. . . ~ . . 1 , lii 1 ';. - 1 • I . ' I ' • • 2 ' • .•. ;,, . \ ' - l '. ‘.: ...............,.................. ......,,.................,..........,.........,, .................... : , , ~ ..., I , • ` I .; ' '' : ' ' Ll : • , 1 r , ,• “ ..02 ..... t; / ' r . ii, , ; ,, • ` . g •,- • if, `.+ , I .. , , , k ~,, • •,,,,,/•• /r, , . . i i , - ' 4 , • , I ' ... / .. r i • • t . . ' , 1 :// . , , 1 / '' ' 42 0 , ~, , .. 0' 0 . 'I . ~,,,,_ i -•- . , / • ......., :: , • i ~1.„ - - _ `,,, 44- ~,,, ?k , - 1 . \ 1, , 11i . ..• 1 t : wo , 'au : . r . , , . 4- - '•.' 4 •le ! # 4 4 , -0 , • , 1 _.....K. ! Y , 111 44P 0 1 4 _, .. , , •: . . „..._,,,.3„ ~ ~. , , ~.• . ....„,..,,.... . ~ , (...„.....______ ‘, _ I 141. ' < ,.... , x . , , ,,, 9 , 4 , yo, i7 a .; ' p)'' ,41 14 . '' 7 I 44' k " 4 4. ' t ' i - 44 - ' . • \ ~.. 4 ' 1 - F it - '" t , / I . , : ;,' - • • , • ' i -, I ' ' , I. ~ , . , 1 _ - I , • 1 , 1 -. 1 • . i , , • ' 1 • i i , . - .1 - ‘ _, -1, • . , . k Pan, Vroprid 4tlttiti 1 . ''f TOpe once, LAW. ttbirt• I.olivillil_l . oarnsili .Tricli colt bition as . a measure' orarveta. , 1 i in the finumerable 'evils resulting froiuk ; traffic. 1 . .• , 1 1,. . I- . • -, 1 . Trher ',L ,, We wohld invite the' atten t tempe ance men. of ;Susquehanna. .I,Ouii! the tablishment of -an . association ' t • . i• ich e rights . and privileges of vaunt*. can . maintained. We have no. 14 - ? : rsck. • terest n.so doing, but have a . deep Inuit ii the use; W`e see how intimately ,C,Oini - I 11 are utemperance and' crime ; howtliiii . ~.. i S•bothiare caused. by the Liquor traffic •„>:',' i 24,1 dint if we cannot rid ourselves of t power - w I"4ul'ilek.roying dement, its twill , I :ally ' :ender out civil and religious - libel* U, .... ~.• . lose rpther than a ..blessing. ,With till it i ews ive would call your attentinn te , .a (I n t i I on paramount to all' others, and to ci . -• e lendithis,question in all its a.pectsJo y I • - ,' ra t cOnsideration. - H , ' . • . ..,. 1 ~ c.' ° m Be olved,' -Thathaving etamin6d the' ;4 l a m a I pe" roject, and ,belidVing it t' t 1 : ..i uost efficient principle by wlueh to . e e. l'Atel the many . " 'rippling U.Ousi.,4,' that, ' I. C` , suffcreil•fo unpOse Upon'-the itubliet ir •,r•s' , • t:toy the -peace,.of cammuni6l ' ;. 7 . e ‘l - ; \ • ne • • ;,tou gentlemen to co-oppratk With e pad attainment of this principle. t- . .• ! lit fed,. That we as an orgamiation 1 - ' e j ect for the -promotion of, 't e mper, ' ° o, l : its legitimate interests; • could earn • t m cit the 1), ,hiltinthrophic citizens of the .nti-to ke iunnedinte action upon . 1 'ect. - , - i' • : , ........ ii '?".... 1 .3 - Olved, ' That . -Wi -.);. Pang l gt . 117-----1- 1 ... i • 1 • From Gleason's. Pictorial' irnE VWIDOW'SnEir; • Ora "lit Go s BT 'CAROLINA A. SOULE' - • . • • . . , Se. . -ieeltad - Conlinencedin the nee t little: .. actuary, :which the sinhabitatitsl 'of -Fair- Mount had Consecrated, to the woi4liip of God. The minister had Tread the .I)..in . and the Scripture les_sofi, ?Ind' the first lines of the : ipper4g.liyinn, • , The•:eyes of his peoPle were ifixedfintently upon him, for le was not 'only. ..j.l good. sound, eloquent preacher, but lie was a tine looking one, too, aud, thus enchained usual y -not only the attettion .of -the true, out the false .Worshippe'. The . house Was lery 4till—the clear, me lions tone ;of .the peakr were the only-• .sdinids.that throbbed 'I Ori:thlalmly golden aii:'which the nildsum,- ; . 4 ,I , . , men ',Sabbath morn had I:breathed Into. that l'oly ' lace. - The first sellable of the second J i line as trembling °all' lips, whet a rusile at th door, and the enti nee• of tw persens, a lady and a gentleman, zssolved t e charm; In a second s every ey.. ,. ..tit..ned frOmj th .pid-" I e,, pit to the broad aisle, an watched .. - iiii More thanlordinary ea,gerness; lie progr : ... of. the rl couple: A most searehi g ordeal ' ,'ere the, übjelc, ted to, and-when t, ick were fairly sea- A in-the front pew int ediately- before , the. )ulO, what a nudging t elbows theft ,was, .0y; and how many mli.pers, toot. In:vain .sougtit the good, tlm sou d, the eloquent, the. hant soroureacher to se 1 main the: att4,;n tion .of his hearers., T ey , had eyes_ i ,and. thout - rhtS for nobody bu ' Widow .--'• ; 4atid widow C:: - young MI dashing atten dant.' . - I 1 • ' t them hadn't she more, chat herlheifit . 'pried one ;. - that.she , 411 . adnt e re or, ride , withd gentleVien of the 1.-: . she didiet• feel as ; anything but mourn these prtt,-tations, , at Once, !dressed in ;hunch in broad day of a youngentle r . liow she had cheated ) said l a hundred times or 1 li • was lin the brae of herli 'would neyerman-y agait .'fused always to : walk (aril an*lof the' un apprOpri ate, .viliAge I lladte , t she •saicil .i ,-- • .thol she. could ever wear 1 insT\ And in. spite 'of had she not come out all •White,, and walked into. e. light, leaning oh the ar . ,trutn. - ' : . • i „ , • es, indeed .sh.e• hail . She wnuld I have , . • -1, ,plead guilty tci all . those charges, grave ones .. l as hey were; sandf.the 'lSt two, how. , many writ iesses might have heciti •sulipmaned. ,i She ' • wa;actualiv dreSsed in --white. A. .I.*autil rehe of India mull, tucked to the ivaist, wr , anlopen corsage; displaing an , elaborately • .wrou t thfchemisette, drapery sleeves trimmed 'with richest Meehlin.lace,lunderslee' Yes of the 1 • • same expensive ; mateiial,la white crape shaWl, a 4 white. lace hat, - with o.ingibudS and tl4w- • _ers . , white kid gloveS: and light glaiters-stich _ w 43 the description - eve6'r lady : liad, on- her tongue's end to repeat. oi , er.a.s• soon as serie Ivak closed. And 'the gentlemati-he•• was • dr43sed. in style: He WOlB. white,',.pants of - th ' latest patem, and a lksdlitevestand a coat 4)f • tin fintsh i 7 and white kids too;.; and don't •he port a maskive Chain', land didn't ii gaze l a • oft qt and tenderly, and 19 , v . in_g . ly; '7n e . fair cr ature beside him'? ' Ah, . Ves -he•4 l id so, an there was no . further !room to ' ckubt.--- . IN'idoiv (.). ---had cheated them. ;I.She had wcn a 'beau,. laid .aside,her mourning, put On • a 'bridal attire, and was - going. to -, matrie in church. But % - lio the beau. was,' or whence he came, was : more difficult to:thlv„e4 , . .. ' .• • rvice proceeded. The • Choir -sang; and • th minister and preacht-arrd. the i 1 - ple wondered wlfett - . the ceremony Would take place. .But io their astonishmenOthey. , lre left to - wonder. F:-• or when the ,benedic , ti n was pronouncod,' widOw C.-- 7 ----4-and 'the; strirnge gentleman walkcd , ' With the restlnf :tlie con,, ,, regatiOn- quietly lout of. Church.---• ,When. they reached the 1 pavement, he of feied his arm very gracefully, and She placed .114 hand very conti - dinglv - . r !in •tlie heatitiful • soft coat sleeve, and• they paned ou 11' - • I • 1 •What a nooning that was in:.Fairmount? 1V hata world .of conjecture.-i, sUrinists, iuqui', ries and doubts rolled .over:-arid O,V4' rin .the • - .1 rains of, not only the gossipOng la4ies, 144 ober, matter-of-fact gen:than' :. - i `-The - like f such a thine had neVer centred in the . , annals-of the village, There - a a `i.. nnet l i i r i,-,. • new under the sun •-,, a h,,i.. h i i hi t( ' a h ea iT rind nobody 'knew ii. ' Wi I tIONV - t".2,----41. idui l • . . • our ears Lurti :that day I . .A. I; lye wonder they hadn't dropped 4.4.; 'Sur ly;-• , I. - le) • - mus t 0 .• have been crisp and •crinvion. -- The _Rev., 4 '.lt.- B. .preached house - that aft:rnoon, no. con, . though. The Man*. was in . • him. • Ever Voice was sure the take 146 - .1 Len; but everybc . / 1.3.11 y disappo jute] ; "and if to • . :it railroad speed Left,re, the) On eltetne ires. • The :lulu]: I 4 .'",.e Prentlied that day, :au. ; • • ik•g"•.' ' F • .•.- i • • '.• -• • •• i• ;_•• - • - . • •, . • ~ . . Wotil4 harii,beeHtr.,' quite as edifying. But ono ; subject. engross the village mind—the wid-i ow's I.)eap, that' was the topie..[ • -:1 It tietUally..Seined, too, as t hough the 1.1•;j iiy tried to makoall. the talk she could. • Af-•; ter. tea, arm in arm r with - tbn.strange gentlei, 'roan, ski walked the whole length of the vil4 lage r !And awaykiiits into the c'emeterr, and 'ewit retupted till the mooniwtp high', ". Al. nice looking dre.a, I teas. 4 she•had,l; :drawled - out ;old! ; ;w grAndina Vir.-',..-=--- . ao she lis; 'edi ten to the . Wido's:- wandentigs. , "1 anr i glad I - liain't g:Otito wash it, ilrabbled up With; derr;as it mustlianve been—but "I don't 'spoO: .she thought Or, eared a word about it, she* so carried away with hitt. Bt t.I - will (rive: her a.idece qf o?y, Mind, the r4t time I have' achauce, se e it' I ' don't.- .Chimt us ~all ja., .th. tWay.”- I. ' . , l ilf ' , • ut the good old data began ,to Tear that sh Would nver'have the desired clarice.— , ! Sh hurried Ithrionoli her ivaihing.on Ilitindai. 3 . , And hob et over to the IvidoW's as soon as ' bl 'll over possible, bnthOdoor was locked, and one of the 1 11 - eig ibcirS said - Mrs. .—,—arid thd. ti gentleman ; verit'oti -in . a carriage, nobody r,,• ,_ . very -new . u bet* early •in ''.' tlie moming s .---i ," Yes, and never got home till nine o'clOclin the evening ."; i Look, out,'. , WidoW 0.--,--- Your characteriis on the earl )et. i' - .1 - •If she Ituiwilt;: apparently ; she didn't care; for thelnextlday 'she went' sailing .ivitli her beau, and the pelt, day, rambling with friar; away Off tol the! Mountain; and ,on .tlie nest forenodn wOrt 'With him in a carriage to the sAittiOn4housb, and there not only wept as she parted:from I lii in - ;- but Aatu aliy 1 ji lib racetl and i4cli al I V ; kissed I him. : t .. ::; • : 4 1Wfmt,la.bitiad . darligl4r' exclaimed grand Ma 'W. ; '" Well, ifl ever .seed or heard 'the like oult4i ' • •- ' ~ :. . - Little Nel, '; lie old ladvy4tigest grand, child, W-ondired to herself if it vas any worse in broa d datlight than at\ any other tine.We do tleaSt-.1 1. ... I! I . 1 Theri. wa' a 1-err large attendance that at i ternoon ht t i e: Weekly meeting; of the sewing society; I plerytiOily went that could possib, ly leave henhej i . .And what :i chattering there was when the hustle, of asseintilrng was over.. There Was;l4ut fine to ''. but that l was :nit : - sufficient, allengro. ing; the ,widow's beau r , for thelgentleinhri. fist - be her beau, or 4 least, he ought i to be. 1 1- ; . 1 , .- - Everybody had • something ,to tell, ' some, 'thing tto.w4fitter about. But Suddenly evert i l tungpib• tOtigite -was husliblt; a universal stroke of 'Orli!) pal :sr' seemed to bare fallen on the (;' , .ro - irjr 'as looking irip, ' they 'perceived 'the very ladv,,abOut,whorn t'he'n were conver.- 1 r [sing so,ea• .- :- , er O ly, standing in W do r.vliy. "Good afiertiOon, ladies:l s a id tale in. her I nsuallarge quiet l‘yay.: "1 ant gladito see so and lutppy :A gatlicring.,- - - It ip a beautilA day for our in i-, , feetin-," and th.n l she proCeed 7 ed. to the tal.ile; hel - ped heMelft . to a block of work; inquired 'for .the 'sellin g` silk, • whicli •'. ' 'rece ived,she . . • • -having' , • sat down in the only vacant cli*, l ' and coinmenced bemrnin , ,a red • ~ • • - . very' ling with . a yellow . i ving, -onto A very givini..•l*l_ , ; which latterhad been bent -11144:1 nu to :4 square piece of ‘‘llite cloth. and theiwliole then completed j Was AcsiLtued to form the . tiientieth part of it ,11:01 spread. Slie, seethed all 4ngrosssed, with ilielbird's bill, and . spoke to t*,one. • Everybdar wondered if she. had.heabl what they were;; saying "when, ~ ~ {she came iii, i• but her placid countenance. soon reasqired the - most fearful, and every one longed 'to-commence a •-peri;onal attack. . Old g,rahlina W.-:-----w4s,tlip first to veli" ture. title nittant to "do up; the inattt. very delicately, And iti - io "rouidibOut: a way,' the lady sliblild . .not suspect l,er of curiosity. So - slielbegin . by praising MM. Cfs.- . -Ldn.,. A " Why, it, is really' - a beauti;" said slie.;-;- ."IWhete di 4 - you get,it r ~ i., . I buglit, , it,'i Nvas tbe repl y . " Here ? l , ~,, 1 .. , 1 , ~ • - • ..„ - "Nd." 1 • "Vvilefej then ?" fl.j; 1. " York ,. last'sprine • • ‘"" 0 you Aid did buf thou , rht ynu ~ you. , wasn't never; going to Weir anything bUt black agai4:." . • • Every eye ;scrutinized the !lady's face this time in sea'rcli of a blush, htitiit continued - . As pale as usual, while she answered : "I did think and say, sei, (Mce, but Lhave, finally. changed myinind.l • ; , "You haVe ha! But What made you. 1 • had good reasons." :Here the hear-- ersAnd lciokers-on i winked 'expressively ;at each other ; . - • . • \" - But (141,:y0u not spoil your beautiful white dres4 ;Sunday . night, wearing it 'svay up there'll the burying groutid ?" ' -"I didof :rear it: • Here wqs;,a amper to the-fold lady.. ;She had such 14 e , lecture to read on extraS•a gance., an di she was so Aelerinine.d to dol it too 'when Unfortunately for hert i eloquent still]; Mrs - lei 1 1 8 dress had I/lineup in her •- • • ; wasil robe all thl; find shd- had worn an pld black , • ' After a While the • old 3i4y took a flh' h start. :$1.4 Would find out fall about that beat/ beforp,he went home; "flint she woul - 41." So Ae• lAgan: by saying; "your company went away this morning, didn't they I" • `•f was i the - answr, a wee bit;•of eraphasis**sting 4i the ar j .i. di(' - i4't sta.) very" long did he?" "Not . .as long as I wish had,", was ~11e emphatic answer this' tinic. And how [the ladies did idok at: each other. It was as good 'as a confe4sion. • • "Whenidid he come S • "aturgay,nightL": "Was Non looking for hini r " I hail been , expecting [him for a fOrt ; ni‘rht." l - ; ; I I j "Whyd44 . telli if you hatl then 'and you never told! 61A:either. b ' usiue..4 in the placer • ,1 1;1, He 1/10." . , . • • "-What. !Was it ?"' This i%-as:rather more direct and 'blunt- than grin/An/a had ; mCnnt to put,AnliSlic forthwith ago oaired by hay " I didn't. Mean only thought - , ! t • "01'd hs lief you knew!. .48..ti0t," said . • the lady, With a charming air lof ilairvette,il he . came to s:osi me." F 0, l\idiritC ! did your:o6d name go klOwn' then. B careful what you e‘Sar, next or 'you will lutveiOhly 'a remnant character; to go; honic withi and remnants g 4. -cheap. •s . " lie do, Old . - he, and he! didn't' conxi„ for.; ncithino' else' then,? But rills yOu-glad to see' , • •; • ; him?" .1 . ; • - - • "I'lntief•J'W•ls• it - WO Olio of the jiappi-; estoincm nt'spriny " '•Weli,lwell," - said the old lady, hardly I ;knowing ;how • • fratno. heti next -question,-;- • •• . tO a crow !.hided the pew heforol wetiding dy 1A again (fu ; • ofi .11a4 run .t; tr.ivOldlthen ter ,not. hip4ertuont.... A % 7 / 771 i'LY 3OURNAT., DEVOTED : TO O . PLITIt FEWS, ontrost, *lits/ K, well, he's a real good looking nian.iiny-_ *ay." .-• • , • ,k • P- t .. ‘ I think-so, too, and he's notonly goo - lOoking, but lie 4 good -hearted.; One of the best men I ever -iiek." • I • 1 1 J " Yeu,don't yso I But is he rich?" t l '' ." • Worth a lin diedt thousand or lso," said - I the lady earelesily. - . - -1 - 'will 1 . • li- " Why, dU tell, if he is. -Why you i. e liken lady, %ion' you ? But what is his name)?" I! " Henry Macon.". 1 '• " MaCon! Marion I Why; wasn't Before you were married r' • . l• "It voia." - . .• • - i -171!eniiie•is conection, is . he I" Ii "lie is.' . 1 - - "•Tht tell; if lie is then l• Not a • -•ope. •I never.did think much Of teen " Henry is.not, my cousin." •:••• "He isn't. Not your cousin I - Collection is he alien, du tell us!" ""He es my Oungest brother." i; If ever there w'as rapid progress made • v , • iri 44cWiiig. and knitting; by any circle of ladies: it Was. by, those Composing this 'society for the next fifteen minutes. Not a Word Was iltteml, not an t •ye raised. •,11ad tbe latter been done, • and !the roguish and expressivii i. r laries which . r ;ast3ed between Ml+. C.-4-4 and the minister,' who unobserved, bad stood 4 silent spectator and curious 'bearer, pert Baps, Mind: you, we only 'say perh l ops, they might have gueised More correctly the name; Characier, • standing • and prOfessicin _of the Winow's BE At!, • - Itlmie. • God has given unto Man an :Or SO 111 i: Gately attuned, and 'a; soul so elevated and fetined, - eapable of experiencing various slim; tions, that he is able to appreciate, and efif jOy_to its fullest extent, the inefodies and :diL Vine accents of Music. We listen with 'de= light, and hang with rapture upon itlr i e note.S . Of songs, as the voice of some gifted and loved one.utters the anthem of praise, lOve and adoration. ' The heart is stiri;xl to . its very depths, as, changing the themei, the, liar- - minions numbers breathe- the joyouS welcdnie. ,tell of Lope s and heaven, or Whisper', in - Plaintive strains, recollections' of the loved ttnd early lost. But-the smooth and liqUid InodulationS of the human voice is 'not 'the bay source of-music, and, melody. ' We leave the busy haunts of men, the busth,'. ttirmoil and. strife of active life, and walk with nature ii:mong her, works. The soul is awake to : , all. arotind, and wliisperings, sWeet as angels,and Strains ,of g a.l and h., rr y fait upnn Mr 4 e' Spiritscar. - The rivulet as it Comes front its Motintai ii,home,dancing along'the lowly vale i , dispensing and cheering many heaffs,singS of .00ntentment, purity and pence.;, The eveoitig Wind, as it lingers among the Iree-topi, and Softly breathes upon the blushing &Weis, Whispers - as a mother to her- sleeping babe, and we hush _even-the beating of our-hearts, that we rose tiot:a note of the fain' music. k The••tt c ri ) f the rain drops, the chirp- in[r and twittering, of merry - birdsil the dash ,ye the waterratt, the rush of . 'the nnghty river,the licaven'S artillery, and the voiLe of the mighty ceean las' its toz.- liincr and heaving waves break 'uponithe'rockv Shore,—these all unitil - in one prolonged, 'lev er ceasing song of praise unto IBM who is above and over all. Again we- li.4ten—Lku- • t,tunn has come; the cheerful note . of sumo- . nier's joys have, fled ; the heart is sad; and as we catch_ the sound of fallinc:, leaf, and wil-, ling wind, 'Cis melaneholly breathing Of some distant harp; telling of departed joys, and blasted hopes, and calling, "sister . spirit come away.' In 'communication with(Tod, and his works, the soul is eriobled, and' Puri fied, and better fitted for the' .holy !duties of life; and for an entrance I into-',that betterland -where we shall sing and praise as • iangels do ; and our notes* shall rival Cheru bitu and Seraphim unto Him Who livetlinnd • - Ireicrneth forever, even our God.• The. Last Look. : Wife Jay dying. \ Sufferings h d wasted her beauties—but the Wreck of her 'former chartris,:through the medium of liet Meek and fiided eyes, were' peering, the lustre of a '!.soul prepared to go—as through the crevices of .some ho;uy and crumbling ha ion the . rays of-nuerering moon. An the earth , riewdarker and the dashes of the stilleti laws of death began to reachilecar,she turn ed hei face to . Mtn who was weepingbeside her the. object of her first and latest lore land with one long glance cone 'warning smile one lingering kiss—departcd intoanotherand bet ter world._ And be went foal' a inourtier- . -- tint that litst lo9k.ininides in hi 4 duties, and 4ontrols his visions.. A youth left his 'early home . for 'the active theatre of the world, Standing ‘ n the hill beyortdr•the brook, he - east hiseye backward upon' thespictUre.from 'which he w uld 7" soon, be, sePeratedlorever. There : sto the cot, ~.reen:with the woodbipehis owit andst - had planted—there were his parents a d his, dar ling sister looking throng,hniisty leyes after their departing idol. • lie ga4ed rut: n! mo ls i meat—such . scenes are :too ,'tend r -o.i. the S.t,outest . heartsand castingsilen kisstis . to wards ,the gionp of beloved ones, • e dashed down the hill and. returned no-the e. ,i• • • 'An old man whose hair was and white like the 'wary frost, was summoned from the council chamber of the nation to •." enter a way in which he had never • walk d before: '• The eage•Sank down within the w lls Which . had so often reverberated wit-kW, fervid elo quence, and looking around him murmured, i i` I ainl content." And his last words,i even to the Present, upon the boson' of all nien. Alover bad,lost his idol. 13eneath• 'the Arysting tree of ealier hours, there went I they • parting, With . promises strong as, oaths, with kisses sweet as homey, witl4lears,, as plentiful as rain, they tore their heart's as:' -under. The look was ,exchanged, and the' sadness of parting commenced; The Maiden dreatns there—often of his uttbroken.coinpitri- 1 1 ionship, i Alas, for her, whershe awake.s frau , the delnsive viiion. • - . 1 : • ' Jr . , "Every beOnuing has an cnd.7. Themost p ! ainful ingredient in the' cup of hinnan ,actiont is that in quaffing disappointmentis the cup! I bearer. But even' thisfortuueimuSt have air end, and the bowl is broken. at the . fotintain;' and likind its sorrows have 'and cud.. hike wise.‘•-• • . , ~ ! i 1 . • rrYou. rarely, if ever, see a ix)fitieian 'with' smooth hair, a great sCholar., with finehair, au artist With red hair, a fop witheoars4 mi.Mste with loog hair, an 'editor 'whose hair is carefully adjusted. 1 . 1 a COURtgy nut a; 'Q. ut - san ( 4,ll.crntutg, Aptlt 27, , 185-i 6.•• Si'VECH OF c.i It. BUCKALEW, OP costramt =7n-is Diirerfti in 'the Senate q Pennsyliania,.• March • .0,1854, upon Resointaans pending against the Nehtaska-Xansas • • , , it 3111'SrEAXER wcold have b een piense t the Senator from• Dauphin had been henni upon thesoresolutiong, so that my remarks would as. mane the charaeter of a reply. 11e is resPensib le for, the introduction of 'the. resolutions and the consequent debate ; and . Should linie furnished these, Who Ar l o opposed to them with the grounds upon Which they are pressed. But the scnator frem Wyoming only, has , spoken in their favor, and he rather in explanation of his Course than as a trticipantin the debate. ut, 1 will proceed. There is . 'enough of merit, and strength in the Nebraska bill to permit a waiver. of 'all advantagei of pcisities, however conformable to the usages:of discussion.l , : .-The•question raised by the resolutions is a fa.. one. The same question, in:other forms, "has often been up, and been the subject ofdebate. But, although this is so, great misapprehension eilsts'in the community on the subject. have no doubt thateventually the judgment of the peo ple, of this Commonwealth will go, with great urianimity, in; favor of .the bill assailed by these reSolations. ;But, at present, there is a neJessary Work Ito perform in the exposure of falsehood and correetiori of error.' • hat your • I onsin, I arriages . r ut wijat Stitt, during the last thirty yearsamblie opinion initldo State has becn,misled, in;the outset, upon atm oSt every. national sisstestion that has matterof regret, but it is:trite. The pub lic' records etas° State prove it. Uponthe tariff we ii ve more than once, struck . hands with Mas saehusetts; and after 'tiandering in crinr been ohliged to retrace our steps. \ In 1846 wefrefuSed 46 . per cent duties on coat and iron , in order th enntinue our; artnershiP with Lowell and Bos-:. - ton ;'end lime, the sure vindicator of truth, has been tequired to convince us that: we Weie fol. 113Witig the lead of selfiSh and blind guide's.. Up on • thp:kalk questjon,, we contributed legislative resolves, and votes in Congress, aid:, of . the eihneS..poweis and when the bank was crushed as a tiational,kve etnbiaced it asi Stattinstitg tiUn•.!' .AVe gsive it countenance Until itstaggered on into bankruptcy, and the latnentationS of its vietitnseame to constitute the rcquium over its (ierrnpted retrains. In 1847, by statute,', we re f Used. the use of - our jails for purposes under the natintial . ConStitutions . That cmctment was cop ied frinn an het of sLissaehtisetts—the Auarter Where most Of political heresies. originate—and if yeai only after a patriotic 'struggle ip 1851, that itsrepeal Was secured: J might go ':on with ether'illustrations.eStablisingthe fact oflivhich I have:Spokertf a fact Which has had much to do With..the secondary position assigned our:St:dein the Political history of the country. .There has not Veen, with us, that necessary =pinky in 'the outset upon' Brent national questiOns; tsi .cnable, Our State.tolake a place in the Union Commen senate With her population, resources and geo graphical position. The, firmness and sagacity 1 14 - -in- , urnirsi promptly a position In great nation at entergencies, is inntspensablc to the idignity, hiinnr and influence cif a State in :our republican . s, • • Mhy, sir, even initlins'e stormy debate 4 extend through,yenrs, and terminated by Lilo:passage of the Compromise measures of 1350, our ',State Ois:in -an uncertain lif:tiot false'. attitude. Re sOvi* Were messed by th - e . Legi , litturel'ilipstile in cisnr.:icter to; the measures of y.djustacnt which 4terword prevailed. - 1 That we- eventually- came right} was ol‘in:s to the force .of truth, g'raduaily 4f:•seruinate4,and to that patrioti:im and!'scrise of jus tiee which 'are characteristic of our pee - Tie. we repeat former errors In the. Case be k .vhid) cant Btul' Vh , out, §ir, the sixth section of the Nehrs tains the following"pt °vision : ! .;,:- • ,‘ That the ligislati.repnrer of he Terrgory shall Weild to all rig sulyeets of e i gislatiom consist rni 04. th the-Crutstitution rf the truited Stotes,and flicprurisivis (f this act; but no law shall be pass.- Interferiirr with the prim' aridisp e sal glaze soil, - 4 : , - ~,, 1 I . . I R c 'l7ii ci ,' 4 . l s ection pd,-czn 1 is terbatini from Ow Utah and New ~ ex . . . . -Ten hills of 1850. ' Instead of being new to legis bitinn, it was adopted by CongreSs in; 1850, and l:langtioned . by the ecinntry. ; HoW'then in those With approve the measures of thilt year, complain Of the bill l'i No new .principle intfoduced. , its ~ . . . Tim people of Nebraska are th, enjoy simply the Siuith rigitti'of local, legislation, as those of ad jci‘ ining ,t. rritories. This proviSion was necessary t defineo he powers of the Territoriall Legisla- - inre ; and from the 'grant of legislative ;power it !ordains, it. would ; have been necessary, (if the ii f ieWs of the abolitionists were to be..conSultedi . )l 4) - Oclucle power over the suebjet of shivery. - In 44 way only eoulff . the confrot of Congress over 4,liSigsub,,ecti or the authority of the Bth section of I ,11101issouli net 0f,1820, , be -prPserved.i . But, if 1 the'sectionillad been so constructed, would it not I If are ' aye 'introduced tl4 .. slavery .-question into Con. greis ? Tile bill Would have ':been subject to 'Aulendmeni and discussion; it would have conin ; 'OIIA proviSion on the subject of Slavery,* it n w t.. :, 'does, only of a different charneter ; and the ant lor lof the bill eouldlinVe been chnrged,•juSt as .ab ithrdly as he is no's cithrged, with the jutroduc ' Jaen of tho slavery question, into Conaress. Sir, i t ifylAntroduction was unavoidable.....Nn sensible .',miss; ever supposed, that the, subject would .not, sitiliz.e. : . , ~,. i , . '!,.: . Such eXPectatiorf would haVe he - en foolish' if 1 it:duipd., Wl:nt. Was content - plated 'after the i Struggle of 1850; by those in tiWor of the:acts of that year, was that'ithe basis of*tiOn then estair , fished, should be maintained:: Congretis tEen . de. gidtd in favor of the principle Of non-intervention 'On the question and passed it !ever to the pecTple ,011 the Territories concerned.. ' The general„ gov rprriment'by that deiision, was 'Sundered from all connection with the question ' in, the T'erritoricA llithi,aboutheilig organized. No enactment cm: , in#ling frOni it could thereaftek,be quOted, =le i iieping: eV ?excluding the institution of ilavery• in - Utah or New Mexico. The principle df the N.e..: 'braska bill' was plainly enacted: as a just, and wise AliSposition of the .!controversi .then cixistink.—_ Dciubtless; iff-Nehrasira and KanSas had then been -Winfred for 'Territorial governments; the same thicingement preciiely would illiVl3 been made its lills for their organization. Does riny one sup usethat. , the statesmen who figured, Intil.e ; dc.. bides of 1850, Would have extended rights . df self !,ccriverniinent to the people of Mexiith and ibliah,•andi refused. the same . rights to those of I.iransas and Nebraika.? Would they haVe dealt this uneqnally, and therefore Pnjustlyi with the IpZippla of tuljeining Territories? •-• ~ - '.— i Sir, the,,TerritorieS of Utah , and Now Mexico, ... 3 as'• organized in 1850, ineludCid portiOns of 'the 'Missouri territory,' covered by , :the Bth section of j 'the Missouri act of 1820, and Of nort4rn Texas, 1 . :ciivered by a: similar provision ;in the ant annexing I :itbat Stntir.to Oil Union.. Di 1850;;,!'illerefore,j .:Qoncrress. hot only' decided in 'fliv - erof the-friril 5CE, 17. 4T1, 11 E . ,,' 7 2.4 A Lt - , i• - plot of the .Nebraska bill, but applied thaLprinci pl in exactly ilie.saineiway-4that ts, to territory' fr m which Congress had previously enacted an ex lusiOn of the institution, of slavery.. The pl in fact is, that Congress deelded to !withdraw al interference ,with the question in the ToTlto ri s concerned, without" distinguishing' between . regionasceuired froth Trance; Spain,.Teias and. Indian tribes. I No matter whence title was de- - rived, or Whatl legislation had theretofore been h • by foOign governments or -enr oivn,Popular lo al authority was substituted for COngresSional di •tation. 1 The right of those who lay prostrate. ~. th ! forest,.-tind give tO' civilization another v ee westward, to'!erihet their; ocal laws, was vindicated and established. I Congiess • wisely surrendered a doubtful . censtittitional -power into -hands • ennipetOt to its exercise. Wielded by the general government, it is ii power productive oil ceaseleas and incalcUlable MrilK Vested in the hnds of the People of the Territories,; mid! just ly bodged it is its exercise unattended by nation ali convtilsionsl. The question ai s t.o the location of this pOwe4, whether in Congress ',or in the Territorial legislature.4ebeeted by, and represent ing-the penpla thereof`,' had to be met. in COM._ • st-uctihg the I . lebraska. bill. - lit was impossible tol construct - it otherwise than it was constructed, without tin *indent**, of the principles and pilovisions of the Territorial 'nets or 1859, and endersingagain the dtingerons•doctrine 'of Con -wiessionatinterventior4•The . committee having the subject in 'charge, Met the question and dec.i. (led it rightly hied wisely. Holding: that the nets • oft 1850 were;-h . : just decision; `f in principle and . siilatance, of 'the question of . stivery in the Ter rftories—n settlement and "finality" in our na tional policy upon that, exciting and-!dangerous subject—theYetoo.d. by; the principleA / mid ,pro visions of, thoSc acts, and gave' a corresponding ferm to the bill it had! heemut, their duly to re:. Art.. Sir', the till Subsequently . \ receiieti;.after hill debate. a two;thirdS vote ot: the Senate, and ifdeserves the apprOtal 'ef the country. . At, all events,, no one who 'approves i 7the. compromise Measures of 1850, and whoSe mind is unclouded 14 'prejudice, can iippuse the Nein:tan bill of 1851. I'he prineiple.in the twe eases is identi cal, nnd its applhAtien affords no-solid - greumfOf distitictiou r . .1- : • 7 : i There fibs been great misrepresentation on this. subject, and Many hard been inisled.,. • The meas. tire is not, el l 'en. yet, flioroughly understood.— We. havei not arrived at that plot which we will attain, in! thel. natural,...course ; of . things, some nionths hence: But ought"We not rather, to an ticipate thnt(tollow;far in the rear of public opin: inn? - .At!,any rate, we should nut rashly cast the weight of; thei Cominonwealth ! Mo.-the, scale et error, 'or Cause her to speak, through these rose , •- lutions emLicre may be . disposed hereafter to r , etract.. Isn e, ..is sh e .,, . ~ . The appeal is tinide to us against the Nebraska bill, on' the ground that it . suPercedes andannuls, the Bth section of -the liss,iiiii act of A 850.— Who make this appeali? Who are nicht .active and elamoruuS througtiotit the north,?, - It is well knot: kno, who; are to lead:and -who aro to be -oar associates in this critsade beyond thellisSissippi. Are they notlthe very; men-who have -opposed and 'repudiated' ecimprouiises,•and spurned the Counsels of cOneiliationited justice ? The same men who cried alondii01850 ? when agitation was cr t nsbe!,iiby . the pa‘sage -of the! measur'es of ad jiistmentl—The same men Who have always de notmetd Alm act of 'lB2o,ard decleted .that they would not regard it, or he lioubd by it! They now hypocritically adept the so called 'Missouri - Compromise as the platform Of agitation, and pre sent theinselVes before-the country as-its chain-. Pions and defenders..' Can any one '.:doubt that this is done solely Tor 'purposes Of Mischiel?-- -that they. arejno more sincere than, consistent in their conduct? It has \becti abundantly shOivn thatithe act of 1820 was not a compact,agreernent, Ur *.bargain, 'in any just Scinse of those terms. It.',was simply a legislative let, subjjct, like other acts; to modi fication or re cal.. NUr has time (riven it t sanc tion and fore it, did not originally possess. It had none of he elements of a - • compact at first ; and experienee -has proved that the vieious, prih ciple ot . Cimaressiona interference it'contaios,is the occasion-of continual diSigreemelit, difficulty and danger.. Besides; the Congress Of 1820 had not the slightest right to bind the Congress of . 1850, or Con'gress of 1185.1. [ One legislature can, hot, ordinarily, bind a'succeeding one; -cannot tie up a question Of legi4lation 'and, remove it from the field of political Power. That is a farrilliar' doctrine, reqUiringo argument to establish or vindicate it.. But thin is . net- all. The \ act of. 1850 has been rePudiated more • than- once by Congress, aslWell as by the interests . now clam orous in its upport; 1 - --• ti n ! . It . has hee, calledi the Missonri nomproinise, d an iinpressionlas prevailed that it, and it A.I e, securild the :Tifaission of )lissouri into the. enio . history i 4, otherwise. :. In 1801,111iisouri ) ed claiming th e Missouri to . be admitte. ''s a State:l She had a right to/such admission ; nd withoUt cavil pn the question'ol came the kl;seirsan. of t i s vh C i e cl e i l.7 in e e 6 l s ud ' \light lof France inlBo3, and slay at that iiine; and. afterwards.- '`' 'Lent from - all *parts •of. the Itants pogsessed:and exereis \of self government and nestion from any quar -.AMA improved with', -,• the great Vnion' \ew elements, at, , And when ess, id 1821,' it as free; . laiming . \kidvan-1 \tent. L 1 L . 10 • f ' * L b I. 'th si t) t. I ... • L... . ... . • ,l 'y ,‘,..... ' 1 * * l ) • %,.. .II 'l's. :slavery. country, wab cry existed.ther6,. It *as open to setil. Union, and the inhabi ed - the ordirlary righ local legislation, without k, ter. • The.e4untry was setti. the view to its incorporation of the StateS,. frOm which 'the, least, of its Population were dcriv, the people of Missouri came' to Cont),. they came niit - as Micas . ' or inferiors, b., men and Ajlierican eitizen, rightfully ' .common and eepal ,parti 'illation in . the tages' therTediiaMtilen. They laid rcomp numbers, and. a republican constitution. U. every princiPle• of equity and justice, they were, entitled to admissiom .. Buttlie:y also caneunder the sanction. of tho :let of 18-20 ; and - in conform= ity with its Provisions. If ihat actrWas in VW nature Of a compact, the obligation to admit spoil Was ineperativei r But the plain right of the . case, and litO obligation of Whitt is now.talled the Missouri coinpromisA, were'disregarded. North 4 ern votes iulthe proportion 'of two to one, went upon the journal of the House against admission;, unless MisSouri 'woUld abolish Slavery. ThiS• was a direct repudialihn of the arrangement of the previous year, which had left slavery untotteht ed, except in the unsettled region nest of the pro : • posed Statef; and . Proie that. the get Of • 1820 was not esteemed a cidni ackok i binding, - itomprowis by northern members. • , ,t 'An objection' urged againstethe•admissioniveas, that hilt chose in the Alissouri constitution, it's . legislature tees atithioriZed to pass laws prohibit: ing, the immigration oT free negroes into the State, mid it was•npon thateoint that an adjusttneni was had— a compromise c feeted. Ityasprovided that Missouri should declare that nething ih her eori- . 1 . stitution shauld be cOnStrued to effect the rights of citizens' Of' other (Slides' tinder the national constitution. This was'the:Missouri corneromise, by virtue of which-the State was admittedirsther than OM - pratious act Lof 1820, - the obligation. of which hhd been repudiated. It was a .compadt between Ihf general; government and the State of Missouri, induced by an ohjection, the unredion. • nbleness.of which-uvoy..be judged of by the that lassiteliusetts Bier. had an net in full fur 4 forbidding the iatroOtietion' of free negroes into • (that Stac t and tliatiother Aadristern States bike sle.e.e pass,4l laws o the same description. . In the laws of I'B2l, Mr. 'Clay wits! a/ prominent factor,' arid. his; reputation has beiin placed in •part, upon the result attained. , BO; clearly, the provioui act of 1820, (as. regards its Bth. section % ).ilid not bear, at the time, :the sacred F character, saughtAobe given:lL It. was,' a simple, lq, , islative provision fur unsettled territo; ry, subjpet al,way4 -to" modifie.ation or repeal, and . effective even to thoadmission of Missouri,-whigh !--earne in under a subsequent arrangement.. ; The principle of that • Bth sectifAi• was .applied white] I 1 . -- r - , Ticias' was adulated, and i-ecalled when New life leo was Org,anizhed. As matter of fact, it h:is h no extension, now prm,tically existing, but, has been removed, as already shown, from a par lc two iof the territe to which it 'was - eriginally Op ied.\ lAti,arn ndatent eitending the line es tablishedl by it, westward: toward the. Paitifie,' Watt voted down- •hen* the Oregon bill was pena -1 4 lug in 1848. l lt as again rejected when propos. ed to be applied o the territories, acquired from . 31e ico. lit has een•voted 'down : over and over a,'„ nin Congre s ; and it I became evident ie 18 0 that! it coul not be, maintained. It became 144.spryl toado ,,, rt. other and better ground mo '0 consistent ith correct Principles and Jhe eXperionee of. the country., Cordially approved by no interest orlparty in the Union, and incapn or ' ' bleier *nduring Vgical examination 'and 'debite, it necessarily yielded before; the pressure of agb• Wien and assault., ; Then it was that we. 14. sfilistituted for Win legislation ; the principle! Of territorial 'rights and Congressional non-intervene ticiii, whieh Iltrust. limy endure---to the end Of . . . thellehapter. :- The deetrine of the Missoeri-aet, is' certainly itiertlcrotin AS a matter of national policy. It is bet special pleading; to say, that it has not been, heretofore, technically, formally, and totally re:. pieiiled: • The ploiet Of debatelies deeper than the real+ of e legal huitbte. It strikes behind - the It4Ul.qtic4stiort Inn statute, to . those foundn tions of right nn olpediency, upn which - legi4- ,Intloe ,mast rep* , No: party: can be really sal-- itiOd tvith the act of 1820, and the struggle must lic,twlionithe rent point is Met . in COngress, be- I t*eri ; the Calhonn doctrine and the Wilin i bt Pin, Vise. 'An egnal.riglit for the-south in. the terri= . teries;- tolbelrotected, if necessary, by Cengreft *anal; legislation, wits the 'doctrine of Mr. Cal hotm, fortified arid enforcedby powers of reason! the whit abovej.all men Of . his generation he' lie case . This doctrine reaches to all the ter i rit ries,. nd is net geographical line. It involves tht idea eteongresSienal ptorer, effectively ex,er idied, ,to ipretecti aed - preserve southern institu tions, .when earned by emigration into tlip ter:o , l torsos.' The Wilmet :proviso, with equal disre gard of the Missbuil line of 36 deg..3o min., is to build epla. Wallnpeti the . line of the territories, to ipre:,vent the entrance; of Southern institutions: CenserVatisth and innovation have arrayed again 4 ea ell Other, and -their Struggle's have shaken _ the i.Tolverempnt to its very foundations. To'cast the Missouri line between the -Combatants, is to pre po'k wl4t is acteetribte - te neither; cannot be cre-. fended upon principle, and Can never secure a 01. idipetice. . 71ce ..n.i.t.ta . ke /0 in permitting -(;6 - 1- I , l4,ess' to 'act, at all;: and hence the Compromise acts of 1850: are right, andeserving•of support. pet Congress withhold its - land arid leave the Whole snbjeet.where it p :el Eill: belong,s—te the peOple of the territerics concerned, • - " . -INVliattilittre said will iihow, in some - degree, 'the tree lehM.ac.er,cirthe Illkinuri net of 1820; how inelliTiCnt it has.leen!to . prevent agitation ;.. bon. din it has beat contillined or 'rejected, and, w It lift eit is "ealulatcd to inspire ewtrlder..-ite eed respect. It will be tufty wortlethe cost of a strugglei' to strike from our national.;policy cift.et ,iut-illy and finally the vicious princirile of Cottesees.. ;si nal interference tvhich it embodies and ci:rin ipl lies. I, • ;:. -, ! ' . Sir; there; are difficulties in the way of, a fair idi jeussrma here:of ri subje4 involving tlie .ques t.io'n of slavery.. • Upc,rn every ordinary question. lofdeb,.6 there are tivo parties,wlfiii_ se interests rule tffeeted:by- its decision ; and fro ie whose al i tercatrees•the .trutii• is evolved. :; Won thiaques tier' there is no, existing interest: 10 the nerth Ito oppcoe the activaYand : fury of fanatieisue— r!lil ;supp ating, sound doet : iines we. have but one !ground-..ipon which to stand. We etn -makeup i li Olds . inibut - pee Nriireetion: We-can • appc'al only )id; those principtiiS of justice and. right which ILit do eat always reenlate the conduct of nations itlad States.. Theoriecees of comity among the' Sfates dr the Union, and the right of equal paiic-. : !it alien, lby all the §tatcs l in the ad% auto get. to b:, d lived finm the camp:ton property, however elear • and justi, do not strike the superficial obserithi.— ,IO apparent self iritcrest exists to urge us for-: w ard: hale proper lihe!of conduct, or constrains us. to the correct opinions And as the indi titude,• the mais of mankind', carrnet easily,. be protight tOlregiuld Whatis distant, however . important, in the absence of preSerit motive,wo are continentlyiliablu to 'be plubged into diliculty, and to. as senti .pOsitions which will not endure the Lest of tzi jai ned tithe.: ' Legislative action-S[I(MM he,baS-- ' 4 d epee the principle of utility, .as propounded co enforced by Jeremiah Bethate: • 80, with 'most, men, it is difficult 'to perceive their eventu a 'interests; when :ceetrary to g i ome temporary or' partial view of 'alieestien presented., It requires 1 sludY-and discieliee to.grasp the Wholeinerits.of al subjeet ; to mice, tt . .,, t. - lettis irrevelant and trivial • 'Ord accept what is easeetial and true. It iS a the Mission 'of wise and goed men to Teelarge the, visioe ef. the -multitudM and cause there to per 4ive their real interests; to disabuse their minds. of eirod and prejudio;l to Canie- them to reject . utt 14 fallacious, tlioUgh plausible, •.,a4ctplitut themselves upon print:4lles of immutable - truth. .141 en jn the north—inen sagacious, jest and wiie- 7 —' who, hive heretofore stood by 'the! true .tirineipfes of the conStitution - and the real:inter-- eM `of !the ;country, have been denounced, reviled d abirsed. , Opprobrious - terms have been fidap- . upon them, and wren warty occasions, i they l nye brim subjecte(LtO fierce enmities and to ult. , ,ptilaiity.. ''liut, those of them:whose resolu tions have been "seated in a square and constant riling," 4vhe have had the courage and magrianitn t-i to. steed pp for Ap: 'right, •against tenqjorary isioes--have'evetitually and surely been yin diatech Time haS tested their position and es thblished, it. TheY ba've received the reward just- IY dire to courage, fidelity rind p . atriotis* The StOrm ntid the tempest which they with Stood, Ossed eivny,.and were succeeded by a--,0 periOd . of —.. !the! same rights - of 'Self.govei, AO, .I.lllsth leiljOy i l.befOro removing thither. - iThe People os P,etinsylvania have, from the earliest times, had Ithe i unquestioned right of establishing or probib; jitin,g among themselves the institatiou of slavery. They4tertnitted and legalized it ito long as they t ought proper, and when the time arrived that it was exrectient atid right to . Crlidicate it, thby ; did se 'without dictation from ai foreign author ; ity. INeither the British erown ' khe Continental Congress,liithe govii.rnment of the United Suites,- ever spoke to Pennsylvania in the time of Com mand upon this 'subject. -We deehied for our solve 's, as the beat judge of our own interests.and wnlfiire, and we could have jus(ly spurned any injunction issued from an. allenteuthority. Ali the northern gtates l the old thlrteen who pur tieipated in the gqitlition. and on their ties to , the power O(foree, enjoj,sid tho memo ex. el naive jurisdietionover the sameNnestion, This principle of local control and'tWsiation is prorinnently stamped, upon - the Iwiitical policy of the northern. StateS as any of which history. holds itoluitte 1L thtbttl7 . . ..- , , the ' record. 'Pennsylvania, for good',reimOnit; fo u nded inlulicy and: principle, . ,sibolished, -in : 1780, the histitutiOn of slavery - withinl her bor., - - - . dens; and she did this in a manner as just f as, it ' was beneficent and, salutary. Not .proroptd. hi. -: - the blind, incalculating - .spirit of Modern'tibe ition: • ism,she accomplished 'the , work:gradnall4 Ida ' uner Conditions 'as little - oppressive as;possiblet . ' 7.. • Upon. individual rightt and existing arrangements,- •,- • Is there tiny solid objeetion againstextenditig to thp people of Nebraska tho.isaine -:righta: *Web We have enjoyed and exercised? : Are repel pprinciplesbabe varied by,leCation and.geogeaphYs . -- *- so that eihatis right - along the venters orthd Soli, inehMina shall, be corisideredcrithinattiptitt the*: . prairies of the far - *eat, mid at the base of , ths, : :,,. " Rocky mountains I . Can gatisachliskiths, Or .Nett?. , . • ' . York, or AdarYlandi: deny, la 7 their.l - people ' : : Whii . -f. -_--; have' gone. weattvard,' rights: which have • -!been:. - :, . -. neither .denied or questioned in thol StriteXm• fro_-.. :- which they emigrated! -. i ,-' 1 . ; ,;' •• \ - r-' , ,--: - .: • , What spirit of evil is this :which nses npin out midst, and invokes us, to a' work of ontrago„ - itna,, . wrong! Have the republican citizens orthe,Ter - - ' ritoribs no right.tO complain that thegeeral gift•„ - - - _' . ernmerit should attempt te - dictate 'the - IniitStii 4 , r, - : `lions, and deprive them of a- jorisdietiott &St - -- their own concerns which has been,Cnjoyed by the .- . older States,ef the Union ?- - Theyj have rescued,.- . - and are itscuing, the regiqu in which thoftrave.:„.. , .- settled, frOm itsdesertoondition,and-haveminfe; and ore making if; fit for theliabitation Of eiVilised ,' - mma. . The foreitshaVe fallen - borers - them ; the - ..: savage has retired as they . have • Mivaneed4tlieS. . . have subjected alike prairie, Mountain, and valley, . to the - dominion of laborrind indastry,:and...haret , . swollen 'the wealth and extended the limits.of the republie. And shall tbey have no, rights. except:. _ .. such as are doled out to them fromia goienimeist, ' ' hicated_at the city .oc Washington? . Shalltheir . ' . laws•be framed and inipo.itduponiheni:by repro. •\; sentatives of - flartford, Boston, an ,Baltimere . 1-• or. shall they, free from congressional interfereime. , .: 1 ---free from the dictation of representativeS they • ' have no voice in - eldetieg—shape their 'own insti; !• tiitions.und the lawsonder which they are to live I. ''. However others, May, act, whether alone or imp:- ported; I stand tip to-day in vindicatiOk of their - • right to the same powers ofloeallegislatilm which ~ we enjoy; and I trust that the decision of tho• 1 ,1 question ending in Congress may be in strict ac.: , --, ' cord:ince jib - tbis.principle.. If's°, we may ex pect a pe cefal and just solution of all 'difficulties upon the !qiiestiOn of slavery in Cnngiess.:' Thee: • - , general government, stripped of all' control over. :. . the subject, wil lb° . left to perfordits appropriate . constitutional duties; and will no binger-beltmed , - • - dler with reatte‘ &\ that tiof ftist v pertain to it: . . - 'This: principle of contiessionall - non.petion is powerfully recommended-by the • •act . , that it is,. _ - 'strictly - accordarit with the character of our fed; _eta! goverment. No idea is more firmly rooted . -. in our national System, or more.,Useftil in itX re. ' . sults, than that'which leaveS to thl. Stotes the - ex. • : ,elusive regulathd of their internal nffairs:' ~ W ith., out this salufary'prinbiple it would beimpossible that the general governmentsotild lonivtontinuo, •w i tho u t:a chan,ge,--a mamal change—in our whole , system of admipStmtiOn. The'. term "State . : Rights” is not a mere political;. watch:word; hut contains in niit a .enning of the higheit, sig,nis-. .. 'ranee. It , iineana limitation-4dd restraint to- the , aeneral government it means that there/rere- - ... al barriers ng:-.inst the encroachments of federal-` power. .It means that centradization I is: pot. run - ,:::.- i idea' of government *amongst us. AMI it memasif - ,-f,A finhlly, that popular, local, and Individeisl , ' hziN•e, real guaranties -rind, a solid - defence... -Vifir? would resent, in Pennsylvania, to the utniciet,soy, , xf, ... encroachment Of 'the . federal government- utsai - ,=..-:, - - our just and reserved rights. And why shotild:42: . we, tt,irefore, ansist in extending Cinigressional. : ,: interference int6lll6 Territories of the .Uniort.— - ' . '. , The bumble emigrant, who goes out from amongst: . ' 7: us, our relative; neighbor or. frien&—shonld Carry. • with him, to his; new 'home in the west; the same: republican principles, which prevail in-the locality from which ho !emigrates. iliac is: tie reason I • . why he, should! forfeit any- of his rights as. au i. American eitiz4n,.by a removal into 'the .territo.i. .. ries—The common 'property of the United States:: . , Sir, when this . principle of loial power spares: exactly with-the national interests, in rentioting the question of, slavery from the field of Con;ges. .. - sional debate, and secures the peacAnd harmony .. of the :States in their relation to each . other, that ' man must hr.•..e . bad motives, or mnst.,be greatly or grossly mistaken, it ho would oppOsO its adopt • - .. . lion. - . , . . • . • . My argriment has been upon - the sixth section of the. Nebraska bill, already read, 'establishing the power of territorial legislation. It is the vital section, and the debate hinges•upon it. _ - I now read - from the 14th section:. ( . 1) "That the constitution and all laws of the Th United States,ich are not locally inapplicable' s , shall have the mule force and effect within the • said territory. et' Nebraska ris;' 'elsewhere within the United States: (2.)igxcept the Bth - section of the act preparatory to the.tulmissionof Dlissouri into the Union, approved March eixth,.eighteen hundred and twenty which being . inconsistent with the principle of non.interventiOn,by Con. gress, -with slarerY into the States and Territo , riesos recognited by the legislation of eighteen fomilred and fifty (commonly called the°repro.. • mist measures ' ? ) is-hereby declared • perkily° and void; (3.)' %It being the true in t and mean., ing of this actinot to . legislate- slat - into'iwy _ ctd , Territory or State, not-to exclude ,it therefrom, but to leave tliO people thereof perfectly free to 'form and regulate their domestic institutions in their own wily; subject only to the Constitution of the United States: (4.) Prot:ala s :That noth: ing herein contained shall be construed to revive. or put in foreelany law or regulationwhich may have existed pror to the act of sixth March, eight, een hundred and twenty, either protectiog,estabo fishing, prohibiting orabolishing slavery." .•• i. - t regard thiS section as declaratory in its char'. peter. The *clause asserts The. extension. Of the constitution andlaws to the Territory. .The second deelares but the legal effect. of the sixth . section. alreadi read. with ilieirpasok therefor.. : The third, to void misconception, declares the genera! intenttowitt the act; and for tho SAM. - reason, the concluding clause declares that no net prior to 1820 shall be considered revised. '. The propriety of this section lies in the , fact, that it. states succinctly and; clearly the seeps, purpeee t character and effect 'f the act.: It jute the toot to misrepresentation and gives, upcit• the face of the bill and to direc . terms, expression. to the . • principles it Was intended to cedorse.. The p.c.. amble to the .Pending resolutions, asserts that the hill permits the existenic of slavery in theTetift tory. It doceinot permit it. It leaves the TOEO;' tory to decide whether it: shall be ..pormitted !or \ cot. "his is:lthe meaning of: the.. sixth section, milder indiputable by the ;clear ,terras -Of the i d 14th. In my!opi Edon, the preamble,is untnie,and thoßo N iiii.v (10 for it indorse a falsehood. I The 'Senafor from Wyomin .said.the bill was "an invasionlof northern sigh ." He 're s!, - qt.. phr a (hi Aboliti , ;vocabulary:which\ Is it tueant that the in the Tenitonee.r. tes wet* equal, and - n property._ iltnoltr rights or amitham :mown .ta_ the=tomiti• of the States, 4.. a it one; end this bill ist, certainly not to inthe Tarritarieap the principle 0f,420t '1 ', the erritoritikb )li-interference- 10400 ,: : iplo of territorial •01P: 4 10 1 are , the big, and itholifi and its nille4 hate 'it- and' nonneisit. : Ili _deeply 'injures their businessqf itutiou. B removing their_ durling subject - from !MO jurisdiction of Congress, they are deprived epportuniEftz for keepuq,* the couutry its an ft.