BY DAVID OVER. PRESIDE.\n MICE. Fef.'ow citizens of the Senate and of the House of Representatives, The Coas'itution requires that fbe Pres ident.shall, from time to time, not only re commend to the consideration of Congress soeh measures as he may judge necessary sud expedient, but also that he shall give information to them of the state of the Union To do this fully involves exposi tion of all matters in the actual conditiou •of the country, domestic or foreign, which essentially concern the general welfare. While performing bis constitutional duty in this respect, the President does not speak merely to express personal convic tions, but as the executive minister of the government, enabled hy his position, aud eaiied upon by his official obligations, to scan with an impartial eye the interest* of the whole, and of every part of the United .States. Of the condition of the domestic int< - est of the Union, its agriculture, mines, manufacture?,navigation, and commerce, it is necessary only to say that the internal prosperity of the country, its eontianou" and steady advancement in wealth and pop ulation, and in privato as well as public well being, attest the wisdom of our insti tutions, and the predominant spirit of an tellisrenco and patriotism, which, not wit lis sjanding occasional irregularities of opin" ion or action resulting front popular free dom, has distinguished and characterized the people of America. In the brief interval between the teriui" ■cation of the last and the commencement of the present session of Congress, the public mind ha? been occupied with the care of selecting, for another constitutional term the President aud Vice President "of the j United States. The determination of the persons, who ■ are of right, or contingently, to preside ">ver ! the administration of the government, is, j under our system, e oumittcd to the Stores ' and the people. We appeal to them, by ' their voice pronounced in the forms of law, | to call whomsoever they will to the high post of Chief Magi-hate. * \ And thus it is that as the senators rep resent the respective States of the Union, and the members of the House of Repre sentatives the several constituencies of each State, so the President represents the ag gregate population of the United States.— Their election of hiui is the explicit and solemn act of the sole sovereign authority of the Union. It is impossible to misapprehend the great principles which, by their resent po litical action, the people of the United States have sanctioned and announced. They have asserted the constitutional equality of eneh ar.d all of the State? of the Union as States: they have affirmed the constitutional equality of each, and all of the citizens of the United States as citi zens, whatever their religion, wherever tbeir lirtb, or their residence; they have nwintainedThe inviolability of the constitu tional rights of the different sections of the Union; and they have proclaimed tbeir de voted and unalterable attachment to the Union and to the constitution, as ohjtc's of interest superior toall subject* of local or sectional controversy, as the safeguard of the rights of ail, as the spirit and the es sence of the liberty, peace ami greatness of the Republic. Ia doing this, they have, at the same time, emphatically condemned the idea of organizing in these United States mere geo graphical parties; of marshalling ill hostile array from each other the different parts of the country, North or Sooth, Last or West Schemes of this uature, fraught with in calculable ini-vliict, and wun-u the conside rate sense of tha people has icjccted, could have had countenance in uo parr of the country, had they uot been disguised by suggestions plausible in appearance, acting -upon au excited state of the puhiic mind, induced by causes temporary in their char acter, and it is to be hoped transient ia their influence. I Perfect liberty of association for politi cal objects, and the widest score of discus sion, are the received and ordinary coadi lious of government iu our country. Our institutions, framed in the spirit of oonti dence in the intelligence and integrity of 'be people, do not forbid citizens, either in dividualiy or associated together, to attack by writing, speech, or any other methods short of physical force, the Constitution and the very existence of tho Union. Under the Bbeltor 0/ this great liberty, and pro tected by the laws and usages of the gov rroiLcut they assaii, associations have been formed, iu some of the States, of iudividu *l, who, preteuding to seek only to pte v' ot the spread of the institution of slave ry i#to the present ot future inchoate iiUtes A Weekly Paper, Devoted to Literature, Polities, the Arte, Sciences. Ajric ilt ire, ke., Ac—'Perms; Two Dollars per annum. - of the T nfon, aro really inflamed with .it-- J sire to change the dottffcstic institutions of , existing States. To accomplish their eb j Ji-cts, thoy dedicate themselves to the odious I Hsk of depreciating the government orgati •z-.ti-n which stands i„ M*ej r w ,iy, ntt ,l of Calumniating with indiscriminate invective' not only the citizens of particular State*' with whosel.ws they dud fault, but *H oth ers of their fellow citizens throughout the country, who do uot participate with them in their assaults upon the Constitution, ! rauied and adopted by our lathers, autl claiming for the pt iviiogas it has scoured, aud the blessings it h aß conferred, th* steady support and grateful reverence o x their children. They seek ati object which they well know hi be a revolutionary ?ue. Thy are perfectly aware that the change it, the relative condition of the black and white races in the slaveholding States, which they would promote, is beyond tLeit lawful authority; that to thru, it is a for eign object; that it eaunot be pffacted by airy peaceful instrumentality of theirs; that for them, and the States of which they are citizens, the onty path to its accomplish ment is through turning cities and imaged fields, and slaughtered populations, auti ail there is Ernst terrible in foreign, complica ted with civil and set vile war; and that the first step in the ztteuipt is the forcible dis rupt ioQ of a country embracing iu its broad bosom a degree of liberty, and an amount of individual and pubitc pi asperity, to which there is no parallel in history, and substituting iu its plaee hostile governments driven at once and inevitably into u.utua' devastation and fratricidal carnage, trans forming the now peaceful and lelicitous brotherhood info a vast permanent camp of armed men like the rival monarchies of Eu rope and-Asia. Weil knowing that such, and such only, arc Hie means and she eouse (juences of their plans and purposes, 'hey endeavor to prepare the people of the L ot ted States for civil war by doing everything in their power to deprive the Constitution and the laws of morel authority, and to undermine the fabric of the Union by ap peals to passion and sectional prejudice, by indoctrinating its people with reciprocal ha tred, and bv educating 'hem to stand face to face as enemies, rather than shoulder to It is by the agency of such unwarranta ble interfeienee, foreign and domestic, that the minds of many, otherwise good citizens, have been so infl uied into the passionate condemnation of the domestic institutions of the southern St ites, as at length to pass insensibly to alur.st. equally passionate iios tility towards their fellow citizens of those States,and thus finally to fall into tempo rary fellowship with the avowed and active enemies of the constitution. Ardently a;* lachcd to liberty in the abstract, they titution and the L'uion. They would, up j on deliberation, shrink with unaffected hor ror from any conscious act of disunion or : | civil war. Bat they have eatorod into a path, which leads nowhere, unless it be to civil war and disunion, and which has no other possible outlet. They hive proceed ed thus far in that direction, in consequence of the successive when reclaimed according to law and iu vir i tue of express provisions of the OotiStitu- I tion. To promote this object, legislative ; enactments ami other m-ius were adopted | to take away or defeat ririit* which thecou- I stitutton solemnly guarantied. In order to nullify the then existing act of u a state of mutual hostility, rather than !e!,ow magistrates of u common country peacefully subsisfljg under the protection of one well constituted Union. Thus here, also, aggression was followed by reaction; and the attacks upon the Constitution at utis point did but serve to raise up new barriers for its defence and security. The third stage of this unhappy sectional controversy was in connection with the or ganization of territorial governments, and the aduiisniou of r.cw States into the Union. V. hen it was proposed to admit the State ot Maine, by separation of 'en-Dory from that of Massachusetts, am! ;h Stale of M--mV: ri, formed of a j rfrtion os the territory ce ded by France to the United States, rep re" sentu!ives in Congress objected to the ad mission of the latter, AtAw with eondiriaije suited to particular view? of public policv. The imposition of such a condition was j .successfully resi-ted. But, at the saute period, the question was presented of im posing restrictions upon the re-idtie of the tenitoiy eeded h) France. That niicsttnii wi s, for the tint , disposed' of by tie adop tion ut n g' -graphic il Sine of liuii'.ilioi:. In this cornice' ion it should be ITlU,'lu be red, that France, of her own accord, re .s( ive-', for considerate n.s of the most far sighted sagacity, to e-de Louisiana to the Ui iie l State.-, and that aci-es-ion was ac cepted by the Unit d States, the latter ex pressly engaged that, '-the inhabitant of the ceded territory shall be incorporated in the Union of toe doited States, and al uiitted h.s coon t-s possible, according to the principles of the Federal Constitution, to the enjoyment of all the rights, advantages, and immunities of citizens of the United •States; and in the meantime they . aha!l be maintained and proj-cted in the free en joy merit of tbeir liberty, property, and the religion jvhieh they profess"—that is t~> say while it remains in a territorial condition, its inhabitants are maintained and protect ed in the free enjoyment of tlmir liberty and property, with a right then to pass into (he condition of States on a footing of perfect equality with the original States. The enactment, whi-h established the re strictive geographical line, was acquiesced in, rather than approved by the Stales of the Union. It stood on the statute book, however, for a number of years; and the people of the respective States acquiesced in the re-enactment of the principle as ap plied to the State of Texas. Thereupon this enactment to Lave binding virtue iu any sense, whether as re spects the North or the South; and so in ettect it was treated on the occasion of the admission of ilm State of California, and tho organization of the territories of Now Mexico, Utah and Washington. Such was the state of this question when the time arrived lor the organization of the Territories of K msa and Nebraska Iu the progress of constitutional inquiry and re flection, it had now at length couic to be seen clearly that Congress does not possess constitutional power to impose restrictions of this character upon any present or future State of the Uuiou. In u loug series of decisions, on the fullest argument, and alter the most deliberate consideration, the Su preme Court of the United ciiatos had final ly determined this point, iu every form un der which the question could arise, whether as affecting public or private right?) iu questions of the pblio domain of religion, of navigation, and of servitude. The several States of the Union are, by force of the Constitution, ct-equal in domes tie legislative power. Congress cuimbt change a law of domestic relation in the State of Maine; no more can it iu the State of Mi-sourt. Any statute which proposes BEDFORD. PA.. FRIDAY. DECEMBER 12. 18-5B jto tfb this is a mere nullity; it ukea away no right, if confers none. If it remains on the statute book unrepealed, it remains there only us a monument of error, and a beacon of warning to the legislator aud the statesman. To repeal it '-will be ouiy to remove iwperfeutkut front the statutes, with out affecting, either iu the sense of per mission or of prohibition, the action of the ."Virtus, or of their citizens. Siiil, when the n-.uiiiiai restriction uf thu leiiuri*, already a dead letter iu iavv, was IU terms repealed by the last Congress, iu a clause of the act. organizing the Territories ol iian-as aud Nebraska, that repeil was made the occasion of a wtue-spieuU and dau*erod ■ agitation. It was adeged tn.t the original eiuctineut being a compact ot pei'pc uai tiiorUi obli gutiou, its repeal coltslivutt'd au ovtious breach of faith. Au uet of Uongress, while it rcutuius unrepealed, more especially if it be con.-u --tuiicnully Valid in the jtidgmeut of those paLii ■ fuuctii.Tiuries whoso duty it is to pro nounce on that point, is undoubtedly jiud iug ou the conscience of eacn good citizen of the Republic-. Rut iu what sense can it be ussencd tli it the enactment in queSrion was invested with pea entity and entitled to the rc-spitet of a solemn compact? lie I Ween wlum was the compact? Nodis.iuel contending powers of the goveiumeni, no separate sections of the Union, treating as sUcil, entered into treaty stipulations ou the -obj ot. It was a mere cl iase of an act of Congress, ind like any other, oon roverteu matter of legislation, receiveti its fir,a? shape and w.ts passed by eomprounse of the con flicting opinions or sentiments of the mem bers of Congress. But it it i,ad moral au thority over men's couscieuces, to Whom .iiii this authority a finch' Not to those of (be Nortli, who had repeat caiy a .-fused to coti film it by extension, and who hud zealonsly striven to establish other and, iecoinpatibte ivgulatiabs upon tint sui j. jfc; And it, a.- it thus appears, the supposed compact hud no obligatory force as to ttie North, of course it could not have had any as to the feouth, for all such Compacts must be mutual and of reciprocal i f,ligation. It has not uuiivqucutly happened that i-iw giver.-, wall undue estimation of the value of ihe law they give, or in the view ot imparting to i. poeu.ur strength, ui.ike it poipetual in terms; Out tlity caUtiOl thus Wud tlie coir-deuce, tr.e JUlgiu .-lit, and ttia wilt ot those wiiu may siweeed them, in vest eu with simitar responsibilities, aud dollied won equal authority. More carefui investi gation may prove toe iuw to lie unsound in principle. hixporieuee lu.iy snow it to be mipcil el in detail and impracticable in execution. And then both reason aud right combine not merely to justify, but to require ns repeal. Tue Constitution, supreme as it is over ail the deparuueuts of tbe government, leg islative, executive, ami judicial, is open to ameuument by its vary term.-; ai:i(Jongre-s or the Slates may, iu their discretion, pro pose amendment to it, sulemn compact though tt tutiuilt is between the sovereign tvates of the Union. Iu the present mstauce, a politicl euuetmeut, which had ceased to have legal power or auihority of any kind, was repeated. The position assumed, that Congress had uo moral right to enact, such tepeal, was si range enough, and singularly o iu view of tbe fact that the argument Came from those who openly refused ob dieneeto existing 1 iwj of iho land, hating tiie sauie papular and quality as tfbmprnnii.se acts—uav, more, who uu equivocally ds.-regarded ami eon damned the most positive ami obligatory injunctions of the Constitution itself, and sought, by every lima its withiu their reach, to deprive a portion of their felloweitizens of the equal enjoy merit of ihoso right 3 and privileges guaranteed alike to all by the fundamental compact of oor Union. This argument against the repeal of the statute line in question, was accompanied by another of congenial character, and equally with the former destitute of foun dation in rea.on and truth. Of course, these imputations on the in tentions of Congress in this respect, con ceived as they were in prejudice, and dis seminated in passion, ate utterly Destitute of arty justification in the nature of things aud contrary to all the fuu Jameutal doetriues and principles of civil liberty and self gov ern merit. While therefore, in general, the people of the northern States have never, at any duir arrogated for the federal government the power to interfere directly with the do mestic condition of persons in the southern Stares, Imt orr the contrary have disavowed all such intcntious, and have shrunk from I conspicuous affiliation with those Jew who [ pursne their fanatical objects avowedly , through the con tempi shad means of revolu i tiouary charge of the government, and with j acceptance of the rtcoess iry consequences,- a civil arid servile war—yet many citizens have suffered themselves to be dfar.'tj. into et also died a'unst with its birth." Then followed the cry of alarm front the North, agatns ! imputed southern encroach ments; vririob ery sprang it reality from tlie spirit of revolutionary attack on the de mes.tic iostitutiops of the South, and, after a trouo.eu eaisUmce of a few months, has been rebuked by the voice of a patriotic ! people. Uf this last agifa'ion, one lamentable few- 1 ture was, thai it was curried oo • t the im- ' mediate expense of the peace and happiness i of the people of the Territory c' Kansas.— ! That was made the battle-Sec 1 , r.0, n much® of opf csmg factions or interests within it- | self, us of the f asiiious of the; wbole.j. ;op!e of the United States, llevo iutionary disorder in Kansas had it? .rigir; in proy-c f ititerv-iotion, deli beret eJy?ar- ' ranged by law for the organization of the j Territory. And when propagandist colout- I zation of Kansas bad thus been undertaken j in one section of the Union, for ihe syste matic promotion of its peculiar views of po licy, there ensued, as a matter ot course# a ciuiiier-acrion with opposite view?, in oth er sectlous of the Union. lii consequence of these and other inci dents, many acts of disorder it is undent, able, Lave perpetrated in Kansas, to the oecas-onal interruption, rather tbxn the per manent suspension, of regular covertrtr.cnt. Aggressive and most reprehensible incur sions into ..the Territory were undertaken, both in the North and the South, and enter ed it on its northern border bv the way ot low a, as well as on the eastern tfy fay of Missouri; and there has existed within it a state <>f insurrection against the constituted authorities tioi without countenance from inconsiderate persons iu each of the great sections of the Union. Liiju'eu irregularities in the elections had in Kansas, like occasional irregularities of the saute description in the States, were beyond the sph -re of action of the Execu tive. 13ut incidents <>f actual violence or of organized obstruction of law, pertinaci ously renewed from time to time, have been met as they occurred, by such means as were available, and us the circumstance* re quired; aud nothing of this character now remains to affect the general peace of the Union. The attempt of u part of the in habitants of the T< iritory to erect a revolu tionary govern inert, though sedulously eu eouraged and supplied with pecuniary aid from active agents of disorder in some of the States his completely failed. Bodies of armed men, foreign to the Tei ri'orv, have been preveutei from entering or compelled to leave i*. Predatory bands, engaged in acts of rapine, under cover of the existing political disturbances, have bocu arrested or dispersed. And every well disposed person is now enabled once uiore to devote him self iu peace to the pursuits of prosperous industry, for the prosecution ot" which he undertook to participate in the settlement of the Territory. It affords me unmingled satisfaction thus to anneum e the peaceful coalition of tilings in Kansas, especially considering the means to wtiicii it was necessary to b:tvo recourse for tlie attainment of tl.e end, namely, the employment of a part of Hie military force of the Untied States. Toe withdrawal of that force froui its pioper duty of dtf.nd iug die country against foreign foes or the savages of the frotiue.', to employ it for the suppression of domestic mKurrectioh, is, when the exigency f self con stitution exists in the completes! form, the attempt to remedy unwise legislation by re sort to revolution, is totally out of place, inasmuch as existing legal institu'ion afford more prompt aud sfficaeious means for the redress of wrong. I confidently trust that now, when the jcacefui condition of K*n*as affords oppor tunity for calm reflection aad wise legisla tion, either the legislative assembly ot the Territory, or Congress, will see that no act shall remain on its statute-book violative of the provisions of the provisions of the Con stitution, or subversive of the groat objects ; for which that vw ordaiucd and establish.. Ed, and will take ail other necessary steps to i assure to its inhabitants the (inpayment, without obstruction or abridgment, of all the constitutional rights, privileges, and immunities of oi'-ijeas of the United •' as contemplated by the orgnnia Uw of the | Territory. i Full iiuformation in relation to recent ' events in this Territory vvili be found in the documents communicated herewith from the Departments of State and War, I refer you to the report of the Secretary of the Treasury for particular information concerning the financial coalition of the government, and the various branches of VOL. 29, VO. 50. | the public service connected with the Trea sury Department. During the last Esical year the receipts from customs were, for the first time, more f than Sixty-four million dollar?, and frotn all sources, seventy-three million nine hundred and eighteen thousand one hundred and furty-oue dollars; which, witL the balance j on band up io the tat of July, 1855, made the total resources of the year to amount toniucty.two million tight hundred and fif ty thousand one hundred aud seventeen dol j lars. Tlie expenditure?, including three : million dollars in execution of the treaty ! w 'th Mexico, and excluding sume paid on i ac.-ount of the public debt, amounted to , sixty million one hundred and seventy-two j thousand four hundred and one dollars; and j including the Liter, to seventy-two million I nine hundred and forty-eight thousand eeveu j hundred aad aiuety-two dollars, the pay j ment on this account having amounted to ; twelve millions seven hundred and seventy six thousand tlriee hundred and ninety dol liats. ■ \ •; I Ou the 4th of March, 1853, the amount of the public debt was sixtynlne million one hundred and twenty Dine thousand nine hundred and thirty seven dollars. There was a subsequent increase ot two million seveu hundred aud fifty thousand dollars for the debt of Texas—making'a total of seven ty one million eight buudred and seventy ' nine thousand nine-hundred and thirtvseven j dollars. Of this the sum of fortyfive mil- I lion five hundred aud twenty five thousand three hundred,and nineteen dollars, iuolttd ; iug premium, has been charged, reducing j the debt to thirty uiiihon seven hundred ! aud thirty seven thousand one hundred and ; twenty nine dollars, ail which might be paid within a )ear without embarrassing the j public service, but being act yet due, and j only redeemable at tle option of the bold- ' i or, cannot be pressed to payment by the i government. On examining the expenditures of tho i last five years, it will be seen that the aver j age, deducting payments on accounts of the I public debt and ten millions paid by treaty J to Mexico, has been but about forty eight million dollars. It is believed that, under i ar economical administration of the govern ment, the average expenditure fur the ensu ing five years will cot exceed that sum,un less extraordinary occasion for its increase should occur. The acts grunting boui ty lands will soon have been executed, while the extension of our frontier settlements will cause a continued demand for lands and augmented receipts, probabiv, from that source. These considerations will justify a reduction of the revenue from customs, so as not to exceed forty eight or fifty mill ion of dollars. 1 think the exigency for such reduction is imperative, jand again urge |f upon the consideration of Congress. The amount of roduotii.n, as well as the manner of effecting it, are questions of great and general interest: it being essenti al to industrial enterprise and the publto prosperity, as well as the dictate of obvi ous justice, tLat the burden of taxation be uia.de to rest as equally ns possible upon all classes, and all sections a;td interests of tho country. 1 have heretofore recommended lo your consideration the revision of the revenue laws, prepared under the direction of the Secretary of the Treasury, and also legis lation upon some special questions affect ing the business of that department, more especially the enactment of a law to pun ift the abstraction of official hooks or pa pers fro " the Clcs of the government, and requiting all such books and papers and all oilier pubiie property to be turned over by the out going officer to his successor; of a law requiring disbursing officers to deposite ail public money in the vault* of the treasury or in other legal depositories, whero the same are conveniently accessible, and a law to extend existing penal provisions to all persons who may become possessed of public money by deposite or otherwise, and who shall refuse or neglect ou due demand, to pay the same into the treasury. I invite your attention anew tc each of these ob ject*. The army, during the past year, has been so constantly employed against hostile lu •liaus in various -quarters, that it oaa scarcely be said, with propriety of fan gunge, to have been a peace establishment, its duties have been satisfactorily perform ed, and we have leusou to expect, as a re sult of the year's operations, greater se curity to the frontier inhabitants than has been hitlwrto enjoyed. Extensive combina tions among the hostile Indian* of the Ter ritories ut Washington and .Oregon, at ooa tune threatened the devastation of the new - ly formed settlements