THE OE CR AT, "I bare sworn upon tho Altar of God, eternal hostility to every fom of branny cv cr the Blind of Man.Thomaa Jefferson, PRINTED AND PUBLISHED BV IT. WEBC. Volume Ilk BliOOMSBURG, Message From the President of the'Uhitcd State, to the two Houses of Con gress, at the coriunencement of the third sfosidn of the Twenty-fifth 'Congress. Fellow-citizens of tho Sendto ' and House of Representatives. . lr congratulate yVuVn hevfavdrabIo MtWaVa Wc cbMtfon Of Our country, under which you reasjem for the performance of your official du ties. Though the anticipations of an f abundant harvest have not every .where beeh realized, yet; on the whole, the laborfl'of the husbandman aro reward ed with a bountiful return; Industry prospers in its variouB channels of bu siness and enterprise; general health again prevails through our vast diver sity of climate; nothing threatens, from abroad', tho 'continuance of exter nal peace; nor has any thing at homo Impaired the strength of those fratcfc nal and domestic tics which constitute the only guaranty to the success and permanancy of our happy Union, and which, formed in Uic hour of peril; have hitherto been honorably sustain ed through every vicissitude in our national affairs. These blessings, which evince the care and beneficence of Providence, call for our devout and fervent gratitude. We have VjOt loss reason to be grate ful for other bounties uestowed by the same munificent hand; and more ex clusively bur own. w ( . , The present year closes the first half ""century of bur Federal institutions; and our system differing frdm all oth ers in tho acknowledged, practical, and unlimited operation which it has for so long a period given to tho sov ereignty of ilio pebplc has now been fully tested by experience. The Constitution devised by our forefathers as the framework and bond of that System then untried, has be "come a settled form of Government; not only preserving and jirdtecling the great principle's Uripn . Which it was founded, bnt wonderfully promoting individual happiness and private inter ests. Though subject to change and ontiro revocation, whenever deemed inadequate to all these purposes, yet such is the wisdom of its construction ond so stable has been tho public sen timent, that it remains unaltered, ex cept in matlerb of detail, comparative ly unimportant. t.lt has proved am ply sufficient for thb various emergen cies incident to our condition as a na tion. A formidable foreign war j agi tating collisions Between domestic and in some respects, rival sovereignties; temptations to interfere in the intes tine commotions of neighboring coun tries; the dangerous influences that arise in periods of excessive prosperi ty; and the anti-republican tendencies 'of associated wealth these, with oth 'or trials not less formidable, have all been encountered, and thus far success fully resisted. It was reserved for the American tJnion to tejt the advantages of a gov ernment, entirely dependent on the 'continual exercise of the popular will; and, our experience has shown that it 'is as bcneficicnt in practice as it is just In theory, Each successive change made in our local institutions has con tributed to extend the tight bf suffrage, has increased the direct influence of we mass of thb community, givbn greater freedom td individual exertion, Tind restricted, morb and more, tho powers of Government; yet the intel inicenco, prudence, and patriotism of the neoDlo havo kent nace with this ! iujmented responsibility. In no coiin i try has education been so widely dif fused. Domestic peace has nowhere so largely reigned. The close bonds bf social intercourse have in no in Lstanco prevailed with such harmony ibver a space so vast. All forms of re ligion havo united, for the first time, ito diffuse charity and piety, because, tTdr tho first time in tho history of na tions, all have been totally unlramell ed, and absolutely free. The deepest ; recesses of tho wilderness have beon Senetratcd; yet, instead of the rude ess in the social condition consequent upon sucn aavemures eisewitcre, nu COMMBIA merous communities have sprung up, already unrivalled' in prosperity, gen eral intelligence, internal tranquility, and the wisdom of their political in stitution!. Internal improvement, tho fruit of individual enterprise, fostered, by tho protection of the States, lias ad ded new links to the confederation, and fresh rewards to provident indus try. Doubtful questions of domestic policy have been quietly settled by mutual forbearance'; and agriculture, ""1 uwj..f..i... commerce, anu '?r7t to each other. TaxatiC Rndb'0 debt, the burdens whichbear b6 W liy Upon ail Oilier cuuimico, ar ymo- fced with comparative lightness upon us". Without one entangling alliance, our friendship is priced by every na tion; and the rights of our citizens are every where respected, because they are known to be cuarded by a united. sensitive, and watchful people. To this practical operation of our institutions'; so evident and 'successful, we owe that increased attachment to them which is among the most cheer ing exhibitions of popular sentiment; and will prove their best security, in time to come, against foreign or do mestic assaults. This review of the results of bur in stitutions, for half a century, without exciting a spirit of vain exultation, should serve to impress upon us the great principles from , which they have sprung; constant and direct supervision by the people over every public meas ure; strict forbearance on the part of the GoVcrnment from exercising any doubtful or 'disputed powers; & a cau tious abstinence from all interference with concerns which, properly belong, and are best left to State regulation's and individual enterprise. , Full information of tho state ol our foreign affairs having been recently, on two different occasions, submitted to Congress, I deem it necessary now to bring to your notice only such e vents as have subsequently occurred, or are of such importance as to require particular attention; The most amicable dispositions con tinue to be exhibited by all the nations with whom the Government and citi zens of the United States have an ha bitual intercourse. At the date of my ast annual message, Mexico was tho only nation which could not be includ ed in so gratifying a reference to bur foreign relations. 1 am happy to be now able to iniorm you that an advance has been made towards the adjustment of our difficul ties with that Republic, and the resto ration of tho customary good feeling between the two nations. 1 his im portant change has been , effected by conciliatory negotiations, that have re sulted in the conclusion of a treaty be tween the two Governments, which when ratified, .will refer to the arbi trament of a friendly power all tho subjects of controversy between us crowing out of injuries td individuals. There is, at present, also, reason to be- licvo that an equitable settlement ol all disputed points will be attained without further difficulty or unneces sary delay, and thus authorize the free I . ! 1 a" I' I resumption oi uipiomauc intercourse with our sister Republic. With respect to the northeastern, boundary of the United States, no of ficial correspondeoce between this Government and that of Great Britain lias passed since that communicated o Congress towards the close ot their ast session. The offer to negotiate a convention for the appointment of a joint commission ol survey and explo ration, 1 am, however, assured will be met by her Majesty's Government in a conciliatory and friendly, spirit, and instructions to enable tho British Min ister here to concludo such an arrange ment will be transmitted tb him with out needless delay. It is hoped and expected that these instructions will b of a liberal character, and that this negotiation, if successful, will prove to be an Important step towards the satisfactory and final adjustment of the controversy. 1 had hoped that the respect lor the aws and regard for the peace and hon or of their own country, which has ever characterized tho citizens of the I United States, would have prevented COTOTY, PA. SATURDAY BECBMBER any portion of them from using any means to promote insurrection in tho territory of a power with which we are at pence, and with which the Unh id States are desirous of maintaining the most friendly relations. 1 regret deeply, however, .to be obliged to in iorm you tnat mis Has not been tho case, irildrmation has been given to me, derived from official and other sources, that many citizens of the Uni ted States have associated together to waKe noaitie incursions irom our terri tory into Canada, and to aid and abet J--.. ! I r. .. iiiauuuuuun mere, in violation 01 the opngations aim laws ot the United States, ind in open, disregard of their own duties as citizens'. ,This informa tion has been in a part confirmed by a hostile invasion actually made by Cit izens of the United Slates, in conjunc tion with Canadians and others, and accOmmpanicd by a forcible seizure of the property of our citizens, and an ap plication thereof to the prosecution of military operations against tho author ities and people of Canada. The results of - these criminal as saults upon the peace and order of a neighboring country have been, as was to be expected, fatally destructive tb ihe misguided or deluded persons en gaged in them, and highly injurious to those in whose behalf they are profes sed to havo been undertaken. The authorities In Canada! from intelli gence received of such intended move ments among our citizens, have felt themselves obliged to take precaution ary measures against them; have actu ally embodied tho militia, and assum ed an attitude to. repel the invasion to which they believed the colonies were exposed from the United States. A state of feeling on both sides of the frontier has thus been produced, which called for prompt and vigorous inter ference. If an insurection existed in Canada, tho amicable dispositions of the United States towards Great Bri tain, as well as their duty to them selves, would lead them to maintain a strict neutrality, and to restrain their citizens from all violations of the laws which have been passed for its en forcement. But this Government re cognises a still higher obligation to re press all attempts on thb part of its cit izens to disturb the peace of a country where order prevails, or has been re established Depredations by our cit izens upon nations at peace with the United States, or combinations for committing them, have at all times been regarded by the American Gov ernment and people with the greatest abhorrence. Military incursions by our citizons into countries eo situated, and the commission of acts of violence on tho members thereof; in order to ef fect a change in its government, or under any. pretext whatever, havo, from the commencement of our Gov ernment, been held equally criminal on the part of those engaged in them, and as much deserving of punishment, as would He the disturbance of the public peace by the perpetration of similar acts within our own territory. By no country or persons have these invaluable principles of interna tional law principles, the strict ob servance of which is so indispensable to the preservation of socd order in the world been more earnestly cher ished or sacredly respected than by those great and good men who first declared, and finally established the iri dcpendeneelof our own country. They promulgated and maintained them at an early and critical period in our his tory; they were subsequently embodi ed in legislative enactments of a high ly penal character, tho faithful en forcement oi which has hitherto been, and will, I trust, always continue to be regarded as a duty inseparably associ ated with the maintenance of our na tional honor. That the people of the United States should feel an interest in the spread of political institutions as free as thev recrard their own to be, is natural; nor can a sincere solicitude for tho success1 of all those who are, at any tinie, in good faith struggling for their acquisition, be imputed to our citizens as a crime. With tho entire freedom of opinion, and an undisguis ed expression thereof, on their part, tho Government has neither the right, infprffirr. But whether the intest or S,7. or of the United State, renuir hnf they should be made a. party, to. anj such struggle, amu , by Incvitab consequence, to the war which is waff- ed in its support, is a question which, by our Const tut on. In wisolv lnf Confess alone in A.A a V I 1.7. k ,: ' i i.uu imvo, aircaay maue criminal in our citizens to embarrass or .nticinafe . Wt u --.r. orations on their nart. Offences of .r. . "..; T tins character, in addition to their criminality as violations of the laws oi our country, havo a direct tendency iu uraw aown uaon our own citizens at large tiio multiplied eyils of a for eign war, and expose to injurious im putations the good faith and honor of me country. As such thev deservn to be putclown with promptitudo and decision. I cannot be mistaken, I am confident, in counting on the cordial j and general concurrence of our fellow citizcisin this sentiment. A copy of the proclamation which I havo felt it my duty to issue, is herewith communicated. I cannot but hope that the good sense and patriotism, the regard for tho honor and reputation of their country, the repect for the laws which they have themselves enacted for their own government, tand the love of order for which the niaM of our people have b'een so long and ao justly distinguished, will 'deter the comparatively lew who are engaged in them from a further prosecution of such desperate enterprises. In the mean time, the existing laws have neen, anu win continue to dc laiuuul- ly executed; and every effort will be made to carry them out in their full extent. Whether they are sufficient or not, to meet the actual state of things on the Canadian frontier, it is for Con gresi to decide. It will appear from the correspon dence hcrcwitn submitted, that the Government of Russia declines a re newal of the fourth article of the con vention of April, 1824, between the United States and his Imberial Maies- ty, by the third article of which it is agreed that "hereafter there, shall not oe lorineu ay ino.ciiiseno 01 me unitea States, or under the authority of the said States, any establishment upen the northwest cost of America, nor in any of the islands cdjaccnt; to the north of ii4 iu ui tiui 111 laiiiuuc, utiu iiiab 411 the same manner iherc shall be none formed by Russian subjects, or under the authority of Russia, south of the sambparallcl;"and by the fourth, 'that, during a term of ten years, counting from the signature of the present con vention, the ships of both powers, or which belong to their citizens or sub jects repectively, may reciprocally frequont, without any hindrance what ever, the interior seas, gulfs, harbors, and creeks upon the coast mentioned in the preceeuing article, lor the pur pose of fishing and trading with the natives of the country." The reasons assigned for declining to renew the provisions of this article, are, briefly, that the only use made by our citizens of the privilege it secures to thern, has been to supply thb Indians withapir- iiious liquors, ammunition, and fire- arms; that this tralhc lias neen exclud ed from the Russian trade; and as the supplies furnished from tho United States arc injurious to the Russian es tablishments on the northwest coast; and calculated to produce complaints between the two Governments, his Imperial Majesty thinks it for the in terest of both countries not to accede td tho proposition made by the American Government for tho renewal of the article last referred to; , The correspondence, herewith com municated will show the ground upon which we contend that the citizens of the United States have, independent of the p'rovisions of the sonvention of 1824, a right to trade with the natives unon the coast in question, at unoccu pied places, liable, however, it is adj mitted, to be at any time extinguished by the creation of Russian establish ments at such points. Ihis right is denied by the Russian Government, which asserts that, by the operation of thp treaty of 1834, each party agroed to waive the general rigjit to land on 15, ig38i Wuiribcr 3JL 1 Hi n u i i ',. . f ,i ""3!! Wlw'afl' ZaZZV f"0'' to o art de. Th .-uli " nlnJ t; " IVfi'"" "Y" em" wiVh Th VniSSS of AmerW L,:n "nwW??aM?i AmCrica I 'l.'" aaVnB. ? .tbe pffi. aimemenis oi the commerce unrl navim nn tt o.i i .. 7 T rnw T"" "tTVW"".6 -.,w.1.,UCUOTnEmoo mconoidera- "4WV " ount to. attract much alien. uon; yetthesubiectmaw in olh speefs, deserve tho careful considera tion of Cnnirrs Irecret to state that thi M we principal nort9 on thf pnstnm of Mexiso, whirh, in consequence of uiuciCUCG DBlWeOn that Annh . -. Prance, was instituted in May last, unfortunately still continues, enforced by a competent French navnl Tnr . . f . . f 4VtbU jo iieiicaaaray emoarrassmg to our V;t1rtatle the gulf, itt common with that.of other nations., Eyery dis position, however, is believed to Vv! on me pari oi the French Government, to render this measure as little oner ous as practicable to the interests of tho citizens ot the United States, and to those of neutral commerce; and it is to be hoped that an early settlement of mo QlincUlt S3 botwnnn FV,n,. Mexico, will soon re-c-tablisn the har monious relatidna forme'rlv mil between ,them'v and again open the ports of that Republic tb the vessels oS 1 A convention for marking Vhlt ptrt jof the boundary between the TTnifa an jnenuiy nauona. States and tho Renubli'e of T.'. which extends from tho mouth of. tho Sabine to the Red river, was conclud ed and signed at this city on tye 25th of April last. . It has since been rati fied by both Governments'; and season- -Li- .... : ' --.v. UH.I19UICO win dc uKen lo carnr it into effect on the part of the United States. The application of that Republic for admission into this Union, made in August, 1837, and which for reasons, already made knOwn to I you, has been formally withdrawn I will appear from the accomnanvfn copy of the note of the Minister nlen- 1 ipuicimaiy 01 xexas, which was pre scnted to the Secretarv of Sfnioon k occasion of the exchange of the ratifi- uauuna ot me convention above maa tioned'. , Conies of the convention with Toil as, of a commercial treaty concluded with the Kine: of Greace.ahd of .mi ilar(.treaty with the Per.u Bolivian Confederation, the ratifications of which have been recently exchanged. accompany this messagefor the. infor mation of Concress. and for such 1ir. islative engagements as may be found" necessary or expedient; in relation to either ot them. To watch over and foster tho intcrl ests of a. rrraduallv widely extend commerce: to iruard ih rights of American citizens, whom bus may tempt into distant climes', and af! the same time to cultivate those senti- merits of mutual respect.and good will which experience has proved so benefi cial in international intercourse, thq Government of the United States hasi iness, ur pleasures, or other motives; aeemeu it expedient, frpm time to time, to establish diolomatie corinec tiohs with difficrpht foreign States, by the appointment of renresentativeo t residb within their respective territo ries, x am gratilied to be epable to ant nounce to you-that, since the close of your last session, these relations, h.ve been opened under the happiest jius pices with Austria and tho .Two Sici lies) that new nominations hive been made in the respective missions, of Russia; Brazil, Belgium, and Swederi and Norway, in this country; thitil Minister Extraordinary has bean re cieved, accredited to this Government! from the Argentine Confederation. An exposition of the fiscal affairs of of the Government, and of their con.: dition for the past year, will.be made! 10 you ay tne Secretary of tho Treas ury. ... 1 he available balance in the Treasu ry, on tho 1st of January next, is esti mated at Ss,766,34I. The receipts pf me year, trom customs and lands, will probably amourittog20f915598.TheSS