OU D3UAR PER ANNUM, INVARIABLY IN ADVANCE. TOWAJNTDA: S.iinr&fln fllormrtn, fttarcl) 29, 1836. Mail's in |iansas. REMARKS OF 11()X. G. A. GROW, i,,;n:?. v !?cof I, ISO 6. •n ? House If ins in * tiie Committee of the Whole on the , V • th.- I'nion. and having under consideration the 1;-latent V annual message. Mr. GROW said : M- Speaker : Rumors of a prospect of ci vil war; the Territory of Kausas have reach ,,,'l n . and filled the public mind with gloomy fll ,jtrvheiision. The President in his annual -age informed us, that " in the Territory of j; there had been acts prejudicial to good .- .■r," l ut neglected to tell what those at ts -, re: and at a later day he informed this JJ IT special message that there had been t<, jf ;nlu tc-iinst Luc, which now threaten • j ace not only of the Territory of Kansas, it of the Uniou." It becomes the imperative i; ,?v of Congress, then, to inquire into the cau . . f this state of things, and devise if possi- , y-'tie uieans by which to avert so dire aca li3i'tV. , o-r, .s being the supreme legislative pow : r the Territories, giving them their organ ,w. exeftitive and judicial officers, and pre :!._ r the mode and manner of the exercise a. their legislative functions, it is our first ;v to that the inhabitants thereof are the enjoyuieut of all the rights and ... guarantied to American Freemen r,-where under the protection of the Re pa- act- which the President regarded as • •• i: g the peace not only of the Territory Kaii-ns. but of the Union, are summed up . . mragrugh of the message : •- ig.-oolr not constituting the lxxly politic t. hi tint-, but merely a party of the iahabi • > - : : t itw. have undertaken to summon a r; purp >-e of transforming the Territory - d have formed a constitution, adopted it, <• t-d a tiovernor and other officers, and a - v.the to Congress - i aL'eh he pronounces illegal and of revo ■ S ..r ; ter. Sir, the doing of any or • a- •- in this enumeration would be no of just law or constitutional right ; - :he ; "ii- .or any part of them, of a State . t . -y have a perfect right peaceably to . ai any time, and dejiosit their votes j --on they may please, with such de •' Tee as they choose to affix : and : v, or the person so chosen, commit ■ -•r' act against the Government under i -h-y live, they have violated no law and 1 vx ■■ ..d'e for no offense, a.:y more than ■i i -1 be to assemble ami discuss their ~ -. and petition for their redress. In i Island, where there was no question as n-gularity of the existing government — lit xisted for almost two centuries— a cail lveution to form a new constitution was ."'.u. . I y jxrst ns • nfcss-'dly not cunstitutins the ; Ir - . and *.a'hout I tc, for the purjose : tiausfonuiug a charter govenuneut into a N iO- They formed a constitution, adopted and under > elected a tioveruor and other •'•rs, and a Representative to Congress.— v m 'iiber- of tiie Legislature met, swore to :* the new constitution, and the oath of wa- administered to the Governor, and • •.e tra: -mined to the Legislature.— x ' ' these acts were considered as ille •' 'he constituted authorities of Rhode and no arrests were made till Dorr . military force to uphold his goveru !:.* px>ple of Kansas have thus far done on was done in Rhode Island previous to u M a to arms. Are acts that are barm ; p* rfonne.l in a State illegal audtrea ■ when performed under like eirctira • i". a Territory ? It was not thought - . ' ■ ( wintry in the case of the admission 1 .'in into the Union, where a eouven ' ' ; • pie, called without Luc, accepted :iti. :is of Congress which had just : 1 ii} a convention of delegate* as . under authority of an act of the Le- Rut. -ir, the undoubted right of the >f a Territory to call a State eonven ' ' ' any act of the Territorial Legis 1' ..TOSS, for the purpose of trans -1 ;<>ry into a State, and to elect officers necessary to administer sueli '- • - a-eminent, has licen settled not only by v of the Government, but by the • -.' ie of its ablest legal officers and -i- v i! vlvisers of the President Du ral J.ick-on's administration the Go ■ ' Territory of Arkansas addressed - i r -oii King instructions for his guid • ' x ease the people of said Territory should • > ,'atcs to a convention without a law i-' c siatare, and organize and put in a government without authors i-iress. The Governor informed the ' : ai.'ess otherwise instructed, he •ound to consider and treat all . -. ' v .- as idavflL" The Prcsi- G •ral Jack-on, it seems, had not _T' r.t principles of popular sov aid -Led ly the compromise moa- ; s r '-iicd, through his At'orney i' F Rutler, on the 21st of Scptcni -swr sf the General Assfmhly of Ar ' .' " :• 1-epn-p—#ofek- ting-mem':-.r -- " " '••• ' '-tii a #n-;;ii:!;t-u and State eovern ] tber act. citrectlj f-r lud.rectly. to verameat. Every mich law. er-ii*th* . -rerser t the Ttarit :v, • uM - m.-L" . . " :> Trritory have an undonbt kv ' a: ' l ' mf t0 a convention, frame i a State constitution, aud elect ail ry *o its action as an indepen ... t: -' Rgh it might l>e a question w he - ... I rm any official act as State ■ • ' e action of Congress, though . - - -t v ted i aw - c voted for President a-i ttcd a State into the - -• the gtate mutt be formed If fore THE BRADFORD REPORTER. her admission ; for it is States that are admit ted, under the third section of the fourth arti cle of the Constitution, and not Territories.— I. pon this point, I read from the opinion of the Attorney General in the Arkausas case : " This provision implies that the new State shall have been constituted by the settlemeut of a constitution or frame of government, and by the appointment or those of ficial agents which are indispensable to its action as a State, and especially to its action as a member of the Un ion, prior to its admission into the Union. In accordance with this implication, evert' State received into the Union since the adoption ot the Federal Constitution has been actually organizd prior to such admission.'' Now, I desire to call particular attention to the part of this opinion which applies directly to the people of Kansas : and had it been writ ten expressly for their case, it could not have been more applicable. In defining the rights of the citizens of Arkausas, he says : . They undoubtedly possess the ordinary privileges and immunities of citizens of the United States. Among the-e is the right of the people. " peaceably to assemble and to petition the Government for the redress of grievances. "~ In the exercise of this right, tlie inhabitants of Arkansas may peaceably meet together in primary assembly, or in conventions chosen by such assemblies, for the purpose of petitioning Congress to abrogate the territorial govern ment , and to admit them into the Union as an independent State. The particular form which they mar give to their petition cannot be material so long as they "confine them selves to the mere right of petitioning and conduct all their proceedings in a pea- cable mannci. And as the pow er of Congress over the whole subject is plenary aud un limited. they may accept any constitution, however fram ed, wtiich in their judgment meets the sense of the people to lie affected by it. 11. therefore, the citizens of Arkansas thiuk proper to accompany their petition bv a written constitution, framed and agreed on by their primary as semblies, or by a convention ot delegates chi-en bv 'such assemblies, I perceive no legal objection to their power to do so." But, it may be said that this doctrine will not apply to Kansas, for there it is " merely a part of the inhabitants " who called the con vention. In all cases the call, in the first in stance, must be by a part of the people ; for it would be almost an impossibility to get the signatures of all the inhabitants of a Teritory. The call issued for a State convention iu Kau sas was iu this form : " To the legal voters a vir tue : and whereas the people of this country have hereto fore exercised the right of changing their form of govern ment when it became oppressive, and have, at all times, c - nata tory to the admission of Kan-as into the Union a State." Under it all the legal voters of the Territo ry could participate : and who shall say that a majority of them did not ? The fact that it was necessary for the pro-slavery p.rty at a later day to summon armed men from Missou ri, i$ almost conclusive evidence that a majori ty of the people of the Territory are in favor of the free State movement. But to give va lidity to the action of the people of a Territo ry iu any act which they have a right to do.it is not necessary that they should be unani mous, any more than it is necessary, in order to give validity to a law of a State, that every voter shauld be in favor of it. Majorities, under our system of government, constitute the people, and their action rs the action of the people. The members of the convention were elected ut the same time and by alioiit the same vote as the free State Delegate to Congress, and he received almost three thousand votes at a time when there was no occasion for illegal votes. Judging by the census, and the other elections held in the Territory, that would be a majori ty of the legal voters. If the proceedings for a State convention were participated in by a party only, how did it happen that the dele gates did not all hold one sentiment on the all absorbing question liefore them—that of slave ry ? Many of the deiecratos in tht conven tion were never suspected of leiiig Abolition ists or Free-Soil'*r liefore they went to the Territory, and some of them were well-known to the country as earnest advocate-of the Kan sas-Nebra.ska bill and of all the measures of this Administration. But why was it necessary for the people of Kansas at thi- early day after their organiza tion as a Territory to call a convention to frame a State constitution ? What arc the grievances that they seek in this way to redress ? They claim that under the act of Congress organiz in? the Territory they were to have the right to form and regulate their domestic institutions in their own way ; bnt, instead of that, a Le gislature was elected by non-reidcnts. tlie bal lot-box seized by armed bands of men from Missouri, and jeaeeable citizens of the Territo ry were driven by violence from the polls or shot down in cold blood. * The President has failed, though devoting an entire message to Kansas, to give ns any information as to the mode or manner in which that election was conducted, bnt seemed more anxious to discuss questions involved in the contested of a delegate on this floor, and to show, if jKsiMe, inconsistencies of eondoct in one of the officials whom lie bad appointed to office in that Territory. We are. therefore, left to rely on the history of thase transactions as they have reached us through the press and by private correspondence. But that the elec tion was a frand. and the Legislature a usur pation imposed upon the actual settlers of Kansas, is as well established as that there was an election held ; for we have no different or better means of information of the one than of the other PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY AT TOWANDA, BRADFORD COUNTY, PA., BY E. O'MEARA GOODRICH. The census of the Territory was taken in February, and the election was in the following March By the census there were but about three thousand legal voters. Yet, at the elec tion about six thousand votes were polled, while a large number of residents did not vote', owing to the threatened violence of the elec tion ; and every member elected to the Legis lature at that time, save one, belonged to the pro-slavery party. Is it to be supposed that, at a fair electiou in that Territory, but one free State man would be elected to the Legislature out of thirty-nine members, and that he should be in the district furthest removed from Mis souri ? But passing by the election for mem bers of the Legislature, I desire to call atten tion to their official acts, for these are the first fruits of popular sovereignty, as established by the repeal of the Missouri compromise. With out inquiring into the validity of that Legisla ture ou account of the mode of its electiou, or by reason of its changing the seat of govern ment to Shawnee Mission, the legislation itself is a sufiicieut justification for the free State men of Kansas to appeal, in the mode they have adopted, to Congress, to secure to them their rights and privileges. This Legislature, imposed upon Kansas bv non-residents, has disfranchised a large class of its citizens, and deprived them of the right of holding offiee, or of practicing as attorney at law in the courts, by imposing as a condition, unwarranted oaths to support particular laws of Congress or of the Lesrisiature, thereby de stroying freedom of opinion anil the right of private judgment as to the constitutionality of the laws of the country, which is the birthright of an American citizen. Mr. SMITH, of Yirgina. Quote the acts. Mr. GROW. That is what I proj>ose to do. The voter if required must swear, in ad dition to other things, to sustain the fugitive slave law before he can vote —an unheard-of requisition to require a voter anywhere under our form of government to swear to support j any particular law as a condition to vote ; for in most cases the very object of his going to the polls is to secure the repeal or modification of such laws as he considers unconstitutional or unjust. And every person elected or ap|>oi[it ed to office in the Territory must take the same oath. To be admitted to practice as attorney ■ in the courts the applicant must swear to "sup-! port the Constitution of the United States,and j to support and sustain the provisions of an act ! entitled an act to organize the Territories of Nebraska and Kansas, and the provisions of an act commonly known as the fugitive slave law,' and to which I understand the court has added all the laws of the Territorial Legis lature The Legislature has appointed or provided for the appointment of au officers uot alrcadv appointed by the General Government, for terms of from two to five years, including sher iff-, constables, justices of the peace, countv commissioners, and election boards. So that there is uot an officer in the Territory of Kan sas to-day, of any kind or description, civil, military, or judiciai, except the thirteen mem bers of the council, who hold their offices for two years, in the selection of which the peo ple of the Territory have had any voice, nor can they have under present regulations till the ftil of The Legislature has prolonged its own existence by legislative act till the 1-t of January, 18,>3, so there can be no change in the laws till after that time. This is the pop ular sovereignty that leaves the people " per fectly free to form and regulate their domes tic institutions in their own way." And under these circumstances toe people of Kansas are are assured by the President that " the con stitutional means of relieving the people of un just administration and laws by a change uf public ageuts and by repeal are ample." But, in addition to invading the right of private judgment, and of depriving the people of all voice in the selection of their rulers, the Legislature lias struck down freedom of speech, freedom of the press, and the inalienable rights of men, and enacted into law a despotism as galling, if not a? odious, ns that of the House of llapsburg. The rightsof freemen nre tram pled under foot, while the right to slave pro perty is shielded and protected by the highest sanctious of law. The {icnalty for advising or assisting an apprentice to run awnv from his master is a fine of not less than S2O, nor more than $-">UO : but for enticing or carry ing away a slave, death, or ten years'imprison ment. I For harlx>ring or concealing an apprrntirr. | oue dollar for each day's concealment ; bat fur harboring or concealing a slave, not less than live years' imprisoninent at hard labor. For advising or jiersiuiding an apprentice to rrbd against or assault ids master, not less i than £2O. nor more than SSOO : but for adri ' sing or persuading a slave to rebel, DEATH. Kidnapping a free mail and selling him into slavery, an offense that should receive the se verest punishment known to the criminal calen dar. unless it be for taking life—and I know '■ mat as that should be excepted ; for what gra ver offense against the laws of a civilized com munity could be committed, than to seize a j peaceable citizen reposing upon its protection, and place upon him the chain and the manacle, and then consign him to hoj>elcss bondage— yet the penalty for snch an offense nudf r the laws of Kansa< is not to rreeed ten years' im prisonment ; while death is the penalty for aid i tug or atsisting in persuading a slave to obtain 1 his freedom. For decoying and carrying away a child un ; der twelve years of age. in order to detain or ronrtnl it from its parents, imprisonment not to exceed five years, or six months in county jail, or fine of SSOO, at the discretion of the court. Even the innocence and helplessness of chiid- I hood finds less protection under the sanction of these laws than is given to the right of pro pertv claimed in the sonls and bodies of meu. A. MEXBER. They do not sell the souls. Mr. GROW. Can it be separated at the auction block ? Does it not go with the body in this world's pilgrimage, till it passes the dark valley ? Mr. Chairman, I hare contras ted .some of these laws for the purpose of show ing what kind of protection is thrown around *' REGARDLESS OF DESUNCUTtON FROM AXT QUARTER." the rights of freemeu, compared with that giv ven to a particular species of property. General Striiigfellow,in a letter to the Mont gomery (Ala.) Advertiser, uses this language as to the character of the laws of the territo ry in reference to slavery : " They have now laws more efficient to protect slave property than any State in the Union. The*o laws have just taken effect, and have already silenced Abolitionists; for. in spite of their heretofore boasting, they know they will be enforced to the very letter and with "the utmost rigor. Not onlv is it profitable for slaveholders to go to Kansas, but politically it is all important." Not content with enacting laws more effi cient to protect slave property than any State in the Uniou, they attempt to stifle freedom of speech and of the press 1y enacting that— "lf any free- person, by speaking or writing, assert or maintain that person-, have not the right to hold slaves in this Territory, or shali introduce into this Territory, print, publish, write, circulate, or cause to be introduced into this Territory, written, printed, published, or circulated in this Territory, any book, paper, magazine, pamphlet, or circular, containing any denial of the right of person* to hold slaves in this Territory, such person shall be deem ed guilty of felony .and punished by imprisonment at hard labor for a term not less than two vears. '• Xo person who is conscientiously opposed to holding slaves, or who does not admit the right to hold slaves in this Territory, shall sit as a juror on the trial of any pro secution for any violation of any of the sections of this act.' Such are some of the laws of the Territory of Kansas which the I'resident has announced must be enforced at the point of the bayouet, if necessary. The first gun fired by the armies of the Republic in such a cause would be but the echo of the British musketry in the streets of Boston on the Iflth of April, 1775, and its flash would light a flame that the floods of the father of waters could not extinguish. Should a despot of the Old World issue an edict that ouv of his subjects who should de clare that he had not a divine right to rule, to imprison and to kill, should be incarcerated in the dungeons, and that auy one should be in competent to try the accused unless he believ ed in the divine rights of kings, would not an execration go up from the heart of civilization deep and bitter as the wailingsof the damned ; and his name would head the infamous roll of the worlds Neros, Gesslers, and llaynaus ; vet in the heart of the Republic American citizens are to-day required to submit to an enactment in the form of law wot less odious. It is to free themselves from such wrongs, and that they may enjoy the common rights of American freemen, that the people of Kansas have peaceably assembled and formed a consti tution, in order to petition Congress for a re dress of grievances. The I'resident informed us, in his special message, that associations were formed in some of the States to promote emigration to Kansas, which " awakened emotions of intense indigna tion in States near to the Territory of Kansas, and especially in the adjoining State of Mis souri.'' \Y liy this iudignation at any effort to furnish settlers to the Territory, and thus to j>eople the wilderness ? For the first time in the history of the country has any effort to fa cilitate the settlement of new States excited indignation anywhere. But the prayer of the patriot and the philanthropist has ever follow ed the hardy pioneer, as he went forth to sul>- due the forest and convert the lair of the wild beast into a home for civilized man. But the reasou assigned for the special in dignation of the people of Missouri, is, that their " domestic peace was the most directly endangered." Sir. how could the domestic peace of any section of this ITnion be endanger ed by building up new States in the wilderness, and covering its desert waste with the homes of civilized men ? Though the President fail ed to give us that information, General Atchi son has, in a letter to the Atlanta (Georgia) Examiner, dated Platte City, December 15, 1855 : •• Ka:i*a* ami M *>ouri have the same latitude, elimr.te, and soil, and sh u.1.1 have the same institution*. The peace and prosperity of Ict'i depend upon it. A 'visas fi*t hare stare insit tattoos, or J/inouri must hare fere institutions— hence the intere-t the " border ruffians " take in Kansas affair-. '• If the settlement of Kansas had beer, left to the laws which govern emigration, it would have been a slave Ter ritory as certainly a- Miss -an is a slave State ; but inas much a* those laws have tieen violated and perverted by t!e force ot money, and a powerful organization in the North and Ea-t. it heeo nes the South " to be np and dm ins." ar>d to -end in a population to counteract the North. " Let your \ Ming men . one forth to Missouri and Kan -a*! !-• : llw-ii come i rdl armed, with money enough to ■.upport them IT twelve month*, and determined to SEE th;-thiijsr "tit! One hundred true men will be an acqui sition. The more the better. Ido not -ee h>w we are to avoid civil war; come it will. Twelve months will cot elap*e before ear—util war of the fiercest kind—will be upon u.-. We are arming and preparing f>r it. Indeed, c of the border counties are prepared. We m :-t have the support of tin s-jutii. Il'r are /igoiing the bailies of Ike South, fur nu/tW ons are at ttahe. Voti f:i -outli er n men are now out of the naive of the war. but. if we fail, it will read'. "ir own door*, perhap* your hearths. We want uien. armed men. We want motley—not for our-elve*. b.t t ■ supjewt our fr.eads who inav corae fr ta a d i-lance." I* the domestic peace of Missouri emlanger ed, tlicu, by an effort to make Kansas a free State? Are the institutions of Missouri and the South staked ou the issue whether a free State shall join a slave State on the west ? Then the only vital question in the politics of the day is freedom or slavery to Kansas ; for its destiny is to shape and control that of all the territory west of it to the Pacific. For, with slavery established in Kansas, its insti tutions, as well as those of the South, will be just as insecure with a free State on its wes tern border as would be Missouri with Kan sas free. The moving cause, it seems, then, for abrogating the restriction on slavery in this vast territory, once consecrated to free dom. was to plant upon its virgin soil the in stitution® of human bondage, so that the do mestic jieacc of the southern States might not lie endangered. The repeal of the Missouri compromise "as. from its inception, a conspiracy against free dom. The moving cause that abrogated th:< time-honorcd restriction was to secure the in troduction and establishment of slavery, so as to prevent, if possible, a free State bordering a slave State on tine west. For but one Ter ritory was needed for all purposes of fair set tlement : and such was the form of the hill first introduced. Vet it was afterwards di vided without any apparent reason, unless it was to enable slavery the more easily to make its conquest. Why was Kansas intrenched and hemmed in entirely by the State of M-ssouri, and re stricted to a small area compared with Ne braska, with an imaginary line lor its north- ! ern boundary, when the Platte river, a few miles further north, was the great natural boun dary that should hare divided the two, if a division was to be made ? Was it because that would bring a part of Kansas opposite lowa, so that freemen could reach the Terri tory without the necessity of passing through a slave State ? Why was the clause always before inserted in every territorial bill since the formation of the Government, requiring the laws of the Territory to be the supervi sion of Congress, omitted in this? Then, when, the time comes for electing the Legis lature, which is, of course, to give shape, by its action, to the institutions of the infant State, it is secured to slavery by an invasion, of non-residents, and then follows the legisla tion to which I have referred : a series of acts, all pointing, from the first, to the consumma tion of one object—the lulfillment of the pro phecy of General Atchison, made in the Seu ate of the United States, that if the Missouri compromise was repealed Kansas would be a slave State. And he has insisted upon that opinion from that day to this. In addition to all this, the secretary of the Territory, who is required by act of Congress to transmit " one copy of the laws and jour nals or the Legislative Assembly within thir ty days after the end of each session, and one copy of the executive proceedings and official correspondence semi-annually," Presi dent, and copies of the laws to the Senate and House of Representatives, to be deposited in the libraries of Congress, has neglected entire ly to send the laws to Congress, or to 'nroish the President with the executive proceedings. If so, the President has not transmitted them to the Senate, to answer to their call for them, and has not answered a call made by this Ilon-e more than three weeks since. So I take it for granted that they have not been furnish ed by the secretary of the Territory, as requir ed by law. So, uo information of the doings of the Territory reaches ns officially till a late day, and then we are furnished only such part as the officials choose to give, lint his neg lect on the part of one of the officials of the Territory is passed by unnoticed by the Presi dent, while he removes other officers for alleg ed dereliction of duty. Now, if the gentleman from Virginia [Mr. SMITH] wishes it, I will yield to him. Mr SMITH, of V irginia. Ido not desire to interrupt the gentleman at this point ; I merely made the remark—rather sub rosa thau otherwise—that I did not undersarid why the gentleman should complain of the secretary of the Territory for failing to pat the House and the country iu possession of the territorial laws when I found him using those laws and arguing njion them I thought it was rather unneces sary fault-findiug. Mr. GROW. I suppose, then, Mr. Chair man, that it would not be necessary for the officials of the Government to do their official duty becun.se the information they might com municate could obtained in some other wav. 1 take it for granted that, when the organic law requires an officer of the Territory to do a certain duty, you have a right to complain if lie fails to perforin that duty, even though you may obtain the information by soine other means. But to return from the digression into which I have been drawn by the gentleman's remark. It seems, that but one object has actuated this whole movement, from the inception of the repeal of the Missouri compromise, and that has been to supplant free labor and fre* institutions, in order to establish slavery on the soil of Kansas. Why are men brought there face to face with the bayonet in their hands and deadlv hostility in their hearts ? Governor Shan non, in his dispatch to the President, giving an account of the troubles at Lawreuee, savs : "Tlii ex itemeot increased aid spread, mt oa'r through out this whole Territory, but was' worked cp t j the ut most point of intensity ia the while of the npper portion of Missouri. Armed men were seen rushhig fr rn a!' quarters towards Lawrence, some to defend the place and others to demolish it.'' " Men rush with arms to demolish it !" From where? The State of Missouri. What interest has Missouri in enforcing the laws of Kansas more than the State of Ohio, or Yir ginia ? General Atchison tells ns : Slave in stitutions for Kansas or free institutions for Missouri Slavery in Kansas secures -lavery forever in Missouri. This is the motive whi> li brings from Mi.-souri men to preserve law and order in Kansas. From the description in nn part of this letter, the " law and order" ti.at such men wo old preserve is like the protect o > the wolf WQuld give the lamb. In another part of the despatch he -ays : " l fined in the camp al Wakara-a a deep and se;tk-d feeling of rutrtJity the oppo-:;ie force* in l-nw reuie. and apparently a fixed determination to utta-k thi- pi ice and forth to enforce ' Jaw and order, and to preserve peace and (jni et in one of the Territories of the Uuion. — . They cotne for what ? To dtmoiish a town, to burn its houses, and drive out its citizen from their homes at the po'nt of the bayonet. • Why is Mi>.-ouri fjh'ivc thr 'nf ih< S- ulfi ; and Itow are hy a common motive. T!ic three mil lion slaves in the South, at an average price of SSOO each, makes a capital of $1.500,000. 000. Rut, in addition, it is the same interest that owns the landed and personal so that the moneyed interest of the South IBH acts together hy a common sympathy bly exceeds £4.000,000,000. Whatever, then, tends to enhanee the market value of the slave moves this mighty interest with a common im pulse. A moneyed interest in any country al-. wave stnigsrles to seize upon its Government,' and to wield it for its own advantages. Hence j the innovations on the early and well-estab lished policy of tJso Government in restrwrtiog shverv where it had not an actual ex'stence. ' VOT-i. XVI. —NO. 42. Hence the efforts now making to overtarn the settled decisions of the courts, and to nation alise the institution of slavery ander the nw doctrine, that the Constitution carries it wher ever its jurisdiction extends unless there be lo cal law to prevent it. The Democracy of the country, in the davs of its glory and triumph, resisted the attempt of the moneyed interest of the country, invest cd in bauking, to seize upou this Government to use it for its owu purposes. They also re sisted the attempt of the moneyed interest en gaged in manufacturing to use this Govern ment for its purposes. And yet here is a nnit ed, conceutratcd moneyed interest—compared to which either of those was but as a drop in the bucket to the ocean—endeavoring to use a thi3 Government for the promotion of its in terests and the advancement of its ends. Now, sir, it is to resist any such attempt, on the part of the moneyed iuterest invested in slaves, that the people whom I represent resist all at tempts to plant slavery in Kansas. Regarding it, as did the fathers of the Ro public, as a social and political evil, that re tards the growth and development of a coun try by degrading its labor, they believe it to be the duty of Congress to do in reference to the Territories what Madison desired it to do more than a half century ago in reference to the foreign slave trade. In urging its aboli tion he says : " The dlctat--"? of humanity, the principle* of the poop!# the nation*! solety and happiness, and prudent policy re quire it of us. " It is to be hoped that, by expressing a national disap probation of this trade, we may destroy it. and save onr selves from reproaches, and our posterity the imbecility ever attending on a country filled with slaves."' And here. sir. I desire to read an extract from a speech of mine iu the last Congress on the Nebraska bill : " But it is 3!iid that these Territories ere common pro perty and that all the citizens of the United State* have common rights in them ; and that, therefore, no citizen can he excluded from emigrating to tliern without injus tice and degradation. No one proposes to exelnde any person from emigrating and settling on the public domain. The Territory, it is true, is the • ->miu-nt:i n shouM the statesman be loaded, who. permitting one h.ilf toe citizen® thus to tramnle on the right* of the other, trau-f arms into despots, and these into enemies, destroy® th'- montli of the one part, and the amor pariUt the other." I trust, s'r, that Jefferson, born and reared amid the inSuences of slavery, will not be re garded as a fanatic for his views of the insti tution. As for ntyself, I have no sentimental ities. othir than those which man should ever feel for the miseries and woes of his race, on the subject of -lavery as it exists in the States. If it be a good, those who have it are entitled to all its blessings ; if an evil, they alone have to answer for it to their own consciences, to the public opinion of the world, and to their God. I would leave it. then, to the people among whom it exists to devise, in their own t'me and in their own w ay, the mode and man ner of it.® removal. That is a problem with the solution of which I tax not my brain. It has taxed in vain the wisdom and ingenuity of some of the wisest and ablest statesmen of the K -public. \\ hen. therefore, we find an institution that once planted among a people they are unable to devise any means to gi-t rid of, eventhongh they desire to do o, should we not hesitate in doing any act by whh-Ji it would be fasten ed upon a people who have if not. and who won Id be much better without it ? Would the people of Kansas, if left to their own free choice, to-dav choose th° institution of slavery instead of the free institutions ? It is said that the object of t!ie bill organiz ing the Territory was to leave the people to do as tliey j lease. The people of Kausas to