VOL,HIE SZ. NEW SERIES. TEE BEDFORD GAZETTE tS PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY MORNING BY MEYERS in BEN L ORD, At the following terms, to wit: $1.50 per annum, in advance. $2.00 " 44 if paid within the year. $2.50 " if not paid within the year. K7~No subscription taken for less than six months, paper discontinued until all arrearages are paid, utiles at the option of the publishers. It has heen decided by the United States Courts, that the stoppage of a newspaper without the payment of ar rearages, is prima facie evidence ot fraud and is a criminal offence. [CF'The com ts have decided that persons are ac. countable for the subscription price of newspapers, f they take them from the post office, whether they iubscrihe for them, or not. SPEECH OF HON. ALEXANDER H. STEPHENS, OF GEORGIA, IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES, FEBRUARY 12, 1859. The House having under consideration the bill providing for the admission ot Oregon Mr. STEPHENS, ot Georgia, said : Mr. SPEAKER : I do not know that T can say anything that will add force to the argument already marie in behalf of the admission of Ore gon. It is my purpose, However, to contribute what I can to that end. And if I fail in my wish, it will be because my ambition is not e qual to my zeal. Apart from considerations ol public duty and justice to the people claiming this admission, there is another consideration which enlists my entire energies for the bill ; j that, sir, is tile opportunity it affords me, as a southern man, and one acting with the Demo cratic pai ty, to show tin- groundlessness of the charge made la.-t year, that we were in favor of putting one rule to a Slate applying with a slave-State constitution, and anothor and a more rigorous rule to a free-State application ; < that we require a larger population for the ad mission of a Slate not tolerating African sla very, than one permitting and allowing it.— The gentleman from Ohio, [Mr. STANTON,] who has just taken his seat, has reasserted that charge, in substance. Sir, I repudiated it when it was first made, and I repudiate it now.— The position of Kansas and that "Oregon are totally dissimilar: and whatever consideration ol duty, looking to the peace and quiet of that country, as well as the general welfare, may have induced me and other?, to put the popula tion restriction upon any further application from Kansas, like considerations of duty, ola higher character, acting as we now are, under existing obligations which we cannot ignore, forbid that the same representative ratio rule should be extended to Oregon. As 1 stab din my opening remarks, under existing compacts, under existing laws affirming and extending what all regarded as a most solemn compact, the ordinance oi 1787, it is, in mv judgment, a high obligation to admit Oregon so soon as she has sixty thousand inhabitants. Now, sir, before going into details, I wish to reply to the gentleman from Ohio, [Mr. STAN- ; TON,) who has just taken his seat, it 1 under stand him, and the gentleman frotn Massachu setts, [Mr. Goora.] who asked that significant question ot the Delegate from Oregon and Sena tor elect : how he would vote in the Senate on the repeal of the population clause in the Kan sas biil of last session ? both of them would be willing to vote for the admission of Oregon, provided tiiat representative ratio required of Kansas should be repealed. i hey occupy this strange position : because the Democratic par ty did Kansas at the last session, as tlu-y assume, a wrong, they will do Oi egon a like wrong at this session, by vvay of retaliation. Mr. ST A VI'ON. The gentleman misunder stands me. Mr. S TEPHENS, of Georgia. I cannot he interrupted. 1 have heard the gentleman's ar gument: so has the House ; and the gentleman and the House will hear mine. Let them stand , together. I understand the minority of the; Committee on Territories, with the gentleman from Pennsylvania [Mr. Gitotvs] at their tiead, signify a like willingness. Mr. GROW. No, sir; I stated distinctly that I would never go for the clause of the con stitution I have indicated. Mr. STEPHENS, of Georgia. Do not inter rupt me. t state the gentleman's position as it appears in his minority report. The only thing he complains of in it is the discrimination, as: he calls it, in the Kansas conference bill. The j only amendment he proposes to this bili is a repeal of that. Not a word in his report against the obnoxious clause in the Oregon constitution against negro equality. That lie passes over, and evidently seems to rest his entire opposi tion to this biil to the existing law in reference to Kansas. What has brought "this change j over the spirit of his dream" I do not know. I am glad, however, to see that there is a number j of the oth.pr side actuated by a more liberal, a . juster, and a more magnanimous sentiment.— They cannot see the logic, or the moral ot ttie j jxisit ton ol the gentleman from Pennsylvania: that because, in his assumption, tJus side ot the House did wrong last session, therefore lie will do wrong this. TQ the majority on that side, acting with the gentleman from Pennsylvania, I would put the question, how can two wrongs make a right ? If it were granted that injus- j lice was done Kansas, how can that be righted b^vpeating it towards Oregon ? That side ot the House will permit me to tell them, that by their votes to-day they will spike every gun they have fired against the Democratic party lor their alleged injustice done to Kansas, if the Democratic party did wrong to Kansas, (but T shall show that the cases are totally dissimi lar,) the Republican part}* seems disposed to day to follow suit, and do the same wrong they complain of to Oregon. If they are sincere in their belief, arid not governed solely by oppo sition and antagonism, would it not be the wiser, the betf- Hi** nobler, and more states manlike course ior them to come forward and Set ut an example of doing right, as the two \ I gentlemen from Massachusetts [Mr. THAYER and Mr. COMINS,] urged them yesterday ? But, sir, the cases are totally dissimilar; the clause in the Kansas compromise bill, refusing to hear any further application for admission j from her in case of her declining to come into the Union under her then application, with the modification of her land proposition, which we submitted, until she had a population equal to the representative ratio, may, or may not have been right, according to the opinions' of gentlemen. The policy of adopting such a geneial principle in all cases where it can be done, may, or may not be right, as gentlemen may vary in their opinions; but that question ; cannot arise in the case ot Oregon. We a p e foreclosed on that point, in the territorial organ ic act; and I appeal, not only to this side ot the House but to every side, and ask how they can get round that obligation in the territ >rial bill of Oregon, of 1848, which declares solemnly that all the guarantees, privileges, arid rights secured to the people of the Northwest Teiri tory, should be extended to the peop!eof Ore gon ? The words of the act are : 4t Src. 14. And it it further enacted, That the inhabitants ot said Territory shall be enti tled to enjoy all and singular itie rights, privi leges, and advantages, granted and., secured to the people of the Territory of the United States ! northwest of the river Ohio by the articles ol compact contained in the oidmance for the government of said Territory, on the 13th day of July, 1787, and shall be subject to at! the conditions, restrictions, and prohibitions, in said articles of compact imposed upon the people of said Territory."— Statutes at Isirge, volume 9, page 3:29. And what were those rights and privileges, guarantied to the people in the Northwest Ter- . rilory hereby secured and guarantied to the peo ple of Oregon ? Here they are : "And whenever any of the said States shall have sixty thousand free inhabitants therein, such State shall be admitted by its Delegates into the Congress of the Uuited States on an e quai footing with the original States, in a'l re spects whatsoever; and shall be at liberty to form a permanent constitution and State gov ernment : Provided, The constitution and gov ernment so to be formed shall be republican, and in conformity to the principles contained j in these articles: and so far as it can be consis- j tent with the general interests of the Confedera cy, such admission shall be allowed at an ear ti er period, and when there may be a less num ber of free inhabitants in the State than sixty thousand."— Fifth Article Ordinance 1787, Statutes at Large, volume 1, page 53. No such guarantee as this was evergiv®" , ttie people ol me Territory ol iiansar; if there had been, that representative-ratio teature could : not have been put in the conference bill with- j out a violation of plighted faith. And is there any inconsistency on this side ot the House in , adopting the representative—ratio principle, wherever it can be done, and still maintain good faith where previous obligations prevented ! Oregon is the only Teriitory to which this pre vious obligation to admit with sixty thousand inhabitants applies. Hers must be an excep-j tional case in any general rule that it may be deemed advisable to adopt lor all the other 1 er ritories for the future. Kansas stands in a po sition to take tier place with all the others, ex cept Oregon, without any just cause ol com plaint. Whether such general rule be wise ar.d proper, is not now the question; nor whether its application to Kansas at the last session was right or wrong: the question before us at tins time, is si.mt>ly whether we will discharge an existing obligation? The gentleman from Tennessee, [Mr. ZOLU COFFER,] who made one ol the minority reports, argues that the compact of 1787, extended to Oiegon by act of 1848, was not in the nature of an engagement with the people of a T-rrito- 1 ry, but with a State. The languagp, he savs, is,"whenever any ot said States," Src. Mr. Speaker, what makes a State? Is it boundary ? is it limits? is it livers? is it parallels of lati tude* ? Sir, people make States. His argu ment, to my mind, has no force. The Terri tory was defined, and the compact entered into with ttie people, with the inhabitants; and that compact was, that as soon as they had sixty thousand fiee inhabitants, they were to be enti tled to admission as a State; and further, so far as it can be consistent with the general interest, such admission shall be allowed with a less number than sixty thousand inhabitants. There is no escape from this; nor aie we without some lights as to a proper construction of these words. It is the same identical guarantee that was extended to Tennessee in 1790; and how was this language interpreted by those wfio made the compact ? How was it construed by the grpat lights of the old Republican party ? This identical question came up on the admis sion of Tennessee, the gentleman's own State. The debate on that question was referred to yesterday. There is no dodging the question no evading it. The question here, so far as pop ulation is concerned, is the same as that on the admission of Tennessee. The only fact in issue now befo:e us, is the fact that was in issue then. It is not whether ttie pioposed State has ninety thousand or one hundred thousand, but simply whether it has sixty thousand inhabitants. I will not go over the argument to show that it has. lam satisfied that there are over sixty thousand inhabitants in Oregon. I am well satisfied, from the evidence I cited the other day, that there are over one hundred thousand. There were forty-three thousand and upwards in 1855, as shown bv an imperfect census.— Five years before there were only ten thousand. In five years they had increased fuur-fold.— With a proportionate increase there would be now one hundred and thirty thousand and up wards. Bui even suppose the "crease has been partially retarded: the other evidence shows there must be over one hundred thousand. The official report shows peisonal property to the amount of $22,000,000. Suppose the peo ple of Oregon to be worth S2OO per capita of BEDFORD, PA, FRIDAY MORNING, MABCTI 25, 1859. L ! personal property—which is more than ant State in tlie Union; there would be one bun > dred and ten thousand inhabitants. I think tb ; per papita estimate of personal property a S2OO is too high for Oregon. In Georgia i where the weath per capita is greater, as showed the other day, than in any other S'..j in the Union, it is, including real and pers*-, estate together, $531 for the entire population Theaverage in the United Statps is something i over $350. Place it at $l5O io Oregon foi personal property alone, (for they own no rea estate there—no land patents have yet issued and the population will be over one hundrer and thirty thousand. These facts satisfy rru tiiat there aie mere than one hundred thousam people there. No man can doubt it seems tc me, that there are over sixty thousand; anc that is the question. Then, sir in the debate i eferred to on the admission oi Tennessee, what said .Mr. Madison on that point ? "The fact of population was the only necessa ry one ; and would gentlemen be satisfied with ; no other method of ascertaining it but such us they themselves should direct ?" He went on : "If there were the stipulated number of in habitants, that Territory could not be denied its claim of becoming a State of the Union witout a violation of rights." Again, he says that— "He himself has no doubt on the subject : the evidence was sufficient and satisfactory." And again he said : "Hut he thought, where there was a doubt, , Congress ought to lean towards a decision which would give equal rights to every part ol the American people." He said there was no doubt on his mind that there were sixty thousand people there , and that, under the compact, they w°re bound, bv all the facts lie could gather, to admit the Stale. How can tfie gentleman escape that ? Mr. Macon, a gentleman who occupied a r.igh posi tion in the Republican party of that day not the parly ot modern Republicans, but ol good old Republicans of the JefFersonian school—one oi the shining lights of the House, whose name will go down to history and Jive as long as the names ot the founders of the Republic, said ; "The question before the committee was on admitting the Territory to be a Slate in the I nion. I here appeared to him only two things as necessary to be inquired into. First, was the new government republican * It appeared to him to be so. Secon I, were there sixty thousand inhabitants in the Territory ? It appealed to him tfiere were : and if so, their - 'mission as a State shook' " Jl > ' **" a gilt, but as a right. Again, Mr. Gallatin said he— "Was of opinion that the people of the southwestern territory became ipto facto a State, the moment they amounted to sixty thou sand free inhabitants; and that it became the duty of Congress, as part ol the original com pact, to recognize them as such, and to admit them into the Union, whenever they had satisfactory proof of the fact." I cannot dwell on this branch of the subject. It is no question of ninety-three thousand here. It is no question of what is the ratio in other Territories. It is no question of Kansas dis crimination. It is the simple, naked question of fulfilling obligations. That is the whole of it. 1 have no doubt that she has sixty thousand and every man upon this floor so believing, according to this authority, is bound to vote lor tier admission. Will you do it ] But the gentleman from Ohio [Mr. STANTON] complains ol the constitution of Orecon. He complains of that article which denies political equality to the African iace ; to that part which exclude;; npgroes from voting : which prevents tiiern from exercising the lights of citizenship : especially that which denies them the right to maintain an action in their courts. The Tope ka constitution of Kansas, which that gentle man favored in I sod, excluded free negroes entirely trona the Territory of Kansas. Mr. GROW. I will correct the gentleman. TheTopeka constitution did not exclude free negroes from Kansas ; but the question was submitted to the people, as instructions to the Legislature, to pass an act of that cliaiacter. Mr. STEPHENS, of Georgia. And a majority of the gentleman's friends who adop ted tlie constitution voted to give the instruc tions. Mr. Grow. 1 make no point upon that. Mr. SI LPIIC.NS, ol Georgia. And those who profess to be exclusive friend of negroes, as they now do, so far as that constitution was concerned, voted to banish them forever from the Slae, just as Oregon has done. Whether this banishment be right or wrong, it is no worse in Oregon than it was in Kansas. But, on the score of humanity, we of the South do not believe that those who. in Kansas or Oregon, banish this race from their limits, are bettei friends of (he negro than we are, who assign them that plaee amog us to which by nature they are fitted, ana' in which they add so much to their own happiness and comfort, besides the common well-being of all. We give them a receptio*. We give them shelter. We clothe them. Wefeid them. We pro vide for their every uant, in health and in sickness, in infancy and old age. We leach them to woik. VVe educate them in the arts of civilization and the virtues of Christianity, much more effectually and successfully titan you can ever do on the coasts of Africa. And, without any cost to the public, we render them useful to themselves and to the world.— The tiist lesson in civilization and Christianity to be tauglit to the barbarous tribes, wherever to be found, is the first great curse against the human family—that in the sweat of their face they shall eat their bread. Under our system, our tuition, our guardianship and fostering care, these people, exciting so much misplaced philanthropy, have attained a higher degree of civilization than tiieir race has attained any where else upon the face of the earth. The Freedom of Thought and Opinion. ITopeka people exclude them ; they, like the neighbors we read of, went round them ; we, t like the good Samaritans, shun not their destitu | tion or degradation—we alleviate both. But Ilet that go. Oregon has, in this matter, done no worse Mhan the gentleman's friends did in Kansas. I 'hink she acted unwisely in it—that is her | business, not mine. But the gentleman from I Ohio [Mr. STANTON| questions me, how could 1 a negro in Oregon ever get his Ireedom under ; the constitution they have adopted? I tell him, under their constitution a slave cannot exist there. The fundamental law is against it. But he asks, how could his freedom ever oe established, as no free person of color can Sue in her courts ? Neither can they in Geor gia ; still our courts are open to this class oj p-ople, who appear by prochein ami or'guardian Nor is there any great hardship in this ; foi married women cannot sue in their own namei anywhere where the common law prevails.— Minors also have to sue by guardian or nexl friend. We have sui's continually in our tribunals by persons claiming to be free persons of color. They cannot sue in their own na nes, but by next friend. They are not ; and just so wiH they be in Oregon, if the question is ever raised. Mr. REAGAN. By the lawsof Texas free ne groes are prohibited from residing in that State, and hence have no right to sue in her courts ; and yet the courts there have entertained jurisdiction of suits for the liberation of free negroes, and I have assisted in the prosecution of such suits, ir. which they were declared free under writs of hnh*nx corbuus. Mr. STEPHENS, of Georgia. I understand the gentleman to say that the constitution of Texas is similar to this, and yet that her courts are opened just as I stated in reference to Georgia : and that he himself has assisted free negroes in the courts of Texas to obtain their rights. There can be no difficulty upon that score. Let me say to gentlemen on the other side of the House, no* to lay the flattering unction to their souls that they can escape- by such a pretext as that. But it was intimated hy the gentleman from Ohio, that last year we voted to admit Kansas as a slave State with a view of getting two Democratic Senators, and that our object is the sam n now in regard to Oregon. Sir, in this he is mistaken. We stood tNen, as now, upon principle. Had Kansas been admitted under ihe L-compton constitution, all of us knew that the probabilities were, that two Republican Senators would have been elected. Nor was tfey large Democratic vote in the Senate, soon I i -' '*' tK.i ft t CV—- mtoi based upon any such idea as he intimated. It could not have been. When this bill passed Ihe Senate it was not known what sort of Sena tors would be elected there, any more than it was as to Kansas. The election in Oregon had been heard from. It was a hot contest. And at the election which afterwards came offj the member who was returned to this House was p|ectd by only sixteen hundred majority. I'nder these circumstances, how can the gen tleman attribute such motives to the action of Democratic Senators ? Where is the slightest •vidence for such an imputation ? .May be the gentleman attributes to others the motives by which he himself is governed—that is, a wish 0 bring in the State under political auspices ivorabte to his own view of public policy.— May be he thinks, by rejecting tnis constitution, Ilie State may come in under a Republican in lead of a Democratic banner ; tor he said her admission was onlv a question of time. 1 will not say that Ihis is his object in opposing this bill: but I do say, for myself, that I am not gov erned by such motives a he has intimated. I will vote, whenever a State comes here with a constitution republican in form, and with a:i alligation resting upon me to vote for her iln ission, irrespective of what mav be the political cast of her Senators anil members elect 1 frill never do wrong that right may afterv.ads cone from it. Wrong dees not produce such frtits. What you plant and sow. that you reap, [will never commit an acknowledged error, hoping that good will come of 't. Good ends n>ier justify wrong means according to my code of morals. Honesty is tlie best policy in a|| ihings. Perhaps most of those on the other siil' of the House who go against this bill, do 30 barely to le in opposition. To such ] would sa7 what 1 race said to a gentleman in my dis trict. When I was going to address Hie peo ple at a particular place, meeting him on the wjv, I a'ked him if he was going to speak :he :aiil he redv wanted to know what side I was ;.pjn to 8* against it. I said "that istim reason rou are 4ways in the minority : you give me -hoice ofsides upon*all questions, and of course I take tie bpst.'* [Laughter.] Would it not be well for gentlemen on that side to consider the point, baely as a matter of political or party actios ? That gentleman was so well pleased with the -emark that he went and heard me an the ocasion alluded to, and from that day to this he las never failed to vote for me. If the oppose side will allow me, I will say to them it isiad policy in any party to oppose pverythinj barely for opposition sake. Let me entret them not to oppose this bill—as some of Him do, I fear—barely because Demo crats vote or it. By this course, you give us choice of sles in a great issue of right. One wot further, upon another subject, and I call the epecial attention of the House to ir. Tt is the objctiin raised to the constitution of Oregon on ccainl of the alien suffrage feature in it. The gentleman from Tennessee, |Mr. Zo^LicorFE.] it his report, quotes a part o< the decision of he Supreme Court, bearing upon the coistituional power of a State so to regulate suftagewithiri her own limits, but stops right ia Ve middle of a sentence. I wiil read firt tb?cvi rac t quoted by the gentle man— italics hn-and then read the whole sentence, as it snds in Chief Justice Taney's decision in the led Scott case : "The Constitibri has conferred on Congress the fight to establish a uniform rule of naturali zation, and this right is evidently exclusive, and has always been held by this court to be so.— Consequently, no State, since the adoption ot the Constitution, can, by naturalizing an alien, invest him with the rights and privileges secu red to a citizen of a State under Hie Federal Government ," &c. There the gentleman stops, with the sentence unfinished, at comma. The Chief Justice goes right on with these words "although, so far as the State alone was concern ed, he would undoubtedly be entitled to the rights of a citizen, a clothed with ail the rights and immunities which the constitution and laws of the State attached to that character." . In this the Supreme Court says, and says tru ly, that no State can make an alien by birth a citizen of the United States—that is the exclu sive right of Congress; but that each State may clothe an alien with ail the privileges and rights they see fit, within their own jurisdiction and limits. The right of suffrage, the right to de clare who shall vote at elections, is expressly reserved in the Constitution of the United States to each Slate. This (rover irnent cannot inter fere with that power. It is the last right I would have the States surrender; for upon it rest] ail the great bulwarks of State rights; and, should it ever be surrendered, no vestige of State rights would remain. Mr. ZOLLICOFFER. The comments of the gentleman l-ora Georgia upon that point of my report would produce tne impression that 1 have acted unfairly. Mr. STEPHENS, of Georgia. Ido not say i lhat. 1 cannot, however, be interrupted. 1 i have barely time sufficient Mr. ZOLLICOFFER. But let me make this I statement. I will not be two miuutes. Mr. STEPHENS, of Georgia, Be brief, ij will give you two minutes, but no more. Mr. ZOLLICOFFER. I was enforcing the j position, as asserted by the conrt, that a State :ould not confer upon unnatnralized foreigners he rights of citizenship, so far as the Federal Government was concerned ; and, therefore, 1 quoted only that portion of the sentence found ! in ihe decision, which showed that to be the po sition of the Court. Thatpoition of the sen tence is this. Mr. STEPHENS, of Georgia. 1 cannot yield any further. I have already read it. Mr. ZOLLICOFFER. Let me add the sin gle remark that, in my report, I distinctly con curred with the court in the re tnaining por tion of that sentence : that, so far as "the State alone was concerned," the State had the right to confer rights of citizenship upon unnaturali "ife'SffeffllßN'S , of Georgia. It woul I have | been much better understood, if the gentleman had quoted ttie whole of it, and given his con currence in the whole as it stands. And I must be permitted to say, that in concurring in the whole of that decision as it stands, he yields the whole question. It a State has the right to confer upon aliens all the rights of its own i citizens, so far as siie is concerned, certainly the right of suffrage is included. Air. ZOLLICOFFRR. That is,so far as the State alone is concerned. Mr. STEPHENS, of Georgia. Exactly.— The State has the control of the right ol suffrage within her limits and under her laws, accor ding to the decision of the Supreme Court.— She can say who may vote for all her otHcers ; who for Governor and who lor her State Sen ate and who for her H >use of Representatives ; and then the Constitution of the United States expressly provides that the members of this House shall be chosen or voted for by those in each Stafe who, by the constitution and laws of eech State are entitled to vote lor the most nu merous branch of the State Legislature. In ad mitting that each State may allow an alien to vote for members of the most numerous branch of their own Legislature, the gentleman yields this entire question. The language in Ctftet Justice Taney's decision immediately preceed ing that quoted by the gentleman in his report, is in these words : "Nor have the several States surrendered the power of conferring these rights and pri vileges, by adopting the constitution of the United States. Each State may still confer them upon an alien, or any one it thinks proper or upon any class or description ol persons ; yet he would not be a citizen in the sense in which that word is used in the constitution of the United States, nor entitled to sue as such in one of itsjcourls, nor to the privileges and immunities of a citzen in the other States. The rights which lie would acquire would be re stricted to the State which gave thein." Then comes the gentleman's quotation. And from the whole the principle is clear, that each State may, if she chooses, confer the right ol citizenship within her own limits and juris diction, upon an alien. But, without natural ization under the laws of the United States, this will not give him the right ot citizenship in any respect outside of that State. In it, his rights of citizenship maybe as full and com plete as those of the native born. But 1 did not intend to argue this point. I did that at the last session, on the Minnesota bill. In that argument, 1 gave the history ol this question ot alien suffrage in the Territories. I have nothing to add to what I then said.— 1 barely refer to it now, that it may be consid ered as part and parcel of what I would say on the same points, if my time allowed, to-day. Of the Presidents who, in some form or shape, had given the principle their sanction, either in the Territories or Slates, on their admission,! named Washington, the elder Adams, Jefferson, Madison; Jackson, Polk, Fillmore, ana Pierce ; and to this list may now be added that of Bu chanan, who signed the Alinnesota bill. My colleague [Mr. HILL] yesterday alluded to what Air. Calhoun said on Ihe. subject in lS3ti. 1 commented upon tiiat last year. 1 could not dnd lhat speech of Mr. Calhoun in the Globe, or any parliamentary record in the coun try. Ido not mean to say he did not make it WHOM: M MHIII 2812. ! ft was not made upon the admission of Michi gan. ft was made, if at all, when a measure was tip involving the question of suffrage in the Territory, while Michigan was still in a ter ritorial condition. The speech is said to have i been made in 1836. Michigan was ! no ' admitted until 1837. Her coostitutidn was I similar in this respect to that of Oregon. Mr. Calhoun was then in the Senate ; he did not rai-e his voice against that feature in it, as far |as I have been able to find. Not a word fell from him, at that time, on the subject of alien suffrage, that I am aware of. Mil. ZOLLICOFT ER. Allow me one sen i lence. j MR. STEPHEN'S, of Georgia. 1 cannot | yield. [ Mr. ZOLLICOFFER. Allow me but a single sentence that sentence is : that I should labor under great disadvantage, if the gentleman were even disposed to extend to me the courte sy of allowing me to reply to his points while he holds the floor. Therefore, I will not at present ask to do so. Mr. STEPHENS, of Georgia That I under stand very well. The gentleman can reply hereafter. My time will not allow me to in dulge him now. f made the speech I have re ferred to last year, expecting that it would be replied to ; but it remains yet without replv. And f cannot permit my time to-day to be ta ken up with matters there disposed of. Mr. HILL. Let me ask mv colleague a question. Is he not aware ot the votes givm by Mr. Calhoun, on the Michigan bill, against permitting alien suffrage in that state I ft was on the motion ot Mr. Clay. Mr. STEPH EN'S, of Georgia. What year 1 Mr. MILL, fa 1836. Mr. STEPHEN'S,of Georgia. Ves ; I know of his votes alluded to in 1836. Michigan was then a Territory. I repeat again, that on the admission of Michigan as a Slate next year Mr. Calhoun said nothing against the alien-sul rage feature in her stateconstitution,that 1 know of. He may have voted on it in 1536, yet in ISIS, he was on the committee that reported the celebrated Clayton compromise, which pro vided a government for this very Territory of Oregon, and that bill contained this very alien suffrage clause in it. Mr. Calhoun voted for the bill with this clause in it, in the Senate.— I have the record by me. It is not of so much importance what he said or how he voted in ISU6, when the question was fiast started, as how he voted twelve years afterward, and after mature in vestigation. Here is his vote in ISIS. I put that against his speech and his vote in IS-'KI, and let all go to the country with my colleague's comments.— I t> content. Now, Mr. Speaker, on another and entirely differ ent aspect of this question, i have something special to say to another side of the House—a distinct class in it. 1 mean the members coming from slavehoi ding Stales. There is evidently a feeling of oppo sition in that quarter to the admission of Oregon from a reluctant and manifest indisposition to in crease the number of what are called free States. This arises from an apprehension that, with the loss of the balance of power, the rights of our section u pon constitutional questions will be less secure. This may be so. It does not however necessarily follow. But that balance is already gone—list by causes be yond your or my control. There is no prospect of its ever being regained ; and, in taking that ground vou do but reverse theposit.cn of our sectional oppo nents in the other sine of the House. 1 know it is the tendency of power to enroach ; but let us look to the security which rests upon principle, rather than upon numbers. The citadel of our defense is prin ciple sustained by reason truth, honor andjustice.- Letus therefore, do justice t Lough heaven fall. Let us not do an indirect wrong, for fear that the recipient from our hands of what is proper ly due will turn upon us and injure us. Slates men in the linn ol duty should never consult their fears. Where duty leads, there we mav never tear to tread. In the political world, great events and changes are rapidiy crowding upon us. To these we should not be insensible. As wise men, we should not attempt to ignore them. We need not close our eyes, and sup pose the sun will cease to shine because we see not the light. Let us rather, with eyes and minds wide awake, look around us and see where we are, whence we have come, and where veshall soon be, borne along by the rapid, swift, and irrestibie care of time. This immense territory to the west has to be peopled. It is now peopling. New States are last grow ing up: and others, not yet in embryo, will soon spring into existence. Progress and develop ment mark everything in nature—human socie ties, as well as everything else. Nothing in the physical world is still; life and motion are in everything; so in the mental, moral, and po litical. Trie earth is never still. The great central orb is ever moving. Progress is the universal Jaw governing ail things—animate as well as inanimate. Death itselfis but the be ginning ofa new life in a new form. Our Gov ernment and institutions are subject to all-per vading power. The past wonderfully exem plifies its influence, and gives us some shadows ol the future. This is the sixteenth session that I have been here, and within that brief space of fifteen years, we have added six States to the Union lacking but one of being moie than halfot the original thirteen. Upwards of twelve hundred thousand square miles of territory— a much larger ar a than was possessed by th" whole United States at the time of the treaty of peace in 17S3—have been added to our domain. At this time the area of our Republic is greater than any five of the greatest Powers in Europe all combined ; greater than that of the Roman Empire in the brightest days of her glory more extensive than were Alexander's domin ions when he stood on the Indus, and wept that he had no more worlds to conquer. Such is our present position ; nor are we yet at the end of our acquisitions. Our internal movements, within the same time, have not been less active in progress and VOL 2, NO. 34