jOORE, PUBLISHERS. 1, 128 gam. Wm. trerralt, pr oarLvAiiiLa , w s s S AFFAIRS. P' l 7Deesaler-21 4 11167 is ;$0 ,•••"-- 1111.- 1 0 Siesta proteeiled is the 00 01 d sr. Dovoues. to retar so a* rotate, to torritorial Tirriterwa i t President No one has m yself that the discussion of the administration has w ith e Senate sod the coon , to tine discussion until the es the slavery clause had ,iI Kan should present her= a State ; but the Senator poretsa] deified a different si proper, an 4 ino alternative ', of the administration but ly sensible of the important n of the eubjeot to be ditt o' sure I never was more anxious never more willing to monfiee or to restrain passion and pre , me dearly tbe pablie good wt ., are -"mated by motives i re too doubt. bas delivered what speeeh against the Kan tistration. No man who itt his ability to make the au of facts and circumstances sea can equal him in this Pa , weir, I make no nob pretea •mu rights, privileges, and re- Mt floor we are equals. FOr oteent difference, I think' mj the two, and on it I eau r'o e tl,l be vile to attempt to an. , i rgnments, and controvert his I to concede the correctness of not I cannot do, and I shall s t different points as I pro speecii of the senator, with all D in bumble estimation, after tincture resting on e. vets no. sitflundation. He Ilse ap• neenmstances with great skill rue . but he will pardon me tbe opinion that, in tone and ' and sound theory, ha:Tract st ton , in generous _tolerance ethers, it will not, in my so much of publics Visor as 'farmer efforts of that :gifted right—and no one will mill tee —bat I do not believe it /icor to precipitate the slavery ody‘oll in the country ; nor whrhe should hoe shown so to to weaken public nufidenee in fat. men of his own party, whom be i r e in power, and who, at this °tit meld the Only facetious of govern maintaining the public-pesos in Thged in ! sibbie should ten with hav t; i se jai views of t The allegation that that able ' statesman bad fallen into err." as to the .meaning of the !me, and the purposes of its te was not in the country at swag , ' can be estimated in no skasu ( beerve no useful purpose to °Autry. True, it amottit *entity 4sll the triseustierr, and chagrin on this ; le, nor in the country, will the even vispeetiat response, when the low shall have yielded to The honorable senator from sr in the country what the peels , denee was ennoeinted, nor when was - made and . yet he slalom tetb thee. instruments, and the r..ir hs their authors I. this Kan bitalttssf comprehension ? crents, it - has certainly re •tplenstion at the bands of - its tnight seem that, so long as he caws to ex plsin what be meant every ie T •if , he could afford to pardon the •de eommission of even - "Nada. re" But enough on this point. It -att. , , shall have persuaded the, to Gutted States that the President esnentuel the subject, I shall recur to • tie hnimble senator say uto if tSe late President, who was mg out rhea the ia• passed, but partly tor step of the struggle that gave it Steertainly understands the qua. l‘ar• 'Ariel:it authority for saying rah his sueeesser on bit Kansas levatatiy differs with the wester anew part of the senater's speech nki, ttbilm 'ankles i broad hoot' rausuzsi so , he has attempted to le Preakezit's view* sustain these liilltaself He in certainly entitled IN tate for hie arse in this IN ; int vu no great differeace Inters "b• It Iti bloself, there was then Me less 'ragbag the Uses , . The Preeid#nt's , ' maim aka fairness forbade that he " .4 '' , l *. pre the 'lightest adoring to, Ls la mac, with i Tie" - even of inetain- sieu.4,-a" of which be felt rettaired to Ter mold he approach the sabre is a 'veil He has tot coma to deal with L zeolp, and'isuot teztisgs which altar seedeaeither aide of the gum" 't out of Kum, i bet be haat peefeered let the present sal the future, end to to 144: ..: !Terilt re. i., , ..te r . T a. . r aku teroihtli•l of judgment, for f o r.-• D''s 1,-. ‘llZ •:' humanity ; but I do rl2 .12 e Lfekt•l degree of patriotism a . ar..-fo.sa to a!: he lam'aid and done "Itt - r-Ar clueatroo The idea ;het be iTraaw art . l elm. 0' the poopt, of 16, ire t,, itopNop spa theta es odirlte t., • .h•seld o .t be, and I troet il nat. Wi a iti T iturter, that be will Dot kat', ‘e any ...the e rest queottem ; said l ''':"--ire t d di. elli.lity of the leers Ilk at .1,, neat ,f the enlisted:le to ' - ' 6 ' 1.4- 41 att.f State government one 'itet '‘t ; , .caul that .elver the D""II, la I lLv orb ht. eim me r ef ,fo e integrity Pre. std ri-aratew a of per pt .. *k r 1 -. tlie eoaator mean by sososiac '". l •'. p.4 , :1. 4 the wimp is nut so !`kltz truer- ' Wes he luau that, IV't Ifhe with the Presides' ?- 7 1 d 411 . rattle O r does be mesa thei tuNti s. harte g iaia awe its ;Kali., ~ far , 4„,e, who &mail and 4 6111 0 1111011$ 7 itt r oot oppNe s the adatisistratios ? ,_" r tl. Note for misoiaerri g ikaiag . 41 - ir 1111 , 1 II if sertaitlY :tot Mill , 10 d i ll L 6ll 4. I lafts4lo. of the •Presitleat what 'he ndiaintstratioa neatgaitas *) 4 tiW Pr , reediags ill Haase% was ter !iia, ,_. trarase e d is the atm." of staking :dos* bed Sisk. goversatea_t preparatory_ 14 , wit ilie Ulm ea 6 &ate nay 1 t Inistater k el a Territory bai the 14 4 t e 'avestift of &hoe to bailee& I P"tic to Una a &ate reemetitittioa : "leati.r, ire so foompii it lisga lith. 1 Viet t om . creptitediii ' - s i i . ' ipleeiv ... . . . _. ....,.. ~4_ • ..,.. 4 „. ~_.. •... u , ... . ,_ , , . ' -mi. • • v . ..., - 4 , , k,..''. • ~, . '. t I i• • Rt.. „, , , , k,,,,,p4 .- ...,,.. , 6 . ,j . v .• . .,, , N - --•'•/‘*. " W. .) • 4' 3... ',./ t ' j. a at:: 4 ;Z .- A 1 A' , :'.4/' - 1 ,I, 4.. : ' ' • ir , . 11111k8 :::'`, i , , ..‘ 41 -. '''. , , 4 ) : zgat:Att,.± , '4` all . Oft t , • Ali NNW I • , 1111114 ' P . .. ..e-44.0 6 .... :. . ..,.. kv.q.. .41. 3 , .1i,,:: !. . ~.. \i c 1. ,. , . -.• ;' ,i : gig' .:I *.. h. , 7 .1 8 :' '::' t . 1111 11:fd :' . I l 'i -1 ali. • ••• : • ,;..• •.. ~ ......„... . , • _ 1 '-`,. Irl •• •, . 1 .1 ••:'. « • 1%,t . CA 1 • X • .V . . r• •K , - - - ;0 , • ~ . • • - . their doier to tfie s ANA of^p4: 4 t "Mad theta to lad rah fac. Alt Bata under ; that Act, oral* * *lbw special relitemee to a issidateeimay almensiatety which involved the whole 1011Atg l Sloe OM*. lion was morally hand I. .wart aitt Otio seinls4 the people on this lasattrw of their Illewoole icy, otherwise the spirit of tureassioo.oll - angry fend would hien :of. lit. They * purpose wo far as Koran is tioneessed._ bold, further, that when the &Ma shall ask mission, the constitution being itepubihma in form, it will not be a 8111504111 'Mit* to deny her admission, and thereby porpotoete thO eon test about slavery, that the ordinary forms of Btate'government, *boo whieh there is Stdditill much coatrooms, ' anOirhick can be chanced at any timic s ital not iris received the essesol of the popular vote ; _ ' that this proems is safest as a general prints, but that, under timeliest terms of the argotic w, it is a question fart.the people and their representatives in convolution, loth whiokthe federal government has now no 44 to deU ; that, if the &devise hall imbed in bed faith, they are accountable to the people who ected them, and not, to Congress or to thew/. ministration. So mash be she views of the ad ministration. Now I undsiztand the eases* from nisei* not dilly to deny nearly all them palliate of the administration sad especially the right at the legislature* Call a oesventiwAr he has mid the lair for that purpose was unglland void frola the beginning,"hut he goes fne , , and Amin tains that to admit the sands* of ail the doom of the administesticM, the Blase nisei not beiedmitted until the question of emote, ono rations, banks and railroads shell be metaled by a' vote of the people, anti herein is the inns. As to the power of the legislature to mill a . .eonvent Lion, it will be seen that the set for wines is direct conflict with the views of Cleaner Walks et, who, in his inaugural address,.6ll that the legislature was "the power codelned for that purpose " But the mostottartling doctrine int volved in this position of the bouorable miaow is tkie assumption that it is the tithe said dray of the inierai goVerainesU to -hoop* between the people of a- Territory and their owe keg/ repot. austatives. ,This newer could, have been a sound or safe practice as to any State' or Territory ; but it is utterly oat of the question under the organic act for Kansas, which has coMmitted all domestic and internal affairs to the people to be regulated "in their own way." rto matter of pleats" to me to recur to the unpleasant different,* between the hateable senator sad myself, she other 'day, touching the eonsaltation of senators at his resides's, is July, ISM), on the policy of the Toombs bill ; bat however disagreeable the task, justice to myself, requires that I should do ep, especially gam the character of that conferenei has been mismiaders stood in certain quarters- Nothing was further from my mind than to allude to any social or confidential iuterTiew. the meeting was not of that character. Indeed, it was semiAkial, and called to promote the public good. My totionee• lion was clear that I left the cosferenee under th'e expressioa tat it had beet' doomed bast to adopt measures to tidal" ~Lanese as a State through die &gooey of eye popular election, and that for delegates to the eonvention. This im. preision was the stronger, becauie I - thought the spirit of the bill isfringed upon the daerriose of non-intervention* to which I had greet swain, bet with the hops of accomplishing a gresigood, and as no movement bad bees made in that di potion in the Tetritory,' I waited this objteettos, sdl doselseisl itesaymors one tlitiMs a few items of testimony as to the oarreetoess of these impressions, and with their submission I shall be content. I have before tee the bill reported by ibe seoskir from 11lieois, nu die 7th of March, 1856. providing fnr the admission of Kansas sae State, the third section of whieli reads as follows : "That tho toUowiq peeptatitteett b, and tin moo aro hereby, offered to the said atonalities of tire pro* at Kansas. whoa formed, for their tree satropottoao 4 1e 14 0 06 08 ; *hints. it atteoptod by *tor etrevention. sal rained by the peon!. at tito abortion tar the adoption alba tenettsden. abii:l bs.bligster, spot tb * Gaited Swot sod the mad Beau of Klaus."' The bill read in plebe by the senator from Georgia on the 25th of June, and.refierved to the Oommittee on Territorieo °moaned the sane section, word for word. Both these bills were under consideration at the conformalreferred to ; but, sir, when the senator from Dlinoiti x re. ported the Toombs bill to the Senate, with amendments., the next morning it did act tain that portion of the third section which indi rated' to the eonvention that the poncintion should be Approved by the people. The words “eted ratified by' tbe ye plc at die electiCo /Or the adoptioa of doe mastication," bad been stricken out. Who struck...these words out, or for_ what purpose they wig omitted, is not for ne to slimier Bat, sir, I cannot be persuaded that it was intended thereby to Ware to the people of Keens* the right to vote out the eoastiretiom..-- I know the senator assumed the other day, that wherever the 'law is silent on the sabbiet, the in ternee is in favor of Itlbliklitos.; bitt, sier examin,stion of the precedent/. beerieg, on tYt point has shown in. that the eosesses of the . proposition ha. ate weight of authority, cad that which he haslaid down , as the rule of pre, eedent, has seldom, if ens *psi*. ladled, I failed to discover a eag le Wigan is whisk the people have voted on thepiipstery eoseti, Lotion when the set of Coerces was silent ma the subjeo).. But, yielding ibis Ojai, Ws le 'the senator to reeouoile this pawn ws , the 'understanding of the suldem he has so elawly indicated on other miessione ? For instate% if it be an knowable emattheakaa, that when no ken is silent ow the subject, the econsfit" stint mint be submitted to a vote of the people, why did the seestor insert the clause which I ban already tiaatc.4ll fit big an of the fth et liar& i sad shy did he insert a nisilar provision is the ja r. for the admission Minnesota?-Thee, arta, .if by striking these winds out: of the bill aft the rebate, from Georgie, its Writ was to no wigs affected, why T ethers they snakes mat Sub, eironte riots sad eisugt Maaea w bi t h l . a that the Toombs hawse to bring Kasai in the tram without a yobs tr the eonstitutioe. Toughly ay imprinting are out. Inflated; that thatonf• feast not be persuaded that the 011111140 41biabiltd secure to thepeople the right to wake set the asot- Whitioa. ki striking tram &a thi weds "waking 'bat pallor astaaaary, air that tioaaaves, tig• would We been Woad to aggeted thetepper , unit, to the people, simply humane the sot el- Nevem mid no soh siting,. But mss age. this point. i Now let ma pronged sika lioreine pertentlenmek of my tamattia.. • ; to :axle , to a proper samhostaadiag et lie subject seder distrowies, it is inesiney to 'fist with a eleit trim of the religion eminesp bestows the 'Ttoritorl of Moen awl ilk _ hes*. govereeest. The arab: i w issibses thee "timf Ifigidatito astbenty do Itertitarraisti este• A i to tightbil rialstfteries= sad also dist aft palgeebell b• Ie! &+a. to b asl sagebste Stair dimessiff ipso time Is ' - safeties I bad !Cirri° iaittl' Aldo?", 'Leis whom jest laird Ina of ;-4 .4'&l i:" ,'-') ,t r ..% , 7,,..;:•,4 ....4,:_ ..!•••twr ‘t, ~ r ~ I~ ~ 'wawa day to ram . So-AC idisost ebonwrans assail at the Varle fat • au. from their tenitedel to a INiks,iplearinneat, as smadikstal far two years pest, a poetise of whom had ettempeed to east kritt io rry WWII\ &Wu in the nest ruse unlantil 'maser; ae (IT imml b t ar a t to take nodes Of the ilelmffraMMlisess al cm the senses ot Oeogrose, the me in 1 to remiss the Unitary into the ileitis .gee with Mr thee meager pcipalatiee. I hold also that there are bet two manes of gmenmeatal authority for %helm* of a Terri tory—tile me is Courses, the ether is theopie she teepee; and that wiles Oqagrem, as in the emil of noses, has onferred upon the people all thelegislative authority with which they weirs limited, the people are entirely sitressrsined in the eedi Latiar of iumientleas of government, by Constitution_ of the United States. It meept a ,no oripowoet;thes, to show that the people of Kansas have a right, seder the organs low, to adopt any measures they *ay deem proper to Amigo their form of goverment- that is doing this they hue a right to delegate Chair sovendigi authority to repreeentatives to say event they piesei--to the ezteat °sly of wpm* fouls of tee ratification, for *bait supervision, seespieses, ratification, or wile mums of amides sad adop . tiN a conatitatioa and State goversemet for &daemon late the Usies; thst - whererthere is so limitatios is the 4)0101ml - rut el authority, tile hates menace of power say be atiweissol; that the sooereignty of the people is inalienable, sad am* revert to them after having performed the fanotime for wiaele it was delegated, sad that therefore the people areas all times clothed with enthorityto alter and amend theirforms of d ascot; but se hold that the people mane. = their soveteige authority to stake laws for their owe amend enjoyment, is to discard oar whole represesittive system, and the prudes wider it sines the government began. And to my that laws so made, unless the popular sense is taken apes them, are oppressive or muitiegin authority, is to Is; down a ride which would require the submission of all the statutes to the rote. Indeed, on this principle, the Dec= of Independence, the Bill of Bights, the Con siltation of the ileitis! States, might be called acts of oppression, for neither received the sane. ties of a popular vote. I maintain that the people of Kansas bare the right to make a constitution and a State fryers meat, that Coerce, cannot participate in that mirk, either as to as subsumes or form; that whilst Negress might attenipt , ,to pre.onbe how the people should do this, it would be opitimal with them whether they adopted that way or pursued some form of their own. Congress may invite the people fo make their government in a prescribed mode, but cannot require oomplimee, except that Congress could refuse the Territory admission as a Btati4 bet this prooseding of the people mut be in meordanes wish and ander the direction of the kiwi of the Territory, it mast be Limo ir spring - of law, and out of a spirit of rebellion, as is the rue of the Topeka mama tion I do cot oodeteteed the honorable senator from Illinois to bold an enabling act to be indis pensable in all eases. Be esenot hold this in the face of' the numerous precedents to the eon. wary; but he oertalnly does naistain that is the eases of Kansas, all that the people have dose shall be disregerisi, Ida beeline they have not dune, it seemitng to law, but for the reason that, in his °piston, they have not dose it in the right wog Isis& for the wool the eestsmi as re - Witetwer re wigipr at we - twemet question that suggests itself to the to:nd te, what has become of the great Kuria* Nebraska law; that new charter of rights to the people of the Terntortes, which deelare• that it is "not intend • ed to legothte elarery into soy Territory,cr ex. elude it therefrom, bat to leave the people pen hotly free to make their dwindle institutions in their owe way." Is it to be abandoned, and thus summarily proonuneed a failure? Be that as it may, he cantos catmint* me that the people have not the right to make their domestic bolsi• talons in their own way, until he ewh so mock of the orspaaie act as says thy aW do this pre cise Itha w sa oottAtrred upon the people not only all thepowers Congress poisoned wader the Oessti. tones as to the kind of institution which should be mode, but also, and jest as Etiremly, as to the mode, manner, • aid way of making them.— The senator proposes to reject what the people hen done, and enter operations sew grants of ' power; an d yet, if thets is any One thin dear its all this Masses qwestion it is, that as to the load of iestitutions tin peg& shell ban, sad doa say is which they shall be ends, they 51- reedy have complete authority. It is true that Osmoses still has the power to my that Basses doll Ilk* cease into the Union; heal canon see boss that body can eosisrany adortdosal satisseity se to the eny in which she Ibe prepared to seine ia. I wilkoot be see ' when, say that the (tendon betweeerthe • and asset* of the Kassel bill was, wbe th e pimple et sim tbe whole Union, set* their repress' *selves is Cesgrens, ehookllegilbeill ( Is 6121 ° 8 7 *the rentihwy—we one ever gaining Abe right to • es any other doesetie isiiitstior-er the questies shoed,' be dealt with by the people of a Territory in thaws way, tinseo teed npronsstetless of their ova Jeolvides.— This question use settled as so other qualm hid nee bees settled befere—by the mosennemes et all the departneste of goeersast, by Cow- FIN, by the szentin, by the )udsentry, sad by 1 dm people at the polls. Mod, Mr. Possitistat, I zet= de s to great ameaseasest wins I beard sessilbar easume, tirl Mbar dap, that this people of Bassos, meting under his ban. ed past at kindest beeline," essid set, is the tatter of mein a preenneset * tioies, ries shwa the Amity et espplitases to One= to ratify their irregular and usultheelsi pew etwoliage, bet ea the grand, ens, tint Ind they bad dose was itself wisely issholieedle, but because it bed sot been dose in the right my. The swan are seys they shall le tide thing 'is deer ova way." Will the meta sky the way they term resbreeed was us the osy or the peerlist Irill he cost id, la the tees of hie Elprieglisld wank to which I shell anode ?morn pailligayiliesatier t that the people hove WI bad a fair oppownsity to molleet their will Omagh the ballembst; or, ifs pieties of this mites is de this, whew Waited, 1111111181119 dory an Istensiesi to disregard their ova Wei hos, that the respossibility is est their ems? Nods. ty What* When* dna, is de ♦ MSS at the esseeariew defessiver I limy is Ws the eseaser'saight se se boiled the 44 end setherised septet et ills lees Cespesser set kessrlier Wild with the rite sof midst itot is lesess, Other ea to their alterarser two mods et tormatiow. Me eilittes et Cite peasier as to this sewer sew dreensenlwil by as Ceerstiesdas way, end oboe as INSIVINAIIMMO their assist sod AM iso assosst shell ens' e, lima be a "swiss her the jodisissy. and set ;or Oserirew; age se the wire tar hest illierrie two ohms beid, ea M e ws es, et fterrset essweigewp. the pee* slyly es Ours, tar ad. toilette* ass Pm% dim. tin If of UMW within* ammo* ohms by ftisfia is a hod old ado* orsouri voile Whir kepi isms el ths erg ewe, is limo Aldys of ow issossotiso t baskst Illsidolliiiebeemyysedss Atogsse *lbw eal s=dso "di ssip t s l' a is Ili 4.'' , Oa .w r ERIE, SATURDAY- •4* zs • - =I 21 io A. 'WAX eair! -16 . -11 tdisnesdiertillea0 040 l 1 11 1 d011* of Ali liejsfe r Eciiiitetit riillyttmety . fitehe ill Se 'a tepaitift Ohm im. weer* Mist, to be . 'fa Vte 1 1 16 eTIJW ' but which is too volumjeows hr uirelt the provost ossaion, ii, Witty skid, clear on thii OW.' The honorable eenstultailiresnrted to musty smirovltita to sustain Itla reds poildoh; but I am not disposed to meat to sew or AM idod to sentrovert their. Indeed it Weald be hardly hir i in Amok as. of noit:infereetitioo- I bad supposed that, itft• the as of bis now doctrine, old - relies raid bil firgeetak, Oa_ , s iket we Were to ham a DV plain systole ter the Territories, to wit: that people from SU AO Slates *hold tatadoim tha t„ with all their property, • skates, and legislate for, themselves up to the sionsamallowsbin by ibt Oonstitaiise of the United Ilium, without revision oe inter femme by Congress; and that, is their own tints and is their own way, tie; should be allowed to prerre for sod sat adminsicie .as States. Be. sides, it is nonmed dills& to ten wetly what prosedsats of itgroea, &Mesa and stake. on, woad mob on this es WsW I I haws taxed my brain to the utmost to ash • fair deduction !kont this eomplieited eimiteitimil lad it ended. iserdilleali to show decisive Itothority for soy - of the paha. involved. I that the States of Maine, Michigan, Vermont, - Arkeneu, Ten. messes, Te2llll, lowa, ificeideointflalifornis were admitted late the Unitewither i Sis called Gmbh' Seta; Ohio, Indium, pi, Law Walla, Illinois, Alabama, Ilikswari, Arkan sas, gams in ander., seta of Ctingres; and that Teisnoot, Ohio, ICeirtneity, Tensaw% Alabami; inteewri. Arkansas, and. Whooowsin, according 4% sr to the best loath 'ts I cap and, mote into the Union under eons Woes which had not been submitted to the po 'vote.,„,Certain States, under enabling ants,i ka bave submitted their oonstitutions to a vote the people, ma others have not. There mess base been no uni t fortuity of action Do the pert of the seer States or of Congress. The preached* satablishael by statesmen are still mom &Jima. Brea the honorable senstor from alllioois does not seem to have bald the mme view, at all tines on the questions seder tromideratits. At pres ent, he doubts the polio', of admitting Kansas, bemuse her teethe oesm4tation was not submit ted to a vets of the pee* yet Le voted for an enabling art for Kansas, which did not require that say part of the constitution should be stab. misted.- He denies the authority of a conven tion of the people of the Terltory of Kansas to make i State government, even under the en larged powers oedema' by his own favorite law of 1854; and yet tie voted to admit California u a State, the having mad a eithatitution and State government without even the color of authority from Comrece, the incipient steps of which had 'their origin in the orders of a military commas. der. I make no charge of inconsistency against the hosomble senator, and surely none as to the porky of his motives. I Mate these things to show the difficulty of this *Abject; but I do soy that when the senator pitied up the charge of ineonsistancy made opium the President the other day, by his oullsegnsoa the Michigan sod Arkansas eases, asS when afterwards replying to a similar talisman againsabiaself, be mid: “I am mot Goo et those who bow that they have never chanood their oplakm," HI do not know that a math has ever o'er my bead in which I havems ' some opinion to some degree," be might to bane extended the same charitable rule to the .IPresitletit. hat t o eold, stem,ertepAmgmentig, sit Snow Move m matter cn erwiliDniming Welt govern ment, that dosttenent, though it may - not be illegal, is irregular, and does not rise above the importance of a petition for redress of grievances. How will this sentiment be relished by the proud men who have gone to Bantu (Nisi in p arts of the Union believing they had been vested with the "great principle of the self government?"— They will scarcely realise their new attitude But it is said they can petition Congress for redress of grievances. When was• it pretended that individnals or communities could not tine Congress fur redress of grievances? In God's name, who ever denied that night? Is that aU the people have gained by non-intervention? Is tkat the full fruits of perfect freedom in limas? Is that what we have gained in this long strug gle? If it be, then I must easiest I have never understood the question; nor do I believe the people have understood it If the right to make beatitude's in web a way as Congress prescribes and send them to Ocusgreee in the shape of a pe. titian for redeem of grievances, is all the people •hase pined by soneintervestion, with the moral say legal right in .pgrees to send that petition beck for alterstion ' ongh- the ecoostitution be meddles's in form, then the senator's law of 11454 is a bald imposture, a delusion,nod a de eeption—"the word of promise is thrier to be broken to the hope"--"the that beatnik' the nos." Bat het es pa llet° a sore practical view of the eabjeet. My milk reileetioas au the daegereas seatroserq In Nunes, oonaidesibi the sources and the abeneter of the strife, slushed my mind even Were I because • member of this body, that the surest, if not the only way, of ending this bitter sectional straggle, sal quieting the asestry, was to admit Kansas as a state at the earliest ponied practicable, therelT 4amaserib. kg all eoneern about her affairs etthk lief own Bolts, when the differences, wiatiiverliey might he, maid sot fail of preempt and legitimate adjastateat. Entertaining these PsTreoas and views, I was rejoiced to pensive that the people st Kamm bad determined to call a convention to form a oosstilattion and Stats .gseerevaent pre rngeey to wholienem into the Wee ea a State. Thill propriety aid cabal of movement for a eaeventkm; melee direction of the territorial laws, had bees preurptly recognised by the Presi dent la Ide butructious to Nemec Walker, and then spilt is his Oinneetiest letter. Governor Walker did the same thing is hie hest address, and urged the people to the perforwasee of rlbeir linty ander the law, in die bikonies aliphatic terms; tae nih• iii. at e zaiins, Om n levied by setbotig re lows Is do mdse is tostisilMft= owl hilly is tae elessise of lobos". se Items a eseetten time sell ilsete tpasoosses. De his bas pldstostd, its satire tewmptiete beetles 'Ma' It snob& ts his people Os Apo of naves; Ist tt verist sorsa sits yartipssesaee et tbesboy. Themeeliesti soft obis VOsoriestswer. sea Aiwa MO AWPlONfteat preeeile Obeys ebeelesies hest SIM eve etas •t_tlkkag est t w. eetboise tire sae lib Sets ta set Fifits4 II IMO sestisgussy. soil the 'bese ts*. site as nosh bassi easier tbs iso esti Outboards% Aloe dose is me howl et slaloms.* tae set of tbe is. jaft el Obese Mi. 6 rm. sa ONO sU liol pardstpe• We is do elesties. OelbeseSse ea woke nee be velar. Oa. sellieseseursmos emit be iisstestiemble, yea veer essilVer detrains smelt resets as tie eft eitareause ' "Tee ebaell Oil seessi• yestssives. my filievrttisees. ISIO is needles dot yes essy. by • smilhoppiet .is, dein& tae settlioltils if 04 seeithede& ' Afil4lo meet siabses Is severs t yen tba Otsoise el tire gook mead tellasol AO" ad hilinfor Ore sae atistosisa is Oa swore souse dr maw et the people ro I love es Isola se MOO* the Appeessfeep et that betty. I ...set issibe. baniven the woos the% vial dept se this asloest. lbst wits least Oa Illowil of =isili , s l s e ei • Oloidll7 Os Sweeties o l s WNOt ege rim .l le To. *Was 4l t [ 'Petit is otalletlbe iessesOso is eat ispily ellisk sod Met Abe dealliorillast bur lims&y aid MAT emaista. ei.: The terNlarld'lseielaseve bt tee pewee eollAmed tar Obi pep se by Os C..i ar his MOM assite4 us/ la sopestscit yen miss deepobitrio it the &Wised are net blesttitsseOes *OM Sae bah, IT =sr: tatsit NOksithis essplima bi Is Illybellniesepow alsioNigehnibr 60 Wiwi Obill ii• litiaos. Ilialt awls icr Simr. Amato% iiiittlitrlitliftist ate wit Intmeiliiss bow lot -'.. &sibs pmerritilleTisithirrogsa. I gie see hats sot tin eestrOweeß sod\ I Os Mbar ossilin assist tor emit boil is see till a Ims, waft maid* fininot ..t .~.- =MI ~f e , a j6kN Ado , 23;\1858 MIS --- lifri : , , !hostas, sailpt , tlia lastrwetions if - OA Pr .' I "ea jolted* hattritseet the .:. - . . POP 4 .'L I 4 ,-,.. isritagi .:.. 4 .i.tit. twindii 4.4 . - • , immiesibitas a esseesdes ke Piro a oreaelltatiesorddra etuithisispidlleadea tit <harem fat sdilliadilla • it. Wu tbe Caine. That set.ii imb ialp reiredied aa .. . th .ii , ely bet of midlide of votive for troe lkia. all presiding sigsgasst are melded. • Is lit do set 'awl be alletied to bade prodded fie a fa Me il s te ad We asloreasies et WI will •1 12 %mpie throng! the ilell =be may be awes to t dim is the eased rosirsetbia. , 1 Jos a deeds, however. that. is moor to avoid all pilaw ihr redseesee to die poseorial °pandas et Ude its 4 die owersodow , `occur la, is eons fiterovide fer s plittlag the gresediketnritin Ilimillow leg their 'mikados; which liar oco bog est • she people lywasse. to It fair vote at all the 'Waal boai imis i r Ch reddest, tit tilll flattery, with leery pleads naiad fraud sad elitism's If the staatitaties be thin Issas& sad tha %smiles et dillruses time inabiaitted bide, deolalos of the people, I Weis that rabies will be adisitted by Coatroom wittiest delay se ose of the 'over sip hooks of the diaarksa Votes, sad the tonitorial aathoridee will ho isosedisudy sitimbasts." These quotations are full of strafing ideas, which inviteatteation at this thee. The first is the fal=ition, by both the governor and reretary, of the validity of the law calling the convention; another is, that the ceavention, when foriamiorauld haves right to make a con. atitution sad entunit it to a vote or not; and this is one of the reavous of the governor for urging the people to attend the polls end vote. "Those who adonis from the right of suffrage," says the =, witutbutise those who do vote to act ." He oar "the convention-4s legally catiled,”m"beeinsi the territorial legislattire is the power ordained for this purpose.' But what is most remarkable; and most to the point, is, that, Mr. Stanton indicated, at that early day, that the submission of "the ' great distracting question" every) was all that would be necessary to give ~ E ansaspft -ft and the dignity of a State Ile even then indicated, most , pointedly, the policy afterwards adopted by the convention. The Senator from Illinois, in a speech deliver. ed at Springfield, in his State, on the I ' ,2th of 1 Jane last, said: "Kassa* is alms* to speak for hermit( through bet deb,- gsg•• aammoblird is ocisseatioa to form a froastitation pre, panitory to her odeaisaloa late the Vaion." -Tho law soder valet' her &Ares are shoat to be sleeted is be lined to be jut NA it is Ito objoets mad prosartooo; With all this mass of authority to sustain them, the people of the Territory, or that* of them wbo were willing to sustain the laws which the President, Governor Wilkes" and the senator from Illinois held to be proper and binding, pro ceeded to make a constitution and State government. But those who said the laws 'Wald oot 'be obeyed refused to Participate in this work, a nd from - this spirit of in subordi nstiou, in iv judgment, all the subsequent ohs• chief has arisen. They would not attend at the polls, and vote for delegates to carry out their will in the convention; not because they did not wish to have aßuste goverunsent—for the same man had attempted to erect Kansas into a State is the most ifingular tend nautborised mode— but for the that they bad commenced re , hellion vital, the laws, and were detennind to waist in itl And it is, in the pain, these very men who at this moment are Tlamorinit. most about oppression and usurpation, and about sa cred rights, Widish they indignantly refuse geezer ciao. Governor Wsdkse labored ssalossly to bring these win to the performance of their duty, es is shown in the entrust I have given frogs his address. But they were joined to their idol— the Topela fares. The consequence was, that there was virtually no contest for delegates, and oily about twenty-two hundred votes were pol led. But still the convention, on the theory of , I. .oMcat w hos etc authority of nearly the whole population to make a constitution and State government. This , large class of the people who neglected to vote for delegates became clamorous against the convention, sad even assembled at Topkes At the avowed purpose of putting their own bogus government into operation I-was in the Territory for some time prior to and after the election, and speak from personal observation as to the spirit of insubordination manifested by some. *speeding itself in bitter denunciations of the President and Governor Walker for attempt ing to administer what, in the chaste phrase of the malcontents, were the bogus laws of a bogus legislature,'' averring that they would have no form of government from the con vention gotten up under these laws, so matter how perfect it might be; that though that' "bogus etravention!.' should submit for their approval their owe Topeka eonatitutios, tLey would spurn it with contempt. This spirit was persisted in to the end. Governer Walker, as must be obvi ous to all, was sot and could not be vested with 1 any authority over the subject of making a State ! government- His functions were to administer! the laws, and perform the executive duties genre ally, which he did discharge with great ability., But beyond this, he could not go. He had no! eonuexioo with, agency in, or responsibility for,: the work of making a oonstitntion. In the* exercise of his dieeretion, and with the itttetition' of doing what was beat, be had at first advised!! the people to vote, but all would not do so. He also urged the delegates composing the oonven.,l den to submit their work to the approval of thei people, holding this to be right as a general l principle, and especially necessary in view of thdf small vote east for delegates. But-the convert tioa submitted only the ar ti cle relating to slavery. That it ought to have submitted the constitution in some form to give the people the right to judge of its seems) perm, I agree; and, se a citizen of Kansas, I should barn insisted on this polies ' butt I should certainly have desired a vote on the inettin of as proposed by the late maven , I j - mon, from all other subject. in pre fermium to a vote on the constitution u whole( For its action the convention has been Mort roundly abused; and I do not intend to oozes . t• its defence, for from marry of the details of Its proceedings I dissent. Bat it would not be can. ' did to contend that there was nothing in the bearing of the gamin of the oonvention to inip psi it to fully exhaust, if not to abase, the ao• thority with which kW been clothed. The motet 's:it women °film violent leadersof the republican party, who,in my jraeat, neverstesired tobsve the oontraveny sett InC was calculated to do this. The deslarktiom that they would cot judge of the merits of any form of government it might Mahe, bat would reject it, if possible, at the polls, lay rearms mischievous and rebellious, was also cal coasted to produce such action. Nor in it esnd ' to eontead that this clam of politicians in the Territory, and Odors out of it, when they dwilt Is the itaportasts ot asitmisisg the mastication to the test of pepatar favor, had rebate, to dies pate, about nsi banks, earporations, eounts, , seel:" fetnetions. The queation—the all- , and the only qessetion--was, iViii;;;Ts a hes oe slave State? I believe - armor _Walker vest molt west and yet am am site threatened to rebel on his as Temeba, and who pit him through the eirentar emsehisin of Kamm porgies, wirer would imve met him them use aseatiommi the same of *me mss, Awl it not has for the quoins el slavery. Al* mid " mustitatios,ts _ is true, the idea eta 'swab mimics had sot then - bees raked; bat theyether question as their Weds that ' i rket Seises should be a free Awe this brood land cis he hem tetrh=lifilioas sad w d , 714,.fssiAss tea pm& at Kansas aa stiattio is ;.as krs, by lir V W Ma 0111 tisie will. They • . lIMI ha* another to-day, by voting on se itnat• of theitionatiuttios as relate" to that subjs.'. After it! bathas been said. about fraud and triskm his& this issue, the great seersimtles= camtot be denied, that the people of late had two opportunities to make her i See Shiite. lam atrire t sir, that the registry of toting at .the election in June was very definitive; but thqt was no reason why those who were register. edohould not vote. That complaint s however, cannot be made as to the vote on the shaver, article, for no registry is required, and every white citizen above twenty one years of age tan vole. I regard the registry as very- imperfect; but I cannot understand the picture presented by Governor Walker in & recent letter addressed to the President. lie undertakes to show that leis' than one-half of the voters were registered Sake the delegates were elected, and yet the records show that over nine tbousaod names were regis tered in Jane, and that the whole vote for the emagreesional delegate io October last, after as exciting contest, and a large increase of papule was only a little over twelve thousand.— Mew this mystery is 14 be solved.l cannot tall, btlt,the statements are singularly contradictory. What my action may be on, the question of sehniisiow, should the new eonstitution be pro. vented; I cannot precitWily foresee The ease is not yet fully developed No man can tell what a day may bring fords in .Kantrate. Those who are to condom the election upon the slavery article have been vested with large and dangerous power', the use of whieh they may, if they choose, abase to such an extent as to forbid the recognition of the result, whatever it may be: But if that election he fairly conducted, I shall feel required to vote for the admission of the State either with or without shive.ey I 'should do this under the firm belief that it is this. best mode possible of pgttiog an end to the existing strife; for, after all, when we look at this question practically, it dues hot involve half so much as some would make us believe When the State shall have been admitted, Dot only slavery, but all other in stitutions, will be subject to be changed and 're modeled by the ptople They can, if they please, do this within six months after Kansas becomes a State, and enjoy the same opportuni ty, whenever they desire it, forever thereafter Why then contest the question as though the in stitutions under which the State may he admitted were to be, like the laws of the Medes sod Per sians, unchangeable?. I know it is alleged that' the constitution cannot be changed prior to 1864; but that view cannot be maintained Without discussing the terms of the schedule, which situp. prescriln s the mode in which the txutatitution Olin be amended after 1864 4 the bill of rights If conclusive on this point.. It declares The nsode of voting has also been a-subject of Criticism The honorable senator maintains that pie elector must give his sanction to all the other 'provisions of the constitution before he can en. joy the oppertuvity of voting fbr or against ipt aefa y. This is clearly a mistake. The ballot, to constitution with slavery,' or "cousthation :without slavery." involves only the slavery clause It is simply the question of whether Kansas shall be a free or a slave State, under the ,nenersl form. agreed upon by the cotuttitution.— IThat this was intended by the convention is made I - clear by its proceedings. if they have been given to lnie scrurately by a gentleman front Lecompton. intortuatiou is, that, before the a.foptine of the form of voting, the sense of the convention 'Rid taken on the proposition to submit the whole ~constitution a. vote of the people, which was Idecided in the Iterative, and never reconsidered. Scibsequently, a motion to submit the slavery .article was agreed to by a majority of two votes. 'This view is clearly sustained by the procla mation of the president of the convention, in which he 'aye the vote shall be for or against the introducti m of slavery into the Stine of Kansas The voting hail be by ballot, :and these vot ing for Kansa4 as ... a star, St a re ebsU vote a bal lot, with the words .'constitution with slaver'," and those voting fur - Ka:oils to be a free ,Slate shall vote a ballot with the words "constitution with no slavery " It most be evident that if it had been intended to take the sanction of the elector on the whole constitution, the ballot would bare been "for"' the coastal/aims. The honorable senator, and others who take this view, will be the first to deny, when the oonatitaation is presented to Congress, that it •bas the steed= the people: But the honorable senator has labored to maintain his position by confounding the slavery question with the ordinary institution* of a-civi lized community. Notice the extraordinary character of the 'following extract from his lsts speech : Si?.,•' what w oald this boasted principle of pollster soy. 'Mists hats boil" worth. if it applied odly to the amps, sad did sot •steed to the whine sae De pes thislv.tr• could bare armed the sympathies sad patriotism et this broad repstilie, and bare curbed the presidential oleeties lam year le the foes of a tromoodoas opposition, se the principal of 4r:teethes the visit of self goversanest to be negro iseetios, bat thorns it so to ail the rotatiosts af feeti4 white emir • • • • "Sir, I kayo spelt too wash etrangth sod breath, and eiGnsey, too, to 4Stalitish this groat principle in the popular heart, sow to see It frit tered away by bringiag It dews to so erception that ap plies to the nose% and doss not •stead to the bonsat st tilll white wen." • „ • " All poi,tieat poorer it inherent in the people. (of Lau ) aad ..Al irre, Ko. ersunitau are founded on their roatheei ty. and inotitur.e.l f r tbe.r benefit. sod tatrefore um, have itt all (1111<.11 an iouliea•b:e and ioderzai le right to alter, refiain. or aboLteh their forte of pre of in Oa* mas her as they may tank proper.- Now, Mr. President, can it bepuisible that the senator from Illinois expecteilloAntake the Senate and the country believe that,the people of Hansari are indebted to the Amines organic , act for their right to the enjoyment of life, liberty, and property, and the ordinary insti tutions" of a civilized conamnaAy? , He moats the idea that the great principle of popular sovereignty shouldbe "frittered allay by bring ing it down to an exception that applies' to the negro, and not to the white man." What ever he may mean, his language is certainly calculated to make the impression that the Kansan-Nebraska bill settled SOON dispute about the ordinary institatioas ot_goveremeet in the Teryitories. I cannot agree, sir, that that view is either candid or allowable. Who; ever denied The rig* of thepeolii to quake ' their ordinary inatitatiesi? When was that question which divided parties, or sleek tut Union to its foundation?. The simple truth that the question of slavery, and that i was involved and, eossidered in passing, tke Kansas- Nebraska ball. It us to setts ' • dangerous sectional feud that tin doctrine of uouittterreatiou was adopted. The repeal of the Missouri line has in ao way alrolusd. right of the people to hare all other demean initiations tither earth or south of that. liss sad when, the oats: mkt . ulest de boasted principles of pordar sovelegaty would haws 6p worth if applied only to the usgeo l and "sot to the white sun," "be uteri a esstuseut which is unworthy of the snidest. What part are oegroes to have iR the govern. meat of Kansas, or who se "roping to resins* . airy of the rights of the whits . man, tales it he himself, when he denies them the • tto mks ' a governmeat without the ems* f I know how presumptuous it is is at to th with that senator ; bet I amass foam, to bey that the question et railnada,vosem,ll: l , B Z Wittig* functions, ass, vas i$ say Rey la the "peal of the Numetri Has, and the inter nottiss of the destriss st asnestmwoMisn ;as" yet, dkr, the susiku leas stedemaded des - of alsepery, mid dint dMs mintlit =Mg ME iclt.swatattott EMI isa saiispatoi rkgbio,t. es, sets leas Abe espe r oc =ma • Ito WI Inse t lislvc Ad is 4.7iSe 11 1 001,11 —l ' • 4 - 16‘14 1 •704. dash is says: gat no ask *. is lasi down so slat the raids sea vse• aril! owe a daces sr sad*. socia•vm2,w, . mil awl ilettriili tits thisidni wiser ' awe tow UAW ihri toilltim-1 04.16 ) 211 r4 108 -" yeah.. ibaceassitsuas tleit.wiwitowaLf r . fser:;ii assoen 1fi5iami,,,,••••401161907,‘ • _ This, Mrl ilreakints is OUP. Y I have . *mdy'shown,the cr, - asensip that the sicuilor , ,ce, to Do to epprov,ei eaSsigettkoc ell*" a- NOM Ar • vote for at *pleat gamy, I sew Iptipp*k.ln show has the asnatcir's plan, would' le Fife 41 to nail; the suss ohjsrelooei insists that the ecsiedtnitioa„ se r a Sheds` , ishonid be submitted. So, rlpireo.• - 11 " • been *b . * with the slaver' ;dodo in it, aid ha t. had oat his a at die polls as .11 pro slavery toso. g at gcs,ecoeseicruioa, fly , Sys that he cannot approve...Of the other punk ions He says, "I wish tojeKeivella t but ip DOi possible that I cosi sciallow. 104, =arm , ' aa.konim, ficrgioAkalt,..lL: positions la this OClPSdild39lLetptrest estiowdy do th is; and If ors birch , of right to establish slung to this,• erricesy."— This suppose be appeared ciplit as a gwe , 8640. man; the ecestitutioe is the wean isveryepeop table to hint, and he is eseeedlogly mum co approve it, but it contains the provisions meg sizing slam, ' whisk men'* apprailei again be is driven frost the polls- It will dist . ' be seen how easy is is, to esusplaiiii bet, Luip grail the senator guard spate& the repetition if 'sr -"rat*, seder as; law Conflolgelf". Pie Certainly, be Till, Tot propose to prescribe ill, the action of the peeploowaveothe Tits titO Dever boat deoe,,sod saver olio be dune. As:, truth.* that the swami* in his sedoe.,-ti-teein: tale what he oonotives to be a jest position, jlty been driven into the nag of abstain. techni c tier, and, in more instances teas on. is, this dig.. ensaioe, bee dwelemspoe alleged wrongs iet tba proceedings of the Leaolopton oonsention, against the repetition of whit* be can in so way protect the people In another part of his speech the honorable senates ressarks: -sea/ isasi assesaissit sae anal I bear from sao Moo. Mot as the nat of Thsaaasbar. lan said *as Pedigo that min Pug It all sisia.ant •toto am the wises' dose Saw ma id Pedigo slags shay Is a imp was Tlsorepay be a Wt. wisdaisOinsi." flallikbar Hero, egad, is isdilloolt. te. determine whet be mesas to allege. Be says "there may be a large totwretunted." • Him hieguagearoidd seem to imply an imputation upon somebody follower connected with the eleettioe. Upon whom is is - to fall? Not , upon his friend, John ertheeest, whom he has *adorned to one of the tispistiisoss in this city es a syttby, and migrates& seas for surveyor isseral. Fres whose; they, is the fraud to easel No deputises& of siiir gents. • Meat here will have as epportuaity to do and sews would esslimmit. Then, when is it to be promised? By those who stesdoss the eke tios is the Territory? Row thej. omy saki cannot say; bit if times are se honest moo is Kamm to hold the alsetion, them the seastor eassoi - FrVe s fair eleeties seder his reposed remedy; Woes, indeed, be bee senoluded that the repetitious@ out there have more heosity than his own party friends. He will be stow to my, however, that mom who hate resisted the lase fruit the beßloothg, sod ao often incurred his just indignation for their folly, are more reliable than the demeeratie party. I can only say that, if be adobe this, be has changed his estimate et the elisseeter of both parties within a brief pal - od. Bat, be this as it may, the senator has is masted as evil whieb be asset reme ! fy. Thee, aria, be says: .1 este me bee Met vote we, eteaA I iasi k for raw. lei that it mill be visaed we I &lab I bar* seem errs* Le the lasi three dye to oaks it esitaiga tbsa. is wilt be go tuna oet, w isallor low the vete nay reams rLaagi. ter.] Here is a mooed iodides of satieipsusi fres& I bean' with pain sad regret these words.. they fell from the aerator's lips How shwa he kmey that the slavery article will be. "wonted NM" no matter - bow the vote say stand? Wiles bad the senstee sees within three days to form this , conclusion upon bin stied? If helm kootriedir of • scheme of hue fraud to Amu toe people, oe to impose oa Congress, I knoitilli is the mi n ts alevelop it; sad Whew se developed, se man will go farther than myself to punish the bleeders_ If be somet do this, then why audit iantall? Why, is skis uabappy rammer sod elliensive spirit, eel imputation upon time who lists been and us mill, his Meals? I ant readily per. ,eeiee—and it is that, which I west regret--how such a seutimeut him so high a aware* is Wow Wed to males diseouteut and clamor about real or imaginary mouse when the residtliholl bate 'been aseertased. It lo w virtually an Wm. Lion to unloosing& to mistime the strife. The heseniiis sassier, a lii dilirss elute to render the &bap el the Latempust soaves tios odious, bee eves dwelt on this sisals of the repo's& esestitatios is hmiie isig the aigistios of \ fres-.egress to Kamm He •vite se did 'sough to admit tau the . usetitsties State easteUeel the must ishibitioes vs& view all know the, the Topeka Outs. b! ilmpalse rm. have isurseud the legislature to p • lew to the use 'east. Bat the' oesator should 4 have dose "the Lesseeptos eoseeni," u. has phenol to term it, the teetieThe to say, that es this pat, at Wai l it had sosikeited to the perdu\ vii 4 forked parties hates spokes stains tits minis doe of bee swots. .Niu bee he eves s taid as that his satins Stets, Vermont, pulled tins peat usresre of 'grout eyes the pie*, if wen it be, et Weft adademea for the Mate beton the people haat voted es the eartfastioir, sew that his &she Dias into the Usies sla va as asseiiag set lalf so red as the Swum Nebraska lan sad dot da siamtlitom, sin lw sei. mimeo that 184$, set themsaagis far theists esti" of Ruses by sabstittUir a you as iii - holdisg a part of Ole ixoestitatieu frok a veer the pee* • - TIM usasior trill pitied so lee Makin a little tektiber Iwo his views. It as affirm ‘44ind st as the 12* of Jew issl,tiimobi* Huns slim he saw - k saint as gest I bower SOW* bat drib smaidirl ammaslas sekssisptithas, ragsOs UMW' 'lthe leat gam t be 'Yob idepies wee alma arts to Nattorillir Oa MU afro at propmaa . tlw 4 • 'Mao! alt is: 1? r ?Ws., aisdkailmi is Is tati 4 4 4 / 8 4 Ow vssals 411 0. 41 14. 1 tr totoalL eat tam Apia .111 boat jags Eat orpolimtpr nisi swab set seises* is Ilksr pkolCsieisisS Ills ask and aseisalls nipioalifirodwaell 'Wit/ft** aft rodiramoilissitost amok" air ea Vslllollloase 4easusses laajims . t at, tur rediftre the iirevassitlit a ssiS4 eat oar, Oil • 1 " 1 7 Odin ib e 116 .. i "" 460% al' Ulm *lt thete timmikeep t ihr Vl=to reitZpsWins ask -y moan Ins psi • tart ta wit iii ii piper tat imam mit 41 , =IN =II s I r- 0 tr: • 4 .Itiggit =IIIMI II ei. , f • I i 44
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