1B ll IK As mm C- B- GOODLANDER. Editor and Proprietor. PBINCIPLES, not VLES. TERMS :--$2 00 Per Annum, if paid in advancs 1 VOL. XXXVIII. WIIOLC NO. 1893. CLEARFIELD, PA., WEDNESDAY, FEB. 23, I860. NEW SERIES-VOL. VI. NO. 32. 111 iDlrtDt rill ll ll ri ma srEF.cn or i SENATOR W. A. WALLACE, OP CLKAHFitLD couxtv, 4 concluded. pf Jamaica, and let him remember J hat theso people cannot develop the J ind, that to enable them to do so, f ma, unit iu vudoie in iu uu w, there must be there an overruling race i-not men that will enslave them I look to nothing of the kind ; but they ok to nothing ol the kind ; Put they inust have there a race whose intellect 3s greater and better than theirs hey must have somebody, to depend upon. Jhcse people never can ana f never will, unaided by the white race, develop that country. Jruc, they j have the muscle ; but muscle, without I brains, never did anything. They i ave not the capacity, the intellect. 1 1 ou must depend upon tho 6upcnor race for the brains, and use the mus cle of tho negro lor the labor, i ELEVATE KOTU RACES. J "It is necessary to develop the la borer," the Senator says. I admit it is necessary to develop the laborer, but you must not develop him to the injury ot the race that Jives sido by hide with him. Xo,6ir; raise them from their degraded condition, lift tlicLi up, but do not attempt to place thera on the same platform with the whites. I accord to them all their natural rights; lam willing to raise them from their degradation; Iain willing to fit them to learn the great lrr'bs of the Gospel, to do business, to uccome intelligent, so that they may; nakc contracts and preserve the fruits of their labor. I am willing to do all this : but I am unwillingto bring them to an equality with a race that is far above them, and thus aid in lowering Loth. Your nicely rounded periods of sympathetic and eloquent diction about the improvement of races, and tho triumphs of humanity, are hut too palpably proven to be myths idle us the vapor, empty as the wind when you go to e:;aininc the practical work ings of your theory. 1 he spending of hundreds of millions of dollars by the mother country in Jamaica to develop those people, to learn them how to lake caro of themselves, you rind hap demonstrate! the truth 1 assert. The '(gitimate result of your humanitarian ideas have there culminated m ft most inhuman and barbarous msa rc with in the pnt year. This is imt one in stance of the results of your "improve ment of races," one illustration of your theory of "conacUy f r progressr' on tbc part of tho colored race. IIATTI. Let lis take another instance. Ilay ti. Her independence was declared iu 103; and tl.y negro was placed in tho entire control of the Government ; the reins of government were fully committed to his keeping. No white there tocneumber him, no white brain to direct him, the negro not only had cxclusivo control of that fertile island, but he alone managed its affairs. The Government vested in the people equal fi(V;tical rights such as we enjoy. In 1790, the exports of the United States in coffee, sugar and rum amounted to a little over twenty and a half millions of dollars worth, while Hayti export ed twenty-eight millions of dollars worth of those commodities. Con trast the reliilivc situations of the two countries and tho facilities of each for developing their respective capacities. Here is the negro in a fertile land; ho is blessed with all the advantages that we possess, and the inducements to excel which should present them selves to him are the samo that are held out to the whito man; the insti tutions nndcr which ho lives have been modelled after our own ; (the humanitarians of ! ranco having form ed tho frtvernment nf fsl. I Inminirn , i and given to that government all need- i ,liat "solution a propos.tion granting ful political advantages;) while the ! !t ,,lj0 t0 Vrgo K M Clellan, aiv exports of that island are several mil-d,,aUHe- was vo,0(1 (lo? n li' lions in excess of thoso of our ownlll,c I'l"''' "" I'"p3" horo' ns 1,10 rt'c: country. On the other hand, wo aro ord Wl" 1,1,0 w- "e tll(,r0'"I'c U'J in a land that is sterile and iinproduc.jnainst tl,c resolution in fo-f. -Hut, tivc and which requires labor anj1 sir, to go beyond that, I hold it to be time to bo made of value. Such wcrc'm3' ,Ju,y ,l niember of party Hint the relative positions of Hayti and ,,"ve Vcsi-Um, to extend the hand tho United States at that day. Dut!of fellowship to every man who pla where is that island to-day and ccs himself uj)on thoue prinnj.lcs nnd where are wc! While ive havo as-! whether he be peasant or President, cended in tho scalo of prom-ess and tutail wi11 1,11 niJ' ability, humanity, they havo retrograded ' with a" m.v for(,' in Parrying out and Their institutions wero founded uiion succcst-fully vindicating thoso princi- our maxims or political justice and of right, and you sought in vain through their written laws and legal customs for any traco of Africa. Control their condition of to-day with our own. Iiook at what they nre. They aro de - graded and brutal; their main char- B.v i j vi v.iiniuvi.-b ni.u show ; ihpy have not a form of gov. nrf At-iat ia aia lswk rf jM.nnAr,f jin, I vo not n lorm oi gov. s we havo ; religion is n ; heathenism is run- ;h the land, and sens- ei ii men i Kueu as we nave almost unknow ning Hot throng' tiahty reigns sujiremo. Hayti is raj- idly retrograding into barbarism. Tho aiegru 'a happiness, his chief delight,' ns It in character has unfolded itselfin that island is what it is hero nnd what it is in his native land: idleness and an apparently instinctive bloodthirsli-1 ness arc its attributes. I refer you 1 to the numberless revoliitionsand mas- 'sacres that have occurred there, and I assert that bis highest delight is in massacreing his npecies If evidence js wanting, it may be found spon ev- is wanting, it may lie lound spoil ev- ory page of the history of emancipated n.,yii. Hostility to'the foreigner is rulm? passion with tho Havtian: a ruling passion with tho Havtian; agriculture is abandoned, their com-j mercc is dying out, and their popula - jtion is decreasing with a rapid ten - dency to convert tho whole country . ito n forest. I rc:id from Mr. Mackenxic's He- port i placed the bh in l.'.O. In LSU3 Ilavti was ! entirely under the control of Li,,, .L-o oiwi ;.. icto ! m ..,.t . reported to tho hngush as follows : government "In lTf9, thcr ytrr exportrd Hl.OPS.CSt pouccU of nigir, 7,004,274 fmundi of col ton nl 76, $35,219 poumls ofci ffr?. In 1 S26 there were exported 32rl p- undo of ruirnr, 620,572 pounds of cotton and 2,lsy,7S4 pounds of butTee." There is a consideration of some importance in this connection bearing upon the position that I assume, that is, that sugar (the production that is most palpably diminished) requires constant toil in its cultivation ; while coffee (that maintains itsstatus better) grows wild through the country. The latter has continued an article of com merce and is largely exiorted. The plow does .not exist in llayti ; it has ceased to exist. Tho gold and other mines there arc being neglected; the machinery is worn out or allowed to rot out; the forests arc returning. Ilavti is rcec ling from tlio light f civilisation; the people arc becoiD'.ig savage; their lmbits are disputing and heathenish. Tho couir.iion of Hayti re asserts tho pos''iou that 1 maintain, that this race have no ca pacity for progress. "Look at Mexico ; sec what a conglomeration of revolu tions is there; see tho degeneracy of that country: tho legitimate result of a coininioiiug of blood. Seo Central America and. tl.u ; Sj.ani.-U colonics sout1. all these furnish additional cv ionccs ol tho truth of tho fact I as- SClH.. LEARN UT EXPERIENCE. Let us then l-o warned by the ex perience of the jast, taught by the lessons of history. If God's law be tho elevation of humanity, let us con tinue to elevate ourselves and with christian charily aid those below us to climb tho ascending grade. If the law of tho world be the law of jiro grcss, let us be satisfied with the jiroud position we enjoy, trying no new path mt energetically moving upward in our yet bright career, iet us not let ter ourselves, by halting midway to enable tho African to reach us. Let us bo wise and preserve the sovereign t) of our race. Let us estimate it at its true value and refuse to share it with those of whom hitory is silent, whose land is voiceless, whom your ow n experience teaches aro your in feriors, Uon whom privileges aie lost, and whom the mournful lessons of a century havo but served to demon strate their inertness and stolidity. Chain i s not to "the iiodv of this heath." wr rosirio.v toward the president. Let me reply to an attack which the Senator from Erie has made iion my friend, tho Senator from Derk.s, Mi. Clym-fr, and impliedly upon myself. Tho Senator attempts to show that in lsfi.'l. the Senator from Berks voted against granting tho use of these balls to Andrew Johnson, then Provisional Governor of Tennessee, lie forgot to state, sir, that tho Dem ocratic parly rejucsented Uon this floor, introduced as an amendment to TJ 1,118 uf 11 0 Pon m j resMnn,j t,,.,...,,;, molli (2,75!1,04! ;) dent Johnson, he has our right hand j U(0 w,i(iK, niiml,CP m.0iVed was 01 miowsnip; n n oenoi ins position, 1,e i,HS our ojoilion. iiatti a bad polict. ' Let me now turn for a moment to some of the arguments of the Senator rM O , I r i 1 1 . . : n I . 4JVM1 jji t:tiii)ni. iie sn n, Mr, ine pcojdeoftho South havo no rights' pcojue oi the .South have no rights that we should respect save to be hung and to be damned." This is his very language. 1 regret, sir, that such languago as this should come from tho lijis of any Senator. Mr. LAX DON. I quoted that as tlio language of Governor Brownlow, of Tennessee. It was not original with mo. Mr. WALLACE. Tlio Senator by . using it becomes responsible for its sentiment. "They have no rights ; they arc to bo hung and to be damned." Alas ! .Is this the nineteenth century, and are wo enlightened men? Sir, go are wo enlightened men: Sir, go back to subjugated Hungary, to con-( ipiered Poland, ami see there men, trodden in the dust, with tho heel of trodden in tho dust, with tho heel of tyranny upon . them ; aco tber.lhe ' sore oppression of the Austrian and 'tho Kussian upon the necks of those men, who dared to rebel against a government that was above and not of them : and say if you want to re-1 peat in this country the scenes that have been there enacted. 1 trust that your soberer moments, your more so- and brunt of tho day ; I want to bear, lor all practical purjioses,the immcdi rious reflection will cause you to blush 'something of tho men who,in all those : ate representatives of that constitu at such language, to shudder at such ; lour years of strife, were constantly ' cncy,und tho will of that people ought doctrines and to remeinher that "to err is human, to forgive divine." Sir the Senator had upon bis lips at most the same moment the expression, 'beauty for ashes, tho oil of joy for i mourning." If, with the ability that 1 I know he possesses, and out of re-i spect for tho vocation that he profess-1 es, he had proclaimed the doetrinesof , the sermon on the .Mount and ol that I desire to do no suih thing. lhc re glorious .salutation of the angels,"' suit is that the black has had his race "Peace on earth, good will to men," 'emancipated while '.ho white man has ho would havo been nearer, much j had hi Government maintained. Let nearer tho position that ho should oc-Jus bo satisfied witk these resulls. The cupy. Sir, t'.io hour for hate has pass- black has obtained w hat, in the opin ed and tbo hour for forgiveness has ion of the Scnatorf rom Erie,he fought come; they who are statesmen should for ; nnd tho white man, if you would riso lo the htighlh of the occasion ;' beliveim.has obtained what he fought au however much their vindictive for; because if you tell him that he passions might wish to wreak ujvin ; theso people just punishment, yet tho' good of their country, tho good f, their race, tho future prosperity ol four millions of blacks and five mil- I10119 of whites, depend uixin the ndop-. tion of some other policy. A fLASTIC GOVERNMENT. Sirs, the Senator says that tho Gov- ornmunt U t.l,,-t, n innst fnnvoiuon word pfiTtfr that it may bo formed ,' aud moulded by the hand. And.truly, - it is a plastic Government aye, a juogmein us u ii.il urvugov on i.lastic Government when now, in ! that great calamity. The men who obedience to King Caui us, ut Wash-'t"deJ it North and South, I do ington, a cabal of men rule the nation nounce in unmeasured terms ; Abolit irresjtcctive of legislative or executive ! mnisU and secessionists are equally functions, and take upon themselves puilty. Great Ap.lauso. A voice: the power of a French Directory. I "That's played out." Sirs, it may be Well may you say the Government is ! "rlnJ'cJ m,t" o',w''n tho warnings plastic. Go back to the tin;.- of 17S! of reason and exjieneiiee cannot yet and remember that then the French ""'itcrtte the col sequences of that Government was;.V.sf7r,too;that it was fanaticism ; and there may bo other moulded and manipulated to suit tho l'1'"9 in vuur rule nndro.gn "played ideas of designing men, and used to "t too. oppress nnd destroy the pcojde; and i out 'if it came blood-lied fearful,) awful, horrible bloodshed. No, sir; as has been well said by the Senator from Berks, (Mr. Clymcr,) this is no plastic Government. It is a govovcrn- ment of law that you and 1 swore to sujiport when we took upon us our duties in this chamber ; and they iii Washington have upon them thesame obligation. There is to be no plastic government in this country ; there tiro rights recognized by the Constitu tion that arc to be maintained ; tho rights of individuals and the rights of States. Sirs, tho secessionists ii. ISlil undertook, ty war and Moodshcd. to break up this Government, and they failed; lour long.fearf'ui years of strug- gle saved the Government. Dut your ty, tho energy and tho o' of tho .7?c Coi-i rnnuitt would now seek to An-rlo Saxoii, the Teuton, and the dobyunconstitutional legislation what (Vlt in this country will, when your tho secessionist failed to do in four culminating point has been reached, years of war. Is not thisso? Sirs, rj,0 down, batter to pieoe,lrcak into where now is your rallying cry f Aro utter fragments any race that dares you how for the Union ? Or arc you.in to raise its hand against them and to obedienco to this cnbnl of men at nsk for equal rights in tho govern Washington, under the lead of Stev- ment. 1 trust that a war of races is ens, (immortal from his deeds in these never to-come ; hut I ati'iriii.Scuatora, halls,) moulding your j.lastic (Jovern-' thut you aro driving tho entering ment to sever ami divide tho Union ? ( wedge, you aro increasing the number Is this so? oris it not so? Are yon of points nt which these races aro to he for this Government as a whole.or aro thrown together. The points of con you on the other side of the Issue? tact between the two races are 1 e This is a question that must bo answer- ing multiplied, and the old fable of cd sometiino and somewhere. !ln. iron not nnd Hm ebiv iit. will r. the colored soldier.. pPat itself; in every contest where 1hei further exierience may assist to guide The argument that tho colored sol- atronger raco conies in competition us 10 n M'i0 eorTclusioii as to the joli dier took his musket and did his mite with tho weaker race,(ho weaker must (3' ,0 1,0 "'h,l),ed in time of peace. I for the protection of the Government, ' and will givo way. j share with Congress the strongest do- has been used, nnd is the great shikj Mr Jcm,rson (m (C(I , sire to secure to the freodnua the full boleth in his favor. Tho whole nuni, Moni,ieiir Vvmvli) htt l0lhin 3 , enjoyment of their freedom and their ber of sohliers culled for from 1SC1 to' ,. ..jonrlv wriitm in ll.e book" of rF"J . 01,J '"r indu- 1S6S. as found in the report of tho Secretary of War, was two millions l,l.t.'ks'7aii(l it is equally certain that tracts f.-iMhcir lahor ; but the h. l.,e seven hundred nnd flHy-nine thousand lh , ' wi ' lipp : .lBlfl foro me contains provisions which, in nnd1 " two million six hundred and fifty-eight .1. ....,! 1 ...... I ..... 1 I !.... nit- iiuniiiiu i.iva in n i"i u (2,r.r,.S"i3). The wholo number of colored troops ennsitHi is one Minorca and seventy-eight thousand nino him .1 i ...... il n - ureu iiiiu re em -im e, j 1 1 r1,.' t , r inn quite 200,000,118 the Senator said. Tho j quite iiu,uoo,ns the nenalor said. J no greatest number of colored trooj.s in service nt any one time was 1 T)f ; and that sirs, was on tho l.rth of July last, some three months after the rc - i hellion had been crushed. Laughter. Supposo that these 12.1,1 .M) men, about whom so much noise is made, ('and who nresnid to have fought bravely") snpoo that those 12-3.1 of men were Yankees or Dutchmen or ( Irishmen, how much would they have been missed in Uio whole two million, :six hundred and fifty-eight thousand ? There are four lnillions of these color- cd people, and out of these four mill-j ions, one hundred and twenty-three i thousand carried the musket as against two million and a half of tho white 1 freemen of this (I'overnment.who took Aip their arm did battle bravely in its behalf. I say thaticosnparative - 'ly considered, their rights sink into utter insignificance; and Senators should be ashamed to prate about the great deeds of tho colored soldiers. ! Sirs. I want to hear 6oniethinr of the i men who dn the batto in tho heat doing all that they could ; and let us not be told only of tho "heroism" of a al-'few who wcro mainly placed there against their will. Dlack soldiers j w ere equal in bounties and pay with tlio white soldiers. Tho colored man has been emai cipated. Senators say 1 desire to send Lim back into slavery. I pray you do not commit mo to that, fought to emancipate negroes ho will tell you "it is false,"lhat is the answer you will get from rive-sixth of them. Jiut it you tell him that helonglitto protect and defend tho Government, he will saj, "that is so, that is what 1 went to do and what I did." Tho war is ended ; tho Government is protect ed nnd the black is emancipated, as a ConsC(UellCe of the War. Shall I do nounce the means that brought about that civil wnrr Miall I hero express A WAR OF RACES. Now, sir, what are you disposed to do! To agitate. In 101. you pro posed "to agitate." You commenced "to agitate" in 1 830, ami you have Ik-cii agitating ever sinco ; yon agita te I to ns n war, and we have got through that war with an enormous sacritico of money and of blood; ami you propose to agitalate further. The entering wedge is before us; agitation is to continue ; and we are to go on from bad to worse until, as the Sena tor from Bradford tell u, it rulmi- rmtes in a war of races. Ileaven help day comes. tbo weaker when that Sirs, tho instinct of blood is stronger far than the lust for power. The in f.tinct of blood possessed by the vitali ,,,:,. ,( ' ,, ..:.: f,i. , i i . . i of equal freedom timer the same gov- 1 .ii .1 till llllii l, nt' l lir-l' l uuill ll ut uiu lliu tuu . . i.i. .1.., obstacles wnicn nature, naiut ami, omiiioim tUMn .w.v, vsu.uoM.eu ii I I . ... Ih.s is theop.nionof one whoknew lua" raoe9- the will or the people. j Tb , right : trict This lull, sir, proposes to grant tho d.t to vote to tho negro in tho l)is- trict of Columbia and to take from the 'hani. - i of the white in .in (becauso that is its practical effects) tho control of that munripil overnnicnt. There arc some fifteen thousand negroes in the city and vicinity of Washington, and some eight or ten thousand voters' in the District. Thisgives the control of tho muncipal affairs of tho District er than the President of the United to the negro. 1 suppose they will bo Slates, acting through tho War Dc- discreet and not elect u negro as tho ipartment and the commissioner of tho first mayor, jfreedmen'a bureau. The agents to It is a vital point inthe argnnicnt,that( carry out this military jurisdiction when tho people of n State or district, are to be selected cither from the ar- have expressed themselves in an cm-, lthutic manner mrainst a certain mens- ;uro it is an outrage to force that meus-, jure upon them. The will of th jplo lies at the foundation of our j eminent, and those who do note ie peo- of our .tiov- donotcxnress: lhat'wiil are not truly tho people's i representatives. It may be said that tho men in Congress were not elected by the people of the District of Col urn- ma. 1 hey were not: vet thev arc to bo oliovcd. Mr. Dowry. Who ere the people ? Mr. Wallace. Tho white people of the District of Columbia, Mr. Dowry. The white people ? the whites Mr. Wallace. Ves, sir: have snmo rights left yet. They have tho right to govern that District ; and until they say they are willing that tho luirro should partako of those rights they should not be conijelled to tharo them with him. protect the white laborer. The olicy of my state wpon this snb- ject, sir, is my jiohcy. In 1S0, she emancipated tho slaves that were here, and in lS.ii? si c declared that the white raco should govern the State. I accord to Ihcse pcojtlc all their natur al r'ghts the right of life, liberty, property and tle pursuit of happiness ; but I deny to them political rights. IHs afrty and the maintenance of our riirhts demand this. This is a govern- ment made by white men and to be sol perpetuated. Sir, that flag is the and passion. 1 he trials having tiein svi.iU of tho majesty of a white man's I origin under tin's bill, aro to take place- j. . . i . j t i . j government, mo ensign oi mo sane-: tity t a w hite man s law, the her ald of tho capacity of the white man for self-irovernnient. Tho ballot is tin emblem of the whito man's sov ereignty. Theso shall never be the badges of our weakness, the trophies of a weaker race. Sirs, the proud head, tho honored neck of tho whito laborer yes, the white l.miorer, for "to this complex ion doth it come aflnst" shall never with my consent be bowed to the level of the African slave applause or to an eotiality with the colored man. .Sir, his blood shall lc maintained in un sullied purity. Krectin his manhood, protected in his labor ami in his power of sovereignty, the while laborer in the shop, the lield, the highway, the sovereign of tho iScpublic, ho shall be in iho f uture, ns in the past, the sinew of tho State, the vital element in the prosperity of the nation. PRESIDENT J0HNS0SS VETO MES SAGE. The liezvo Bureau Smashed Up. Washington, Feb. 10, 1SGG. 7t the Scnitc of tin' Uiiitrtl tSirc . 1 havo examined with care the bill which has been passed by the two Houses of C ongress to amend an Act entitled an Act to establish a Hureau for tho ldief of Freedmen and refs- irors. and for other purposes. Having with much regret come to the conclu sion that it would not bo consistent with the public welfare to give my approval to the measure, I return the bill to lhc Senate, with my objections to its becoming a law. 1 might call to mind in advance of theso objections, that there is no immediate necessity for lhc proposed measure. The act to establish a bureau for the relief of treed men and refugees, which was nrovcd in the month of .March last, has not yet cxjiued. Jt was thought stringent and extreme enough tor thcpurjmso iu view intinio of w ar. Diilore it ceases to have c fleet, p and equality ia making con- my opinion, aro not warranted hy the .. .. ' , ,. J .. , Constitution, and are not well suitei . ,. , , . to accomplish the end in view n-, , ,. M. , . ! lit. fill I'l til.'.rt- n t;7.titiMlci t't nutl0rity of Cou,.ress military juris- Stntcs t(,lUili J rcf mJ frovJ. men. It would by iw very nature ni- ! ,,y wiL, tie ln0!it fovve to those parts of tho United States in which the freed men most abound, and it express- ly extends the existing temporary jurisdiction of tho freeduien's bureau, with greatly enlarged powers, over; thoso States in which the ordinary course of judicial proceedings has been interrupted by the rebellion. The source from which this military Jurisdiction is to emanate is none oth- my or from civil hie. the country is to bo divided into dint rift nnl tnh. districts, and tho number of salaried agents to be employed may bo equal to tho numlmr ol counties or parishes in all tho United States where fieed inen or refugees are to bo found. i ho subject over which this mihta- !rv iurisdiction is to extend in every Dart of the United States includes nro- tection to nil employees, agents and oflicers of this bureau in the exercise of the duties imposed upon them by the bill in eleven States. It is fur ther to extend over all cases affecting freed in en and refugees discriminated against by local laws, custom or pre judice. In those eleven States the bill subjects any white person who may be charged with depriving a freedman of any civil rights or immunities be longing to whito persons to imprison ment or fine, or both, without, how ever, dvfiiiing tins civil rights and im munities which are thus to ce secured to the freedmen by military law. This military jurisdiction also ex tends to all questions that may arise respecting contracts. The agent who is thus to exciriso the ofticeol'a judgo may be a stranger, entirely ignorant, of the laws of the place, and exposed to the errors of judgment to which all men are liable. The excrciso of pow er, over which there is no legal 6 pervision, by so vast a number eft agents as is contemjilated by thisbiJli, muKt, by tho very nature ol man, bo? attended by acts of caprice, injustice .rmioui uic iij.-rcnnoii oi njuryanut without any fixed rules of law orvi- denco. The rules on which offiinees. are to be lieard and determined by tho numerous agents, are such rule audi regalationn as tho tho lVcsuJentV throHgh the War Department,, shall prescribe. No jircvions presentment is rtairedi noraay indictment charging thoai mission of iKTinio against th laws,, but the trial must proceed on vVargo and specifications. Tho punislimenti will be, not w hat the law dcclares.but. such as a court-martial may think proper; and from theso arbitnrrr tri bunals there lies no aj.peal, no. writ ot error to any of the courts iu which the Constitution of the United Stat vests exclusively the judicial rsx-rof the country. V.ilo the territory- and ilk classes of actions and offences tiaU aro made subject to this measure ar so extensive, the bill itself, sWuld it become a law, will have no limitation in jo'mt of timn but will f.rm part of the permanent legislation of Uieej.m try. 1 cannot conceive a system of military jurisdiction of this kind with lUs word of tho Constitution, w hich declares that "no person shall bo hehl to answer for a capital or otherwise) in famous crime, unless on a presentment or indictment of a grand jury, except iu cases arising in tho land and naval forces, or in the military when in service in timo of w:ir or jmblio danger," nnd that "in nil eriminal proceedings tfio accused shall enjoy the right to a speedy and public trial by an imiartiai jury oftheSiate or district wherein tho crime shall havo been committed." The safe guards which the experi ence and wisdom of ages taught our fathers to establish ns securities for the jtrotcction of tho innoceRt, the punishment of the gnilty,and the equal administration of justice,nro to be set aside; and for the sake of a more vigorous interiosition in I'ehalf of justice, we are to take the risk of tho many acts of injustice that would necessarily follow from an almost countless number of agents establish ed in every parish or count v iu nearly a third of the States of tho iTnion over whose decisions there is to be no super vision or control by the Federal courts. The power that would be thus placed in theliajids of the President is such as in time of jn-ace certainly ought never to be entrusted tonnyoneman. If it be nsked whether the creation of such u tribunal iu a State was warranted as a measure of war, the question im mediately presents itself whether wo aro still engaged in war. Let us not unnecessarily disturb tho commerco and credit and i.idustry of tho coun try, by declaring to tho American people and to the world that tho Uni ted Slates are still in a condition of civil war. At present thero is no part of tho country in which tho authority of tho United States is disputed. 01- fences that may bj committed by in- i ! J