0, DOLLAR PER ANNUM, INVARIABLY IN ADVANCE. TOAVANDA: Jdarsban fllorninn, December 25, 1836. PKLEGATB FROM KANSAS. „ REMARKS OFMR. GROW, iSTHK HOL'SK OF REPRESENTATIVES. DEC. 1.1956, On the Question of Admin Uterine the Oath of Office to j, .UN it". WHITFIELP, as the Delegate from Kunetts Territory. Mr*GROW said : Mr. Speaker, on the certificate presented, I am opposed to the ad inirsion of Mr. Whitfield to a seat as Delegate from the Territory of Kansas. The gentleman FRONT Missouri .Mr PHELPS] is entirely mista keu in supposing that this course of proceeding u unprecedented, and contrary to all principle which has prevailed in the organization of this House. The mere presentation of credentials ,ioo not in all cases entitle the holder to be .worn in as a member of this House. If the | certificate of election shows upon its face that it is not in conformity with the requirements of the law upon which it is based, or if the law j •self under which the election was held is upon •j face in violation of the Constitution of the United States, or of any organic law of higher authority than itself, then the certificate alone (joes no* furnish such a prima facie case as w,.tilth under the usual proceedings of the 11. •]>('. admit a member to a seat. In the case of Letcher r.. Moore, first session ii Twenty-third Con stress, while the roll was v, _ r called by the Clerk, and before the orsmn on of the House, Mr. Allan, of Kentucky, heiii a certificate of election. After diseus von, the House proceeded to elect a Speaker r other offi ers. without permitting either of ': c aimants to vote. The case was finally ilieugh one of them held a certificate of election. in ;in l celebrated New--.Tersev case, first ses • of Twenty-sixth Congress, five j>ersons np i "cil at the bar of the House, claiming to rif s.ii-. that Sia e. with certificates bearing Br ad Seal" of the Commonwealth. Yet, wer two weeks' discussion, the House refused 1 tcadminister the oatli of office, or to permit j MI to vote in its organization, and tinallv re ■:e ] tiiu-e holding the certificates of election, i : miiuitted their contestants to seats it s not for the gentleman from Missouri, j Mr. PHELPS,] or myself, to reject theauthori- j 7of tliis precedent, for it was made bv the 1 "y w:h which loth or us were then acting, | : .i.-uld it come with good grace from those j prating with that gentleman to-day. It s vc< ssury to consume time in citing other " vdents. for tiiese arc amply sufficient, so j> any precedent may be necessary to sus my position in this case. lut, sir, were no precedent for this course of proceeding, i reumstauces surrounding the case would mselves justify it. At ihe opening of the last session, the same i; iitiou was made in behalf of thisclaiuiant t now. I then objected to the oath of office • - aiiministcrcd, for the reason that, in my , _ cut, it was not such a prima facie case f - ome within the usual practice of the ■i s-e ; but out of deference to the wishes of c- !r. sis, the whole House in fact, I did not my objection for immediate action. We -- Urn nine weeks electing a Sj>eaker. and l : ' a.-iks more would, of course, be consuin -.ccussing the right of the claimant, 1 would for tiiat leugth of time prevent •'.rtlur organisation of the House, and -• itUy all action on the other important -> to come liefore it. Hut no such con - for delay exist at this time, und we J -n. j! disjiose of tiiis case now as at any j t"ijuetit day. It was adjudicates! at the ; r:, after a most thorough investiga if'.er a fuller examination than was ever ~ven to a con tested-election case in the ' j ' -v of your Government. A committee j ! --- • }>y tlii> House to Kansas, to investi | i. the alleged frauds and irregularities of I * ti.v-tior.s m that Territory. After exani - *>: i call, and nnder .cross-examination. • " • Hundred witnesses, lielonging to all • a::; of various {wlitical sentiments— -1 - Tij ies of the official records of the Ter- j comparing the |x>ll-books and cen '' " - each electiou district, they re • an t r> j-irtcd to this House, that at the tiso members to the Territorial As *h ■•!■ passed the election law upon - - '-•a-u the certificate under which Mr. i i;.>w claims, every Representative one wa< controlled by armed men -- •- uri • and that of the six thousand . WsVirp-1 and seven votes polled in the 7at that election, but one thousand * - and ten were legal votes. By " tak-:i thirty days before this elec red by the organic act. there were :-ai:d nine hundred and five legal 1 ti.' Territory. Thus was the legisia ■ t! > |rro|>le usurped by invaders 7 ' iiig State. Tils House, at its " a ;h all the facts ot the Kansas z t'omniittee before it, and afur , ' -'u-sion. adopted this resolution : Tiiat John W Whitfield is not ' a e 3 t in this Houseasa Delegate Territory of Kansas."* - • conclusion of the report of the - f Kkctioas. which declared " !!*' a '• jred Territorial Legislature body, and had no ! ;, -s valid laws, and titir tn -daunts ,"' rt n// , ln( j toid." *■ : • election under which the sitting ~ ~ lr -'• n W Whitfield, holds his scat. ; Q pursuance of any valid law, •* ' should lie regarded only as the ) " .•? the choice of those resident ci * : 'o Voted for him." Jwided that no valid election Kansa Why T Wasitbc * -'U election there was 110 con- Till; BRADFORD REPORTER. test ant ? Was it because there were illegal votes cast, or was it because the law under which the election was held was an invalid law ? The decision could hare been upon no other ground. The decision was, that the election was held uudei a pretended law pass ed by a usurping Legislature, and therefore in valid, which would of course vitiate any elec tion under it. What change has taken place in the Territory of Kansas since then ? Her legislature stands to-day as it did on the day the House rejected this Delegate, six months ago. No new laws have been passed. Though the application of this Delegate is renewed, it rests upon the same ground that it did before, i It is the same esse over again, and we need uo precedent in deciding it. This House, sitting as a judicial tribunal, has adjudicated the case, and declared that no valid election could be held under the election laws of the Territorial Legislature of Kansas. And why 1 Because the Legislature was imposed upon that people by au armed invasion from the ritate of Mis souri, and could therefore pass no valid law for the people of Kansas. Mr. Whitfield's seat was then contested by Andrew H. Reeder ; and our position was, "that the people of a Ter ritory had a right to be represented in this House ; and if the majority of the actual re sidents of a Representative district had chosen a Delegate, he ought to be admitted, though the law of the Territory might be a millitv. Rut the House, in rejecting Mr. Reeder at the , last session, decided otherwise. And the very same tribunal that made that decision is call ed upon to-day to review it. In deciding elec tion cases, this House sits as a judicial tribu nal. and from its decisions there can be no ap peal ; and a case once adjudicated should be considered good law. at least by itself. The fifth section of the first article of the Constitution provides that " each House shall be the judge of the elections, returns, and quali- ■■ fictitious of its own members and in order to judge of the elections of its members, it must in quire not only into the purity of the ballot-box and the freedom of exercising the elective fran chise by the voter, but also, as a necessary consequence, into the validity of the laws on . der which the election was held. To judge of the returns, it must see whether the forms pre scribed by the law have been observed : and i to judge of the qu difrations of its members, it j is necessary to examine the provisions of the i local law, to e ' prescrilml by the legislative Assembly : Pro- i j 'tided, That the right of suffrage and of hold -4 it'g rffee sk/ill be exercised only bp citizens of ' th* I nited States, and those icho shall h ire ' der/ared on oath their intention to become such. ' and shall have taken an oath to supjmrt the 'Constitution of the United States and the pro -4 visions of this act."' Now. the Territorial Legislature of Kansas cannot permit any person to vote in that Ter ritory who is excluded by that proviso. If they have done so iu the enactment of their election law, it is an invalid law . and any elec tion held nnder it would consequently be au invalid election. The eleventh section of the electiou law of the Territory of Kansas pre scribes the qualifications of voters. I read from the !aw< of Kansas, published by order of Con gress, page 252 "sYc. 11. Every free white male citizen of 'the United States, aud every free white male ' Indian who is made a citizen by treaty or ' otherwise, aud over the age of twenty-one ' rears, who shall be an inhabitant of this Ter ' ritory, and of the county or district in winch • he offers to vote, and shall have paid a Ter ' ritorial tax, shall be a qualified elector for ail 4 elective offices ; and alt Indians tcho are iuka ' bit ants of this Territory, and trko may hare ' adopted the customs of the iekite man, and who • art liable to pay taxis, shall be deemed ritizrns : 1 Trended, That no soldier, seaman, or marine, • in the regular Army or Navy of the L nited ; ' States, shall be entitled to vote by reason of i 1 being in service therein : And provided further, ' That no person who shall hare been convicted • of any violation of any provision of au act of j j • Congress entitled ' An act respecting fugitives i ' from justice, and persona escapiug from the i on shall vote In that Territory, at the first or any subsequent elec tion, unless he is a citizen of the United States, or has declared his intention to become such. Rut the law of Kansas admits all Indians to vote who have adopted the habits of the white tnan. But it may be said, that the only effect nf such a provision would be to exclude all such votes as illegal, and not to vitiate the election. The board of elections would be bouud to ad mit them, because, under the law of the Terri tory, they arc legal votes. The election law of Kansas, therefore, admits a class of voters who, by the organic act passed by Congress, are pro hibited from voting. While the law admits a class to vote who are prohibited by Congress, it excludes, by test oaths, a class which the or ganic act permits to vote, and to whom the Constitution of the United States guaranties the rights of franchise. ♦This law is doubly void. then, because it per mits a class to vote who are excluded by the organic law. and excludes a class who are en titled. iqton every principle of a just and free < rovernment, to vote in the Territory of Kansas. I need not repeat the provisions in reference to the test oaths, one of which disqualifies any man from voting if he refuses to sup port the Fugitive Sla\e Law. These provisions not only violate the Constitution of the United States, but are subversive of every principle of just government, and trample in the dust the inalienable rights of American freemen. Of what use is the elective franchise, if you can impose upon the voter, as a qualification to vote, an oath to support any particular law 1 For what does he go to the JKUK. save to elect men to make, alter, amend, or repeal laws ? And if, when he comes to vote, he must first swear to support the very law he wants chang ed, it is a mockery to call it the right of suf frage. The nineteenth section of this law, though it is not in conflict with the letter of the Consti tution. violates every principle of fairness or justice in the exercise of franchise among fair aud honest voters. It declares that 44 wheu • ever any person shall offer to vote, lie shail •be presumed to be entitled to vote." This provision requires the party, who would pre serve the purity of the ballot-box, to prove a negative. The opinion of the venerated Sena- ! tor from Delaware, Mr. Clayton, describes truly the effect of this clause in a speech he j made in the Senate during the extra session : ' 44 There could be no justice in elections, with ; ' such a provision as that in the bill. The bur-' ' den of proof is on the wrong part v. and there • fore the law is clearly and manifestly unjust ; • and oppressive."' Uu ier it. every person un known to the citizens of the election precinct \ could vote : and it would be entirely uuneces- ■ sary for a foreigner to !>e naturalized, for,were 1 he challenged, the objector must prove that he uot naturalized, which would manifestly be im- j possible. By section twenty, 4 " Whenever any per-on ' offers to vote, his vote may be challenged by ' one of the judges, or by auy voter, and the 'judges of the election may examine him ' touching his right to vote ; and if so exnmin -4 ed, no evidence to contradict shall be received." Though the objector may hold iu his hands the most ample evidence to prove the false voter's perjury, yet his vote must he received. Wei! might the Senator from Delaware ask, as he did in the Senate, what part of the ci vilized world is an election condncted on this i principle ! The election law of Kansas, upon which this certificate is based, is, in addition to the rea-, sons already given, unconstitutional, for it fixes ; iu the twelfth section qualifications for a mem ber of Congress different from those prescrib-i ed by the Constitution of the United States. ] The "qualification prescribed by the second sectiou of article one of the Constitution is, that " No person shall be a Rereseniative who 4 shall uot have attained the age of twenty-five 4 years, and have l>een seven rears a citizcu of ' the United States, and who shall not, when 4 elected.be an inhabitant of that State iu which ' he shall be chosen." It is not iu the power of the States or Ter ritories to require other or additional qualifica tions than those specified in this article of the Constitution. In Barney vs. MeOreery, first session Tenth Congress, this was the only point involved in the contest. By a law of Maryland, Baltimore | city and county was made one Congressional district, entitled to two members ; and the law further required that one should be a resident of the city and the other of the county. The two candidates having the highest number of votes both lived in the county. Barney,living in the city, contested McCreery's seat, on the ground that both members could not, under the law of Maryland, reside iu the county. The House decided, by a vote of 89 to 18, that McCreery was entitled to his seat, and that the Constitution of the United States having fixed the qualifications of memlicrs, no addi tional qualifications can rightfully be required by the State ; thus setting aside a law of a sovereign State. The twelfth section of the election law of Kansas requires as a qualifica tion for a Delegate that he shall possess the qualifications prescribed for voters. Those qualifications are inhabitancy, payment of a Territorial tax, and oath to supjiort the Fugi tive Slave Law, and never having been fined under the Fugitive Slave Act, in any court of any State or Territory. This law j>erniits /- diams who are uot citizens to vote, but prevents white men. if they have ever been couvicted of any violation of the Fugitive Slave Law, 44 whether such conviction were by criminal 4 proceeding or civil action for the recovery of ' any penalty prescribed by said act." Any person that has been at any time so convicted cannot vote in Kansas to-day, and is under her laws ineligible as a Representative in Con gress. The Senator from Delaware, [Mr. Clayton] whose bier has just passed to the church-yard, iu speaking of this law iu the Senate Chamber, with almost his dying breath, said : 44 I denounce this as an unjust and cruel law 1 against one section of the Union, ami an in ' suit to honorable men who differ totally with 4 me on great questions of politics, and yet are ' as honest as I am, or any man on this floor. ***** 1 hold this injustice to be un • exampled. * * * Sir, it is a thing un ' heard of in the history of the country, that ' in the introduction of a Territory into the 1 Union as a State, or in the formation of a ' Territorial Government, you should require 4 men in the Territory to sw ear to support your • acts of Congress." Take. then, the law of Kansas, the certificate of election of this Delegate, and the Constitu tion of the United States, ami put them side by side, and they fail to make out a prima fa cie case : for they show that the election itself was invalid, there being uo valid law under which it could be held. But, sir, in addition to the invalidity and unconstitutionality of the legislation of Kansas, there is still another reaon why this House should not recognize it, for it would be giving support and countenance to a mot session, refused to appro priate any money for its support, for the dou ble reason that it was a usurpation aud a des potism combined—a despotism that we are asked to recognize after the recorded opinions of its character, not only in the official acts of both branches of Congress, but aLo by such men as General Cass, Clayton, Bayard, Crit tenden. Weller, and other Senators, who will not be regarded, I trust, as fanatics. General Cass, on the 2d of July last, said, on the floor of the Senate : 41 There is uo doubt that sonic of the stat ' ute> passed by the Legislature of Kansas are 1 a disgrace t<> the age and th' country. [I re ' ]>eat the streng expression—' a disgrace to ' the age and the country.'] Such is my firm ' conviction. Heavy penalties are imposed, to 4 prevent the people from arguing w hat is al -4 most a question of abstract right. Now, I 4 ak yon, how have the people of Kansas full 4 liberty to pass laws establishing their doines -4 tic relations for themselves, if they are not al ' lowed to discuss them ? It is inconsistent 4 with the organic act." I refer to the opinions of Senators Bayard of Delaware, and Crittenden of Kentucky : and certainly they will not lie charged with s;>eciai fanaticism, coming as they do from -I ive States, where this kind of fanaticism, for Free dom and Free Territory, of which gentlemen affect to be so much afraid, .does not prevail. I summon tiiem to the stand, therefore, as coo! j and dispassionate witnesses. In speukiug of these laws. Mr. Bayard says : 44 There are certain of the laws of Kansas 4 which arc unquestionably, in tbemselves,shock -4 ing to the moral sense. There are certain of 4 the laws of Kanealed before we adjourn. * 4 What are these laws ? One of tlieru sends a 4 man to hard labor for not less than two years 4 for daring to discuss the question whether ' Slavery exist-, or does not exist, in Kansas ; 4 not less than two years—it may be fifty : and 4 if a man could live as old as Methnsaleh, it • might be over nine hundred years. That act 4 prohibits all freedom of discussion in Kansas 'on the great subject directly referred to the • exclusive decision of the {>eople in that Terri -4 tory ; strikes down the liberty of the press, 4 too ; and is an act egregionsly tyrannical as 4 ever was attempted by any of the Stuarts, • Tudors, l'lantagenets, of England, and this 4 Senate persists in declaring that we are not 4 to repeal that 1 4 ' Sir, let us tender to the nouse of Rapre -4 sentatives the repeal of that and all other ' objectionable and infamous laws that were 4 passed by that Legislature. I inelude in this 4 denunciation, without any hesitation, those 'acts which prescribe that a tnan ?ha 11 not even 4 practice law in the Territory, unless he swears 4 to support the Fugitive Slave Law ; that he 4 shall not vote at any election, or be a member 4 of the Legislature, unless he swears to support 4 the Fugitive Slave Law ; that he "Miall not 4 hold any office of honor or trust there, unless ' he these iniquities. W hat are the laws denounced in such strong tonus by th se veteran statesmen and Ne-tors of the Seuafe ? The very election law under which this certificate is criven is one of them, and the principal one. though there are other section- of this code included, rhe following among the number : 44 If any shall knowingly aid in bring ing into, printing, publishing, or circulating, ' within tin- Territory, any book, paper, paniph-' ' leb magazine, handbill, or circular, contain ' tug any statements, arguments, opinions, sen-' ' tirnents. doctrine, advice, or iuuendo, calcu ' lated to province disaffection among the slaves • in this Territory, or to induce such slaves to i ' escape from the rercice of their m i-tcr. he ' -liali be guilty of felony, and !e pnnihcd by ' imprisonment and hard labor for a term of 4 not less than five years." 41 If any free person, by speaking or by wri ' ting, assert or maintain that persons have not 'the fight to hold slaves in this Territory, or ; 4 shall introduce into this Territory, print, pnb ' lish, write, circulate, or cause to be introduced ' into this Territory, written, printed, publish 'ed. or circulated, in this Territory, any book. ' paper, pamphlet, magazine, or circular, con • taining any denial of the right of persons to • hold slaves, in tbi-Territory, such person shall | ' be deemed guilty of felony, ami punished bv ' imprisonment at hard labor for a terra of not 4 less than two rears." What is the kind of punishment at hard la- • bor provided by this code 1 . SEC. 2 of ehoptrr 22. page 147, of Kansa- ' I.AW-. provides that *' Every person who may ie by j ' any court of eompeten! jurisdiction, under j ' any la"- in force within this Territory, to pun- VOL. XVI r.—NO. Qtf. ' ishment by confinement and hard labor , shall ' be deemed a convict, and shall immediately, ' under the charge of the keeper of such jail or ' public prison, or under the charge of such ' person as the keeper of such jail or public ' prison may select, be put to hard labor, as ' in the first section of this act' specified ; and ' such keeper, or other person having- charge of ' such convict, shall cause such convict, while ' engaged at such labor, to be stenrdy confin ' cd by a chain, sir feet in length, of not less than ' four-sirfecnlhs nor more them three-eighths of 1 a n inch link, with a round ball of iron, of not 'less than four nor more than sic inches in di 'a meter , attached ; which chain shall be se ' curely fastened to the ankle of such convict, ' with a strong lock and key. Aud such keep ' er, or other person having charge of snehcon ' viet, may. if necessary, confine such convict, ' while so engaged at hard labor, by other 'chains or other means, in his discretion, so as ' to keep such convict secure, and prevent his 'escape. And when there shall be two or ' more convicts under the charge of such keep ' er or other person, such convicts shall be fas ' tencd together by Strang chains, with strong ' locks and keys, during the time such convicts ' shall be engaged in such hard labor without ' the walls of any such jail or prisou." It is these acts, and the test oaths of this election law, that the Senator from Delaware, rising above the prejudice of his section, de nounces as becomes an American of the better days of tlie Republic. Where in the auuals of despotism anil wrong can you find an edict of the tyrant, of blacker or deeper infamy than those laws enacted ou American soil, aud re cognized as valid by the Executive of the Re public, and which we are now a>kc-d to recog nize as giving to the people of the Territory the rights guarantied by the Constitution of their country ? Iu view of these acts, the London Times truly declares that the enema milks of Naples and Austria are reproduced in the f 'ni'cd States of America. Mr. Speaker, I have examined this election law somewhat in detail, citing the provisions which exclude from voting a class entitled, up on every principle of justice and right, to the exerci e, under this Government, of the elec tive franchise. I have referred to the provi sions of that law, which violates the organic act passed by Congress, and subverts the dear est rights of freemen guarantied by the Con stitution of the Republic. I have read a des cription of the legislation enacted in the Ter ritory of Kansas, as given by men who cannot be charged with partiality to my views, or as holding fanatical opinions—men who pro claim from the Senate Chamber that these laws are infamous, oppressive and unconstitutional. Under such laws, it is claimed that a Dele gate, coining with a certificate based *u such euactmeuts, presents such a prima facie case as entitles him to a seat upon this floor ; and that, too, after Congress has once adjudicated the case, aud refused him a scat. Without trespassing longer upon the patience of the House, I leave this case, with a single remark, that Congress being a judicial tribu nal wheu it sits upon an election ca=e, its de cisions are conclusive upou itself 011 the same state of facts. The facts have not changed since the last session. They are precisely the same as they were then, and the same tribunal i- now u-kc i to overturn its decisiou ; and to overturn it for what? To recognize and give validity, so far as can be doue by our action, to an odious despotism, forced upon an uuwil ling people by fraud and violence. te?" An Eastern editor says that a man got himself into difficulty by marrying two wives. A Western editor replies bv assuring his contemporary that a good many nmu in that section have doue the same thing by marryiug one. A Northern editor retorts that quite a num ber of his acquaintances found trouble enough by ban ly promising to marry, without goii g any further. A Southern editor says that a friend of h's was bothered enough by simply being found iu eomp-. Ny with another man's wife. £-4?- A youth of our acquaintance thus ex perimented ou his mamma, who was making bread, a few days since : '• Mother, it strikes me you are lazy just now.'' " Ilow dare yon say so ? Why, don't you see I am making bread?' indignantly returned the lady. '• True, but that's neither more nor less than loafii g." The wit got no more hot cakes for several day.-. He uiak> no suth pans since. tea?- Ir i< estimated that the nombcr of-loo kers in Paris i- 425.00 U. and that they con sume anuually 157.400,000 cigars. teiU A ladies searnta" skirt is advertised. Good. Anything which will make them seem less is welcome. tes* A mason tried the other day to pur chase a hen that would lay a brick. ter* At a Fair down East, a re|K>rter gives the toliowing iu the list of premiums : ' Hot bed-comforter— Miss Tnoinpson." fc*r- A stupid fellow being seen in a singu lar attitude, stooping down with his head be tween his legs, was asked the reason : to which lie replied thai ue wished to see how the pain at the back < f his head looked. tea? < ieniiis light- its own fire, but it iseou -tantiv collecting material- to keep alive the tiainc. Spare moments are like the jrokl