THE PEOPLE'S JOURNAL. ES JNO. S. MANN, I EDITOR . ; EDWIN HASKELL, FIDELITY TO THE PEOPLE CO - 135ERSPORT, FRIDAY, JULY 21, 3&4. Circulate the Documents. ._ L. 7" The importance of the present Cam• pejo induces us to make the follwing offers, for the sake of placing the facts in the hands pt f ' a s n J t u h u e r p a e l o p f l o e r . tw W el e v e w w i ek fu commencing - 'July 22,f0r the following torms: One copy, ....$ .25 Five copies, to ono address, LOU Eleven copies, " " 2.00 & AvEnr, Publishers. The Now York Tribune strong ly recommends the election of HENRI WAnu BLECIIER to Congress. I:7 The very able address of the anti-Nebraska members of Congress will be found on the fourth page this paper. We hope no person will overlook a document of so much im portance. ICl' Those persons desirous of im proving their stock, and every farmer ought to be, will do well to enquire of Samuel. M. Mills, who can give val uable inti,mnation on this subject. Ea" The crops in this section are suffering terribly for want of rain, except corn, which holds out remark ably. The hay crop is nearly a dead loss, and great injury is done to the proSperity of the county, by the un heard-of dry weather. rr Mercury stood, on Wednesday afternoon last, at 100 in the shade for two hours, and was at 93 at 4 o'clock. such a thing was never known in this county before, 12F The Vannatter boy committed to jail fur stealing, sonic , weeks ago, broke out on Tuesday night last, and has gone to parts unknown. rir Titus Lossey, for some years rather prominent in this county, has been convicted of counterfeiting the coin of the United States and sen_ tenccd to five years imprisonment in the Penitentiary of New York. We have been expecting to see a virtuous expose of this matter, by the parties who made such a blaze about the un fortunate ruin of a poor mechanic's son of this town, but look in vain for any notice of the matter, and.we must conclude it is only the crimes of poor men's sons, that some people think worth exposing. rF" We send a large number of the present issue of the Journal to those who are not subscribers, at the request of various active friends of the cause, in order to distribute certain facts in relation to the Nebraska question which no Bigler paper thinks it safe to let the people see. Ist, there is the speech ofSenator G illette, which speaks language the• people will be glad to hosr. Then there is the address of the Anti-Nebraska members of Con gress on the fourth page which every man ought to read and then lay up for future reference. There arc the res olutions of the Wellsboro meeting, which every democrat ought to read and ponder. Then there is an edito rial entitled "Party vs. principle," which we fancy contains more truth on the Nebraska question, than any administration paper would dare tell. Knowing the sincerity of the mass of the people, and their anxiety .to learn the whole truth and do their whole duty, our friends have thought it ad visable to send out a large extra edi tion. The same thing may be done frequently between this and election, so that those persons not subscribers who may receive the Journal, need not think we are begging subscribers. We am only trying to lay the facts of history before all the people. Hunker leaders invariably shun the truth. Progressive men do their ut most to spread it as freely as possible, knowing the heart of the masses is ever ready to receive it, and that free dom 24.11/ triumph. THE AGITATOE We have received the first number of a paper bearing the above title, and published at Wellsboro, Pa. ; M. H. Cubs, editor, and W. D. Bailey pub- lisher. The Agitator takes the place ." 1 of the Wellaboro Advertiser, and-is in part the result of the great effort of the people of the North to harmonize all the elements of freedom into one great party for the Overthrow of avery. • .We hail . the appearance of the Agi tator with unusual , pleasure, for al- though the Advertiser was a consistent Temperance and anti-Nebraska paper, et being a Whig organ, •it was not as bold in the assertion - of truth, as the exigencies of the times demanded. The new paper, fortunately for the cause of progress in Tioga county, has secured the services of W.D. Bailey, editor of the Advertiser, as publisher, and will therefore have all the strengtl of the old paper, with the addition. of all that a determined, faithful, necom plished and hopeful young man, who wields a graceful pen, can give it. . The following, extract front the in troduction of Mr. Cobb, will give our readers an idea of the important, aid which may be expected from the new paper in Tioga county. We hope every friand of Temperance, and every hater of oppression in our sister coun ty, Avill give the Agitator a generous and enthusiastic support. The following is the extract from Mr. Cobb's opening, which t-e heartily endorse: 'With the perfidy of Arnold Douglas fresh in the public mind, can ue allow the present to bear record of moral cowardice and crimi nal neglect of duty ? If the men of To-day fold their arms, the men of a coining genera tion must blush for them; but if they stand up to their duty, posterity will honor them. .1f we are united at the North, the superstruc ture of slavery, reared as it is upon a sandy foundation, must go down. It is only through ' internal distention that a final triumph of Right over the most stupendous wrong of the nineteenth century can be retarded. We acknowledge no- allegiance and yield no homage to any party as a party ; and when an- honest adherence to principle ceases to recommend us to public patronage, we shall abandon this profession and choose one. that can be retained without a loss of self-respect. But there will be no steessity for this; the public mind is ripe for reform. Men are tired of following demagogues blindfolded. A better spirit is leavening the masses. The rights and dignities of faeemen are better ap preciated now than ever before. NV hat were once considered as priveleges, simply, are' now come to be recognized as imperative and sacred duties. " Democracy," as it is " believed and prac ticed," is bat the ass in the lion's skin. It was once thought progressive ; it is now proud retrogressive. We do not remember when it moved forward, though it revolves around the star of self-interest as does the earth around the sun. True Democracy is just taking firm root in this Northern soil. It oFr.stAtos dag laity roues ama Bradford, and we come to help water the germ already quickened in Tioga. This is our object, and our motto—" Heaven prosper the• Right." We have adopted a name indicative of the course we intend to pursue. Without agita tion, no good thing ever accrued to Man. It gave us Christianity in the place of bigoted Phariseeistn, the Reformation, erected this nation into a powerful independent state from a dependent colony, and with the blessing of Providence upon the efforts of good men, it shall yet strike the fetters from the limbs of the millions who groan beneath the driver's lash and the iron rule of Intemperance. We cannot close this article with out again bearing testimony to the honorable and upright manner in which the Advertiser was conducted by Mr. Bailey, and we trust his present con nection with the press will prove fIS pleasant and profitable as his former one was high-toned and useful. 'the following extract from Brother Bai ley's valedictory points in a felicitous manner to the duties of to-day, to wit: union among freemen for the sake of freedom: Recent events of a national character, have, in our opinion, rendered the publication of a strictly party paper no longer necessary. The Agitator will Mei- front its predecessor only in being less disinctive and better cal culated in its new form to bring about the end for which every friend of his country should labor, viz: tie expulsion of slavery from free soil. It will support Judge Pollock for Governor, and strive to make the coming campaign upon Temperance. and anti-Ne braska issues. PARTY vs. PRINCIPLE The old line Democracy of .this county have called the usual, and regular party Convention. This .is just as we expected; but we desire to ask the rank and file of the party, who mean something when they say they are against the repeal of the Missouri Compromise, if it is what they ex pected. how is the restoration of the Missouri prohibition of Slavery to he restored by sustaining the men who carried the repeal of that measure ? The repeal of the compact which secured Nebraska and Kansas as free 'States forercr, could not have been carried without the almost undivided vote of the old line Democracy of Pennsylvania; and this vote 'was se cured in Congress because the Admin istration men in the Legislature of Pennsylvania refused to pass the Senate resolutions condemning the monstrous fraud on the free States. And when the Convention met which re-nomin. ated William Bigler for Governor, the eleven members of Congress froth this State, who were watching to see if it was safe-to g 8 with the President and against the people, were encouraged .to.go with the: Isr"esiifent "in forcing upon the people of the ?Forth_ this odious measure. The Convention; in full view of the fact that the' great crime was about , to be committed iii Congress, passed a long string of reso lutions endorsing the President,- Sena tor Brodhead, who bad just voted for the bill in the Senate, and •various . . other little things; but not a Word in relation to this greatest of all political cpiestiens," did the 'Convention say. Everybody knew that the influence of the Convention was for the Nebraska bill, and everywhere through the State anti-Nebraska Democrats are uniting with all opponents of that measure without reference to their previous party connections, bevuse of this state of things. We do not believe a single intelli gent man in the State • bus a doubt of the fact that a - vote for William Bigler,- or for any party man on that ticket, is a vote in furor of the .Nebraska swin- die. Hon• can there be a doubt Senator Brodhead 'voted for that bil and yet the party in State COnvention approve his conduct. Eleven members in the otheillouse, all old line demo crats, voted for that bill, and the party approre.their conduct. But to make the question perfectly clear, every prominent Bigler paper in the State not only openly and brazingly sup ports that measure, hut they boast of it as a party triumph. Now, as the mass of those who voted for William Bigler at the time of 'his election are earnestly opposed to the N6braska outrage and to the extension of SlaverY, we again ask them how they. can, with a shadow of consistency, sustain the party that carried that measure through, and. the organization Vhich is the only obstacle to 'the restoration of the Missouri Compromise. Suppose- the _County Convention to assemble on the sth of August should. pass some milk-and-water resolution against the Nebraska bill, what will it amount tol What do the slaveholders or their allies care flir your resolutions, so long as you come ti; the polls and rote for their men ? Is there, then, 111t,s vention which is worked by the same machinery that forced' through the Nebraska bill in defiance of the public opinion, is to go against your princi.: pies? Of course this language applies only to those Donarats who are hen est/ y opposed to the triumph of tIL! Slave Power, and has no reference to those men who allow personal feelings to control their votes, or who care more for the triumph of party than the preservation of their principles. To this class we have nothing to say, for no arguments would influence them; but the former class we ask to read the Wellsborough resolutions; hear the-counsel of Hon. David Wil mot, the N. V. Evening Post, and all other Jeffersonian Democrats. These all concur in saying that the only safety for freedom, is for freemen of all parties to unite in'its defense. Will you hearken to reason, or to party? That is the question. • One other question: _What single good will you accomplish by voting for the party" In a day or two, a call will be issued inviting all opponents of the Nebraska outrage in this county to cooperate for the purpose of restoring the Nis souri Compromise, and for the repeal of the Fugitive Slave bill. We sub mit that this is the only way for earnest men-, who mean what they say, to act. Wo appeal to the better judgment of all, to throw aside prejudice and act as reason prompts. Do this, and all will be well. • TIOGA COUNTY IN MOTION The establishment of a new paper at Wellsborough is an indication of the progressive movement at work in our sister county, but , that is but an index. Every mail brings us letters full of enthusiasm and goad news. The papers contain additional facts, as the following from the New York Evening Post will testify; [Correspondence of the Evening Post.] The Cutout of &peal in Tioga County. WELLSBOrtO, Tioga Co., Pa., July 6, 1.85-1 I have just returned.from the fit% popular demonstration which has already been made' in this county against the repeal of the time honored Missouri Compromise.. The present meeting was presided °Vet by Judge R. G. White, and among the vice presidents were our present.democratic member of the Legis lature and the editor of the democratic county paper. I never sow a gathering ofthe masses _which seemed to express by its proeedings more earnestness and determination. The meeting was addressed lot' more than two hours and a half by Hon. David Wilmot; and he never before gave Etch general satisfac tion.. The ground - was taken that the time for talk, long resolutions, and temporizing oi - ernes to 'save theliartj; was past andliiiii; Thu resolutions, which were drawn tip by . the asst orthodox democrat, find no opposition among tho party in the county worthy of the least notice:, . r .f hey denounce the President as using corrupt influences: to accomplish a nefarious purpose, and charge the northern "representatives who supported the measure, w ith the basest treachery, and close by pledg ing themselves, to oppose. any candidates for county, state, or national otlices who are not in favor of the' iininediate restoration' of the Missouri. restriction, and also declare that the "only safety fur freedom is in the union o freemen, without regard to former political attachments." Judge Wilmot has made three speeches this week at three different mass mcetm2s iu this couhty. lie was met by Judge - Knox, of the Supreme Court, a degenerate son of Tioga, but a personal friend of Wilmot, who used all his influence to put a stop to this movement among the democracy, but his en treaties were of no more avail than if he had been .appealing to dead men. The vote for Knox when running for Judge was almost unanimous, but since coming here and at tempting to sustain Big:ell and President Pierce, he is not /treated civilly, and was not even invited to speak at-the trileeting, although formerly a popular public orator.' • I think Grow, our presentmetuber will be sent back if he will pledge hiMself to insist on restoring the restriction of slaverY. " NoW on NEVER." Judge Knox and other leading Big ler men made the same attempt to keep Wilmot quietin this county, but be is not the man to stifle his convic tions, and so he electrified a large audience with a. two . hours' sfioech, that did the heart of every friend of freedom good, and made the adn4inis tration of Franklin Pierce look a little. more contemptible than we had ever thou glit it was. • • But we have still stronger evidence of the progress of ' the people-.ofTioga in the resolutions of their meetings, which we find in the .ifirttator. The resolutions of the Wellsbore -, meeting, over which' the Hon. IL 0. White presided, are all that could be asked, and if the old line democrats here would act on the smile liberal and .honest principle, this county would give a vnanimous vote for the restora tion .of the Missouri Compromise, and there would be no sftirtber jarring. But the leaders 1 -!s-fir lave never desired to oppose this measurOn earnest—their whole object being to keep the people quiet—hence their personal slang—bitter denunciation of active free soil men, and: malignant" oar on all persons who cannot be awed into reverence fbr the upper ten,. who arc vain enough to think - that' everything said against a c,slaveholders, and pro-slavery men, nitsaits e m. So long as the party is controlled by such men, it. will have rio principles, and make no progress. To the mass of the party, who desire to vote so as to accomplish some purpose, we corn-. mend the following.resolutions, 'adopt ed by the old line . .democrats of Wells-. born. Were' we in Tioga \v i e should • zealously cooperate with all persons who, would faithfidly live tilt to the spirit of these resolutions, and we ask all 'persons in this county, who mean anything when they talk against Ne braska; how they expect to resist the aggressions of slavery! Please to tell us if there is any other way than that Suggested by the Wellsboro' Demo crats, in the following truly republican resolutions. Read this last one twice: &Merit; Tint the repeal of the Missouri Compromise, so far as it was accomplished by Southern votes, was a breach of faith ; and, so far as it was accomplished by the influence of a Northirn President, and :the; vote. of Northern rdtresentatives, a base betrayal of .the rights of Northern freemen. Rtaolred, That as members of the Demo cratic party we protest against the interpola tion of the doctrine of slavery extension into the Democratic creed. That a doctrine so repugnant to the principles of humanity, mo rality and religion, so subversive of the rights of twin, and so dangerous to the perpetuity of our Government, cannot meet the approval of the masses of intelligent freemen in the Northern States. Respired, That the aggressive. spirit of slavery can he checked only by a manly and determined oppositiim on the part of the free population of the Northern states: That to this end rigorous efforts should be made to defeat, at the ballot box, all candidates for Office, whether County, State or . National, who are known to favor the repeal of the Missouri Compromise. That the election of Northern men to official stations who are frvorable to southern interest, (Northern men with southern principles) will be proclaimed Witte world as a Nebraska victory, and inev itably lead to the eventual triumph, of the slave power, and the prostration of the trite principles of government. Resoleed, That the President and Secreta ries of this meeting, be appointed a"committee to address such of the candidates on the Dem ocratic state ticket as hive not publicly ex pressed their views upon this subject, request -tug their opinions upon the question involved in the Nebraska and Kansas sill fully and explicitly,,and that we will not support any candidate whose answer is not in accordance with the views here expressed, and who will not pledge himself to use his utmost influence to effect are tnactment of tee Missouri Com promise. Resolred, That the Hon. G. A. GROW, our Representative in Congress, in manfully re sisting, the consummation of' the Nebraska' iniqui!..y, deserves and receives , our entire approbation. Resolved, That the Celia of Freemen, with out regard to former political attachments, is the only safety for freedom. R. G. NVIIITE, President. E. RLrx►an, Scerectzliis A. E. NILES, "Love refuses nothing that love sends." TER SPE= OF MR. OrtuTrz • the Legislature, some of whit... Th - eeititech. of Mr. Gillette, the — neW - s z ' itiiiiTy gays they, did pass i and some ly elected. United States Senator from • of Which*, he also says, they did not ConnectiCut, on ThurSdaylest; in reply past. Thus arraigning the Legislature to Mr.- Teucey. the Nebraska Senator of Connecticut before the Senate not from that State, furnishes us a foretaste only for sins •of commission, but also. of what we may expect *Om 4he men' .for sins of omission. Now, sir,. I am .who.are destined henceforth to repre- unable to see the pertinency of these sent the North in the National Legs; matters to , the i question before us.-:- .lature. ' . .—• •- < - . I How - the enactment - or non-enactment Mr.. Toney, it will be recollected, • of good or bad laws by 'the sovereign in opposition to the positive instruc- 1 authority of. a State can justify its rep , tions of the legislature of his State, I resentative in disobeying positive in ' had voted for the Nebraska bill ; upon structions to vote against - a bad law, which the legislature passed a resolu- l here in the Senate, unless it has coma tion of censure upon him. When this to pass in these latter times that, con resolution. was laid before the Senate, I trary to the Seriptire, the servant is Mr: Toucy took. the opportunity to . greeter thanthe master. justify his refusal to obey the instruc- I • Lam yet to learn whether the Leg -dons ; . and arraigned the legisla- ' islature of Connecticut is guilty of ture On the charge of "assailing the wrong doing for enacting such laws, as constitution of the United States,", in they in their wisdom may think best. diet. - act for the protection of persons The honorable gentleman has corn-- claimed under the fugitive slave law. istented upon some acts which they did —La,nrariter Whig. . not enact, and upon some which they In reply, Mr. Gillette, after some did, among which he gave particular preliMinary remarks, said : prominence to an act for the def:nse It May not be unprofitable, -in the of, Liberty. This, in his judgment con first plate, to enquire-what is the cause filets with the Fugitive Act, fir this of the disagreement between my lion- safety of which lie is alarmed. Now, orable,colleag,ue and the State which Sir, I would not do my collegue the we represent ? WhY has this un- injustice to compare myself Nvith_ hinx happy difference, to use no stronger in legal science; but 1 have given some. term, arisen between a sovereign State attention to the law to which he haw and one of its representatives on this taken exception, since I saw it her , floor ? It it one of the bitter fruits of aled through the country as nullifica-• the last great peace measure which tion, and I have not been able to dis was to settle all agitation fir all time cover anything in it that needs to er in the country. It had its origin in ite the apprehension; of the most vigi the Overthrow of the Missouri Corn- i last sentinel of the _Fugitive Act. I promise. This is the pestilence-box i have consulted several eminent cis i -1 out of which it sprung. I will state I limas in relation to it, all of whom lava .the facts as briefly as- possible in rela- ; assured me that it conflicts with no tion to the matter. •The . prop e sition law of the:United States, and I think to Violate the puliefilith 5Y the abro- I can safely challenge those who assert gation of that Cmnpromilie i thus break- 1 to the contrary to :produce the proof. ing`aown the last'barrier against Slave • But without detainslig the Senate upolt ry to all. the Territories of the 'United this point, I would here raise the ques- States and leaving them wide ()Pen to tion whether under the Constitution its dark inundations, Territories which of. the United States, Connecticut lasi. had ibeen considered forever free by , not as much right to enact laws for the what was 'considered at the time to best protection of the rights of her people a solemn and irrepealable' l :Mimpact-- - C, as South Carolina has to enact laws , startled - the good people of Vonnecti-:: fir die destruction of the rights of her cut from their shindies:: and rallied people ! ' Whether freedom_may not thesis to the polls at _their late State as %veil be protected tinder the , Con election in April, and the ballot-box • stitutien as well as slatery ? Cannot I rang out an • 1 . • 'N " This was Connecticut lie indulged a little with ini ignant . IL the great issue at that eleetion, rural the pri‘ hog,' of. -protecting the rights r nevewas.there a political revolution and liberty of her own people in any State more co mildew and signal. upon her (own soil, %Olen a part of It I was, attended with no storm of I. theM at least have no protection er poptfar excitement. It was conducted cept such as is furnished by prison with remarkable moderation and calm- walls in certain other States of this ness—hardly a leaf trembh.l in the Union ? Oh, Mr. President, has it breeze. It was the natural. spontane- ' conic to this, that we of the North are oils uprising of the people to avert a all centralized, a bsorbedonelteddown, • great impending calamity and save su allowed up, consolidated into this I: theinselvs and their 'country from its great central -usurping government, ' I disastrOus - consequences. Outside, of and . the Northern States are mere rips - thepale of Goverumental officials:sliesc pinidages,—shorn and rayless sate!- was hardly a voice of dissent. The re- Sites, to revolve around this.all-absorb sult, Sir, was what we should natural- in! , center, in borrowed light.. God ly expect. Both branches of the leg- turbid. s'fo this ntiimentou question, islature were overwhelmingly opposed Contiecticut, '1 -rejoice to say, trne to to the odious measure. Sion after her ancient fame, as the vigilant chain- I convening, early in the month of May, pion of State rights, and mindful of the subject was brought up and reso- her grand historical eminence as a de- Macon; presented dtclarints it to be a I fender of liberty, answers No. I feel . violation of the public faith, destrue- i somewhat as the great friend of Amer tiVe of mutual confidence, subversive ~ ira and Libsrty felt when giving voice of the fundaniental .principles of na- to these words -in the British Parlia - tional justiCeAnd threatmong the sta- ; meat in 1176 : •' 1 rejoice that Amer-l. ' bility of this Government, and they i'• ica has resisted. Three millions of; instructed their Senators, and earne it- I " people so dead to all the feelings of ly requested theirsltepresentatives to I "liberty as voluntarily to submit to Oppose it by all 'honorable means and I " Slavery. would have been fit instill 'to the last extremity. The'se resolu-,I " meats to make slaves 'of the rest." - firms passed the - House by a vote of Ido rejoice that in the great conflict nearly three to one; and in the Senate i between democracy and despotism, With only a single neigal'ive. I submit ni)w begun in good earnest, Connecti to the consideration of honorable Sen- cut has been so prompt to take her ators whether there was ever a fairer, pOsition on the side of Freedom. and , fuller, more explicit and authoritative : to call upon us to restore this-govern expression of the. popular sentiment ; neat to the - old foundation on which. I of any State anywhere, at any time, on 1 her Ellsworthand -Sherman were so any question. The . legislature six- - I active in establishing it, and - separate pressed the sentiments of the people of ' it from Slavery at once arid finever. Connecticut on that momentous ques- i She had done with all comprprnises, I the'. There was hardly a discordant I with the perfidious violators and echo from any quarter of the State.— i haughty contemners of the public faith. ; These re aolutions were duly forwarded and now says, return tic the early pol -Ito Congress. The dreaded bill soon I icy of this Government, that --of dis came from the I louse with an amend- : couraging,. restricting and discounte -1 malt for the final arti_on of the Senate, I mincing Slavery everywhere, under itsi and what did my honorable colleague? 1 jurisdiction. She calls upon us to dis- It is known to the Senate and the coon- i card the vile and contemptible. dogma I try—on the memorable night of the I thatishe Constitution of the — Fluted Ifinal vote, a few moments before the States is a shield of Slavery or anywise 1 qusstiim was put—he arose in his soft : countenances that most cruel and ter -1 with characteristic deliheration, and I rifle despotism-that has ever crushed informed the Senate that he was under r hunianity. . A despotism which denies instructions to vote agbilist the WI, the natural right of a man to his own 'but lie had deserinined to disobey the , body, a husband to hi; own wife, of a instructions of an Abolition \'hie father to his own child ; which sells Legislature, and vote for the bill—a husband, wife and child separate or beautiful exposition of the doctrine of I together in the market place ; which popular sovereignty, by one of its dis- I asserts chattlo Slavery to be a Divine linguished advocates. Hardly had the I and Democratic institution, and so last word for popular , sovereignty. hill avows its purpose indefinitely to cis- Kansas and Nebraska died away upon . tend and forever to perpetuate the ter his lips, before lie arises in the Senate I rifle curse. I thank God, Sir, Con- I chamber, scouts tile, popular sorer- I neeticut is washing hands from this i eignty of hiS own State as an Aboli- I bloOd, and calls upon 'us in her old 1 tion \Vhig sovereignty, and assumes' voice of freedom, to cleanse' this Go autocratic povereignty in opposition 1 vernment from its guilty, praticipation and•defiance of the popular sovereign- in the 'diabolical Work of enslaving ty. 'This is a simple and unvarnished and imbruting man. She invokes us to statement of the case. Never was disabuse the . Constitution of the ,mis a: fuller, - fairer, more explicit, authora- erable dogmas which slaveholders have tive expression of the poular will; and foisted into it. toserve their own nefa- I leave it fof others to say whether rious purPoses, and to restore it to the there ever was a more audacious and original construction in' which. its contemptuous violation of public sen- illustrious framers conceived and es thnent. In regard to the good old tablishecl it, not 90 much as admitting Democratic doctrine of the obligation into it;tccording to Madison, Sher of the representivb to obey the will of I man asd oti:ers, the blasphemous idea his consumer's, I have nothing. to say. I that man Can hold 'property in man. I leave- the Honorable Senator with- She in•v•ike3 us to return to the origi- Jefferson andl4constituents: But ply 1 nal policy of th? Governrnent, inaugu honorabre colleague' has seen fit to, ratvd by Jefferson, andinterdict Slave take sanctuary in certain other acts Of I , ry on every rod of territory under its : • . LI 13