I The repot of the Secretary of the inte rior, *hich accompanies this communica tion, will present a condensed statement of the operations of that important depart ment of the Government. It will be seen that the cash sales of the public lands exceed those of the proceed ing year, and that there is reason to anti cipate a still further increrse, notwith standing the large donations which have been made to Siang of the States, and the liberal grants to individuals as a reward for military services. This fact furnishes very gratifying evidence of the growing wealth and prosperity of our country. Suitable measures have been adopted for commencing the survey of the public lands in California and Oregon. Survey ing parties have been organized, and some progress has been made in establishing the principal base and meridian linos. But further legislation and additional appro priations will be necessary before the prop er subdivisions can be made, and the gen eral land system extended over those re mote parts of our territory. On the 3d of March last an act was passed providing for the appointment of three commissioners to settle private land claims in California. Three persons were immediately appointed, all of whom, how ever, declined accepting the office, in con sequence of the inadequacy of the compen sation. Others were promptly selected, who, for the same reason, also declined; and it was not until late in the season that the services of suitable persons could be secured. A majority of the commissioners convened, in this city, on the 10th Septem ber last when• detailed instructions wore given to them in regard to their duties.— Their first meeting for the transaction of business will be held in San Francisco on the Bth day of the present month. I have thought it proper to refer to these facts, not only to explain the causes of the delay iu filling the commission, but to call your attention to the propriety of increasing the compensation of the com missioners. The office is one of great la bor and responsibility, and the compensa tion should be such as to command men of a high order of talents and the most un questionable integrity. The proper disposal of the mineral lands of California is a subject surrounded by great difficulties. In my last annual Hies sage I recommended the survey and sale of them in small parcels, under such re strictions as would effectually guard against monopoly and speculation. But upon fur ther information, and in deference to the opinions of persons familiar with the sub ject, I am inclined to change that recom mendation, and to advise that they be per mitten to remain, as at present, a common field, open to the enterprise and industry of all our citizens, until further experience shall have developed the best policy to be ultimately adopted in regard to them. It is safer to suffer the inconveniences that now exist, for a short period, than, by pre mature legislation, to fasten on the coun try a system founded in error, which may place the whole subject beyond the future control of Congress. The agricultural lands should, however, be surveyed and brought into market with as little delay as possble, that the titles may become settled, and the inhabitants stimulated to make permamont improve ments, and enter on the ordinary pursuits of life. To effect these objects it is desira ble that the necessary provision be made by law for the establishment of land offices in California and Oregon, and for the effi cient prosecution of the surveys at an ear ly day. Some difficulties have occurred in or ganizing the Territorial governments of New Mexico and Utah; and, when more ac curate information shall e obtained of the causes, a further communication will be made on that subject. In my last annual communication to Congress I recommended the establish ment of an agricultural bureau, and I take this occasion again to invoke your favora ble consideration of the subject. Agriculture may justly be regarded as the great interest of our people. Four fifths of our active population aro employ ed in the cultivation of the soil, and the rapid expansion of our settlements over new territory is daily adding to the num ber of those engaged in that vocation. Justice and sound policy, therefore, alike require that thq government should use all the means authorized by the constitu tion to promote the interests and welfare of that important class of our fellow citi zens. And yet it is a singular fact that, whilst the manufacturing and commercial interests have engaged the attention of Congress during a large portion of every session, and our statutes abound in provi sions for their protection and encourage ment, little has yet been done directly for the advancement of agriculture. It is time that this reproach to our legislation should be removed; and I sincerely hope that the present Congress will not close their labors without adopting efficient means to supply the omissions of those who have preceded them„ _ AtiAgricultural Bureau, charged with tho duty of collecting and disseminating correct information as to the best modes ,of cultivation, and of the most effectual means of preserving and restoring the fer tility of the soil, and of procuring and dis tributing seeds and plants and other veg etable productions, with instructions in rt gard to the soil, climate, and treatment best adapted to their growth, could not fail to be, in the language of Washington, in his last annual message to Congress, a "very cheap instrument of immense na tional benefit." Regarding the act of Congress approved 28th September, 1850, granting bounty lands to persons who had been engaged in the military services of the country, as a great measure of national justice and mu nificence, an anxious desire has been felt, by the officers entrusted with its immedi ate exception, to give prompt effect to its provisioffs. All the means within their control were, therefore, brought into re quisition to expedite the adjudication of claims, and I am gratified to be able to state that near one hundred thousand ap plications have been considered, and about seventy thousand warrants issed within the short space of nine months. If adequate provision be made by law to carry into ef fect the recommendations of the Depart ment, it is confidently expected that, be fore the close of the next fiscal year, all who are entitled to the benefits of the act will have received their warrants. The Secretary of the Interior has sug gested in his report various amendments of Ole laws relating to pensions and bounty lands, for the purpose of more effectually guarding against abuses and frauds on the Government, to all of which I invite your particular attention. The largo accessions to our indian pop ulation consequent upon the acquisition of New Mexico and California, and the ex tension of our settlements into Utah and Oregon, have given increased in terest and importance to our relations with the aboriginal race. No material change has taken place within the last year in the condition and prospects of the Indian tribes who reside in the Northwestern territory and west of the Mississippi river. We aro at peace with all of them; and it will be a source of pleasure to you to learn that they are gradually advancing in civilization and the pursuits of social life. Along the Mexican frontier, and in Cal ifornia, and in Oregon, there have been occasional manifestations of unfriendly feeling, and some depredations committed. I am satisfied, however, that they resulted more from the destitute and starving con dition of the Indians than from any settled hostility toward the whites. As the set tlements of our citizens progress towards them, the game upon which they mainly rely for subsistence is driven off or de stroyed, and the only alternative left to them is starvation or plunder. It becomes us to consider, in view of this condition of things, whether justice and humanity, as well as an enlightened economy, do not require that, instead of seeking to punish them for offences which are the result of our own policy towards them, we should not provide for their immediate wants and encourage them to engage in agriculture, and to rely on their labor, instead of the chase, for the means of support. Various important treaties have been negotiated with different tribes during the year, by which their title to large and val uable tracts of country has been extin guished, all of which will, at the proper time, be submitted to the Senate for rati fication. The joint commission under the treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo has been actively en gaged in running and marking the bounda ry line between the United States and Mexico. It was stated in the last annual report of the Secretary of the Interior, that the initial point on the Pacific and the point of junction of the Gila with the Col orado river had been determined, and the intervening line, about one hundred and fifty miles in length, run and marked by temporary monuments. Since that time a monument ofmarble has been erected at the initial point, and permanent landmarks of iron have been placed at suitable distances along the line. The initial point on the Rio Grande has also been fixed by the commissioners at latitude 32 deg. 22 min., and at the date of the last communication the survey of the Ilino had been made thence westward about ono hundred and fifty miles to the neigh borhood of the copper mines. The commission on our part was at first organized on a scale which experience proved to be unwieldy, and attended with unnecessary expense. Orders have, there fore, been issued for the reduction of the number of persons employed within the smallest limits, consistent with the safety of those engaged in the service, and the prompt and efficient execution of their im portant duties. Returns have been received from all the officers in taking the census in the States and territories, except California. The superintendent employed to make the e numeration in that State has not yet made his full report, from causes, as he alleges, beyond his control. This failure is much to be regretted, as it has prevented the Secretary of the Interior from making the decennial apportionment of representatives among the States, as required by the act approved May 23, 1850. It is hoped, however, that the returns will soon be re ceived, and no time will then be lost in making the necessary apportionment, and in transmitting the certificates required by law. The Superintendent of the Seventh Cen sus is diligently employed, under the di rection of the Secretary of the Interior, in classifying and arranging, in tabular form, all the statistical information derived from the returns of the marshals, and it is believed that when the work shall be com pleted it will exhibit a more perfect view of the population, wealth, occupations, and social condition of a great country, than has over been presented to the world.— The value of such a work, as the basis of enlightened legislation, can hardly be over-estimated; and I earnestly hope that Congress will lose no time in making the appropriations necessary to complete the clasifications, and to publish the results in a style worthy of the subject and of our national character. The want of a uniform fee bill, preseri- bing the compensation to be allowed dis trict attorneys, clerks, marshals and com missioners in civil and criminal cases, is the cause of much vexation, injustice, and complaint. I would recommend a tho rough revision of the laws on the whole subject, and the adoption of a tariff of fees which, as far as practicable, should be uni form, and prescribe a specific ,compensation for every service which the officer may be required to perform. This subject will be, fully presented in the report of the Seep tary of the Interior, In my last annual message I gave brief ly my reasons for believing that you pos sessed the constitutional power to improve the harbors of our great lakes and seacoast, and the navigation of our principal rivers, and recommended that appropriations should be made for completing such works as had already been commenced, and for commencing such others as might seem to the wisdom of Congress to be of public and general importance. Without repeating the reasons then urged, I deem it my duty again to call your attention to this impor tant subject. The works on many of the harbors were left in an unffnished state, and consequently exposed to the aetion of the elements, which is fast destroying them. Great numbers of lives and vast amounts of property are annually lost for want of safe and convenient harbors on the lakes. None but those who have been ex posed to that dangerous navigation can ful ly appreciate the importance of this sub ject. The whole northwest appeals to you for relief, and I trust their appeal will re ceive due consideration at your hands. The same is in a measure true in regard to some of the harbors and inlets on the seacoast. _ _ The unobstructed navigation of our large livers is of equal importance. Our settle ments are now extending to the sources of the great rivers which empty into, and form a part of the Mississippi, and the val ue of the public lands in those regions would be greatly enhanced by freeing the navigation of those waters forom obstruc tions. In view therefore, of this great in terest, I deem it my duty again to urge upon Congress to make such appropriations for those improvements as they may deem necessary. The survey of the Delty of the Missis sippi, with a view to the prevention of the overflows that have proven so disastrous to that region of country, have been nearly completed, and the reports thereof are now in course of preparation, and will shortly be laid before you. The protection of our southwestern fron tier, and of the adjacent Mexican States, against the Indian tribes within our border, has claimed my earnest and constant atten tion. Congress having failed, at the last session, to adopt my recommendation that an additional regiment of mounted men specially adapted to that service should be raised, all that remained to be done was to make the best use of the meths at my disposal. Accordingly, all the troops adapted to that service that could properly be spared from other quarters have been concentrated on that frontier, and officers of high reputation selected to command them. A new arrangement of the milita ry posts has also been made, whereby the troops are brought nearer to the Mexican frontier and to the tribes they are intended to overawe. Sufficient time has not yet elapsed to realize all the benefits that are expected to result from these arrangements, but I have every reason to hope that they will effectually check their marauding expedi tions. The nature of the country, which furnishes little for the support of an army and abounds in places of refuge and con cealment, is remarkably well adapted to this predatory warfare; and we can scarce ly hope that any military force, combined with the greatest vigilance, can entirely suppress it. By the treaty of Guadalupa Hidalgo we aro bound to protect the territory of Mexico against the incursions of the tribes within our border "with equal diligence and ener gy" as if the same were made within our territory or against our citizens. I have endeavored to comply, as far as possible, with this provision of the treaty. Orders have been given to the officers comman ding on that frontier to consider the Mexi can territory and its inhabitants as equal ly with our own entitled to their protec tion; and to make all their plans and ar rangements with a view to the attainment of this object. Instructions have also been given to the Indian commissioner and agents among these tribes, in all treaties, to make the clauses designed for the pro tection of our citizens apply also to those of Mexico. I have no reason to doubt that these instructions have been fully car ried inty effect: Nevertheless, it is proba ble that, in spite of all our efforts, some of the neighboring States of Mexico may have suffered, as our own have, from depreda tions by the Indians. To the difficulties of defending our own territory, as above mentioned, are superad ded, in defending that of Alnico, those that arise from its remoteness,from the fact that we have no right to station our troops within her limits, and that there is no effi cient 'Military force on the Mexican side to cooperate with our own. So long as this shall continue to be the case, the number and activity of our troops will rather increase than diminish the evil, as the Indians will naturallyturn towards that country where they encounter the least resistance. Yot these troops aro necessa ry to subdue them, and to compel them to make and observe treaties. Until this have been done, neither country will enjoy any security from their attacks. The Indians in California, who had pre viously appeared of a peaceable character, and disposed to cultivate the friendship of the whites, have recently committed sever al acts of hostility. As a large portion of the reinforcements sent to the Mexican frontier were drawn from the Pacific, the millitary force now stationed there is con sidered entirely inadequate to its defence. It cannot be increased, however, without an increase of the army; and I again re commend that measure as indispensable to the protection of the frontier. I invite your attention to the sugges tions on this subject, and on others con nected with his Department, in the report of the Secretary of War. The appropriations for the support of the army during the current fiscal year en ding 30th June next, were reduced far be low the estimate submitted by the Depart ment. The consequence of this reduction is a considerable deficiency, to which I in vite your early attention. The expenditures of that Department, for the year ending 30th June last, were $9,060,268 58. The estimates for the year commencing first July next and end ing June 30, 1853, are $7,898,775 83; showing a reduction of $1,161,492 75. The Board of Commissioners, to whom the management of the affairs of the Mili tary Asylum created by the • act of 3d March last was entrusted, have selected a site for the establishment of an Asylum in the vicinity of this city, which has been ap proved by me, subject to the production of a satisfactory title. The report of the Secretary of the Na vy will exhibit the condition of the public service under the supervision of that De partment. Our naval force afloat during the present year has been actively and usefully employed in giving protection to our widely-extended and increasing com merce and interests in the various quarters of the globe, and our flag has everywhere afforded the security and received the re spect inspired by the justice and liberality of our intercourse, and the dignity and power of the nation. The expedition commanded by Lieuten ant De Haven, despatched in search of the British commander, Sir John Franklin, and his companions in the Arctic Seas, re turned to New York in the month of Octo ber, after having undergone great peril and suffering from an unknown and danger ous navigation and rigors of a northern climate, without any satisfactory informa tion of the objects of their search, but with new contributions to science and na vigation from the unfrequented polar re gions. The officers and men of the expe dition, having been all volunteers for this service, and having so conducted it as to meet the entire approbation of the Govern ment, it is suggested, as an act of grace and generosity, that the same allowance of ext* pay and emoluments be extended to them that were made to the officers and men of like rating in the late exploring ex pedition to the South Seas. I earnestly recommend to your atten tion the.necessity of reorganizing the Na val Establishment, apportioning and fixing the number of officers in each grade, pro viding some mode of promotion to the higher grades of the navy, having refer once to merit and capacity, rather than seniority or date of entry into the service, and for retiring from the effective list up on reduced pay those who may be incom petent to the performance of active duty. As a measure of economy as well as of effi ciency in this arm of the service, the pro vision last mentioned is eminently worthy of your consideration. The determination of the questions of relative rank between the sea officers and civil officers of the navy, and between offi cers of the army and navy, in the various grades of each, will also merit your atten tion. The failure to provide any substi tute, when corporal punishment was abol ished for offences in the navy,has occasioned the convening of numerous courts-martial upon the arrival of vessels in port, and is believed to have had an injurious effect up on the discipline and efficiency of the ser vice. To moderate punishment from one grade to another is among the humane re forms of the age; but to abolish one of severity, which applied so generally to of fences on shipboard, and provide nothing in its stead, is to suppose a progress of improvement in every individual among seamen which is not assumed by the Le gislature in respect to any other class of men. It is hoped that Congress, in the ample opportunity afforded by the present session, will thoroughly investigate this important subject, and establish such modes of determining guilt, and such gra dations of punishment as are consistent with humanity and the personal rights of individuals, and at the same time shall en , sure the most energetic and efficient per formance of duty and the suppression of Grime in our ships of war. The stone dock in the navy yard at New York, which was ton years in process of construction, has been so far finished as to be surrendered up to the authorities of the yard. The dry deck at Philadelphia is reported as completed, and is expected soon to be tested and delivered, over to the agents of the Government. That at Ports mouth, Now Hampshire, is also nearly ready for delivery; and a contract has been concluded, agreeably to the act of Congress at its last session, for a floating sectional dock on the Bay of San Francis co. I invite your attention to the recom mendation of the Department touching the establishment of a navy yard in conjunc tion with thjs dock on the Paoifie. Such a station is highly necessary to the conve nience and effectiveness of our fleet in that ocean, which must be expected to increase with the growth of commerce, and the rapid extention of our whale fisheries over its waters. Tho Naval Academy at Annapolis, un- der a revised and improved system of rogu• Wiens npw affords opportunities of educa tion and instruction to the pupils quite equal, it is believed, for professional im provement, to those enjoyed by the cadets in the Military Academy. • A large class of acting midshipmen was received at the commencement of the last academic term, and a practice ship has been attached to the institution, to afford the amplest means for regular instruction in seamanship, as well us for cruises during the vacations of three or four montki iu each year. The advantages of science in nautical affairs have rarely been more strikingly il lustrated than in the fact stated in the re port of the Navy Department,that,by means of the wind and current charts, projected and prepared by Lieutenant Maury, the Superintendent of the Naval Observatory, the passage from the Atlantic to the Pa cific ports of our country has been shor tened by about forty days. The estimates for the support of the Na vy and Marino Corps the ensuing fiscal year will be found to be $5,856,472 19, the estimates for the current year being $5,900,621. The estimates for special objects under the control of this Department amount to $2,684,220 89, against $2,210,980 for the present year, the increase being occa sioned by the additional mail service ou the Pacific coast and the construction of the dock in California, authorized at the last session of Congress, and some slight additions under the head of improvements and repairs in navy yards, buildings and machinery. I deem it of much importance to a just economy, and a correct understanding of naval expenditures, that there should be an entire separation of the appropriations for the support of the naval service proper from those for permanent improvements at navy yards and stations, and from ocean steam-mail service, and other special ob jects assigned to the supervision of this De partment. The report of the Postmaster General, herewith communicated, presents an inter esting view of the progress, operations, and condition of his Department. At the close of the last fiscal year, the length of mail routs within the United States was 190,290 miles. ' the annual transportation thereon 53,272,252 miles; and the annual cost of such transportation $3,421,754. The length of the foreign mail route is estimated at 18,349 miles; and the annual transportation thereon at 615,206 miles. The annual cost of this service is $1,472,- 187, of which $448,937 is paid by the Post Office Department, and $1,023,250 is paid through the Navy Department. The annual transposition 'within the United States (excluding the service in California and Oregon, which is now, for the first time, re ported and embraced in the tabular statements of the Department) exceeds that of the preceding year 6,162, 855 miles, at an breased cost of $547,- 110. The whole number of post offices in the United States, on the 30th day of June last, was 19,796. There were 1,698 post offices established, and 256 discontinued during the year. The gross revenues of the Department for the fiscal year, including the appropri ations for the franked matter of Congress, of the Departments, and officers of Gov ernment, and excluding the foreign post ages, collected for and payable to, the British post office, amounted to $6,727,- 865 78. The expenditures for the same period (excluding $20,509 49, paid under an award of the Auditor, iu pursuance of a resolution of the last Congress,' for snail service on the Ohio and Mississippi rivers in 1832 and 1833, and the amount paid to the British post office for foreign postagos collected for and payable to that office) amounted to 6,024,566 79; leaving a bal ance of revenue over the proper expendi tures of the year of $703,299 99. The receipts for postages during the year (excluding the foreign postagcs col lected for and payable to the British post office) amounted to $6,345,747 21, being an increase of $997,620 79, or 18.65-100 per cent. over the like receipts for the pre ceding year. The reduction of postage, under the act of March last, did not take effect until the commencement of the present fiscal year. The accounts for the first quarter, under the operation of the reduced rates, will not bo settled before January next; and no reliable estimate of the receipts for this present year can yet be made. It is be lieved, however, that they will fall short of those of the last year. Tho surplus of the revenues now on hand is, however, so largo that no further appiopriation from the treesury,in aid of the revenues of the Department, is required for the current fiscal year; but an additional appropriation for the year ending June 30, 1853, will probably be found necessary when the re ceipts of the first two quarters of the fiscal year are fully ascertained. In his last annual report tho Postmaster General recommended a reduction of post age to rates which he deemed as low as could be prudently adopted, unless Con gress was prepared to appropriate from the treasury, for the support of the Depart ment, a sum more than equivalent to the mail services performed by it for the Gov ernment. The recommendations of the postmaster General, in respect to letter postage, except on letters from and to California and Oregon, wore substantially adopted by the last Congress. Ho now re commends adherence to the present letter rates, and advises against a further reduc tion until justified by the revenue of the Department. He also recommends that the rates of postage off prißted matter be so revised as to render them more simple, and more uni furin in their operation upon all elassbi3 of printed matter. I submit the recommeu -1 (Wiens of the report to your favorable I consideration. The public statutes of the United States have now been accumulatinng for more than sixty years, and, interspersed with private acts, are scattered through nu morons volumes, and, from the cost of the 'whole, have become almost inaccessible to the great mass of the community. They also exhibit much of the incongruity and imperfect:en of hasty legislation. Ai it seems to be generally conceded that there is no “common law" of the United States to supply the defects of their legislation, it is chest important that that legislation should be as perfect as possible, defining every power intended to he conferred, eve ry crime intended to be made punishable, and prescribing the punishment to be in flicted. Iu addition to some particular cases spoken of snore at length, the whole criminal code is now lamentably defective. Some offences are imperfectly described, and others are entirely omitted; so that flagrant crimes may be committed with im punity. The scale of punishment is not in all cases graduated according to the de gree and nature of the offence, and is of ten rendered more unequal by the differ ent modes of imprisonment, or ponitonitary confinement, in the different States. Many laws of a permanent character have been introduced into appropriation bills, and it is often difficult to determine whether the particular clause expires with the temporary act of which it is a part, or continues in force. It has also frequently happened that enactments and provisions of law have been introduced into bills, with the title or general subject of which they have little or no con nexiun or relation. In this mode of legisla tion so many enactments have been heaped upon each other, and often with but little consideration, that, in many instances, it is difficult to search out and determine what is the law. The Government of the United States is emphatically a government of written laws. The statutes should, therefore, as far as prac ticable, not only be made accessible to all, but be expressed in language so plain and simple as to be understood by all, and ar ranged in such method as to give perspicuity to every subject. Many of the States have revised their public acts with great and man ifest benefit; and I recommend that provision be made by law for the 'appointment of a commissioner to revise the public statutes of the United States, arranging them in order, supplying deficiencies, correcting incongrui ties, simplifying their language, and report ing them to Congress for its action. An act of Congress approved 30th Septem ber, 1800, contained a provision for the ex tension of the Capitol, according to such plan as might be approved by the President, and appropriated ono hUndred thousand dollars to be expended under his direction by such architect as he should appoint to execute the same. On examining the various plans which had been submitted by different ar chitects, in pursuance of an advertisement by a committee of the Senate, no one was found to be entirely satisfactory, and it was therefore deemed advisable to combine and adopt the advantages of several. The great objects to be accomplisphed was to make such an addition as would afford ample and convenient halls for the delibera tions of the two Houses of Congress, with sufficient accommodations for speotOors, and suitable apartments for the committees and officers of the two branches of the Leg islature. It was also desirable not to mar the harmony and beauty of the present struc ture, which, as a specimen of architecture, ie so universally admired. Keeping these objects in view, I conchided to make the ad dition by wings, detached from the present building, yet connected with it by corridors. This mode of enlargement will leave the pre- Sent Capitol uninjured, and afford great ad vantages for ventilation and the admission of light, and will enable the Work to progress without interrupting the deliberations.of Con.: gress. To carry this plan itlto effect I have appointed an experienced and competent ar chitect. The corner-stone was laid on the 4th day of July last, with suitable ceremo nies, since which time the work has advan ced with commendable rapidity, and the foundations of both wings are now nearly cuipplete. I again commend to your favorable regard the interests of the District of Columbia, and deem it only necessary to remind you, that although its inhabitants have no voice in the choice of representatives in Congress, they are not the less entitled to a just and liberal consideration in 'your legislation.— My opinions on this subject were more fully expressed in my last annual communication. Other subjects were brought to the atten tion of Congress in my last annual message, to which I would respectfully refer. But there was one of more than ordinary interest to which I again invite your special attention. I allude to the recommendation for the ap pointment of a commission to settle private claims against the United States. Justice to individuals as well as to the Government in peratively demands that some mote conveni ent and expeditious mode than an appeal to' COngress should be adopted. It is deeply' to be regretted that in several instances officers of the Government, in at tempting to execute tho law for the return, of fugitives from labor, have been openly re sisted, and their efforts ftustrated'and defeat ed by lawless and violent mobs; that in one case such resistance resulted in the death of an estimable citizen, and 'in others serious injury ensued to those officers and to indi viduals who were using their endeavors to sustain the laws. Prosecutions have been instituted against the alleged offenders, so far as they could be identified, and are still pending. I have regarded it as my duty, in there cases, to give all aid legally in my poWer to the enforcement of tho laws, and I shall continue to do so wherever and when ever their execution may be resisted. The act of Congress for the return of fu gitives from labor is one reqnkedand deman ded by the express words of the Constitu tion. The Constitution declares, "That no per- . ' sonheld to service or labor in one State, um. der the laws thereof, escaping into another, shall, in consequence of any law or regula '•tion therein, be discharged from such stir• vico or labor, but shall be delivered up 011 claim of the party to whom such Service or labor may be due.' This constittltional pro vision is equally obligatory upon the legis• the Executive ; and Judicial Depart