Teriii of the Wntcliinaii. a,wriptinP'r yeKTwo DoLLATts. payable ill i ' Jful f not Pal(1 In advance. Two dollars w'.w.-'rit will be chareed. 44J"L-tTSlnrrted at 81 for the firet.and 25 eta ut)!KHif nt insertion. ' Court Bf r ct. hfch" than the.e rates. Aj I in to thosf who advertise by the yeafr rTEJ lo'lhi KJitors must be post paiid orders chnrged liberal deduc 1 J. J. BRJJNER, Editor Proprietor, . , ( , j y i-ni - 1 i i i i I 1 1 ; i i . . T- , , , p. . . . . . ! i oi t Tcimtnir vr r m!TTTTToTv a -t a TTnTTorn 1 onn i- It is astomsliipg hat all the belies with which' we are acquainted in nature, when analysed, are found to be composed of so few elements. The following table of elementary substances was prepared about ten years ago by an eminent Chemist in this State. r ; ; It might be useful to the readers of th3 Watchman, and especially school teachers to preserve it for reference. Catalogue of Substances Connected with Chemistry, with some of their Properties Spc. i , I .1 nrnntc' II The Caloric, Light, x Electricity, Magnetism, 1st. Cla contains 5, all of which are Elecv tro Negative. The other 48" are Elec , tro Positive. 1st. Class contains 6,! which are Inflamma ble or Acidifiable. Name. Oxygen, Gas. Chlorine, Gas. Iodine, Bromine. Fluorine, not distinctly known. Hydrojren, Gas. Nitrogen, Gas. Sulphur. Phosphorus. Carbon. Boron. The other 48 are Metals which are divided into 3 Classes. 1st. Class contains 3 Alkaline Metals. 2d. Class contains 10 Earthy Metals. 3d. Class contains 30 Oxidable Metals, f which 12 are Malle able. . . I'fow Scott' t Weekly Pap.r. , pji SINGULAR CIRCUMSTANCE, i te year 1820, the writer residing in w -Coiinty, Va., I was requested by ffriend toinssist him in? harvesting his i.e There Were sortie ten hands erriploy 5 jn:lhefiC -In' the evening. (Saturday Jane 2'2d, 1620.) about an hour before lonsetw.to'fquit work and. Went to the 'x0JAc! Mr. Il . our boss, requested us lo be seatrjd for a short time, while he po to a near neighbor's to hire an tiii'lioBi.jnumbr of harvest hands for tjjC j,ext MondrtyV work. ' I had left my Test in theforenoon, where we had work f4,nefir G- ,'v''rt nd I requested Mr. j' jo bring it wilh him on his return, which he promised to do. It began to crow latf, iinl I commenced Poking for Mr. R- eve ft j before he had time to return, jhc house 'jood on an eminence, and all -L. iVnher Knd even the slumns. wer nfT inr w 1 i i . the land. Jhert: was a full view for half There are 53 Elementary Substances. .rnile.'in-tne uirrcuon wnere no went. I Agftin I loqkeu for him, and did not see him. I remained, however, n minute where he. tood, and on looking again, suJJcnly, wjthin about 100 feet of me. in pen space! appeared Mr. R., but oh how "cbmgetj ! Jilt' appeared as writhing in pain, his body slightly inclined on the left side, his eyf-s rolled upwards,1 his counte nance assumed a deathlike biie, his chest heaved, and a Convulsion shojak his whole frame ! I sjiood riveted tv theispot, unable td stir, llts who perceiveu me, anu was alarmed atjmy wild appearance. She saw that I was looking intently at some object cl'osd at hand, and oh looking in the direction she saw nothing ! She, how ever, causetl me to look away, and at that moment, he vanished from my sight ! 'Alarmed I-jvcnt into the hpuse, and en quired if Mr. R. had returned. I went abo to the barn and made (he same en quiry, but in each case was answered in the negative. In about twejnty minutes, Mr. U. wasjseen about 80 rpds off in the direction htj had went, leisurely coming along towajj the -house. jVhen he ar rived I ask c;d him if be" bad cjome straight home from Mr. G.'s and he ahswered that he had. 1 Related the whoe aflair to a ! near friend wro desired me to say. noth ing about it. She believed hat his death was near, and that it was made known to me by htsapparation appearing to me in that mariner. On the next Monday, die hands (myself with them,) returned to the field a,nd were allenpaged in cradling and binding rye for Mr. R. He appeared unusually cheerful. Rut the"recol lection ' of bis awful countenance made me any thing but cheerful. There Was a man of our company who was a professed deist ; and his wIidIo talk was something about backsliders! and the sins of religion. He professed b be also atrAtheist, and deni ed all lutufe rewards and punishments. He kept ur) a laugh occasionally amongst the hands that day. About three o'clock P. MMr. R. came to us jwith some re freshments, of which we partook, and again commenced work. 1 was binding after-Mr R.p Wo had gone about 20 rods when the Atheist made some big speech, and I raised my head to see if Mr. R. was laughing at it, as I could feel nothing but j disgust for him or his blasphemous ex- j pressions, ll perceived thai R. smiled for ! a moment, find then resumed his cradling. He struck ofice wilh the cradle, and drew it around again the cradle fell from his hands and jjhere before me stood same form in reality, whose apparitmn I had seen on Saturday evening I He stood writhing for a minute and then dropt to the ground'on his left side. I called for help. It came ; but the King of Terrors, hid imprinted his seal upon his palid countenance f-convulsions and cramp held his body for a short time;; and then his soul lelt its! clay tenement! for the land of ; spirits. It iwas my lot to acquaint his af fectionate jyoung wife with the sad ac count thatihe husband of her youth was i npmorei jWhenl arrive at their dwell J ing the task was too great for me, and I ' passed to the garden to acquaint his aged r father of tBe sad account. Mrs. R. per ceived me", and seeing my wild looks, asked me f her husband was not dead ! 1 with suppressed emotion I answered in the affirmative. She swooned away, and sank senseless to the floor. Soon the harvest hands made their appearance, bearing the lifeless body of Mr. R. Hut whip re was this boasted atheist. Vhen Mr;. R. breathed his last in our mmsthis boasting scoffer ran into the Woods raving crazy! He remained in that situation some time, and never re turned toj his right mind entirely. We consigned 'to the earth, the remains of our heloved friend on the 25th of June. 1820. I do not make these statements for the MIS - - V. " --Ml- - i 1 j ! ' I 1 ", Keep a checi: vtotx all totj RutEts. mi 'Hi Do THI8, A KB LlBERJT IS SAFE.' Gen I Harrison. ' NEW SERIES. VOLUME VII NUMBER 15. GREAT BUSINESS ON A SMALL CAPITAL! ! i -41. Discoverer. Prieily. Scheele. Courtoia. Balard. Cavendish. Rutherford. Known to ancients. Brandt. Known to ancients. Davy. 3 I1 year. Spe'c Gravity 1774 1.111 1774 2.5 1812 4.94 1826 3. 1766 0.694 1772 0.9722 1.99 1669 1.714 1807 2. Fusing Point by Farenh'ts scale. 13 are Brittle. The other 5 are little known. but Potassium, Sodium, Lithium, Barium, , Strontium, Calcium, Magnesium, Alumium, Silicium, Glucinurn, Zirconium, Yttrium, Thorinum, Gold, Silver, Copper, Tin, Cadmium, Piatinnm, Lead, Zinc, Iron, Nickel, Palladium, Mercury when frozen, or at 40 below zero, Antimony, Arsenica Bismuth, Cerium, ' Chromium, Cobalt, Columbium, Manganese, Rfolybdeiinm, Tellurium, j Tungsten, Titanium, Uranium, Rhodium, Iridium, Osmium, - Wodanium, Selenium, . Davy, 1 Davy, Arfwedson, . Davy, Davy, Davy, Davy, Wohler, Davy, Wohler, : Davy, Wohler, Berzelius, Known to ancients, Known to ancients, Known to ancients, Known to ancients, Stromeyer, Wood, Known to ancients, Alchemists, Known to ancients, Cronstedt, Wollaston, Alchemists, Brandt, Alchemists, Heisinger, Vauquelin, Brandt, Hatchett, Gahn, Muller, Muller, Delhuyart, Gregor, " Klaproth, Wollaston, Descotils, Tennant, Lampidius, Berzelius, 1807 1807 1818 1807 1807 1807 1807 1828 1828 1828 1829 .86 .97 1818 1741 1751 1803 1733 1804 1797 1733 1802 1774 1782 1782 1781 1781 1780 1803 1803 1803 1817 1818 19.30 1045 8.9 7.29 8.6 2147 11.35 6.9 7.7 8.4 11.8 13.6 6.70 8.35 9.S3 5.90 -8.6 5.6 8. 8.6 6.11 17.4 ? 18.68 10.65 4.3 185 99 Infusible. Ditto. 150 200 5237 4717 s4587 " 442 23,127 612 680 21,637 20,577 40 809 476 17,977 - 21,877 23,127 620 23,127 23,127 23,127 23,127 23,127 23,127 about 220 nomenclature in use among Chemists was fram ed by several distinguished French Chemists, and was first published in May, 1786. It was formed on the supposition that Oxygen is the only principle of acidification, and is so formed that the name shall describe the character of the substance nam ed. Thus, A sabstance with which Oxygen, Chlorine, &c. are united in a less degree than to form an Acid, is known by a name that terminates in ids as, an Oxide, Chlo ride, Iodide, &c. When the substance contains a larger portion of the combining ingredients than the lowest, the Greek adjec tives answering to first second, : third, are added as, Protoxide, Deutoxide, Tritoxide Proto-chloride, Deuto chloride, &c. The highest degree of combination is known by the Greek preposition Per, pre-fixed, as, Per-oxide, Per- chloride, Per-iodide. The various kinds of Acids are designated by the name of the base of that acid as, Sulphuric from Sul phur ; Phosphoric from Phosphorous, The -degree of acidification is known by the termina tion of the name: The name of the weaker acids ends in ous, as Sul phurous, Nitrous; The name of the stronger ends in ic, as, Sulphuric, Nitric When a degree of acidification between these, or above one or the other, is designated, the Greek prepo sition Upo, under or the Latin Sub, under and Su per, over, are prefixed as, Upo, or Sub-Sulphuric, less than Sulphuric : Super-Sulphuric, more than Sulphuric The various Salts are known by prefixing the name of the combining acid to the name of the base as, Sul phate of Potash, Nitrate of Potash. The degree in which the acid is combined, is known by the termination of the name of the combining acid. Thus, a salt formed from an acid whose name ends in ous, is known by a name ending in ite as Nitrite of Potash. A salt formed from an acid whose name ends in ic, is known by a name ending in ate as, Sulphate Soda, Nitrate Potash. When the salt contains- an excess of acid, the Latin adverb b is or bi is prefixed as, Bi-Sulphate, Bi-Phos phate. In some books the prepositions sub, super, are pre fixed -as, Sub-Sulphate, Super-Carbonate. 1 "When two solid substances unite, the compound is known by a name ending with Uret as, Sulphuret of Iron, Carburet of Iron. ' When a solid inflammable substance unites with an inflammable gas, it is said to be uretted, as, Sulphuret ted Hydrogen, Carburetted Hydrogen. In both these cases the adverb or Li is prefixed to denote a larger portion of the combining ingredients, as, Bi-Sulphuret, Bi-Carburet, and Bi-Carburetted Hy arogea. will take verjr good care that their rath drirers in future "furnish their oxen icagons." Natch ez Courier. TEXAS BOUNDARY QUESTION. In our last we gave President Fillmore's Message to Congress in relation to afiairs be tween Texas and New Mexico. We subjoin here the Letter of Mr. Bell, Governor ol Texas, to the President, and Mr. Secretary Webster's answer thereto. Executive Department, Austin, ( Texas,) June 14,1 850. Sir : By authority of the Legislature of 1 exas, the Lxecutire of the State, in February last, dispatched a special commissioner with full power and instructions to extend the ciril jurisdiction of this Slate orer the unorganized counties of El Paso, Worth, Presidio, and San- la re, situated upon its noith western limits. That commissioner has reported to me, in an official form, that the military officers employed in the service of the United States, stationed at Santa Fe, interposed adversely with the in- habitants to the fulfilment of his object, by em ploying their influence in favor of the establish- ment of a separate State Government east of the Rio Grande, and within the rightful limits of the State of Texas. I transmit to vou here- ! with the proclamation of Colonel John Munroe, acting under the orders, of the Government of the United States, under the designation of Ci vil and military Governor of the Territory of iNew Mexico. I have very respectfully to request that your Excellency will cause me to be informed, at your earliest possible convenirnce, whether or not this officer has acted in this matter under the orders of his Government, and whether bis proclamation meets with the approbation of the President ol the United States ? Wilh assurances of distinguished consider. ation, I have the honor to be your Excellency's most obedient servant, P. II. BELL. To his Excellency Z. Taylor, President of the United States. AN AMATEUR FOWL BREEDER. The editor ofthe Lynn Bay State has been buying fancy eggs of some pne in Boston at a big figure, which did'nt turn out what he expected ; and so be con cludes that the hen fever is a great hum bug ! Sarved him right ; he bought what were said to be Cochin China eggs, and after waiting ipatiently over four weeks, he found six ducks in his hatching coop one morning. So much for his foresight edness. This is not half so bad as the case of one of his neighbors, however, who paid a round price for half a dozen choice eggs, queer looking speckled eggs small, round. outlandish " eggs which he felt certain would produce rare chickens, and which, hef was very cautious in setting un der his very best hen. - I At the end of a fortnight he wqs star tled at the breakfast-table, to hear his fa vorite hen screaming 4 bloody mUrder," from within the coop! he rushed: to the rescue, raised the box-lid, arid found his hen onhe nest, but in a frightful pertur bation struggling, yelling and cackling most vociferously. He spoke to her kindly and softly ; he would fain appease and quiet her ; for there was great danger lest in her excite ment and struggles she should destroy the favorite eggs those rare eggs, which had cost him so much money and trouble. But soft wxrdf were vain. His best hen continued to scream, and he raised her from her nest to ascertain the cause of her trouble, more critically. His; aston ishment was instantaneous, but immense; and his surprise found vent in the brief but expressive exclamation M Ttirklex-bu thunder r J marvelous. Every word is strictly and . Such was the fact. The poorinnocent literally true. Many of the persons who poultry fancier n was the victim of mis- were at the burial, are Vet alive. The Deist Johti B., is gone to his last account. The image ofmy friend Henry K.Jsyet vividiin my mind, as when present in death, or iti bis apparition he appeared to me. Those who were acquainted with these facts will readily recognize the wri ter, and know that he is yet alive. N. FROM THlTcHOCTAW NATION. We tavo received, among our exchanges, .two papers, the Advocate" and the Intelli fcencer," puiliihed in the Choctaw nation. They give evidence7 of the happy progress al ready made in lb civilization of the Indian. The elections which were recently held are aid 0 havet passed off without disorder of any . ort and temperance was observed throu"hout. j. The school examinations also took place a short time sloco. jTbey are described as having giv. n unusual satisfaction, while they would have , been creditable to children of the same age and term ct scaooling tn any of the States, poultry placed confidence. The party wpo sold him them eggs, bad sold the buyer shock ingly 1 And instead of a brood of pure Cochin Chinas, he found that his favorite hen had batched halt a dozen mud turtles all of whom upon breaking their shells seized upon the flesh of the poor fowl and had well nigh destroyed her life! before they could be " choked off P He has giv en up the chicken trade, and has since gone into the dwarf pear business ! From tie Washington Republic of Saturday; ARREST OF RUNAWAY. An affair was brought to light in our city yes. terday to which much attention was attracted. The principal actor in it is General Chaplin, of New York, ia gentleman of fifty to si$ty years of age, somewhat widely known as the editor of a paper called Chaplin s -Portfolio publish ed at Albany.; lie has been lor some lime a resident of ibis city, acting as correspondent of his own paper, and perhaps doing other wri ting and attending to other business, as the means of getting along. On Thursday night it was known by a cer tain portion of the police that he was about to depart from Washington on that night with some fugitive slaves in a carriage; and the route he was to take, was also known. Ac cordingly, while a good lookout was kept up here in the city, Captain Goddard, with seven officers took their position a little beyond the District line, in Maryland, near the place of F. P. Blair, Esq., about six miles from the city. Here they quietly awaited until half-past eleven o'clock, when the sound of a heavy car riage was heard, and the voice o( a merry dri ver who sang cheerily as he passed over the road. This was the object of their pursuit ; and when it had come quite up to them, the night being very dark and cloudy,) Captain Goddard dexlereously pushed a fence rail be tween the spokes of the hind wheels and at the same moment Smithey and Cox seized the bri dles of the horses. An exclamation of surprise from the inmates was instantly followed by the discharge of a pistol by the driver, (Chaplin,) which, as is believed, sent a ball through the bat of Mr. Smithey, who held the near horse. General C. plied his whip fiercely, and his fine spirited horses would have bounded off had the wheels not been "chocked." I Officers Davis and Handy now pulled General Chaplin from the driver's seat. During this operation the inmates of the car riage, two servant-men belonging to the Hon. R. Toombs and the Hon. A. Stephens, of Geor- gia, respectively, were carrying on a severe battle with the beseisers around them, dis charging no less than eleven bills from revolv ers of formidable calibre. Nor were the rest of the outsiders idle. The night, as we have remarked, was very dark ; the halt-captured driver fought to the last, only ceasing; when the last limb was pinioned ; and the fear of shoot mg each other rendered the police in a meas ure powerless. They nevertheless returned shot for shot as long as the firing from within was continued. At one moment Capt. Goddard approached the carriage door, and a pistol flashed near enough to bis race to scortch bis left eyebrow. For this he returned' two shots both of which are believed to have taken effect though not mortally. One of them lodged in the watch of the fighting negro, who belongs to Mr. Stephens ; the other made a flesh wound in the same negros back. I While this was going on, one of the beseig ing party stooped to undo the trace chains and detach the horses, and Mr. Toombs's man, hav. ing discharged his last shot, leaped from the front of the carriage upon this officer's back, as the, blood in his tracks evinced. He has not yet been caught. The captare was now complete ; and upon ascertaining the extent of the damages, all were amazed that so little was! done. A flesh wound in the arm of Mr. Butjs, a bullet hole through Mr. Smithey's hat, a singed eyebrow on the part of Capt. Goddard, and a scratched face for Mr. Cox, are all the disasters sustain- Department of State, Washington, August 5, 1850. Sir : A letter addressed by you to the late President of the United States, and dated on the 14th of June last, has, since his lamented decease, been transferred to the hands of his successor, by whom I am directed to transmit to you the following answer. In that letter you say that, by the authority of the Legislature of 1 exas, the Executive of that State, in February last, dispatched a special commissioner, with full power and instructions to extend the civil jurisdiction of that State over tne uuorganizea counties ot e.i raso. Worth, Presidio, and Santa Fe, situated upon its northwestern limits ; and that the commis sioner has reported to you, in an official form, that the military officers employed in the service of the United States, stationed at Santa Fe, in terposed adversely with the inhabitants to the fulfilment of his object, by employing their in fluence in favor of the establishment of a sep- ed by the captors. The captives fared a little arate State Government eastof the Rio Grande, worse. Gen. Chaplin had his head bruised, t and within the rightful limits of the State of Mr. Stephens s man the two wounds already Texas. You also transmit a copy of the pro described, and Mr. Toombs's man has not re- ( clamation of Colonel John Munroe, acting un- ported himself to the surgeon. der the orders of the Government of the Uni- The two captives were yesterday committed I ted States, under the designation of Civil and to prison by Capt. Goddard, to await their tri - Military Governor of theTerritory,of New ass : and it is understood that in the state ot Mexico, and respectfully request the President Maryland, Gen. C, after having atoned to the to cause you to be informed whether or not this laws of the District, will be required to an- officer has acted in this matter under the or- swer the charge of a muitierous assault. A mulatto man, named Warner Harris, residing in the First Ward, was also committed to pris on, as an aider and abettor in this transaction. ders of his Government, and whether his proc lamation meets with the approval of the Presi dent of the United States ? In the events which have occurred, I hardly know whether your Excellency would natural- STICKING TO ONE'S RIGHTS. ' I tt" a,,37c '"V;" ".7" U,,,"T I'Mn nrpr1pfpsnr in ntnp. to whom it wa an. Old stories very often have a forcible appli- dressedf and under who3e authority and direc cation to present limes. The following anec dote we met with lately in an exchange paper. " How is it, John, that you bring the wagon home in such a condition." " I broke it driving over a stump." "Where?" " Back in the woods, half a mile or so." " But why did you run against the stump ? Could't you see how to drive straight ?" ' I did drive straight, sir, and that is the ve ry reason that I drove over it. The stump was directly in the middle of the road." " Why, then, did you not go round it ?" " Because, sir, the stump had no right in the middle of the road, and I had a right in it." "True, John, the stump: ought not to have been in the road, but I wonder that you were so foolish as not to consider that if was there, and that it was stronger than your wagon." "AVhy, father, do you think that I am always going to yield up my rights ? Not I ; I am de termined to stick up to them come what will." " But what is the use, John, of standing up to rights, when you only get a greater wrong by so doing? "I shall stand up for them at all hazards." "Well, John, all I have to say is this : here after you must furnish your own agon." In the political world there is a very large ugly stump, placed directly in the middle of the high road over which our great legislative wa gon has to pass. What is i worse,, too, some of our ' Southern fellow-citizens helped the North to place the stump exactly in its present posi tion, or rather to dig away the earth which bad previously hidden it. These very same politi cians now insist in driving directly over the slump, because it is in the middle of the road, it being one of their undoubted rights to use that portion of the highway. ' Little care they whether the wagon is broken or not in the passage they insist on their rights at all haz ards. Would it not be proper for them to re flect upon the agency they had in giving the stump its present position, before they put in practice their threats to break the wagon upon it, merely because those who helped them lo put. it there, fancying it a great improve, ment to the highway, will not assist In its re moral I j There is one thing very certain ; the people who own the vehicles that travel over this road, tion the proclamation of Col. Munroe was is sued, is no more ; and, at this time, that proc lamation, whatever may be regarded as its true character, has ceased to have influence or ef fect. The meeting of the people of New Mex ico, by their representatives, which it invited, is understood to have taken place, although this Government has as yet received no official information of it. Partaking, however, in the fullest degree, in that high respect which the Executive Government of the United Slates always entertains towards the Governors and the Governments of the States, the President thinks it bis duty, nevertheless, to manifest that feeling of respect, by acknowledging and an swering your letter. And this duty, let me as sure your Excellency, has been so long delayed only by uncontrollable circumstances, and is now performed at the earliest practicable mo ment. after the appointment of those heads of Departments, and their acceptance of office, wilh whom it is usual, on important occasions, : for the President of the United States lo advise. In answer, therefore, to your first interroga tory, viz. whether Colonel Munroe, in issuing the proclamation referred to, acted under the orders of this Government, I have the honor to state that. Col. Munroe's proclamation appears to have been issued in pursuance, or in conse quence, of an order, or letter of instruction, given by the late Secretary of War, under the authority 01 me laie rresiaeni. 10 L.ieui. 1,010 nel McCall. Of this order, which bears dale on the 19th of November, 1849, your Ex cellency was undoubtedly informed at the date of your letter. A full and accurate copy, how ever, is attached to this communication. Col. McCall is therein instructed that if the people of Mexico, for whom Congress had provided no Government should manifest a wish to take any steps to establish a Government for them selves, and apply for admission into the Union, it would be his duty, and the-duly of others with whom he was associated, not to thwart, but to advance their wishes. This order does not appear to authorize any exertion of miltla ry authority, or of any official or even person al interference, to control, or affect in any way, the primary action of the people in the forma tion of a Government, nor to permit any such interference by subordinate officers. Col. Mc Call and his associates were not called upon to take a lead in any measures, or ef'oto reconv .mena any ining as ni to be adopted by the peo ple. Their whole duty wat confined to what they might be able to perform, subordinate to the wuhes of the people. Iu this matter it was 1 evidently contemplated thai ihey were-to act as the agents of the inhabitants, and not as of. ficers of this Government. It must be recol. jected that the only Gore rumeot then existing -in the Territory was a quasi military Govern ment, and as Congress had made n provision for the establishment of any form of civil Gov. ernment, and as the President .doubtless be. lieved that under these circumstances ibeTpeo. pie had a right to frame a Government for them, selves, and submit it lo Congress for its apnro. val, the order was a direction that the then ex isting military Government should not stand in the way of the accomplishment of the wishes of the people, nor thwart those wishes, if the people entertained' them, for the establishment of a free, popular, republican civil Government, for their own protection and benefit. This is evidently the whole purpose apd object of the. order. The military officer in command, and his associates, were American citizens, ac. quainted with the torms of civil and popular proceedings, and it was expected- that they would aid the inhabitants of the territory, by their advice and assistance, in their proceed- ings for establishing a Government of their own. There is no room to suppose that Col. Munroe, an officer as much distinguished for prudence and discretion as for gallant conduct in arms, meant to act, or did act, otherwise than in entire subordination and subserviency to the will of the people among whom he was placed. He was not au'borizd to do, nor do I uuder htand him as intending to do, any thing white ver in bis military character, nor to represent, in any way, the wishes of the Executive Gov ernment of the United Slates. To judge intelligently and fairly of these transactions, we must recall to our recollection the circumstances of the case, at they thea ex isted, l'revious to the war with Mexico, which: commenced in Maj, 1840, and received 4he sanction of Congress on the 13th of that month, ihe Territory of Mexi o formed a Department" or Slate of the Mexican Republic, and was go. verned by her laws. General Kearny, acting under orders from this Government, invaded ihis Department with ah armed force ; the Go. vernor fled at his approach, and the troops un der his command dispersed ; and -Gen. Kearny entered Santa Fe, ihe capital, on the 18th of ; August, 1640, and took possession of the Ter- j nlory in the name ol the Uni'ed States. On the 22d of that month be issued a proclama. tion to the inhabitants, stating the fact that he had taken possession of Santa Fe, at the head of his troops, and announcing his "intention to hold the depaitmenl with its original bound i aries, (on both sides pf the Del Norte,) and under the name of New Mexico." By that proclamation he promised to protect the inhab itants of New Mexico in their persons and pro. perty, against their Indian enemies and all oA. ers, and assured them that the United States intended to provide for them a free Government, where the people would be called upon to ex. ercise the rights of freemen in electing their own representatives to the Territorial Legis lature. On the same day he established a Ter. ritorial constitution by an organic law, which provided for executive, legislative, and judicial departments of the Government, denned the right of suffrage, and provided for trial by jury, and the same time established a code of laws. This constitution declared that " the country heretofore known as New Mexico shall be known hereafter, and designated as the Terri lory of New Mexico, in the United States of America," and ihe members of the lower House of the Legislature were apportioned among the counties established by the decree of the de partment of New Mexico, of June 17, 1844 ; which counties it is understood included all the Territory over which Texas has lately attempt, ed to organize counties and establish her own jurisdiction. On ihe 22d of Decembet, 1846, a copy of this constitution and code was trans mitted by President Polk to the House of Re. presentatives, in pursuance of a call on himbyr that body. In the message transmitting the . constitution, be says thai " portions of it purport to establish and organize a permanent Territo rial Government over the Territory, and to im part to its inhabitants political rights which, un. der the constitution of the United States, can bo enjoyed permanently only by citizens of the U. States. These have not been approved and re. cognised by me. Such organized regulations as have been established in any of the conquer ed Territories, for the security of our conquest, for the preservation of order, for the protection of the rights of the inhabitants, and for depriv ing the enemy of the advantages of these Ter ritories, while the military possession of them by the forces of the United States continues, u:ill be recognised and approved." Near four have now elapsed since the quasi military Go vernment was established, by military authori.' ty, and received, with the exceptions mentioned. the approval of President Polk. In the mean f time a treaty of peace has been concluded with Mexico, by which a boundary line was estab.j lished that left this Territory within the United! States, by treaty, what we had before acquired by conquest. I he treaty, in perfect accord ance with the proclamation of General Kear ny, declared that the Mexicans remaining in this Territory should be incorporated into tbej Union of the United Slates, and be admitted at the proper time, (to be' judged of by the Con gress of the United States.) to the enjoyment of all ihe rights of citizens of the Lnited states, according to the principles of the constitution and in the man time " bhould be maintained! and protected iu the free enjoyment of their lib ty and property, and secured in the free exer cise of their religion without restriction." Thus it will be perceived Uiat ihe authority of the United States over New Mexico was the result of conquest; and the possession held of it, iii the first place, was of course a military posses, sion. The treaty added the title by ceysjon Id the already existing title by successful achieve ments in arms. With the peace, there arose i natural expectation thai, as early as possible! there would come a civil gorernment to super sede the military. But, until some such fornt of government, should come into existence, U was matter of absolute necessity that the mili tary government should continue, as otherwise the country must fall into absolute anarchy.- And this has been the course, generally, in. the practice of civilized nations, when colonies of territories have been acquired by war, and their acquisition confirmed by treaty. The military government, therefore. exffing in New Mexico at the date of lb- ordr. exisU ed there of inevitable neC.siy. It existed aft much against the will of the Executive Govern, ment ofthe United Slate- a- ag-iinft the will oT the people. The late President had adopted lb opinion that it was justifiable in the people of the Territory, under the circumstances, lo furnj