Trf r if if f l V ipM: T J Fdi itors & VUIi Villi. NO 'Jfi. jjc $rpuMir;ni. Terms n('Siitisrrlitlnii. jf pnlit In B'lvnnee, or within three months, If pni'l Any time within lite year, - - . f (uiiil utter tho expiration of tlio yeur, - Term of Ailirrtlsing;. 'Advertisements are iimrrtvil in tlio Hojnitilii nn it tlio folio lug rate : 1 Insertion. 2 iln. 3 tin. Tin iijnir, (1 I linos,) $ AO $ ".'i $1 mi iro squires, (2S line,) 1 (10 1 ,',0 2 III) fhroo ituirvK, ( 12 linen,) 1 M) 2 (n 2 ill ,1 months, fi inos, 12 inn. t2 .Ml $1 00 $7 00 1'wosiimres, t t 1'lm' ti ;irr 5, : Kmir iiiurt, : tl:ilf ii column, : Oiio ?"luuu, : I 4 til) tl III) 10 00 ; 5 00 0 (III : 8 110 II no 8 00 10 00 12 no 20 00 12 no I I no is no :t; no Over three weeks nrti l''ss thiui three tumuli 20 cents per square fur cnvli insertion. lliisiness notieo not e.lcoi'UIng f lines nre in sorted fur $2 u yeur. Advertisements nut niiuked with the nunilor of inir(ion desired, will hu emitiimeil till I'm bid it nil churned Recording In these terms. LA li It I M Kit & WAlil). i . " - 'rilti fur tl. Jlrimbliivn. MY "LICK RUN" HOME, My hnini' in oil Liek Hun, where the tiill pine prown, ll hero tlio Miiy-npples hluuin, 11 ml where hlus- KiniK the rose, Wliero tlio wooilii arc covcr'J o'er like a bright rvu of floweri", Ami mveet cining birJi wliile awuy tho Iml liniirK, I ivo Hint fnir ppot, where the wild rust- hlooin. Oh ! how dcnrly I clicrinli my "lloek t'uttngo'' liouie ; 0 ! n lionie on tho run, the bright sparkling run, A homo uu "l.iik Kim" for inc. Jly home in ill tho wood, where the red deer roemy, Where the Ihrimh nnd tho blno bird hnvo mtide them their home, Whero the umns mid wild linen creep over thu tree, Aud bright gretu lenvcc dimeei to (lie fon of the breeio ; Where rent the soft bennts of tho set of Iho sun, Oh ! how fondly I lore my dear lieine on the linn, A home on "lack liun" lor me. I can see tlie h In e waves of the Hiisiiiehnnna flow When tho niare of the evening in the went bright ly glow; Tho fprny and the mist from the old dam arise, And Lear her loud (inthemi ascend to the skies. With rupture I've guzedon her water's whito foam 1'iit ilearcr's the Kun by our 'llock CottiiKe' home: 0! a home on the linn, the bright ll;irhiug Hun, A home on "Lick Kun" for inc. I tore its high bills w here the dark hein'ocks rise, Where the pines teem to bathe in the blue ot the skies ; Its cool shady bowers, iu woodlands so j;roy. Where the birds go to rest at the close ofthe day. Tho' nature luilli charms for me, where'er I roam. Yet the holiest ilinj; round my "Bock Cottage" heme ; 0! a home on the Kun, tno bright smiling linn, A home on "Liek IU111" for me. I've seen Winter's fetters, by Spring nil unbound And the dark waters rush, tire ice Tush around, I've sut and fvo gazed on the waves is they'd fontu, And threatened destruction to my own loved home. Hut I dreamed of no danger, I knew of no fe or, 1 was safe in my home, in our "Collate" so denr: O ! a homo en the liun, the bright da.-hinj; Hun, A homo on "Liek Run" for me. Tho' in Clearfield I've dwult many bright sunny hours. '.Mid scenes that I loved, and bright scented flowers, With the friend of my youth so blithe and so gay, Jly lifo has been pa.sed as one happy d;iy. I would not return to my "old Cleiulield home," For dearer by far is my home 011 tho Kun ; 9 ; a home on the Hun, the bright dancing Kun, A homo on "Liek Kun'' for me. Pr.y I)kum. Mm V huh'ilo onoeeui's rolling wave. Lifo A gleam of life extinguished hy the grave. Fame A meteor ilaal:n with its dis tant glare. Wealth A source of troiihlo 11 ml con suming rare. Pleasure A gleam of sunbliine passim.: -soon away. Love A morning dream whose, memo ry gilds tho day. Faith An anchor dropped heyond the vide of death' Hope A lone star henming over the harzen heath. Charity A stream meandering from tho fount of love. Iiihlo A guide to realms of endless joy uhove. lieligion A key which opens wide the giiten of heaven. Heath A knife hy whicli th" ties of death are riven. Enrth A desert through which weary pilgrims wend their way. Grave A house of rest where ends life's weary vlAy. Resurrection A sudden wakening from a (itiiet droiun, Heaven A land of joy, of light and love supreme. B59u"lint is tho chief use of bread !" .ivsked nn examiner at a recent school ex hibition. "The chief uso of bread V an swered tho urchin interrogated, apparent ly astonished at the simplicity of the question, "tho chief uso of bread is to .spread butter and molasses on it." SeaT'A rich man once complained in n icollee-hou 0 that he had three daughters, to whom he would give ten thousand dol lars each, nnd yet he could find nolmdy to marry them. "With your leave, sir," aid an Irishman who was present, stop ping up and making a very polite bow "I'll tako tno of thelll !" 1HTA young and pretty littlo lady re marked tho other day that "a young man who didn't take a newspaper, was not do nerving of the Affection of nn amiable la dy." A bensible girl that, and if aha was for sale we would set our cap for her. J. II. T.AnitlMKR, R. FENT WARD, Jr., rublishrrg. MY LAST BALL. II V I'ltnl K-MOtt SNOIX.I: SS. Some people stand ii i in rt when they waltz, lis if they were afraid tlmt tliry had IVirtiuii matches in their pockets, ami might accidentally get up a blaze. Hlters roiiii up In tin- wm-k like martyrs, fully resolve to trust to Providence under des perate circumstances. Whicli of these modes is the most proper is not tlio qiics limi now, because tlio Ut?v. Mr. Sptirgcon lias itit liis vi'to on waltzing of every de scription. The reverend gentleman says persons, when waltzing, are very liable to entertain unholy thoughts. Now, inas imn'h as Mr. Spurgeon was telling his ex pel ielii e, it must ho tnkell as reliable tos tiiuoiiy. Ami I would add my testimony to his, ami warn the kingdom of New Jcr- -v 111 general and the rest ot Hie vuuld lit I'iH tii ular, against the jirnetieo of kicking ,,.m, and turned mv cut water in the di ii p their hoM iil time with thu ihriitions j r,.,-tioii ofthe hall. " A l-.-.i11v companv 4 .... 4 : . I iii ' " i ciii ui iiiiimi.-. I wish to warn otiicrs. oeiau.-c 1 am i competent to do so. I have partaken ol 1 the loilnddeii fruit, and know the cnn- sequences hy awful experience. I was led , into it forced, I may say hy women ; i tho-e Lewi teh i iil' imps, who have had their fingers in every pie, since the. lirst apple-j dumpling was made in the garden of Kden, j I will tell the reader how it happened: I I am 11 native of the United States, and i when I first dumped my dunnage in this . kingdom I was innocently ignorant of all j sueli customs as tairpri.se parties. Well, . soon after easting anchor in New Jtrutis-' wick, I was inducted into the mysteries; of a performance that seduced me from tho j path impropriety, and hrought on a fever j that allows me no rest day or night. hie , dark, rainy night, after I was snug in Led, ! a faint rapping was heard at the front I door. My wife opened the door, and in rushed eicht ladies, and ns many Kcntle-i man, acconijinnied hy a dancing master, with a line fiddle uudcr his arm, and with out as much as saying "how's the folks?" they galloped into the parlor and made themselves perfectly at home. On learn ing that 'the mini of the house' was in hed, one of the ladies opened the hed-room j door and henovolenUy informed 1110 that if I wanted any assistance ahout dressing, 1 could have it on short notice. I'eing , naturally of a modest disposition, J de- j dined the assistance of her ladyship, mid j got up snd dressed niysell. When I en tered the parlor I was lillea witti bin. I liftcd-iip my voice and says 1 "Ladies and gentleman, I urn a member of an orthodox church, in good standing" what I said after that was lost, for, just at that point in niv exhortation the blas- ' i'"" " " , , '.out ol his fiddle, and away wentthe wholo around t lie room in the polka I sat down perfee y resigned to my ate, whatever . it miL'ht be, and, alter contemplatins: the 1 scene before me lor a few minute, l" be- I came satisfied on two or three points. I First, I was sati. d.'d that thetiddlei was ' a very good player. Secondly, I was satisfied that the cers kept very good time. Thirdly anil lastly, 1 was satisfied that those einht you iii ladies, in beauty and grace fulne-,s, could not be surpassed by j any eijiial in number that ever rattled j crinoline over the llooi of a dancing room. 1 Ami there I sat exposed to the. lire of ' a battery that was demolishing the ram 1 parts behind which I had found protoc I tion through a long and very exemplary 1 life. When 1 was sufficiently fisoinnted by the artistic evolutions of the dance, i one of the ladies walked up to me with, ; "I'auce the polka air ?" at the same time j extending a hand that was too tempting j to le let alone. j I shall never blame Adam again for ; eating that apple that upset all creation, ' for I believo that Miss Kve danced the , polka or the Highland Fling, just before .he oiiered it to him. And I appeal to I the masculine reader to know what he ' would have' done if he had been Adam or . Professor Snodgr.iss. Only thing of it. j there stood a lady right before me, look 1 ing at 1110 with a pair of black eyes that I must h ive seen tno wall right turougii 1 me, and .'Lskini; me to dance. What could I do? It's 110 use to tell me what I h,,M have done. It's too late for that; but 1 ask nny man who aspires to the politeness of a baboon what he .w ouhl have done in my case. 1 remember well what I did ; I got up nnd "sailed out.'' Sometimes I trod on my partner's toes, and sometimes I didn t meiit ; there stood eight coupto mining unJ ghu :ust tol.1(yi . ti10m with the tips I'0"' l '"',lo' 1 opportunity to vote each other on the floor, ami jn one coiner )f j(eJ. fibers tltrevf iter bedy forward to1 ,or '''''''gs it "t pretended was nni- Ptood the fiddler, with his bow in his hand angle 2f fortv-twwh'grees-and trotted i vorsal or unexceptionable, hut it certainly nnd the butt end of his fiddlo under his arouml mo ln nVi,.clc fifteen feet in diam- wns iim'' c?,nsl,lorm? the eharnder of the when she was hopping, up I was hopping 1 in ol"er noJv ll'iin 1 ",1W V"'n ;, Uiele ved by the laets I have i tated. The op down ; but if I tried to stop she declared arc frosty spots 111 the. tinder-jaw depart- portuiiity to vote was sufficient. The nu I was a first rate polker, and away we ' ment of my whiskers ; but to my everlast-1 thority, therefore, of the convention was went n"rtin. lieforo midnight every lady ' g weakness be it said, that if one of, perfect, and its proceedings were regular. 11 the party had thrashed out a flooring thoso peculiar institutions called women, Mr. Doolittlo Will the Hon. Senator with me and after they had departed niv should look sweetly at me, within sound . allow me to nsk hiin a question on that wife put on her spectacles and took a long look at me, before she could believe that 1 was tho chap that used to wear such a long face sermon time. m. ih l.r.-innm.f ,S i eniible, that, would have set Job to swearing 1.1 iO A pl- rate. I havo been within half an inch of fifty eowhidings for dancing with other men's partners without leave, which is contrary to the rules of this kingdom, women be- ing considered a chattel at public (lancin parties, I look back now at the exciting scenes through which I passed, and wonder that I am alive. Fifty times I vowed never to lilt a oot 11 en in to the musio of internal fiddle, and vet I attended no less than one' hundred balls and soirees in two years. I hut sail. ; One night I went to ft Methodist revival, nnd the words of tho minister had such B3uloetick8, the funny writer, has an cll'ect on me thai 1 borrowed a liible taken unto himself a wife, and is now said mino had got mislaid in the hopo of to bo engaged in a work entitled matri mo finding something to guide my future iny and its results. .Several editions ure course. As tho devil, or tho (lancing-j contemplated. CLKAIIKIKM), PA. WKDMvSDAV AI'KliVJI, mi). llia-ter. Would hove i( I opened an I how Ihui'l dahecd (ho fall' lahgo j the Ark of the ( 'ovenant, in the sir I road !.- ol lei lisiilem, ami kieketl so high tlmt his ! wife was M'limlnliseil. I dosed the I k, smoked a penny segur, ami !elt beUcr. Alter smoking u good spell, ami medi tating a spell longer, 1 he;;oti a convetsa tion with myself, ami says I .- "Profe-sor Snodgrass, if you keep on tlrs way you will soon he a miserable old cuss, and your latter end will he too awful to think of." And then I end red into an agreement with myself to reform immediately, and for this purpose it seemed advisable to at tend the next hall, and strengthen my moral constitution, by acting as ait indif ferent spectator, ah-faining from all par ticipation in the ih'Vclti in.-- of i In.- occa "ion. 1 he next hall soon came, and mirlv in tie' e I'llill 1 Washeil luv I'aee lllirolionoii was iisciiiinci, liresi'iintl' a I'loi ;ous oti- I liol I'.'tlltV ,,,,1 fotiitv for a matt of ta-to to studv the various ntmilication human :ucl wo- nmn ituliirc, jv ,.v,.s rested first on the splendid r,,,.,,; .,,,',1 exnresive face of Man- Kit.- L'erald. She was the helle of the hall, he- ond a peradventure. it was difficult to decide which fitted the host her dress to her person, or her person to her dress. Kaeh seemed made fur the, other. And I felt a throlihing sen ation in the ,.,.; I ot the ''i..ai'il when she nrivei .... . r . . 1 throu"h I tho cotillion, willt thegrueeliildignity and elegant cae of an eastern cUecn. Thinks I to lnvsi-lf: "What a shame it is that that magnificent girl is destined, in after life, to be burdened with the little cares, and little sorrows, and the little babies of this lower world.'' 1 Next on the list stood Mai ia Irani, the ! fairy huiiunim: bird of that galaxy of' beauty. Her little feetj as they played on '. the lloor, bent forth a soli melody that fell I 011 my heart like drops of honey on a hot rock. I The band played a waltz, nnd my friend Jake, the (lancing master, disappeared 111 u cloud of imported muslin. While ex ploring for his whereabouts, 1 ls'came mentally abstracted, nnd, wliile in a stale of hnlf-way-betweenity, 1 tumbled from the tolvcr of moral rectitude into the mid dle of a "cheat and 'jig." 1 was some what oblivious till ajpung iady planted herself right before me and come tho louble pigcon-wingV 7 held out inv hands cter. llefore long, another living specimen ofthe feminine gender appeared in front of my corporosity, and when 1 held out my hands to swing her, she just lifted her left elbow to a horizontal position, leaving l(,1.iM.ltl.ibban.l ,..Xposedas much usto say : .Tll0 ,.o;l,t is (,M )l(ss ir vol, want ft ,,.,lmino j, ,,n,h. j ., ... ' , ,, ,. , Ihd you ever see a half starved jnekas wtilk into a hay-stack ? If you did, you gather a faint idea of how I walked into the exposed territory o! that lauy s i dan- physical department. .My arm cireum ' navigated her wai.-t in the twinkling of a lamb's lateral appendage, nnd maybe her skirts didn't snap before 1 restored her to the perpendicular. I am not responsible for what occurred 1 after that, for 1 was as powerless to resist tic current as a bob-tailed gander going over Niagrn Falls. 1 began to fell salu brious, and i ui;i 1 1 I myself at a carnival of th' graces. Art and beauty joined hands in the nuptial ceremony, and love and melody tumbled piomiscuoitsly into tho frying-pan of delight. For three 11 g onizing hours I drifted through a wilder ness of lla.hing eyes, floating ringlets and fluttering petticoats. j When the company went to supper, I found myself scattered all over the room. Hastily picking myself up, I went home went to bed but didn't went forest; for before I ".'as half asleep I dreamed that I was on the other side of Jordan, doom ed to vnltz through Purgatory with 11 partner four feet and 11-half through the ivni.-t. and lour feet and six inches hum Nothing daunted, I went on, and com menced kicking the bed-clothes up to the ceiling, and the foot board out ofthe bed stead. Let the curtain fall : time rolled on ward into eternity since that awful night, and ninny who drifted with 1110 through the whirlpool of excitement have "gone home." 'Flint was my hist bull; I have never been to one since. I am older now than 1 was then ; there of a hell Iired hddle, 1 should lly oil tho handle. ... 1 Perhaps the oldest inhabitants of New ; Ih'iinswich have not forgotten Mary ! it- t'erald, the belle ol the ball. I here were inanv outers wno new oyer me lioor nt my last hall, who, perchance, ere this, have eu tiered penance for the sin of dancing, while scouring dinner pots and spanking babies. 1 have written this veritable story nei t her in sorrow nor anger. And 1 recom mend its perusal to all who have any rel ish for quiet rest and pleasant dreams. If any man has tho hardihood to enter n hnll-ror-m after rending this warning, let him benr 111 mind that tho consequent' "'e on his own neaa j my .mru aro Clear. HN. W.M. ltKII.KK, 'tVNMI.VIVh, III Iho Senate of the 1'nited Slates, on t, hill to admit Kansas into the I'nioii H a State. Iielivcred ill the Senate, Much U.".d, l:.s. Mr. I'lc-idi'iit, I hail not intended to dis- cuss this sul.ject further, ami I ih now intend to do so at any considera l.le leii 'th. My ohject is to make myself iinder-tood on a few practical points; to make a record of a few additional ideas for my own use hereafter. At 1111 early date in the session pursued this vexed con troversy at coiisiileralile length, and I need not now repeat its general history. First, then, 1 to the legality and regular ity of the proceedings for the organization of Knti'tis a--a Stale: I t It in k as to these there can no longer he rcasouahle douht. The history of the 0rga11iz.1l ion of tho sev- j end States fully vindicate Kansas on these I points, showing that tin; proceedings in 1 her ease were not only more regul r, legal land binding than in most cases, hut that j in these particulars she is an exception to 1 the general practice. Sot no .States have I been prepared without liny act of ( Vmgress I territorial or otherwise; some hy enahling I acts ; some hy the direct propositions of ! Congress: some hy action ofthe Territo I rial Legislature, without first consulting I the people. Some of the constitutions II 1 1 : . . I 1 . . 1 1 nave oceiiM.omiiie.i 10 1110 popular sane- , u 1 "nu niiicrs nave inn. nut 111 Kan sas t no movement comnietico'l at the vc rv fountain of political power. Tho peo- tilo lit tlie regular election 01 !.. wen I consulted lis to their desire to change tlieir torin ot government trorn a territo rial to n State, and they decided to have a State government. It is true that the Topekn party did not Vote; but they had been clamorous for a State government from the beginning. A law was passed accordingly, providing for a convention of delegates of the lieonle to 1 form a constitution nnd Stut government preparatory to admission intg tho I'nion. This law, it is conceded, was well adapted 1 to the end in view. It has Leon pronoun ced right ami just in all its objects and TMinwises. It was modeled tiiamlv. niter a bill which this branch of ( 'ongress had passed to accomplish the snmeend. t M'i:i:i'ii ol' was well designed to protect the purity of 'sbue. It was more important to know : the career ot the ,l(epublicnn par tite ballot box. nnd at the same time to 1 that what tho people did was right in it-; ty in Kansas that they ever desired to set- extend to each citizen a fair opportunity to exercise the high function of an hide country. 1 no registry 01 voter only was ,11 . . c . . 'liable to reasonable complaint; but 110 candid man will pretend that it was so im perfect ns to impair the legality or the au thority ofthe election of delegates. Whilst all were not registered, it will not he pre tended that tho e who wore, had not the jiroj erj authority to make 11 constitution : lor, neerinting to tne rno-t conclusive nu thoritv, seven out of eiidit of the legal vo-' -Hy 'vl cherished Sti.te, than which there t. rs were registered, and had the ri'.-ht to , is. ""' " happier or greater in the Union, vo(,. ' j did not make her fundamental law in this The facts exhibited by the Senator from "'"' l"'io1' ""' V'al' 18:',s- ,vl"'u ninend-Mis-sonri the other d.iv has comnlefelv nients to that instrument were submitted put to rest the allegation that nineteen counties had been dislraiiehised 1 nei not repeat tin to satisfy any general facts, dred 11 1 1 i fifty se details. There is enough reasonable man in a few Nine thousand two hun nf names were registered in May ; that tin a clamor was immediately raised liepubliean party ought not to vote tor delegates, lieeau the legist rv was so exceedingly defective; and yet nt the October election, at the end of r, violent partisan contest, each party charging the will. 1 did, therefore, regard the Lecomp other with polling illegal voles, only cle-ton Constitution us under special obliga ven thousand seven hundred and eighty ! tions to submit the (piestiou of slavery to were east for the delegate in Congress. ' a vote of tho people, lint I never thought Here is conclusive evidence that the dis- wo outsiders had tho power to dictate on franchised vote.as it is termed, must have I even that point, and there never was a been very meagre, lint the fact, ns e.hi-time when I would not have said that the bited in the returns, that the entire vote in the whole ol the nineteen counties, at the January election, when there was no registry and no qualification except the ! age of twenty one years, was less than loiirteen niinureii votes, is pertectiy con i elusive. If these counties contained but fourteen hundred votes 111 January, w hat number did they contain when the regis try was taken in the preceding month of April, before tho spring emigiation had reached tho buck counties: in my judg ment, and I have repeatedly expressed the opinion before, thoso counties could not at the time, havo contained more than six or eight hundred voters. This w as tho only vital point ever present ed against the Lecompton convention, nml certainly this has been completely remo- point ? The Vice President Will the Senator from Pennsylvania yield the lloor? Mr. Iligler It is a very bad time of the night to be asking or nnsweringqnestions; but let us hear Iho question. Mr. Iioolittle The question which I de sire to put to the Senator is this: wheth er more voters did not reside in the coun ties which had no registiy nt nil tlinn nil the voters that voted for the delegates to the Lecompton convention ? Mr. F.k'ler-Certainly not, Mr. Presi dent. Mr. Poolittle T'nl not fiovernor Walk er so slate? Mr. Iligler fiovernor Walker did sub. btantially so state. fiovernor Wnlker made other statements in reference to this question in which I eanuot concur. Sir, the evidence is conclusive against the objection ofthe Senator from Wisconsin. In January when there was no registry, and no qualification except the njfo of 21, only otic thousand four hundred Totes ivcro cast in all th0 nnn registeied coun ties. Now, nir, I repent the opinion expressed heretofore, from what I how in the territo ry fnrly in the season, that at the lime that registry was made in April, before the spring emigration could have passed to the back luirt of the Territorv. there were not mole than six to eight hundred j voters in all ot these counties. Hint is the answer to the ittestion which tho Sen ator propounded; and I trust I have con vinced him that the defects in the regis try could not have been sullieient to im pair the legal or moral effect of thu elec tion for delegates. Jut it is said that a meagre vote was cast for dulgates, and that is true ; but that does not impair the force or cll'ect ofthe election, (iov. Walker gave tho discon tents full notice on this point, lie told them that they would he responsible whe ther they voted or not. That liny Other doctrine would lead to anarchy. And there never was a truer sentiment. Wo must cither accept or reject this doctrine: if we reject it and hold that it requires an active agency on the part of tho elector to give consent, then we lay down a doctrine that would lead to anarchy in probably ev ery State in this I'liion. In my own State, on this principle, tho fundamental law could bo repudiated any day. That State contains live hundred thousand voters; at tho last election certain amendments were adopted to the eonstitut ion, and tho w hole vote for and against it did not exceed one hundred nnd thirty eight thousand votes; and the highest iiHirmative vote reached only 0110 hundred and seventeen thou sand : who thinks of doubting the author ity of those amendments? On this principle and none other can be counte nanced the Lecompton convention had a more complete authority, 1 venture to say, than any other similar body which preceded it. Now, sir, as to the action of the conven tion. The only objection raised worthy of note is that it did not submit tho entire constitution to a vote of the people. I have said, heretofore that, at the time, 1 preferred they should do so ; but I never regarded the mode of inakinu tho consti- tulion a a reason why the Territory should : or t-hould not come into the Union as al ' s' iiiiire into the way in which . it. . 1 . . . ,, , .1,, iiiiu rigui inuig nan neen done, j ney nan lull authority to do it "their own way" The right of the people in conven tion, by delegates, to make nnd adopt a Constitution: was conceded even by Gov. Walker. Th's was one of Ids special rea sons for urging th people to vote for del 'cgates. 1 think adoption by popular vote 'a good mode of mnking a constitution. I ! cei b'.inly do not think it is the only good way. It is not tho way in which the con stitutions of nearly nil the original States of this happy confederacy were made in the earlier and purer days of tne llepublic. ! to.a v0,(' 01 1110 poph;, nnd adopted by a I minority ot the voters ot tlio Mate. 1 1 did hold, .Mr. President, that the spir it of the compromises of lx.'jO, and the or ganic act for this Territorv looked to the decision of the (iiestion of slavery by some direct action of the people; that there ' was a general understanding throughout '.the country tlmt the question of slavery should not ' eompanied comeback to Congress unac by nu expression of popular submission of the vexed iiuestion of sl.i- very is nil that the people ol other States had any right even to inquiro into ; much less have they a right to dictate n mode of innkng a Constitution as a condition on which the people who nro to live under it mny become n Stale ? Yet this high-handed dictation has been attempted by those who call themselves 11011 interventionists. That vexed question was presented: that question was voted upon. Now, Mr. Pres ident Mr. Iioolittle Upon that point will tho Honorable Senator allow me to put 0 ques tion? Mr. Iligler Certainly. Mr. Hoolittle Was the slavery ques tion in fact submitted to the people of Kansas? Mr. Iligler Undoubtedly it was. I hold Mr. President, that if the majority of the people had voted down the slavery arti cle, that, in its own language, in the Inn gunge ofthe schedule, thereafter shivery shall not exist in the new State of Kan sas," the institution would have been abol ished, and there would have been com plete authority in the Legislature to have wiped out the remnant of shivery that had previously been planted in the Terri tory. Mr. Hoolittle I desire to nsk the Sena tor, does not the schedule expressly estab lish that property in slaves in the Tertito ry fchnll not be interfered with? r ... , . n ... .Mr. Mgior 1 lie property value in slaves is protected. I never heard :ui body even in Knn-as object to that. Hut the Senator is certainly aware that there is another provision 111 1. '10 ion;ituiion, winch ivs that the Legislature shall not emancipate the slaves without remuneration to the owners; they shnij not interdict tho immi gration of slaves into tho Territory solong ns similar persons nre held in bondage in the 1 erntory. Mr. Hoolittle That is the slavery nrtl ele. Mr. liiglor But tliey can, by mnking compensation, emancipate the slaves. ( TFRMS- 1 II 23 per Annum. NKW8KHIKS VOL III. NO. 13. Tim Legislature has that power. The Sell'' ator did not fail to hi tlmt the Senator from Virginia, on Friday hist, in his able nnd eloquent speech, pointed out clearly the power in the Legislature to get clear of Mavcry in that Territory without any niiiendiiii tit of tho Constitution w hatever; Therefore I answer that, fo far as regards the iiiestion of slavery, taking thee can- s together, the power is complete in tho Legislature as it now stands. Mr. Ioolittle Let Hie understand thrl Senator. Is it complete with tho slavery article in or with it out ? Mr. lliglor I said if the slavery tirticlu had been voted out. Mr. Iioolittle What then? Mr. lliglor Then shivery wouhl lmve been completely abolished in tho Territo ry by the people. That is what I said. I knew what the Senator hail in view, tlmt bee iuse the schedule protected tho projn erly value in slaves, he would hold iIihI the posterity of slaves were to remain in bondage; that there was no power in thoi Legislature to wipe out that remnant or root of the institution. That is where he is mistaken. New, sir, 1 want to notice another point. Mr. Jioolittle I wish to put one further iiostion to the honorable) Senator, with his leave. Mr. lligler If tho honorable Senator will allow me, I wish to proceed to anoth er point in the case. Mr. 1'oolittle It is on this point. Mr. Iligler It is now nearly II o'clock in the morning, nnd 1 have several, points to make before that hour. Now 1 wish to mark tho extraordinary course and policy which has from time tor time marked the conduct of the anti-slavery parly in Kansas. I do not intend to review their acts of folly nnd insubordina tion, in standing, out flaiiist the'laws, nor their constant nnd persistent efforts to pro duce violence, rebellion nnd civil war. (lovei nor Walker's despatches are full nnd omplctc on this point, lie describes'tjie? Republican party as in"opoti rebellion to the laws during nearly all Ins service, and as plotting for the overthrow of the gov ernment. Against the oilier party, the Leeomptoti party, he made no complaints prior to his departure from tho Territory Hut I wish to look for the evidence in , tie the (piostion of slavery. I can find u ..I....,.., i-i .., .... eviuenceinat iney inn so desire, ; but mueir that they did not. In tho language of n distinguished Now York politician, (Jno, van litiren) I do not understand "thi free .State party in Kansas, who arc all Lhe while trying to make Kansas a slave State." The remark is witty and true. The free State parly in Kansas have never exei (' sed their pow er when they could touch the' question of slavery, ln June last, when they had the opportunity of voting for delegates to make a free State, nnd when they daily boasted of being three or five to one of the population they would not vote, Hifferent pretexts were set up iit vifl'erent parts of the Territory as I know of my perscnal knowledge, some said, ''We will not vote, because the laws under which this Convention is to assemble arc' bogus laws." Others said, "110110 shall' vote because nil were not registered." I 11111 sorry that I do not sco my friemf from Massachusetts in his seat ; for ns ho took the liberty, the other day, of asking? mo n question relating to my exporiotitv'. in Kansas, he would not take it unkind if I linked him one touching his career in that noted country. I hoard it said rn more than one occasion that during thft honorable Senator's tour in that Territory he had advised tho free Stnto party not f vote and that he also concurred in tho' policy of attempting to make Kansas a free State by allowing the pro-shivery pnr ty to elect nil tho delegates to mako the Constitution. I know not whether the; rumor be correct or not. It is not impor tant to my purpose. P.ut it is a significant fact that the CJ publicans or free-State party did not vote in June, when the fate of slavery was in volved ; and that in October when notlw ing was at stake but offices and a delegate in Congress, they did vote they did rush to the polls and carry the election, regard less of the humiliation implied in there cognition of the "bogus laws." Then, again, in December following, on tho direct question whether slavery should or should not exist 111 the new State ol Kansas.tlicso anti-slavery men did not vote. Tho 'bo-' gus laws and the bogus convention,' for bid that they should condescend to vota against slavery, and they did not vole. ' But less than 11 month afterwards, when' the question i f slavery was not involved, when office, and honors, nnd emoluments were staked, they readily got over their scruples of conscience against the Locomp ton usurpation nnd rallied to the polls and secured nil the offices under what they term tho "Lecompton swindle." Comment cannot ndd to tho strength of this history. It is painfully significant. When it was necessary to get ollico tho "lxigus laws" were promptly recognized ; when slavery was at stake they shrunk from it ns from the touch of death. Constantly hoasting their power and determination to mako Kansas n free, State, thoso auti-slnvery nn 11 carefully refrained from dealing tho blow, when the institution mine within their reach. They boasted of the power but would not do the deed. Tho country is agitated iroin one extremity to the oth er about an nlledged design to force sla very into Kansas ; and yet, sir, within tho hist nine months, the party claiming to have theibsolute power, and the will to do the deed, have hud two opportunities of abolishing and forever interdicting the institution; but they would not. How many opportunities must they have? Hovf long is the country to bo harassed by the complaints of men who will not avail themselves of their prerogatives as freo- mon? They cannot he mado to voto ft j y., blilVery, and how can they bo couiv-