PRESIDENESNEBSAGE. Fellow Ci!izPsig of Pic Senate mu! ()jibe House of/RfOreeenfatires : The Constitution requires that theyreeident shell, froth time to time, nut only recommend to the consideration of Congreia su c h m eueuree OS he may judge necessory isWespedient, but also that - he shall give infortiation toahem of :he state - of the' L t uien, To . de this fully in- .slues ex.position dull matters in the actual conditiao of the country, domestic or foreign wnich essentially concern tha general welfare. 'While performing his constitutional duty in this respect. the Presideet dues not speak merely to express personal conviatiens, but as the. executive ruin ister of the OovernMent, 'en abled by his position, sad called upon by his official obligation's, to emu with an • impartial intereste of the whole - , and of every part, of the United States, _ oo Of the 4ondition of the irlTrriestic interests of the Union, its agriculuire, wines , iaannfac tures, navigation, and &ailments, it is necess ary only to say that the internal prosperity of -the country, its continuous awl steady advance ment in wealth aid population, and in private Ai well as public well-being, attests the wisdom of oar institutions, andthe predominant spirit of intelligence and patriotism, which, notwitto .atanding ocenslooal irregularity of opinion or' action resulting from popular freedom, has distinguiShed and eharacterixed the people - of America. • In the brie fluter val between the term loation of the last. and the commencement of the pres ent session of Congress, the public mind luta been occupied with the care of selecting, for another constitutional term, the President and Vice President of the United ,States. The determination of the persons, who are • of right; contingently, to preside over the ad ministration of the government, fa, under our evstern, committed to the States of the people. V. appeal to them, by their voice pronounced in the form of law, to call whomsoever they will to the high post of Chief Nligistrate, And thus it isahat as the senators represent the respective States of the Union, and . the • members of the House of 'Rep[ esentatives the several constituencies of each State, so the President re presents the aggregate popula tion of the Lulled States, Their election of him is the explicit and Solemn act of the sole sovereign 'authority of the Union. . It is impossible to misa pprehend the great principles which, by their recent political se ti on, the peoplo•of the United States haveaa,uc• tiered and announced. They have asserted the constitutional qUality of each and all-the-States - of - the Union . As States 3 they linen affirmed the constitte Lionel equality of , each awl all of the citizens of the United States ruiedtizene, whatever their religiOn," wherever there birth, or their resie deuce ; they have tnantalned the inviolability of . the constitetional rights of the different sections of the Union; and they have pro- claimed their devoted and utialteruble Wen:li me:it to the Union and to the constitution, as objects or interest superior to all objects of lo cal or sectional controversy, as the safeguard of the rightsufuli, as. the spirit and essence f the liberty, peace, and greatness of the lie puhlie. . In doing this, they have, at the game time, empliatieally cundetuntid the idea of organie ing in. these United Stetes mere geograpical peaks; of marshullingiu hostile array towards each other the different parts of the country, North or South, East or 'West. • • Schemes of this. nature. fraught with ineal -----culable-eatieehietenend' which - theec Asiderato - sense of the people' has rejected, could have countenance in. no part of the country, had tkiev not heel) disguised by suggestion's ;Anus. able in appeararipe o neting. open, excited state 'of the public plizid; induced by causes temporary in their character, told it is hoped " transient in their influence..• Perfect liberty of association for political objects, and the.widestseope of discussion; are the reoeived and ordinary cuuditious of goy eminent' in our' country. Our institutions framed in the spirit Of confidnifee iii t - hu intelli gence and the integrity' of the people, do not forbid citizens either individually or associated • together, to attack by writting, speech, or any methods short uf_physical . force, the Constitto tion and the very socistence of - the Union.-- Under the shelter, of this great liberty, and protected by the lawariud usages of the gov. e •entent they "wail, associations have . been teraied, in some of the Statesi, of individuals, who, pretending to seek only to prevent the si;read of the institution of slavery into the present or fattive inchoate States of the Union, -are really inflamed with (Wire to change' the domestic institutions of the existing Suites.— To accomplish their übjects ' they. dedicate themselves to the odiCus laskor depreointing the government organization which stands in their way, and of oaluinnintilos, with indiscrim ,inate invective, not only citizens of particular --State s r with w hese-lisweal-L-e-y-tind-fittrlts-butat I l t -nicl+•--eatarld is heel-the-a Farictiye geographical line, was aegnieseed in others of their felleweitiZens throughout the rather titan approved by the States of the Un country, who do not participate With them in It. Atom( on the statute book. however, their Ds:melte upon the CouStitation, • framed ' lose, And adopted by our fathers, and claiming for I for a number of 'soars ; and the people of the respective States acquiesced in the re-enact. the privileges it has secured.. and the . blesisiegs ntent of the privaiple as applied to the State it has conferred, the steady support and grate of 'fexas ; and it was proposed to acquiesce (ul reverence of their children. They seek an • i its further applicatioe to the territory acquired object which they will know to be a revolts in aware that ;by the United States from Meeitne But this tionary one. They ary l the proposition was "successfully resisted by the the change in the relative condition of represeinatives from the northern States, who, white and black races: in the aleveholding regardless of the statue line, insisted upon up States, which they would promote, is beyond their lawful authority ; that to them is a foreign plying restriction to the new territory generally, they are citizens object ; that it cannot be effected by any .whether lying north or south of it, thereby re eaceful instrumentalit of pealing it as a legislative compromise, and, on teem, and the States of which the part of the North, persistently violating theirs ; that for I the compact, it' compact there wits. the only path to its nocomplishmein thiough Earning cities, and ravaged fields,„and ele Thereupou this enactment ceased to have binding virtue in any :cause, whether as respects iu Bred populations, and all there Is most terrible ; the North or the South ; and so in effect it foreign, complicated with civil and servile I I wile treated on the occasion of' the admission file and that the first step in the attempt is the fercible disruption of a country einhra- ; of the State of California, and the organization clan in its In . CM 1105000 a degree of liberty, ,of the 'Territories of New Mexico, Utah and and alt amount of individual and public' pros- I'V"shing't"n f.erity, to whirl[ there is no parallel in history, Such was the state of this question, when and substituting in its place hostile govern- ; the time arrived for the organization of the Territories of Keels:is and Nebraska. In the "gents driven at once and inevitably into mut tialdevestation awl fratricidal carnage, trans- progress of constitutional inquiry and reflec• forming the now peaceful and felicitous broth- "'it it had now at length come to be seen erhocel into a vast permanent came of armed ) clearly that Congress does not possess consti. men the rival monarchies . of Europe and 1 tutionol power to impoee restrictio n s of this Asia, , character upon any present or future state of knowing that such, and such only, arts the Union. In a long series of decisions, on the fullest. argument. and after the most delib the means awl the consequences of their and purposes, they endeavor to prepari,•_th,‘ orate consideration, the Supreme court of the peopl of the. United States fur civil wa by Uniied. tetotes had finally determi lied this point, e r doing every thing, in their power to depris'e n every thrm under which the question could arise, whether as affecting public or-private t'ie Constitution and the laws of mural ttth• critv., and to undermine the fabric of the ri'4lltS—in questions of the public domain, of Soft by appeals to passion and sectional pry j- religion, of navigation, and oi servitude. to..ice, by indeetrinatitt‘r people with strip- The eeveral States of the Union aro, by repeal hatred, and by educating them to stand feree of th e Constitution, co eqetil in domestic fare to-face as enemies, rather than shoulder legislative power. Congress cannot change a to sl:oulder as friends. law of domestic relation in the State of -Maine; It is by the agency of Fuel anwarrantah'e inu more can it in the State of Missouri. Any inte-ferenee, foreign and domestic, that ti e• statue which proposes to do this is a mere nul minds of raanv otherwise rood citizens, ; it takes away no light.; it confers none.— been so intlatised into the passionate condeen- If it Ntr:rtin_s on the statue-book iinrepealed, it riaton of the domestic institutiene of remains there (tidy us a monument of error, southern States, as at length to pass i ns .. ll ,ib- and a beacou of warning to the legislator and ly to almost equally . passionate hostility to- :;tatesman. To repeal it. will be only to remove wards their fellow-cinzens of those Stne n; arid imperfection from the statutes, without affect thus final; to fall inio te4nperarY ing, 'either in the sense of permission or of with the mowed and active ene l of t h e prohibition, the action of the States, or of their Coustitutioa. Ardently attached to ?alerts in citizens. the abstract, they do not stop i causlcier Still, when the nominal restriction of this practically how the objects they woeld attain olture, already a dead letter in law, was in can be accomplished, nor to reflect that, even terms repealed by the last Congress, in a clause if the evil neseas grea t es t h ey drew i t, they - - =`, , :of the net orgatti'zing the Territories of Kan. bays no remedy to -apply, and that It, can be sas and Nebraska, that repaid was made tho Duly aggravated by their violence and uncoo- " ca; `" of a wide-spread and dangerous aZi" etit:ltianal Action, A :volition., which is one ofthe' most difficult ' It was alleged that' die original enactment of all the problems of social institution, puli- 'being a compact of p t lettial morel oblige s _ . ticsaThmionty rag's!ettestneitslop, flies's - sesta ties. its - retkuu co - eaten • all odious bresch or -1 with un reanOni lig iritesipesittiee of s4oegettl.d feat). _ heignitge. Extreines Isegetlextrosts: ]cadent , - Aii act of eitrigresii, while it remains nnre-, ittnek fromthe North finds ita inevitillike conse- pealed; more Mipecially if it' he toustitsitionally quenee in the growth of it spirit etangry deft. ; valid iii the judgment Of those public fuetion . :ince. at the buutlt. Thus in- the pro( ess of ! nries whose duty it is to pronounce on that events we had "reaehed t h at consu mmation I point, is undoubtedly binding on the con witioli the 'voice of the people has now so point- I, seietiee, of each good citizen of the Republic. 1 sslly rebuked of the attempt, ufi portion of the I Out, in what sense can it be asserted that the States by a sectional organization and move- I enactment in question was invested with per govertuneet 1 petulty and entitled to the respect or a solemn merit., to usurp the eoutrol of the ;of the United States.; : compact? Between whom Was the compact? I I eunfidently believe that the great body of iNo distinct contending powers of the govern those, who inconsiderately took this fatal step went, no separate sections of the Union, treat ere siueerelYiettaelsed to the Constitution and pig as such, entered into the treaty stipulations I, the Union. They would, upon deliberation, lon the subject. 4 shrink with unaffected horror from any con- I It was a mere clause of an act of Congress, 1 , seisms act of disuiden or civil war. But they and like any other controverted nintter of leg nowhere, itlistion s resteived- its final shape-and-was pass - prime entered into-afah which lends unless it he to civil war and disunion, and ed by compromise of the conflicting opinions iwhich has no other possible outlet, They or sentiments of the members of Congress.— have proceeded thus far in that direction in But if it had moral authority over men's con• consequence of the successive styes of their 1 sciences, to whom did this authority attach ?:--- progress having censisted of a series of semi- ; Not -to those of the North who had repeatedly dery issues, each of wideb profess to be eon= l , -- refused to confitm it by extension, and who Hued within constitutional and peaceful limits, ! had zealously striven to establish other and i incompatible regulations upon the Hub itset.--- but which attempted indirectly what few men ; And if, as it thus-appears, the supposed coin were willing to do directly, that is, to act ag gressively against the constitutional. rights of f pact had no obligatory force as to the North; nearly one-half of the thirty-ose States. - 1 of course it could not have hod any as to the in the hang - series of acts of indirect ageles; 1 South, for all such compacts muse be mutual Ilion, the first was the tortuous agitation, by and of reciprocal obligation. citizens of the northern States, in Congress and 1 It has nut unfrequently happened that law out of it, of thequestion of nesro emaucipation I givers, with undue estimation of the value of in the southern States, - I the law they give s or in the view of imparting The second itep in 'this path of evil consis. It o i t peculiar strength, make it perpetual in -tad of acts of the people of the northern States, -1 terms ;,---but they can not thus bind the con and s tn several instances of their governments, science, the judgment, and the will of those aimed to facilitate the escape of persona held who may succeed them, invested with similar to service - in the southern States, and to , pre• responsibilities, and clothed with equal author vent their extradition .when reclaimed aecar• sty. More careful investigation may prove the ding to law and in virtue of express . provisions law to be unsound in principle. Experience of the Constitution'. Tu promote this object, mac show it imperfect in detail and impracti legislative enactments and other means were cable in execution. And thee both reason adopted to take away or defeat rights. which 'amid right combine not merely to justify, but the Constitution solemnly guarantied. In or. I require its repeal. - . . der _to nullify the then existing act of Congress The Constitution, supreme as it is over all concerning the extradition of fugitives front the departments of the government, legislative, serviee t laws were enacted in many States, tor. executive, and judicial, is open to ainendinent bidding their officers under the severest pen, by its very terms ; and Congress or the States alties, to participate in the execution of any tufty in their discretion. propose amendments act of Congress whatever. __. f to it, solemn compact though it' in truth is his In this way that system of harmonious co-op. oration between the authorities of the United States and of the several States, for the main tenance of their coniroon institutions, which existed in the early years of the Republic, was destroys?; conflicts ofjurisdietion came to he Srequentf-and Congress found itself-compelled, for the support of the Constitution, and the vin -1 dieatiou of its power, to authorize the appoint ment of new officers charged with the exec to Mon of its acts, as, if they and the officers of the States were the ministers, respectively of foreign governments in a state ,of mutual hos tility, rather than feliuw magistrates of a cum , mon country, peacefully subsiding under the I protontion of one well-oonstituted Union.-- j Elms here, also, aggression was followed by re melon; and the attaelts upon the Constitution at this point did but serve to raise up new bar j tiers for its defence and security. ! The third stage of this unhappy sectional ckoitroversy was in connection with the organ -1 ization of territorial governments, and the ad mission of new States into the Union. When lit was proposed to admit the State of Maine, by separation of territory from that of Massa ! chusetts, and the State of Missouri, fJrnied-ofa portion of the tern tory ceded by France to 1-the. United--States in Congress ' objected to the admission' of - the latter, unless with conditions suited, to . partict.lar views of public policy. The imposition of smolt a con , dition was suecossfully resisted. But ut the I the same period, the question was presented 1 of imposing restrictions upon the residue of the territory . ceded by ' France. That ques tion was, for the time, disposed of by the - adop. tion of a geographical line of limitation. In this connexion it should not - be forgotten t that France, of her own accord, resolved, fur I considerations of the most far-sighted sagacity, to cede Louisiana to the United States, and that accession was Accepted by the United States, the latter expressly engaged that "the inhabitants of the ceded territory shall be in corporatedin the Union of the United States. and admitted as woo as possible, according to the principles of the Federal Constitution, to 1 the enjoyment of all the rights, advantages and - immunities of -citizens, of the United Suites i and in the meantime they shall ,be maintained and protected in the flee enjoy mett of their liberty, property, and the religion which they profess"—that is to say, while it remains itt a territorial condition its inhabitants are maintained and protected le the fr.:e en joyment of their liberty and property with a 1 right then to pass into the condition of States on a footing of perfect equality with the origi nal States. i Ph n o " • tweet, the Sovereign Statea of the 'Union: In the present instance, a political enactment, which had ceased to have legal power or author' ity of any kind, was repealed, The position assumed, that Congress has no moral right to enact such repeal, was strange enough, and singularly so in view oleos fitet'that the argu ment came from those who openly refused obedience to existing laws of the land, having the. same popular designation and quality as compromise acts ; nay, more, who unequivo cally disregard and condemned the most ob ligati:l.y injunctions of the Constitution itself, and sought, by every means within their reach, to deprive a portion of their fellow citizens of the equal enjoyment of those rights and privi leges guarantied alike to all the .fundatnen .:. tal compact of our Union. This argument against the repeal of the statute line in question was accompanied by another of congenial character, and equally with the former destitute of foundatioa-iii rea son and truth. It was imputed that the meas. ore originated in the conception of extending the limits of slave labor beyond those previous • lv assigned to it, and that such was its natural as well as intended effect ; and these baseless assumptions were made in the northern States, the grmind of unceasing assault upon constitu tional right. The repeal in terms of a statute, which was already obsolete, and also null for unconstitu tionality, could have no influence to obstruct or to promote the propagation of conflicting views of political or social institutions, When the act recognizing the Territories of Kansas and Nehrarka wits passed. the inherent effect upon that portiOn of the public domain thus opened to legal settlement was to admit set tlers from La the States of the Union alike, each with his convictions of public oolicv and. private intlivest,,Akere to found in their d*isere lion. subject to - such limitAtions as the Consti tution and acts of Congress might prescribe. new States, hureafteeto be admitted jai) the union. - lr. was a free field. open alike to all, wheth er the statute lint, or assutueti restriction were repealed or not. That m epeal did not open n free . competition or the diverse opioious and domestic institutions a field which, without such repeal, would have been closed against them : it found that field of competition already opened, in fact and in law. -All the repeld did was to relieve the statute-book of an objection able _enactment, unconstitutional in effect, and injurious in terms to a largo portion of the States. Is it the fact, that. in all_ the unsettled re gions of the United States, if emigration he `u' rocone re,pec se , wit lout legal prohibitions, on either side, slave-labor will spontaneously go everywhere, in, prefer ence to free labor? h it the fact that the peculiar domestic institutions of the southern States possess relatively su mach of vigor that, wheresoover an avenue i s freely open to all the world, thor will penetrate to the exelusion of those et the northern Stites. Is it the fact that the tomer enjoy . , compared with lie lut ter, such irresistible superior vitality, indepen• ,dent ut climate, soil. ;ma other accidental cir cums:ances, as to Le able to produce the 'stip po4ed result, in spite of the assumed mural and natural obstacles to its accomplishment, and . the more numerous population of the northern I - (1 . +4 were most con-4mant with-the principle of States ? I popular soNereignty which underlies our goy- The argument of these who advocate the en- eminent. It could not have 1 gislated other act cent of new laws of restriction, and eon- wise without doing'violence to another great deem the repeal of old ones, in effect avers that principle of our institutions, the im nrescripti their particular views of government have no bin right of equality o! the several States. self extending or self-sustaining power of their We perceive, also, that sectional interests own, and will go nowhere unless forced by act and party passions, have been the great he. of Congress. And it' Congress do but pause pediment to the salutary operation of the or for a moment in the policy of stern coercion, (rattle principles adopted, and the chief cause of if it venture to try the experiment of leaving ... the suecessive disturbances in Kansas. The men to judge for themselves what institufWi.. assumptton that, because in the organization will best suit them : if it Ito not strained up to j of the Territories of Nebraska and Kansas; perpetual legislative exertion on this point ; if Congress abstained front imposing restraints Congress proceed thus to act in the very upon them to which certain other Territories spirit of liberty it is at once charged with aim- had been subject, theretbre disorders occurred lug to extend slave labor into all the new Ter- in the latter Territory, is emphatically contra. ritories of the United States. dieted by the fact that none have occurred in Of course, these imputations on the inten- the former. Those disorders were not .the tions of Congress in this respect, conceived as consequence, in Kansas, of the freedom of self. they•were in pr e judice, and disseminated in government conceded to that Territory by passion, are utterly destitute of any justifica- Congress, but of unjust interference on the tton in the nature of things, -and ,contrary to part of persons not inhabitants of the Territory. all the fundamental doctrines and principles Such interference, wherever it has exhibited of civil liberty and selfgovernment, itself, by acts of insurrectionary character, or of obstruction to processes of taw, has been While therefore, in general, the people of, the northern States have never,-at any time, repe;led or sit ppressed, by a!I the means which arrogated for the federal government the pow- the Constitution and the laws place in the or to interfere direotly with the domestic eon- hands of the Executive. dition of persons in the southern States, but In those parts of the U. Statrs, where, by on the contrary have disavowed all such in- re-is nof the inflamed state of the public mind, tentions, and have shrunk from conspicuous false rumors and misrepresentations have the affiliation with those few who pursue their greatest currency, it has been assumed that it fanatical objects avowedly through the con- j was the duty of the Executive not only to sop tompluted means of revolutionary change of press insurrectionary movements in Kansas, the government, and with acceptance of the but also to see to the regularity of local elec. necessary consequences—a _civil and--servile'tions.____ltmeerls little•argument to show that wa—yet many cid - fens have suffered them. the !'resident has no such power, All Erov solveE to be drawn into one evanescent politi- : ernment in the U. SWIM; rests .substantiatly cal issue of agitation after another, appertain. , upon popular election. The freedom of eleo ing to the same set of opinions. and w hi c h , lions is liable to be irnpairedby the intrusion subsided as rapidly as they arose when it of unlawful votes. n the eiclusion of lawful came to be seen, as it uniformly did, that they ones, by improp 4 r influence:. by violence, or were incompatible with the contracts of the by fraud. But the people cf the IT, Slates are Constitution and the existence of the Union. themselves the albsufficient guardians of their Thus, when the acts of sortie of the States to own rights, and to suppose that they will not nullify the existing extradition jaw imposed remedy, in due season, any such incidents of upon Congress the duty of passing a new one, the country was_invited by askatore_to_ • P into party organization for its repeal ; bnt that agitation speedily' ceased by `roagon .of , 'the impracticability of itsebject. So, when the statute restriction uppn the institutions of new States, by a • geographical, line, had been repealed, the country wits' urged to. de mand its 'restoration, and that - project - also died almost with itA*rth. Then followed the cry of alarm fpm the North against im puted southern encroaehments which cry sprang in reality from the spiri t of revolution ary attack On the domestic institutions of the South, and, after a troubled existence of a few months, has been rebuked by the voice of a patriotic people. Of this last agitation, one lamentable fea ture was, that it was carried on at the imme diate expense of the peace and happiness of the -people-ef-the-Terri tory of -Kan-s:ts. That was made the battle-field,-not no much of op posing factions or interests within itself, as of the conflicting passions of the whole people of the United States. Revolutionary disorder • • • • eid_its_origin in projects of inter vention, deliberately arranged by certain members of that Congress, which enacted the law for the organization of the Territory.— Aml when propagandist colonization of Kan sas had thus baen undertaken in one section of the Union, for the !4ystenintic promotion of its peculiar views of policy, there ensued, as a matter of course, a counter-action with appo site views, in other sections of the Union, In consequence of these and other incidents many acts of disorder, it is undeniable, have been perpetrated. in Kansas, to the occasional interruption, rather thin the permanent sus pension. of regular government. -Aggressive and most reprehensible incursions into the Territory were mid ?.rtaken, both in the North 'and the South, and entered it on its northern border by the way of lowa, as well as on the eastern by the way of Missouri ; and there has existed within it a state of insurrection against the constituted authorities not without countenance . from inconsiderate persons in each of the great sections of the Union. But the difficulties in that have been extravagant ly exan , ,evated - for purposes of polities& agita tion elsewhere. The number and gravity of the nets of violence have been magnified part. ly by statements entirely untrue, and partly by. reiterated accounts of the salne rumors or facts. Thus the Territory has been se:tmingly filled with extreme violence, whet , the whole amount of such acts has not been greater than what occasionally passes bellire us in single cities to the regret. of all_ good citizens, hut without Lein; regarded as of general or per manent political consequence. Imputed irregularities in,the elections had in Kansas, • like occasional irregularities of the same description in the States, were be yond the sphere of action of the Executive.-- liut of actual violence or of organ ized obstruction of law, pertinaciously renew ed from time to time, have been met as they occurred, by such means as were available, and as the circumstances required ; and nothing of this character now refrains to affect the general peace of the Union. The attempt of a part of the inhabitants of the Territory to erect a revolutionary government, though sedulously encouraged and supplied with 'pe cuniary 'aid from active agents of disorder in some of, the States, has completely failed.— Bo , lies of armed men, foreign to the 'Territory, have Keen prevented from entering or com pelled to leave it. Predatory bands, enraged In acts of rapine, under cover of the existing political disturbances, have been arrested or dispersed. And every well disposed person is now enabled once mon) to devot e himself' in peace to the pursuits of prosperous indus try, for the prosecution of wleieli he undertook to participate in the settlement 31 the Terri tory, It affords mo unmingled satisfaction thus to announce the peaceful condition of things in Knn.as, espemally, considering the means to which it was necessary to have recourse for the attainment of the end, namely the employ ment of a. part of the military force of the United State:). The - withdrawal of that force ft ow its proper duty of defending the country again•zt foreign foes or -the sava.2,es of the ft wider, fn employ it for the suppression of domestic insurrection, is, when the- exigency occurs, a matter of the most earnest so lieitude. On this oNasion of imperative necessity it has been done with the I),,st results, and my snt isfactien in the attainment of such results by sueh means is greatly enhanced Sly the con sideration, that, through the wisdom and en ergy of the present Executive of Kansas, and the prudence, firmness mot vigilance of the , military officers on duty there, tranquility has b.!eti restored without one drop of . blood hay lug beep shed in its accomplishment by the foyers of the United States. The restoration of comparative tranquility in that Territor • furnishes the means of_oh- serving calmly, and appreciating at their just value, the events which occurred there. and the discussions of which the government of the Territory has been subject. We perceive that controversy concerning its future dootestie institutions was inevitable: that no human pruience, no form of legi,la tion, nu wisdom on the part of Congress, could have prevented this. It is idle to suppose that the particular pro- visions of their organic law were tho cause of agitation. Those provisions were but the oc casion. or the pretext of nn agitation, which was inherent in the nature of things. Con greAs legislated upon the subject in such terms civil freedom, is to suppose them to have cea- then is fonn convenient and salutary. Te e :•, •• b_e_e_apable of self-government. :The syste* of granting an honor:11,1e discter to_ President of the U. States has cot power to faithful seamen on the expirati on of' tl e perir d interpose in elections - to see to-theirs --freedoniesof their enlistment,sand-pet mit-ling-them to canvass their votes, or to pass upon theii le-. enlist after a leave ofabsence of a feu - A:nomho, gality in the Territories any more than iii the ' without cessation of pay, is highly beneficial States, If he had such power the government rin its influence. The apprentice 'system' re /night he republican in forin, but it would boa I cently adopted is evidently destined to ineor monarchyin fact; and if he had undertaken to porate into the service a large number of our exercise it in the .case of Kansas, he would countrymen hitherto so difficult to procure.— have been justly subject to the charge of usur- Several hundred American boys are now ,on a pation, and of violation of the 'dearest rights of . three years' cruise in our national vessels, and the people of the United States. • will return well trained seamen. In the ord.- nance department there is a decided and grad ' Unwise laws, equally with irregularities at elections, are, in periods of great excitement, fying indication of progress creditable to it the occasional incidents of even the freest and and to the country. The suggestions of the hest political institutions. But all experience Secretary of the Navy. in regard to further im demonstrates that in a country like ours, where' provement in that branch of the .service, I the right of self constitution exists in the coin- i commend toyour favorable action. pletest form, the attempt to remedy unwise i The new frigates ordered by Congress ere - legislation by reeort to revolution, is totally out t now afloat, and two of them in active service. They are superior models of naval architecture, of place 4 inasmuch as existing, legal institu :ions afford more prompt and efficacious means and with their formidable battery add largely for the redress of wrong. to public strength and security. I confidently trust that now, when the peace- I concur. in the views expressed by the Sec- - ftd condition of Kansas affords opportunity for rettiry of the Department in favor of_ a_still celin reflection and wise legislation, either the fUrther increase of our naval force. legislative Assembly of the Territory, or Con- The report of the Secretary of the Interior gress, will see that no act shall remain on its j presents facts and views in relation to internal statute-book violative of the provisions of the • affairs over *hid) the superviiiion 'of his de- Constitution, or subversive of the great objects partment extends, of much interest and, im tor which that was ordained and established, portance. • and will take all other necessary steps to as- I The aggregate sales of the public lands, du sure to its inhabitants the enjoyment, withoia col ring the last fiscal year. amount to 9,227,878' obstruction or abridgment, of all the constitu- acres ; for which has been received the snm dotal rights, privileges, and immunities of cit- lof $8,821,414. During the same period there izens of the U. States, as contemplated by the have been located, wi'h military scrip a n d organic Pawofthe l'erritorv. Full information land-warrants, and for other purposes; 30,100.. in relation to recent events in this Territory 1230 acres, thus making a total aggregate of will he found in the doeuments communicated , 39,328,108 acres. On the 30th of September herewith from the Departments of State &War. last, surveys had been made of 16,873,699 I refer you to the report of the Secretary of 1 acres; a large portion of which is ready fur the Treasury for particular information concern-'1 market.' ing the financial condition of the Government,l The .suggestions in this report in regard to and the various branches of the public, service the complication and progressive expansion of connected with the Treasury Department. the business of the different bureaux of the During the last fiscal year the receipts from department ; to the pension system ;to the customs were, for the first time, more than 64 colonization of Indian tribes, and the recent dol lars, awl from all sources, $73,918,- I mendetions in relation to variousirnprovements 131 ; whirl) the balance on hand up to the Ist in the District of Columbia, are especially of July, 1855, made the total resources of the commended to your consideration. • year to amount to $92.850,117. The expert- The report of the Pestnatt.ster General pre enures, including $3,000,000 in execution of 1 seats fully the condition of that department the treaty with Mexico, and exeludimg sums{ of the, Government. Its expenditures for the paid on -account of the public debt, amounted j last fiscal year. were $10,407,868 ; and its ro $60.17:2.401 ; 'and, including . the latter, to', gross receipts s7,62o,Bol—making an excess $72.948.792, the payment on this account hav-i of expenditure over receipts of $2.78;,046. ing amounted to $l-.2,776,390. The deficiency of this department is thus $744,000 greater than for theyear ending June On the 4th of March, 1853, the amount of 11 the public debt we's-569,1 4 9,037._ _'ritere_witsi 30. 1853. Of this deficiency. 'ik330.00 is to. a subseqiient increase of $2.750,000 for the debt of-Texas—untidir a total of $71,879,937. Of this the sum of $45.525,319, including pre 'num. has beendischarged. reducing the debt to 30,737,1.29; all which in igh ehe paid within a year without embarrassing the public service, but being not yet due. and only redeemable nt the option of the holder. cannot be pressed to payment by the Government. On examining the expenditeres of the last five years. it will be seen that the average.. de deeting payments on account of the public debt, and ten luilhcus paid by treaty to Mexiect. hav been but ahem $48.000,000. It is believed that, under an economical administration of the government, the average expenditure for the ensiiiiig five years will bet exceed that sum, II tileAr4 extraordinary occasion for its increase should occur. The acts granting bounty lands will soon have beim executed, while the extension of our frontier settlements will cause continued demand fir lands and augnierited receipts, probably, from that Broome. These considerations will justify a reduction of the revet.ne from eustotils, sons not to exceed 48 or *50.000.000. ,1 think the exigency for smelt reduction is imperative, and again urge it upon the consideration of Congress. The amount of reduction, as well as the manner of effecting it, are- questions of great and general interest; it being essential' to in. dustriel enterprise and 'the public prosperity, as well as the dictate of obvious justice, that the' burden of taxation be made to rest as e qually as pol-sible upon all classes, and all sections and interests of the country. I have heretofore recostunetided to your eon; siderarien the revision of , the revenue laws, prepared ander the diFetlian of the Secretary of the Treasury, and also• legislaticin upon some special toe -stems affectinz the business of that more especially the eitactinen t of a law to punish the abstractien of official books or papers from the files of the govern ment, and requiring all such books and pa pers and all other public property to be turned over by the out. going Officer to his successor ; of a law respiring disbursing officers to deposit° all public money in the vaults of the treasurror in other ,legal de positories, where the same are conveniently accessible • and a law to extend existing_ penal provisions to all persouS,who may be come possessed of public money by deposite or otherwise, and who shall refuse or neg lect, on due demand, to pay the same into the treasury. 1 invite your attention anew to each of these objects. The army, during the past year, has been so constantly employed 'against hostile In dians in various quarters, that it can scarce ly• be said, with propriety •of language, to be a peace establishment. Its duties have been satisfactorily performed, and we have reason to expect, as a result of the year's operas ions, greater security to the frontier inhabitants than has been hitherto enjoyed. Extensive combinations among the -hostile Indians of the Territories of Washington and Oregon, at one time threatened the devastation of the newly formed settlements of that remote portion of the country.— From recent information, we are permitted to hope that the energetic and successful operations conducted there will prevent such coro_binations • in future, and Reuse to those Territories an opportunity to make steady progress in the development of their agricultural arid mineral resources. Legislation has been recommended by me previous occasions to cure defects in the .sisting organization, and to increase the fheiency of the army, and further observa tion has but served to confirm me in the iews then expressed, and to enforce on my mind the conviction that such measures are not only proper but necessary. I have, in addition, to invite the atteti lion of Congress to a change of policy in the distribution of troops, and to the necessity of providing a more rapid increase' of the military armament. Fur details of these nd other subjects relating to the army, I refer to the report of the Secretary of War. The, condition of the navy is not merely , atisfaztury, but exhibits the most gratifying -videteres of increased vigor. - As it is com paratively small, it is more important that it hould be efficient in the character of its oth ers, in the zeal and discipline- of its men, in he reliability of its ordnance, and itt the ca pacity of its ships. In all these various qual• itics the racy leis made great progress within the last few years The execution of the law of Congress. of February 28, 1855, "to pro mote the effielency of the navy," has been at tended by the most advantageous results.-- be law fur" prorating discipline =Oil the be attributed to the• additional compensation, allowed postmasters by thooet t.f Congres of June 22, 1854. Theomail fatillties in every part of the country, have been very nataeh iu• creased in that period. and the - large addition oUrailroad service, amountirg to 7903,' has added largely to the cost of transportation. The inconsi(lerable augmentation of the in— come of the Post Office Department under the. roduced rates of- postage, and its increasing expenditures, must, for the present, make it dependent to some extent. upon the treasury for Support. The recommendatit , Nns of the. Postmaster General, in relation to the aboli tion of the franking, privile:4e, and his_view3 on the ebtablislunent of mail stcamship lines,' deserve thevoinsideration of Congress. I also• call the special attention of Congress to the statement of the Po.itninster General respect— ing the sums now I aid for the trans', ortation of mails -to the Panama Railroad ComptliV, and commend to their early- and l a vocable, consideration the suggestiwo: of that officer in relation to new contracts ler ni.iil tr. asporta. tioa upon that route, and of-a , ui . .toz. the Te— huantepec. and Nicaragua tls,. The United 'States continue in th , ! rnov ment of athicable relations ‘ttli all foreign powers. When my last annual mesFne was trnns mitted to Congress,/two sulieet., isfeoun (ever ay, "one relating to the 'enlistment of soldiers in this country, for foreigo service, ?lad the oth er to Cestral America, threatened n+ , disturb good understanding between thetn . ted its. 0111 Great Britain. Of the progress and tor ou'siation of the former quust:oo• ou were in formed at the time ; and the other is now :rt• the way of satisfactory adjustment:. The (qect of the convention betw9on the. United-States and (great Britain of tikehtli of April, 3850, was to. secure, for the- benefit of all nations, the neutrality and the amomon" use of any transit way, or interocennio com munication, across the isthmus of linama,, which might be opened within the limits'or Central America. The pretension subsequent ly asserted by Great Britain to dominion or control over territories,. in or near two of the routes, those of Nicaragua and Honduras, were deemed by the United States, not niere -I.y incompatihte with tLe main object of the treaty, but oppressed even to its express stip-, u attons,--Oec sivo.---6>f—eontrolus - point has been! removed 6 , y an additional - treaty, which am nainistes at Lonaim has, concluded, and which will he immediately submitted to the Senate for its consideration.. Should the proposed - supplemental arrann.'"e ment be concurred in by alt the parties to be-, afrected by it, the objects eontemphited by tilt:- original convention will have been fully at tained. The treaty between the Urriteil States and . Great Britain of the. sth of June,lBs4, which went into effective operation in 1855, put an end to causes of irritation between the twv countries, by securing to the United States the right of fishery on the coast of the British North American provinces, with advantages equal to those enjoyed by British subjects. Besides the signal benefits of this treaty to a, large class of our citizens engaged in a pur suit connected to no inconsiderable degree with our national prosperity and strength, it has had a favorable effect upon other interests in the provision it made for reciprocal free dom of trade between the United States and the British provinces in America. The exports of domestic articles to those provinc. s during the last year amounted to more t an twenty-two m► ►on ( 0 ars, excee'- ing those of the preceding year by nearly seven million dollars ; and the imports there from during the same period amounted to more then twenty-one million—an increase of six million upon those of the previous year. The improved condition of this branch of our commerce is mainly attributable to the- above-mentioned treaty. Provision was made in the first article of that treaty for a commission to designate the mouths of rivers to which the common right of fishery, on the coast of the United States and the British provinces, was not to extend. This commission his been employed a part of two seasons, but without much progress in accomplishing the object for which it was in stituted. in consequence of a serious difference of opinion between the commissioners, not only as to the precise point where the rivers terminate, but in many instances as to what constitutes a river. These difficulties. how ever, may be overcome by resort to the umpir age provided for by the treaty. The efforts perseveringly proseruted since the commencement of my a dministration to relieve our trade to the Baltic from the exar.•,- , tion of Sound dues by Denmark have not yet been attended with suecess. Other g;)vern 'neut.: have-also sought to obtain a like relief to their commerce, and Denmark ‘77l!+ thus in duced to propose an arrange ter.; to all the European powers int oiest ed in the ; and the manfferirrwhich her proposition was received, warranting her to believe that a bat- E