O v Elov.lralkees Letter of Resignation. The following is the letter of the Hon. Robert J. 'Walker, resigning the dike of Governor of Kansas : WASIIINGTON CITY Dec. 15, 1831 4 , To the Ho's. LEWIS CASS, Secretary of State, Sm I resign the office of Governor °kite TerritorY of Kansas. I have been most re luctantly foreed xo this conclusion, after anx ious and careful consideration of my duty to'" my country, to the , people of Kansas: to the President " of the United States, and . to •my 'self. - The grounds assumed by the President in i his late Message to. Congress,. And in recent ! • instructions in connection :with the events ',, now transpiring:here cud in Kansas, admon ish l, tne that as Governor of that Territory, it; .will. no Itengeiti'liiiiiy - power - to preserve the peace or nriiniote the public weltlire..i:;. At the earnest solicitation of the- Presi dent, after repeated refusals, the last being in Writing, I finally accepted - this office, upon his 1 letter showing the dangers and difficulties of the Kansas question, and the necessity of my undertaking the task of adjustment. Under these circumstancesatotwithstanding the-great Sacrificesjto me, personal, political, : and pe- i cainiarY;l felt that I .could -.no more refuse sach a call from - my country through her Chief Magistrate, than a.soldier in battle who I - -is .ordered to the command ofa forlorn hope. . I aceePted, however, on the express condi- 1 Coil that "should ads ocate the - subnfiSaion.of 1 the - Constitution to a - vote. of the people ftir 1 ratification or rejection. These views were I clearly understood by the President. and all 1 his Cabinet ...They. were distinctly set forthil . in my letter. - on my acceptance of this otlice,l of the 26th 'March last, and reiterated. in my inaugural address of the 21Ili of May last, as follows : " Indeed, I cannot doubt that the Convention, after having framed A State Ceti- . stitution, will.submit it for ratification or re- i jecti - on by a majority of the then actual bona 1 1 fide resident settlers of Kansas." ' With these • views, well . known ..to the President and- the Cabinet, and approved by I *them, I accepted the appointment of Gover- i nor of Kansas.. My instructions from the • President, through.. the Secretary of-State, ! under date :10th Ifarch lust, sustain the reg- ' tiler 'Legislature of : the Territory in assort- ' bling a Convention to form. a Constitution,' and they express the .opinion of the - Presi- i dent that" when such a Constitution shall be submitted to the people of the Territory they:l mast be protected in the. exercise of their 1 right of voting for or 'against that instru- I ment, ani.V.the fair expression of the popular i . ~ will must not be interrupted by fraud - or yi• 1 olence. I repeat, then, as my clear con,vic- i tion, that unless .the Convention eitbinit the ! Conatituti6n to the vote of all the'actual res ident settlers of Kansas, and the election be j 'fairly and.justly conducted, the Constitution ; will be, and ought' , to b.; rejected by Con- .: ess." 1 . • Pr This inaugural :most 4:stinetly asserted I that it was nut a-question of Slavery merely; 1 which I believed to be of little practical int- 1 poitanee then. in ,its application to Kansas, I but the entire Constitution which should ! beSubmitted to the people for ratification or 1 rejection. These were my, words on that : • . subject ' - shall Slavery exist in' or disappear froin Nan- I Has, but shall thegreat principles of self-gov ernment and Stale sovereignty be maintain- ed or Subverted ?" . . 1 . In that inaugural I proceed further to say, 1 the people " may by a subsequent vote - de- 1 feat the ratification of the Constitution." I 'designate this " a great constitutional right," and add, " that the Convention is :the sera 1 vant and not the master ',of the people." In 1 ' r iy offteial ' dispatch to you of, the 2d 'June I • last, a copy of that inaugural address. was transmitted to you for the further inforina- 1, tion of the President and his Cabinet.- . No exception was ever. taken to-any portion of i that-address. On The contrary, it was dis- I tinctly adMitted by the President in his Mcs- I sage, With commendable frankness,' that my i instructions in favor of a submission of the i Constitution 'to .a vote- of the people were ".' general and.umpialified." '. BY that 'inaugural and a subsequent ad- , dress, I was pledged to the people of Kansas 1 to oppose, by alliaviful means, the. adoption 1 of any .Constitution Which was not fairly and fully submitted ,to their vote' for ratification or rejection. These pledges. I cannot recall or-violate without personal dishonor and the abandonment offuudainental principles; and therefore, it - is impossible for met° support what is called ..the Lecompton .Constitution, because. it is not eulanitted• to .!,a vote ; of the • people for ratification _or : rcjeCtion. .. . 1 have ever uniformly Main ained die prin ciple that savereiguty is ves ' t l exclusiaely it. in the people of each State, • id that itper- 1 'forms its first and highest function in , form i ing a State Government and State' Conetitu aloft: This highest act of sovereir * nty, in my .judgment, can only be performed by the.veo pie themselves, and cannot be delegatad to Conventions or-other intermediate bodies. .. [The.- letter sting of great „lengtha.apor tion is here'brnitted fur Want of roonni ; The P.resident'thinks that sovereignty can be delegatedat least in-part; I think that sovereignty cannot be delegated at all. The President billeve.a that sovereignty is divisi . ble betWeeti conventions and people, to be exercised by the former on all suljects but Slavery„ and by the latter only on that ques , ' tion ; whereas, I think that sovereignty is inalienabicilindivisibk, a unit, incapable of partition, and that it - cannot be delegated, in ••.whole or 'in part. 'lt will not be denied that sovereignty is the only power that can make EState Constitution; and that it rests exclu sively with the people, and if it is inalienable .and cannot be only I - have shown,. - then. it eau be exercised by the people - themselves, under,. e9 . r:Government We know no. sovereign but Alie. people. Conven tions arc composed .of "delegates." They aro mere, agents or trustees, exercising not a sovereig,h• but a. - -delegated power, and-the people are principals. The power delegated to such Convention can properly only exteud to framing the ,Constitution, btat its Tatifica . Lion or reaction can only' be perfornired • by the•power where sovereignty alone tests-- namely, the people' themselves. - - Wt t , must mot confoUnd sovereign with delegated pOw :et, The provisional authority of the Con yard= to. laiiinea COnetitution, and submit it to,the pople, is delegated power, but sUv -'.- ereigntyslone wliel rests exclusively with the people., radio and put . .in force that Constitution,. Amid this is the ai ue doctrine of Popular ..Sa . vereigitty, and I know of. no such thing, nor daras the Federal Constitution recognize 'it as de4watiad :or ',./ ventional so.v -• ereiguty." The Pctaident in a'"7`, • hicid pas age of his able ineasage, giv • iduswerahle reasons why...the jeople and not _ConVentions should decide the question of .Slavery. Ho says; very truly, 1114 from. theNieeesoary di vision. of the"-:joeheal,e.Stoe ,inta districts, a wajoriq . of - the delegateSinay Will: hale way arid Ail people another, and . :that she dele pita, mu was ;the case in Kansas, xnay violate their . pledgea; or fail to ,exeeute the . will of theTeople. 7 t .4,4 d Why-does not this reason,- i ng apply with j egunif deice, to 41j : ether alue'a, Atop embodiedin_the State Cunstitution,and ; 406, - ,sbenld :itlielneatiOrt.. of Slavery -1 alone 'etvattitiaghasl-Rx.tiuguialt .the.4loetriue of Pop. ular ,SoVara*t_lty:PO *.-.: . _14 1 4 of sagov ertuattittt.:-.". .t.flArtokitglY3 ,l ils .4 no sec :lona itte,St7 . 4.,fer it bi;lone. - alike to the.. r• States adMitted inchoa te , - of - the gOilit as l of the. North. It is not.* question of Slii;s,Wy, but of State's Rtlits, of Stutf e ' . i and .pol War soyereipty,; and my objectitios to ,the.,,, 0- i eompiitn eiittallt.teOng, whetikr kansaa:undeitjts proyisiorat, sbotild be made a Fred : ;or Shive Suite:, My dbjec .. tioa4 . :;are'•bas4 upon,: the, violation . athe , rightaf Self:government and popular:sever- eignty, and of forcing any Constitution upon the people a g ainst th eir will,.whether it rec ognizes, Free dom or Slavery. Indeed,. t he first question which the people ought to de .eide in forming a Government for an incho ate State is, Whether they will change or not from a Territorial to a State Government.:..- Now as no 'one who with me denies Federal or Territorial sovereignty, will e‘}ntend that •a Territorial Legislature is sovereign, or rep resents sovereignty, or that such Legislature, a mere creature of - Qingress, can transfer sovereignty, which it does not possess, to a Territorial Convention. This change from a Territorial to a. State Government can only be made by the power where sovereignty rests with the people. Yet State .Govern ment is 11%.‘vd upon the people of Kansas by the Lecompton Constitution, and they are not permitted to vote. But, besides the change from a Territorial to a State Govern mept .which the people alone have a right to make, in (rain ing a Suite ()institution, there are many other momentous questions includ ed in that instrument. 'lt involves all the• powers of State Government. Where is the bill of rights, the Magna Charta of the fiber; ties of a free people—the legislative, ~xecu Live, and: judicial functions, the taxing power, the elective franchise, the great question of education, the sacred relations of husband and wife, parent. and ehild,guardian and ward, and all the rights ,affecting life, liberty, and ' property. There is also the question of State debts, of banks and paper money, and wheat er they shall be porinitted or prohibited.—. AS all free.government, as stated by Mr. Jefferson, depends upon " the consent of the governed," how can it be' known whether the people would assent to the Constitution, un less it be submitted to their vote fa ratifi cation or rejection ? But if acquiescence can be presumed in any case, surely it cannot be in that of Kansas, where so many of the delegates violated their pledge to submit the Constitution itself to a vote of the 'people ; where the delegates who signed the Consti tution represented scarcely one-tenth of the people, and where nearly one-halt of the counties of the Territory wore disfranehised, and that by no fault of theirs, and did not and could not give' a single .Vote at the elec tion of delegates to the Convention. I have, therefore, discussed the subject mainly on the . question that conventions are not sovereign, and cannot rightfUlly make a State Constitu tion without its submission to a vote of the people for tatificatioinor. rejeLition. Yet, sure ly, even thoge who differ with me on this point must concede, especially under the Kansas-Nebraska:let, it is onl such Govern Lions can be called sovereign as have been truly elected by the, people, and represent their will. On reference, lowever, t(1 my address of the 16th of Septctnber last, on the day-qualification question, a cop• of which was immediately trzinsinitted to you for the information (tithe President and CaMnet., it is evident that: the Lccompton Convention was not such a body - . That ConventiOn had vital, not technical. defects in the very sub stance of its organization under, the Territo rial law, which could . only be cured, in my judgment, as set forth in my inaugural and other addresses, by submission of the Consti tution for the ratification of the people. On reference to the Territorial law under which the- Convention was assembled, thirty-tbor regularly organized counties •were named as election districts for deleliates, to the Conven tion. In each and all of these' counties it was required by law that a census be taken, also 'the voters registered, and when this was com pleted the delegates to the Convention should be apportioned accordingly. In nineteen of these counties there was no census, and there fore there could be no such apportionment there of delegates upon such census. And in fifteen of these counties there was no registry of voters. These fifteen counties, including many of the oldest organized counties in the Territory, were entirely disfranchised. and did not give (by no fault of their own:) and could not give-a solitary vote for the dele gates to the Convention. This result was sti perinduced by the. tact that the- Territorial Legislature appointed all the Sheriffs and Probate - Judges in all these counties,to whom was assigned the duty by, law of makin ,, this census and registry. These officers were po litical partisans, dissenting from the views and opinions of the people of these counties, as was proved by the . election in. October' last. These officers, from want of funds, as they alleged, neglected or refused to take an)l census, or make any registry in these coml.: tics, and therefore they were entirely dis franchised, and could not and did not give a single vote at the election for delegates to the Constitutional Convention. And here I wish to call attention to a disiinctibn which will appear in my inaugural address-in reference to those counties where the voters were fair ly registered, and did not vote. In such coun ties where full and free opportunity was giv en to register and -vote, and they did not choose to - exereiie such a privilege, the ques tion is 'very different from these counties. where there was nu census or registry, and no vote was giveri,or could be given, however anxious the . pc - iple might be to participate in the election of delegates to the Convention. Nor could it be said these counties acquies ced, for, wherever they endeavor e d, by a sub sequent census or . ' registry of their own to supply thi s defect, occasioned by previous neglect of the - Territoriat.offieers, the dele gates thui chosen were rejected by the Con vention. " • I repeat that, in nineteen counties out of thirty-four, there ivas no census. In fifteen counties out of thirty-four, there was no reg istry, and not a solitary vote, was given, - or could be given; for Delegates to the Conven tion in any one of these counties.. Surely, then, it cannot be.said that such a Conven tion, chosen by scarcely more than one tenth of the present voters of Kansas, *represented the peoploaf that Territory, and could right ly impose a Constitution upon them without their consent. These nineteen counties, in which there was no census, constituted a maj. ority Of the census of the Territory, and these; fifteen counties In. which there was no 'regis try gave a much larger vote at tho October election, even with the six months' qualifiCa tion, than the whole :vote given to the 1-„e Compton Constitution on the 17th of Noretn .ber last. 1f; -then, sovereignty. can be dele gated, and the Cor;rintion as such are sorer emit3 which I deny,-surely it must be In 0 such cases as when such - ,Conventions are chosen by 'the people, have seen :was not the case 'as regards .the late Lecomp ton Convention. I: was for this and other reasons that in my 'naught-al : . and other ad -dresses I insisted that the COnstitution should be submitted to the peophi by the Conven tion, as the only •moans of curing this .vital defect in iti.organization. It was. therefore, A mong other reasons that when, as you know, the organization. :called . the. "Topeka State 4'overnment" was Made, and as a conic ,gluteinee'zin ipeyitiLhle civil war and conflict .tunat tare ensued, these results wer'eirevent. ea !by Aix assuring, not th 6 Abollthinists, as his been crrorteously stated (for my Add ms -was not tv to them, • hut - the peopteu Kansa,aj that, m my judgment, the tion would be snbr,►itted fairly, a► for ratification or rejection by the and that if this was not_ done, 1 wou i iiith,them (the ,people) I now'do, f i ll opposition to . such - prbeedure. . ''' -rw vowel; and responsibility beilig devot ed•elelusiVely_tipon me by the President of using the Federal army in. Kansas Ito stip'. press insurrection, the alternative iras dis tinctly presented to. me, by questions pro pounded at Topeka, of arresting the- revolt'. i tion by the slaughter of the peopl ~ or of preventing it, together with _ that e vil . war _which must have extended througtout the Union,. by a solemn assurance, thet:i . given,. that the right of the people to fraMo their . own Government, so. far as any .polwer. ex= tended, should be maintained. But pr this assurance, it is a conceded fact that the Tope ; ka State Government, then assembliA in-le ! gislative session ! would have teen ,put into immediate actual operation; and \Oat a .san i guinaryt collision with the Federal ailmy and civel war must have ensued—extending, it is feared, throughout the Union. i Indeed, the. whole idea of an inauge dress originated in the alarming intutli which had reached Washington City! ous and incipient rebellion in Kans insurrection was rendered still more able on my reaching the 'Territory near approach of the assembling of t lutionary State Legislature and the . mcrous mass conventions by which sustained. In truth, I had to choose arresting that insurrection, at whatob' of American blood, by the Federal •si to prevent the terrible catastrophe, it by toy pledges to the 'people of the of alt my power to obtain a fair election and the subtnisdon of the Constitution to the vote of the people fir ratification or rejection. My inaugural and other addresses were, therefore, really in the nature of pripelama -11 Vitals, so often issuedit by Presidents 'd Gov ernors,*with it view to fjycvent, as t tey did in this case, civil war and insurrection. Now, by my oath of office I was sworn to upport the Constitution of' the United State., which I have shown, in my judgment, reqn red the submission-of the constitutiim to theomte of the people. . I was sworn, also, to tAc care that the Kansai and Nebraska bill Sbliuld be faithfully executed, which bill, in my judg ment,-as heretofore stated, required hat the Constitution should be submitted to t le vote. of the people, and I was therefore oily per forming a socenin duty, when as Govqrnor of the Territory to whose people my Inist. obli gations were due, I endeavored to I secure them these results. The idea entertaiped by some that I should see the . Federal C institu tion and the Kansas• Nebraska bill over brown anti disregarded, and that playing theipiirt of a mute ;n a pantomine 'of ruin I shqulci ac quiesce by my silence in such a result, espe . - eiall j where such acquiescence in vol veil Ali an immediate consequence a disastrous a id san guinary civil war, seems to me most ',repos terou..; Not a drop of blood has been shed by .the Federal troops in Kansas during my ,:dmin istration, but insurrection and civil 4r, c:, 7 - teuding, I fear, throughout the eouutrx, weee alone prevented by the course pursqd Iv nie on those occasion,, and the whole ieople, abandoning revolutionary • violence, were in duced by me to go, for the first time. general and peaceful election. These 1 _ tant retilt'l constitute a sufficient cons for all the unjust assaults - made upon I do not underAand the this suojcct astqullt-; have ever received the slightes ten:ince from the President. On the rr, his moss.age clearly indicates an ap: of my efiurse up to thu preseiit Most m nate- diflcrence about-the so-called Lccu Ci•n,titutiou. Inasmuch, however, a difference is upon a vital question, itiv. practical result.; and new iustruc•tian! certainly much more respectful,to the. r dent on. my part, to resign the office of ,crux•, and give . himan opportunity of at, as is his right tiiicler _the Oinstitutiva one who concurs with him in his _ pi! opinions, - rather than go to Kansas and him to remOve me by disobedience to structions. This Lauer course, in my merit, would be incompatible with a p respect fur the Chief Magistrate of the L inconsistent. with the rules of moral rec Or propriety, and could be 'adopted wi other view than to force the-President to re- I move me from office. Such a course; it is alleged, would present me to the public ; as a political martyr in the . defense of the gent principle of selfgovernment ; but to gli to Kansas- %with any such purpose, or with I cer- , fain knowl e dge that• Such a result UWE, fol low would be alike unjust and improp(r.— l‘fy roily alternative, then, is that of . re- spectful resignation, in the hope that K:insas . l and our beloved emintry ' may be. shidhled -from that civil war, with which,. I .fear both .are threatened, by any attempt to fore( the so-called Lecompton Constitution upon the people cf Kansas. , . I state it as i fact, based i on a long and intimate association midi the 1 people of Kansas, that an overWheliningima- 1 jority of - that people are opposed to th 4 in strument, and my letters state that button .out of twenty of the press of Kansas sustain, it. Some Oppose it because so many eimn- . ties were disfranchised and unrepresente in the Convention. Some, Who are oppose - to paper money', because it autborizes" a - atilt of enormous capital for Kansas, nearly un 1111- ited in its issues and in the, denorbinatio of its notes from L.one dollar up and dowl . Some, because of What they consider a know- Nothing clause, by requiring that the Go ,7er nor shall have been twenty years a citizen of I the: - United States--some because the elective franchise is not free, as - they cannot vote ' against the Consiitution, but only on the in- gle.issue whether ! any more slaves may be I imported, and then only upon that issue by voting for the Constitution to' which they re opposed ; and they regard this us bu a mockery of the elective franchise and a peril ous sporting with the sacred rights of he people—some oppose it because the Con ti. . distinctly recognizes and adopts he Oxford fraud in apportioning legislati re' members for Johnson County upon the fratpd ' uknt and fictitious returns, so falsely.mlltd, from-that precinct, which recognition of that fraud in the Constitution is abhorrent to . Ihe Moral sense of the people.: Others oppos it 1 because; althouffh'in other 'eases the Prdsi is dents of Conventions haVe been authorized to issue writs of election . to the regular Teriito rial or State officers; with . the Usual judges and w,ith the established precincts and on t i lte ! adjudication of the returns,' in this case n: precedented and - vice-regal powers arc git - 'en to the President of the Convention to inalie I the precincts, the judges, and to decide final -Ily upon the returns. Front the grant of the'pe _untisani and enormous powers, and frogs other'reasons connected with The returnsf Oxford and McGee, an overwhelming ma) . r. by of Kansas have no faith in the validity f c t these , returns and. therefore will not. vote. Indeed, disguise .. it as we may to ourstk S, under the influence of the present exeiteme it i the fae.ts will demonstrate that any attempt: y 1 Congress to force it upon the people of Ka i. I sas' will be au effort to substitute the will. if I a stuall'ininority for that of an oVerwheltnl g i-inajority of the "people of KanSas; that, it 'Will ' not settle the Kansas"question, or kimlize tlie Issue ; that it will, I far; bo attended by crust war, 'e4tetiding, perhaps; throughout the U=,- ion, thus hringingi a this • question . back ag , ' - upon . Congress co before the pc°. p - lt: to i • most dangerona and alarming aspect. The i President takes a different view of the Subject I in his Message, and from the events occurring ; in Kan* aa well us-here it is evident that the question is •paissine , -from theories . into I practice; md that as- Geirertior of Kansas E should be impelledto carryout new instruc tions differing on a *vital 'question- frOrn- those received at the - date of my apointment.— Such instructions I could not execute consist:!_ ently with. my views of the Federal Consti tution and of the Kansas and Nebraska bill; or with my pledges to the people .of Kansas. No one can more deeply regret than myself the necessity, but it arises front no change of I opinion on my part. On the contrary, 11, would cheerfully have. returned to.Kanis to'i carry ont . my original -instructions, and tfitia preserve the peace of the Territory, and finall ly settle the Kansas question by redeeming my pledges to the people. It is not my in tention at- this time to discuss the peculiar circumstances and unexpected events which 1 have modified the opinions of the:President.l . upon a point so vital as the submission of the Constitution fur ratification or rejection by the vote of the people e -smuch less do I desire any controversy with the President on this subject. Yet, however widely my views may differ. from those entertained by hint on this question—views which I have held - all my •life, and which, as involving fluldamental principleS of public liberty and of the Consti tutiti, are unchangeable—yet, as regards all those great measures which I trust will con stitute the policy of his Administration in other respects, it will give me pleasure as a private citizen, to yield my cordial support. have.said that !the Slavery • question, as a practical issue, had disappeared- from Kansas long before any arrival there, and the clues; tiun of self governmentbrid been Substituted in its place. On sonic future occasion I shall dissipate the delusion which - has prevailed upon this subject, and show that after three years' experiment, when I arrived in Kansas there were less . than. WO slaves there, and the number. constantly diminishing; that, as proved by the 'Official records of Congress published and authenticated by those distin iguished Southern Statesmen, John C. Cal houn and Jefferson Davis, the Winter cli mate even of:Eastern Kansas is colder than that of New England, and that. the Pro-Sla very Territorial Convention of Kansas consul idated with the Pro-Slavery Territorial Leg- ; islature on the 4th of-January, 1857; nearly :five month's before my arrival there, did aban don the Slavery issue because, as set forth by one of their number, the Pro-Slavery party was in a small and admitted minority, and the co-operation of the Free-State Democrats was invit4as the 'only hope of success—not to make Kansasa Slave State; which .was , conceded to be impossible. but to make it a conservative Democratic Free State.- Even as late as the 3d of.fuly; 1557, when the Democratic Territorial Convention assembled at, Lecompton, in consequence of the'laws of the climate and the well-known will' of the *culla, none Contended - that- Slavery could be established. there; nor was it until my i,,Southern opponents interfered in the affairs I of Kansas, and by denunciation, menace and otherwiSe, aided at a critical period by•seve ral Federal office-holders of Kansas, including the Surveyor-General, and the President of the Convention with his' immense patronage, embracing many hundred s .emnloyees, inter veiled, and as I believe withoutahe knowledge or approbation of the President of the United States, produced the extraordinary paper called the Leeomptori Constitution. Yet this act of intervention by the Federal officers to defeat the will of the people seems to be suse tained by my opponents,_ while.my interven tion, as it is called, in obedience to my duty and oath of office to support the Federal Constitution, and to take care that our organ. is law should be fairly exeputed by endeav oring to secure to the people of Kansas their rights under that act„is denounced and calum niated. It is still more reinarkable, that the hypothetical remarks made by me as regards c limat e ie its connection .with its influence upon the question of Slavery in Kansas, after, that issue had been abandoned there, which views were for consolidating the Union be tween the 'Conservative, the Free-State and Pro-Slavery Democrats ; so as to prevent the confiscation of the saran number of slaves then held in Kansas, have been denounced by Many distinguished Southern Senator, who, when the Kansas and Nebraska bill' was pending in Congress, and when such re mark troth them, if ever, might affeettSouth. ern emigration, were - .then loudest in pro cla'iming that because of its climate, Kansas could never becomeat Slave State. Indeed, it seems that all persons in- and out of Kan sas, whether in public or in private life, may publish what opinions they please in regard to these questions except the Governor of that Territory, who has so little power and no patronage. And now be pleaaed. to ex press to . the President my deep regret . -as regards our unfortunate-difference in Opinion in relation to the LecoMpton Constitution, and to say to -him that, as infallibility does nut belong-to Man, however exalted in intel lect, purity of intention or position, - yet if he has corninitted er n ' - errors in this respect, May they be overruled by a superintending Prey ideriee for the perpetuity of our Union and' the 'advancement, the honor and interest of our beloved country. - in now dissolVitig my official connection with your department, I beg leave to tender to yOu my thanks fur your constant courtesy and kindness. MEI • Freely r = vote; d unite in luw- 11 ad ik.s, ice I, Pe This fonnid by the rev,- .cry nu it was etueen er.cost my, or - 1 did, • xez tion into mpor lation no un EIS BrEIM Effird fortti- ZIA MEM Icing BE Gov ith BEM WM MEI i judg- Tiyer non. t tude h no ?Most respectfully, your obedient servant. (Signed) • Pb. J. WALKER KANSAS Simmiani.—The greatest shriek ers for free Kansas, now.adays,.are the dem ocratic papers that refuse to i follow the lead of the administration. 'Witness the reply to the 'following from the Washington Union : - " But those of our Democratic cotempora ries who object to the action of the conven- - tion insist that the whole constitution should .have been submitted to a popular vote ; and because that was not done, they denciunce the convention, as violators of- the principle of Kansas law. . Will any one of our objecting coletnporaries pretend that when the lianas Lill went - pending, .it ever was , -contemplated Ly anybridy that the popular sovereignty clause had reference-0 any other saVect than that of slavery? Surely not. , Then it is a mere " sticking in the bark" to Say that the con vention has failed to carry out the great ob ject and the true spirit of the Kansas law." To this, the Chicago. , Tines, the organ of Douglas, replies thus; " The above queitiou can easily be an swered, by_ asking another--viz': , the Washington .litliou pretend that. Congress, in passing the Kansas Nebraska act, designed giving, the people of Kansas- the right of reg. (ating slavery in that State and denied thou all right to determine any other question in their dumestie concerns' Did Congress in tend to confine the right of "self-government" to the single issue of slavery-1 - .If lo,'vas not the ICausaiWebraska act a gross swindle? did it not deprive the people of • the right to regulate ell otherdotriestic institutions 1" . • I Bishop ltiglics has renewed his at tack on the Common Schools ; tie dues not. like the principles on which they were origi- Dated, or are ocnducted.• , Itua lecturo deliv ered a few 'evenings - •thee, at Nevi York, he advised his peciple.not to send :their children to,these schooli; he would have all theinsti tutions of learning directly under the control of the Church; , Govemor Stanton's Message. An extract from acting-Governor Stmton's message convening thd Legislature oCiCansas, in.aidvaace of the time fixed for their regular. rneetingOirill, be below. The- Legislti.. tare convened in accordance with thi_call'of the Governor, and organized by the election of Free-State officers throughout. The , Free. State majority have thas, for the first time, an opportunity. to earryont the willof the majority under forms of law. This is a great advantage, and perceived to be such by the fire-eaters. They were therefore exceedingly indignant at Stanton, for having yielded .to the just demands Of the majority, and, al though he is a Southern man, and a National Democrat, President Buchanan promptly re moved him. No other oflunce than conven ing the Legislature wes ehareed upon him. Here is all of his .message that we hive room for : It is not intended herein to assume that the people of the Territory are, opposed to 'the Constitution which is to be submitted, in .a certain form, on the -:,lst inst. It is sari-, cient fur the occasion .which now convenes the LegislatiVe Assembly, and' for the purpose. of this communication, that there is wide spread dissatisfaction, threatening to disturb the tranquillity of the people. If there bo any means 'of" preventing the discord and possible violence which are so seriously ap prehended, as the result of the partial and' imperfeel eleetion authorized to ho held at the time ramed, under the authority of the Constitutional Convention,-it is the solemn duty of the Legislature to ascertain and adopt the measures most effectual for that end. What appropriate and efficient measure ran be adopted in the existing emergency, is a question not with Out dltlieulty. Some have proposed a repeal Of the act of the last-Le,,,nis lature,*under which the Convention assembled and performed its funetiorm But inasmuch as. that law has been partially executed, it is doubtful whether an act of repeal would have the effect intended. It is certain that if the Constitution wet... 2 to be really submitted to the people, and, they should ratify it by their vote,: a legislative tepee!, ,between the dates , . .of the submission and of the election, would' not affect the validity of the sovereign act of ratification. The true purpose which, iq my judgment, ought to control your legislation on the pres ent occasion, and that which Is perhaps, the most pertinent and practicable within your power, is to provide for the regular and-le gitimate exercise of the sovereignty of the people ; on those - points in which the Conven tion has attempted to trammel or restrain it ; in other words, to provide for a direct vote, under your own authority, upon the adoption of the Constitution which : is to be partially submitted, on the 21st inst., under the authority of the Constitutional Conven tion: . • I have already expressed the grave doubts I entertain as to the power of the Legislature in any Manner to interfere with the proceed. ings of the Convention. But there can be no question as to your authority to provide, by a suitable law,.for a fair expression ( - tithe . will of the people upon the vital question of approving the Constitution. That highest net of sovereignty, the act of delegating ap, propriate powers in the best form of words and with the proper limitations, to a State organization, so deeply involves the dearest rights, and 'interests of the peOple, that the very .safety of our whole system of self-gov ernment demands, in 'all rises, but especially .where any doubt or dissatisfaction prevails, -unequivoeal ratification of the Constitution to be adopted. Perhaps a majority of the : people may ac cept the instrurnynt now befo . re them, in one or the other of the forms in which it is pre sented by 'the ConVention. In . that case, there could be ro ground .of complaint ; for I doubt not the whole people tail cheerfully acquiesce in the will of the. majority, fairly ascertained. On the other Lind, if the people should decide against the Constitution in both forms, itrwouldnot be' possible fur Congress, without a violation 61 all popular rights, to admit Kansas into.the Union ender it. The. way would then be fairly opn -fur the-pas sage of any.other appropriate: - measure, by virtue of which the people, relieved from all former embarrassments, could 'elect their del egates to a Convention, and establish their own institutions, in their own way, in accord ance with the provisiOns of the organic act; and thefundarnental principles g self-govern ment. AFAcrious 111.0 Washing Washin ton U ' 114021 thivizs the constitution ought not to be sutmitted to the people of Kansas be cause they are sure to reject it. TO almost any sane mind that would be the strongest argument possible againsl the constitution itself. It says: " would Choy (the Free State men') have voted for the constitution Hit were the most perfect one ever made ? Clearly not. - -That would tend to fasten it upon them and. defeat all future agitation which would • be death to the Black Republican party. If the question of rejection or adoption of the whole instra lnenthad been submittcdoheir only hope of continuing excitement would have rested in defeating it alttogether, so as to leave the whole field open fur future schemes of fact ious . Upon this the _National Intelligencer, good authority with conservative . people every. where, remarks: "It will at once be seen that its refusal to submit the Whole constitution to the peo ple is justified amio .. the circumstances, be cause it Was foreseen that a majority of the pcople would most probably declare against that instrument? This certainly is strange logic in the mouth of an advocate organ of "popular sovereignty," Constituti•ms, we . are aware, have sometimes been ordained without the formality of a populatsubmission, but in these cases the formality was dispensed with because it was foreseen that no popular contest wonld arise over any of their provis. lens.' The - popular aequiescence was implied because apparent to_all. But in: the-case of Kansas the brava argues that the.sime fot. mality was wisely and properly dispensed with because it was foreseen that a majority of . the people; for ". factious" purposes, were bent on voting down' the ,entire work of the Convention. We have often heard of • fac tious minorities," but this is the: first instance in which we over remember to- have heard that epithet applied to a nyjorily fur no other fault than tha4 of insubordination to the mi: nOrity," NEw DErn.artou.—lf the - Washington Union is to be taken as a Democratic organ, we must,revise and correct our dietiooarier, its thus: DzsmicuAcr—Depriviiig the people of the right of' stiffrage,:when you know they will vote against you ! gar The Wilmington (Delaware) Journal states that a disease.affeets cows in that State; the only symptom of illness, however is an incessant lowing from the commencement of the attack nntiLthe animal lies down to die Lieut. Randolph, the oflicer - who pul led Gen. Jackson's note in ,public when he was - President, has been appointed by Presi dent BuChanan, Superintendent of the Arse nal r at Washington ! H r. Mrs. Cunningham and her twodaugh ters are reported to be in fermi, What the Herald Says. Not beiiog among the admirers of the New York IreVald, we seldom quote front its but having lately heard some dour political opponents Mil:ding to whatthe Her. aid said, we have thought it might be worth while to republish the follling, I peared editOrially in a late - number of that paper : We have no recollection ,of a more formi dable combination against any President dur ing the last thirty years than this which has so suddenly delieloped in huge proportions against the .Kansas policy of Mr. Buchanan. To the tremendous forces of the Northern opposition camps, as disclosed by the last Presidential election on this Kansas issue, there are now added the Democratic contin gents which have gone over to the enemy, with Governor 'Walker and Senator Douglss. The balance of power commanded by these contingents may be conjectured by the sim ple statement that, from the Boston Post to the Kansas Lecompton Democrat, the demo- cratic newspapers that have taken sides in opposition to the Lecompton constitution may be counted by tens and twenties.— Prominent among them are Col. Forney's .Philadelphia Press, the - Detroit Free Press (long known as the home organ of Gen. Cass), and the Chicago Times, the devoted home organ of Senator Douglas. These sudden accessions to the Northern anti-administration camp with all their extensive ramifications, are full of mischief, .disorder and confusibn. They foreshadow the swift destruction of the democratic party and a most terrible convul sion among all the elements of sectional-dis cord, North and South:. . The revolutionary political movement. of the last ten years have been full of the'most wonderful. surprisc.s. .The running 'of Old Hickory's private secretary on the same ticket with Mr. Fillmore for the Presidency, the running of Fremont as the Northern can- . didate against the South, nd of Mr. Buchan an as the Southern can • ate against the North, are among these re arkable things. So, too. is the election of son of Henry Clay to Congress, as a demo rat, from under the shadows of . Ashland. But the last of these political surprises is the most wonderful of all ; for who could have dreamed, in his. wildest vagaries. that during their natural lives Robert J. Walker and John P. Hale, Stephen A., Douglas and. W. H. Seward, could ever be brought together side by side,. to fight. for the same abstractions, under the banner of -"popular sovereignty . ?"Yet so it is. And - thus the all-healinvcompromise of Mr.- Douglas—the. Kansas-Nebraska 'bill— ht‘s pushed the Democratic party-tothe very. brink of destructionond is mustering all par ties, cliques, sections and factions to the most fearful sectional struggle in the history of the . Un ion.. The public mind at this crisis is in the best. possible mood fur revolutionary excitements and agitations. The demoralizing influences of the late financial and "commercial Collapse have sapped the foundations of .all political organitations ; and the shattered t rank and file of the democracy, with the remains of the dead whi.T b party, and the dispersed Know Nothings and the missing squadrons of black republimnism are all .adrift upon the waves,. At this critical conjuncture of financial. ruin mid political demoralization such a movement as this Kansas rebellion cmthe part of Walker and Douglas is quite sufficient to rekindle the flames of sectional strife into a consuming fire. It is, in -fact, the deliberate opening of the last grand battle which is to determine the absolute supremacy at Washington of the : North or the South. We have seen from the readiness of Hale- and Seward to throw down the. gauntlet, that they are on hand ; and from the readiness with which the glove has been taken up. by Jeff. Davis it is evident that he chuckles over. this new and visible opening for secession and a Southern confed eracy: The book is opened . at a most imposing chapter of the slavery agitation. We are upon the threshold of a new epoch.. Years ago our most populous and . popular Ptotes. taut churches were shivered to pieces upon these shoals and bars. of slavery; those reci. procities as between' the North and South, without which the Union is 'a mockery, were almost annihilated in 'the camPaigri . of '56. A Northern Freniont man last October would have been as safe in the sacred streets of Pe kin as in the streets of Charleston. And now, with• all the demoralizing effects of this financial revulsion upon us, unhin g ing all our business .relations, ,North,., and South; and turning Over banks, credit, trade and indus try into chaos, this great Northern . Kansas combii;atien becomes, not a harmless passing cloud,-but an impending hurricane, darkening the whole land with. its heavy•shedow. • A BErzt..krzo: , :.—The public are indebted to Mr: Bigler. for his revelation, in the Senate debate. of Wednesday, of the fact that the omission in Mr. Toombs's . Kansas bill 'of the last Congress, of any proviiion for a Submis sion to the people of the Constitution proposed to be formed under it,' was a matter of de sign and concert among the Democratic poli ticians who conferred upon it. The Republi cans suspected the design 'at the time, and charged it, but were met by indignant deni als.- .11 is wow said by Mr. Biger that the framers of the Toombs bill intended that there Should be no submission to the people of the Constitution to be formed under it.— Wash - ington • How TO BURN COAL.-It is maintained that, even. at this late day, few know how to burn anthracite- coal, and .we have already _seen that our fathers . had a diffichlt task to find the mode of burning it ,at all. A common blUndei-in attempting to: use coal is the plac-.. ing of too large a quantity in the grate or stove at once. Coal, to bum freely, should only be six inches deep in the vessel contain ing it, and then, .'if properly ignited,, there- will be no trouble . • f. A PREDICTION.—As congress is now in session and the Kansas question is fairly launched upon its troubled waters, we pnt on record the following prediction of Forney : "The public man who tatters in this issue, seals his doom. The Northern Democrat who tries to make the Convention of Kansas anperior to the people, and who advises that the Constitution shall not go to.them for en dorsement or rejection, FIKISUES' ins canzin, FORZVER." ' SECIIETARY ver, who has b Stanton as her of Congros and since then 1 He acquired no in which ho kil Alta Califorai pie of Californi was heartless TANTON'S SUCCESSOR.—Den. n appointed to succeed Mr. Lary of Kansas, was a men= 4:. last session from California, has been an Indian Agent.-!.- riety in California by a duel, ed Gilbert, the editqr -of the . It waithought by'the peo. that his conduct in that affair Id blood-thirsty. imr.The Le mpton Dentocrat;the organ of the Adminis , ration party nt the capital - of Kansas, earne,st y 'opposes the:policy adopted by the Lecomp on eonvention;and eontends that trouble alo a can 'grew out of it: Yuri. ous Southern peipers.take the same view of the matter. A inor.g them we may 'mention the LonisVille, Ky., Democrat,' Independence Meiteager, %,yntgotnerY,ll.le.journet; Wdmitigton l Journcif, • Astounding Developments. Nser-HAves, Friday, - Dec. 18, 1857. It will bo remembered that last Winter a boy named Charles' E: Sage, about 19 yearb of age, was missing from his home in Crom. well, netteXiddleton, in - this State, and that ap Irishman named Patrick Nugent was rested-on a charge of murdering that lad, and putting his body under the ice in tterConnee. ticut River. In a few months afterward a body was found in the river without .a bead. This biidy was believed to be• that of the missing boy, from several marks upon it, a s well as from a portion of the clothing, Soon afterward the lining of an 'overcoat was found answering to the description of that worn by the missing person. Somo;mnflais elapsed, when a sailor named Benson came to Cram. _well and directly charged Nugent, the 'lrish. man, with the murder. He said he - saw the deed done, arid. assisted Nugent in 'putting the body under a haymow. Ho described accurately the lad's appear. ance, his dress, the color of his hair; &c., and declared that he had -not - had 'tiny peace of mind since the murder, and that he bad coma to Cromwell expressly to diiitfige all he knew about it. He confronted Nugent and charg ed the deed upon hirri. The accused denied it, but trembled from head to foot. .A Grand Jury found a true bill against Nugent, whese,time of trial was fixed fur the present month.t Thus matters have rested until within a few weeks, when the couilitt of the missing boy, living in Ithica, N. y received an anonymous• letter from the hue. rior of Pnnsylvania, which he showed to his father, a Mr; Williams. The letter was answered, when another letter was received from Pennsylvania;sign. ed William Russell, which Mr. Williams himself answered. He at the Same time ad dressed the Postmaster, requesting him to watch -for the person who called for the let ter, and describe him. 4' The Postmaster did so, When Mr. Williams immediately left Ith lea for Pennsylvania, and found Russel, whom he discovered to be his nephew, Charles E. Sage, the identical missing bay! - A' special . Court is held at iladdam, to-day, when Nugent will be liberated. The case is involved in the deepest mystery beyond wlias has been related. No one can assign any reason for the perjury ,of the sailor. who swore that he saw the murder Committed, and there is no • information to lead to the identity of th.l body that was found, and bur ied as that of the boy Sage.: The annals%.'of crime do not' afford a more extraordinary case than this. NEW liAvp.l, Fridey, Dec. x. _ John A. Benson, the -sailor who testified that he saw the murder of Charles E. Sage of. Cromwell, ,has been arrested on 11.7 charge of perjury, with intent to take life, and has acknowledged his guilt. The crime will send him to the State. Prison for, life. There are not further developments. A COMPENDIUM 9F NEWS. . . . . Governor Bigler rose to reply to Mr. Douglas on Wednesday, the Senate.=-- But the contrast was as if the lights of the chandelier had been ; suddenly extinguished, and a tallow' candle brought in to supply their' placc. ‘ Pennsylvanians present hung their beads.!-- Washiaitoa American: . . „The:new Congress, it is said, presents the fact that among the Northern Democrats there arebut ten who hi - v,e cver before sat in Congress. The South' pursues a- different practice. Of the - Virginia delegation, for ex ample, the average term of service m Con gress is eight years. Great Salt Lake City is laid out on. a magnificent scale.. It is four Miles in length, by . three in breadth; the streets'run ing at right angles, and 132 feet wide, with sidewalks 20 feet in width. Each building lot Con - talus an acre and . a quarter of land'; and a stream of pure water . rtinning through the,city, is made by an ingenious plan, to floi on each side of every street, and .to irri gabo every lot. . Some of the ; Democratic papers charge. Douglas with being. "worse than a Black Republican." The remark is truthful, and equally applicable to their entire party. .... The Philadelphians have•just discov ered that bologna sausages are : made in that city from dead horses. They have brought the villainous sausage makers to justice. At all events it cannot m justice be said here after that the people of that city are "no fudges of horse flesh.'i : . We invite our-readers to the perusal. of .Dr. Ayer's itdvertisements Which appear in the columns of our paper. They deserve attention as treating to what' interests us all, and from - a source which, all have long re spected. The Doetbr is well known as one of the leading Chemists of this country; who &Votes his great :acquirethents to the dis covery and manufatture of , remedies for pop ular. use. The unparallelled.success which has folloked his labors is too well. known in this 'coinmunit,y lo need any elucidation from our pen.— Washington Co. Obseirm, .... A Washington correspondent of ,the Philadelphiii Press says: It is genet ally believed that the Administration have sent to Kansas .agents instructed to make, every effort - to have the .Slaveryielause stricken from the Lecompton Constitution. This measure has" given offense to the : Southern mere.bers of Congress, and there are•ar pres ent symptems of defection on their part from the Kansas policy of • the Administration, as it is understood in thb present phase-of4Kan sas affairs. They a ll ege.that the Administra tion in this violate ,the principle for which they contend. Every day, it seems only develops new complications in this matter. ...$, Tlie N. Y. Post makes: the following "drive?! against our " Bachelor President." " Great , allowances ought unciuestionably to be made, for the ignorance Oa man, who, at the ago of seventy or thereabouts, has never, been a father or dhusband but when Mr. Buhanan takes' upon to assert in a Message to Congress, that Slavery is the only domestic relation about which the people of a new State ought tine consulted, it is high time that position be taken against electing. old bachelors to the Presidency." .. The St. Lluis Perriperal reflects se". vorely on the War Departlnent for its man agement of the Utah expedition; denounces it as " a premeditated ,murder of bravo men, the sacrifice of thousands of lives," by delay in starting. It is predicted that or.ly the wreck of an advanced guard will -be left to tell where the Army of_the West wintered. The utter:failure of the Exepeditiun ie predie; ted. The same, paper recommends the 'call. log oot'of ten regiments of volunteers, who' can readily be obtained ih the West l the rangers, not the regulars, that are wanted.. . friend- meeting Gov. Reeder in New York; a few days Since, •said, " Well Governor, things are working."- "Yes," Said the Governor, "and, dri-you -- know, . we think of - calling a Convention of the Govern ors of Kansas in, order to coMpare notes, and decide upon some plan to quiet agitation,. and settle the affairs of kEleeding ;Kansas . ' The . fiet is,. the Government has got so Much on its hands in removing the unfaithful, - de generate-Democrats,- and then finding fit per, sons tOt.II their places, :that we fear it cannot Attend to Kaniaeaffairs.". - said his lYiend,"l think you are likely. to hive a Deetint."' •