THE TELEGRAPE IS PUBLISHED EVERY DAY, (sospera KaurrED,) BY GEORGE BERGVER & CO• TERMS The DAIIT TELeGaxem I 3 ECi'Vt,l to sul) , :nieers in 111 'or..ogh at 63 cent per u - I•r4z. Yo.ir!," staw.illar 4lh i.e charged $4.00. WILSISLY AND SFI.Ii•WfERIT.Y tau, TELEGRAM la aka 1a11,1:11:ed tv.:rcn week eerie,: • F CSBiOl3 Of the Leetilatt.:l P. a , d .taring the re aiu,ter of the year, me: :U17.4;e:1,7 riloera at the i'n , iug rates, olz: Subiuriben t,e, .c.4r4r SC.Ver = • •• , ,userilxes order Ili , irisomeinut, ei their roue •-rs, the pailisher rimy continue i•mel them eutil ; a.r reurrages ure paid. -mbscrilrets negierit of t their hervipa• Crom the ollko to which directed, they sni • eesible until trey hex^ totter - a lie hula and orderer; m diseeetirmed STATE OF TIE UNION. The hour of half past eleven hating Arrived, Agreeably to order The House proceeded to tie oonsideration of the joint resolutions presented by Mr. 9.E.11- STRONG, on the 9th inst. The resolutions were read, as follows: Itaolved, by the Senate and Elfotor. of Repremmta lives, rikat we recognize the Constitution of the United States as the Supreme law of the laud : and that all laws enacted either by Congress or the Legislatures of the several States ; which are contrary to its provisions, arc null and void. lies:A/red, That the laws of the United States are of paramount authority in every State of the Union, upon all matters within the exclu sive jurisdiction of Congress, and that every attempt on the part of a State, by State laws, to ennui or hinder their due execution, is in violation of both the letter and - spirit of the obliaations due from the people of each State to the general government, and to each other. Ro , elvecl, That the citizens of this State, in common with the citizens of other of the Free States, have just cause to complain that their constitutional rights have been denied to them in some of the Slave States ; that the fretidom of speech and of the press have been abridged ---the right of personal security has been vio lated—they have been on frequent occasions arrested, imprisoned and punished without trial, even to the taking of life by lawless vio lence, and without interference on their behalf by the constituted authorities of the State. Yet, we believe the remedy for these, and all other grievances between the citizens of the several States, is in the Union, and under the laws of the land. Resolved, That we recognize the right of every Slave State to regulate and oontrol slavery within her limits each in its own way, subject only to the Constitution of the United States ; and that we deny the right, either of Congress or any of the States, to interfere with it, either to limit, modify, abolish or 'control it within such States. But, on the contrary, it is the duty of Congress, when required. to suppress in surrections and domestic violence, by military force, if necessary. Resolved, That it is contrary to the first article of amendment to the Constitution to abridge the ,freedom of speech or of the pies% and con trary to the genius of free government to sub mit either to any other control than the respon sibility for its abuse; afalthat we cannot, in the interests of Slavery, offer so great a sacrifice even upon the altar of peace. Resolved, That the Territories of the United States, previous to their recognition as States, are under the exclusive control of Congress, which has the right to make all needful rules and regulations respecting them ; that whilst we do net recognize the doctrine that the Con stitution of the United States carries slavery into the Territories, or exempts it from the con trol of Congress, we are in favor of au adjmt ment of the whole question of slavery in the Territories in such manner as shall settle it for ever ; and to this end we recommend that a line not farther North than the Missouri Com promise line be established, and sanctioned by an amendment to the Constitution, whereby, in all territory North of such line, slavery or invol untary servitude, except for crime, shall be for ever prohibited ; and South of which neither Congress nor the Territorial Legislature shall interfere with or abolish it. Resolved, That Pennsylvania is loyal to the Union, and faithful in her observance of the Constitution and the laws ; and in manifesta tion thereof, the Judiciary Committee are here by instructed to inquire whether there is any law in force in Pennsylvania which conflicts with her constitutional obligations to the, Gov ernment of the United States, or which pre vents or obstructs the.clue execution, within her jurisdiction, of any law of the United States ; and if there be any such law to report by bill or otherwise. Rescaved, That we cherish for our brethren of the slave-holding States the most cordial ond fra ternal regard ; and that we are willing to con cede to them the enjoyment of every right not inconsistent with the preservation of our own ; that we hold the Union to be the only sure basis of our continued prosperity and happiness, and the enforcement of the laws an imperative and inviolable duty of the general government, es sential to its preservation, and to be accom plished, if necessary, by its entire civil and military power. That secession is revolution, and its inevitable consequence; and that, in such an emergency, Pennsylvania tenders to the President of the 'United States the whole resources of the State. Mr. HOFIUS rose to a question of order, viz: The resolution from the Senate No. 1, enti tled "Joint resolutions relative to the mainte nance of the Constitution and the Union," hav ing been made the special order for every day until disposed of, is it in order to consider the question now before the House? Th e SPE A NPR decided, "That the Ilouse,hav jug by a vote of two-thirds, determined that it would at a certain specified hour, upon a partic ular day, proceed to the consideration of a cer tain question, and the time having arrived, the House must proceed to its consideration, and any other business before the House stands postponed until the question is disposed of by the House, either by adoption, reject - low or postponement." Mr. HOFILIS moved to postpone the further oonsideration of the resolutions until after the disposal of Senate bill No. 1, entitled, "Joint resolutions for the maintenance of the Consti tution and the Union." Mr. ARMSTRONG. The resolutions now un der the consideration of the House are not in conflict with the resolutions presented from the Senate, which have been under consideration for several days. I think that my resolutions cover a branch of this subject which has not yet been under discussion, and perhaps it would be wise that the house should hear all sides of this question before they come to any final vote upon it. I hope the House will proceed to the con sideration of the resolutions which are now be fore us. Mr. HOFTUS. My object in making this mo tion is simply this : the Senate resolutions have been under our consideration for a long time, and we should have decided the question long ere this. Those resolutions, sir, contain noth ng of a party nature. Tire resolutions submit ted by the gentleman from Lycoming (Mr. Annsrucao) are entirely of a party nature : and from the fact that they ate calculated to arouse discordant feelings, ];prefer that the Senate re solutions should be disposed of first. Mr. PATTERSON. I trust that the motion to postpone these resolutions will not prevail.— I do not think it possible that the resolutions of the gentleman from Lycoming (Mr. Alan mom) should cause greater discussion than we have already had upon the Senate resolu tions. Beddes, a great many of us are not pre pared to vote on thaw/Senate resolutions. They ---e, ~ , ~ il, 14/3744/ , -"- • ..:;, 1 , , ~::• %\ 1 i 4 W l ,i, „.,„,..„%„.,,,,,, e c -`1: --,- 1`;'...z.z.T. ,, ,NS \ Pp /,/ / ," „,, , - -- ;„ 1,--"% - _____ - ~ --.:::,:::-_-,_ _l s . ,..!„''''' h i ' ,, 4.4 ( - ---..-__../..- --_-_--- ~.. - -- "-- --r- '2,W P ' - if ' e' 1 ------- ‘ „,. /--,--__ - • - , -- -Z --------- t , --= , . ---,-- s —____ :".-, . - ^® 4 --------,--- --_-.: _. _.... s. : , f 0 , 6 , 1 ~ , - , f , ~ ":"----:--, t 4 .- _ Wr - - ~&r t ot, , c rtr ?," -.SA' . .." - a1.,4,)„.4.,, 1............____5c.,..%..“...,.„........._ Zlelto ~..„...._!„.11,„,,.._.„.74,:_4....,.. 0. . EMEZEM 9 ^ 00 12.00 IF.OO do not mean anything. The resolutions of the gentleman from Lycoming mean something; there is something in them. Ido not care if they do represent the views of a patty; I am ready to vote for them. Let us hear what the gentleman from Lycoming has to say. There are others who wish to speak on these resolu tions. Gentlemen have had an opportunity to express their views on the Senate resolutions. We hope that now they will not apply the gag. Let us all be heard. Mr. THOMAS. I trust that the motion of the gentleman from Mercer (Mr. Hones) will pre vail. We have been debating the Senate reso lutions for nearly two weeks. I thinkthat this House will be ready before the adjournment to take the final-vote. I do most earnestly trust that this House will proceed to no other busi ness until we shall, have disposed of the Senate resolutions. On the motion to, postpone The yeas and nays were required by Mr. LEISENRING mid Mr. BALL, and were as follows, vi.z YEAS—Messrs. Acker, Alexander, Barnsley, Bartholomew, 131xler, Blanchard, Bliss, But ler, (Crawford,) Cowan, Craig, Gordon, Graham, Harvey, Hood, Hofius, Lowther, ill'Gonizal, Marshall, Mullin, Peirce, Reily, Robinson, Shafer, Taylor, Thomas, Williams-28. Nays—Messrs. Abbott, Anderson, Armstrong, Austin, Ball, Bisel, Blair, Boyer, Bressler, Brodhead, Butler, (Carbon,) Byrno, Clark, Collins, Cope, Dismant, Divins, Donley, Douglass, Duffield, Duncan, Ellenberger; El liott, Gaskill, Gibboney, Goehring, Happer, Hayes, Hill, Hillman, Huhn, Irvin, Kline, Koch, Lawrence, Leisenring. Lichtenwallner, M'Donough, Manifold, Moore, Morrison, My ers, Ober, Osterhout, Patterson, Preston, Pughe, Randall, Reiff, Rhoads, Roller, Schrock, Seltzer, Smith, (Berks,) Smith, (Philadelphia,) Stehman, Strang, Wildey and Davis, ,Speaker -59. So the question was determined in the nega tive The question recurring on the adoption of the resolutions, Mr. ARMSTRONG. To avoid a number of minute amendments, which otherwise it might be necessary to offer, I will move to amend the resolutions by striking out all after the woi d "Resolved," and insetting the following resolu tions, which are in substance the same, and for the most part in the same phraseology. The amendments were read as follows Resolved, by the Senate and House of Represent of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, in General Assembly met, and it is hereby resolved by the catt.lwily of the same, That We recognize the Constitution of the United States as the supreme law of the Janie, and that all laws enacted either by Congress or the Legislatures of Ole several States, which are contrary to its provisions, are null and void. Resolved, 'That the laws of the United States are of paramount authority in every State of the Union, upon all matters within the exclu sive jurisdiction of Congress, and that any at tempt on the part of a State, by State laws, to annul or hinder their due execution, is in vio ation of both the letter and spirit of the obli gations due from the people of each State to the General Government, and to each other. Resolved, That the citizens of this State, in ,common with the citizens of other of the free States, have just cause to complain that their constitutional rights have been denied to them in some of the Slave States—that the freedom of the press and of speech has been abridged— the rights of personal security have been viola ted—they have been, on frequent occasions, ar rested, imprisoned and punished, without trial, even to the taking of life by lawless violence, and without interference on their behalf by the constituted authorities of the State. Yet we believe that the remedy for these and all other grievances between the citizens of the several States, is in the Union, and under the laws of the land. Re.soltyxl, That we reco g nize the right of every Slave State to regulate and control slavery within her limits, each in its own way, subject only to the Constitution of the United States, and that we deny the right of Congress, or any of the other States, to interfere with it, either to limit, modify, abolish or coni.ol it, within such State. But, on the Contrary, it is the duty of Congress, when required, to suppress insurrections and domestic violence, by military force, if necessary. Raolva, That it is contrary to the first arti cle of amendment to the Constitution of the United States, and to the Seventh section of the ninth article of the Constitution of Pennsylva nia, to abridge the freedom of speech, or of the press, and contrary not only to both these Con stitutions, but to the genius of free govern ment, to submit either to any other control than the responsibility for its abuse; and whilst we deprecate every abuse of such freedom, we cannot, in the interests of any section or people, offer so great a sacrifice, even upon the altar of peace, as their subjection to any other re straint. Resolved, That the Territories of the United States, previous to their recognition as States, are under the exclusive control of Congress, which has the right to make all needful rules and regulations respecting them ; that whilst we do not recognize the doctrine that the Con stitution of the United States carries slavery into the Terriltries, we are in favor of an ad justment of the whole question of slavery in the Territories in such manner as shall settle it forever ; and to this end we recommend that a line, not further north than the Missouri Com promise line, be established, and sanctioned by an amendment to the Constitution, whereby, in all ter- ritory north of such line, slavery shall be for ever prohibited ; and South of which, neither Congress nor the Territorial Legislature shall have power to prohibit it ; and the Territorial Legislature shall have the exclusive power to regulate and control it in like manner as a State might do, except only that it shall not, during the territorial condition, prohibit or abolish it. And the people of any Territory containing suffi cient population for one member of Congress, in an area of not less than sixty thousand, nor more than eighty thothiand square miles, shrill have the right; preparatory to their admission to the Union, to adopt a constitution either admitting or prohibiting slavery, and shall, on their application to Congress, be admitted with or without slavery, as such Constitution may determine. Resolved, That Pennsylvania is loyal, to the Union, and faithful in the observance of the Constitution and the laws ; and in manifesta tion thereof, the Judiciary Committees of both the Senate and the House are hereby instruct ed to inquire whether there is any law in force in Pennsylvania which conflicts with the col stitutional obligations to the government of the United States, or which prevents or obstructs the•due execution within her jurisdiction of any law of the United States, and if there be any such law, to report by bill or otherwise. INDEPENDENT IN ALL THINGS-NEUTRAL IN NONE " X.i. V HARRLSBUtiG, i•A. FRIDAY AFTERNOON, JANUARY 25, 1861 Resolved, That we cherish for our brethren of the Slaveholding, States the most cordial and fraternal regard ; and whilst we claim and insist upon the recognition and protection of all our constitutional rights, we cheerfully admit in them an equal and inviolable right to the same constitutional privileges. and to the equal and impartial protection of the government. That we hold the - Non to be the only sure basis of our continued prosperity and happiness, and the enforcement of the laws an imperative and un avoidable duty of the Federal Government es sential to its preservation, and to be accent plished, if necessary, by its entire civil and military power. That Secession is Revolution, and inevitably leads to war, and that in such an emergency Pennsylvania tenders to the Presi dent of the United States the whole resources of the State for its suppression. Mr. ARMSTRONG. I rise, sir, to address myself to the consideration of these resolutions, under a deep Impression that we are about to consider the most important question which will engage our attention during this session of the legislature. Pennsylvania, at this time, stands in a very peculiar relation to the Union. Her influence will be felt; and it is light that she should speak upon the questions which now agitite.the country in a manner which shall be incapable of being misunderstood, and that her proper influence should be exerted to allay the national strife and lead us, if it be possible, back to that safe and sure ground upon which the government has stoodsince its organization. In regard to the resolutions from the Senate, which have been under consideration, I have only to say in brief, that they meet my hearty concurrence. I believe that they express the sentiments which ought to be acceptable to every member upon this floor. But whilst I say. this, I believe that their ut terance is uncertain. They do not express the sentiment of this House, or of Pennsylvania, in that unmistakeable manner which will carry the weight that is due to the influential position of this State. The resolutions which I have the honor to submit speak, I think, with greater certainty, and therein I conceive to be the es sential difference which constitutes the ground on which I prefer them. I de not pronose, sir, to discuss all these reso lutions at length. rl'he first and second resolu tions may be considered as truisms, for they as sert only the supremacy of the Constitution and of all laws made in accordance with its provis ions. Ido not know that any objection will be raised to them, and shall waive any discussion of them for the present. The third resolution touches upon a subject on which I think a pro per manliness requires that the State should un mistakably express her sentiment. My resolu• tion declares : "That the citizens of this State, in common with the citizens of other of the free States, have just cause to complain-that their consti4 tutional rights have been denied to them in some of the slave States ; that the freedom of the press and of speech has been abridged—the tights of personal security have been violated— they have been, on frequent occasions, arrested, imprisoned and punished without trial, even to the taking of life by lawless violence, and without interference on their behalf by the constituted authorities of the State." • This resolution, thus asserting the gross and outrageous violence which has been done to the Constitutional rights of the people of Penn sylvania and others of the free States should, I think, be adopted by this Legislature. " It is not only our right and privilege, but a duty which we owe to the people of the State. The resolution further declares that : "The remedy for these and all other grievan ces between the citizens of the several States is in the Union and under the laws of the land." This applies to every State and all forms of grievance. Certainly there are no grievances of the South that exceed these in violence, or in the tendency to provoke retaliation. When we, therefore, express to the South our willingness and determination to submit these grievances, which are greater than theirs, to the arbitra- ment of the laws, it is putting ourselves in the strongest position which it is possible to assume in respect to this question. The fourth resolution recognizes the right of every slave State to regulate and control slavery in its own way, subject only to the Constitution of the United States. Upon this, all parties in the North are entirely agreed ; and I shall not further discuss it. The fifth resolution declares,that it is contra ry to the Constitution, both of Pennsylvania and the United - States, to abridge the.freedom of the press or of speech. This iss. sentiment which it is peculiarly proper that this Le gislature should express at this time. It can hardly have escaped the observation of any one, that a large part of the com plaint made by the South is not directed to the special enactments of Northern laws, but it is a complaint against the prevalence of a sentiment ; it is a complaint that we have not placed bonds and fetters upon free, speech and, upon the freedom of the press. It is right that that we should declare to the people of the South that we are not prepared; even though the refusal should result in all the horrors of an armed conflict, to yield those rights which are essential to the preservation of our freedom, Our position should be unmistakably expressed in order that the South may understand dis tinctly how far wo will go, and how far we will not. But, without further comment, I proceed to consider the sixth resolution, upon which I am well aware there is some, perhaps much, di versity of opinion in this House. It is the resolution in respect to slavery in the territories. I have not thought it advisa ble to introduce, at this time, resolutions cover ing the entire scope of this much vexed ques tion. We are not here as a Congress to delibe rate and determine, with minute exactness, upon all the provisions of a settlement.— But the question of slavery in the territories lies at the very root and is the foundation of all the difficulties which have arisen between the North and the South. I have deemed it quitesufficient that we of Pennsylvania should express our sentiments upon this branch of the subject, as being the paramount muse of all the trouble; and if we can Witte to a harmoni ous action upon this, all other questions which are of comparatively minor importance and upon which the sentiment either North or South is not very widely different, can be set tled without difficulty. This Is the great and overruling difficulty which has involved us in our present National peril. What this resolution proposes is, in brief, a restoration of the Missouri compromise line. It comes distinctly and fairly up to this issue, and invites the Pennsylvania Legislature to express to the people of the country, whether or not we are ready for a settlement of the slavery question. Let us for a moment consider it. We should greatly misinterpret the action of the people at the last election, if we supposed it had any other effect than simply to pro nounce the verdict of the people against the fraud committed in the repeal of the Missouri Compromise and against the frauds perpetra ted in Kansas. Sir, how many of all the thou sands who voted with the Republican party at the last clection,had read the Chicago platform? As the embodiment. of general principles, as the best expression of any party upon the issues of the last election, I cordially and fully en dorsed it. I voted recently for the resolution endorsing it, and would do so again, because as a general expression it comes much nearer to an expression of a proper and national senti ment than any resohitions or platform of the last campaign. But, sir, we are not standing in a posi tion to examine party platforms with criti cal nicety. We are now in an emergency which rises above all party considerations. Sew ard, and the great leaders of the party every where, have boldly,_and with a patriotism which does credit to heir understandings and their hearts, avowed that this Union is superior to any and every party. What is the present condition of the territo ries of the United States ? At the present time they are covered by. the Dred Scott decision.— We, as Republicans representing a very large class of the citizens of . the North, hold that that decision is extra-judicial, and that we. are not bound to recognize it as the final and conclusive decision of the Court. Bat we cannot doubt that the Court, as at present organized, would re-affirm that decision; and if it is to stand, Sla very is carried into every foot of all the terti , tories by force of the laws of the United States, as declared by -the Supreme Court ; and any one, North or South, who would attempt to nullify that law becomes as much a nullifier as any man in South Carolina. Let us understand our position in this respect. I wish it to be understood that Ido not hold that that decision, as now made, being an extra judicial opinion, is the expressed opinion of the Court. But if that opinion were re-affirmed, as under the present constitution of the Court it unquestionably would be, then I say there would be a law of the United States covering every foot of territory that we possess, and car rying slavery into it all. Now, it is idle to de ny that this is the force of that decision. It is just as much the decision of that Court as any decision they ever uttered, if only it tad not been extra judicial. That is the only ground that we can take in assuming that it is not their decision. This resolution is carefully worded, and it declares that we do not recognize the doctrine that the Constitution of the 'United States carriesslavery into the territories. Yet it is a fact which we cannot disregard. Neither can we shut our eyes to the pres ent constitution of the United States Su preme Court, and its present unmistakable proclivities ; and unless . the constitution of that Court should be changed , the prin ciples announced in the Dred Scott decision will, in all probability, be re-affirmed, and would stand as the decision of the Court. Now let me call the attention of the House to another consideration ; the location of the line, and the character of the terjitories. it desig nates. It runs westward from the southern line of the State of Missouri, till it reaches the eastern boundary of California. The territory south of it is comprised in New Mexico and Ar izona. California, through which its extension would pass, is already disposed of, because it is a sovereign State ; and much of the agitation which attended this question in 1850, is obvia ted by that fact. The only territory that now lies open to the encroachments of slavery,south of that line, is the territory I have named, of New Mexico and Arizona. Sir, God and nature have forbidden that slavery shall go into the territory of New Mexico. It is covered to a very large extent with high mountains crowned with perpetual snow, and whose sides are barren; its rivers run dry in summer. The only fertile ground in the great body of the territory consists of the narrow valleys which line the rivers, and upon a great parl of which vegeta tion cannot be supported except by artificial ir rigation. • • Is it possible that slavery can go into that territory ? Sir, nature itself has there set bounds to it, stronger than any constitutional' restric tions which the people of the United States could by any possibility devise. Then, so far as the question affects this territory,it is not an open question, because slavery 'cannot, by any possibility, go there. Nature has provided against it, and it is impossible that slave-labor should there be remunerative. As to Arizona —a small territory lying North of Texas—a territory not equal in size to the single State of - Pennsylvania, I am not particu larly informed as to its physical characteristics, because I have not been able to get information upon the subject. But admit that it is adapted by nature to the introduction of slavery, what is.it It is a territory of size only sufficient for the erection of one State not larger than Penn sylvania ; and it is the only part of the entire territory of the United States which is now in the slightest danger of any permanent admis sion of slavery. I care not what are the Con stitutional provisions ; I care not what are the laws respecting it; it is the only territory south of the Missouri line into which slavery can, by any possibility, be carried. I have brought here a map to show more dis tinctly the position of our territory with respect to this question, and how the line proposed will affect it. I beg to call the attention of the House to this map. By it we see upon what a mere phantasy, on what an empty abstraction we are contending. Here [l:tiding up the map] ends the Missouri Compromise line. All this territory painted in green is given over to free dom by the proposition contained in this reso lution. How much of the territory of the United States is given up to slavery ? Not uncondition ally given up ; we are not carrying slavery into this territory by positive enactment. I never— no, never, so help me God—would give my vote anywhere to carry slavery into any terri tory by positive enactment. • This is a different question and a totally dif ferent proposal. Let us return again to the map. Here you see all the territory which, by any possibility, would ,by this compromise line be thrown open to slavery. In all this terri tory [pointing to the map] it is forbidden by the laws of nature ; and by these laws alone will be forever exempt from the footstep of .the slave. How much is left ? This little green patch, not so large as the. State of Pennsylva nia, is the' nly territory covered by fhis com promise, in which slavery becomes possible un der any circumstances. Now what are we contending for ? Do gen tlemen say we are contending for a principle ? What principle ? That slavery shall not sbe carried into the, national territories? . We do not propose to carry slavery into any territory by any direct and positive enactments of law. We suffer the territories, by thiscompromize, to lie open ; and while they remain territories to be, so far as this question is concerned, tinder the exclusive regulation and control of the tar- ritorial Legislature, depriving it only of the power, during the territorial condition, to pro hibit or abolish it. But when a constitution is prepared for the admission of the territory as a State, the people may make it a free State if they please. I would not place any trammels upon the people which would prevent them froth throwing off the institution of slavery, if they do not wish to have it among them. My resolution provides that this arrangement in regard to the territories shall be sanctioned by a Constitutional amendment. There is rea son for this. When the Constitution was formed, all the territory which we then possess ed had its'condition fixed with regard to slavery, first by the ordinance of 1787, and then by the Act of Congress of 1789, which was merely a re enactment of the ordinance of 1787. At that. time the entire territorial question was settled. There was no other territory with regard to which disputes could arise to disturb the peace and harmony, of the. Union. The Constitution never applied to territories; it had no relation to them. Whatever may be the force of the Dred Scott decision, it is oontrary to the settled practice of the government from its foundation. Let us recur to some facts in regard to the sub ject. The territory of Louisiana was acquired in 1803, by purchase from Napoleon Bona parte. When Congress was convened in special session for the purpose of ratifying that treaty, an Act of Congress was passed vest ing in the President of the United States the right to control and- govern that territory by the laws which were then in force in the terri tory. Those laws were the Spanish laws. They constituted the Intendant-General under Spain, at that time the virtual king of the country. He was intrusted with powers utterly at va fiance with the Constitution of the United States, and with the genius of the government. Yet, by act of Congress, the powers of that In tendant-General of Spain were for a time vested in the President of the United States. Had the Constitution of the United States been then considered as controlling territorial legislation, the act could by no possibility have passed, for its was a plain and direct violation of its pro visions. And again in 1819, a precisely similar law was passed on the admission of Florida. To say that the territories of the United States have been governed by virtue of the Con stituticn, is totally at variance with the whole history of the government. And, sir,we are at this moment, in some psrticulars,governing the territories of the United States in direct violation of the Cor_stitution of the United States. Itnever did apply,it never was intended to apply,to the territories. Why, sir, the Constitution of the United States provides that the judicial power of the United States shall be vested in Courts to be appointed by Congress, whose judges shall hold their offices during good behavior ; Yet in the - territories Congress establishes Courts whose judges hold their offices. for a li mited period. I Ili slit give other illustratioris, but I do not propose to go extensively into that argument. The question. is upt one of imme diate and pressing "consequence, and I have no disposition to pursue the discussion farther. The • advantage of making the proposed set tlement of this question by an amendment to the Constitution is, that otherwise the subject will be always liable to be re-opened. with angry, vindictive and injurious debate. But when we have disposed of it' by a Constitutional provi-. sion, as here proposed, it is removed entirely from the discussions of Congress. Mr. BYRNE. Will the gentleman allow me to ask him a question? Mr. ARMSTRONG. Certainly. Mr. BYRNE. Did not Congress, in 1850, as part of the compromise measures of that year, pass an act providing for the capture of fugi tive slaves in the territories of the United States? Mr. ARMSTRONG. Certainly they did.— Congress might pass any such act, not by vir tue of powers,conferred by the Constitution of the United States, but in virtue of the sove reignty of the United States. The Constitution never applied to a territory. The territories have been governed, not in accordance with the provisions of the Constitution, but by virtue of the sovereignty of the United States, as vested in her by right of purchase. And that right is absolute, uncontrollable, except at the discre tion of Con - ress. It is not a right obtained by virtue of the Constitution, nor exercised in ao cordance with it. It is a right that rises even superior to it in some respects—not in all.— This right of sovereignty vests in the Congress of the United States a right to control the te-x -ritories in whatever way they may think best, because the United States is the owner of the territory, and any right of proprietorship and ownership is vested in them. But, Mr.. Speaker, I have shown how small is the territory that now lies open to the intro duction of slavery. Is it worth a quarrel ? Here we stand admittedly upon the very verge of a civil war. Pennsylvania to-day holds the keys of this Union in her hands ; and if Penn sylvania speaks to Maryland, to Virginia, to Kentucky, with a voice of kindness, such as will persuade them of our fraternal regard and bring them over to a reasonable view of our mutual interests, tho revolution now threat ened is divested of most of its importance, and becomes inconsiderable in its extent and con sequences. But gentlemen say "this would be conces sion ; it would be giving up our position."— We are not conceding anything which it is es sential we should adhere to. We are not giving up any of our positions which involve a sacrifice of principle.. What was the origin cf all this trouble ? From Fromm what causes did it arise? Can any man shut his 'eyes to the fact that this question has arisen almost exclusively from the repeal of the Missouri Compromise ? Had that Compromise line remained till this time, as the law of the land, there would now be no Repnblican party of any considerable strength. The South repealed that line. They said, "we will carry Slavery into the territory north of that line—we will do so by virtue of a. deci sion of the Supreme Court, and under the sanc tion of the Constitution." The Republican party stood up to say, "you shall not do so," and the people have endorsed their position.— They have said, • "we consent that you shall have the privilege of taking slavery below that line, but you shall not curry it into one acre of the territory north of•it:' , • That is the-qtres tion which this eked= 'decided. To say that this'election was a raice;:•lmir-splitting. wire drawn. discrimination with regard to the doc trines of - the 'Chicago platform is totally to misrepresent the people of the State. The South then repealed this compromise. If now, by a Constitutional amendment, we re enact it unalterably; what do we do? We force the South back to their former position ; we put the Territories in the eontion in which they were before that line was repealed. Is this an undue concession of the North to, our brethren of the South ? The advocates for the universal diffusion of slavery now stand before the people fortified with the decision of the Supreme Court of the' United,States. They mantas that the Constitution has, by thy ftfam Erintingi Pffitt. Having procured Steam Power Prersco, weorp Prepared to execute JOB and BOOK ERIN riNti JeEcriplion, cheaper that it can be done at .n 1" 0:h , - - I . l 2liattrueutin the country HATES ur auV e.liffSING. Ilgrrour lime hr ken constitute one hall ' , le :re. I. , are, or mere than to :r colaatitute a equal. , Rail ..: , quare., one day- . . one week , ..e.ne 0ath................. • , three months ~ • • • one year Ime quare one day. i... .ono well' ' ;,!1 .... •4 one month... _ „ , ~„. , _„, . ~.,.-: ri three moutli7, ...... „ .......... .3 iii.: " Six Mi11Ab5........ ... ..... ..... .. g Lo .. one )ear 10 O 0 Kir BUsiness notices inserted in the Lcori. celuenl • before Marriages and heaths, FIVE CRNi iS rEe. :..f. , (hr each instrtion. NO. 19 {ifir , ,tarriageS and Deaths to be char': r • • 4dvvrtisements. highest tribunal known to our laws, boon .7. : dared to carry slavery into every foot of set national territory. We easy to them, "No, sate shall not plant its foot in any part of that whne lies north of this line." Yet gentlemen will lie:: and say that we are making humiliating coarse sions ; that sanctioning this Missouri Comprom lee line, we are yielding to the South every prittel ple that was involved in the last election. i hold, Sir, that this is not the case. We are compelling them to recede. We are saying to them, " you shall not, under the Died Scolt decision, or any other decision, or by any maws whatever—you shall not bring Slavery north of this line." We compel them to go b'd seed take their position where they stood when that line was repealed. Is this humiliation ? Admit it, if you pleage,tu be concession, is there nothing at stake of equiv alent value ? All legislation is a compromise. I have no sympathy with the expression which has gained so much prevalence of late, thne "the day of compromises is past." The day of compromise is never past, in a deliberative as sembly. All legislation is a compromise. Every concession, made by cue man to another, upon any question, National or otherwise, is a com promise. We arc called now to consider those qUestions in their beating upon the great Ne i tional interest. To stand boldly and rigidly ,etpon the lines of a party platform, and to sey That this platform is paramount to all the core siderations suggested by the nation's present crisis is, I say, a perversity of party, and is un worthy of the representatives of any people_ Sir, we are in an emergency which rises far 5,t -pond considerations like these. lam here as a Republican ; I was elected as a Republican. ; I am a Republican now, and will be till this question is settled. When I return to my con stituents, they recognize me as a Repubiican • they know that I am a Republican • and from a recent visit among them, I know that the see, timents which I now express are endorsed - by them with very great unenleaity—a unanimity which surprised myself. I was met repeattaily . by persons, who said to 1:11; "Why do riot thoett resolutions pass.? Why do you not do sumo-- thing ? Why do you not utter the voice of Pennsylvania in a manner which shall be fat and understood—with no uncertain utterance: Why not hold up the hands of those pattiots of the South who aro struggling, not for ascension, but to preserve the integrity of the Union?" Mr. Speaker, I have uo sympathy with South Carolina. The moment a State secedes, the moment she is outside of this Union by her own declared act, she is in rebellion ; and in the language of my friend from Allegheny (Me. Waxen/es) it would not comport with the 4;- 1 nity of this State to treat with her whilst rais ing arms against the Republic. I urge no plea 1 for South Carolina, or any other State that has declared herself out of this T.Luion. But, sir, I stand here to urge a plea for Virginia, for Ma - ryland, for Kentucky, for Delaware, for 751.1.0u ri, for Tennessee, for North Carolina. I stand here to ufge that we shall, by this action. of Pennsylvania, hold up, if we can, the hands of those patriot men who, in the South, are strug gling for this Union—such men as Gov. Letti er, of Virginia, Gov. Hicks, of Maryland, Gov. Ellis, of North - Carolina—who has declared to the Executive of the nation that he retinas the forts be euse he will not permit one overt act of treason Othin the limits of the State. T.rose men ar know combatting a strength of re -- -- sentim - 1 and fanaticism in the South, which dwarfs i l e difficulties which conservative man 1 in the North encounter in opposing the extreme opinions of Northern men. They are standing 1 before the nation,battling for the Union,against obstacles which we can barely. if at all, tippler date. Shall we desert them in this holy cause and in this hour of their tole? ? For myself I shall answer no. By the meeneire. which I pro pose, we give up nothing of value ; wa yield no principle that has been at stahe ; but we say to These men, "We aro ready to mott you upon a platform that is just to you and just to our selves. We recognize your rights and we mean to protect our own." They have a right to coil upon US for this sort of encouragement and as sistance, and I pray God it may not be defiled them. Now, Mr. Speaker, let us look at !tin arlotit:t aspect. If South Carolina and Alabama, t all the cotton States unite, it is bet en in.:Tx:, siderable rebellion—inauysitlerable in its nun , hers, in its force and in its moral influenco. "Lt is utterly impossible that the cotton St:-; atone should form any coniederacy, by con or otherwise, which could attain to any respect :.- •ble position among the nations of the °attn. But, sir, if you add Virginia and Maryland, Kentucky, Tennessee and North Carolina, nut to say Missouri and Delaware, the aspect of th, question is most materially changed. The seat of the National Government is now at Wash ington, in the very midst of Viiginia and Maryland ; and just as sure as those States se cede, it will become necessary to protect ties capitol and the frontier, and an armed land force will be required. So long as this rebel lion can be confined to the cotton States, they can be shut in by vessels of war, in their Itar- bora, and thus we totally and entirely obviate the necessity of a conflict of armed forces upon the land. lint when Virginia and Maryland, and the States I have named, join this confed eracy of disunion, then it shall become necessary to tortify the frontier ; and all along the bor ders of our own State, we shall have forays and predatory expeditions from our own State into Virginia and Maryland, and from them into Pennsylvania, bearing fire and sword, destrue• tion and desolation upon homes now resting In peace and smiling in the fullness of their hap piness. And let us not forget that the =Liar tunes of war fall mainly on the innocent--and such a war! If, in the providence of God It shall ever come, I shall have this melancholly satisfaction, that I have used every feeble pow er I possess to avert it—and may Clod in his mercy prevent it. • And, Sir, have we nothing to gain ? Are acv now rashly to rush into a condition of things such as this? And for what? In the name o Heaven for what? To prevent one little teal. tory . from deciding for itself whether they will or will not have Slavery ! For, as to New Nag ico, the question is already settled. I know thatlearned gentleman here, familiar with throe topics, will say, " why, Slavery is already in New Mexico." I grant that Slavery is there by an act of the territorial legislature of New 'Mexico ; and that that legislative act, not be ing annulled or controlled by any act of Con grees, it remains, upon the statute-books. Th 3 history of its passage is perhaps familiar to all. A' raud, conceived in Washington, was perpe trated for the purpose of adding a Slave Stat? to our confederacy. But Slavery is not canted #lteimela a territory as that by mere paper raa chinery. I repeat, sir, that so far n 5 New Ment ion is concerned, the tenitory is virtually tree. Why, how was it with, reference to Oregon- e, territory which, like this, is made free by nature. When Oregon territcry was orzaulmd, the mot prcrViso was inserted in the act„ and Pros& [Continued cn Swath Papa]