vaszt.imi 11.1'.0 questioned—our sovereignty over it denied. I have examined, with some rare, the history of our legis ratioti.in respect toTerritories; and I affirm, with out the fear of contradiction, that from the first year of the organization of this Government, down to the present.session of Congress, our sovereignty over them has been continually exist - deed in the most perfect and plenary manner. That we have exten ded over them our - sole and exclusive jurisdiction and authority, in all respects, end in all things ap pertaining to their government and laws. Territories possess no inherent political sover eignly. Sovereignty appertains to organized Stotts. Ma. CHAIRMAN : I shall aveil myself of the pre- It is that poser which prescribes laws, and tri sent opportunity to discuss the great issue now be. which the citizen is required to yield obedience.— fore the country—first presented by an amendment, Thi's power no mere resides in a Territory than it which, some ,fvo years since, I had the honor to' 'duets in a county or a township. As well might offer for the consideration of this House. That the inhabitants of the latter claim the right to make amendment asserted no new.principle. I was but laws, and regulate their own attains as that the pen the copyist of Jefferson, in the reaffirmanceof a ' plc of a Territory should assume to themselves principle consistent with the uniform and settled such high prerogatis es and powers. Such a doe policy of this Government—in harmony with thetr trine is unknown to the legislation of this country. whole history of its legislation. Neither was the 1 During the whole period of our national existence, subject improperly introduced into our national de•l not-an example can be found in which a Territory liberations. There was uo design in its introduce 1 1 has beau permitted to, exercise a single act of in tion, beyond what appeared on its face. It arose dependent political sovereignty. -Ties doctrine is necessarily out of the circumstances in which we of recent origin—a new invention. It originated were placed. We were engaged in a war with in the necessities of the occasion, as a cover be- Mexico. TI c policy of the Aihninistration to ae * hind which to take shelter, and avoid sh'e. respon quire vast territories as an indemnity for past iniu- • sibility bf meeting directly the great,sfuestion of the rieie Ind for the expenses of the war, had been extension of slavery in territories' now free. lt is frankly made known to the country and the world. not the' doctrine of the ConseMStion. It is unsuppoi- Cmigress was called upon by the I..:xecutive to ae- ted by authority, and wjthily at yariance with the propriete money, not for the prbsccution of tile M ar, ..teachings of thci , e veluthave gone before us. but, confessedly, as a Means to further this policy i Commencing with the celebrated Ordinance of of acquisition - . In tits judgment, then, as now, 1787, diesisteethc organization of a Territorial Go there was no more fitting occasion, upon which to vernmenbfe. lowa in 1838, th is , Government has declare the future policy of this Govcreinent, in re- exerreteeil full and .exclusive sovereignty over its spect to the territory to be acquired, than the one r i ituries. This long record of sixtyyears furnish offered by the bill to which the " Proviso.' was ' 67 4 es no precedent to justify this doctrine of Territorial ginally attached. Such 1 believe, at the time, eras sovereignly. We have invariably prescribed the the judgment Of Congress and of the country..,' Fie fundamental law, and laid down the great land amendment was carried by a large majority in this • marks. within which every Territorial Government House, and would, I doubt not, have received the should move. move. We have re4ehtted the descent of prompt sanction of the Senate. hal time been affor lands. and the distribution of the property of Mts.:- dr:el that body to ,act upon it, then in the last hoer tales : the mode in which estates should be cmi . olits session. It is unfortunate for the country and vet ed and devised. We have pre.scribcd yualihi for the great interests at stake, that the Senate had cations for the exerciseof the right of suflrasm, and not then been permitted to some to a vote. The for eligibility to othiec : esed the ratio of represen question would,have been settled quietly, and with tation, established courts,.(Telined _their power; a: out agitation. No conamersy of a sectional char jurisdiction, and directed the maucer of the s.cicc weer would have grown rip, engendering unfrarer tion of jurors. We have provided for the appoint nal feeliegs.betwccu the People and States of this mint and elect:tin of executive, judicial, legislative Confedcraci. ° The South, I am persuaded; would and military officers, prescribing their qualifications, have cheerfully acquiesced, at that4lay, in a policy . duties. and terms of office.. We have guarantied so just, and in the estahlishmed of which South the privilege of the' writ of habeas corpus, and the ern statesmen had borne a leading and honorable right of trial by jury. Such are some of the usnal and ordinary provisions, must, it nut all of which : are to be found in every act organizing a Territh- Government. What other or strongereviecnce could be aildite cd, or required, to establiA the gescral and cxclu siye sovereignty of this government mgr its Terri tories! Why were not all these matters of local ern Bern felt to the People? Why hot permit thorn to say who should vote, and who not' will be eligible to office; and who not These powers ate among the highest prerogatives of sovereignty : and have been asserted from time to time, by Al most every Congress since theadoPtion of the Con stitution: • The novel and extraordioary doctrine has been promulgated from high quarters, that we have no power over our Territories, beyond the making of ".needful rules and regnlations - for the dierosition of the public domain. All beyond this, it is claimed. rightfully belongs to the people them selye'A Notwithstandingthis doctrine ‘‘ as sliam:•ful ly abandoned by the friends of its distinguished ad vocate. in the Territbrial bill recently laid upon your table, I shall briefly examine its claims to respect and support. It denies the right of Congress to es tablish a Territorial Government. It makes our territory essentially foreign, and independent of our control. The people, in the exercise of their in herent sovereignty, might refuse to associate with us as a confederated State. They would have the right in establiskon irelependeut empire. This Go• vernment having no right except thcee of a pro m ietary,tl ey would of course terminate e ids the dir positiou nt the soil. elle territory front that day henceforth would be as independent of us as is the ,Repnblic of France. We have hail rnany among us, of late, favorable to the acquisition of the whole of Mexico. The annexation of Cuba, is also, I doubt not, a favorite project with some. Further nrquisnioirs would hot be profrable, if this *new dr - s-trine of the sovereignty of the Territories should become firmly established. Cuba and die reinam- Mg part- of Mexico are densely populated. The lands are all appropriated : and in the hands of pri vate owners. -Should we expend a thousand mil lions in the conquest or purchase of those countries. we would acqnire no puhlrr &minim, and theiTlore nothing at all : it this property argurnent be good.— Nu sooner would the treaty be ratified and exchan• :sere than, we should instantly become detested of 'all the benefits of our purchase or conquest. The people, in virtue of theisinlierent sovereignty, credit recall their old rulers, and establish their old Go vernment. Why net ! Wjutt rightful power would we possess to interfere and prevent such a result. If we have no _right in, or power over Territories, except such as result from the ownership of the soil, it is very clear, that if we owned none of the soil, we would possess no rights whatever. To . this absurdity do we necessarily conic, by such a construction of the Constitution, That clause which gives to Congress power ci to dispose of, and make all needful rules and regulatitms respecting the ter filmy and other property of the United States, - has received, and must continue to receive, a broader TOW AT DA: tOcbncoban filorninn, unlist 23, 1818. - SPEECH OF HON. D. WILMOT, ON THE Restriction of Slam" , in the New Territories. 84 Delivered tot the House of Rep.'s, Ayr. 3 1 - - part. The failure o( prompt action on the part of the . Senate threw the question into the arena of party politics. It was caught up by politicians. and used -as an element to combine the power 01 the South, and enable that section of the Cniou to reward, with the honors of a Presidential nomination, him ' who-should prove himselt the hio,t pb.uit lu,tru nient of the Slave Power. Through the press, in their Legislative Assemblies, in State and eosin Conventions, and in the primary meetings of the people, the voice of the united South was heard in resolve upon resolve, declaring, that she would sup port no man for the Presidency, who did not open ly repudiate the doctrine of preserving freedom in free temtory. The Presidency, in fact, was held up to the highest Nl' irthern bidder. and the humil- Wing spectacle presented to the wild, of an igno minious rivalship between the leadina nien of the Nortli,t ! in a - race of i-übscrviency in Southern de mands. Those who td-inuld hare led in die incul cation of a sound..and virtuous ,public sentiment, 'who should Itti-e been the champions of the rialits of free labor, the .standard-hearers in the strugPe of Freedom, were first and foremost in )ielding to the Mandates of the Slave Power. I speak as I believe( truth demands, and as the iron pen of history will make up thg record of the times. "A great ques tion, affecting the honor and character of the Re public, vital to the interests of the white laboring man has been icoparded and endariaered,.in a sel fish scramble for office. A new creed was set up, a new platform aortic:4 of party fidelity erected. Denunctation and pro si-ription followed all who would not bow down at the shrine of Slavery Propagandism. Northern men, who dared to I indicate the rights of free la bor, to speak and vote hi favor et the while mail and his Children, were proscribed by an Admini , . tration that owed existence to the sacrifices and noble ellorts of . the Democracy of the North. Its organ here was pleased to proclaim that the•advo cates of freedom u Unlit -find no favor w ith tboigt Who, but for their support, would hai - e slumbered on w the, shades of retirement. The patronage of — the Goverinnent, and the money at the People, Were employed to pro..ti ate the cane of Freedom; an& to overwhelm and crush Its advocates. 'A. press, largely dependent upon patronage I.nt sup port. was actively engaged in misrepresenting the true nature of the great i-sue inyolyed, and in de nouncing thore NOIO in the face of power, and in denunci,ol the mandater, remained true to prittct• ple, anti to their solemn convictions of duty. Such were the influencr, and such the means employed, to break the ranks of the Northern De mocracy, and to rait-e upon free Foil, advocates for the propagation and P‘tensinn of hunian slavery.— It is time that the, white laboring man should know' that the Government which hesuplons by his la bor, and defends by his strong arm, is against hint in this eAruggle for his rights. It is time he should understand the influences that pervade this Capi• tot, and which exert so powerful a control over the legislation of the country. The efforts of their friends will be unavailing so long as the patronage of the Government is.wielded against them. Mr. Chairman' : . Tln4*s a day of changet, and nt new theories, in the polifical world. Novel and most estraorsinvary doctrines have recently been put forth by the advocates or slave extension. Our rights to legislate for terreory has been gravely ......-- . . .. . . . .. • 4.• , ' [ .1 - ii., , 14:. ari - . .. . 0 . . •• - . T ; '' . . .. . .. .., ~....., . .. .. .. . 5 • - . , , ;31 , - 1 , Alit‘TA ,' ' , ..' ‘‘. , T../ . .r - .7 ' ' ' '. ''' .'' '' ' , -1.,,, ''''...,.,,t. _.....,. , ~,,,, J . : -• . :., . ';' 7 . .. ..., '...., . ...4,r, f ..,ti• ....z: :r II A- • :, ...• / I * • • 7.i .4 . i .' ;•1 Y - % , E" .14 I/. 7..* -4 , 1...;:. . 0.,,,,,-. ALI. , ~.......6 .!t:4l. r.,;...: i..a..,tr ) !.1 . :..1.1 ',.4•:-.-1.4 PUBLISHED EVERY WEDNESDAY, AT TOWANDA,IIRADFORD COUNTY, PA., BY E. O'MEARA qOODRICH. and more common-sense constructinn. 'Mare Cuustittition were sleet upt a this subject, still the 4tiestion would be' free from difficulty or doubt. With what show of reason and fair argu ment can it be maintained, that we may acquire vast Exr-sessions, at an expense of millions of trea sure and the best blood of our c nizets, and yet have uo rower to gewerii it when acquired i No power -- r • - _ AIEOSOLEiIi j 3-33: • • to impose our laws upon its people, or to giro cha racter to its.institutions ! Such dui:trines cannot be defended. They are the resort of those who fear to meet this question, lest it disturb the harmony of patty organization, and ent4inger ale .*ccoS.s of party leaders. It is a question alxive parry ; it is ono of honor, of character, of humanity, of the rights of free labor. Mr. Chaira an : The general jurisdiction and ly established. The sixth article contains subatun soveriguty of this Government over ifs Territories nobly the resolution of Mr. Jefferson. It provides being established by the whole history of our leg- as follows: islatirm, what is there in the Constitution. or in the "There shall be neither slavery nor involuntary practice under it, that juatifies this claim of special servitnde in said Territory, ettn!rwise than in the punishment of crimes, whereof the party shall have exemption, on behall of slavery? Will any man been duly convicted." tell me why it is, that we may regulate the clues- This Ordinance was passed by the unanimous .tions of suffrage and eligibilirssto office in a Territo- vote of the slaveholding States. It elearty estals ty, and not the question of Slavery ? Is slavery of fishes; the policy marked out by the men who laid higher regard than these ? May this Government the foundations of our free institutions. Thevlook regulate and control within its Territories, every oth- ed upon Slavery in its true light—as an evil of the er interest and every other right. except that of sla firat tnagnituile—a 'curse upon men and nations.— very alone ? Does shivery dictate its own laws and It had been indicted upon us by the cupidity .olthe ilehue its own limits ? Is there ncs power to stop t motner country, and in the face of the earnest m ils progress—to stay ,its advances—to arrest the maestri - wes of the people of that day. For it exis curse and desolation of its march ? Congress has tence among us, we were in no respect reapimsi no power to bind the States by enactments such as ble. lt was in view of these circumstances that are contained in every territorial bill it and if its our fathers adopted the wise policy of leating to the power over territory be circumscribed by the same I several States in which it existed entire control constantional restraints that are applicable to States, I overahe subject within their respective limits, and, then is any bill you may pass a usurpation and a re the same time, of providing securities against its nullity ; then has this Goverameut been in error, spread aver the unoccupied territories of the nation. homalie•day of its foundation down to the present Who is it, sir, that now demands a departure from hour. States and Territories am widely different in this wise and safe policy ! Who are responsible their character, and in respect lo the power of this I for all the consequences that may follow the agita- Govenunent over them. The former are orsaniz- hoe of this subject? I answer, the responsibility eil, , inilependent powers, sovereign in all things, -is with those who seek to overturn the Settled poli save in those restriction= and grants contained with. cy of this Government—who demand, that the ter m the Constitution. The latter arc unorganized, I ritory of the nation, heretofore closed up against the (I_,peniletit coinmunitics, destitute of sovereignty, approaches of Slavery, shall now be opened to its lookine in us for political i•xistence, and in'time Our desolating march. To thisiequirement we can 111.- an admission into this sisterhood of States. i ver )ield. Let - the South adhere to the policy It has become habitual with many, when sneak -which. in 1747, she aided to establish, and which ing upon this subject, to talk hole the guaranties has been "preserved uniform and unbroken from of the Constitution in a manner that seems to nn- that day to the present. NVe can consent to no ply the existence of some solemn covenant ; planing ss i lasse , We w ill sanction no departure limn this slaver - upon a different footing fruit that upon ! wise policy. We will not aid by onr votes, or elfish rest , -ill the:other laws and institutions oldie countenance by borraience, the p v i m °l s la _ Statea. The Constitution no more guaranties the , .:.asery of Vilainia, than it does the banking very over the flee soil of this Continent. s 'Y s 'l l The first Conerets that assembled after ti the ;slop tem of Ventisylvania, or the common school ay s- ; • non of the C,onstitution, on the 7th of A trust, 1789, tern of New York. These are subjects without the passed an act confirming the Onlinance of 1787, s . shere of the Constitution, and, in respect to the • and giving to it full force and validity. The pur- States ; beyond Federal istaference and control.— 1 poses of this act clearly appear from the preamble, The ) belong to the powers -reserved to the States. which is in these words: No rowels arc reserved to the Territories. The ' Whereas, in order that the Ordinance of the Uni- Constitution recognizes the existence of certain per- 1 ted States, in Congress assembled. for the govern sons, not freemen, but nowhere guaranties the con- went of ths territory, northwest of the Ohio, may tinuance of slavery—much less does it provide for continue to brafa ll force and e ff ect, it it, required that certain provistonsshould be made to adapt the its indefinite extension. same to the present Consutuuon of the United States No one will deny but that the banking system I —Be a enacted," ika. within the States is as far removed from the con- I This act received the constitutional approval of trot of the General Government as is the institution Washington. Many, of those who participated in of slavery. The laws of Pennsylvania which au- its enactment had been members of the Conven thorax bauking are as sacred from Federal inter- I tion that flamed the Constitution, ant, therefore, lerence as are the laws of Virginia which authorist may be supposed to have understood its true in the holding of slaves. Congress can no more in- tent and meanitie. terfere with the former than it call with the latter. On the 7th of May, 1800, an act was passed for Both rest upon State authority, and te e th are alike I the organization of a Territorial Government for beyond the control of this Government. yet Con- Indiana. and Slavery expressly prohibited therein. gress may annul a bank charter, and nprobt the This act Was approved by John Adams. . - whole system of banking, in a Territory. I January 11th, 1805, the northern part of Indiana The Territorial Legislature of Florida having in- was erected into the Territory of Michigan, and corporaled several banks, an:l insurance companies I Slavery prohibited. February 3d, 1809, the Terri with banking privileges, Congress, by ace of July tory of Illinois was established, with the like pro -Ist, 1836, declared the same repealed and annul- I hibition as to Slavery. These two latter acts re led, •‘ together with all other acts and parts.of acts ; (Tired the approval and signatUre of Thomas Jef passel by the said Territorial Legislature of Florida ferson. in the yetsr 1536, ereating tsanks, or extending batik- On the 20th of April, 1836. Wisconsin was or,. ing, corporations, or corporations with banking pow- amazed as a Territory. and Slavery orobilated with in,. or conferring banker; powers on any corpora- in its Inuits. This act was approved by General lion or Matheson; whatever."' Jackson. Was this an act of usurpation and tyranny over I The Ternary of lowa was established by act of kite good people of Florida? Or did it fall within Congress of the 12th of June, 1838, tinder the ad the exercise of the iielitful power of this Govern- ministration of Mr: Van littreu : and here, also was ment ? It the tatter. as lam bouid to believe. then Slavery prohibited. Why with equal right may not Congress prohibit i Here are a series of enactments, commencing the introduction of slavery into Territories in which with the Ordinance of 1787, which was confirmed it does not exist ! Slavery and banking depend by Congress, in 1789, under the administration of upon the same anthotitylor support—the authority Washinatott, Eleven through the administrations of of Stale laws They are both equally - secure front I Adams, Jefferson, Jackson and Van Buren, to the Federal interference within the States and alike I yeat 1838. when the last Territorial Goyemment subject to our control within the Territories. I Will, ors -ensed, covering a period of more than half IVe are nut left, is the investigation of this sub- a century. in which this polio- of resteietine the jeet, to argument drawn from analogy alone. We spread of Slavery Was steadily pursued and enfree have precedents fur our guide—the authority of the ; ed. The constitutionality of these enactments was lounders of the Republic, for our instruction. Our , not controverted at the time ; nor has it ever blase lathes had this same question in hand : and in its been _called in question. settlement, as in all things, gave sis an example I Not content with providir that slavery should worthy of imitation. Immediately upon the close never exist in any Territory which was free from of our Revolutiouary struggle, the wise and good it at the time ul its organization, Congress has front men of tse die, turned their attention to the condi- tirrie to time regulated and restricted it in those Ter tion of the country, and he'ssan to digest plans to dairies where it had an actual existence. promote its prosperity and growth. Among the By the 7th section of the act organizing a Terri objects of paramount interesethat first engaged their tonal Government fur Mississippi, passed la 1798, .attention, sails the then alinost trackless wilderness the importation of slaves into said Territory from of ffie j Nottliwest. The territory lying northwest of any place without the United States was prohibited, the Ohio river embraced the entire national d'omain. under severe penalties. This was ten sears berme It was the great heritage of our people—the field Congress had the rower, under the Constitution,to in which our empire was to growsand expand. It prohibe the importation of slaves into !to States. was the cnnimon property of the North and the By act of the 26th at Mareth, 1804, that part of South, secureil i ky the joint efforts and cOmmon ca- Louisiana sonth of the Terri'nry of Mississippi was et-ince:l of both, in the same great struggle for Na organized into a Territorial Government, by the tional Independence. Looking, out upon this ler- name of Orleans. By this act, the importation into tile field of human enterprise and labor, they.dis• said Territery of slaves from abroad, was prohibit covered the germ of an evil, which, if permitted to ed, and also the importation of any slaves from grow, scold blight its fertility, and paralyze the within the United States who should have been energies of its people. It was Slavery just starting brought into the country since the Ist of May, 1798, into life They strangled the monster. or who should thereafter be brought into the Uni- As early as 1784, Thomas Jefferson, the great ted States. It further provided that no slave should apostle of our faith, introduced into the Congress of be brought into said Territory, except by a citizen the Confederation a proposition, having reference of the United States, who should remove there for In the States to be fanned out of this Territory of the actual settlement, and who should at the time be Northwest It was in these words: the bona foie owner of such slave ; thus directly in- Retal yea, Thai, after the year eighteen hundred of terdicting the domestic as well as the foreign slave the Christian era there shall be neither Slavery nor involuntary servitude in any of the said Stain, oth• trade in this Territory of Means. This act was • erwise than in the punishment of crime, whereof the approved by Jeffemon. party .hall have been duly convicted to have been On the 6th of March,' 1820, art act was passed" to personally guilty. authorize the people of Missouri to form a Consti- This, sir, looks very much like the " Proviso." tution and State Government, and for the addmis- Here is the original " . firebrond"--the heresy, for sion of such State into the Union on an equal foot- = holding on to whioh men am now proscribed by the:Government of their country. Mr. Jefferson, had he lived it this day ; would have been denounc ed as an Abolitionist, Enid a disturber of the peace of the triton. This resolution did not pass at the time ; but, in 1757, three years later, the work was consum mated, and the great Ordinance of Freedom firrn• ~i~oz3 -r~iaT I ~.;~~~~ B=IMMILE= •ng with the original Statee, and: to prohibit shier/ jaws it will enlists woe io die Pacifiei , leefethel . in cerise fcrritoties." .. power 01 tile Government is itempased to prevent By the tith section' of that act it was provided, .t. 'I% is sir, is a teCat paten: and politieel sine, i "that in ell that territory ceded' by France to° the tiori. Ite settlement belays to the Veopte, and siri United States, uuderthe, name of Louisiana, which t i the Conrts. : The Supreme Court have already lies north Of thirty-tax degrees and thirty miuutes -decided thet we have authority over the .subject ; north latitude, not included within the limes°, the let atotio stir ditty, and itta seek. tn eller& ofF the .. State contemplated by this act, slavery and nivel- responsibility upon otlisee. We know whether antary servitude otherwise than in the punish:acre slavery ought or .nriett dot to overruo these .Territes of critnestwhereof the Fara shall have been duly riss, end lel as declare directly either that- W . 114 convicted; shake be, and the same is herebyforeter .Sr that it may rot • prohibited.': . Ettend slavery to the Pacific Myron ri es h hifiree This net, as also the Ordinance of 1787, actually the ultimate 't . tobjtellitittit of the whole etuuhera halt • abolished( slavery—a thing we do not now propose of this continent to its timinion. It erects a barrier to do. 'Slavery existed in parts ,of she Northwest over which free emigration cannot pass. It effect. Territory; and in Louisiana the law of slavery at the. unity cuts off the tree Stateitone all continuity time of the cession from France coveted the entire- a ith Mesieo, and secures to slaiery an easy and territory'', 'from the Gulf of Mexico to the parallel of I certniti ntivanve. tn the South. Sack a comerfotnise the forty-pine degree of Le ath latitude, and west to would be the certain triumph of Slavery, and She the Rocky Mountains. The !thesauri compromise last strtereie of Freedom. It would give to the was in harmony with the settled policy of our Gov- slave interests en ate-elute - my in this Ile:pin/lie for ern:neut., It restricted and narrowed the Ernie; -of all coming time. There is sue trey, 010 brit orfe, slavery. The arrangement that should extend i in which this controyenl should be settled. Do limitsnti a enlarge its boundaries would possess rt s hi. Leave the soil of Freedorti alone. We- make at all Mine of the features or characteristics: of the aliseou-• no hments upon slavery—we will submit ri romprOmiee. This project however has for the Ito . -,Lan the boundaries of Slavery and Ftee- present heen abandoned. It sonnht its object by i dom siandsieshey are. This is the eceriptritniee means kei direct met too easily understood. The iWe offer—it is irrst and' fair, anal all that shdeld be masses Of the flee States had condemned it in ad- \ required at our hands. Pt otecton to the institabons vance. It was well ascertained that it could not ,of the South against foreign -invasion or domestic pass 111:1 Douse, and hence the Exten , ioni-t 4 were I violence, is a duty enjoined alike by the Constittt , driven tO new shifts and dewices. A scrtimed con- tibn and the fraternal ties thatbind ustogether as one sultatme or caucus, as I am informed, was _held on I people. Slaiery within the States, es all other State • the etedine preceding the day on which the Select 1 'estimating, we held sacred from Federal interter , . Commieeeot Eight was moved in the Senate. The , mice ; but the soil of Freedom most not be invaded, known Opinions of a majority of that committee— I neither by violence nor by stealth—by the aired their opit opposition to the policy of engrafting the - action of this Government, nor by its stifferanee screat feature of the Ordinance of 1787 upon the re- and reknit acqtficzeratee. • Slavery has its abiding emelt. acquired Territories. mode it certain, from place. 'anal Freedom its home. Let the limits of the lire, that the interees of elavery would, govern each be satorilly observed. Ile- is the true bone , their ceinisels. i I promise : upott it we can stand in security and Sir, I (regard this new bantling--this "child , born peeve. Beyond, there is no met ; no place of safefie in dog tlays - - wer whose suddeu death Mr. Batch- I The experience of the last few year is full of iu- ie seems the principal, if not the only mourner, as struction. We have seen the Southern boundary a frand'both upon the people of the North and of i of the - republic extend as. if no obstacle impeded the Smith. It had no slams) of manliness about it, mar advance; while en the north, it stands like a but was a studied effort to- evade and dodge the e all el adamant. Our Northern .boundary never question. Why not meet this subject as mete end a moves except to recede. -Within three years we settle it upon a basis that all shalt understand 1 This have st y e s to our possessions s t h e . s out h ti mai _ new scheme. so happily defeated, settled nothine s tory of the extent dt nearly half of Europe, mid sur- Certain it iit, that one party or the other would hove reedered on the North a vast Country, to which it been grossly deceived. Ilas it passed, the }OA:: i was said our titletwas " clear and unquestionablei" clues hope would have been held out to the North I Such are the fruits of Southern policy. In lill4, that slavery was excluded, while at the South it Oregon and Texas were twin meattures—they litchi would have been understood that the whole coun- hand in lanna. Texas was secured ; and Oregon try map open to that itistitutitin.. The speech of the abandoned; and the moiety that terimined to Its hononible Chairman of the Committee of Eightmust be denied the protection of but Government • [Mr. Clayton] upon ate introduction of the bill to, anti laws, until we consent to Valenti sletdry beet the Sedate, is as e.Nintordinary as are all the other Nee- Mexico and California. When a meastirele eircurnstances connected with its history. ° After I proposed for the aggrandizement of the South—for mining the nature of the Governments provided fur witlenine. deepening, and strengthening the institte California and New lexico s lie goes on to say : I tion of slavely—then the patriblisni of the whole • "Thus placing lite question Lslaverfl beyond country is involed—then we are one people,. ithd : the pOwer of the Territorial Legislature. ami resting i the Democracy one great party. But let Northern ' the field to introduce dr prohibit slavery in those men talk of the integrity of free soil, of the interstate two Territories. on the Constitution, as the same and rlelits of free labor ; and a Govemttrant . press shall be expounded by the Judges, with the iiela l assails and detiourices them as Abolitionists' and of ap seal to the Supreme Court of the United States. , demagogues, who seek to create sectional divisions, It wad thought, by this means, that Congress would ' i anti to organiz parties on ',geographical lines. avoid the decision of this (Es:riding question, lea- ;Then there is. no Democracy but that which adopts ving it to be .settled by the silent operation of the I Southern opinions, and submits to Southern dicta- Constitution itself ; and that in case Congress should I tioe . - We are remiked to surrender our elle refuse to touch the subject, the coin try would be Fished principles, to do violence to Our solemn dereholdine, only where, by the law of nature, slave I convictions; and it we refuse to make this sacrifice, labor was effective, tied free labor could not main- we are driven from the councils of the party; and brie itself. On the other hand, in ease Congres-s permitted to have no voice in its deliberations. A should hereafter cheese to adopt the compromise I Northern Democratic Statesman, however exalted, of 36 ideg, 30 MM., or any other rule of settlement, I and whatever may be his claims upon the confi it N‘ ill be free to act as to its wisdurb and patriotism dence and partiality of his political friends, must, shall eeem fit.'' I quality himself as a candidate for the Presidency tateh sir is. in part, the statement of the charace by wi ineli pledges to the South—must perge him- ter a this new " comprornit , e," as given by the self of the taint anti leprosy of Freedom, and rd. chairivau who reported it to the, Senate: Truly it I reivethe stamp that marks him as the gentaine Can - was a most clear and satisfactory settlement of this 1. , didate of the slave power. Thee qualified, or stet; "distracting question." As a purely legal question, ' tified. we may be peenitted to vote for him. litre it was to be_finally put to rest by the adjudication oft do so, we save the most solemn endorsement to' our highest law tribunal. Then Came its the law principles we detest :if we withhold our totes i the of untfure—auti climate. soil, and the adaptation of i patronage of a Southern Administmtion, acting, upon the miters - to slave labor. was to fix the boentlary I a mercenary press, is employed to excitg against between freedom and slavery ;' and. lastly, the lus the honest laborer, to *hose rheas and interests whole subject was left open and unselifel for the we have stootisnie and feithful. Sir, I will not be . subsequent action of Congress. ‘Vas it not sir, an forced in a direction contrary to my principles. I ' admirable and ingenious ":compromise 1" It set- know the fearful odds that- are against me in ,this. tied the question, aid yet left it open. The Su- strugrele 2 —the overshadowing power of 111 institn prenie Court was to decide whether slavery could or tiorithat directs the action of this aofemtnent, eon could not legally eeist in these Territorieteand yet the trols its patronage, wields the organization of die slarrholder was allowed to appropriate such parts Republican party, and tears down and builds up at to himself as he deemed adapted to slave labor. pleasure.. I Snow the chances are a hundred to Such.a scheme was unworthy of support from any one, that I must go down in this unequal tornest. quarter. We can submit to be voted down, al , °Be it so: I had rather sink into the deepest obscu though it is hard when the blow comes from Nor- rity, with' my integrity and reputation unsullied than kern men ; but the cann - ot - cor.sent to be cheated. purchase distinction at the sacrifice of my self-re- We ; want'ao paltering upon this subject. When it ,!spect, and the good opinion of all honorable Men. is settled, we wieleto know how and upon what But sir, I have laith in the moral power of a good terms the settlement is made. If tree soil is to be cease . There is another day coming; tutti Sin the surrendered, tee evish to know the extent of the language of an able and eloquent statesente of surrender—the limits where slavery is to cease its, France, "I am willing to Place my bark tiptiet the ilfl,gressions. highest promontory, and await the rising of the we _l ,am fully satisfied; in my ewn mind, that this tens." I cannot believe that the Illetimattassy of die ingenious device, not of settlement, but to event a North will ever take upon its broad shoaldere - - - the settlement, give up the entire Territories of Califor- institution of slavery, and carry it ever upon _lands. ma and New Mexico to slavery. There was noth- now free. This is not the mission of the Democrat. Ing in the bill to obstruct the slaveholder in his de- is party,- and any attempt to pervert itsorganizatioa elated purpose to overrun these countries with his to such objects must end; as it should end, hoover. • slaves. Congress imposed no restraint ;and the whelming defeat. people themselves, however much opposed to spa- Those gallant and true men, Who hate fought - the - very, where expressly prohibited from raising their battle of popular rights against privilege and tnce yoke against it. The idea of a judicial deeision nmioly all its forms—who aided in trashing 11•6 that, should be effectual for the protection of those rrenster bank, and wresting from the reag of distene"Tertitories was shamefully deceptie. I Eastern capital the hard earnings of Labor, will n.O - satisfied that no case would ever have ver fight thehatles of slavery propagandism. They beein brought before the Supreme Court ; and if one will never become the champkins of a =lntl poorrt had been, before a decision was obtained, slavery in the Eolith, more potent and more dangerous than %weld have fixed itself so firmly upon the soil, that all other enemies of liberty combined. Southern its removal would have been impossible. Slavery capes' has a thousand millions of dollars invested neVer yet went into a country tinder the authority in shires; and this is another great struggle between of previous law. The law of slavery -is the law of capital and labor. Northern and Eastern capital, violence and aggression. How came slavery in invested in manufactures, claimed the_privilege of Texas' It found its way the rem violation of law, . Isr.l 701711111 PAGJI .1 - ; ' ~.. ME EI=IMI . X ==.llH:.l. - • Mr MEI