m Mtn It ; Si BV'O000DLANDEIl, 1 Edito" and Proprietors. ' 'i VOL. XXXIV. WHOLE NO. 1302. FmCIPLES, not MEN. TERMS 50 Tcr Annnm, if j aid in n.t rc CLKARHIXI), 1A., WEDNESDAY, MARCH .TO, ir,r,k Ni:V SKRll-S-VOL. IV.-NO. 37. IJEASOS o r WILLIAM A. WALLACE, II ON. OF CLKARIIKID, Ior HH VOTR ON amendments' TO THE CONSTITUTION. 1XSEXATK, MARCH, ISCi. Mr. WALLACE said : 1 vote against thin bill upon principlo, as doll as tor lorw, and desire to assign the following reasons for my vote with re giu d to the first amendment : This is no ordinary step. It is not one ot those acts ol legislation mat may oe rc-: j'eaieu at our uoxi gessiuu, u ii jhuic uu wise or injurious, but it 13 a change of the organic law, which, if efl'octol, cannot be repealed savo by the act of two successive Legislatures, and a vote of tho people, and even this cannot be done uutil fivo years subsequent to its adoption. Such are the provisions of the Constitution. Beside this, it is in substance a repeal of the well considered provisions of the Constitution of l(ot upon the subject of the riizht of ulTrage, and essentially a change and a modification of the invaluable eafe-guards that the wisdom of ages has thrown round the elective franchise. The time of its Imposition, too, is objectionable We are in tho midst of great public commotion ; tho minds of men are in a continual whirl of excitement and agitation ; and the Lour is unpropitioua for that calm, unruf fled judgment that should preside over our deliberations in tho settlonient of I'm questions of this magnitude. Whatever may huvo been my sentiments rnd opinions upon this amendment when it was before this body at last session, tho lcsons of the past year have taught mc to fear the consequences of its adoption, and driven me to an investigation ol its mer its. In our own State wo have seen the military used by its controlling power lo decide tho contest for power and place, and unjust discrimination made in favor of one party against another. The soldier whoso independenceof action and peculiar pany vie-s renuerou mm incapauio oil evident that some ot the returns were control, was permitted to remain on duty, forgeries, and that through them several whilst l.o who was willing to be subservi-.of the candidates had improperly obtain nt, or was already possessed of tho essen-; ed certificates of their election, the courts tial requisite, was sent home to aid in the cannot for that reason summarily inter section. Of the result we have no right ! fere with and annul those certificates in to complain, fhe means made use of, and. the unblushing avowal of thorn, are to ray mind alike fearful and portentous. Wo have seen the dearest rights of a free and patriotic people in tho States of Maryland, Delaware and Kentucky ruth lessly invaded by the Executive, the bayo net of tho soldier used to control tho bal lot of the freeman, und the will of the people made to yield lo the power of force, in each of those States tho ballot-box has been trampled in tho dust, and the min ions of power have boon elevated to place lo do tho bidding of their masters. So, too, in tho rebellious States, we have seen tho rebel and the pa'.i'iot united in the same degroo; and they who have nev er raisod tho hand of rebellion, or sympa thized with its acts, must lowly abase themselves, or bo doprivod of tho right of sutiiago. Those who have committed no crime, who havo boon guilty of no act of rebellion, r.nul subscribe to a slavish oath, must degrade thoir manhood, and basely cringe at tho feet of power, or bo disfran chised. As a condition precedent to the pardon of a rebel, this mvght well bo done; but as a pre-requisite to tho right of suf frage by u " loyal " man, it i. Hie sheerest tyranny. It may be done in Louisiana or in Tennessee. If tl'.o asgis of tho Constitu tion be insufficient to protect the lover of the Union there, may wo not justly fear Its power here. ''tie abstract proposition embodied in Ihis amendment appears to many minds at first blush a reasonable and a just one. It requires an inquiry into and some ex amination of our elective and criminal system to demonstrate to such minds the utler impossibility of guarding the ballot box in the army, outside of the Common wealth, from foul and loathsome fraud. If, thoreforo, it bo impossible to protect this right of suffrage from fraud at a distance from the Commonwealth, surely its ex ercise cannot be advocated with propriety. Tho elective franchise within the State is cuarnnieed to the qualified elector un- tier a well considered and most carefully! guarded system or law. iho pmco orelec-1 tion is fixed by law ; an enrollment of voters is made by sworu ollicers ; lists of j voters aro -.lublifhed in advance of the el- ection; tho right of challenge at tho polls ! is protected j peace ollicers command the a new system of laws and a power never place of eloction to protect and defend the ! before vested in the courts of the Corn right ; a highly penal code of statutes, j mon wealth. The sixth amendment to consisting of no less tbati twenty different tho Constitution of the United States pro jections, prescribes tho punishment for ! vidos that "in all criminal prosecutions interference with the ballot, lor fraudu- the accused shall enjoy tho right to a speo Jently exercising tho right, or for frauds dy ttialbyun impartial jury of the State committed by tho election officers; oaths and district wherein the crime ihall have been iof the most binding character are admin- committed." isteretl to the officers holding the election, I The case of the Commonwealth versus .and they must all be citizens of the Com- Kunsman, reported in 5 Wright -129, de monwealth and qualified electors. ck1m nml conclusively settles this very W. can you designate in advance ft ' point. "By common law, crimes and mis place for the holding of elections In the demeanors are cognizable and punishable rmy T Can you there exercise the purl- exclusively within the jurisdiction where ying rights of challonJeT Can you de- thev nm mmin.i vise a system of guards and checks by Xvhich you can prevent frauds? You may .1 . .-..-I . ! ...I answer vuai trauus nave uemi iierieiitticu within the State. True, thev have : cross nd clarinc outrages upon ihe purity of the ballot-box have beon committed with - in Ihe Commonwealth, They who com- mil thero are amenable to your lows, and ean b. nnd hare been, cunithed for their offences. The fact, of their commission here, in defiance of all the penalties sur-, bounding them, provos that they can bo knd will be comraitlod in the army. They) " eon b punished here; in the army they ' Tiuiylt commitif,i,mik;mmjniv. And I affirm ' that the most learned and ingenious legal ujihu, noi excent na the most learned and ftblo chairman of tfce Judiciary Committee i cannot devise a coda of law iliat will elli-i ciontly or even partially protect the juri-, ty of tho ballot-box, if it be carried to the 1 army, outside of the Commonwealth. ' ou cannot punisn rrauus committed ty non-residents, beyond your territorial lim in; nnu wie rmKo oi ' umonuuieiit , tUro s wide tne aoor, and invites traud lo diotionai limits. The sumo arguments enter. An outraged people and an out- j yfould apply if tho Legislature had given raged soldiery will learn too late that tho : similar privileges, under similar penalties, right or Bufi'rago, their priceless jewel, j to other classes of citizens temporarily re the weapon of a freeman," has been by j siding in other Stated or countries, for the you debased, and made tho synonym of i power of tho Legislature is just as event in force, fraud and wrong. The constitution al qualifications can be, and they will be, disregarded ; and those who are not vo ters at home will be invited to aid in drowning tue voice of th cilizPni Your carefully prepared system of checks and uer consideration, its adoption was urged oaths will bo thrust aside or broken un,i Au3 finally carried bt.ouuse it ivas one through whenever they obstruct tho wish-! 0f the most c-Siicient protections oftho pu cs of designing men. Koturns will be sup- j rjty of the ballot, and tho Bhure.it guaran- pressed before thev reach tho borders of the State, and fulse and forged returns will be manufactured ; and by them the man who bids highest, or is most subser vient to tho will of the controlling power, will be declared elected. I speak by the record when I say that these thingi will occur and that you can not guard against them. The frauds of 1x01 are still fresh in our minds and upon the pages of your criminal reports ; and among the records of your courts are to be found repeated evidences of the truth of this fact. The caso of Ilalseman vs Items, reported in 5th Wright, 3, is but one of those ca ses of outrageom frauds perpetrated over the head of an innocent soldiery. There tho fact was clearly developed that the alleged returns from three entire compa nies were forgeries. They wero counted in tho return and they decided the elec tion. A certificate was based upon them, and tho highest court of the Common wealth was powerless to deprive the fraud ulently elected officer of li;s place. Une ol the syllabi of that casi is as follows : " Where the return judges included the soldiers' vote and issued certificates of el ection to those who were thereby elected members of common council, and it was the absouco ot proof that tho return mines acted fraudulently, but the case must bo tried by the forms of a " contested elec tion " before the tribunal appointed by law, and not by tho ordinary forms of le gal or equitable process bgforo tho usual judicial tribunal." the wholesale frauds committed in the election of sheriff of I'htladelpliut, as de veloped in the case of Thompson vs low ing, and particularly tho the return of tho Schimtuelpfennig regiment will also be remombered. A formal return of up wards of one thousand votes was regularly filed in tho oflico of tho prothonotary, having come by courso of mail to his hand. Tho?e votes wero cast almost sole ly for the Republican candidate. They wero produced before tho board of return judges and were thrown out becauso it appeared that only two companies of the entire regiment were rcci uited in Phila delphia; that the regiment was not at tho place named on the day of the elec tion, that no vote whatever wus had in the regiment, and that the entiro return was a base and palpable forgery. To the credit of the soldiers it is to bo said, that nono of these instances of outrugeous fraud were traceable to his act. Taey were all committed by the mercenary politician who lay in wait in the purlieus of the camp, seeking his opportunity to cheat both soldior and citizen out of tho fair and equal election provided for by law. Frauds like these, persisted in and suc cessful through the meshes of the law, tend to move men to violence to resist them ; and when it is seen that fraud and forco are the controlling power, and hon esty and justice submerged, riotous resis tance and bloodshed usurp tho place of law and oruer. You cannot punish frauds committed out of the Corutnonweulth ; beyond the borders of the Slate your laws are power less. Tho vilest outrage upon the right3 cf a freo people, if perpetrated outside the jurisdiction of vour courts, must co un- punished, and the ruffian who committed it may come here and mingle with you, unwhipped of justice, Show me the way in which you will control these frauds and punish the per- petrntors of them, and you will show me "An unnaturalized foreigner who fraud- ; ulently votes at a company election, held ..i. . r J 9 outside oi Pennsylvania, by virtue of the act of Julv 2d. ISM roi.iin in .liinn. , by the militia or volunteers in actual ser- , vice, cannot be indicted and punished in this State for such offence. The court of quarter sessions have no jurisdiction oyer such a case." Judge Kead, of the Supreme Court, in delivering his concurring opinion in this case, says: "There are, therefore, ineuporable ob - jections to any criminal courts in this State takinc cocnizance of any of the statutory offences created and punished by the act ol ad July, itsjx wnen commuted, as in the present case beyond our jurisdiction, I nm aware that creat and grievous fraud upon the elective franchise Imvo been perpetrated at the last general election, under tho cover of aliened elections bv tho volunteers, but they must f.'0 unpun ished, becnuso our courts cannot try of- fences nommilteu outside ot tlieir luris- one caso as in tho otlier, and no greater. In our Constitutional Convention of l!S3S, whilst the provision requiring a res idence of ten days within the district in tuiulilication to tho riiiht to vole whs un- teo asiainst the commission of fraud. Iu- ing tho discussion Mr. Forward, of Al legheny, said : 'Whenever the people seo your elect ions carried by fraud, then will thero be an end of all confidence, and in a short timo will there be an end of free govern ment. A few corrupt votes may make tue mujo uy .. ,ur ,o e ota e govern-1 "7,1;":"," . u.w. lUU Bijiii-o in j u" - ...mi-, ,uur iiousu Ol xitjj)reseiiiiiiivi;a nimuui jxuuuiive government. Ten corrupt votes on one' sido, may give a majority in the Senate n mnint'itv in Mia Hoilsn fLrwl fi tnainrilu 1 .. ..J-...J - fortne Governor of tho State. Then, if i; " i V , " .J' i V ' . r,. ., ,i i .ii , ... iiiniieu (as it men was tiv the act ol Con there is this chance of fraud, will tho peo- .piA nf' irr.w n.r 1 ,i , i . . 1 r gresfi 01 1 1 Jd) to three months, or even to pie be contented, ,1 there , a certu.nty of k iod not QKCiS0li ne' nfl traud in you elections? Will tl,r( roojilo ,lrfirter ol lieil. iprv woul j no submit to it It seemed to lum hut they t0 uf)(u thom for , d . r would not and that tho best, the sures v cMwn And the act of Assembly of lsl.i- and the safest way of preserving peace and 14 rec0fcMlize,i tlieir .duty as ciliitenSOf the order and content in tho public mind on S tate to aid it. the support of tho General thm su ject, was to place such restrictions Uovernmcnt, they were taken from their upon this right n? would ensuro t ho pun- ..j,,..,,:,,.,, , i ,, , ty of vour elections Since tho foundation of tho colony, all of our successive Constitutions have be came more and more distinct and careful upon the subject of the right of sullVage, and it has been the prime object of tho fiamers of all of them to define the right so clearly and surround it with such emi nently proper qualifications, as to preserve it from being abused and perverted. The act of July 2, 1830, specially exten dod lo elections by the soldiery ull of the sections of our general laws that imposed penalties ami provided cheeks for tho pro tection of the elective franchise within the State. Frauds, forgeries und illegal vo ting committed in the army were to bo punished as if they had been perpetrated here. In the case of tho Commonwealth Kuntzman, tho validity of this provis ion has bet) tested, nnd tho Supremo Court decide it to be utterly impotent, ami they distinctly declaro that nono of those offences, if committed outside of the State, can be punished by our judicial tribunals. pline, its subjection to tho Executive, and forms of an election, elevated their idol to Can you, by your act in rennsjlvonin, ; its time of service, in what does it ditlor th. lord poteetorato of tho realm, where extend tho jurisdiction of your courts to ; from our recognized standing army ? And ho exercised more despotic sway than ev Tcnnessoo or Virginia? Can your courts if the present policy is to govcrn'tho na- er did the unhappy Charle?. that army in Pennsylvania punish the man who ; tion. who can doubt tho necessity for its ' created und paid bv tho commons of Ln- steals a horse in South Carolina ? Can you devise a more perfect system of checks and penalties than those which surround the bailot-bo.x at home ? 'This has been the ' work of generations ; it has grown with i tho growth of tli g Commonwealth, and it! may well bo said to bo a thoroughly diges-' ted code. Tho system, by tho fiat ol ir- j reversible law, is brushed out of existence, i whenever vou cross the borders of your State, and the purity of tho elective Iran-1 cbisc in the array is entrusted to tho tr.n-i tier mercies of political tricksters, roerce-; nary adventurers and minions ol power.- - Legislate as you may, your network is the merest gossamer, and will be broken with impunity whenever the caprice, or the in - terests of designing men require it. I ho provisions of tho lull lo regulate these elections, rccotilly reported ami found upon our files, does not attempt to to his superior, and punishment follows create a new code of penalties and checks, tho violation r.f bis oath. He becomes a hut briefly re-enacts tho obi one. As 1 mero machine in the hands of his officers, have shown, these provisions have been and within tho sphere of his duties; he decided to bo powerless ouuido of the dare neither think nor act independently. Commonwealth. Tho two propositions Mr.n is a creature of habit and of circum are, in efl'ecl, to allow tho army to control stance ; he readily acquires tho first rudi the State ; and, in doing so, to dispeneo went of the soldiers' education, the habit with tho safeguards that might secure uu of obedience to orders, andjust in propor tioned election. ! tion as he leariu to obey, he urdetrns the lo this i will never consoni, and i mus place upon record my solemn protest and my vote against the measure. Another reason upon which I baso my opposition to this amendment is founded in the views 1 entertain ol the structure and character of our Government. In my a citizen of a republic, considered with judgment this step is contrary to the go- reference to the sphere of his duty, as nius of our institutions, and lends direct- such, are implicit reliance and tho etiligh ly to loss of liberty. The right of the peo- tencd control of himself, and these quali ple to choose their rulcr3 and ofthocili- ties applied to the realities of life, and zon to aid, through I ho elective franchise, conscientiously exercised in the inanago in tho making of the laws he is to obey, ment of his own 6irairs, constituto the es are great cardinal principles of the Gov- sencc of republican self-government, ernmont; they are the strata upon which II it were practicable, the citizen sol rests our political rights ; they are tho dier, fitted lor tho exercise of all those foundation of the edifice that protects our high duties, by nature and by education lives, our liberty and our property. In qualified for Iho position of a Ireem.m. tho order to tho intelligent exercise of this equal of each aud of ull of us in intellect high privilege, freedom of discussion, free- and in devotion to his country, if ho wero doui of action, the controlled investiga- able to preserve his individuality in the ; tion of tho sentiments, opinions and char- r . . . . 1 1 acter ol tne candidates, in a word, every - thine that umy enable tho voter to make up an impartial and unbiassed judgment, i .1 11 . are inuispenssuie. I From the nature of an army, from its very life giving principle, none of these, can be attainod by tho soldier. lie is m-: cable of volition; his freedom of action and of speech are controlled by his supe-! I riors. nnd one can reRiiilv nuderstand howl : destructive of dic.ipline political discus- sion, honest difference of opinion, wartnlv j expressed and truthful, yet harsh com- ; ment, upon the character of a candidate, possibly his superior ollicer, would ncccs- sarily be. The articles of war forbid the soldier , ceasure or condemn the acts or tne poucy of the "resident, tnd they only have per mission to discuss iheni to approve thi'iii. l'olitical documents, r.ewspapers or up pliest'f tickets can only go to the army by leaeoftlio rresident'or his appointees, and no act of ours, nr amendment of our Constitution, can divest him of the right to uso his own pleasure in his control. The position needs no olaborato recapi tulation of facts on high-strung argument for its support. conlidontly appe.il to the dispassionate judgment of tho unbias sed voter and to the experience of every intelligent soldier, for its truth. The ve ry elv'ients Hint fit a man for the proper discniirge of his dutie as n citizen, are those which in his position as a soldier urn, and necessarily must be, douied to him. I'y tho articles of warall the troops mus terod into the service and under the pay ol the United States, are Bubject lo the provision of ami amenable tolhopenid- ui's lu'ovueu in inosc articles. Anil each of them, volunteer as well as miilitia. are sworn to "observe and obey tho orders of tho J'residonl of tho United States and tho orders of the officers appointed over mo, according to tho rules and articles for the government of the armies ot the United States." Jf the troops now in tho service of th(. Ujited Klttl ,w Voluntoer8 of drar "-yjied men from the several States, wero rriifiRj Bllij musU.0,, ;n undBr tho provis ion of theConstitution fordiscipliiiingand organizing the militia, wero ollicercd by the Stato, in accordanoo thoiewilh, and limit- tifrtt rV cm.fi.. n- I 1 vJ 1 I 1 advocation, their homes and their usual habits of thought for but a brief period, and naturally would feel that the'ir true position was thol of a citizen and not of a soldier. T he Legislature, too, in limiting the right of sulliago to tho election of the officer of tho Stato, palpably expressed the idea of citizenship, and demonstrated their jealousy of the power of tho commander-in-chief, when, howevar, as now, men aro taken from the States, tiotns mil itia, but under tho provisions of (hecUusa giving power to raiso and support armies, ure mustered la fora period of three years. anil many re-enlisted tor tho same timo, mo sworu to obey the President and the ollicers ho may appoint over them under the army regulations, and are ollicered mainly by tho United States, they become in reality n great standing army, ami ail the clangers to free institutions, that px- nerienco teachers. How fram tb i.xisti.iwn of such armies, aro to bo feared Is it not I in all its constituent parts, a standing nr- i my? In its oix'inization. its modoofdici- I existence for years after tho rebellion shall 1 huvo been crushed. If all our volunteer j soldiers viewod the pursuits of peace ui their field labor nnd preserved their relu-1 left the people powutloss in the hamis of lions to tho community, the result might ' despotism; and yet that army was raised not follow ; bjt we all know of the wild ! according to law, its supplier were voted pursuit of our ollicers of position in the j according lo law, and tho people fondly regular army, und who can fail lo perceive hoped it would preserve to them tho lib in the re-!nlistment of whole regiments of erties it afterwards destioyg 1. The finny our soldiers, theovidenco of their love f:r of tho commonwealth of Uonie, composed llio professions nf arms, and a palpable lemonstriUiou of their preference for that mode of life. Tho motive of tliU re - en - : Hutment, whetherp.ilriotisrn, fame or gain, (1 trust it is the former.) is however unim-: portant ; we have tho fact and are to deal I : with it as prnctiial men. j -Jue WOrld of the soldior, consider od as' such, is embraced in the simple sentence command and obey. He sweart obedience naua ol soil reliance as he progresses to Ihv status of Iho trained and inleligcnt scl dicr, he sinks the cii iraeterUlics anil hab its of thought of tho individual. 'I he freeman obeys law, the soldier o beys orders." The highest naainnient of army, and to remain uncontrolled by its ' ll .1 ,1 I I . ' . t . I ' , inuuences, snouia no vested wun inn right, but such men know, und to them 1 willingly submit the decision of the l,,l,Au!,n wi.nlI.Aa ll.rt,. m filial t.m .j-.-..!...., iin-mn iuo mu un.-u mi these important obligations, who, at the inception of their career, take the vow of obedience to asuperior ; who, by the very nature of their duties, are isolated from the community and unacquainted with its necessities, who from tho unbroken routine of soldierly obodim.ee, havo lost the control of tlieir individuality, and who, by sheer force of habit, have learned to look upward to men for tho line of con duct they are to pursue, instead of judg ing for theruielvos, or exchanging opin- to' ions with those who, Ly nature, are no iuor uieruiet. man moy. - iu Iho State and the rcj-ubic, tlcoliji are essential llilLV porinnir 111 their chaiiipter. tm.flftii. ill .Ik. Ik. aK.ii .tnlnn Tho voice -3Li. . . .r,..i.. .. "J.. r-r- " i imit.i... i. as expressed ihroitgli lei'and ..rj..v .,!". "j "i r,T ot.h.itilu-.will. tiorml forms at the'hallriSWo ox, U tho con- trolling povrer, and to that will, thus ex-! 8t the aecoruplishnietit of tiie o ,iec' ' pressed, nil bow in submis.sion. To thisjho great lesson taught upon t,i 0,,lt featuro in our institutions, we. si a nation bv the history of the pas: i; tha ',, point wah just pride; wo esteem it, us this character in leimliin;.... ,. ,;.,. does tho world, a vindication ol the puri- largely increase the lw.t of . .. ;i ,,.., ty or the ballot-box ami a truiinphant ev-!,,,,.,,!, ami from tho very nat.iro itltnett ol the e;inuei!.v i-il niiui lnt snl l'."ii. . i.. i.. .i .i. ornment. . . i " -b" I i n me civil policy tho willol aiZCns, ami tho mamiii.mienl of .illt.!,e I.uki- majority of individuals, each of whom is tho equal of ins fellow is tho controll ing power ; in the army tho will of one man guides and controls tho volition of nil. Tho importance of the preservation of the former ax uu essential element of our national oxulanee, ami the manifest tendency of tho measure now under dis cission to endanger it, are, in my judg ment, equally apparent. Under our Con stitution tho Lxecutivo of tho nalou is tho i-oinnianiier-in-chici ot our army, nnu is possessetl ol almost unlimtied control i over both othcers anil soldiers. They swear to obey him ; his will is their will ; in his hands lio the power of promotion ami of comparative degradation ; rank and emolument aro in tho sunshine of his favor; poverty and refusal of irrado nro in tho fro w ii of his displeasure. In our iirmy all the soldiers may become ollicers. In this ruspect they diller from most, ar mies of tho old world ; yet this very fact, whilst it prompts tho soldier to deeds of daring, makes him but tho more solicit ous for tho good will of his superiors, and urges him to seek promolion through tho only avenues that open beforo him im plicit obedience and courage in battle. The ollicer, too, who sees his grade, sees no teuton why ho should not go still high er; and as position in society and increas ed pay follow elevation in rank, nil the selfish motives that operate upon the hu man mind, and compel it to energetic ac tion, urge him to improve his standing with his supeiiors; and it may happen, in the pursuit of this object in military 1 i to, as not unfrcqueully happens in civil life, tho man is n iiling to deg'udo himself far the attainment of the object of his dosiies. 1 he desire ot the interior to ingratiate himself with his superiors, in whose hands rest fuvor und fortune, is as fixed a princi pie in tho mind of man as is any other of the baser reasons for human action. If to elevation of position ami supremo com niand, tho leader unites skill in strategy, segacity in council, ami courage in battle. , ho becomes in the eye of his soldiery r standard of perfect ion, and their devotion i All remember the devotion of the soldiers I of the great Nopoleon to their idol. Of ' what weiiiht would individual opinion be. i VI ..III. IflyWllllt. i. 7 lICblVK VI lll'UI-H UlCtlll' ' iust and inoner thouch it were, if thrown i in tho scale against such a lender? The bravo and unimpnsMoned soldier of the Commonwealth of filmland, through the 1 eland, and commanded bv their cenerals. at the behest of thoir commander, dis- 1 pcrsctl the. very body that made them, and of tho noblest and best ol her citizens, pandered to tho ambition of Ca sar, their 1 leader, and aided him in slipping tho foun- dation of the Hepublie, and nd enslaving the people. It is in timo of war, particularly, that the strength of tho Kxecutive, comniaml- er-in-chicf, is magnified, and danger ro- ; stilts from his superabundance of power. I his is thus graphically portrayed ny i.ir. Madison in his fourth letter over the sig nature of UcU idius; ' War is in (act the due nurse of executive aggrandizement. In war a physical force is to be created: and it is the executive will which is to di- roct it. In war the public tie-usuries tiro to be unlocked ; and it is tin cxecuitvo baud which U to dispense them. In war tho honors ami emoluments of office are to bo multiplied ; and it is the executive patronogo under which they are to be en joyed. It is in war, finally, that laurels are to be gathered ; und it is the execu tive brosv they aro to encircle. Tho strongest passions nnd most dancrorous weakness of the human breast, ambition, avarice, vanity, the honorable or venial lovo of fame, aro all in conspiracy against t he design and duty of peace." "Hence il has grown into an axiom that the executive in the department of power most distinguished by its propensity to I wield his patronage as ti secure his ole war ; hence it is the practice of ull Slates, I tion for a second term, who so blind m iu proportion us they ure freo, to disarm j not to see that four yoars hence ho wi I this propensity of its inllucnco- If a free' havo less difficulty in securing his election people be a wise people also, they will not for a third term ? For with an army r-f forgot that tho danger nf surprise can nev- more than half a million citizen soldier er be so groat as when the advocates for under his command, and an annua! pi the prerogative of war can sheatho it in a tronago of a thousand millions of money, symivol of peace." he can, if ho has one-half the In ain nttrr And Mr. Hamilton, in (ho 23th number utod to him by his friends, h me Ai -im , of tho Fed, r.uLt, says : "As-far as an ar-' cUeted mm term to term durinj his .ia.'rj mv may bo considered us a dangerous life.." weapon of power, it hail better be in thosol " If tho military necessity supplies " hands, of which the people aro most like-! reson now for his nomination, a:.d tit ly to bo jealous, than in those cf which 1 extraordinary putronngo occasioned by lb -they are least likely to bo so. For it is a' war furnish" the means of his ele Mo-,, truth which tho experience or all age I as a matter of course his vUfrot U has atlestcl that tho pooplo are common- irolo:j thenar as a meant of rcrjvtuatry '. ly most in danger when tho means of in- porcr. ... , juring their rights are in the possession of, In the face of the rmpressive 1omo,.s , those of whom they entertain Iho loan the past, in the face r.f the inev, lab, , suspicion" i tendency of Ihe army lo centralization When war is once commenced by a na-' one clas of persons gravely tell us it . tion it is in the power ol tho executive to .,. to risk the consequence of tb protract and continue it so long as ho can adoption o the amendment, and an Ml., : obtain the senews necessary for his pur- class assert thero is no danger ; ..urruin. rose and there was never m protracted a I are honest; they will uot b-.tray i-.. war that was not full of danger to the free j For those who pl-a-i its expediency -. I institutions of tho country engaged in it. aro willing to racnlice ftmciple thereto. UcU yoir of Us couliuiunce .-oivea tjam- c tati only proy that the reluntUM It- mm mo power n t hi ', i;., .! t " o. mo r.xecunve. rentier uia army merit iiiUm. ...V, Ull'l III li'liL iii I. J Mang-rii net !,... l0 i. ,.,. .bonded from n l,l,.i, ,,.! ,.;.. .. loims i" inure lilt) coir.ini ol lit ! ii' uu- ness uiiair ot the nation, m the ham' ,.f the administration. Of the truth of tun lesson, tho history of our count:-? 'i lm past throe years is another s t 1 1 i vi demo. I'.y gradual ami easy tr;.niiiou, the mind of man can be accustomed to al most any change, and by elxv.ly nr . 1 hi perceptibly changing his habits of life nnd modus of thought, he e.iti bo Ki.itle to elide gently but purely from the highest devel opments of an advancing hu.na.iitv irMn the very depths of unlit ieul h'.j.i emeni t is hcie the danger of om libeities is to be found ; Iroin the habit of peace we are gradually acquiring the new und danger ous habit of war ; from dcpenJance upon our own rescources and judgment, wo'itro gradually acquiring the habit of acceptin.". without question, the iiidiiuieuto our ru lers ami obeying thoir dictation ; we aro now about to vest tho right of controlling our institutions in tho hands of those who have acquired tho habit of obedience, nnd thereby lost tho habit of self reliance and individuality. "All Ihosewhoseplit.'.de stroy the liberties of u nnlion, ous'it to know that war is the surest and shortest means to accomplish it. This is the lirsj axiom of the science." Inasmuch, then, as thoindividu.il mem ber of the State should be possessed of in- lependenco ol action and implicit scir- 'e- banco in order to fully fit him for the in tiligent exercise of the elective franchis... and as the structuro of the army audits liscipline Inevitably (end to unite, (in.. minds of all iu members in suhm.; ion to tho will of one man, nnd thereby would prevent the elections nf the nation from being "Ireo and equal," I am unwilling to extend the provisions of tho Constitution as is contemplated bythis amendmo.it. 1 am not without authority ami prece dent to sustain mo in this conclusion. In commenting upon that clause of thj Federal Constitution which rn;me? thj President commander-in-chief of Urn ar my and of the militia, Mr. Madiioii says : "Those who aro to conduct a war, can not in the nature of things, be proper or safe judges, whether n war ought lo bn commenced, continued or cunciuW. They aro barred from tho latter fuucliom by u great principle in freo j;overnuient. Biinhigous to that which separates the sword from the purse, or tho power of ex ecuting from the power of enacting law-: " Inouro'vn Slate the act of Assemt.l y evince n jealously of interference byt:-.1 military with the free lorn of electi on -The ninety fiflliection of the act of .. July, is.'i'j, provides that "no body ot troops in the army of tho United SlRc , or of this commonwealth, 6h.ill be prescn'.. either urnied or unarmed, at any pla ;o o!' election within this Commonwealth, dj: ing tho lime of such election." A similar provision exists in the la.v many other of the States, and of Lng'.vid Tho army of the Roman F.mpiro, ti ,;n 1 in the school of tho soldier, and vosto i with the privilege ofelcclion, did the wd! of its leaders and, regardless of the will n' the people, raised to the imperial purp! whomsoever their fancy dictated. Th-i man who gained the afleetioiis of th.; diery, however limited hi qiMiifi '.itiLi . or baso his character, at their bck be -m the omperor of the world, and changed c:ipri::o his throne cub1 tj. j in the du't. The soldier? of the rcpavh" of Fru i vested with the right t f 'ni'uge i; ' command of tlieir le.vlrr. vnieti in our u , day to sustain the second of I'eecmbt r ami ovenurow rue cnnsutntion liiev w tc sworn lo support, and the s i-jo s'i'.o i voted to create Loilis Napoleon e eiiJi i of tho French, destroying ly thfir billots, j within six years, the liberties of !i.o p pie, and the very inslitiUi.ins thult'iev had sworn to support and defend with their bayonet. In the recent addresi emanating from tho Chase committee at Washington at: i circulated among the members of the Oil io Legislature, ulteianco is given to th sentiments of the opponents of Mr. Lm coin, upon the nuestion. in verv niain I n, jguago. I quote from tho address: " If iresident Lincoln in defiance of li teachings of Jackson, in vin'stion of tl.- great principle which underlies our dem ocratic institutions, and in tho fico of ti solemn warningiof history, can now t i (rli, ., ,.UJl.