was of a light color, and so dense that I could only slightly see the Balloon above, a distance of 16 feet. From the intensity of the cold in this cloud, I concluded the gas would condense, and the Balloon would consequently descend beneath it, where it was much warmer. In this however I found my self mistaken, for in a few minutes after I entered the cloud, I found myself whirling upwards with a fearful rapidity, the Balloon girating, and the car describing a large circle in the cloud ; a noise re sembling the rushing of a thousand mill dams, with a dismal moaning noise of wind surrounded me in this terrible flight. Whether this rushing noise was occasioned by the hail and snow, which by this time Was fearfully pelting around the Balloon, I am unable to tell. I was in hopes that I should soon he towed out of the top of the cloud and enjoy the congenial sunshine invariably above them. But in this I was sadly disappointed, fur after being hurled up, apparently to-me many hundred feet ; there ap peared to occur a vacuum underneath, tutu the Bal loon would again sink down, with a swinging and fearful velocity, to be again carried up, and let fall, which was repeated eight or ten times, all this time the storm raging with unabated fury. The Balloon in the mean time had received considerable damage by kinking, and breakage from its frozen condition. I experienced all this time an almost irresistible de termination to steep, which I believe was only over come by the sickening of the stomach, and most powerful vomiting. 11 0).4 ZZI Z. 4 <~:~~~ OF THE BILL FOR THE SALE OF THE Main Line of Public Works. EXECUTIVE CuAluuEn, 20th June, 1843. S Cusitt.Es ll'CLunL, Esq., Secretary of the Commonwealth. Sin—Please filo the accompanying message to be delivered to the General Assembly, together with the Bill to which it relates, within three days after their next meeting. Vcry respectfully, DAVID It. PORTER. To the &nate and House of Representative: of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania : GeNTtenEN herewith return to the House of Representatives, in which it originated, the bill, entitled An Act to authorize the Governor to in corporate the Pennsylvania Canal and Railroad Company from Philadelphia to Pittsburg," accom panied with my objections to its passage into l a law: In general terror, this bill provides for the incorpo ration of a company, Co which is to be transferred, on certain terms set forth, the Main Line of the state improvements, by railroads and canals con necting the city of Philadelphia and the city of Pittsburg, and the almost entire control of the pub lic over its management and use. Those improve ments, constructed at an aggregate cost of about fifteen millions of dollars to the State, arc to be sold or transferred to this company for the sum of sin teen millions, to be paid in subscriptions of one hut I tired dollars a share, in cash, or in,citifleates oft°an to the Commonwealth. To the details of several of the provisions of this bill there are objections, but I need not at present re fer to them particularly ; I will only call your atten tion to the twenty-third section, in which is found what appears to be a most extraordinary feature.— It is in the following words: "It shall at all times be lawful for a committee of the Legislature, ap pointed for that purpose, to inspect the books and examine into the proceedings of the corporation hereby created, and to report whether the provisions of this charter have been by the tame abused and vioalted, and if the olliceni of said corporation should refuse to he sworn or affirmed, or give evi dence, or produce all such of their books or papers as may be demanded before any such committee, then the Legislature may by law declare the said charter void and repeal the same, and whenever any committee as aforesaid shall find and report, or the Governor shall have reason to believe, that the char ter has been violated, it may be lawful fur the Le gislature to direct, or the Governor to order a seire facias to be issued out of the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, in the name of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, (which shall be executed on the President or Treasurer of the corporation for the time being, at least ten days before the commence ment of the term of the said court,) culling on the said corporation to show cause wherefore the charier hereby granted shall not be declared forfeited, and it shall be lawful for the said court, upon the return of the said scire facial, to o.lllillo into the truth of the alleged violations, and if such violations be made to appear, then to adjudge that the said charter is forfeited, and thereupon, and in ease the Legislature shall declare the said charter void and repeal the same for the cause aforesaid, the canals and railroads aforesaid, with the appurtinances, and all the estate real and personal of the sad corporation, shall re vert to and reveal's. the Commonwealth, upon the payment by the Commonwealth to the stockholder, the par value of their stock, and until the Common wealth shall have made such payment to the direc tors of said company, to be by them distributed among the stockholders, the rights, privileges and franchises of said corporation shall remain as though said judgment of ibrfeiture had not been pronounced." Now this section provides a perfect immunity to the company for its infraction of its charter or the laws. Even when it is 'proved to have violated them, it is authorized to enjoy and possess all its rights, privileges and franchises, as if said judgment of forfeiture had not been pronoun ced, until the Commonwealth pays to the Company the par value of its stock, to wit, $16,00,000. Such payment would he little short of a moral im possibility. And were it possible for the State to pay this SUM, it would be clearly for the interest of the company to violate its charter, persist in this violation, and make the State pay the par value of stock which was bought and subscribed at less than fifty per cent. of its nominal value by the stockhol ders, or allow them to go in defiance of the charter and the law. Can it be possible the credit and hon or of Pennsylvania have sunk to this depth, to re quire suds a sacrifice for their support ? I trust not. But independent of objections to specific it seems to sue that the measure itself is most im politic and unwise. It is true I approved the bill for the creation of the Delaware Canal Company, substantially the same as this bill, but I did that more in accordance with the apparent wishes of the people, announced by the voice of their representa tives in the Legislature, than in accordance with my own prior opinions, or those I entertained at the Limo. Had nothing occurred in the attempt of this commissionersto procure subseriptions to that stock, to induce the belief that it was not likely to opera's to the advantage of the public interest, I should probably have waved my scrupled, and, for the same I reason have approved this bill also. But I should ill discharge my duty if I shut my eyes to that pro ccedini, When we see a most unexampled ser.m. 1,1. LIB. c , . tit. is tiril