tin COOK. S AXO SA V3JVJ, sffi h o e^. 151. nckly und regnlui. ' unuxl on- a» tliat nnpi^r*l - of Ours or 2J * ■|' inYitod tocUl.l ‘ ;c r««uplc, hokmakeil I- Blair .s Sti.\e mnitm ci rnl faroritw. •. rood and in n Uiorwid. !;■ be iveommenSU ves constantly ’II U. BCKH. - ■i llmizr, Altoonaf 'IC OIL, DC VALL.fc,; nris, U now-eft r sore and pabh my part of tJu • brerut oratJif -ua, headkchS disNwo thotU •-r this claasat PKT. wTZ« vp tl}« rafttir ‘V to tbs Mfe. rging to tfcM cnloffto ’roprjotar, ' [via;own, Tq. : ary Lihr,a:tr. abalQnifarni^ s? PKEIIAi [• 6rstU,thOlt|k Kssas [ [miug IWM riwlt La-of yiic^iS t;, is in OiicdHi l-dy newaAku*. lUp Anther;,tifiy I- onabted to tnr» libSp co«t, thtfsby day. [ ‘iu a Mahali®- I-kv itomf* toPr. IrkCltyV ry, k££d kiethodcCbWk fmedlclnv iuirS [ALL'S OALTa£ Irr.doftni^wk hful port,ndfm [uti RtwM'awvfi Ir.rui coatispdki. B so makagonlW I nearly ♦"a—»» I. u. iiauk; Centro ML hiy.—tab pw Xip«f|Ur b«, contaiaiMSU Ictnal loeaSthltjdf r, School Hmmm, pres, fom Heat- J-ros, * Ikbtoot m;- the nas»|M rav-.-d on toa ißtf tale eoutttub I’d bocol.ndul to lubscnben •* BCKL OEIL, IAC O. FKEKD. actical tn-RS, Lntly Kf [c«s. pn- siro torend*r**h iity. he hopest* lajre. ■ tr-vsonabl* tKM Ittcnded to. |c unded. .CHf. ZETTB.- Criminal! to la ‘1 (.-“<1 Trials, CrlmteM aip. together *W > be found in as; hr six month*; I* trite their M»«* I reside plohW tI.L t CO- dice Gazette. , York CVtjr. i & Co-, ass. Hoona. AL jGITIES. fictions mado- L-.nd, withont to fr.tes. [l-tf OLLIttATS- llr. Hunting it to all coil** r.t) at hi* re* Holliday**’"*' ' I, H. Hilcmao. [fokjia b) Wasbinfc <»* Lp Soap, F*l» -fc'ilHCSn’B kLITY OF hi, .mdReWi 1 bI.MAKKK, U<;iiir Tctnpl*' hmnrf teuß’S- ' t’s POM* fic.forsaleW p. IvESidA^, CONFBO' Y LEPB’g: Lvd (tffi McCRIJM & PERN, YOk 4. , - \ - «- 1 7 n w conM of garter Sfessloia !• of Combria County. I, matter I#®*-: - • 1 • OpIKIOX Of THE COWKT. ■ TiTLOEi r* X • ■ ■■ n I On the 16th of October last, the petition of I Lewis Cassiday,. J. P. Bcott, and twenty others, I representing themselwto be tpalificd electora l o f the county of Cambria, formally [ m of their hwhber, was presented to this [court, complaining of dn undue .election for [county commissioner, at the lutgeneralclec- Etion: and .Betting forth “ that Abpl Lloyd and [Lewis Fisher, both citizens and-dectors pf said county, were sotorally voted-for at the said [election in connexion with said offieft. and as it Ui poars by the return of the return judges of [tiidcoanty.of Cambria filed of record “in” this [>■ court, on the 15th day oflpctober, A.,«; v |:858, the .said IV»;v^jv l ’ Pf course, were utterly I l hela» *r?® bft *3s®tho duties enjoined by 1..-.thtfit. were esamiued. by the [ ,!le Germ an inteipyoter. One of it Goonr* 1 ?"*» hoard were sworn by F. cnee bo* cummisaioh, though ho had -a a Justice of the Peace, had expired, •'---- • : and be had no. authority whatayer .to administer the oath. Snob was' the tboord/of officers and its‘organization! Its modo T or procedure show ed-a-still wider deviation from the requirements of thedaw. No. naturalization papers, as it ap pears by the evidcnce.wereiuquired for or pro duced that ; diiy: v no one who presented himself as a vote/, though more than one half of who Apparently votedoonldlegally do so with out such examination, was sworn or .examine# as tO' his right to vote: no list was kept, or if kept, preserved, as required by the law, to show; who voted “on age,” or upon proof ofthd payment of a “tax:” the votes waren either rei ceivcd, called out, or counted, in the.manner enjoined by law. Xho Assessor whose duty it is made by the law to.atteud and be present -with .the .hoard - through, the day, when he ap peared, there to discharge that duty, was order ed out of the room by one of the officers, and yet when tho time come to count off the votes, Uichard White, A. M. White, Francis. McCon: nell, and P. M. George,.the non-commissioned Justice who had sworn.them, were all, contrary to tho practice everywhere else, and totheim-' pressioa of every body as to what.is right and proper, admitted into the room. And when all was over, .the explicit and important require ment of the as a safe-guard against fraud by providing evidence for its de tection, —that the ballots, list of taxables, &c., should be put into the boxes and sealed,, and presorted in the specific manner directed, was utterly disregarded; and tho tickets for the office in controversy wore produced- tp the com missioner .by tho aforesaid F. M. George, in an old segar-box, without even a lid upon it All these things appear in thcevidcnce. .In a word, if Squire George had sworn these officers to dis regard ever/ requisite of the buy, Instead of j swearing them to observe it, they wpqld, merit more .-commendation for thoir fidelity,to their oath, .if not to the lvw.‘ It is to be observed, ' also, that none of the officers ci!;n»ined,can or will give any account' of the Ugt of taxables which they had before them; and that neither of the clerks could be found.Cr procured-to tes tify before the commissiqner. andthatine of t|iem, Gcisman, in the opinion of the officer, and ns is evident from what the offic^states,leva-' ded the'process of the law/ These deviations from the rcquircmci the law are clearly proven and not denied [they are defended or attempted to be cxc on the ground that the several provisions 9 act of assembly violated, or not complied, are merely directory, and that whilst d tares, from them may be censurable, and subject the officers to penalties, the result,] appear to be right, should not, on that grai be disturbed. As to some things, and \ there Wijo allegation or ly those who bad a right to vote appear to ll voted, and legal votes only appear to; Jiavp I received and returned, this andoubtedly i ar rcct dloncst citizens should npt-bd.depri cd of their suffrages on account of ft ipere Slip or on jncrely technical grounds,/oi’ fpJrtunsubsiaa-, tiat reasons. A failure onthepartof nlestion officers to comply with what is merely formal in the directions, of the law, where nothingraoru is charged or provenj shoyld-.not bc setted upon v as ground or occasion to cast away lead votes. Bat to this there must be some limits There are provisions of the law which must he re garded not ,sfts :matter of form merely! but-of substance, Those wlucl* fix thetime atk place of holding an election; or define the number and qualifications of officers j pr how vote! shall be cast, as by ballot or otherwise; or prttsribo the mode in which ballots shal,! be received, counted, and returned, and the tests whioWshall be applied to persons presenting thcmaelvU as voters,, .arc the means cstablished'and fixul by the law of ascertaining, and constitute thderi terion, and the only criterion of deterhlang, what are Ugcl votes. Iso votes except by bdlot, and no ballots, except those received at the time and place, in the ntahher, and by the offi cers appointed dr chosen and qualified as Ac quired by the law, can be legally recognizedns such : and, unless thus ascertained to bo le'gil, they must,bo'rejected as illegal. \ In the pieseat case, it cannot surely be sail that no substantial requirement.of the law was disregarded in the organization of the board of officers, and in the mode and ,manner of conduc ting the election. Some" things complained of, and proven, wo might view and treat as irregu larities merely. TVc might, for instance, over look the fact;that the oath was administered to the officers by one who had no more right to administer it than any other citizen of the town ship. if there was -reason to suppose they be lieved at tho time ho had, and therefore as sumed the moral if not the legal obligation of an oath. But two of them, at least, were dis qualified to act; one of them not ignorant or forgetful of the fact. ’but as his own testimony shows, wilfully intruding .himself info tho place; and every required test of the qualification of voters, and of the legality of the votes received, or returhfed, was disregarded. In fapt there .was scarcely a direction of the law strictly, and in all things complied with. cxcept that which required the votipg ,to,.be jby ballot, and that fixing the time pad placeOf holding the olec filbO. And, if this were the whole case, we do p°t sce how we could,avoid the'conclusion, that the election in that waannduo aud.il- Icgal, and to be treated as null and void. ■, But it is not stall necessary, to rest our deci sion oh .tliatj ground. ilh addition .to the nu nisrpas; wrbguWrities noticed, which, lhoug|,&>y Mrt .aud:w6 ,think would .bosuffi qiqnt the.election, might not crun ih&tc if nothing appearedjwfcich disclosed a, Jpaqtive’ to wilful lawlessness and fyiiud, yjQ have .before, ixs .the‘most conclusive evidence that more than one half of the names of-voters on,the list were fictitious, and the cowcsp’ohding votes retarded, fraudulent; " 1 .. .The sfirst prominorit fact going to proto this, which arrests the attention, is the discrepancy between the list of taxablcs and the list of vo ters. It is well known that every list of taxa , bids; coinprises the names of females, aliens, [ and non-resident properly holders who liriva .no I right to vote, It is well known, moreover, .that | all who have a right .to vote, are noverat any ! election, i These together seldom fail to oiit | number largely those whose names are put on what is called the “ten dey list,” dnd th.63e. who vote “ on age so that it very rarely hap pens that the list of voters equals the list of taxablcs. Generally, it fallp far short of it.— And oi this, every, one can be convinced by in stituting a comparison with respect to all of the other election districts in the county.- Here, however, fficre arc 311 taxablcs " while, .on. the list of voters we have 437 ; ap excess' ; of 12C ;. dr pidre than 40 per (ient-.1-r ‘.This fact alonp, unexplained, is convincing. proof of something foul and fraudulent.' * v ; 5 ■ But further,—of these 437 names on the list . A ALTOONA, PA., THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1859. , ! of voters, we. findfn the asscssriaect, or list of texables, only JiS; showing that no less than 279, if voted tat all, done so oh a residence of ien days and a proof of the pay raeht of “ tax,” or on age:; and, if-so, it was the the officers to scrutinize, require the specified proof, and preserve the evidence of their right to vote. “ JVb -perton" the act of assembly expressly declares, “ shall be admitted' to t}ote tchose name ts not contained 'in -the list of taxable inhoiitants furnished by the commissioners, ” tpiless he make . proof .of his having paid a state or county tax within two years, or the required proof of his right, to, vote by being on between the age- of twenty-one .and years ; “ it is further;expressly required and provided, “ the name df the person so ad mitted to vote shaikhs inserted ih the alphabet- list by the inspectors' and ainoto made -op posite there to by writing thqword “ tax,” if he shall, be admitted to vote by, reason of hiving paid a tax, or .tbe word“age,” if he shall bc admitted to vote on account ofhis age; andiu cither case thp name df such; voter shall he cal led opt to tiie clntkSj Wlio shallimake the like notes on tho list of voters kept hy them.” By another sect ion of the act, it is made tho duty of each inspector who shall receive the ticket o’f nn elector, to call out aloud the natde of such elec tor which shall be inserted by the blork sin sepa rate lists, and thd name shall be repeated by each of them, and the inspector shall‘insert the let ter V in the margin of the alphabetical list op posite the name of such voter ; ai)d, if such elec tor sltall have been sicom or affirmed, or produced a certificate or other evidence at before provided of having been naturalized, the inspector shall also \nolc the same on the margin of such list, and token {proof of rexidenef is made shall also pole the name of the person making siich proof\ While, therefore, the law explicitly declares that “no person shall {be admitted to vote whoso nam.c is not contained in the li-fi. of taxable inhabi tantswithout making tho ispecifiod proof of Ibis right ,to vote, add without Mich his vote Iwould }: bd illegal, it provides the evidence of compliance with this indispensable requisition bf the daw, ' viz ; the enjoinefi notings of the offi ■fei s upon the lists. And it i Explicitly provides /or the careful presciwation of this evidence for the purpose of settling any or contro versy respecting the legality o£ such votes; — “As soon as the election shall be finished, the tickets, list of taxables, oho" df the lists of vo ters, and one of, the certificates of the oath, or affirmation, taken and subscribed-by the inspec tors, judge and clerks, shall bo caircfully collec ted and deposited in one or in are pf the ballot boxes, and such box or boxes being closely bound round with tape, shall be scaled by the inspectors and judge of the: ejection, and to gether with the remaining ballot-boxes, shall within one day afterwards bp delivered by ono of the inspectors to'the nearest justice of the .peace who shall keep such boxes containing the tickets and other documents, to-answer the call of any person or tribunal authorized to try the merits of such elect ion; and tjic other list of vo ters, tally papers, and certificates, shall bo .en closed by the said inspector and judge in a seal ed cover directed to the pfothonotary of the court of common pleas of the county, and shall hy ono of them be delivered into his office with in three days thereafter whoa the same shall be filed.” \ ; . Live I These lists, then, should .contain the evidence of the right of the 279 whose; names are not on the list of taxables, to vote. They ore the evi dence which.the law requires, and their preser vation was a positively enjoined, duty for the very purpose for which we hero want them.— But the list of taxablqs which should have been, was not thus preserved. Iff cannot be found ; and the officers can or will give’ account of it. And the other lists contain no nolings by the officers which show that; any; of these per sons were examined, or produced any proof of their right to vote. On the contrary, it appears in the testimony taken and reported that no die teas sxsorn and examined xtpdn oath, and that no naturalization papers Were or produced. The conclusion is unavoidable, that the 158 whose names arc found on the assessment list, were the only qualified' electors there. And this, by the Way, accords'with the testimony of some of tnc witnesses who estimated the number of persons voting that day, at about that number; ns wed as with other evidence, to the same po/ut, yet to be noticed. We have no evidence ofjthe qualification of any others ,• nay, the evi dence which the law requires i as to the 279 w»oso names are not on the assessment, has no edstencc, aud we are warranted in’ the conclusion tVat, if they were there, and did vote, their votes rcrc illegal.. • ■ The ruling and icasonihg of the court of Quarter Sessions of Philadelphia,| in the District Attorney case, arc so precisely in point here, that we extend our own by quoting at length that part of their opinion. •\ “The alphabetical lists produced in tins case,” s'kys that court in relfttioa|to- that case, “ for the divisions enumerated, (showed that, as far; as these lists wcre coacernqd, the inspectors had ntlerly neglected or. evaded;the duty which the lav requires them to perform'. No one is mark ! cd admitted because he had paid 1 a tax, or voted on agel and no oath appears to have been ad ministered to any one, or any other proof rc T quired os to qualification. , If this omission or neglect extended to a: few yptos i only, it might be regarded as a raerc irregUlariiy, affording no reason to infer that the election officers acted in bad faith, os was said in Boileau’s case. Bat when the omission extended tj) hundreds of pmes, in some cascs to nchrly bpo half” (more than one halfiherc) “ of all the jvotes received, the conduct of tho officers jean ofilg be regarded as an intentional neglect of Bidr sworn duty ; such d neglect, to call it by no haraheir'name, us ap pears to bo uttbrly inobnsifcttßt >ilh that good faith and integrity which is required to render the proceedings of elcctiott officers reliable, and Without the appearance of which, the evidence is unworßiglof these reasons, which are entirely consistent with tha-rule applied ip all: former sh£eS, that the evidence offered row* l . h#. r ®? fr°p circum.- stances'savouri'ng of fraud ot contrivance, toe feeihouiid to disregard entin&y > Hs.Mtd *'• ■ ' I.' * inatioD, can only recognise' awof th* nhn|** upon it | . wiflii sodjiTty* *K« '«oaauj»joner, ahd phtmto the; haiida of constable AL S, Harr, ,to bo served.—. In Ins effort to serve it, be travoled day after day trough; the whole township, and every port of it, aocompspied by Arthur Storm; erf olid 4 citizen and well acquainted inthatownalup, and; with its citizens, as wehavo noQ°f— testifies that, after the most diligent search, he only found four persons answering to names bn theiistj . . >Ve.have then, all this additional evidence,--’; (and, if this were all, who could entertain. a doubt upon the question?—) that 275 of .the 279 on the list of voters, which are not found on (he assessment list, or list of taxablas, are notiin, .the township, r.nd were not there on-tLe day of the election. This is called “ negative testimony” by the respondent’s counsel, because it is here* introduced to show, that those alleged voterb. were not and are not in the township. It wo hid' be of innative t estimony, if adduced to show.that they ww, and are, in the township. The force, of it, is the same in either case, the result de pending on the fact as it exists. ' Tho propor tion is embcaccd if the inquiry, wsbb ami auS they th£R£ ? h'o one can doupt for a moment thht Hie knowledge of Storm, Conriid, Adding, and Burgoon, of the township and its citizens, would have discovered, and the diligent search of Harr Storm have found if not all, at least tho greater portion of this large number' of al-; loged voters, if in the township, and to be found there. Had they been there, the testimony would have shown it, and would be affirmative. Bad they been there, this evidence would have prov en it, instead of proving, as it does, that they were not. \ Whatever you choose tp call it, it h is therefore, the force i f positive or affirmative testimony. The existence of 275 fbtbra; iti a township containing 311 taxable habitants; as we have already noticed, and ns every one feols and knows, is very easily shown.; An appeal tp to tho knowledge of old citizens,'and diligent search, mast and will discover them, if there ns it must fail to do it, if they ar£ sot there.— The truth is, it is impossible, in a district iiko this, to practice a fraud apoo the ballot-box l;ke tliis fraud—by introducing 275 unreal or fictitious voters—and hide it. ‘The attempt is as silly as that of the ostrich to-conceal its huge body by thrusting its head into the sand. But it is unnecessary, as it is sickening, to dwell upon the evidence in this case. The large and suspicious discrepancy between the list of taxables and tho list of voters—the fact that only 158 of riie 43< names returned as voters arp found on the assessment list, and that, conse quently, 279 of them had no right to vote with out being sworn or examined by the board the absence, if not the suppression, of the evidence required by law that this was done—nay, the fact,'affirmatively proven, (so to speak) that it was no, done, —the total absence of any evidence, or of any attempt or offer, cn the part of the respondent, afjtbough incumbent upon him and them who would sustain or defend a result thiis. hnpeachcd—when, if it had been the truth, it was so easily shown, and so much depended upon it, —that these 279 names representedpersons in the township af the time;— the fact, on tho con trary, that old jeitizens of the township, with tho most ample means of knowledge, know noth ing ol them, and that the most diligent search cannot find them :—these prominent facts and features af the case, wc say, impress visibly and indelibly upon it the impress of fraud. We. treat it ns a fact, brought out by tho| evidence into clear day light, so clearly'established as not to admit of a moment’s doubt, that 275 of these names on the list of voters, are fabricated or fictitious, and the corresponding number of ballots that kind of fraudulent votes. This and. this only, accounts satisfactorily for the very suspicious irregularities and departures from: the requirements ot the- law in organizing the 1 b|>ard, and conducting the election, which, though so numerous and glaring theft it would die hard: to impute thein to ignorance or negligence, might possibly, if tho result appeared to bo right, be ascribed to some other than an intentionally corrupt or fraudulent motive. Itis plain, how ever, that they were “means” Adapted to the attainment of this “ end and part and parcel of one fraudulent transaction. Jt requires; therefore, very little calculation to dispose of this complaint upon its "merits ” In any view of the evidence, we would be bound to treat the names on tho assessment, —158, as the only legal votes cast. It is,contended ozi the part of the complainants, upon the,evidence adduced, that 70 votes were actually cast for Abel Lloyd. It is shown, at all events, beyond doubt ox cavil, that he did receive theuumber returned for him—44. This would leave ll'4i instead of 338 rotqmad, for Lewis Fisher.;—- This wbuld elect My. Lloyd by ovc? 150 votes. But the facts in o»ir judgement, disclose such fraud as renders tho whole poll undue and void. Throwing away, therefore, the w|ole vote of Washington township, the rcsuit.stiinds thus Abel L10yd,.... 1850 Lewis Fisher/. ig22 Lloyd’s majority. To tLe case thus made o\lt by the coraplain ants, by more than sufficient evidence, the only answer by the respondeat, and thogij who aw behind him, is a motion to qnaih the p«titiomahd proceedings, for three reasons ass%ned in ;a paper filled since the case came on for alrga* .ment; and'which, reversing thp ordpr m yduph they appear in the paper filed, W; shall nd# take up and consider. - 1. Ono of the reasons is, “that the petition does not set forth tho existence of foots whiehi if true, would change the result pffh«' jg^6q|’? No court,' we agree, should entertain 0 com plaint, and subject parties to the trouble and es pense of an invegtigation. whon the. result upon t!»e face Of tho complaint,' would be fruitless,- This reason, however, Is filed and urged 'upon the attention of the court, after the labor lids been undergone, upd when there is evidence bp fore Us which proves beyond-a doubt Tjhat does change the result as it respects the yoto- foy: county commissioner. .Whatever ebneideratlon wo might hate felt inclined to give thfe hid it been urged in’ an earlier -stage' of: the- proceed* ings, we would hesitate to arrest ;thjnp now. for thnt reason, if tnle. But is it true.?' -The cojUr plaint,’ already 1 'quoted, asserts that “a' lafgn ■number of ilitgai andfraudulentvoies vefe polled for Lems.; Fisher, and that the return of sod electioa'soasnforcsaid held in tho said ly made to the said return judges, and that &erd>£fy i dqfeah ed of'thi siasf o Js e „ °f’ ewnty. commissioner This we think sufficiently explicit; particular ly atthis stage ortho case, when wo have be fore ns a superabundance of proof to substaUtl*- ate the complaint. AND PROmETOBiI/" i .*3 -?' :A : 2 - Another of th« «>««*«« v, ~»ytybrdte ‘ offraud»jnTeguWUies*4e., battur*** tton, are vague and general lp^en^aj»o4s£»' r S*? , ■‘S™ 0,0 as. they or* madecotw evidence ;;but itwa» not; requisiteMttlbew shQuld.be. ,Jh®. different binds of fraud and m general term* it Is luqmcttaibl^i^Hd^ county of Cambria; and verified by two of .The evidence shows that one of these two,J.'p ; * Scott, ayoung man sbont lhree yttJlW 1 - 'ngp, was not'logally. cutitled.tq voteqa because, and only because,-ho bad not priM ft state or county tax within two years; although* • as it appears, ho did vote'in Washington town ship on that day. As it was his first vote dL pending on the previous payment of a tax/wa ns his father owned property in the township; it is not difficult to suppose that ho may have voted thoughtlessly; and the offieertof «K| election whose swop doty it was to Inqqjre abd ' sec to it, are moiw censurable" than ho. Btxt the question isnot, whether he did vo&bf had a right to yote, ,on that dtiy. ©no the wasnot at the election at all, if hc ! had a right to vote there, it cannot be doubled, ; might sigtr or Veri fy such a petition, This young man possessed ' all the general and inherent qualifications of a voter. He was not * minor,"an alien, or a nob resident. He labpred cnly undcr thecoanol on accidental disqualification arising from hot hay, iog f-a-d a tax. If, however, any oitizCn of thd township who was not; at the election on that • day, whether he had paid tax within two, yean or not, if otherwise in air respects entitled to vote, and who pqight qualify-himself to vote ' fore another election, or at any time, by tho payment of his fix, had verified the petition, whose deliberate judgment would conclude that ’ he was not “a qualified elector” within the meaning of the'act of assembly, upon a reason able construction of it?—or that a petition on that ground, and especially after iba truth of the complaint is fully established, should be quashed? If the objections to this election suggested mere irregularities, or what might be considers, ed undesigned departures from what is merely directory in the election law, and no fraud were proven, and no one appeared to hare voted but thosa who had ,a right to vote, we would feel in* dined to require the utmost strictness In a pro ceeding which aimed at overthrowing On election on technical and unsubstantial grounds. Bni when gross and flagrant frauds are dearly es tablished, to require this would'be little less than to make ourselves partietpa criminis, and render this court, instead of being what even court shtfuld bo, “ a place where justice' 1* jbr dicially administered, a refuge andsaactUaty df' fraud and crime, . . . . i We have been told in this case, that foy; pin-. cecding was got up by disappointedhfece-eeek ers, and should not, therefore, be encoorogedk If this were so, it would bat iUastratethCad age, “ when rogues fall but bonestinen ge'ttbeir ‘ duesand, in the aspect in which it isbefort us, it would still bo our duty to deal with the case as made out by the proof, al ready remarked, however* Wo recognised W this petition the names of some of the most reaper.; table citizens of the county '; and we donbt not they havoboen actuated by the purest aridmost patriotic' motives. The., necessity of requiring, ■ great strictness and formality iP such complaints, has also been very strenuously urged uptm bur ■ attention, as of all-absorbing : and' ponusonnt ; ' importance. To give undue consideration to , technical strictness here, when the actorabi' sembly requires usto decide Upbhmefits, though the effect might only betb stifle wholetom*&£? vcistigation, *onld bo to “ tithe thomint, com- • min, and anise,’* and neglect- “ the Weightier matters qf the ? law.?? Bat to consideration of.pny - Urged for quashing this petition, when uq.ef fect woald -ao to sanction and sustain the ntosl appalling fraud uponthe ballot-box and with plenary proof of it staring ns in the face, would be to “.strain at a gnat, and swallow a cameL;’* “Courlsof justice,” as Judge Thompson ob serves in the District Attorney case, ‘.‘would !, serve te ! loae nil confidence and respect;”—nay/: wq, add. to .it; would deserve the contempt of ; if they were astute in dqvisipg. . technical , finderwhich' thc dearcst ; of tip peqplq wduld bo destroyed by unworthy' men.” . ; V 228. > JThe.only difficulty which wo bnvc foU in this