XI "TT 1 XI rm y v id n VOL. VII.-No. PniLADELPHIA, MONDAY, JANUARY 7, 18G7. DOUBLE SHEETTHREE CENTS. .HIS WTRTiO TBTF i IS (GrM A.IP Ml q 7 V - -J XT filltl) EDITION i PRESIDENTIAL VETO. Message of the President of the United States Returning to the Senate a Bill Entitled "An Act to Regulate the Elective Franchise In the District of Columbia." Jo tht Senate of the UntieU States: I have received and considered a bill entitled "An act to regulate the clecrive franchise In the District of Columbia," puscd by Itae Senate on the 13th of December, and by the House of Representatives on the succeeding day. It was piescnted for my approval on the 2Cth ultimo six days after the adjournment of Congress and is now returned with my objections to the Senate, in which House It originated. Measures having been introduced, at the com mencement ol toe first session of the present Congress, for the extension of the elective fran chise to persons of color in the District of Columbia, steps weru taken by the corporate authorities of Washington and Georgetown to ascertain and make known the opinion of the pople of the two cities upon a subject so imme diately affectinir their welfare as a community. The question was submitted to the people at special elections, held in the month ot Decem ber, 18G6, when the qualified voters of Washing ton and Georgetown, with e.reat unanimity of sentiment, expressed themselves opposed to the contemplated legislation. In Washington, in a vote of 6550 the lurpest, with but two excep tions, ever polled in that city only thirty-a ve ballots were cast for negro suffrage; while in Georgetown, in an aggregate of 813 vote3 a number considerably in excess of the average voteit the four preceding annual elections bat one was given in lavor of the proposed ex tension ot the elective franchise. As thee elections seem io have been con ducted with entire fairness, the result must be accepted as a truthful expression ot tbe opinion of the people of the District upon the question wnicn evoked it. possessing, a) an organizes community, the same popular right as the inha bitants ot a State or territory, to make known their will upon matters which ail'ect their social and political condition, they could have selected no more appropriate mode of memorializing Congress upon the subject of this bill than through tbe suffraecs ot their qualified votes. Entirely disregarding the wishes of the people of the District of Columbia, Congress ha daeoied it right and expedient to pass the measure now submitted lor iny signature. It, therefore, be comes the duty ol the Executive, standing between the legislation of the one and the will of the other, fairly expressed, to determine -whether he should approve the bill, and thus aid in placiutr upon the statute books of the nation a law against which the people to whom it is to apply have solemnly and with such unanimity protested, or whether he slioul I return It with his objections, in the hope lhat. upon reconsideration, Congress, acting as the representatives of the inhabitants ol the seat of government, will permit them to regulate a purely local question, as to them may seem best suited to their interests and condition. The District of Columbia was ceded to the United States by Maryland and Virginia, in order that it ruieht become the permanent. peat of government of the United States. Accepted by Congress, it at once became subject to the "exclusive legislation" for which provision is made In the Federal Constitution. It should be borne in mind, however, that in exercisiug its functions as the law-making power of the District of Columbia, the authority of the Na tional Legislature is not without limit, but that Congress is bound to obperve the letter and spirit of the Constitution, as well in tbe enact ment of local laws lor the teat ol government, as in legislation common to the entire Union. Were it to be admitted that the right "to ex ercise exclusive legislation in all caes what soever," confeired uton Cougrefs unlimited power within the District of Columbia, title of nobility mictit be granted within its bounda ries; laws might be made "respecting an esta blishment of religion, or prohibmg the Iree , exercice thereof; or abridging the freedom of i speech or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to uWemble and to petition the Gov- I vernment lor a redress of grievances." Despot- I ism would thus reign at the seat ot government j of a free republic, and, as a place of permanent residence, it would be avoided by all who prefer the blessings of liberty to the mere emoluments of official position. It should also be remembered that in legis lating for the District of Columbia, uuder the Federal Constitution, the relation ot Congress to its inhabitants is analogous to that of a Legis lature to the people ot a State, under their own local Constitution. It does aot, therefore, seem to be asking too much that, iu matters pertain ing to the District, Congress should have a like respect for the will and interests of its inhabi tants as is entertained by a State Legislature for the wishes and prosperity ot those for whom they legislate. The spirit of our Constitution and the genius ot our Government require that, iu regard to any law which is to affect and have a permanent beuriuu upon a people, their will Hhould exert at leaet a reaouublo influence upon those who are acting in the capacity of their legislators. Would, for instance, the Legislature of the State of New York? or of Penusyl tinta, or of Indiana, or of any State in the Union, in oppo sition to the expressed will of a large majority of the people whom they were chosen to repre sent, arbitrarily force upon them, as voters, all persons of the African or negro race, and mako them eligible foroilioe, without any other quali fication than a certain term ot residence within the Plate f In neither of the States earned would the colored population, when acting together, be able to produce anv great social or political result, in, in aew xoric, Deiore he an vote, the man f color mu6t fulfil conditions that are not required of the white citizeu; in Pennsylvania the elective franchise is restricted to white freemen: while lu Indiana negroes aud mulattoes are expressly excluded from the right of suffrage. It hardly sterns consistent with the principles of right and justice that repre-entativts of States where suffrage is either denied the colored man, or granted to him on qualifications requiring intelligence or propeity, should compel the people of the District of Columbia to try an ex periment which their own constituents have thus far shown an unwillingness to test for themselves. Nor does it accord with our repub . lican ideas that the principle of self-government ' should love its force when applied to the resi dent of tb District, merely because their legis lators are not, like those of the States, responsi ble, through this ballot, to the people for whom ttvey are the law-making power. The great obieet of placing the seat of govern ment under the exclusive legislation of Con gress, was to secure tlv? eutire Independence oi the gtjjcm) Govercment from, undue fcute irjflij- encc and to suable it to discharge, without danger of interruption or infringement ot it-i authority, the high functions for which It was created by the people. For this important pur pose It was ceded to the United States by Maty land and Virginia, and it certainly never could have been contemplated, as one of the objects to be attained by placing it under the exclusive inrtadtctlon of Conere, that it would afford to puipapaiidifits or political parties a place for an experimental test of ther principles and theo ries. While, indeed, the residents of the seat of government are not citizens of any Staff, and are not, therefore, allowed a voice in the electoral college, or representation in the councils of the nation, they are, never theless, American citizens, entitled as such to evry guarantee ot the Constitution, to every benefit ol the laws, and to every riht whicu pertains to citizens ot our common country. In all matters, then, atrecting their domestic affairs, the spirit of our democratic form of government demands that their wishes should be consulted and respected, and they taught to feel that, although not permitted practically to participate iu national concerns, they are nevertheless under a paternal Govern ment, regardful ot their rights, mindful ot their wants, and solicitous tor their prosperity. It was evidently contemplated that all local ques tions would be left to their decision, at least to an extent thai would not be incompatible with the object tor which Congress was erauted ex clusive legislation over the seat ot government. When the Constitution was yet under considera tion, it was assumed by Mr. Madison that its inhabitants would bo allowed "a muni cipal legislature, for local purposes, derived from tl'Cir own sulTraees." When, for the first time, Congress, in the year 1WM), aiscmoled at Washington, President Adams, in his speech at its opening, reminded the two Houses that it was for them to consider whether the local powers over the District of Columbia, vested by the Constitution in tbe Congress of the United States, should be immediately exercised, and he asked thero to "consiler it a.s the capi tal of a grent nation, advancing with unexam pled rapidity in arts, in commerce, in wealth, and in population, and possessing within itselt those rcourcej which, it not thrown away or lamentably misdirected, would secure to it a long course ot prosperity and selt-eoveinment." Three years had. not elapsed when Congress was called upon to determine the propriety of relroceding to Maryland and Virginia the juris diction ot the territory which they had re spectively relinquished to the Government of the Uni'ed States. It was urged, on the one hand, that exclusive jurisaielion was not necessary or useful to the Government ; that it deprived the inhabitants of the District of their political riehts; that much of the time of Congress was consumed in legislation pertaining to it; that its government was expensive; that Congress was not competent to legislate for the District, be cause the members were strangers to its local concerns; and that it was an example of a gov ernment without representation an experiment dangerous to the liberties of the States. On the other hand, it was held, among other reasons, and successfully, that the Constitution, the acts of cession of Virginia and Maryland, all contemplated the exercise of exclusive legislation by Congress, and that its usefulness, it not its necessity, was in ferred from the inconvenience which was felt tor want ot it by tbe Conercss of the Con'edera hon: that the people themselves, who it was said had been deprived ot their political rights, had not complained and did not desire a retroces sion; that the evil might be remedied by giving them a representation in Congress when tho District should become sufficiently populous, and in the meantime a local legislature; that if the inhabitants bad not political rights, they had great political influence; that tbe trouble and expense of leuislnting for the District would not be great, but would diminish, and might in a great measure be avoided by a local legislature; and that Congress could not retro cede the inhabitants wiihout their consent. Continuing to live substantially under the laws that existed at ibe time of the cession, and such changes only having been made as were sug gested by themselves, the people of the District have not sought, by a local legislature, that which has generally been wllllugly conceded by the Congress of the nation. As a general rule, sound policy requires that the Legislature should yield to the wishes of a people, when not inconsistent with the Consti tution and the laws. The measures suited to one community might not be well adapted to the condition of another; and the persons best qualified to determine 6uch questions are those whose interests are to be directly affected by any proposed law. In Massachusetts, for instance, male perrons are allowed to vote without regaid to color, provided they poseesi a certain degree of intelligence. In a popula tion in that State ol 1,231,066, there were, by the census of 100, only 0ti02 persons of color; aud of tbe males over twenty years of age, there were 339,066 white to 2602 colored. By the same official enumeration, there were in the District oi Columbia 60,764 whites to 14.31G per sons ot the colored race. Since theu, however, tbe population of the District has largely in cieased, and it is estimated that at the present time there are nearly a hundred thousand whites to thirty thousand negtoes. The cause of the augmented numbers of the latter class needs no explanation. Contiguous to Maryland and Virginia, the District, during the war, became a place of refuge for those who escaped from servitude, and it is yet the abiding place of a considerable proportion of those who sought within its limits a shelter from bondage. Until then held in slavery, and denied all oppor tunies for mental culture, their flrst knowledge of the Government wa acquired when, by con ferring upon them freedom, it became the'bene lactor of their race; the test of their capability for improvement began when, lor the first time, the career of tree industry and the avenues to intelligence were opened to them. Pos sessing these advantages but a limited time, the greater number perhaps . bavins entered the District of Columbia during "the later years of the war or since. it6 termination w may well pause to inquiie whether, atter so brief a probation, they'are as a class capable of an intelligent exercise of the right of suffrage, and qualified to discharge the duties of official posi tion. The people who are daily witnesses of their mode of living, and who have become lamiliar with their habits of thought, have ex pressed the conviction that they are not yet com petent to serve as electors, and Uiub become eligible lor office in the local Governments under which they live. Clothed with the elective franchise, their numbers, already largely in ex cess of the demand tor labor, would be eoon increased by an Influx horn the ad joining States. Diawn from fields where employment Is abundant, they would In vain seek it here, and so add to the embarrassments already experienced from the large class of idle persons congregated in the District. Hardlv yet capable of forming correct judgments upon the important questions that often make the issues of a political contest, tbey coul l readily be made subservient to tho purooses of design ing persona. While In Massachusetts, under the census of 16U0, the proportion of white to colored males over twenty years of age was one hundred and thirty to one, here the black rice constitutes nearly one-third of the entire popu lation, whilst the same class surrounds the District on all sides, ready to change their resi dence at a moment's notice, and with all the facility of a nomadic people, in order to enjoy here, after a short residence, a privilege thy find nowhere else. It is within their power, in one year, to come into the District in such number as to have the supreme control of the white race, and to govern them by their own officers, and by the exercise of all the munioipal authority among the rest, of the power ot taxa tion over property in which they have no m tewti Ii AlasthuHttts, where they have r n.joyed the benefits of n thorough educational jstn, a qusii rication ot intcl'iifnee require t, while hcie suHrnge tt extended to all, witnont discrimination, as well to tho mot incapable, who can prove a reddence in the Distiict of one year, as to those persons ol color who, compara tively tew- In number, ar -permanent inhabi tant, and having triven evidence of niTtt and qualification, are recoenized as useful and re sponsible members of tho community. Im poBcd upon an unwilling people, placed b the CoiiPtitution under the exclusive legis lation of Corigfi.ss. it would be viewed as an arbitrary exrcNe of power, and as an indication by tho country of the purpose of Congress to compel the acceptance ot negro suf frage by the States. Il would engender a feel ing of opposition and hatred between the two races, which, nceomincr deep-rooted and inera dicable, would pievent them from living together in a state of mutual friendliness Carefully avoiding every measure that mieht tend to pro duce such a result, and lollowma the clear and well-ascertained popular will, we should assidu ously endeavor to promote kindly relations be tween them, and lhu, when that popular will lead the way, prepare for the gradual and har monious intrf duction of this nev element into the political power of the country. It cannot be urged that the proposed exten sion of suffrage in the District ot Columbia Is necessary to enable pcrsom of color to pi-n'.cct either theu interests or their riarhK They stand hove precisely its they stand in Pennsyl vania, ohto, aud Indiana. Hi-re, ns e!ewhni-e, in a'l that pertains to civil rights, there is in.thirg to distinguish this class 'of persons lrom citizens of the United States; for they posse's the "full and equal benetit of all laTS ai.d proceedings for the security of person and property as is cnoyeJ by white citizens," an 1 nie made "subject to like punishment, pains, and penalties, and to none otlter, any law. fctatute. ordinance, regulation, or custom to the contrary notwithstanding." Xor, as has been assumed, arc their suflruges necessary to aid a lQJftl sentiment bere; for local governments already exist of undoubted fealty to the Gov ernment, and are sustained by communities which were among tbe first to testify their devo tion to the Union, and which during the strug gle furnished th-ir full quotas of men to the military service of the country. Tbe exercise of the elective franchise is the highest attribute of an American citizen, and, when guided by virtue, Intelligence, patriotism, und a proper appreciation of" our institutions, constitutes the true bnis of a democratic form of government, in which the sovereign power Is lodged in tbe body of the people. Its influence tor good necessarily depends upon the elevated character and patriotism of the elector, for if exercised by persons who do not justly estimate its value, and who are indifferent as to its results, it will only serve as a means ol placing power in the hands of tbe unprincipled and am bition, and must eventuate in the complete destruction of that liherty of whieh it should be tho most powerful conservator. Great danger is therefore io be apprehended irom an untimely extension of tbe elective franchise to any new class in our country, especially when the large majority of that class, in wielding the power thus placed in their hands, cannot be expected correctly to comprehend tho duties and responsibilities which pertain to suffrage. Yesteiday, as it were, four millions of persons were held in a condition of slavery tbut had existed for generations; to-day they are free men, and are assumed by law to b? citizens. It cannot be presumed, liom their previous con dition of servitude, that, as a class, they are as well informed as to the nature of our Govern ment as the intelligent foreigner who makes our land the homo of his choice. In the case of the latter, neither a residence of five years, and the knowledge ot our institutions which it trives, nor attachment to the principles of the Consti tution, are tbe only conditions upon which he can be admitted io eitlzenshio. Ho must Drove. in addition, a good moral character, and thus give reasonable ground for the belief that be will be faithful to the obligations which he assumes as a citizen of the republic. Where a people the source of all political power speak, by their sutlranes, through the instrumentality of the ballot-box, it must be carefully guarded acainst the control of those who are corrupt in principle aud enemies of free institutions, for it can only become to our political and social system a safe conductor of healthy popular sentiment when kept free from I demoralizing lnffueuces. Controiled, through fraud and usurpation, by the designing, anarchy and despotism must inevitably follow. In the hands of the patriotic and woitby, our Government will be preserved upon the princi ples of the Constitution inherited from our fathers. It follows, therefore, that in admitting to the ballot-box a new clas ol voters uot quali fied for the exercise of the elective franchise, we weaken our system of arovernmont, instead of adding to its strength and durability. In returning this bill to the Senate i deeply reuret that . there should be any conflict of dpnion between the Leilslative and Ex3cu tive Departments of the Government in recriud to measures that vitally atlect the prosperity and peace of the country. Sincerely desiring to reconcile tl'.L . ts'e j v.1 li . ne another, and tho whole people to tbe Government of the Cnlted States, it has been my earnest wish to co-operate with Congress In all measures hav ing tor their object a proper and complete adjustment of the quetions resulting lrom our late civil war. Harmony between the co-ordinate branches of the Government, always necetsary for the public welfare, was nevar more demanded than at the present time, and it w ill therefore be my constant aim to promote, as far as possible, concert of .action between them. The differences of opinion that have already occurred have rendered me only the more cautious lebt the Executive should encroach upon any ot the pre rogatives of Congress, or, by exceeding, in any manner, the constitutional limit of his duties, destroy the equilibrium which should exist be tw een the several co-ordinate departments, and which is so essential to the harmonious working of the Government. 1 know it has been ureed tbiit the Executive Department is more likely to enlarge the sphere of its action than either of the other two branches of the Government, and especially in the exercise of the veto power con feired upon it by the Constitution. It should be remembered, however, that this power is wholly negative and conservative in iu charac ter, and was intended to operate as a check opou unconfctitutional, hasty, and improvident legis lation, and as a means of protection auafnst invasions of the just powers of the Execu tive und Judicial Departments. It is re marked by Chancellor Kent that "to enact laws is a tran.-cendent power; and, if the body that possesses it be a full and equal representation of the people,' there is danger of its pressing with destructive weight upon all tbe other parte of the machinery ot govern ment. It has, therefore, been thought neces sary, by the most skilful and most experienced anists in the science of civil polity, that strong barriers should be erected for the Drotectlon and security of the other tecessary powers of I the Government. Nothing has been deemed I more fit aud expedient for tbe purpose than tbe ; provision that the head ol the Executive De J partment shoulJ be so constituted as to secure i a reoufxlte ehare of indenimdnne.e. and that he should have a negative upon the passing of laws; and that the judiciary power, resting on a still more permanent basis, should have the right of determining upon the validity of laws by the standard of the Constitution." The necessity of some such check in the bauds of the Executive is shown by reference to the most eminent writers upon our system of gov ernment, who seem to concur in the opinion that encroachments are most to be apprehended from the department iu which all legislative powers are vested by the Constitution. Mr. Matlicon, lu referrArg to the difficulty of pro viding some practical security for each acainst the invaion of the others, remarks that "the Legislative Department Is every where extend ing the sphere of its activity, and drawing all power into its impetuous vortex." "The founders of our republics seem never to have recollected the dangpr from legisla tive usurpations, which, by assembling all power in the same hands, must lead to the same nranny as Is threatened by Executive usurpa t.ns." "In a representative Republic, where tbe Executive Magistracy is careiully limited, beth In the exent and the duration of ifs fower, and where the leeislattve power is exercised bv an assembly which is in,-pi red by a siippo-ed influence over the people, with an intrepid con fidence in its own strength; which is sufficiently numerous to fee) all the passions which actuate a multitude, 5ct not so numerous as to be Inca pable ot pursuing the objects of its passions by means which reason prescribes it is againt the enterprising ambition of this department that the people ought to indulge all their lea lousy and exhaust all their precautions." "The Legislative Department derives a supe riority in our Government from other circum stances. Its constitutional powers being at once more extensive and lees susceptible of precise limits, it can with the greater facility mask, nndei complicated and indirect measures, the encroachments which It makes on the co or dinate departments. On the other side, the exe cutive itower being restrained within a narrower eompais, and beine more simple in its nature, and the judiciary being described by land marks still less uncertain, projects of usurpa tion b either of these departments would im mediately betray and deteat themselves. Nor i this all. As the Legislative Department alone has access to tho pockets of the people, and has in some constitutions lull discretion, and in all a prevailing influence over the pecuniary re wards of those who till the other departments, a dependence is thus created in the latter which gives still erenter facility to encroachments of the former. We have sesn that the tendency of republican governments is to an aggrandize ment of the legislative, at tho expense of the other departments." Mr. Jefferson, In referring to the early Consti tution ot Virginia, objected that by its pro visions all the powers of government legisla tive, executive, and juoicial resulted to the legislative body, holding that "the concentrat ing these in the same hands is precisely the tleunition of despotic government. It will be no alleviation that these powers will be exer cised by a plurality of hand', anJ not by a sin gle one. One hundred and seventy-three des pots would surely be as oppressive as one." "As little will it avail us that they are choen by ourselves. An elective despotism was uot the Government we fought lor, but one which should not only be founded on free pr'nciples, but in which the powers of government should be so divided and balauced among several bodies of maeistracy as that no one could tran scend their legal limits without being effec tually checked and restrained by the others. For this rea:on that Convention which passed the ordinance of government laid its foundation on this basis, that the Legis lative, Executive, and Judiciary Departments should be separate and distinct, so that no person should exercise the powers of more than one of them at the same time. But no barrier was provided between thefe several powers. The Judiciary and Executive members were left dependent on the Legislative lor their subsist ence in office, and some of them for their con tinuance in it. If, therefore, the Legulatoro assumes executive and judiciary powers, no opposition is likely to be made, nor, if made, can be effectual; because m that case they may put tbetr proceedings into the form of an act of assembly, which will render them obliga tory on the other branches. They have ac cordingly, in many instances, decided rights which should have been left to judiciary con troversy; and the direction of the Executive, during the whole time of their session, is be cora'ng habitual and familiar.'' Mr. Justice Story, in bis commentaries on the Constitution, reviews the same subject, and says: "The ttnth in that the lesrMative rower is the great and overruling power in every free Govern ment." '1'ne representatives ol the people will watch with jealousy every encroachment of tne Executive Magistrate, tor it trencues upon their own aiithori'y. But who shall watou the encroach ments of ihce representatives themselves? Will they be as jealous of the exeroise ot power by thona selves as by others f" "ihore ore many roasous which may be assigned for the engrossing influence of tho legislative department. In the hrt place, Hi constitutional powers are more extensive and le-s apahle of Doing brought within precise liui ts, taau those ol either ol the other departments. J'ha bounds ot the Executive authority are easily marked out and defined. It reaches few obloo s, aud those are known. It cannot transcend thorn without being brought in contact with the other depart ments. .Laws may check aud test rain and bound its exercise. The same remarks apply with still greater foroe to the Judiciary. The jurisdiction is, or may be, bounded to a few otijeci or persons; or, however general and un limited, its operations are neoessaiilr confined to the mere administration of private and puDlio fug. tlce. It cannot punish without law. it cannot create controversies to . act upon It can decide on.y upon rights and cases as tusyure broueht bv others bttore it It can do nothing foriise i. It must do everything lor others It must obey the law; and il it corruptly administers them it is sub ject to the power ot Impeachment. On the other hand, the legislative power, except in the tw cases ol constitutional prohibition, is unlimited. It if forever varying is means and its end. It governs tho institutions and laws and publio policy of the country. It regulates all its vast interest. It dis poses of ml its property. Look but at tbe exercise ot two or three braucho of its ordinary powers. It livits all taxes; it directs and appropriates all sup plies ; it gives the rules lor tbe descent, distribution, and demises oi all property hold by individuals. It controls the sources and tbe resources of wealth. It chunge at its will the whole iabrio of the laws. It moulds at its pleasure almost all the institutions which give strength and comfort and dignity to eociety. Jn the next plaoe, it is the direct, visible representative ot the will Of the people in ail the changes of times and circumstance. It has the pride, at wed as the power ot nniuhers It u easily moved and steadily moved bv tbe strong Inipu ses of popular fuelinr and popu'ar odium. It ohevs, wiihout rouctauce, tho wishes and tho will of the mujority lor the time being. Th path to publio favor lies open bv such obedience; and it finds not only support, but impunity, iu whatever measures the majority advises, even though they transcend the constitutional limit It has no mo tive, therelore, to be jealous or scrupulous iu its own use ot power; and ft finds lis ambition st mutated, and its arm strengthened, by the coiiut6nao.ee and tbe oourage ot nomhers. These Views are not aloue tlioe ot men who look w th appiehension upon the fate of republics, but ther are also freely admitted by tome ol the strongest advocates for popular rights and the permanency of republican institu tions." " Rach department should have a will of its own." "Each should have its own independence secured beyond tbe power of being taken a ay by either or both of the others. But at the same time the relations of each to the other should be so stiong that there should be a mu tual interest to sus'ain and protect each other. I here should not only be constitutional means, but personal motives to relat enoroachmouta ot ono or either of the others Thus, ambition would be made to counteract ambition j tbe desire of power to oueck power; and the pressure of interest to bal ance an opposing interest." "The judiciary is natu ra'ly,ai.d almost necessarily (as nan been already sa'd) the weakest department. It can have no m -ans of Influence by patronage. IU powers can never be wielded lor itself. It has no command over tbe purse or tbe sword of the nation. It can neither lay taxes, nor appropriate money, nor command arures, nor appoint to office. It is never brought iuu con Uot with the people by constant appeals and solici tations, aud private intercourse, whioh belong to a'l the ott.er departments of Government. It is seen only iu controversies, or In trials and punishmDts. Its rigid justice and impartiality give it no otaimt to favor, however they may to respect. It stands soli tary and unsupported, except by that portion of public opinion which Is interested only in the strict administration of Justioe. It can rarely seoura the sympathy or sealou support either of the Executive or the Legislature. If thev are aot (as Is not unfrequtntiy the case) Jealous ol Its prerogatives, the conMsnt or comity of scrutiniz ing the acts of eserj, opon ths application of any private person, and the painttil du y erf pronouncing Judgment lhat there acts aie a departure from the law or Constitution, can have no Vndency to con ciliate kindness or nourish influence. It wouut seem, therefore, tlia' some additiona guards would, under sucb circumstances, be necessary to protec. this di partment from the absolute dominion ot the others Yet rarely have any such guards boon ap plied; and every attempt to introduce thorn tins been rensbd with a pertinacity whlcn dtmonsiratos bow slow popu ar loaders are to lntromeo nbecks npon their own power, ana bow siOw tho peop e are to believe that the judiciary is the real bulwark of their lit eitie." - It any department ot tho Govern, nient has undue Influence, or absorbing po vor.it certairny has not been enber tho executive or juui ciarj " In addition to what has been said by theie distinguished writers, H may also be ureed tbat the dominant party in each House may, by the expulsion of a sufficient number of members, or by the exclusion from representat on of a requi site number of States, reduce the minority to lees than one-third. Congress, by these means, might be enabled to pass a law, the objectioas ot the President to the contrary notwithstand ing, which would render Impotent tho otuertAO departments ol the Government, and make io of erative the wholesome and res'.rxiuing piwer which it was Intended by the frainers of the Constitution should be exerted by them. This would be a practical concentration oi all power in tne Congress of the United Stales Ibis, in the language of the author of the Declaration ot Independence, would be "precisely the defini tion of despotic government." I have preferred to reproduce thee teaehincs of the great statesmen and co'istitu loual law yers ol the early and later days of the repub lic, rather than to rely simoly upon an expres sion of my own opinions. We cannot too olten recur to them, especially at a conluncture like the present. Their application to our actual conauion is so apparent, that they no v come to us a living voice, to be listened to with more attention than at any previous period of our h'slory. We have been and are jet in the midst of popular commotion. The passions aroused by a great civil war are still dominant. It is uot a time favorable to that calm and deliberate judgment which is tbe only sa'e guide when radical changes in our institutions ate to be made. The measure now before roe is one of those changes. It initiates an untried experiment, lor a people who have said, with one voice, that it is not lor their good. This alone should make ns pause; but it is not all. Tho experi ment has not been tried, or so much as de manded, by the people ot the several States for themselves. In but few ot tho States has such an ii novation been allowed a giving the ballot to the coloied population without any other qualification than a residence of one year, and In mot of them the denial ot the ballot to this race is absolute, and by tuudamental law placed beyond the domain of ordinary legislation. In most of those States the eil of such suffrage would be partial; but, small as it would be, it is guarded by constitutional barriers. Here tbe innovation assumes formidable proportions, which may easily grow to such an extent as to make the white population a subirdinate ele ment in the body politic. After full deliberation npon this measure, 1 cannot bring myself to approve it, even upon local considera'ions, nor jet as the beginning of an experiment on a larger scale. I yield to no one in attachment to that rule ot general suf frage v. hit h distinguishes our policy as a nation. But there is a limit, wisely observed hitherto, which makes the ballot a privilege and a trust, and which requires of botne clashes a time suit able for probation and preparation. To give it indiscriminately to a new class, wholly unpre pared, by previous habits and opportunities, to perform the trust which it demands, is to degrade it, and finally to destroy its power; for it may be safely assumed tbat no political truth is better established than tbat such Indiscrimi nate and all-embracing extension of popular suffrage must end at last in its destruction. ANnaEw Johnson. Washington, January 5, 18G7. THE SEW CITY COUNCILS. Organization of Both Branches this Morning. This morning at 10 o'clock both branches of the City Council met for the purpose of orga nizing for the present year. We give below the names of the members, with the Wards which they represent, their residences or places of business, and the party by whom they we.e elected. Those marked with au asterisk () are new members; the others hold over from last year. SELECT COUNCIL. First Ward Thomas A. Barlow (it.), So. 1332 . Finn street. heoond Ward-Dr. 0. R. Eamerly (O.), 8. W cor nel ot 'l bird and Federal streets. Ibird Ward James D. tampbsll (0.), No 739 f. Filth street. Fourth Ward Henry Marcus (O.), No. 720 South sireet. Filth Ward-James Page (0.), No 272 8. Fourth stieet. Mxth Ward-Patrick Duffj (O.), 8. W. corner ol Fifth and Vine streets, heventh Ward John A. fihermer (B.). N. E. corner o f Kluhlh aud South streets. Ktgliib Wara Alexander L. Hodgdon (B ), No. 1015 Bp race street. iilntji Ward-William 8. Btokley (B.). No. 19 Se Elphth street. lentb Ward-Joshua 8perlng (B.l, No. 1013 Vin street or No. Ill south Fourth afreet. Eleventh Ward Samuel o. King (O.), No 352 N. Second street. Twelnh Ward Charles SI. Wagner (R.), No. 341 S. Sixth street. Thirteenth Ward Alexander M. Fox(R ), No. IttO N. 8 etoud sireet, or No 8S8 N. fiixtii street Fourteenth Ward F. A. Van Cleve (B ), No. 311 N, Tenth or No. 118 8. blxih street FitteentU Ward-John J. Kersey (B.), No. 1920 Green street. hlxteentb Ward James W. Hopkins (0.), No. 1102 N. Ihlrd street. Hevsuieenth Ward Patrick bheru (0 ). So. 1210 Han cock street. eighteenth Ward Wlltlam Bumm (H.), Bace street aud Delaware avenue. Nineteenth Ward James Blc hie (R.), No. 1624 1 merl es n sireet. Twentieth Waid-Joseph Vannel (X ), N. W. corner Franklin and Butlonwood streets. Twenty- ttrst Ward Char.es Ttiompson Jones (B.), No. 131 8. Filth stieet. Twenty second Ward William F. Smith (&., No. 112 8. Fourth street. Twentt-tbird W aid Edward A. Snatloross (B ), No. 331 CLeuuut s reet. Twenti-fouitti Ward-8amuel W. Cattell(B.), 8. W. corner Twenty-flith aud fcnruce stree's TwentT-hrth Ward James Uecutcheon (0.), corner of Ann and Amber street. Twtntyslx'h Ward-William J. Pollock (B.), N. W. corner Seventeenth and Fitzwatoi streets. Twenty seventh Ward K. P Ull. Ingham (B.), No. 3708 (,'hcsnut. oi From and Poplar streets. Bepubticans 14 Opposition.... 0 Republican majority 9 ceuuoir COUNCIL. First Ward George W. Uaciague iK), No. 1313 8. Fourth street. Fhst Ward-WiUlam Calhoun (B ),No. 13262doyamen slrig avenue. Second Ward-William D. Martin (0 ), No. IOOSMoj a mensiug avenue Second Ward Hugh Kennedy ro ) Second Ward-John K. Tjson ,0.), No. 1U6 8. Ele venth street Third Ward-WU'lam Thompson (O.), No. 1203 Catha rine street. Fourth Ward-W. P. H Barnes (9 ), No. 802 Booth street Fourth Ward-Benjamin Haney (O ), No. 702 Penn street. Filth Ward Junes P. Dillon (O.), No. 308 Houtb street . Mxth Ward fiilllip Mutton (O.), No. IM N. Fourth street. herenth Ward-Thomas LUtle (B ), No. 338 8. Thir teenth street. (eveuth Ward John Bardsler (B.) No. 311 Lom bard street FUjbth Ward Alexander J. Uarper (B ), No. 1108 W alnut street. FlKhih Ward-Joba C. Martin B.), No. 118 8. Eighth Street. Ninth Ward-Walter Allison (B ) No. M 8. Eigh teenth street Ninth Ward A. 0. Msrshon (ft.). No. 308 Karket llrest Tenth Ward-A. 11. Frano.si M (K.), Ko. 511 Market sireet. lenth Ward-. W. Henr.M(R.. T O 811 Are"! stieet. Flev nth War' Thomas If. Uiil(0.), No. 810 North Pecond ntreet. i welith Waid-Wll tam Littleton' (K., No. 314 Tor avenue. thirteenth WarJ-William Palmer (K.), No.703Coate street 1 hlrteenth Ward John L. Shoemaker (B.), No 621 ' Vine Mreet. Fnurteenth Ward H.'. C. Oram (B.), No. 1218 Soring Garden street Sou rleentti Ward Joseph B. Baucook (B.), No. 864 N. Eleventh street. FWeenth Warrt-Bobert M. Evans B. No. 818 N. Sixteenth street. Fiiteenih Ward Joseph B. Conrow ,B ), No IMS Green Mreet Fiiteenih Ward Thomas I'ottel (B.), No. 1810 Green street Fl teenth Wsrd George W. Smith (R.), No. 3 K. i Iphteenth street Hlxieen h Ward Charles Eager (a.) No. 1144 Ffonk lord reati. Six tees th Ward-George J. Betsel (O.).No. 1M Dock street. r-eventeenth Ward-Lewis Driesbach (O ) Peventeemh Ward J. O'AeU. (O ), Fiith ana.Jelfcr- son streets. Hkbteenth Ward-Daalel P. Bay (B.), N. Ill N. Third street Eighteenth Ward Daniel W. Stockhsm (It ), NorrlS and ( laltiome Mneteentn Ward-Joseph Earnest (K-), No. 1B24 N. Front street N ineteeuth Ward-Nicholas Shane (B ), No. 2148 if. Fl th street Nineteenth Waid Francis Martin (R ), N. 847 East York stieet. Twentieth Watd-Joseph F. Marcer (1.), No. 818 N. Twenih 'ireet. Twentieth Ward James H. Hit mgton (B J, No. 41 S. Front street. Twentieth Ward Henry C. Harrison tR.). Master and .Sixth fleets. 'luei.titth Ward-Angus Cameron (R ), No. 19 9. Blxth street. T - enty tint Ward William A. Simpson (B ), No. 228 Walnut street. Twenty-arm Ward George W. Alevcrg (B.), Twen tletb nrat Herks 'I v?en y second Ward Joseph Hill (B ), Mo. AS N. Front, or Germantnwn. Twenty-second Ward Lewis Wsgner (B.), No. 131 Walnut street. Twen y-third Ward Samuel C. Wiilltt R ), Ho:mes bum P. o. 'iwenty -third Ward-Joseph T. Vsnklrk(R.), Frank ford P. O. Twenty-fourth Ward William Stokes (R.), No. 48 H. Water street .... . Twenty-lli tn wara o. a. loionower to. j, rort Kicn mTwenty-sixth Ward John Kcter (B), No. 1528 SoulS street 1 wentv-slxth Ward-Bobert Armstrong (B.j, No. 1237 C'l wentv-se'venth Ward-Wllllam Ogdon(B.), King scsslna P. o. K(, publicans 99 Opposition ujU Republican majority "....26 Join ballot Republican majority, 34. a Proceeding In Select Council. The Select branch met at 10 o'clock. Presi dent Sperm In the chair. The credentials of the new members were read, when the election of a President was proceeded with, resulting as follows: jg Johua Sperine, Republican . . . 15 Samuel D. King, Opposition . . .. -TCESfll 0 Majority for Sperinn. . . . .nlMj . Mr. hperinK then took the oath of orhec, alter which he addressed tho members as follows: - Gcntlemeu of Solect Council : In taking the posi tion to which I have been chosen by the favor of my colleagues, it will, I trust, uot be considered out oi plnce to briefly review the linaucial condition ot the city with reference to its debt and the resources it posfi'S'cs to moot it. is; retert nee to tbe official statement, prepared by the t ontrol er on the 1st of November, 1866, for the use of councils, aud upon wh eh the estimates of receipts and expenditure lor the year 1867 are bused, tt appeal b that the amount of tue existing funded deut on that day (not mo udinv that au thorized lor special pui poses, but uot lasood) was 8o,981,7wi IO mis mu'i ub uuuuu iuu suiuuui ui warrants outstanding 1,398,552 12 And to par arrears of State tax, due in Match, 1807 601,111 43 llakins tbe whole amount of the dobt. fuL'ded and unfundea, on the 1st of JNov tuber, 1806 f 37,001,402 79 Included iu the amount of iunded debt is $1 fal 300, ls-ued lor tho extension of tbe Gas Works, the inteict and Sinkinr.Fund lor which aie paid out of the incomo of tno Works, and which nileht, therefore, properly be deciucted in tho statement of iunded ' debt, it havniK a special provision iu the property of the Gas Works for . , , ,, itspsjment. To pay this debt the tame statement ot the Contioller shows resources as lolows: Cah in hands of Commis- uoiiors oi the Sinking fund 372-50 City loan lu s nking fund . 2 7,186 81 ' Otner securities, va'ued at IS 9jl,346 00 Outstanding taxes collect- . . able 860.000O0 23.108,6o4 81 Leaving a balance of debt not repre- ', , sou ted by assets in the sinking fund ot 914,67 4.007 08 But for the large amount of money rai d by loau Uuriusr the four years oi the v. ar, lor tbe purpose ot Daviug bounties and supporting tho families of volunteers, which was about 13,160,000-00 lbe balance ot debt uuprovided lor would have been only 1,724 607-98 I submit that, with this provison of tho sinking lnud, there cannot be a doutof the ability of the city to provide tor ail her obligations. There is no exaggeration in tho valuation ot the assets ot the Sinking Fund, which waa carefully made by ibo Commissioners, at tho actual market vaiue of the several securities composing it. borne ol the items of assets of the Sinking Fund are improving m value, among which are: The stock ol the North l'enna. R. K tl 400,000 do. l'hila aud trie It. It ... . 2,260,000 Amounting topether to 3,66J,009 It is hoped that these will soon become dividend pnjint-, and thus relieve the cny of the payment of the interest on the loans issued to theu to theextout 01 219,000 per annum. Iu the valuation ot the a-wtsot tbe Sinking Fund, time is cot included tho Parks, fcquaros, Vacant GrouLd, Publio Bullrings, Biidges, Prison, 11 1 use ot Keluge, Police Stations, Almshouses, Municipal lio.-pital, Gas Works, bohoo. Houses, etc., wh oh hat e cost many millions, and tar exceed in value tbe bulance of the dobt beyond the ainkiug uud, and all ot which have Ions Binco been paid lor. Perceiving the uneasiness ot tho publio mind at the rapid increase ol our debt during the lait four years (all of which grew out of the war, directly or indirectly), 1 have thought that a statement of thla nature might servo to reassure (bo holders of th city debt oi tho entire cur aiuty of the regular pay mint ot their interest, and oi the liquidation of the princii at when due. It is tho mistortune of the city to have inherited tiomtheold muuie'palities an irregular system of aseaements, which beat with particular severity upon the holders ot property in the thickly settled districts, here tbo assessments are high and ap proximate somewhat to the actual value of the pro perty. An experience ot some years in Council has satitlied me that tbe whole real estate of the city Is not assessed at an average ot twentj -Ave per cent, of its actual va'ue. sCXJ When the measures now in contemplation for iu creasing the powers and adding to the working lorce of the Board of Eevision are comileted, which it is hoped will be early in tne preseut year, a tax of 2 per cent on the aotual valuu of the real esta'e. $040 000,000 ilf uit estimate is correct), wbicu would seem low gttor the apparent y high rates to whioh we have been accustomed, would t leld 412,840 0U0, a sum which, with the othor sources of Income, is lar more than enonch to meet every oh luauon and requirement of the Government. FJiorts have been made tor the last few rears to exercise the power possessed by the oity, to raise some portion of the expense of Government bra tax on personal estate, but these efforts have so far been unsuccessful, irom tbe resUtaooe mado by ths interests to te affected, aud the eouaidoratioa that such taxation of personal property might have a tendency to drive away capital from ibe city. How ever tht may be, other cities raise eousiderabie levenue from personal estate without seeming to banish capita! from among then. Perhaps if tho legal rate of interest were rained to seven per cent the objections of capitalists to a moderate imposi tion upoa that kiud of property might ho with drawn. Cvntinut4 on ft ihA TV-) !4 ri :