t Huntington nitril l. WILLIAM BREWSTER, I EDITORS, SAX. G. WHITTAKER, f Clje ‘fains: SPIIMUZ SEHUVLER COLFAX, OF INDIANA, In the Rouse of Representatives. JUNE 21, 1836. TILE House being in Committee of the Wholo on the State of the Uni on the Army op. propriation bill, Mr. Colfax said Mr. Cllllll.lle I desire to wive notice that I shall move, when we reach the third clause of the pending Army bill, the following amend. meet; and I rend it now, because the remarks I shall make today are designed to show its necessity, "But Congress, hereby disapproving of the code of alleged lows officially communicated to them by the President, and which are rep resented to have been enacted by a body claim lug to be the Territorial Legislature of Kan sas, and also disapproving of the manner in which said alleged laws have been enforced by the authorities of said Territory, expressly declare that until these alleged laws shall have been affirmed by the Senate and House of Representatives as having been enacted by a legal Legislature, chosen in conformity with the organic law by people of Kansas, no part of the military force of the United States shall be employed in aid of their enforcement; nor shall any citizens of Kansas be required, un• der their provisions, to act as a part of the posse contilatos of any officer acting as mar shal or sheriff in said Territory." My especial object today is to speak rela tive to this code of lawn, now in soy hand, which has emanated from a no-called Begin!. tive Assembly of Kansas ; and fur the making of which your constituents, in common with mine, have paid their proportion—the whole having been paid for out of the Treasury of the tailed States. In speaking of the pro. visions embodied in thin voluminous document and of the manner in which these "laws" have been enforced, I may feel it my duty to use plain and direct language; and I find my ex empler, as well as 9 , jurisdiction for it, in the unlimited freedom of debate which, from the first day of the session, has been claimed and exercised by gentlemen of the other aide of the House. And, recognizing that freedom of de bate as we have, to the fullest extent, subject only to the rules of the House, we intend to exercise it on thin side, when we mny see fit to do so, in the same ample manner. Hence, when we bare been so frequently called "fan. alien," and other epithets of denunciation, no one on theseseats has even called gentleman of the other side to order.. When it has pleased them to denounce us as Black Republicans or ; colored Republicans, we have taken no except. ! tion to the attack, for we regard freedom of speech as one of the pillars of our free tutions. When, not content with this they have charged us with itnpiled perjury, in be• ing hostile to the constitution, and unfaithful to Union, !we have been content to leave the world to judge between us and our accusers... a sanctuary in which principles will have more weight than denunciation. In spite of all ! these attacks we hare not been moved to any attempt to restrict the most perfect and unlit, Bed freedom of speech on the part of our de nouncers; for we acknowledged the truth of Jefferson's sentimer.t, that "Error ceases to he dangerous, when Reason is leR free to combat it." If that constitutional safeguard of our rights and liberties, free speech in debate, is to he recogLized, enforced, and protected, in this House. Every Representative of a free con stitueticy, if worthy of that responsible position ehould speak here at all times, not 'bated breath' bet openly and fearlessly, the sentiments of that constituency; fur sir it is not alone the two hundred and thirty four members of this 'louse who mingle in this arena of debate; hut here, within this bar, are the teeming mib liens of American freemen, not individually participating, as in Athens in the olden tune, in the enactment of laws and the discussion and settlement of the foreign and domestic policy of the nation; but still, sir, participa• wig in the persons of their representatives, whom they have commissioned to speak for them, in the important questions which are presented for our emsiderations. Here, in this august presence, before the whole Amen can people, thus represented,stand, and niu,t ever st end, States and statesmen, legislators and jurists, parties and principles, t 6 be sub jected to the severest scrutiny and the most searehing review. Here Alabama arraigns Massachusetts, as she has done through the mouth of one of her Representatives but a few weeks since , and here Massachusetts has equally the right to arraign any other State of the Confederacy. And while the Republic stands, this freedom of debate, guaranteed and protected by the Constitution, must and will be substuined on this floor. Mr. Chairman, I feel compelled, on this oc casion, therefore, by truth, and by a conscien. tient; conviction of what I know to be the feel lug of my ronstituents—for whom I speak as much as 1 do for myself—to denounce, as I do this day, the "code" of the so called Legisla ture of Kansas, as a code of tyranny and op pression, a code of outrage and of wrong, , which would disgrace the Legislature of any State of the Union, as it disgraces the Goths and Vandals, who after invading and conquer. ing the Territory, thus attempted to play the despot over its people, and to make the white citizens of Kansas greater slaves than the blacks of Missouri. No man can examine the decrees of Louis Napoleon, no matter how ignorant he may have been of the procession of events in France for the past six years, without having the conviction forced upon his mind that they l emanated from an usurper and a despot. The very enactments embodied in these decrees bear testimony against him. The limitations on the right of the subject; the mockery of the pretended freedom of elections which he has' vouchsafed to the people; the rigid censorship of the press; the shackles upon the freedom of speech; all combine to prove that they em anate from an autocrat, who, however men may differ as to the wisdom of Isis statesmanship, undoubtedly governs France with a strong arm and an iron rule. And so, sir, no unprej udiced man can rise from a candid perusal of this code without being thoroughly convinced that it never emanated from a legislature vol. untarily chosen by the people whom it profess. es to govern, but that it was dictated and enac ted by usurpers and tyrants, whose leading ob. ,sect was to crush out some sentiment predom. want amongst that people, but dista steful:and offensive to these usurping kurielators. I know this is a strong assertion; but in the hour of your time which I shall occupy, I shall prove this assertion from the intrinsic evidence of the rode itself. Before I proceed to make an anylysis of l these laws, which I hold were never legally enacted were never fit to be mask, nor fit to be obeyed by a free people, let me say a few words in regard to the manner in which they have been administered and enforced. We have heard of murder after murder in Kansas—mar. ders of men for the singular crime of prefer ring Freedom to Slavery; but you have not heard of any one single attempt by any court in that Territory to indict any one of those murderers. The bodies of Jcnes, of Dow, of Barber and others, murdered in cold blood are mouldering away and joining the silent dust ; yet one of the murderers this very day holds a Territorial office in Kansas, and another of them holds an office of Influence and rank lITI. der the authority of the General Government, while neither the Territorial nor the General Government inquire into the crimes they have c =milted, or the justification for their broth , er's blood that stains their hands. _ _ I wish first Mr. Chairman, to n speakof the manner in which the Chief ustice, sitting as the supreme judicial officer of the Territory of Kansas, has performed the functions of his office. I have no imputation to make upon him as a man of moral character or of judicial ability. Ido not say he has wilfully and corruptly violated his official oath; for I can say that authoritatively in only one way— and that is, that by a voting for his impeach ment I shall not comment, sir on the extraordi nary manner in which be has enforced the Kansas code, with Draconian severity, against all who advocated Freedom for Kansas, but with a serene leniency towards all who did not pushing its severest provisions to the extremest point in one case and forgetting apparently, that it contains any penalties whatever in the other. But I desire to draw the attention of the House to the fact, proved by the code its elf, that this "Legislature" have used every ex• ertion within their power to make that Judge the interested champion and advocate of the validity of their enactments. Pecuniary in terest, sir, is a powerful argument with man kind generally. We all see and we all recog nize this fact as a truism which no logician de nies. The Administration that gives a man an extensive or a profitable contract may rea sonably expect to find him a supporter, The Legislature that confers on a man a valuable charter, would have a right to feel surprised if he did not decide in favor of the legality and the constitutionality of their enactments t as well as use all of his influence in their fa vor, if their authority to act as granitors was ' disputed, and if his character fell to the ground as worthless, in case their right to grant it was overthrown. It is true, some men aro so pure as not to be etTected by such things; but in the human tnind cannot tail to be thus influenced even if it is not absolutely controlled. Now if you will turn to the concluding por tion of this "code of laws," you will find one ; hundred and forty pages of it, over one sixth of the whole, devoted to corporations, shingled in profusion over the whole Territory, granting charters for railroads, insurance companies tell bridges, ferries universities, mining companies plank roads, and, in fact, all kinds of charters that are of value to their recipients, and, in deed more, than will be needed there for many years. No less than four or five hundred per sona (not containing one hundred Territorial road commissioners) have been thus *uncorpo rated, and have been made the recipients of the basely of the legislation of Kansas, ma king a great portion, if not all of them, inter ested advocates to sustain the legality of those laws now in dispute before the the American people. I need scarcely add, that the name of ; nearly every citizen of Kansas who has been conspicuous in the recent bloody Beetles in that Territory on the side of Slavery, can be found among the favored grantees and all them know that if that Legislature is proved to be illegal and fraudulent, their grants become value less. In quoting from this code of the laws of the Legislature of Kansas, I desire to state that I quote from Executive document No. 23. sub mitted to this House by the President of the United States, and printed by the public prin. ter of Congress. It is entitled "Laws of the Territory of Kansas," and forms a volume of eight hundred and twenty-three pages. I no tice that many members have a copy of this j code before them ; now; and as many people as they discuss these enactments around the hearth stone at home, cannot believe they are authentic, I will take pains to quote the see. lion and pages of every law I allude to, and will say to gentlemen upon the other side, that if they findme quoting incorrectly in a single instance, or in the minutest particular, essen tial or non.ersential, I call upon them to cor rect me on the spot. I wish to lay the exact truth, no more, no less, from this official me ord itself authenticated as it is by the President of the United States himself, before Congress and the American people. You will find in this code of laws that Mr, Isaacs, the district attorney for Kansas, figures in four acts of incorporation, and cannot fail, therefore, to believe in the legality of their en actment. Mr. L. N. Reese figures in three I more ; Mr. L. J. Bastin in three ; Stringfellow in three, of course ; and R. R. Reese in five— all of them earnest defenders of the code of its provisions, as might be expected. But I de. sire niece particularly to show you the incorpo rations in which the Territory of Kansas hone given an interest to the Chief Justice °like , Territory, bulge Leconip:e, sitting though he 1 does upon the jedicial bench, to decide upon the validity of thee Territorial laws. You will find him on page 788, incorporated as one of the regents of the Kansas University ; but I pass by that as of very little moment. At page 760 you will find a charter for the Central Railroad Company, with a capital of $1,000,000 in which S. A Lecompte is one of the !twerp. raters. The Chief Justice's name is S. L. Le compte ; and as I cannot hear of any other person of the name of Lecompte in the territo. ry, I have no doubt that this is a misprint in the middle initial, and that his name was in tended. But I will give him the benefit of the doubt, and pass over this charter. On page 769 you find another charter, in which Chief Justice S. D. Lecompte figures as a corpora. tor. It is the charter of the Leavenworth, Pawnee, and Western Railroad, which, in the opinion of many, is destined to be a link in the great Pacific Railroad, or at least an important section in one of its branches. It is chartered with a capital of $5,000,000, and five years' time is given for the grantees to commence the work. This charter, valuable as it must become as the Territory advances in population and wealth, is presented as a free gill to Judge Lecompte and his associates by the mock Leg 'stature of Kansas. Of course, in all these charters the directors are to open books for the subscription of stock, keeping them open " as long as they may deem proper;" no barrier ex isting against their subscribing the whole stock if they choose so to do. But I desire to draw attention pargicularly to another grant to be found on page 77 t, in ebich this same impar 4, LIBERTY ,AND UNION, NOW AND POREVER, ONE AND INSEPARABLE. " HUNTINGDON;' PA WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 6, 1856. tial Judge, S. D. Lecompte, with nina other persons, ate incorporated as the Leavenworth and Leoompton Railroad; and I ask you to no. Lice, and explain if you can, the difference which exists between that and other railroad incorporations. In the first place, the other railroad charters are granted to certain persons in continuous succession. In this charter, with a capital of $3,000,000, for a railroad from Leavenworth to his favorite city of Lecompton, (which was made the capital of the Territory by this same Legislature) with an indefinite and unrestrain• ed power to build branch railroads from the carkal in any and every direction, Judge Le. =opt., and his associates, including Woodson, the Secretary of the Territory, are, granted perpetual succession. In section 21, page 777, there is this special objection, which, though brief in its language, is momentous to its im portance, for the benefit of Judge Lecompte it Co. sections seven, thirteen and twenty of article first, and so much of section 11, article second, as relates to stock owned, of an act crincerning corporations, shall not apply to this act." In the examination which I gave to these laws, it struck me that this exception of this charter, for the benefit of Lecompton and Le compte, from the provisions of the general law relative to corporations, was singular, to say the least 1 RIO I turned back to the general law, to see the character of the provisions thus suspended so far as this act was concerned; and the proof that it furnishes of the intention on the part of the Legislature, to make Judge Le. compton interested ir. their behalf, is so strong, that I will refer you to these sections as circum• stantial evidence of no ordinary character. Section seven of the general corporation law (see page 164) provides as follows: " The charter of every corporation that shall hereafter be granted by law, shall be subject to alteration, suspension, or repeal, by any sue• seeding Legislature Provided, such alteration suspension, or repeal, shall in no wise conflict with any right vested in such corporation by its charter." But in Lecompte's charter, the power even to afnend it is, by the suspension of the above section, withheld from any "succeeding Legis• lature," even if said Legislature, or the people of Kansas, unanimously desired its amendment. Sec. 13 (page 165) makes the stockholders of all corporations individually liable for its debts. But this, too, is suspended by the mock Legislature of Kansas, for the beneht of Judge Lecompte. Section twenty (ace page 116) makes direr• tors liable for debts incurred by them exceed. ing the capital stock. But this also, is suspen• ded iu Judge Lecompte's chartet, and he is one of the directors of the road. But there is still another extraordinary pro. vision in this charter, which I find in no other grant of this Legislature. Section fifteen (page 7761 provides : "If said company shall require for the con• .traction or repair of said road, any stone, gre. vel, or other materials, from the land of any person adjoining to or NEAR said road, and cannot contract for the same with the owner thereof; said company may proceed to take possession of and use the genie, and have the propert y assessed," Ac. Not only are they empowered to take stone, gravel, and other materials, including timber, of s .ch great value in Kansas, from land titre which the road runs, but also from ..adjoining" tracts; and still further, from tracts "near amid road," which may be construed to mean ono mile, or five miles, or ten miles oft, as the case may be. And if the owner refuses to part with his timber or gravel, the company are zed to take it first, and pay fbr it afterwards; and the man who resists, and seeks to protect his own property, would be amenable to the peualties of this bloody code for resisting "the laws of Kansas." What was the object of these extraordinary grants and privileges to Judge Lecompte and his associates, I submit fur the American people to decide. Before I leave this Judge—tire central figure ao he is of the group of men in Kansas who are using the power of the Judiciary as it was nsed during "the bloody assizes" in England and the Reign of Terror in France, to enforce the decrees of tyranny—l must call attention to his charge to the last grand jury which he address. ed in Kansas; and in which, instead of alluding to the destruction of property of Free State men by unauthorized mobs ; to the tarring and feathering, and other personal outrages, to which many of then, bad been subjected; to the repeated invasions of the Territory by armed marauders, of which he bad been a witness; and to the murders of unotrending Free State men, of which he could not have failed to heart his virtuous desire to uphold "the laws" found vent in another direction—the direction of per. secution instead of protection. I quote from this extraordinary charge, as published in the National Intelliyencer of this city, of June 5, 1856, the following paragraph "This Territory was organized by an act of Congress, and, so far, its authority is from the United States. It has aLegislature, elected in pursuance of that organic act. This Legisla• tare, being an instrument of Congress by which it governs the Territory, has passed laws.— These laws, therefore, are of United States'ina• king and authority, and all that resist these laws resist the power and authority of the Cid. ted States, and are therefore guilty of high treason, "Now, gentlemen, if you flud that any per- sons have resisted these laws, then you must under your oaths, find bills against such per• sons for high treason. Ifyou find that no such resistance has been made, but that combine: tions have been formed for thel purpose of resis ting them, and individuals of influence and no. torieS7 have been aiding and ahetting in such' combinations, then 711118 i you still find hills for constructive treason, ike." Mr. Chairman, I am no lawyer; but I think I understand the force of the English language; and when I read iu the Constitution of the United States that "Treason against the Uni ted States shall consist ONLY so levying war ' against them, or in adhering to their enemies, giving them aid and comfort," I do not hesitate to brand that charge of Judgo Lecompte, under which Governor Robinson was indicted for treason, and is now sunder confinement and re- Need bail, as grossly, palpably unjust, and wholly unauthorized by the Constitution. To concede his argument, that to resist, or "to torm for the purpose of resisting," the Territo• toilet laws, is treason against the United States, because Congress authorized a Legislature to pass laws, leads you irresistibly to the addi tional positim, that to resist the orders of the county boards created by that Legislature is also treason, for these boards are but one fur. ther remove from the fountain-head of power. And thus, sir, "the extreme medicine of the Constitution would become its daily bread ," and the man who even objected to the opening of a road through his premises, would be sub je,•l to the rains end penalties of . tre.nri. No, sir; that charge is only another link in the chain of tyranny, which the Pro-Slavery rulers of that Territory are encoiling around its peo ple. And when the defenders of these proceed. logs ask us to trust to the impartiality of courts, I answer them by pointing to this charge, and also to the judicial decrees of the Territory, by authority of which numbers a' faithful citizens of the United Staten have been indicted, impri soned, and harrassed—by authority of which the town of Lawrence was sacked and bomber ded—by authority of which printing presses were destroyed, without legal notice to their owners, and costly buildings cannonaded and consumed, without giviug the slightest oppor tunity to their proprietors to be heard in oppo. ration to these decrees; all part and parcel of the plot to drive out the friends of Freedom from the Territory, so that Slavery might take unresisted possession of its villages and plains. It might have been supposed that, at least, one of those rights dear to all American free. men—the trial by an impartial jury—would have been left for the people of Kansas unit. paired. But when the invaders and conquerers of Kamm, in their border ruffian Legislature, struck down all the rights of freemen, they did not even leave them this with which they might possibly have had some chance of justice, even against the hostility of Presidents, the tyranny of Governors and the hatred of Judges. But the first section of the act concerning jurors (see page 377) enacts that "AU courts, before whom jurors are required, may order the mar shal, 81.1101 or other officer, to summon a suffi cient number of jurors." The whole matter is left to the discretion of these officers ; and Marshal Donaldson or "She. rift' Jones" pack juries with just tallell men as they prefer, and whom they know will be their willing instruments. For a Free State man to hope for justice from such a jury, charged by such a judge as Lecompte, would be to ask that the miracle by which the three Israelites passed through the fiery furnace of their persecutors unscathed, should be daily re,enacted in the jurisprudence of Kansas. l•Friy, more, sir—to make assurance doubly sure, the same law, in regard tojurors excludes all but Pro.Slaver7 men from the jury box in all cases relating di rectly or indirectly to Slavery; for here is its thirteenth section (page 378 :) "No person who is conscientiously opposed to the holding slaves, or who does riot admit the right to hold slaves in this territory, shall be a juror in any cause in which the right to hold any person in slavery is involved, nor in any cause in which any injury done to, er commit• ted by any slave, is in issue, nor in any crimi. nal proceeding for the violation of any law en• acted for the protection of slave property, and for the punishment of crime committed against ; the rig. to such property." I leave this dark picture of this jurisprudence of Kansas, and turn now to the laws them• selves—"lmes" that were, as late as the 9th of February, 1856, over two months after the ope ning of this session, thus spoken of by the De. troit Free Press, the °roe of General Cass and one of the lending Deniocratio papers of the Northwest "But the President should pause long before treating as treasonable insurrection the action of those inhabitants of Kansas who deny the binding authority of the .Missouri Kansas Leg. islature ; for, in our humble opinion, a people 1 that would not be inclined to rebel against the acts of a legislative body forced upon them by fraud and violenec, would be unworthy the name of 111170 . 1.71. If there was ever justifiable cause for popular revolution against a usurp. ing and obnoxious Government, that cause has existed in Kansas." The President of the United Stales has de. Oared in his special message to Congress, in his proclamation, and in his orders to Governor Shannon and Colonel Sumner, through his Secretary of State and Secretary of War, that this code of Territorial laws is to be enforced by the full exercise of his power. Ile has, of course, read them, and knows of their provi• sions. He must know that they trample on the organic law. which his official signature breath. ed into life. Ho 7.8 i know that they trample on the Constitution of the United States, which he and we have sworn to support. Reading them as he has, he could have chosen rather to support the law of Congress and the national Constitution ; but he preferred to declare pub. tidy his intention of assisting, with all his pow. cr and authority, the enforcement of this code, which repudiates both. The National Demo. erotic Convention also, at Cincinnati delimit, ced "treason and armed resistance to the lawn" in a marked and special manner t and if there was any dlubt as to the object of the denuneht• lion, the speech of the author of the Nebraska bill hitnself, Mr. Douglass, at the ratification meeting in this city, a few nights since, shows plainly his "intent aud meaning." Wishing to do no injustice to any one, I quote from his speech, as reported in the National Democratic organ here, the Washington Union,of June 10, which I hold in my hand: "The platform was equally explicit in refer• ence to the disturbances in relation to the Ter• ritory of Kansas. It decayed that treason was to be punished, and resistance to the lows was to be put down." * * * * * "Ile rejoiced that the Convention, by a una• nimous vote had approved of the creed that law must and shall prevail. [Applause.] Ile rejoiced that we had a standard bearer [Mr. Buchanan] with so much wisdom and nerve as to enforce a firm and undivided execution of those laws." And Mr. Buchanan, after the nomination, re plied to the Keystone Club, who called on him on thou' return from Cincinnati, as follows "Gentlemen, two weeks since I should have made you a longer speech, but now 1 have been placed open a platform of which I most hettili. ly approve, and that con 'rah far me. Being the representative of the great Democratic par ty, and not simply James Buchanan, I must square my conduct according to the platform of that party, and insert no new plank, nor take one from it. That platform is sufficiently broad and national for the whole Democratic party." I slier now proceed toshow you no less than eecen palpable violations of the organic law, (the Nebraska bill,) incorporated into this code by the bogus Legislature which enacted it.— the President, 3 - edge Douglas, and Mr. Bu chanan, who are all pledged "to enforce these Territorial laws," cannot have failed t t notice that the conquerors of Kansas enacted their code, regardless of whether its provisions coin cided with the organic law or not ; but, never theless, where they differ, the law of the United I States is to be ignored, and the pro-Slavery be. bests of the Kansas invaders are to be carried out at the point of the bayonet, if necessary. First. Section twenty-two of the Nebraska bill enacts that the Minn of Representatives in Kansas shall consist of twentysia members, "whoae term of service shall continue one year." That does not mean eighteen, nineteen, or twenty months, but "one year," and one year only. The Legislature of Kansan was elected on the 10th day of --,day which hea be come famous from the discussions in this House and elsevrhere in regard to it ; and, sir, if you will turn to page 280 of this Ka 181113 code you will see that there is not to be election for members of the lower House of the Legisla ture until the first Monday in October, in the year 1856—over eighteen months since the first Legislature was elected. If you turn, then, to page 403, you will find that no regular ses sion of that Legislature is to be held until Jan uary, 1857 I so that the term of that House of Representatives, in defiance of the organic law, is prolonged to twenty-two months instead of twelve months. Sir, their term has expired now. There is to legislature is the Territory of Kansas this day.; and therefore, in the lan• gunge of the Declaration of Independence, "the legislative powers, incapable of annihilation, have returned to the people at large for their exercise." Fier exercising them, however, in no conflict with the Territorial Government, but carefully avoiding it and abstainiug from put ting any legislation in tome, but only organi sing as a State to apply fur admission here, as "a redress for their grievances"—for doing this the court of Judge Lecompte arraigns them for treason, and scatters its indictments all over the Territory. Second, The same section of the Kansas ot• genic law says that the members of the council shall serve for "two years ;" but their term has been prolonged in the same manner to nearly three years, so that the couusellore elected in March, 1855, remain in office until the lit of January 1858 —longer than a member of this House holds his neat by the authority of his constituents. And it is to this Legislature, the Senatorial branch of which, even if legally elec• ted, should expire in nine months from this time, but which, in defiance of the organic law, have taken upon themselves to extend their term to a period nineteen months distant, that Judge Douglas desires, in his bill, to submit the question of when a census shaft be taken preparatory to admission as a State and to clothe them with the superintendence of the movements in the Terr itory, preliminary to said admission. When we have investigated to-day the "constitutionality," the :justice," the "im• partiality," the "humanity,' of their acts thus far, no one will need to ask, why I am not wit. ling, for one, to give thorn the slightest degree of power or authority hereafter, but, or the con trary, desire to take from them that which they have illegally usurped and tyrannically exer cised. But, if to these two polete it is replied that the term of the house of Representatives was intended by this mock Legislature to expire on the 30th of March, 185 G, ten months before the new Rouse takes its seat, and the Council, in March, 1857, ten months before the Council meets, it follows that, though the Nebraska bill extended "popular sovereignty" by giving the President absolute control of two of the three branches of the Government, the Executive , and Judicial, and left to the people only the Legislative, subject to a two thirds veto of the President's Governor, thin Legislature so legia tales that there Is no lions° of Representatives there from March, 1856, to January, 1857 and no Council from March, 1857, to January 1858—in a word, no that there can be no Leg islature In the Territory from March, 1856, to January, 1858, except from January to March, 1857, BARELY TWO MONTHS OUT Or TWIINTY. TWO! Third. The next violation of theorganic law is the enacting of a Fugitive Slave Law in that Territory t although by section twenty-eight of the Nebraska bill, the Fugitive Slave Law of the United States was declared "to extend and I be in full force within the limits of the 'ferrite ry of Kansas." This is clue of the violations that I do not complain much about, fur, in some respects, the Territorial law is milder than the national one, and requires the slave claimant to pay the coats in advance I but I allude to it to chow the utter recklessness of the Kansas leg. islators, and their disregard of the law of Con. gross. By this law, (sections 28 and 29, page 329,) persons are prohibited from taking fugi tives from the Territory, except in accordance with its provisions, and are fined 500 doliars if they do so. Fourth. The expenses of the Territory are paid, as is well known, out of the National j Treasury ; and section 30 of the Nebraska bill, I enacts that the chief clerk of the Legiskture shall receive four dollars per day, and the other clerks three dollars per day. But on page 4.1.1 ' oldie Kansas code, you will Gad an extra dou ceur to the clerks, of fifteen nod twenty cents per hundred words fur indexing and copying journals; on page 143 seedier late, declaring that, if the Secretary (when acting as Governor after Governor Herder's removal) should refuse his assent to the above, the chief and assistant , clerks should receive 00 each out of the Tree ' stay, besides their per diem ; and on the next page, page 148, the pay of the enrolling and en grossing clerks is increased to four dollurs per day,. on the like contingency, although the or. game law expressly fixed it at three dollars per day. The legislators acted as if they had not only convered the people of Kansas, but the National Treasury also. Fifth, Section twenty-two of the organic law gives the Governor, exclusively, the right of de• termining who were elected members of the Legislature. Ile did so, throwing out about one. third of the members elected at the first elec. ties, the reign of teeror and of violence prevent. ing more contests of other equally fraudulent returns. But the Legislature, when assembled without examination of the merits of each cane and without the authority of committing such an act at all, threw out all the members elected at the second election, and admitted in their stead those whose right to scats the Governor had expressly denied. Sixth. Section twenty-four of the organic law enacts t --- "That the legislative power of the Territory shall extend to all rightful subjects of legisla tion consistent with the Constitution of the U. nited States ; but no law shat be passed inter fering with the primary disposal of the soil." But if you will turn to page 600,. you will see how coolly this bogus Legislature ignores both the Nebraska bill and the preemption law ) for it declares, as if they owned the soil, that in actions of trespass, ejectment , be., settlers shall be protects din their pre-emptions, not of one hundred and sixty acres, but of three hundred and twenty acres ; "that such claim may be 10. cated in two different parcels, to suitthe conve• nience of the holder," "without being compel• led to prove an actual enclosure)" and the still more flagrant repudiation of the Congressional preemption law, that "occupancy by tenant shall be considered equally valid as personal re sidence," under which the whole Territory may be pre•emptled by Missourians. And this law, with the others, is to be enforced by the Presi. dent Seventh. Section thirty of the Nebraska bill enacts that the of oath be taken by the Governor and Secretary, the Judges, "and all other civil qjfeers in said 7hrritory," shall be to support the Constitution of the United States and faithfully to diseharge the ditties of their respeclivo offices." No more--no less. But the legislators of Kansas, with the same disre gard of the Congressional law, that marked their other acts, enacted another kind of official I oath, on page 438 of their code, as follows : "Sec. 1. AU officers elected or appointed un der any existing or subsequently enacted laws of this Territory, shall take and subscribe the following oath of office : 'I -, do solemn. ly swear , - upon the holy Evangelists of Almigh ty God, that I will support the Constitution of the United States, and that I will support and sustain the provisions of an act entitled "An act to organize the Territories of Nebraska and Kansas,' and the provisions of the law of the United States, commonly known as the 'Ffigi• tive Slave Law,' and Liithfully and impartial) and to the best of my ability, demean myself in the discharge of my duties in the office of so help me God." You cannot fail to notice that, in the new oath, framed by the bogus Legislature the Fu-' gitive Slave Law, is elevated to a "hiilier thau the Constitution ; for the officer to merely to "support" the latter, but is required to swear that he will "support and SUSTAIN" the other. Besides these seven palpable, flagrant, and unconcealed violations of the organic law, or ganizing the Territory, I point you now to five equally direct and open violations o f the Con. Melillo,' of the United Slates ; for that instru ment has been trampled upon as recklessly as the laws of Congress. First. The very first amendment to the Con stitution of the United States prohibits the pus. I sage of any law "abridging the freedom of speech;" and it is a significant fact, as can be j learned from -Hickeys Constitution, page 33, ; that this, with a number of other amendments to the Constitution which follow it, was submit , ted by Congress to the various States in 1789, I immediately after the adoption of the Constitu. tion itself, with thet following preamble "That conventions of a number of States It• ving at the time of their adopting the Consti tution, expressed a desire, inlorder to prevent! misconstruction or abase of its power, that fur- ' ther declaratory and restrictive clauses should be added." Therefr -- -mend' , that followed ...nerefore, the amendments that fulloweu were proposed. Thus is conclusively proven that the amend ment prohibiting any abridgement of the free- ; dom of speech was adopted to prevent "an a buse of power," which our forefathers feared might be attempted by some degenerate de scendants at sonic later period of our history. But, though they thus sought to preserve and protect free speech, by constitutional provision, their prophetic fears have been realized by the ; enactors of the Kansas code. Its one hund• red and fifty•first chapter, on pages 604 and 605 is entitled,"An act to punish offences against, 1 slave property ve Ind there is n a decree of Au- strian despot or Russian Csar, which is not mer• eiful in comparison with its provisions. Here, sir, in the very teeth of the Constitution, is sec tion twelve of that chapter : "If any free person by *peaking or by writ-I big, assert or maintain that persons have not the right to hold slaves in this Territoryor shall ! introduce into this Territory, print, publish, ' write, circulate, or cause to be introduced into this Territory, written, printed, published, or circulated iu this Territory, any book, paper, magazine, pamphlet, or circular, coottatnuip any denial of the right of persons to hold slaves in this Territory, such person shall be deemed ortturr or reboxr, and punished, by imprisonment at hard labor, for a term of not less than two years." 1 How many more than two years he shall be punished, is left to the tender mercy . of Judge , Lecompte, and the jury which "Sheriff Jones" ' will select for their trial. The President of the United States has sworn to protect the Consti tution ; but this, wit!. the other "laws of Kan. ear," are to be enforced by him, despite that Constitution, with the army of the United States; , and Mr. Buchanan is pledged by Judge Doug. I las to "the firm and undivided execution of 1 those laws." But, sir, in a few short months, the free people of the United States will limo : gurate an Administration that will do justice to the oppressed settlers of Kansas, that will restore to them their betrayed rights, will yin• dicate the Constitution, and will place in the ! offices of trust of that ill•fated Territory, men who will overthrew the "usurpation," give their official influence to Freedom and the Bight, ra ther than to Slavery and the Wrong, and pro tect rather than oppress the citizens whom they are called upon to govern and judge. Second. Tho same constitutional amendment prohibits the passage deny law "abridging the freedom of the preset' and here, sir, in flagrant violation of it, Is the I Ith section of the same law in the Kansas code, page 605 i "If any person print, write, introduce into, publish, or circulate, or cause to be bronght in to, printed, written, published, or circulated, or shall knowingly aid or assist in bringing into, printing, publishing, or circulating, within this Territory, any book, paper, pamphlet, magazine handbill or circular, containin ,, any statement, arguments, opinion,senti mentrdoctrine, advice, or inuendo. calculated to produce a disorderly, dangerous, or rebellious disaffection among the slaves in this Territory, or to induce such slaves to escape from the service of their masters, or to resist their authority, he shall be guilty of re. lorry, and be punished by imprisonment and hard labor fora term not less than five years." And, under this atrociously unconstitutional provision, a nuts who "brought into" the Ter ritory of Kansas a copy of "Jefferson's Notes on Virginia," which contains an eloquent and free spoken condemnation of Slavery, could be convicted by one of "Sheriff Jones" juries, as having introduced a "book" containing a "seri timent" "calculated" to snake the slaves "disor. derly," and sentenced to fire years herd labor. Probably under this provision, as well as the charge of high treason, Geo. W. Beaten, editor of the Herald of Freedom, at Lawrence, has, after his printing press has been destroyed by the order of Judge Lecompte's court, been him self indicted, and is now imprisoned, awaiting trial--kept, too, under such strict surveillance (far worse than murderers are treated in a civ• I Mud country) that even his mother and wife were not allowed to visit him until ho had hum bly petitioned the Governor for permission.— And this upon the soil of a Territory which our forefathers, in 1820, in this very hall, dedicated by solemn compact, to" Freedom forever." Vtird. The sixth amendment to the Constitu tion of the United States declares that, "In all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right to it speedy and public trial, by nn IMPARTIAL jury." It is significant that, in the Constitution itself, it had been provided (arti cle 3, section 2) that "the trial of all crimes, excet in cases of impeachment, shall he by jury.' But, to prevent "abuse of power," this with other amendments ' was adopted, declaring that the trial shall be by an impartial jury. I have already shown you how impartially they are to be selected by sheriffs who go about and imitate, in their conduct towards Free State men, the example of ftaul of Tarsus in his per mention nf the owls istians. Acts, rlntpier VOL. XXI. NO. 32. 11 ) verse 3, "entering Into every house and nil. ing men and women, committed them to prise on;") and I have quoted you a section, showing how impartially they aro to be constituted, with men on one side only but in this very Chapter, the concluding provision, section thin teen (page 606) repents this gross violation of the National Constitution, as follows : "No person, who is conscientiously opposed to balding slave., or who does not admit the right to hold slaves in this Territory, shall sit as a juror on the trial of dny prosecution for any_ violation of any ofthe sections of this act." Here, air, in theseinstances which I have quoted, stand the Constitution of the United States on the one side, and the Kansas code on the other, in direct nod open conflict—she one declaring that the freedom of speech shall not be abridged, that the freedom of the press shall be protected, that juries above all things else, shall be entirely impartial; the other trampling all these safeguards under foot. And because a majority of the settlers there, driven from the polls by armed mobs, legislated over by a mob in whose election they had no agency, choose to stand by and maintain their rights undertho Constitution, you have seen how anarchy and violence, how outrage and persecution, have been running riot in that Territory, far exceed ing in their tyranny , and oppression, the wrongs for which our revolutionary forefathers rose a• gamest the masters who oppressed them, and yet, though the protection they have had from the General Government has been only the same kind of protection which the wolf gives the lamb, they have, while repudiating the ler ritorial sheriffs, bowed in submission to writs in the hands of the United States marshal, or when the soldiers ofthe United States, yielding to enters which they , do not deem it dishonors. ble for them to despise, assist in their execution. Such forbearance—such manifestations of their allegiance to the national autlierity—become the more wonderful, when it is apparent as the noonday sun, that every attempt has been made to harass them into resistance to the authority of the United States, so as to furnish a pretext doubtless, for their indiscriminate imprison. went, expulsion, or massacre. .Fourth. The Constitution also prohibits cru el and unusual punishments. 1 shall show be fore I close, that this so-called Kansas Legisla ture has prescribed most cruel and unusual punishments, unwarranted by the character of the offences punished, and totally disproportion ed to their criminality. Fifth. The Constitution declares (article I, section 9) that "the privilege of the writ ofha• bras corpus shall not besuspended, unless when , in cases of rebellion or invasion, the public 1 safety may require it." But the Kansas node, in its chapter of habeas corpus, (article 3, sec tion 8, page 345,) enacts as follows : "No negro or mulatto, held as a slave within this territory, or lawfully arrested as a fugitive from service from another State or Territory, shall be discharged, nor shall his right of free. dam be had under the provisions of this act." This provision, suspending the writ of babe as corpus iu the above eases, is not only a vio lation of the Constitution, but also of the or ganic law ; for that provided, in section 28 for kipeals to the Supreme Court of the United States, on writs of habeas corpus, in cases in. volving the right of freedom, the Issuing of which this Territorial law expressly prohibits. The language of the Nebraska Kansas act is as follows ; "Except, also, that a writ of error or appeal shall also be allowed to the Supreme Court of the United States from the decision of the said Supreme Court, created by this act, or of any judge thereof, or of the district courts created by this act, or of any judge thereof, upon any writ of habeas corpus, involving the question of personal freedom." But the Kansas Legislature coolly set aside the law of the United States by which alone their Territorial organization was brought into existence, and effectually prohibited any appeal to the Supreme Court, "upon any writ of babe. as corpus, involving . the question of personal freedom," by declaring that the writ shall not be used in the Territory , for any such purpose I !laving now referred to a few of the many acts embraced in this code, which conflict witli the Constitution or the organic law, I proceed to the examination of other provisions, Some of which stamp it as a code of barbarity, as well as of tyranny—of inhumanity as well of oppression. And, first, to "the imprisonment at hard labor," which is made the punishment fur "offences against the slave property," in the sections which I have already quoted. The ge neral understanding of the people at large has , bees, that, as there was no State's prison yet e meted in Kansas, this imprisonment would bo in sonie Missouri prisons near the frontier.— ' But, eir, such is not the case. The authors of then disgraceful and outrageous enactments, with a refinement of cruelty, provided that the "hard labor" should be in another way ; and that way will be found in chapter 22, entitled "an act providing a system ot confinement and hard labor," section 2 ofwhich (page 147) reads as follows : "Every person who may be sentenced by any court of competent jurisdiction, under any law in force within this Territory, to punishment by confinement and bard labor, shall be deem ed a convict, and shall immediately under the charge of the keeper of such jail or public pri. son, or under the charge of such person as the keeper of such juil or public prison may select be put to hard labor, as in the first section of this act specifiei, (to wit, 'on the streets, roads, public buildings, or other public works of the Territory')—[Sec. 1, page 146;] and such keep• or or other person having charge of such con vict, shall cause such convict, while engaged at such labor, to be securely confined by a chain six feet in length, of not less than tour six teenths, nor more than three•eighths of an inch links, with a round ball of iron, of not lees than four nor more than six inches in diameter attached, which chain shall be securely fasten ed to the ankle of such convict with a strong lock and key ; and such keeper, or other person having charge of such convict, may, if neces sary, confine such convict while so engaged at hard labor, by other chains, or other means, in his discretion, so as to keep such convict se cure, and prevent his escape ; and when there shall be two or more convicts under the charge of such keeper or other person, such convicts shall be fastened together by strong chains, with strong locks and keys during the timesuch convicts shall be engaged in hard labor without the walls of any jail or prison." This penalty, revolting, humiliating, deba sing an it is, subjecting a free American citizen to the public sneers and contumely of his op. pressor., far worse than within the prison walle where the degradation of the punishment is re lieved by its privacy, is to be borne from two to floe long years by the men of Indiana and Ohio, of New England and New York,Penn sylvania and the Far West, who dare in Lamms to declare, by speech or in print, or to introduce , therein a handbill or paper, which declares that "persons have not the right to hold slaves in thi territory." The chalet and hall are to he