F , hc brie Obotrrtr. \ I. AN 11 POl.l T ICA 1. 301 TAN A 1., BY B. F. SLOAN. Trey. -16 it? •übseriLers, If paid fa advance I 7, opoot will Sr sent to one addre.. GK Waal sn. .01ao•ribor tailing to toy within tir year, the se,ount made out at 1.11 with a proper neer, lar TrizUß oPe APVERTIRING y t "-..1 !ivy...? tom mato • Iwitort.-10. I „' ” ~,,, .r..ek, $ 76 thme Keens 3 mouths $3 09 • • ' ~, tOO floe 4. A .. is 60 , ~,,,,,, “ 136 One " V " $76 .. ,‘...r.. a you, ebiangeableill *mum, $lO. •• • ,•, . —3 month*, r: 6 months, VI; 9 months, -• I "...SUL ~,,,,,,., 10 Nn.ann.--uot year, $00:0 .000 the, , • 3 ”,..ti,.,11 6 . '.. , te tnpertAkl la the Billiellllll Directory et, 113 per ' • ~. .1f 01 . 6 liltn.rod far a Card, over Aix, and tabu, done' entices, 10 cents a llow ; bat so .111 be inserted elaaaj the Special MAW,. i c .q our dull*,. m, ,, hente end °there regalrlag frrelaent (Apnea • r To d c &mammal& will be allowed two ammo% paw. t ..t f• $l5 For eddltkatal epees, the charges wilt ,uoe• end thedvartirearente abut be staidly I n oototato business...if the advertieer. ray "' oirerrlsomewte required lo straweer.— „, YYe fh etvertuaag wall be powesied hell-yeourke. BUSINESS DIRECTORY. .1 , :t01 111 ', I.; , i.sal.sa Is herosens Mums ass Lumens, . t ,„„ r French Brandies, Gins, de, Champaign*. „, Wae.i Omrr, ?ortolan, all kinds , 11 wee; Lieu usueutect et reealeul Whit. R . Bourbon, Monongahela, &c, Reed Roue. on .-treet. Fain. T r. W., ri Wum.ktiAt..s Dic...A.uta IS GitOrISLES SID Meret,lo.lo Stinnes eloet.- I It. CO P:, 11' Hoolf. it N DKR, Ouaa lWoc IlAseraervisat, ..... I -I..ry Itindenmehr., Meek, En!, 11. • 0/ 0. W*L$U4, i Conlin:LlAß •T t.AW, Evia ra.— cs. St.to Stroti.. sgsrll.l/ Park. W th• Aakirloesa . .t.,ry of the building, occupied by F. k aleray• be foon4 in Ms eAele, hod jaluctuartpatttoaltxl to. I))1 KMtN, HKNDIG I ) 11 Ito 1.101A1.1 adiu sod ... • la 1.1..ur, rorl, Fish, Salt, !tomb, Wood and , an, \Jule and (Haas, at No. 1 Wright's block • , K,•t. lIT HRaar I , telta •N. *l.l aaMU IU 11111‘ %%. A rTasecoot AT Late , , Al Laois, N... • 1 1 . ..1t.pt altrotoo. to (Ise locating or Land s , no 1. n/..1 the isovnuou• ofTwtos to tho ALM" of Nita. tad 1...., will hlt all ssoleto for Lb. hos— o l •woll•s• I \ll.o. %. F.. CULL. .sserressor !es T R. 1114 e ., 41 T, kLk nn 1 %% 1,1•1ffiall • and kit tall lk.stri 16 ~r• IPtI •tr.l , .4traw IrNlAa, Irt atrial Fl,vvrra, 5i11.., I.oes, anJ t uhtuo.l.l« Ylllil.rrJ, Yat mob U.« Pat k,Erit, ra Park ohs; stlent.D to Orders "%F.% TON PICTTIS. A rrolot al at La Y.--UtlOb Chrotilut U.•. ' t t •IP I 1 , tl. AI..TE.•. l 'l.. • 0:k In Cli.ekt, Witebos, Yip* Jew ... -, .. 1,.., 11561.1 Wane, honking tiLspors, licit u; z ... I , , I. r• and klllll'y ..1,4.40, 1 . 1101 . 14,Uta Bu ihtiug, ~. • , ~ • t% ...I 'earl nretr l'eseta ot I VI, L.. A .11/NtllAlll, ' A u , nr..Au & itILT AIL I ISA L 1,11.1 Iu 1 aucy fVrN tp, I srpots. ilattings, Ott I Intheik, ax., ;•••.l, • 1.1:41.1., h n.. ~• 1. 111 V F. POitr. 7,,it50,1 41 1..., —4 .tlier tat rutral • I(sik.'l6 elothlag Storn lio w %. (:A I.IIIILAITILI. I ritatirer AT I...Aer--taßer ora 6t6.trrt, Itte .t.rt Ittbelpee, I.:rte.. I•. .Suctresoor 1. Meticart _ I. I:/TAIL I.ltt ,011,1 T. Ortoll, of Slate WWI , to h. cs. Mayhem.. 6. \‘' II I 1131 !..• t!..1.1. TT ,, KIAT ANDCoTNAIELLA.A AT I.A. e"rurir kV/W1...01d • klloack.. • • t aml th. ,0141 i. I rir lit I )1(14.1 ) 1A S. LILT(.IIINI+ON. ) T 1 r.RYII AT LAW —(IA(tA• 1111. W• A, r.pp.r..l. b; t.% 111)144. trll I our OD UNA tr . Innd i:ousa”A .. I • • IA , tor U.O ••• r•cal rtxt.xand Terrltonew urrrnoisos ,apr- ____ \ V I . 'I t"1 1 1 ;o 1 ;;Ipy ' ...--- , "thee io H.hvrta- .01...• 11=1 MEM 1.1 • i t ; li c k 1 10 4'; :, 111 I, - 11 1rrr V/- 1 11' 1 the. I'o,lw i 1 ibl.}:llr. ISE"..IIITT. •t' E • • 1. Itier•ILMILI.II.Iu Hard .., Cm. 1,r%. tols•lmarr Mos. 11 sa..l 12 ...I ,/• eon.. r .11.1, x. 1.1 'tatr strrrta, trowito". K • 1111113111TT. It'ONlt 6: ottIANNOIN. .s/scormero Le &army t Af Omkey ) • , Fig II +I4, and Auwriran Itard•art and .To , o A Anvils. Pura, Irma and Stool, No. • •1 14..unr, krtr, I. ii 111E.* 1.1 TLIs• rl TA 1L.., in the row reevntly oerupied A) • 'M. F:Aq as • 1.••• an•loseer the " , t.oinr of N. Iretwtren the Fired tb.u.• awl Itrosn'• Ifutel _ NI . . ANFOlkt 11l di: ellly Dic• I IKKH (:nLn, Sitiver, Hank Notes, 1,1••••1•• Illamut, at. `ziglat ex.ebauge nO tba prin -1.,•••• fotllfttallti) for sale 0115eeho D Heed Houle. ••,•ar•, Krie.. m ROO It ik lir LIARICS an•l Manufacturers of Seel., • , MI win, r. sch , 11, th• ahop formerly occupied zb Jones P lisAutit in lircwrira, Provisions, rro- I'..rk, rim!, Snit, Grain, Floor, Fruits, Nuts, alum, , Brooms, hula, tril oixtrn, Willow and 8111swo W aiq r, agh Pri,a 1.. tcin. 4Wrtittit'• Block, N . • t, 4 .1nor• ahoy* the. Port ()See, Kr* PL doe R.vriurnr,L. lIOITIRM ik (Minn tn &SAY glasse 114.rt6 mar or l'uhLte Siutre, formerly °amp ‘Ol.Oll kCo All omit Irtirrante.l GRAY at F G111.0CL414 %ad %%milers in !nth, (;• , e+lc c a p a , Saf.ty Fuss, Totrieco, Ciorw, Yl.h, oti, etc , en, It.. 7, linattell Bloat, .tat. •tm.t.Ene, l'a. • 0 P P V/11111•11, 11 "i 111 4 :.11LN it CO., elt os.wssotss sod Coausssolos iletrehssta. a ‘o Floor, Fish, and &vat for • daily boa of I lake. Steurnert, Public hock. Pria. Pa I tot)El.l., M , h • 7.a.etr MIMS Of ALM= Kagmedaloilers. Agricultural impl•moatti kailroad Can, 1... k 'O4 V. K. 11010DEs. FAMIIIONAII.LIC I)* /4•1101 2 and Agent & Wilmoo's Stein, Hachin.. R 0•11131 over A...• 1... :Stuns Weft Park, trio, Pee frj7Btitish- Log 4.li.ur to limier EtSittig ii. et/TLKIK. X / A }TOIL" It 1 , A? LA., Girard, Erie l' Cololty, oliPctioto and other twoonewa attended to with vr..ttiptneaa and dispatch. I WIN SWEENY. 9, Jrallell or TNII P 5.4011, Otto" to Bietty'a li tgi lA,Dg.,. a p-irtmles, Kris, Pt tI . tIHIRT dc CLARK. Wnotmteut Osmoses, and Dnalem and Imported Winne and Leitora, also I.ep-00, Fruit, Fish, Oil. and Arents for Naito 1= Ale No. Ekninoll Blnet, Rtzte PIMP*It Erie, Pa. oil 74i Ve' . A AxrrArti area , Whoirmair sod Rotail I tosler In all kiwis of Fancy, Pluto; Room, limasitig uttice soJ !Asia, Chaim. Au. 4 Key .t..o* Riork, Erie, Pa B.lRle a Pk ELSRY. URA Limn us tt0..1.• a554.4h... at Wisolo eal• mad st 1.41 ad* rtl • 131. ck :gate strurt, F PS., ) 1 ,111.4 & LIU . •t rs(-rr /trial k amt Retail L •:•• , 11.111 Well so.l Cistern Pumps of rul vnor quallty, the • lo•aloott and now fa use Phop on Trail% duet ar Ert l , Pa. rr Aalto.d.o.A fur ewer) Snit water Mr family, torm of 111111•10 purpniteo fur sale rbesp I W °Lux, 11. L. Low, Ida. ". 1.: 1 1 4e 1 ;1 1 „ 4 : 1"r vv 'fbErTINT -11,,r rlnelting In .oath Park Row, $1.4„,. Noek pant of Erie Rank brtildlera In. 111.91 fulfil:lt J. 3110IWPONI. 1. I DINO SSW eftilitinonkla W . rthwt l 1 . 41.1, , Mr. It, dr.aler to Umal, Pall, Fish. Flour '.vtrr Nrltit.Tl o .ll 1tY.1.1.06111. ant.onni.otand WWI dMI«w In Cleo...mid% Ship Chandlory. Wood kod, WsUcm Iran dm, • , ,•4t.m.-mr.•t, Dig. Rita. mei atts - wroitics. ar.. A 42aisvoLD. Jobbrr, and %Nati In •nrry tioseriptioe of Foreign nod lionnest= 4 ••....la, I ' aryntinrn. Ott Clotbs, to Yo. 13, !Hato Itrin. Pa. _ _ WILLIAM THOKINTO?i, Irmo' or Tax l'ocAci. Dodd" Agree. tu-Lt Rood* tool Mortgages. 1.111~14 1[4., seearairly ..0”11, dram's. 011101, an Freerll,, Ju. & tirofery Stan Ibis. Yn. r. tmowpaeou. Armours,' Al 1.-. r Ain icitruli or TIM • • or prsctier thr reversl Courts of Vole County, r , t. prompt and fnithful sttrnthin to art boudoir es. to his Isaroir,o4threas on Attorney nr BSc* in I..infoirt Shirk, earner of titian sad nrii • • , hr... Pa. l•. IJOI 4: LA ail. I ArTOKINIV AT 1.01.--Oete I.olAint yr eot ornate Pt.reet, on OA nankin& or A. Krio P. _- 1 )r.%IV ANIPISLINIII. bk. lirl ion m. 0., /Mr hot assd 'Lk Maio Strrkt, H. Ih o, IC hub sittentwo Stela/41,1.1r to lihr *masses* nt ware 1.1 O.* Ey• hod te.f 10,1308.--3747 THE ERIE B. F. SLOAN, IiDITOR & PROPRIETOR VOLUME 80. UPRIBILPia, 4TTOIIIXIT AT LAW.-01114• agar lisiga Tin , betwipos Itroirs's PIMA and lied Roam, Pa $ 1. 1. 001"1 1 Daaaaaa b all Wads of Nei, Ball, Plasaw, Mori Jrk. ka.. ka Pabik Dock, Erie, hi. el. •. SOW% J. IL LIM/. VTT Intougausam Retail dealer la all kiade or Leah, Gomm sad Aniarleaa Hardware, darn; nese, bau„liedia, Hadidiery sad Carriage Yachts" Belting mad racking Treads street, ii=te Reed Rea" motor's Notiat. WIIEREAS Letters of Administration beettin bens muted to the euteeriber, on the salute of Jobe rtapstrisk, dada, late of Otto, 'Wri er" an persona Indebted to maid estate grill maks hautia hille ImlPrep% MA theme Mein doom sposeathe suet ill mend than properly authenticated for settlement, IfiCISAIL HOWES. Sept 10,, 111511.-4t14. 1 Ilk Creek It., j adm'r..._ . 'MOMS IS HEREBY GIVEN. to all wyTuiNi.f IA ma having Meade Ia the United Presbyte non II round, (oil the isomer of Eighth sod Preach !Woote n ) is to Noma et emus the reeaseai of their remains, on or ore the 11/th day of October beat Theme lo the game& arise that tans , will he s mond by the see of the Coniuratioa, agreeably to the provisions of the Art of Aseelobly, paused at the laatemeioa of th• Laddalaavare, authorial*/ said femoral. pie. July 1. Info.—!td My order of the Trustees P_ 1.40.15TG1., Micf— Physisian. Surgeon and Dentist. trzerscoma yucsmatans, anis Co., 1 • 1111LIIPA.. DR. L. having permanently located at mienla his prefeeskra el" promptness. All assfal aleretions oath. Teeth perfomsod and warraated. teeth Inserted from vas term oaths mei. Jul, Ittle.-4 REED HOUSE; FRONTING THE PUBLIC NAME, ERIE, PA. P. ELLIOTT, Proprietor. TIM LARGE AND ELEGANT Tim EL Has bees thereeetay nopalml and rotdrolsb• eat, and la polo open for the reception of guests. .Board by the Day, Week OF Month on tea etoesthie terns, eke Proprietor pleditny hinavir that rzvlrort shat! be wantoig to gave enters satitfachow. Private Putte*, Diaper Parties, or Warmly' , of Saar trill hod the seeotemoilatione at this flonse "ruperior to any other in the ray anti the churls as no sonable. el 'Good Stabling attacbed where reeets from the cuustry will always end Attends. hastier& to take glean* of their teams. May t labil.ttla Ad dr in g For Chicago Ed igg i t And Intermediate Porto ! • ONE OF TILE PEOPLE'S LINE OF Prnpellera leave this Port for Chicago sod Intermediate Porta on WIIIII4IIte4DAY and KATI - 11. DA y *bell week, wind and weather permitting. Yor freight or kajoaire appir to at J gr•Armi, Erie, J 1.4111 4, 18.59 --42 if Public Dock. NEW GOODS! NEW GOODS!! FRENCH AND AMERICAN MILLINERY. MRS. M. A. MORGAN, has loot nem:trawl from ltrw York with um. ismer* sal mast etrasplett asaarttoont FILENCH BoNNETS, RIBBONS, FLOWERS, &c., &c In short, every thing to the Millinery 111.14 which via be sold wholesale or retail at prices that defy competition. Courtin' Millburn supplied with Goods at New Yoh pnres, lidding a C0M11121114100. Al she has made ar rangements to receive Goods every two weldtli, she offers peeuliar inthioements to Mime busing to mil soa to male their purchases at her establishment. Mrs M Morey to Inform the pabtie that slie is prepar e.% by • use and twoutiful process, to remoracsand Color 'qrs.., Mop°litan, ('Lip, and Leghorn, Its a moat superior style. inpr orders solicited, and satisfaction warranted. ==l April 11, 1104.-1611 NEW MILLINERY 43100/48. MRS. S. H. HALL, Pesch Bt., slime the Depot Eris, Has Just opened a new end sploodid Stock or MILLINERS" AND STRAW Uth_lDS, Rißeoss, 11111-ICa3C.B. IMOTirElt 8, Re.. a. Mao, RONNLIN, RUSCHRN AND TANNN, toAchilbe mod hand- row*, bnonet (tumor .ad en.. oa, DRESS BONNETT, DRESS CAPS. A HEAD 221151111 SLIM a the latest at% lea. IsYW hulfeular attention road to rolorizr, bleathios and Promistir Filoorraerr and Riding Hat. einworri In thr matt fa•hionabl• rtplo..lollll my- Alio, a Daprtior at of 1.4.1it0 llertirry torprthor with a ripenl iiamortaimat of Lady G....di, April 23,1859 —MI &a NEW GOODS! SPRING AND SUMMER MILLINERY MRS. M. CURTIS, neer receiving s Lary and Vali As soruooot of MILLINERY Ind rA - wcy Goork4, eon.iat tag of a great variety of White sad COLORED STRA* BONNIER, BLOOMERS. And Children's Hata of ersry style, Rbakar Hoods. Roy's Hata Re., &e-, Ribbons., Vie.en, Ream, Clips, Sled Drowsed, Alexandre's Kid. Glares, Hosiery, lice \ • ell., French COreetta and lair* Notarial, of all kinds for Em broidery, Valesocierusea. Lace, Applique. sod Frond. Work, Collars, gloswee, ke. MILLINICRB supplied with Geode atwholaweale; also, Plaster Bonnet Blocks. Bleaching and Pressing done in the beet manner; also, Straw Bonnets colored Drab. Brown and Black. April 9, 1890. MRS. H. CURTV. - - - GROCERIES, &0., SELLING CHEAP FOR READY PAY! 11:111WILIMAPi, ILENDIG de CO., No. 2, Wrigbt's Block„Erie, 071111 a? WISOLIULALI oa 1127•11. SUOARS of all DESCRIPTIONS, AT LOW PRICES; &IRKEN, BLACK AND IMPERIAL TEAS, OF DI MIEN', GOAD'S I ROASTED, GROUND, AND RIO COFFEE SYRUPS AND NOLANNIX, OF ALL GRAM% ; RICE, SOAP, STARCH, CANDLES, RAISINS BAKING POWDERS, PRUNES, FRUIT, NUTS, &0., WHIM PIM, ('OD PI NH jueoN, surricu,i, I MID, IttiOli, IMMO APPLKAI, WOOD an4lll WILLOW WARK, NAIL* AND GLAND. Toltof&A , with a large woortmeat of all Wale or fiftelDB kap ta • Getraerg Store. wide& tee our to mil at tile lowest market pries. CALI. ANT) SEE UR ' BECKMAN, KENDIO & April la, LSI*. No. 2, Wriglat's Block. - - - - _ Iv HO WANTS A SAFE TN sabaerlber baa tarp aln REMIIINOII BAPS, wide& ha will Dawes of champ for - Cash or approved paper. M. L. SCOTT. Er* April 11.1U0L-44.tt MAY PERSONS SUFFER intensely lath Nursuideig, Pals is tb• rues, Tears sod Jaw amt, that isiebt be rolloored aimed istomettoly by the appikettos of the Its Inset of Smart Word. It is both more pleasant lied ash than say of tbo Paht-Kinoro sad Hot-Mops I. yea /sat try it. 10. Cann ft BRO FRENCH SNOW WHITE ZINC, dry good trotted Di whit, Dow Yarded, for For Wald Web, ato. Mord Sam. Brio, Jam 4,16811.-14 L. I. BALDWIN. PAINTS I PAINTS ! ! PAINTS !! ! wute !Aid, dry sod la ail. Neseiesaaad Fivseli Use. Iga yr asil mar+ hispeed OK ♦eogtlaa Red, health nary, Chrome sad Rpm* Grim, ..1.1 I. .hart exert Wag is the lbw of PADITS. lot salssi tM Rims May li T. R. RINCLATR, FARM LANDS EOE SALE X) MILES frogs Philaisljela by *applaud lathe Stale of :Car Jemmy. Soil eswoing the beet Mr Agrieulhael weave. being • wad lam all, eft% • clay betas. The lead Is a large trial, divided Into mall fr.zMe, sad Iseedresistive ell parts of tie meetly are wow estiliag aid banding.— rim grope wedges") an large sad an be age drogriet•— ?be climate Is delislafal„ and same flea trate Terms hem $lll to par sae, payable within four year by Isr• slalsesets. IN visit She phess--legre Vhie atria Wised as Pbiladelrbis at to A. M. by Railroad tee lisagioatee, or R. J. Byrne*. M letbet,Hasamadria rpm owe. Adanbe ceamoy. blar Jersey. Pee fell adrertasoest le another eohnag. • flea FEAT*ER DUSTERS, At jaky 2. CASTOR 6 MOIL OBSIERVA.TIONS ON SkINATOR DOUGLAS% VIEWS OF 'POP Every one knows that Mr.Donglaa the Sen ator from Illinois, has written and printed an elaborate essay, comprising thirty-eight col 11[11113 of Harpers' Magazine, in which be has undertaken to point out the udividing line be tween federal and toed sotherity." Very many ns Wave &god cow its parigpagthe to the leadin some few have prog Nos bly wiii&gmt WI of *nth and ba'read it with MIL Those who dissent from the dont/hog of this paper owe to its author, if not tokig argesaggrts, a most respectful answer. Mr. Douglas is nut the man to be treated with a disdainhal si lence. His ability is a feet unquestioned ; his public career, in the !seep( Many disadvanta ges, has been uncommonly siumessful ; and he has been for many years a wdrkiag, struggling, candidate for the Presithietty. is, more over, the Coryphetts of his polities/ sect--tae founder of a new wibool--and his &sniping nat urally believe in the htfailible verity of his words is a part of their faith. The style of the article is,' in some respects, highly commendable, It is entirsly.fror from the vulgar clap-trap of the stump and /tattoo, vain adornment of classical scolareldp. Unlit shows no sign of the'elequent Senator; it is even without the logic of the great debater.— Many portions of it are very obscure. It seems to be an unsueceasfhl efort at legal pre cision , like the writing of *judge, who is try ing in vain to give good reasons for a wrong deciqion on a question of law which he has not quite mastered. With the help of Messrs. Seward and Lin coln, he has defined accurately enough the platforto of the so-called ltepublioen party; and he does not attempt to conceal his consietkoh. that their doctrines are, in the lam degree, dangerous. They are, moet,aneuredlit. full of evil and saturated with mischeif. The, 'irre pressible conflict" which they speak of with so much pleasure between the "opposing and en during forces" of the Northern and Southern States, will be fatal, not merely to the pence of the country, but to the existence of theGur nil/went itself. Mr. Douglas knows this, and he knows, also, that the Democratic party is the only power of which is, or can be, organ lied to resist the Republican forces or oppose their hostile march upon the capital. Me who nil ides and weakens the friends of the noun lr) at such a crisis in her fortunes, assumes a vet) grave responsibility. r. Douglas separates the Democratic 'party Into three classes, and deaenribes them as fol lows: •'Firet. Thosie who believe that the Consti tution of the Cnitesi States neither establishes nor prohibits slavery in the States or Territo ries beyond the power of the people legally to coutrol it, but 'leaves' the people thereof per /teed) free to form and regulate their domestic itistitutions in their own way, subject only to the Constitution of the United States.' ••Serond Those who believe that the Con stitution establishes slavery in the Territories, and withhold. from Congress and the Territo rial Legislature the power to control it, and who insist that, in the event the Territorial Legislature fails to enadt the requisite laws for its protection. it becomes the imperative duly of Congress to interpose its authority and fur nisi. such protection. Third. Ttose who, while professing to be lieve that lbe Constitution establishes slavery in the Territories beyond the power of Congress or the Territorial Legislature to control it, at the same time protest against the duty of Con gress to interfere for its protection; but insist that it is the duty of the judiciary to protect 'and maintain slavery in the Territories with out any law upon the robjeet." We give Mr. Douglas the tltll benefit of his own statement- This is his mode of expressing those differences, which, he says, disturb the harmony. and threaten the integrity. of the American Democracy. These passages should, therefore, tie most carefully considered. The first 0121 , 111 Is the one to which be him self belongs, and to both the others he is eqnal ly opposed. He has no right to conic between the second and third eines. If the difference• which bespeaks of does not exist among his opponents, it :is their business, not his, to set tle it or fight it out. We shall therefore coa tine uuraiilves to the disputebetween Mr Doug las and Nis folloners on the one hand, awl the rest of the Democratic party on the other, pre suming that be will be willing to observe the principle of nun-intervention in all matters with which he has no concern. We wal invert the order in which he has dis cussed tile subject, and endeavor to show— ! Thitt he has not correctly stated the doc trine 141 by his opponents; and. 2. neat his own opinions, as given by him self, erti altogether unsound. 1. liti says that a certain portion of the Dem ocratic tarty believe, or profess to believe, that tAe Comititution establashes slavery in the Territo ries, anil insist that it is the duty of the judi ciary tq maintain it there tau/tout any law on the subject. We do not charge him with any' intention to be unfair : but we assert, that be has in fact done wrong to, probably, nineteen twentieths of the party, by attempting to put them on grounds which they never chose for themselves. The Constitution certainly does not ratablida slavery in the Territories, nor anywhere else. Nobody in this country ever thought or said so. But the Constitution rega rd s as sacred and inviolable all the rights which a citizen may legally acquire in a State. If a man ac quires property of any kind in a dime, and goes with it into a Territory, be is not for that reason to be stripped of it. Our simple and plain proposition is, that the legal owner of a slave or other chattel may go with it Into a Federal Territory without forfeiting his title. Who denies the truth of this, and upon what ground can it be controverted' The reasons which support it are very obvious and very conclusive. As a jurist ands statesman, Mr. Douglas ought to be familiar with them, and there was a time when he was supposed to un derstand them very well. We will briefly give him a few of them. I. It is an axiomatic principle of public law, 1 1 that a right of property, a private relation, condition or statue, lawfully existing is one State or country, is not changed by the mere removal of the parties to another country, un less the law of that other country be in direct conflict with 'it. For instance : A marriage le gally solemnized in France is binding is Amer ica children born in Germany are legitimate here if they are legitimate there ; and a mer chant who bays goods in New York according to the laws of that State may carry them to Illinois sad hold them there under his contract. It is precisely so with the stews of a negro car ried from one part of the United States to an other ;—the question of his freedom or servi tude depends on the law of the pines where he came from, and depends on that alone, if there be no conflicting law at the place to which he goes or is taken The Federal Constitution therefore recognizes slavery as a legal condi tion wherever the local governments have Chosen to let it stand uusbolitthed, and regards it as illegal wherever the Isms of the pines have for bidden it. A slave being property in Virgin ia, remains property • and his master has all the rights of a Virg inia master wherever be may go, so that he go not to any Owe where the local law noses in conflict with his right. It will not be pretended that the Constitution itself furnishes to the Territories a conflicting law It ()entails, no provision that can be tor. Lured into any semblance of a prohibition. 2. The dispute on the question whethsosla very or freedom is local or general, is a mere war of words. The black race in this country is neither bond nor tree by virtue of any general law. That portion of it which tetras, Is tree by virtue of some leeal a mlation, sad the slave owes service fora reason. The Con stitution mei laws of the United States simply dechire that everything done in the premises by size State governktents is right, and they shell be protected in carrying it out. Ent free Begone and sieves may both Sad themselves :ERICAN ILLINERI ouft. • brotight to this Inchollug all the- ME .■a MACK KRILL PORK. ILA MM. Naftali. ILAR 80 1 /ERMONTY, As Expressed in Harpers' Magazine, ERIE; TA., I domicil 0441 , b•Afted w some 0 0814041 Mat Level AiOldri_cT• :API le flotalpstant ,local se. thority in a Tearitagg will he elnewhere con sidered. , 8. Thee if lion tittreialty Sixtieth Sks ri t ti"rri r t .. I ; dft it 41e Pe l eisl vestimen , tl4, t abet MA' lie taken •Ir jai the witho ut dem . peasirait, hot wit foe totioow of EllartoF t. petty, and every Mot *Mims tah'eti of adellty to the eon ' ideation is Ineren,, end polio bound to regard dhisa as nth. Does an suppose that a COnstitutiori width seltne - Vthe tratmedites dr private property so y l . l would wastestby' destroy. that right.; not by soy words thateireletsid in it, bosky seer haldiestiou beta! Ha leased prineipleat It adOt as Well be adterted.tbatthe general 'elOaa of the Genstiaatiost gave heteet aadidoitt-i dllaiterPti Went* qt out horoiteiio eito vNldey o 414* Ouse.• + ' • •;;. d. The dagrt a p trt sfitb-e,,Pnittod MAW has decided the vatetipn. After sole/nut milli meatittad ettreful,gprj.pre trf, that augatt tribunal has atinsugped, f iti'Optpran to be that a elavehtbitr, by going Leto Fedsorel Ter ritory, 'does apt bite the title be had (o his ne gro in flab State'frOingiiiedi came.le for mer ' Utak' • .qtimdfdi'.oe iscetatttutittail law enee decided tif thitraisiiiisatbuti 'Was reit*. ded its settled by alf:bieilpethit bitid'of: ribald whey *meet periodically at Bas ton to blaspheme the retitle's, and plot irebell ion against the laws oftehereountry The lead ers oh he so-eallediligoatilitma party have late ly been treading clime ton the heels of their ab olition brethren ; but it la devoutly to be hoped that I Mr. Douglas- itisi nit Intention to fellow their ertampli. In ease be itieteeted President, be moat. sett the lasts faithfulle executed-- Dow he think he can keep that oath by fight ing the Judiciary '' • 5 'The legiostatteh hitacety of the country shows that all the , great statesmen of farmer times entertained the same opinion, and held it an firmly that thej did pot even think of any other. It was unirentally taken for granted that a slave remained a shier, and a. freeman a freeman, in the new Territoriss, until a ektitne was made in their condition by some positive enactment. hrobodybelieved that a slavemight not home bees taken to and kept I. the North - west Territory if the ordinance of 1787 or souse other regulattun had not been made to prohibit it The 'Missouri Ilestrietion of 18`.4..) was im posed solely beeaime it was understood (rrob ably by every toenaberof that Congress) that, in the libigeato of s, eestrictien, slave properly would be as lateral in the eye of the Constitu tion above 15° an', as below ; and all agreed, that tho more %Wears of a restriction did, in fact, make it lawful below the compromise line. It It is right to learn wisdont:from our ene mies. The }tepid)liming do not point to any express provision of the Constitution, any to any general principle embraced in it, nor to any established rule of law. which sustains their views The shiest men among them are driven by guess of neeessity to hunt for argrasenp in a code unrevealed, unwritten, and undefined, which they put above the Constiption or the Bible, and call it "higher law " The ultra ab olitionists of New •England do not deny that the Constitution la righty interpreted by the Democrats, as not interfering against shivery in the Territories; but they disdain to obey what they pronounce to be "an agreement with death and a covenant with hell." 7. What did Nlit.‘Donglas mean when he pro posed and voted ler the Itimmas-Nebraska bill repealing the 3Lipsouri restriction Did he intend to tell sou era men that notwithstand ing the mire& *Nile fittliriblititm, they were ex cluded from his slave perfectly good whenever he got rid of the proldbitioh! Did he, or inybredy else at that time, dream that it was neerettary to make a positive bier in favor cf the sleveholder before he could gu there with safety To ask these question.' to answer them • The Kan sas-Nebriudis hill was not meant au a delusion or a snare It was veil itadersteod that the repeal alone of the restriction against slavery would throw the country open to everything which the Constitution recognized as property. We have thus given what we believe to be the opinions held by the great Maly of the Democratic party: namely, that the Federal Constitution does not establieh shivery any where in the Union ; that it permits a black man to be either held in servitude or made free as the local law shall decide ; anti that in a Territory where no local Jaw on the subject has been enacted, it keeps both the slave and the free negro In the status already impressed upon them, until it shall be changed by com petent. local authority. We have seen, that this is susutined by the reason of the thing, by a great principle of public law, by the words of the Constitution, by a solemn decision of the Supreme Court, by the whole course of our legislation, by the concession of our po litical opponents, and, finally, by the most im portant act is the public life of Mr. Douglas himself. Mr. Doughty imputes another absurdity to his opponents when he charges them with in sisting "that, it is , the duty of the judiciary to protect and maintain slavery in the Territories without' arty far +in the rublect." The judge who acts without law acts against law: and surely no sentiment so atrocious as this was ever entertained by any portion of the Demo cratic party. The right of a master to the services of his stave in a Territory isnot against law tior without law, but in full accordance with law. If the law ba.against it we are all against it. Has sot the emigrant to Nebraska a legal right to the oz team, which he butted in Ohio, to haul him over the plains ! Ist'ot his title as good to it in the Territory.. as it was in the State where he got it! And what should be said of a judge who tells him that be is not proticted, or that be is maintained, IS thepossession of his property " without any law hpon the subject ?" 11. We had a right to expect from Mr. Doug- tor et least a clear and intelligible definition of his own doctrine. We are disappointed. It is hardly possible to conceive anything more difficult to comprehend. We will transcribe it again, and do what can De done to analyse it. ”Tbose who believe that the Constitution of the United States neither establishes nor pro hibits slavery in the States or Territories be yond the power of the people legally to eontrol it, but 'loaves the people thereof perfectly free to form and regulate their domestic institutions in their own way. sobject oily to theCoastitu tion of the United States.'" Conttituttmi neither rat'alitishre Nor prohibits slavery in dr States or 94rrdorirc. If it be meant by this that the Constitution does uot, proprso virpre, either emancipate any man's slave, or create the condition of shivery. and impose it on free negroes, hnt leaves the tines doe of emery black luau's tatty, in the Terri tories as well as in the Stales, to be determin ed b y th e local law, then we eALEgiit it, for it is the very same proposition which we have been trying to prove. But if, on the eonttary, it is to be understood as an assertion that the Constitution does not permit a master to keep his slave, or a free negro to have his lioirty, in al parts of the Union where the local law does not interfere to prevent it, then the error is not only a very grave one, bat it is also *b unted and self-eeniradiatory. • Th. Constitution neither eatablislios nor jorolobits slavery in At States or Territories beyond eke pewter of the peopk tegoriy to control It. This is ladling to Potetwlto•Point arta. Of •course subject, which is kimile eontrolled, cannot be beyond the power that contracts it. But the question is, what constitutes legal control, and when iitspeople Of a grate er Territory are in a condition to saltreise it. The Onutitatteis of the Anted Stoles * • • * leaves the peophojperfectly free. • • • sad oubjeet may to the Cosetitou,os gibs Unitetißtcaes. This carries us round a full circle, and drops us precisely at Ow place of beginning. That the Constitution leaves every,body subject to the Coltstitudon , ls W'e are far from . ilenteieg it.. We never iteeisl it doubted, sad OBSERVER BEE 1, 1859. expect we never will. But the statement of it proves nothing, defines nothing, and explains nothing. Tt merely darkens the subject, WI werdt4itheut intimang always do. But emtwithateading all this circuity of el and consequent opaqueness of mean it7ll3; in t l he maptzine article of Mr. Douglvs, irelltint we Can guess what his opinions are er will be when• he comes to reconsider the 11141. Lie will admit {at least he will nut undertake to deny) that the status or a negro, whether of servitude or freedom, accompanies `trim wherever he goes, and adheres to him in ever; port of the I:ttion until he meets some local law which changes it. El Q 1 It will also be agreed that the people of a State, through their Legislature, and the peo ple et • Territory, in the constitutien which they may frp.ate preparatory to their admission as a State, can regulate and control the condi tion of the sniped. black race within their re spective budedietions, so as to make them bond or free. But here we come to the point at which opinions diverge. Some insist that no citizen can he deprived of his property in slaves, or 01 7 1104 41 else, =opt by the provision of a to constitution or by the act of a State Le gislatete ; while others contend that an un liasited control over private rights may he ex ercised by a Territorial Legislature es soon as the earliest settlements are made. Bo strong are the sentiments of Mr. Ltottgles in favor of the latter doctrine, that if it he not established he threatens us with Mr. Howard's "irrepceasible conflict," which shall end only with the universal abolition or the universal donthrion of alsvery. On the other hand, the President, the Judges of the Supreme Court, neerig all the Democratic members of Congress, the whole of the party South, and a very large majority North, are penetrated with a ennvietion, that no such power is vested in a Territorial Legislature, and that those who de sire to confiscate private property of any kind must wait until they get a constitutional con vention or the machinery of State government into their hands. We venture to dive the fol lowing reasons for believing that Mr Douglas Is in error. the Supreme Court has decided that a Ter ritorial Legislature has not the power which he claims for it. That alone ought to he sufficient. there can be AO 11/4W, order, ur security for anLi utan's rights, unless the Judicial authority of the (sanitary be upheld Mr Douglas may do what he pleases with political eunveutiun4 and party platforms, but we trust he will Ole to the Supreme Court at lettat that decent respect. which nonebtu the most ultra Republicans hare yet withheld. The right of prorerty is sacred and the brat object of all human government is to make it seettre Life is always unsafe were property in not fully protected This is the experience of every people on earth, ancient and modern To secure private property was a principal ob ject of Magna Charta. Charles I. afterwnrila attempted to violate it, but the people rose up on him, dragged hint to the block, and setered his head from his body At a atilt later period another monarch for a kindred offence wns driven out of the country, and died n fugitive and an outcast. Uur own Revolution was pro voked by that slight invasion upon di, right of property which consisted in the exaction of a trifling tax. There is no government in the world, however absolute, which would not he disgraced and endangered by wantonly sitcrt- Ewing private property even to n ain't! extent. For centuries past such outrages have ceased to be committed in times of peace among Cl\ il tzeil nations. Slaves are regarded as property in the S, - ern States. The people of that seetion tiuy and sell, and, carry on all their business, pro. vide for their families, autl make their wills and divide their inheritance.. on that n+•ontp tion. It is manifest to all who know them, that no doubts ever eroaseil their minds nhout the rightfulness of holding surh property. They believe timer have a direct warrant f&r it. not 4 iy in the •xiun .lee of the beat men that ever itself; and they are t °roughly satisfied that the relation of master and slate is the only one which ran possibly exist there between the white and the black race without ritinino both. The people of the North may differ from their fellow chasms of the South on the whole sub ject. but knowing. as we all do. that theA t .. e n_ fitments are sincerely and honestly entertained. we cannot wonder that they feel the 1110.41 un speakable indignation when any attempt is made to interfere with their right, , Thi.Qen timent results naturally and necessarily from their edneation and habits of thinking. They cannot ,help it. any more than au houest man in the North can avoid abhorring a thief or house-breaker The jurists, legislators, and people .4. thee Northern States. have always sacredly respec ted the right of property in slaves held by them own jurisdiction. It is It remarkable fact. very well worth noticing, t h at no Northern State ever passed any law to take a negro from his master. All laws for the abolition of slavery have operated only on the unborn de.tcendant. of the negro race and vested rights of masters have no more hen ilistnrbed in the North than in the South. lo every nation under heaven, ei vilized, semi - barbarous, or sayage,where slavery has ext-ted in any form at all analogous to ours. the rights of the masters to the control of their shares as property have been respected; and no no occasion bas any government struck at those rights, eN eept as it would strike at other property. /...% en the British Parliament, when it cmancitiare4.) ' the West India slaves, though it was legislating for a people three thousand miles away, tin not represented, neser denied . Wier the legal or the natural right of the slave owner. Slaves were admitted to be property, and the Our 'rumen' acknowledged it by paying their mas ters one hundred millions of dollars I , .r the privilege of setting them free. Here, then, is a species of property which is of transcendent importance to the material in terests of tbe South—which the people of that re gion think it right and meritorious in the eyes of Ood and good men to bold—which is sanction ed by the general sense of all mankind among whom it has existed—which was legal only it: short time ago in all the States of the Union, 'and was then treated as sacred by every one of them—which is guaranteed to the owner as any taker property is guaranteed by the Con stittttion ; and Mr. Douglas thinks that a Ter rit orhil Legislature is competent to take it away. We sa No ; the supreme Legislative nosier of a sovereign State alone can deprive a man of his propegty. Tails pro po sition is so plain, so well estab lished, and so universally acknowledged, that any argument in its favor would he a mere waste of words.\ Mr. Douglas does not deny it, and it did not require the thousandth part of his sagacity to see that it was undeniable.. Be claims for the Territorial governments the right of confiscating private property on the ground that dote governments •aa sor•reign— hsre an uncontrollable and independent power over all their internal affairs. That is the point which he thinks is to split the Democracy and impale the nation. Din it is so entirely erro neous. that it must vanish into thin air as soon as it comes to be examined. A Territorial government is meri+ly provis ional and temporary. It is created by Con gress for the necessary perservation of order andthe purposes of police. The powers con ferred upon it are expressed in the organic act, which is the charter of its existence, and which may be changed or repealed at the pleasure of Congress. In most of those acts the power has been expressly reserved to Congress of revis ing the Territorial laws, and the power to re peal them exists without such reservation.— This was asserted in the case of Kansas by the most distinguished Senators in the Congress of 1858. The President appoints the the Govern or, Judges, and all other officers whose appoint ment is not otherwise provided for, directly or indirectly, by Congress. Even the expenses of the Territorial government are paid out of the Federal treasury. The truth is, they hare no attribute of sovereignty about them. The es sence of sovereignty consists in having no sn perior in the United States Government, upon whose pleasure it is dependent for its very es istesee—in whew it lives, and moves, and has its being—who has made, and can unmake it with a breath. Where does tics sovereign nuthorit,y, to do $1,50 PER ANNUM IN ADVANCE prive men of their property, come from " This eremsrentient power, which even despots are CAW iO4lB about using, and which a constitution al monarch 'lever exercises—how does it get into a Territorial Legislature! Surely it does not drop from the cloud.. it will not be con tended, that it accompanies the settler*, or ex lets in the Territory before its orgsnization.— Indeed it is not to the people, hut to the gov ernment of a Territory• that Mr. Douglas says it belongs. Then Congress most give the power et the same time that it gives the Terri torial government. But not a word of the kind is to be found in any organic act that ever was framed. It is thus that Mr. Douglas argu ment runs.itself out into nothing. But if Congress wm,ddi,e,, i a pant ill 0 express ly to give this sort of power to the Territorial governments, they still would not have tt ; for the Federal Government iteell does not possess any c_ontrol over men's property in the Terri tories. That each power does not exist in the Federal Government needs no proof: Mr. bong , lax admits it fully and freely. It is, besides, established by the solemn decision of Congress, by the assent of the Executive, and by the di rect retiication of the people acting in their primary capacity at the polls. In addition to all this, the Supreme Court have deliberately adjudged it to be an unalterable role of eon nt tonal law. This.acknowledgement that Congress has no power. authority, or jurisdiction over the sub ject, literally ohityv , Mr Douglas to give up hie doctrine, or eke to maintain it by asserting that a power which the Federal hovernment door not p0411;4,11 way he yo en ty ronuress to the Territorial . o , ,t,r7totetit The right to aholiall African slavery in a Territory is not granted by the Constitution to 'ongress: it it Withheld, and therefore the same as if expressly prohilr lied. Yet %It. Dougla• declare. , that riingreis may give it t.. the Territ , ,roo , Nay he goes further. and gays that the trent of the power in Congress is the very reason why it ran delegate it--the general rule, ui hie opinion, tieing that Congreaseannut delegate the power, it pos.e.,- cc, but may delegate -itch. •'find only clod' as Congress cannot exeretse under the Capstan tut by turning to page, and reader will ..ee that the. a.i iii lwg propo.it ion is actually made, not in jet or irony, but ool emnly, seriously. and. no doubt in perfect good faith "On this pratieipit, as Congreb, etiluicil i-e loi et to hialse jo.tt I ict• law, or a law :lopairitlg ili.• „hligat int, „r e Intel., Me, in/ e it may authorize , itch law , t o his made the town eiluneile ot Washitigiim city, or the lety ,outs of .et If I •..1- grein 1.14.i* an act to 1,4111..11111A1 Wllll.lllt it is void, and the judge , will not allow it to be exeruied but t he poorer to do tilts iirolliti itcd thing ern lie con.t it utioliall!, green C ortgr ,... to a Terri, orutl Iver,,lnt;t tlrt-tu here aro rortatn power , lie atowed upon the hellion] linvertintent are in !keit hatult of eeut •• 11 it ti them eiingrees can .lo nothing. e . ....eept that they ire eNeente.l hi the proven kind of fdlieert- It t talon true !lint I 'otter,o , eee tsait legietaiiie vowel • %filen enlitiot he dele gated. Poit %IT' 11410 t tot‘.. 4.. n•.% that he wit, talking •ih.ott 1.. , w;-1 longed to to to-,.•t i6e.c i•la-‘ , “ , hut ~hoot legolative Juriltlict , on tot ally turhi , lkie:i t o the Fetleroi Gt.xert:mtot, otoi iuraf , ahle ut tie i n g .lelegutycl. for the emuit.lt o .1 not constititlionallt eat.' 1 1 1111 anybody .isty that -itch t politic ought, us a matter it policy. t ,r ie:l-,1,- of public safitty, to be held t-i-nalgo‘. of the Territorie. • nipt. Ile no title. pat riot, nor no friend Ot.ll.lclit , • and order. c•in Je tiberatelt reflect on the prof, Ode , ono yuent r, without , lerireeiniing This pouer finer , a Ili, ,•,,,• h:eh in all 01- ha. 1.. ell 1.,.. guarded, lieetivo• 1:., tempt iti n lo always great er t han tiny ot her I t t hat a o the subject. ot a 'wooed monarch . , a ilk aif io• grerdestyealoney No republic . 1 •i-t er failed u. impose strict lituntitionn upon it All free people iLILIOw, taut Li they would tewaiu ilee. ••. • - eiraapol ails ineceowuneut‘to keen it a hands off [heir pi ii ale property . and this ran he Clone only by lying them ttp with (-ireful re•triction. our Ve.lerld tut ion 41eckre, that •-no per.on -dist'. IS . de prived of his lit operty except by due proee„, of law,' and that • • prii ate property titall not be taken for public ti.e withoutytist eiimpensti tion " Ii is tirtiver , ally agreed, that this ap plies only to the everet.e •.t the power by the Government of the nit,' Slate. I% earl , a 1.., protected agaiteo the :•.c iie ge•‘k hy pro' howl in the Mit , - Legislative robbery i+ thec,d'ore a crime which cannot he ciontnltied either 6y Congle-. ~ e hr any State Legt-lat ore. II he et-fle fir 11111 rebellion to the fun.lainental law •it . the Ina But if the Territorial govvrtoneitt , it.tie power. that Lev have tt wit bout any 1111111 AI ion whatsoe‘er. utoi In all the tulnes. despoti.m. They are onutpotrut in reizatil all their int ermicaffaii for hey ire •. ont o tett/too ,•, , s..tititttoti. to /tete' ILtm is • 'ge this omnipotent uoiereigid) t. to he Ni4e1.1t . .1 by a few men ,mblett!i ar.tivtt 1. Vliel tio, all party of Atuericv and Europe. titinclitaintrd with one another and ignorant Of then . relat it e rights. Lot if Mr. thoidas is light, tito , e etoverntrottil a hair all ,e ah-t“lttte of the Itus.inn Ant hey may take evert kind of property in ettiortee, or for any purpose of Inert. or e. without proer.s of law, and without pr..% for eompemitittort The Leeislatutet AIM); nt Le cnmpt„n m I ..Tor. n. . t ler the to turry give tip exety ott . to c. , 1 I that hat+ been dug nt Pike Pest; It rm• authorities of I. fah .Itorthl licett-ti a band , tt marauder; to devroll the emit:rant- 4 , 1,1••••/14 , Terrltelry, their .oi - !reign right to .1,, a inliot he tpieeti,,neti 1 new Territory may be organized. who h South ern men think should be devoted to the eillitire of cotton, while the people if the North tire equally that grazing alone I. tile prop er business to he earned ou t here It one par ty, by accident, by force. or by fraud ha+ n majority in the Legi,lattire. the negroe lire taken from the planters, and if the ocher :•et gains a political i ietury, it is : , ,11 ,, ae.1 'oS a statute to plunder the grazier- of !heir rattle, Such things cannot he done by the I ' edersl Government. nor by the government+ of the Statea ; but, if Mr Lhotgl,i+ is not owl aken, they can ht' done by i he Territorial governniell'. tit it not every way better to wait until the new inhabitants know theni.elvev and one another • until the poli:y of the Territory is tiettlesl Ity some experience, and above till until the great powers of a sovereign State arr regular ly conferred upon them And properly limited. so as to prevent the grove abuses a loch alanv accompany unrest riet te I power in human There is nnotlfer eonsitkration, which Mr Douglea should have been the Iwo ittlit to over look. The present Administration of the Fed eral Government, and the whole Democrat... party throughout the country, including Mr Douglas, thought that, in the CRAP of hau.s.. the question of retaining or abolishing hesty should not he determined by any repre.enia five body without giving to the w hole of tbe people au opportunity olvoting On it 'lt Douglas earned tt further, and warmly oppos ed the eonstitution, deny tog even it , e , because other and undisputed part. of it hind n o t also been submitted to a I..pular t ote. Sow he i. willing that the whole .dsc ee y dis pute in any Te-ritory, and nil I ns=tines that can arise concerntng the right. the people to that or other property, shall be decided at once ity a Territorial Legi.latore. without any submission nt all. Popular ...yereignity in the last Congress meant the Irerdrm ei the people (mill all the rest rants of law and ord. r • now it means a guNernment which shall rule them with a rod of iron It swings like a in , ndultini from One ("leaf • er to the other \lr. Douglas's opinions on t -11t.leet of EKOT ere ign Temtorial ,governmetor :ire very singular ; but the reasons he has produced to support them are infinitely more curio still. For instance, he shows that Jeffer.on one. , in troduced into the old Vottgre.s of the Confed eration A plan for the government, of the Ter ritories. calling them by the name of • New Staten." but not making them anything sovereign or independent State; and though this was ja mere "experimental was rejected by Congress, and never afterward• referred to by Jefferson himself, yet Mr. Doug- las argues upon it as if it had somehow become a part of our fundamental law. Again : He says that the States gave to the Fed. rat Government the: F..ime powers whit* as colonies they had he to J eemeedeto the British Government, and kept thee* which as colonies they ,had claimed for themselves. If he will road a common-school history of the Revolution, and then look at Art. I, me. 8, of the Constitution, he will findthe two following facts fully established: I. That the Federal Government has "power to lay and collect taxel, duties, imposts, and excises j" and, 2. That the colonies, before the Revolution, ut terly refused to be taxed by Great Britain and so far from conceding the power, fought against it ,for seven long years. There is another thing in the article which, if it had not come from a dist mod Sena tor. and a very upright genlTiasaa , would have been open to 140[11411 imputation of unfair ness. He quotes the President's message, and begins in the middle of $ sentence. He pro• testes to give the very words, and makes Mr. Buchanan say . "That slavery exists in Kan .lllB by virtue of the Constitution of the United Stater." What Mr. Buchanan did say was a very different thing. it was this; "It has been solemnly adjudged by the highest judical tribunal known to our laws, that slavery exists in Kansas by virtue of tl*Conatitntion of the Cited States." Everybody knows that by treating:4h° Bible in that way, one can prove the non-existence of God. _NUMBER 17. The arywouittust ud hommuns is not fair, and we do not mean to use it. Mr Douglas has a right to change his opinions whenever he pleases. But we quote him as we would any other authority equally high in favor of truth. We can prove by himself that every proposi tion he lays down in Harpers' Magazine is founded in err( r. Never before has any pub lic man in America so completely revolution ized his political opinions in the course of eigh teen months. We do not deny that the charge is heartfelt and conscientious. We only insist that ho formerly stated his propositions much more 'clearly, and sustained them with far greater ability and better reason*, than he does now Wheis he took a tour to the South, at the beginning of last winter, he made a speech at New Orleans in which he announced to the people there that he and his friends in Illinois acrepted the Dred Scott decision, regarded slave: as property. and fully admitted the right of a Southirn man to go into any Federal hiTttory with hi slave, and to hold him there as Mho,. pr,,erly 111 held. In 1849 he voted in the Senate for what was es)led Walker's amendment, hy which it was proposed to put all the internal affairs of Cal ifornis and New Mexico under the domination of the giving him almost unlimited e• et , lrp,r,'ut r. inehrtal and exerutire, over the vo.rnoi ay;nrt of those Territories. (See 10th t • ung , p t Undoubtedly this was a •train.• lvd j treating sovereignties. If Mr Ih,ntrl:ix i+ t Wit now, he was guilty then of most 81 roczoti • iirlinettion 1. , a- Imo h a sovereign State as any . other Tecrdor). nod as perfectly entitled to 4 . 14.)11N Ihe tight of self-governtneut On the I "AI, Mr. Douglas made a speech at Springfield, Illinois, in which he i•N pi opinjon strongly in favor of the dut , • sml unconditional repeal of the ‘.1;! rag the Territorial govern or tat 4. 1 '‘ ,,, e: l " , rand putting the people it., r e : zelusive jurisetetion of the !Ike a fort, arsenal, doek-yard of magazine lie does not seem to hare had the least ides then that be was proposing to PSI mginpli a •osereignty, o; to trample upea sacred right. of an independent people The report nitwit he tondo to the Senate, ut 15...;. on the Topeka constitution, enunciates a very different doetrine from that of the suga r the article It is true that the language is a little cloudy, hut no one can understand the tollowiug sentences to signify that the Terri torial governments have sovereign power to take :iwny the property of the inhabitants . -Th. sovereignty of n Territorr remattis iu ,„,, In the United States. to tryst ,or ),,,,p/e until they shalt be admitted tars the a t a Shit,. In the mean time they ere ad mit te•t to entoy and exercise all the rights and pt - it of self-government, in eubershmatien • .I,,,tutie, of the United States, sad IN , 111 - 1 , 1 PLACE to Tin fillitIANIC Lvov passed by Con irre,= in pursuance of that instrument. These right. and priiileges are all deprived from the t',nt+nnttlm,, through the Act of Congress, and tuna te exercised and enjoyed in nutueet.ion to all the limitation+ and reatrietiona which that constitution The letter he adder:wed to a Philadelphia nieettn. in February, IK:I.S, is more explicit. and. hariiug some anomalous ideas concerning the nlteynnee of the power and the suspension ~ t it in oust, it 11 clear enough : ••I !vier our Territorial system, it require* 1.0 Wet' to ortlain anti establish eon Kul governments. While a Tat-rite to.iy and -Mould enjoy all the rights of self govtrument, in obedience to its organic law, it E K FAG!: PoWER. The sovereignty ..1 ,1 Territiir) reutaitnii in a tilbeynnee, suspen ,ltol it the l nitil State., in trn.t for the peo ple when they lieeolue a State, and cannot witlylrawn flout the hands of the trustee and t,leti 111 the people e a Territory wit how flit' oti-ent ot Congress: The report whieh he made in the same month, from the Senate counouttee on Territories, is equally and rather more emphatic against his new doctrine -This committee in their reports have al ways beta that n Territory is nut a sovereign pewee: that the sovereignty of n Territory l in alteyanee. suspended in the Ceded States, in :rust for the people when they become a Slate that tin United States, as trustees, eau noi he divested of the sovereignty. nor the Ter ritorN he invested with the right to assume and evemse it. without the consent of Congress.— If the proTiosit ton he true that sovereign power al o n, c an to.tititte governments, and that the rcignty of -; Territory is in abeyance, Stet pent rn the I hued State., in trim for the people when they heroine a State, and that the .overel ; ..ttf , ; int; .1 Le di% e.t.;;l front the hands of the trit-tee attututu the rt , sent ut Congress. it foiloiv... as ~t, moil:title consequence, that the Levi-Litt/re ilia not anti could not confer upon the Lecompt on convention the any treign power ordaining n constitution fog the people of Katesai, in place of the organic lie/ pacQed The day a are past and gone when Mr. Doug lit lea the fiery assaults of the oppositton in the Lecouipton controversy Than it was his object to prove that a Territorial Legislature. far front being omnipotent, was powerless 1•Y'll to nothome an election of delegates to I ',ashler about their own affairs It was as s( tied that n convention chosen under a Ter ritortal law eoul'l make and ordain no consti tution which would he legally binding. Then a Territorial government was to be despised ati.l spit upon. even when it invited the people to ',line forward and vote on a question of the inokt vital importance to their own interests -- Bill ie iy all things hate become new. The Le ..nipton dispute ha. "gone glimmering down the dream 01 thing• that were,'' anilMr Doug h. piodoe,, another ',sue, brand new from the 1.11.1 The old °pinion. are not worth a 1..11 to hi. present position it ttill-t be ~ .144 f I hv oppo , lle pi inciples and reasoning to .I.lil to The Legislature of Kansa-. so n• li t ..ot et; 11:1) hell 1,1 rot horited roll% en (lon ot the people in tomenible and decide what art ..r n eoll.tlittli it they would have, but When it at elle. at their rights of property, it herotnes not only a 1./ver/411n, but a itter e re i gu of power. We have no idea that Mr Douglas Is not perfectly sincere, a• he wa also when he took the other aide. The imptikes engendered by the heat of controver- Py half' dtitco )1011atdifferent times in °ppm site .lii We do not charge it against him as it erase, but 11 is true that these Tie. 4 of lip., inconsistent as they are with one anoth er. always happen to accord with the interest,. 14 the opposition, always give to the enemies 4 the Constitution a certain amount of 'mid and comfort' tint alway a add alittle to tlie ran cortmi anti malignant hatred with which the Abolitionists 1,,,•1rtf the Government of theist countrY. y,,,, t h e 1,,,,, m pt 0 0 0 i,outo Which Douglas made upon the Administration two year's ago done, and the principles on which we were then ..pposeti are abandoned, We are ne longer required to fight for the lawfulnesa of a Terri ori n t election held under Territorial ant horit, Rut another ipome is thrum 'upon up, to "thy ' urll the harmony and threaten the integrity of the party A few word• tnorit, (perhaps of tedinti4 reptition,l by way of showing what that new issue I. or probably will be, sud w e ore lone, We m•i+t thgt emigrant gain' into. Fed eral Territory, reining hi* title to the prnperty which he t.)k with him, until there is .owe prohibition enacted by lawful vt.hority. Mr bouir,la% cannot deny this in the fuee of his