(flT I mi .i J. H. LARRIMER, Editor. VOL VIM. NO. 26. Terms of Subscription, fpM in Klvanr. or within three months, Jl 2S ifLl.nr time within tho yenr, - . . 1 50 j&a.rrth. expiration of tl.'o year, - 2 00 v Terms of Advertising. AilTfrtisemonts are insorte J in the Itopublicnn it the fallowing rates : I Insertion. 2 Jo. S do. On si'mre, (I f ltno-;) $ SO $ 75 $1 no Tf i) jquurf s, (2Sline.i,) 1 00 1 80 2 00 Three npi-ires, (42 lines,) 1 50 2 00 2 50 3 months. 6 ino'e. 12 mo Oie Square, : : : $2 60 t 00 $7 00 Twewiuure!", : : : : : 4 00 6 00 10 00 Tliret ffiares, : : : i 5 00 8 00 12 00 Jeurjquares, : : : : (t 00 10 00 14 00 Halfaooluinn, : : : : 8 00 12 00 19 00 One column, : ! : : H 00 20 00 35 00 Drtt three weeks ami Inns than throe months 25 etoti per square for each insertion. itoti ler square tor eaoli insertion. Business notices not exeeouing 81iues are in. lertod fur a year, drertinoiuents not markod with'the number of Insertions desired, will bo continued till forbid chirjed according to these terms. J. II. LARH1MER. tltrt'JJcftrn. a. r Sonnet to March. Oil wicked Murcb, foul mouth of frost and mire, Thyself, of wintry iro malignant burn, Ofsjucs, coughs, andgnunt consumption, dire, .jlvauDt, with all thy horrors, hence, begono. Like JudtM, wearing now a smiling fuce, TIit humor seems like that of genial May, Luring the unwary to each sunny place ; ' Tft, but an hour, or haply, half a day, And lo ! thick, chilling vapors riso aloft, "! ColJ streams along their icy channels flow, The lord and polilied truck grows thin and soft , itud pools abound, of mire aiirl melting snow. Suck is thy smile thy frown so vastly worse, ij mil despairs to find eullicieut curse. From tho Home Journal. Tales of the BY A SOITI1ER.N South. MAX. THE AVENGER. ' The puroliaso of Louisana by the Urn led .Slates, from Erance, in ItitiJ, greatly ktimulated thespiritof emigration through cut the south. The fertile soil, navigable alcis, ami ulniost tropical clime and pro iluctinns of the new .State, invited a rapid How of population and w ealth within its limits, especially from the more neighbor ing States. " Among tho earliest adventurers win) ftent to seek a home in the Kowly-ncmii-red El Dorado of the south, was a Mr. JI , a native nnd resident of the State of Georgia. lie wa a 1 lanler of, moderate means, respectub'e in all the re-j nuir icr in ins eyes, and implanted adeep lati.nu of life, nnd much esteemed in the I seated, ineradicable purpose to avenge it. -circle of his acquaintances. Having pur- j Tnongh young, ho posse-scd tho vigor of chased lands in one of the interior parish-1 will and bravery of heart to form and to re of the Slate, ho returned to Georgia for i execute tho most daring plan for tlic clo the purpose of raising' fundi to i.v for i lection nnd punishment of the assassin tlliin.and tn innkp I Jin tirpiimimirv nv. 'rangments for removing his family to his 'he 'se called for the infliction ol the ret 'Sei home. It was generally known j ributivc blow by his own hand, the guilty throughout the neighborhood n't his resi..; should, if ever, be punished. Thus the Uencii that ho hid bought hindi in Louis iana, and was soon to return with the I mtmey to procure titles to his purchase, j The nocenry preparations for his do- r''ure being completed, Mr. M not out on his journey accompanied by his xn A. , then 11 youth seventeen jours of age. Poth were well mounted on I good horses tho overland tinvel to Louis -unahaving to be performed in that day all lha way on horseback. 'J'ho father was provided with a brace of horseman's 'Itoln, and wore next to his person a belt, impermeable to perspiration and moist iw, in which the jiurchase money to pay for bis lands was depositod and carefully wed up. I he grew older, and lost none of its ltiten- 'lie route of the travellers lay across tho ' sity by his greater, geographical inopin prosent .Sl-ates of Alabama, ard Mississippi, quity to the scene of tho murder which nicli were then embraced in the Mi-sis- "ppt territory. The country was compar atively uninhabited except by Indi an. A few 'traggling settlements of w hites, w eu here and there, the surface of the . wilUtrnt-ss, and gave shelter and direction ' ,'o.uea.ivcnturous travellers who visited passed tlu-ongh the rountrv." The In- .1- .ns were noAoralllA whites, tendaring a ready welcome 'w-io sought the hospitality of their M and his son passeil safely, and without adventure of nnv kind, inrwigb tho territory of the present State 'r baiun, and had entered a densely ooded section of country now embraced m Leake count v Tir;;!,.; n-. --- . "-ing, in the forepart of tho day. some 11H 11 p? r"il't' the f)ltllr ln front " tho son imilliilmli.lv in ln l-njir tt-hen "0 men sndilniitu mai.,n.l IVm-i n tl. !..!.-. 1 'Jr. -"-dergrowlh on tlio margin of the T" "lly were pursuing. They werenrm- rw"n muskets,, and had their faces WCe"UO(l hilt. Itmi- unnbtuail l.on.la Wl thorn ir. I, 1 .; Huue noar to Mr. M , a liltlo in "ance of his position in the trail, and th J. 10 olio 81,Je. As soon as ho saw a,v"-'ne their pun.oso. . b xjn In . .. -. . . - .. . 9 lo dusninimt . . k WJ VJI IFUI iri'nu. A. - 1 If-t . .i 'ii.t:iii 11, a ...... I ... ninoiimiiinuiiii n i.tiia ri rrn liiirv en 11 . ' "e conjectured. ntlnrAtliAwilvnrtiin Jv, coTuVctured, toplncethebody ol'tho W,.alhlti-:or.n l.i .1 .1 I K-... .. "UOtl ti!? n?ft favorable lo defensive opora ll II 111 I Hill 1 LIIM lUUIiTII L Im 1. pw'ols. lie had scarcely . n .lus body, in the net of tlismount l?' Whe" one of the robbers discharged musket. ti, n.. 1 1 v iva-i I'lbocuv-L 1 ill vum .... -:v ffrAt.k 1 ----- , ii iiu mil iu tiio i. r.it i 11.. rP' PPi-feotly dead.-The other rob koi 1 16 np"'-tiine, had ket)t hid gun J Pd Rt A. M . tl.reato .intokill j. " h either ndvaneed or nttemptcd to r" "capon. An soon n.Vjiis father fell, ' AH u rnol l, horse and fled in the direc- "ii7 iiiui conic. fl.nVV? W"n J"" '"M tO Wllilo Set- tienmit. jV Kr i. . i hope of revenue and tho f. l- . u rode ivit I, ? , ' , 0t Pl,rsu". r cite 1 1 ed . , i ! u s and noon , U'ol'ouso ho and his father had " j t mo nipit belore. Tidings of tho il,.oi,l. ,. .. .V, . ' -I'leao. ...v aiiurucr 1111(1 ITil.li. 1 "f-'ii tne set omont. gi tlier iU entire male pojnilati.iii. Arm- - ...... provwed with implements to in ter the body of Mr. M , tl1PV speodi- i?iiC t,ou,.ortl-uPt "heroic had been Killed. J hey fuund the body in tho samo place, and nearly in the same position, in which it had fallen. The pockets had been rilled of the money a Miiall sum reserved to defray the expenses of the journey; the pistol.", u set ol silver sleeve in f t .. ,....i ,i ... , ... I " out u-e person or carried "Mwti.ii.-., uilll SUI11C K1111111 nt't 11-I...1 it-.,.t. in the nock. .-, niTu uiso missing, nut liie belt, com. laining a large amout of money, was un touched, the robbers having failed to dis cover it. A rude grave was dug, nnd tho body, still warm but entirely lifeless, wus placed in it, und covered over with turf. The spot was marked, for future recognition, by deep cuts upon the nearest trees, and is indicated, attliisdas, by u handsome monument, roared, in after' yt niv, by the filial piety of the bon. After the burial, seach was made for traces of tho robbers. Except in the im mediate neighborhood of the spot where the killing occurred, no signs of their . . i . .. . . - presence not even ol the way by which they had come nnd departed could be discovered. Upon tho left breast of the white vest worn by M , the full impres. sion, in blood, on the left hand, with the ring finger shortened to tho lirst joint, was distinctly visible, and carefully no ted by all present. No other mark or impression could be seen upon the clothes or traced ujkjii the ground, beyond a nar row circle immediately around the spot where the body lay. Pursuit being thus impracticable all idea of it was abandon ed. The company returned to the settle- mont, and A. M , having sold his father's horse ami oquipmontsfor a fail price to one of the settlers, went to GcOl- ! gia. j Tho events just described, made, of j course, a vivid and lasting imptv.-sion up I on the mind of A. M . The sudden ness mm bloody issue of the assault the assassin unfairness of the attack, which left his father no chance for defence, and himself no opportunity for assistance n suspicion thut the perpetrators of the murder were from the same section of Georgia ns h:s father, where, perhaps, they had learned the facts which fired (heir avarice and inspired the diabolical Ian for gratifying it above nil, the un timely loss of n parent whom he trrently venerated and ardently loved all these circumstances nggra ated the crime of the slavers of his father, lip fell, indooil licit I spirit ami me purpose ot tlio Avf.nuf.k en tered into his soul. With what vigor they impelled, and to what issued they conducted, the progress of the narrative will disclose. I Having atfained his majority, A.M. removed from Georgia to Alabama: mar ried, settled upon a plantation of his own, and become an assiduous and prospetoiis I planter. Put theie changes in his outward conditon wrought no change in his inward I resolution. In strong and inflexible na i lures, and such was his, a fixed purpose, of any sort, loses 110110 of its vigor with the lapse of time. The desire to avenge I his father's death rather Rtrentrtheni'd ns lus removal liom Georgia to one of the western counties of Alabama had mod a ced. Amid all the incessant activities of his planter life, tho memory of that ror rid scene of assassination in tho wilder- ness still survived, undimmed in freshne l.n.l In.iir..l.L .!. I! , ,.rl. liiiu iiioi..inji; II1U lllll illJlUII IS Ol lOt- SOU! upon which it was impressed. Tho unavenged blood of his father seemed to bo evermore crying from tho ground, and demanding expiation for the treachery and murder by which it had been spilt. To avenge it remained still the cherished purpose of his life, made holy to his heart by filial reverence, and approved to his in tellect by the precepts ot that unwritten, perhaps erring, code ofellncs which teach es that tho child is tho natural avenger of the blood ol tho parent. Jiut at what point lo begin his detective inquiries, and bv what means to prosecute tlioni. rein.iinodi.til1 ns it. bod boon from the first, nn apparently insurmountable uiiiicutiy in tito case, ror an the ordina ry methods usually employed lor tho do lection ot criminals had been already tried. Howards, ollicial and privite, III I eral In amount, nnd accompanied with the best description that con fd be juivon of tho murderers, had hoen ollerod lor their nirr(iionHinn. IVrKfiiinl KMin-li hof-ii I I ' ------ -- " - - tiiruous to the tdace of assassination. In ouirv had been pushed, by means of let ters and handbills, into every more distant locality likely tobetlio resort ol the criminals. Put no tidings of them bad been received. Year after year passed by ; the balfied inquiry still went on, and all but one had forgotten, or ceased to feel any interest in the atrair. After such repeated nnd prolonged failure in the use of every availnblo means of detection, llio best, in fact nil, that A. M could do, has alicutly lo await imi "EXCKI.SIOK ." CLKAKF1KLI), PA. WKDNKSD.W MAKCII 30, 'mo.' tho development of time, tisirg every pre caution ho could, to not closures which wore calculated to lead to a discovery ot the murderers. With this view ho read then-ports of criminal and police courts, the confession of convicts, accounts of murders and robberies, proc lamations of .state executives, otl'ei ing re wards for fugitives from justice, published catalogues and reports of penitentiaries, end, in fine, the whole mass of thoe mul titudinous publications of every kind which compose the ciiminal literature, so to speak, of the country, lie had full faith in the adage, that murder will out, and felt that the justice of Heaven itsell was pledged for the ultimate detection and punishment of theslayers of his fath er. And, therefore, it was he continued, through the long years of lail-ie. to be lieve and assert that he should live to see retribution overtake them at last. A. JI was now a middle-aged man, with sons and daughters growing up around him. Two .States had been carved out of the Mississippi territory, nnd ad mitted into tho Union. The' wilderness and the Indians' had disappeared from both. In the one, tho wild moss was waving, rank and green, over the grave of the murdered father; in the other dwelt the imforgetting son, palicntlv awaitlm.' the coming of tho day ofretiil.tition for the slayers, and losing none of his faith in the wisdom and justice of l'n idem:.-, bv ine delay (.1 its advent. This strong faith of A. M in a ret ributive visitation of Providence epon the L'liilty, even in tho present world, was not the result of any peculiarity in hi- mond organization ; nor is it at ail irrational in itself. All who observe and r lied much see, and, therefoic, believe, that n ju t JW--ing governs the world, and rules hi tho af fairs of men. Reason alone would con duct to the conclusion that this ju.-t l'.eing must so order his moral aii,iiii-.(rat:oui that guilt and expiation, iiniocet.ee and immur.ity from penal intlietion, shall not often, or even for any great li-n.-tli of time, be dissociated. A-ide, however, from tho deductions of riii-n, there is a divinely-given nnd ineradicable instinct of humanity which demands ilmt crime shall be punished, and whisper-- evermore to the heart that the relributive biow, though ofttimes long suspended, is sure in the end to Tall upon the guilty. Memesis, avenging furies, s-nd w:rath'ful Heaven, what are these, nnd all similnrcxprestions, whether Christian or r.ncan in onVin. but embodied utterances of this instinct, pro claiming the supremacy of law, the divine superintendence, and the amenability of guilt to punitivo visitation. It was a stri king illustration, how ever, of the strength and activity of this common attribute of our nature", that A. M should so long, nnd utuW so many discouragements, have clung to the belief that merited pun ishment would overtake the assassin murderers of his father, and that he should live lo withers, perhaps to inflict it, him- sell. The truth of the naiativo requires that ' e siioiuo pasB over nn iniervul 01 manv years, spent by A. M in the quiet pursuits of his planter life, and the dili gent scrutiny, in tho manner already mentioned, of the annual criminal calen dar of Alabama, Mississippi, nnd seveiul of the adjoining States. Continued next c-o--. Mason and Dixon Line- Many persons are ignorant of the orij m 1 of Mason and liixon's Line, and think it ; was established ns a separation H.rtt.on . tha free nnd t-Iavo Slates. It ori 'inated I bv the nrrnnscment of a dispute between m. i cnn aiei i,oru Baltimore, begun as early as 10S2 w ith referenco to tho boun daries of their rospectivo grants of land, now forming the States of Pennsylania, Delawaro and Maryland ; Lord Baltimore claiming to, and including (ho -P'th degree ofN'orlh latitu.ie. Theea'o was brought in to the English Court of Chancery, and do cided nL'ainst Lord Baltimore. Put the commissioners appointed to mark the day, stopped at l'unta Passu, nnd reeeiv boundnries failed to agree, and after fur- j c'- M passengers the last of the Florida ther litigation and delay the matter was '' Seminoles that wiil ever emigrate to the settled by mutual ngieemcnt between the ' est. They were ubout seventy in mini surviving heirs of tho original litigators, 1 ber, twenty of whom arji warriors. When and in 1071,1 Mr. Charles Mison, of the ! "1C steamer touched ot l'unta Iiassa, the lioyal Observatory was sent to lVunsvlvn- j Indians were willing and even eager to get ma to measure the degree of latitude. This duty, in connection with Jeremiah Dixon, be accomplished established tho famous Mason and Dixon's Line between the pre sent. State of Pennsylvania on the north and Maryland on the south nnd mnkiiig his report lo the lioyal Society of London in the year 1770. Advertising. The Philadelphia Pullo in, in some remarks upon advertising, very justly remarks : Discontinuing advertising is like taking down one's own sign. It is a sort of inti mation of retirement of business, and tho public treat it ns such. Or they may re gard it ns evidence that something has gone wrong, which require pi ivaey for in vestigation. Whatever construction may bo upon it, tho result is disastrous. Now, wo advise all our readers who may have fallen into the common error of tho sea son to come out of their holes, to put up their signs once more, nnd to advertise in ns many papers ns they did in the best times. While business creates adverlising it is equally (rue thnt it creates talk nnd a stir in business circles and reminds men that they have no right to be leading drone's even in the worst of times adver lising always pnys well, nnd the more of ii there is, tho greater will bo (ho circulation of money, nnd the sooner will ho restored a condition of prosperity. .Tons Nkai. soys "the eagle hns a con tempt ior all other birds." The owl, however, is more onleniptuous still he hoots at everything. lipMicw lr.ATii or the Victim or a Lkuai. "Eu-i koii. 'The ;..,,,, TnwUn-'s Pan's corres pondent, under (Into of I'ec 30, furnishes! the particulars of tho death, at. tint ...n-lv I T ,UI uiiny-su, ot ono who, though vu.' tirely innocent, sutTered seven veais' i:i prisonineni in tho galleys, on a charge of uuiiiiei nun arson : i ms week earned to the grave a brok. nuiKS mr lite, as being guiltv of murder and arson. lie was in the hulks, treated as a convict for seven years, when it was discovered that hewas (fimviioftho crimes, the true culprit having con jessed his guilt. Thegovcrnnieiitdid everything thev could to atono for the error: they made him chief commissary of administrative inspee tion of the Southern railways, and gave his father a tobacco seller's T-iaeo : but seven years of agony, seven year? spent in con scious innocence and proclaimed guilt are too heavy trials for human nature, and tne unhappy man died a dav or two ago, only six-and-thiitv venrs old ',,,,1 rU- years suico Ins liljcration. ""-'V. JU1lill(-3 Jill 1 til IM-iV.M.ni in France, where tho ciimimd nraclice is very imjierfect, nnd the ju-lge is made the prosecuting Attorney. Put the French hold it better that ten innocent shnnld stiller, than one irmlt v man shout, I " , Cakkvi a ?teamiioit OvKiti.Axi, to Ur.1) ..ivr.it -A writer m (he St. Paul M;, ,. ., dated at trow u.g, says :AI.ut Cakhvim. I tne flh nisi, the work n lakin.r 4 . 1 . , . ihe Anson Northup, and .u paring the frame of '.ho new boat, was commenced ; and to-day, the I'Jth of l'tbruarv, the w hole of the portable fi ame of the boat, tho boiler, engine", machinery, and toois, amounting to more than fifty tons () height, b. .'ides . stores and baggage of the men, ami hay for the teams are trudging away with their load over the prairies, and through the pineries toward the lied liiv er of tho North. The boiler and (ho hea vy machinery must bo hauled on runners the distance of one-hundred and sixty-live miles. Tho new portions of the boat will be taken from Swan liiver, one bundled and ninety miles. The new bout, which is to bear the appropriate mime of the P. oii"er, is to be one hundred feet long, twenty feet beam, with a depth of four feet in the hold, and is calculated to cany from seventy-live to one hundred tun:- of freight. Tho train is reoonipanied by about forty teamsters nnd mechanics, w ho will commence work ns soon as they roach the Ited liiver, nnd the boat will probably be in running order by the first of May The road ii good as fir ns Otter. Tail City, and teams have been through to th" lied liiver dining the pa-t week, so that the track is prolably well broken all the way. Masvji'eraders i Mii.WAt Kir. A cie.it masquerade ball was given in Milwmtkio about a week ago. The X.'vS of that eitv. llic course of an article describing it, savs "One gentleman fell in love with hi own sister, w hile another :111m dnuc.-.i, talk ed, and promenaded tvi'liu gentleman in woman's dress, three bonis, in the vain hope of finding out who the dear creature was. One young man look his mother to the supper, and great was the surprise of both on learning how mattcis stood. Ouc of our leading merchants gave his ring to a young lady if she would raise her mask that lie might see her features, when it Ma,s llls M,I(T' wl' '"' suppose.! was at home with the toothache! Two gentle- ? " a .,v:"',n Uispute as lo who certain young ladv w ith a black domino I was, and after making a wager of two bot itles of champagne, found out that the I young lady was the younger and mischiev ous brother of the losing party." Departure or thk Seui voi.es i iiom Flo rida Tho New Orleans True Delta, of the 22d of Februarv, savs: "The steam- ship Magnolia which arrived here vester I0" hoard A lew hours belore that thev were exceedingly dissati-ln-d, and mani fested considerable opposition to leaving. It required the utmost tact of Col. Hector to induco them to await the comingof the vessel. Had she not arrived at the ih-sig. nnted time, they would havo lioUken thf-ni to their canoes and fled to the jun gles of tho interior. The few Seminoles that remain in Florida Sam Jom-V band. will scarce a.'-ain bo heard of. They are engaged in digging "coonsie,"(nrrow root) for co. tain traders on the eastern coast. Ur.TiRFMKXTor Grxen u. Hors-rov. This veteran hero nnd statesman has closed bis i i ... i'.. i ii-.... . .. . . ong nn.. eve,,, ,,, puniic career in 1 , hcMvnsa volunteer in .laekson's nr.nv in the Creek war: more thnn for v fmr.-m,i was a member of Congress; then Governor of Tennessee, which ollioo he suddenly re signed to take up bis residence among the i i- i i i i ., . .1.. Indians, nnd adopted their modo of life : afterwards, in conformity with a nlea for- mod by himself ami General Jackson, he nnd annex it to the United States, which, utter encountering the greatest difficul ties, and overcoming every obstacle, he ac complished their purpose, nnd Texas be came a State Previous to the nnnexntion ho was President of Texas, and since that time has represented tho State on the floor of the U. S. S enale. IVroi.OMixt, in reply (o a serenade at Troy, said : "Shcntlemon : I am veer mooch obligee for P.s toonipleuicnlz. 1 am veer pooro speak Ah'li-h, unt ( feels, Mileepy. ) Speech of Senator Bigler OX THE QltsTlOX or Slavery in the Territories. Jvltrered tn the Senate of the U S '.-, "t 1H;V.I ' ' luring the discussion of tin Appropri--ion bill, in the .Senato nf tl.n i:,.;i.i ation States, on the 2:id ult.. Senator Ml Upon this OUOStinil Sennln Hi i.kr spoke ns follows : Mr. Picsident, I shall occupy tho time ol the Senate for a very few minutes, and indeed, sir, J regret the necessity of saying any thing on this occasion. I think it was on the 2d of July, lS.lt., about 0 o'clock, in tho morning, when the Senator Iroin Illinois (Mr. Trumbull) pro posed an amendment to what wai known as the loomb's bill, in which this ouestion of the power of a Territorial Legislature over the subject of slavery was raised, and lor the lirst time presented to my mind .... " .. , ",L Jl1 ; i"i piacticai consideration. His omend- ine tho view of j - aii.T rmtJfLV. ln that occasion I exnresced lUm.i,. 1011 that, by the Kansas and Nebraska policy, the whole question of slavery in the Territories had been referred to the people, and that they, through a proper law-making power, could control the sub- p-ct : but at the sumo time, I held, as I believe it had been almost universally held - .y the friend of the Kansas policv, that the question was a judicial one; 'that it , "as ma one ior i. ongrcssionni decision; that it must be decided by the Supreme j Court of tho United Slates, and not by , Congress; that Congress had conferred j upon the people whatever power it posses sed over the subject under the constitu tion; that as lo the language of the Kan sas Nebra-ka act, there c- uld be no tlill'er ence of opinion ; it was explicit ; nnd the only question left for decision was, w hat measuic of power docs Congress possess ? jTbat question was necessarily a judicial one; and thnt was the very question, to gether with that ot the rights ol slave owners in the Territories, which it had been agreed should be taken from Con gress and referred to the Court I was anion-' those who held the onin- j ion that Ihe people of a Territory, through j their local Legislature, under the language ol" the Kansas law, had the power, if not the right, to control the question of sla j very. I say jmvef, if not the right because there is a clear distinction between the right nnd power of a people. They may have the power to do th it whieh it is not their right to do ; and in this connection " ?, J ' . L:" '! "ne,? i V, " - ' "I'"' ' .Ior 1 j a question of this kind for a practical end take it, the question under discussion is L.i i ,. .. n prw uai end more ono of legal right, lhan ono of tholjV ' L ?" Dcm?craV,C inendm power of a majority, or the power of a'irVn ' ,-y .U- lh? Mfn,,euc'' people 1 ur 01 n;0! the Democratic pirty in tho North, a-, The,"o is cerlainlv a very clear dislinc ' -V? m ftscc,'den7 f -hat orgoni. tion between Intervention bv CW-ros to ! T, , mform,y - -heir establish or abolish slavery in a Territory ) , l "-.not to force unne or, if you please, to influence in any way I iTJ, '-"c-of this el.nrac.cr ; for the tho question of its expediency, nnd the ' , 'l v.ll be even more inju -exercise of the power of (Jon,ress to exe i V T be ik h of the cute, a right established bv ii' decree of jn":lM ""' n, ... . . court. Am. against all Cong.eJonul ,,- L ,T. lall teilerence to encourage slaviav, or to ex-1 ""J V FT? U "I"1 h tend, or to restrict, or to maintHh, the in -' "0 Vj ' X " '"os that 1 stitution against the will of the people of 2 1 , L ?-T . l-he eWW oi a Territory" We have agreed to lea o all i "ny ' ,ew.w,,,ch 1 f 'tertain. What I have que,. ions -that may arise as to the instil u" '"11,rf8Sed' WCrC 1,0hU of V'0 mo tion in the Territories, to Ihe people and ' 'f i"' "7-Cr?r01l1 n'"1 a. tho rolll.ts. 1 1 " for i anticipated no such debate as that tfti, to r.r i -..... .. ... impaired, his romed j. .ii,- m.iiiooi nnv eni.eii ok seriously .....:.. i i : f.. . . .. . . i ' . i .. . o...i;',M, i lira onniTQ nmi hul iii v oiiiiiess ; uui a iniestion mav an behind nil these, nnd that is the qiiestio of executing an established right.' Thor remains io ' houK i I L Z lll'llf I ill t XlU.l 111 I . .. 4 r. ...... . to maintain the rights of the citizen as as certained by the Courts. It cannot be de nied that tho Senator from Illinois, (Mr. Douglas,) at one time, entertained the opinion that such an occasion might arise ; for he held and said thnt, in referenco to Utah, such nn exigency hnd arisen, nnd that the law organizing the Territory ough. to be repealed ; and thereby he claimed for Congress the highest degree of power ever pretended to by Congress ; and this for the reason that the Mormons would not obey the law or tho decisions of the Courts. A similar state of facts in any other Territory might warrant a similar remedy. Should tho Legislature of Kan sas confiscate tho property value of the slaves now in the Territory, and the Courts should decide such an act unconstitutional would the execution of the decision of the Court bo called Congressional intervention for slavery ? Certainly not. I claim to stand on the Democratic platform, as defi ned nt Baltimore and Cincinnati, on the broad doctrineof nonintervention by Con gress in the matter of slavery ; but I can not dose my eyes to the distinction be tween the action of Congress to encour age a policy, nnd the mnintainnnco of the rights or the eition, as defied by the Su- d i . I.,-. . preino- ouri. ami tins point, more thnn llllv other, has ballled my jud-ment- an mv ,,, 'WM lo.,,av dJL. , , n ; ' . "I "" Ille very inquiry presented by the Senator form Alabama, (Mr. Civ,-., tow-it: if tho citizen of a slaveholding State has n right ns iieeidti iiv t he .supremo Court, to takA i,;. .i... i.,' . t .i ' " ' . . L J ,Poss: " whonoo eomes thai right, and 1 existence. 1 how can its enjoyment be destroyed by a community not possessed of sovereign power? Nor can I understand what is intended by claim ing for the local Legislature tlie legal means to destroy a oonstitutional right. Mr. Pugh. Allow mo tonpk the Sena tor a question. Mr. Bigler. In a few monienfs if Ihe Senator pleases. What is a right that can not be enjoyed, but a delusion and a fraud T The Supremo Court has held that the right to repossess a fugitive slave h in the owner; but what is that ridit worth, tin less the means of executing it be furnish- cd by Congress T And what is tho right TERMS $125 per Annum NEWSERIES-VOL. iV.-No "T7T of, a citizen in n Territory worth, if it cnn H be oniovprlf Wl.-t . . not be enioved? ,1 ... ', , -ivva I. at 1.11 VU t ie citizen that he has thcriidit. nn,l..r . nws 10 avail 10 the decision of the Supremo Court, to take Ins property into a Territory, if a minority may depnvo him of the enjoyment and use of that property r There is no consti tutional right unless it enn lie enjoyed; lh value of that enjoyment, it is true, may bo lessened by a general public policy or by popular prejudice; but 1 do not sen how it can be destroyed ; it is too true thnt the constitutional right of tho owner lo reclaim his fugitivo is, in somo instances, almost destroyed in this way. It is for the Courts, ntid not for Congress, to de cide nil legal questions that mny arise ns to tho rights of slave property in the Ter ritories: that is tho Democratic policy but is it not clear (hat a necessity will never nriso for the inlerference of Con gross to execute a right decree of the Courts. Now, sir, I do not intend to enter at length upon the question of how far it may be the duty of Congress to go toexe cute a decision of tine Supreme Court ngninst the action of a Territorial Legisla line ; that exigency has not arisen, and I hope it mny never arise: but I do not think the enso so clear against all interfe rence as some of my Northern friends ; I nm not for intervention by Congress in the popular fense ; Jam ngainstit; nnd" I concur in nearly all that has been said by the Senators from Uhio nnd Michigan, as to the political consequences of such a measure. I deprecate, too, tho precipita tion of a question into tho discussions of this l.ody which may never arise a mere imaginary state of affairs, the discussion of which must prove prejudicial to tho Democratic paity a parly which, in its career of usefulness, ol integrity, ofpatrN otism, of Micros?, has had no parallel iu the hi-tory of this or any other countiy. I havo believed, and I still believe, I hat. the best interests of the Nation, its prog ress, nnd is glory, are closely identified! with tho perpetuity and ascendency of this organization. Why, then, should its ship bo wrecked on imaginary breakers? Why should it bo stranded on shoals that, should never be encountered t J regret exceedingly that my friend from Missis sippi, (Mr. Brown,) should have felt re quired to initiate a discussion which evi dently can lend to no other result than, disaster to tho Dcmawatio party. Sir, it will bo time enough to. determine how far Congress should go, to maintain the legal rights of a citizen in a Territory against the notion of the local Legislature, when, the necessity phall arise. 1 hone we mm- '"ever have "occasion for the dhWiokof i "l e nine uau to-oay. jsut, sir, l preferred . ,1 , V . to express to tho Sonn e and to mw mn. ,'iBt'tuents, just what 1 feel on this subject. . - - j - e '.,.,,i;..J "r r , I1!-'""" un.y i.unsequences to mysell i uo not lavor iho idea of iCongrcsionid interlerence. The Demo- ' ' nr? .l apinst that doc trine, tuey ought not to entertain it now : .1. : i 1 1 .i. .i . . - . ' uuu uur- it louotv inai, a siuie or anairs' may not ariso in a Territory, when it would be necessary for Congress to inter fere, not as to questions of local policy in tho Territory, but to cxecuto a law ; to. executo a right that had been established by the proper Courts. I havo made it a rule iu my political career, to maintain the Constitution of tho Uniled Slate9 as defined by the Supreme Court, nnd shall ever do so. In reference to this very sub ject, the decision of the Suprome Court in the Dred Scott case, has, to some extent, overruled a doctrine which I had enter tained ami expressed freely ; but I say, it is now my duty to stand by that decision, regardless of nny peculiar views I may havo hnd on my own nart. or of nnv ma. judico I may therefore encounter. Mr. President, I shall not tresspass ttp. on th Senate further. I tun deeply sen sible of all tho responsibilities that sur round this subject. I'erhapa I should nmpb'fy ; perhaps I should say very mucin more in order to protect myself ngninst' misrepresentations; but I care not to trou ble the Senate further. "Sufficient unlo. the day is tho evil thereof;" and if it ever become necessary to meet exigencies so momentous ns tho.e anticipated here to day, . mist, tney may bo met in a spirit ot forbearance and of patriotism : that spirit; which will maintain the unity of the States; that spirit, loo, which will main tain tho unity of tho Northern and the Southern lemocraoy for tho sake of the Union of the States nnd the future grotfth and glory of tho country. I observe, sir, that my friend from New Ilampshiro (Mr. Hale) is exceedingly anx ious to pet the floor, and he shall have it in a minute. I am quite desirous to hear bia musioal voice on this aubject. I know that he hns very cloar opiniona on the question, and Is not so much concerned' about tho great constitutional question involved ; not go much agitated about then-suits to Kansas, or Utah, or cny other Territory ; but he is especially b.-Iightf-d becnuso he thinks (ho Democratic party are getting into a disartrous muss. Laugb,,- . 8-iT The lady w hoso heart swelled with,; indignation has reduced it with poultice!-,