jhf TlfrfSrtd SKrpubHrin. Terine of Culirrliitluu. tlf Mid In advance, or within throe months.. ' . . .1 - .-.I h..r..M miw mi.nltii t? 00 1 M I 00 qt psia suer -- !il rsiJ after 'he expiration months.. I ' Rates of Advertising, ifnmiitnl advertisements, per square of 10 How or I Iris, i time! or lees.... It at' 1 For each subsequent insertion..,. &0 kdmiuiitratorl' eud Kxocutort' notices I 60 fcuditort' notices 1 40 t Mtions "l Kilruys. . 1 40 I'jMolutios notices 2 00 ,ocl notlees, per line 15 (obituary notices, orcr live lines, per line...... 10 professional Cards. 1 year i 00 j YEARI.r AUVKRTIIKMKITi (1 BHIII... .. 00 I J column ! 00 f 3 squares.- ,.16 00 t eolumn 40 00 1 1 NUitci 20 00 1 column. 76 00 Job Work. 1 BLANKS. 'single quire Jl 60 I 0 quires, per quire, 1 75 t.i quires, per quire, I 00 Over 6, per quire.. I 60 2 aAKtiaiLL. J, sheet, 5 or less,el 60 I i sheet, 95 or lets,!! 60 J sheet, or leu, 2 60 1 iheel, 26 or less, 8 00 UL'O. II. UOObl.AKPKn, Editor end Proprietor. yrofrssional & business (tarda. S. A. FULTON, ATTORN EY AT LAW, t'urwea srllle, Pa. CSee In MeBridVi Building, en Main Street. Prompt attention gieea to the securing sand collection or uiaiusi, ua to an legal ouei tness. auels-hnvpd WALTER BARRETT, ATTORNEY AT LAW. "Oflee ofl Second SU, Clearfield, Pa. no2l,t f, A. Wellaee. . 1). Bigler. O. Blake Walters. Frank Fielding. WALLACE, BIGLER & FIELDING, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, Clearfield, Pa. Legal business of all kinds prompt); and accurately attended to. tieylhy jTHOS. J. McCULLOUGH, ATTORNEY AT LAW. kIos adjoining the Bank, formerly occupied by J. B. Hcanelly, second at Lleurfleld. tar-Will attend promptly to collections, sal tof lands, ie. deol7,J JOHN L. CUTTLE, ATTORN EY AT LAW Und Real Estate Agent, Clearfield, Pa. Office oa Market street, opposite the jail. SeT-Bstpeetfutly offers bis senrioes In selling and buiine lands In Clear Held and adjoining counties ; and with an experience of orer twenty years as a eurreyor, Ostlers bitoscll uat ae caa rtnder satisfaction. icHS.'Ss tf WM. M. McCULLOUGH, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Clearfield, Pa. f OBee oa Market street ene door east of tba Cleur i gold County Bank. mays,'! L'obn if. Orrii. C. T. Alexander. ORVIS fc ALEXANDER, ATTORNEYS AT LA If, nellefoiite. Pa. seplS.'tS-y DR. J. P. BURCHFIELD, Late Surgeon of the SJd Reg meat, Pennsylvania Volunteer, baring returned I rum the Amy, offers bis professional aerrieea to tba eitisens or Clearfield eeunly. acT-Prufersional calls promptly attenJed to. Office oa Second street, formerly occupied by lir. Woods. (sprVM-tl DENTISTRY. J. r. COR SETT, DiwrrsT, offers bis professional sereieea to tba eitisens of lurwensrillo and rietnity. Offloe ia lrug Store, oornsr Main and Thompson streets. mey 1 1 ,Ml- ly:pd J. BLAKE WALTERS, SCRIVENER AND CONVEYANCER. Agent for tba Puichase and 6le of Lands. Clearfield, Pa. -Prompt attention girea lo all business eonneeted with the eounty offices. Office with Hon. Ha. A. Wallace. jaal,'-U SURVEYOR. TBE andsrsigaod offers bis aerriees as a Sw eeter, and nay ha found at bis residence, is Lawrenee township. Letters will reach him directed to Clearfield, IV ar7-oi:pd JAMES MITCHELL. JAMES MILES, LICENSED AUCTIONEER, Latberaburg. Peuu'a. JHf Will promptly altsnd to calling aalee, at reasonable rates. ijen.n m A. H.FRANCISCUS&Co. (13 Market SU Philadelphia, Pa. KanortrTcaans AorsTe roa rna Sili or CORiKtOE. Kote. Tbs regular allowances made lo Dealers la MANILA KOl'K. Ijan3l-om Thomas II. Foreee. A. A. Graham. FORCEE 4. GRAHAM, iittm in General Merchandise and Lumber, jnn.'J Urahantou, Peun'a. JOSEPH H. BRETH, JUSTICE OF THE PEACE And Licensed Conrejaocer, Hew Washington, Clearfield ee , Pa. JAS. C. BARRETT, JUSTICE OF THE PEACE Aad Licensed Cojroyaneer. I uthersburg, Clearfield to. Pa. eej-Collecllcni and rrmltiancca promptly Made, and all kinds of legal inurements eioruted on short aotioo. may,' tf C. KRATZER &. SON, MERCHANTS, pBAiias in Dry Goods, Clothine, Hardware, Cutlery, Qnooaswaro, Oroeerisa, Provisions aad bbingloe, Clearfield, Pena'a. XIFkl tba old stand oa Front street, aboro he Aeademy. IdrclJ. SS if CHEAP FURNITURE. JOIIX GULICII DESIRES to inform bis old friende and cus tomers, ibat baring enlarged bis ebon aad creased bis facilities fur manutar taring, be is ow prepared lo make to order sack Furniture as ay be desired, la good atyls aad at cheap rates ft. ah li. He generally has oa oaaJ, at his ornlture rooms, a rariod assortmeat of ready ade faraiture, asaong wkich are Bl'REAUS AND SIDE-BOARDS. ardrobee and Book-Came; Centre. Knra, Parlor, skfart and Dining Klleasioa Tables; Coos on, Freaok-poet.Cotlage,Jenny-Lind and other dfteads i Bcfae of all kino's, Work-stands, 1-reeke, Warb-slands; Rocking and A rm tairs l epritig-ioat, eana bottom, par'or, com .on and other Chairs t Looking-U lassos of erors ecTiptioa oa band ; and new glasses for old ames, which will be put In oa esry roasonabls rais on shortest notice. He alee keeps oa band famishes to order, Corn-husk, lintr aad vot- -lop Mat trasses. CorriNs op Evicrt Kind da to order, and funenls attended with wrso whenever desired. Also, Unnae Painting e to order. The sul.senber also manulae- s. and has ennstanUy oa hand, Clement's '" weaning Machine. Ibe best sis ia use ss osing thia machias aerer aced be with, i eleaa clothes! Ho also baa Flyer's Patent ira, a superior article. A family aslng this urn aerer a red ho withoal batter I Ml the abore and many other articles are fur. see to customers cheap lor Caen or elchanerd spprored country prod.c. cherry. Meple, " et.er Lumber suitable for aet work, taken ia .ichange for faraita-e. Renjambe, tb. ,B0, b n Mk- ireeut, Pa, aad nearly opporlto tbe-Old Jew CLEARFIELD jjjfc REPUBLICAN, GEO. B. G00DLANDEE, Proprietor. - PRINCIPLE S-NOT MEN. TEEMS-$2 per annum, in Advance. VOL 38-WII0LE NO. 2009. CLEAltFIELD, PA., THURSDAY, MARCH 11, 1867. NEW SEIIIES-VOI, 7, NO. 3:3. VETO OF THE M1UTAET DES POTISM BILL. Washington, March 2. Tho follow- ing is tlio mcssao ot'tlio President of the United Sttilcn, returning to the House of IioprcBentatives a bill enti tled "n uet to provido for the more ef ficient govern merit ol the rebel states : To the House of livprescntaticvs : I have examined tho bill "to pro vide for the more efficient government of the rebel Stutes," with tho care and anxiety which its trnnscendent im portance ia calculated to awaken. I bwn ttnablo to give it my assont, for reasons so grave that 1 hope a state ment of thorn mil-have some influence on the minds of tho patriotic and en lightened men with whom the decis ion must ultimately rest. I he bill places ull the people ol tho ten States therein named under the absolute domination of military rulers, and the preamble undertakes to give the reason upon w hicli tne measure is based, and the ground upon which it is justified. It declares that there ex ists in those States no legal govern ments, and no adequato protection fur life or property, and asserts the neces sity of enforcing peace and good order within their limits. Is this true as matter of fact f It is not denied that tho States in question have each of them an actuul government, with all the power, exe cutive, judicial, and legislative, which properly belong to a free State. They arc organized like the other States of the Union, and like them, they nutko, administcr.and execute the laws which concern their domestic affairs. An existing dc facto government, exer cising such functions as theso, is itself the law ol the btate upnn all matters within its jurisdiction. To pronounce the supreme law-making power of an established State illegal is to say that law itself is unlawful. The provisions which these govern ments have made for the preservation of order, tho suppression of crime, and the redress of privato injuries, aro in substance and principle tho same as thoso which prevail in tho Northern Stntes and in other civilized countries. They certainly have not succeeded in preventing the commission of all crime, nor has this been accomplished any where in tho world. There, as well as elsewhere, oflondcrs sometimes es cape f.jr want of vigorous prosecution, and occasionally, pcrhnpn, by tho in efficiency of cf.urls, or the prejudice of jurors. It is undoubtedly true uiai these evils have been mut n increased and aggravated, North and South, by the demoralizing influences of civil war, and by the rancorous passions which tho contest has engendered. But that these people arc maintaining local governments for themselves, which habitually defeat tho object of all government, and render their own lives and property insecuro.inin itself utterly improbable, and the averment of the bill to that effect is not support ed by any evidence which has come to my knowledge. All tho informa tion I have on tho subject convinces me that the masses of the Sou'.hern peoplo and thoso who control their public act, whilo they entertain di vervo opinions on questions of Federal policy, aro completely united in the effort to rcorganizo their socioly on the basis of peace, and to restore their mutual prosperity as rapidly and as completely as their circumstances will permit. The bill, however, would seem to show upon its fuco that tho establish ment of peaco and good order is not its real object. The fifth section de clares that (he preceding sections shall cense to opcrato in any Stato where certain events shall have happened. Tlicso events are : Fint. Tho selection of delegates to a State Convention by an election, at which negroes shall be allowed to vote. Second. Tho formation of it State Constitution by the convention so cho sen. Third. The insertion into the Slsto Constitution of a provision which will sccuro tho right cf voting at nil elec tions to negroes, and to such white men as may not be disfranchised for rebellion or felony. Fourth. The submission of the Con stitution for ratification to negroes and "rhite men not disfranchised, and its actual ratification by their votes. Fifth. The submission of tho Slate Constitution to Congress for cxamina-, lion and approval, and the actual ap proval of it by that body. Sixth. Tho adoption' of a certain amendment to tho Federal Constitu tion by a vote of the Ixgisloturc elect ed under the new Constitution. Seventh. The adoption of said amend ment by a sufficient number of other States to make it a part of tho Consti tution of tho United States. , All these conditions must lie fulfilled before the people of anv of Ihesc Slates can be relieved from the bondago of military domination ; but when they are fulfilled, then immediately the pains and penalties of tho bill are to cease, no matter whether there be peace and order or not, and w ithout any reforcnen to the security of lil'o or proncrtv. J hccxcuso iriven for the bill in the preamblo is admitted by the bill itself not to be real. The military rule which it establishes is plainly to be uod. not for any pnrposo of order, or for tho prevention of crime, but solely as a means of coercing the peo ple into the adoption of principles and ' . I. . . I. ! . I . 1. . measures to vincii it is suiuwii uiai they aro opposed, and upon which they have an undeniable right to ex ercise their own judgement. I submit to Congress whether this mcasuro is not in ils whole character, scone, and object, without precedent and without authority, in palpable conflict with the nlaincst provisions of Ihfi Constitution, and utt-rly destru'-t-( ive to thoso great principles of liberty ar.d humanity for which our ancestors on both sides of the Atlantic havo shed so much blood and expended so much treasure. The ten States named in tho bill arc divided into fivo districts. For each district an officer of the army not be low tho rank of llrigadier (jonerul is to be appointed to rule over tho peoplo, and he is to bo supported with an effi cient military force to enable him to perform his duties and enforco his au thority. Thost, duties mid that authority, as defined by the third ocetio.i of'tho bill, are "to protect ull persons in their rights of person and property, to sup press insurrection, disorder, and vio lence, and to punish, or cause to bo punished, all disturbers of the public peace or criminuls." The power thus given to the com muuding officer over all the people of each district is that of an ubsolute monarch. His mere will is to take the place of all law. The luw of the Staler is now tho only rttlo applicable to the subjects placed undor his con trol, and that is completely displaced by tho clause which declares all inter ference of State authority to be null and void. Ho alone is permitted to determine what aro rights of person or property, and ho may protect them in such way as, in his discretion, may seem proper. It places at his free disposul all the lands and goods in his district, and ho may distribute them without let or hindrance to whom bo pleases. Being bound by no State law, and there be ing no.oihor law to regulute the sub ject, be may mako a criminal code of his own, and be can make it as bloody as any recorded in history, or ho can reserve the privilege of acting upon tho impulse, of his privato passions in each case that arises. Jle is bound by no rules of evidence ; there is indeed no provision by which ho is authorized or required to tako any evidenco at all. Everything is a crimo which he chooses to call so, and all persons are condemned whom he pronounces to bo guilty. He is not bound to keep any .record or mako any report of his proceedings, llo may arrest bis vic tims wherever ho funis them, without warrant, accusation or proof of proba ble cause. If he gives them a trial beforo he inflicts tho punishment, ho gives it of his gruco and mercy not because he is commanded so to do. To a casual reader of tho bill, it might seem that somo kind of trial was secured by it to persons accused of crime, but such is not tho case Tho officer "may allow local civil tribunals to try offenders;" but, ol course, this does not require that ho shall do so. If any State or Federal court presumes to exercise its legal jurisdiction uy tlio trial of a malefactor without his spo cial permission, bo can break it up and punish the judges and jurors as being themselves malefactors, lie can save his friends from justice, and despoil his enemies contrary to justice. It is also provided that "ho shall have power to organize military com mission or tribunals." Hut this power he is notcommandud to exercise It is merely permissive and is to bo used only when in his judgment it may bo necessary for tho trial ol offenders, hven it tho sent ence of a commission wcro made, a prerequisite to tho punishment of a party, it would be scarcely the slight est check upon tho officer who has authority to organizo it as he pleases, j prescribe its mode of proceeding, ap point its mcmbcts from among his own subordinates, and rcviso all ils decis ions. Instead of mitigating the harsh-1 ncss of his singlo will, such a tribunal would be used much more probably to divide the responsibility of making it more cruel and unjust. Several provisions, dictated by the humanity of Congress, have been in serted in tho bill, apparently to re strain tho power of tho commanding officer, but it seems to mo that they are of no avail for that purpose The fourth section provides, first, that tri als shnll not be unnecessarily delayed, but I think I havo shown that the power is given to punish without trial, anil, if so, this provision is prac tically inoperative. Second. Cruel or unusual punish ment is not to le inflicted ; but who is to decide what is cruel and what is unusual f Tho words have acquired a legal meaning by long nso in the courts. Can it be expected that mili tary officers will understand or follow a rule expressed in languogo so purely technical, and not pertaining, in the lenst degree, to their profession T If not, then, each officer may define cru elty according to bis own temper, and if it is not usual, ho will mnke it usual. Corporal punishment, imprisonment, tho gag. the ball and chain, and the almost insupportable forms of lorture invented fur military punishment, lio within the range of choice. Third. Tho senteiiee of a commis sion is not to bo executed without be spproved by the commander, if it af fects life or "liberty, and a sentence of death must be approved bv tho Presi dent. This applies to cases in which there lias been a trial and a scntorce. 1 take it to be clear under this bill that tho military commander may condemn to death without even the form of a trial by military cotnmis sion. ro that the lite ol tiiecnnuemn ed way depend tion the will ol two men instead of one. It is plsin that the authority here given to tho military officer amounts to absolute despotism. Put to make it still unend amble, the bill provides that it may be delegated to ns many subordinates as he chooses to appoint, for it declares that he shall "punish or cause to be punished. rucb a power i has not been wielded bv any monarch h Jlnglan I lor mor? Cfn five hun dred yearn. In all that tinio, no peo ple who speak tho English luugiiagc havo borne such servitude. It reduces tho whole population of tho ten States nil persons of every color, sex nnd condition, and every stranger within their limits to tho most alijuct und do graded sluvcry. No master ever had a control so absolute over his slaves as this bill gives to the military officers ovor both white and colored person. It may bo answered to this that the officers of tho army aro too mugnnni mous, just, and humane to oppress and trumplo upon a subjugated peo ple. I do not doubt that army offi cers aro as well entitled to this kind of confidence us any other class of men. liut tho history of -Ilia world has been written in vaia If it does not teach us that unrestrained authority can never be safely trusted in human hands. It is ulmust sure to bo more or less abuse J under any circumstances, and it has ulways resulted in gross tyranny where the ruler who exercise it are strangers to their subjects, and como among them as tho representa tives of a distant tower, and more especially when tho power that sends them is unfriendly. Governments closely resembling that here proposed have been fairly tried in Hungary and Poland, and the suffering endured by thoso pooplo roused the sympathies of the entire world. It was tried in Ire land, and though tempered at first, by principles of English law, it gave birth to cruelties so atrocious, that they are never recounted without just indigna tion. The French Convention armed its deputies with this power, and sent them to the southern departments of the republic. 1 he massacres, murders and other atrocities which they com mitted show what tho passions of the ablest ;nen in the most civilized socie ty will tempt them to do w hen wholly unrestrained by law. The men of our race in every age, have struggled to tio up tho hands of their Governments and keep them within the law, bocauso their own ex perience of all mankind taught them that rulers could not bo relied on to concede those rights which they were not legally bound to respect. The head of a great empire has sometimes governed it with a mild und paternal sway, but tho kindness of an irrespon sible deputy never yields what the law does not extort from him. Be tween such a master and tho people, subjected to bis domination, thcrocun bo nothing but cmi.ily; he punishes them if they resist his authority, and if they submit to it ho hales them for their servility. - I come iiiiw'to a question which is, if possible, still more important. Have we the power to establish and carry into execution a measure like this! I answer, certainly not, if we derive our authority from the Constitution, and if w e are bound by the limitations which it imposes. This proposition is perfectly clear, that no brunch of the Federal Govern ment, executivo, legislative, or judi cial, can havo any just powers oxcept those which it derives through and ex ercises under tho organic law of the Union. Outsido of tho Constitution wo have no legal authority more than private citizens, and within it we have only so much asthat instrument gives us. This broad principle, limits all our lunctions, and applies to all subjects, i It protects not only tho citizens of Slates which aro within tho Union, but it shields every human being who comes or is brought under our juris diction. W'o havo no right to do in one place moro than in another that which the Constitution says wo shall not do at all. If, therefore, the Southern Slates were, in truth, out of the Union, wo could not treut their peoplo in a way which the fundamental luw forbids. Somo persons assume that tho suc cess of our arms in crushing the oppo sition, which was mado in some of the States to tho execution of the Fed eral law, reduced thoso States, and all thoir people, tho innocent at well as tho guilty, to the condition of vassal age, and gave as a power over them which the Constitution docs not bo stow, or define or limit. No fallacy can bo more transparent than this. Our victories subjected the insurgents to legal obedience, not tho yoke of an arbitrary despotism. When an absolute sovereign roduees his re bellious subjects, he may deu! with them according to his pleasure, bo causo he bad that power before, llul when a limited monarch puts down an insurrection, bo must still govern ac cording to law. If an insurrection should tako place in onoof our States, against the authority of iho Stato gov ernment, and end in tho ovorthrow of those w ho planted it, would that UUc awav the rights of all the people of the comities where it was ftvored by a part or a majority of the population t Could they for such a reason bo wholly out lawed, and deprived of their seprescn talion in tho legislature? I have al ways contended that the Government of the United States was sovereign within ils Constitutional sphere, that it executed its laws like the Slates themselves by applying lis coercive power direct I v to individuals, and that iteou'd put tfown insurrection with the aaino effect as a State, and no oth er. Tho opposito doctrine is the worst heresy of those who ajvocated scccsiion, and cannot bo agreed to without admitting that heresy to be right. Invasion, insurrection, rebel lion, and domestic violence wero anti cipated when tho government was framed, nnd the means of repelling and suppressing them were wisely pro vided for in tho Constitution ; lint it was not thought necessary to declare that the States in which they might occnr should be expelled from the Union. Rebellions, which Tcre invariably suppressed, occurred prior to that out of w hich thoso questions grow. But tho States continued to exist, nnd the Union remained unbroken. In Mas sachusetts, in Pennsylvania, in Uliode Island, and in New York, at different periods in our history, violent nnd armed opposition to tho United States was caried on. But tho relations of thoso States with tho Federal Govern ment were not supposed to bo inter rupted or changed thereby, after tho rebellious portions of iheir population wero defeated and put down. It is truo that in theso earlier cases there was no formal expressions of a deter mination to withdraw from tho Union. But it is also truo that in tho Southern States the ordinances of secession were treated by ull the friends of tho Union as mere nullities, nnd uro now ac knowledged to be so by the Sttttcs themselves. If we admit that they had any force or vulidity, or that they did, en fuct, take the Suites in which they wero passed out of tho Union, we sweop from under our feet ull tho grounds upon which wo stand in just ifying the use of Federal force to main tain the integrity of the Government. This is a bill passed by Congress in a time of peaeo. There is not, in any one of the Stales brought under its operation, cither war or insurrection. 1 he laws of the States, and of tho Fed eral Government, are all in undisturb ed and harmonious operation. The courts, State and Federal, aro open and in the full exercise of their proper authority. Over every Stato com prised in these five military districts, life, liberty, and property and secured by State laws and Federal laws, and tho National Constitution is every where in foice and everywhere obey ed. What, then, is tho ground upon which this bill proceeds? Tho title of the lull announces that it is intended for the moro efficient government of these ten States. It is recited, by way of preamble, that no legal Stute gov ernments, noradequate protection for life or property exist in thoso Stutes, and that peace and good order should bo thus enforced. The first thing that arrests atten tion, ujion these recitals, which pre pare tho way for martial luw, is tdis : That tho only foundation upon which martial law can exist, under our form of government, is not stated or so much as pretended ; actual war, for eign invasion, domestic insurrection none of these appear, and nono of theso, in fact, exist. It is not even recited that any sort of war or insur rection is threatened. Let us pttuso here to consider, upon this question of constitutional law and the power of Congress, a recent decision of the Supremo Court of tho United Stutes in ex parte Milligan. I will first quote from tho opinion of tho majority of tho court : "Martial law cannot ari, from a lWalneJ in vaiiion. Thenceej.ilyrnui't he actual and present, the invasion rval, su h as effootuslly cli'ws the courts and disposes the eiril administration." Wo see that martial law comes in only when actual war closes the courts and disposes tho civil authority. Bui this bill, in time of peace, makes mar tial law operate as though wo were in actuul war, and become the cause in stead of tho consequence of tho abro gation of civil uuthority. Ono more j quotutiun : Mlt follows from what has been said on this sol--Ject that thrrr are oouasions when martial law cau toe proMTly applied. 11 in forrifra invasion or rir li uar the courts are actually closed, and it is iut pos.ihlu to adunuistor criminal Justice according lo law, then, on the theatre ol active military op erations, where war really prcrsils, there is a uc ccitity to furni.h a substitute tor tne civil author ity thus overthrown, to prewrve the salrty of the anny and eocicly ; and as no power is Ivlt hut the military, it is ailowrd to (orern by martial rule uutil tne laws can have their free cvuirt." I now quote from tho opinion of the minority of the courl, delivered by Chief Justice Chose : "We by no nicans aer-rl that Congress caa cs Ulili.h and apply the laws of war acre no war has Iwn doclairil or exntl. Where peace exists the laws ol pence must prevail." This is sufficiently explicit. Peaco exists in tho territory to which this bill applies. It asserts a power in Congress in timo of pcuco to sot aside tho laws, of peace and lo substitute tho laws of war. Tho minority concur ring with tho majority declares that Congress does not possess thut power. Again, and if possiblo moro emphati cally, thoChiel Justico with moro re markable clearness and condensation sums up iho whole matter as follows : Thvre are under the Onn.lilntinn three kind, of militsrv iuriMlirlion, onv to be eterrieed both in earc and war, another to heoxercised in time of foreign war witnoui ine nounuarlrs nt me i mlcl States, or in time ol rehellion and ciiil war within States or distrirts occupied by relmls. treated as hrlliircrrnte, and a thiid to fir excretst-d in time of invasion or lusurrerlinn within the limits of tlie I'liltcd Slates, or during reMlina within the lim its of the States maintaining adhesion to the Na tional Oorerntncnt, whm tho politic danger re quires its exercise. The nri-t ol these roar be Pall en jurisdiction under military law.aud is f.mnd in aeta of Congress prescribing rules and artiele, of i war. or otherwise providing for the government i ! of the national force. I be second uiftv he oi.tin i guished as military government, superceding, as lar as mar be dremeo eiprdtonr, the local law, and exercised by the military commander, nmlcr the direction ol the President, with the evpress or im plied sanction of Congress. hile the third mar h denominated martial law protier, and is called into nclion br Conrress. nr. temiraritr, when the IwotTmiM.'nnd ," th'1 1 nelinn ol I ongresr case of ius'ifving or excusing peril, br the I'resi dent: In times of in.urreetion or inve.ion: or of foreign war within di.lricts or localities where or dinary law no Inng-r adequately ee.-uros public safe ty and private righp." It will be observed that of the three kinds of military jurisdiction, which can bo exercised or created under our Constitution, there is but ono lhatcan prevail in timo of ponce, ami that is Ibe code of laws enacted by Congress j with prescribed articles in it, and af fur I Im irnveriimeiit of the national i lorwards elect a legislature which will 'forces That body of military law ' has no application to tho citizen, nor . . . ... ,1 even 10 tho citizen soiaior onroneu in militia in timo of poaco. But this bill is not a part ot thut sort of military law, for that applies only to tho sol dier, and not to the citizen, whilst con trnriwiso tho military law provided by this bill applies only to the citizen and not to the soldier. I need not say to tho rcpesentatives Of tho American people that their Constitution forbids tho excrciso of judicial power in any way but oi.o ; thai is, by tho ordained and establish ed courts. It is equally well known thnt in nil criminal cases a trial by jury is inudu indispensable by the ex press words of that instrument. I will not enlargo on ,tho inestimable vuluo of the right thus secured to ev ery free man, or speak of tho dar.gcr to public liberty in ull parts of tho country, which must ousuo from a de niul of it anywhere or upon any pro tence. A very recent decision of tho Supremo Court has traced the history, vindicated the dignity, and made known tho vufuo ol' this greut privi lege, so clearly that nothing moro is needed. To what extent a violation of it might bo excused, in timeof war or public danger, may admit of dis cussion. But we are providing now lor a timo of profound peace, where there ia not an armed soldier within our borders, except those who are in tho service of the government. It is in such a condition of things that an act of Congress is proposed which, if carried out, would deny a trial by the lawful courts nnd juries to nine mil lions of American citizens ar.d to their posterity for an indefinite period. It seems to be scarcely possible that any one should seriously bclievo this con sistent with a Constitution which de clares in simple, plain nnd unambigu ous language, that all persons shall havo that right, and thai no person shall ever, in any case, bo deprived of it. The Constitution also forbids tho arrest of tho citizen, without judicial warrant founded on probable cause. This bill authorizes an airest without warranl, at the pleasure, of a military commander. The Constitution de clares that "no person shall be held to answer for a capital orotherwiso infa mous crimo, unless on presentment by a grand jury." This bill holds every person not a soldier answerable for ull crimes and all charges without nny presentment. The Constitution de clares that "no person shall be depriv ed of life, liberty, or property, with out due process of law." This bill sets asido all process of law, and makes tho citizen answerable, in his person and property, to tho will of ono man, and as to bis life, to the will of two. Finally, the Constitution declares that "tho privilego of iho writ of habeas corpus shall not bo suspended unless when, in case of rebellion or invasion, tho public safety may require it;" whereas this bill declares martial law, which of itself suspends this .grent writ in timo of peace, and authorizes tho military to make tho arrest, and gi vo to the prisoner only one privilege, and that is n trial without unnecessa ry delay, lie has no bono of release from custody, except tho hope, such ns it is, of reloaso by acquittal beforo a military commission. Tho United States ure bound to guarantee to each State a republican form of government. Can it bo pretended that this obli gation is not palpably broken if we carry out a mcasuro like this, which wipes away every vestago of republi can government in ten Stales, and puts the life, property, liberty and honor of all the people in each of them under tho denomination of a singlo person clothed with unlimited authority? JUo Parliament of England, exercis ing the omnipotent power which it claimed, was accustomed to pass bills of attainder; that is to say, it would convict men of treason und other crimes by legislative enactment. The person accused hud a hearing, somo times a patient and fair one, but gen erally party prejudice prevailed in stead of justice. It often became no ccssary for Parliament lo acknowledge ils error, and reverse its own action. Tho fathers of our country determined that no such thing bhould occur hero. They withheld tho power from Con gress, and thus forbade its exercise by that body, and they provided in the Constitution that no State should pass any bill of attainder. It is, therefore, impossible tor any person in this coun try to Ue constitutionally punished for ony crimo by a legislative proceeding of any sort ; nevertheless here is a bill of attainder against nice millions of people at onco. It is based upon an accusation so vuguo ns to be scarcely intelligible, and lotintl to be true upon no crcdiblo evidence ; not ono of the nine millions wus heard in his own de fence. Tho representatives of tho doomed parlies were excluded from all participation in the trial. The con viction is to bo followed by tho most ignominious punishment ever inflicted on Inrgo masses of men. It disfran chises them by htidreds of thousands, and degrades ihetii all, even those u ho ore admitted to bo guiltless, frotu the K of (rot,mcn to the Condition of slaves. The purpose and object of the bill, tho general inlei.t which prevades it lrom beginning to end, is to change the entire structure and character of the Slalo governments, and to compel them bv force to tho adoption of or-' ganic lit s, and regulations w hich they aro unwillingloacccpl.il loll to them-1 selves. Tho negroes havo not asked for tho iiriviletro of voting; tho vnst majority of them havo no idea whf' it means. This bill not only thrust it into their band, but compels them, as well ns tho whiles, to uso it in a particular wny. If they do not form a Constitution I act upon certain measures in a pro- i scribed wa)-, neither blacks nor whites 1 lal is in constant peril, public securi- I le 1! I.i., ft . . - 1 ..... ttanWia can ue reuevea irotn mc slavery which the bill imposes tijion them. V about pausing to consiticr tne policy or im - policy of Africanizing tho Southern part of our territory, I would simply ask the attention of Congress to that manifest, well-known and universally ar-ltnowlsilgcl rule of cwtitntioiml law, which declares that lbs Federal Government has no jurisdiction, su. Ihority, or power to regulate suck subjects for any State. To force tho rigiit of suffrage out of the hands of tho white people, and into the bands cf the negroes, is nn arbitrary viola tion of this princijtio. This bill im poses martial law at once, and its op erations will begin so soon as tho gen eral and bis troops enn bo put in place. The dread alternative between it harsh rule and compliance wUh tho terms of this measure is not suspend ed, nor tho peoplo offorded any timo for freo deliberations. Tho bill says to them : Take martial law first, then deliberate. And when they havodono all that this measure requires them to do, other conditions and contingencies) over which they litre no control yet remain to bo fulfilled ; before they can bo relioved from martial law another Congress must first approve the con stitutions mado in conformity with tho will of this Congress and must declare theso StatCB entitled to repre sentation in both Houses. The whole question thus remains open and unset tled, and must again occupy the at tention of Congress ; ond in tho mean time the agitation which now prevails will continuo to disturb all portions of the people. Tho bill also denies tho legality of tho governments often of the Stutes which participated in the ratification of the amendment to the) Federal Constitution abolishing sla very forever within tho jurisdiction of the United Suites, and practicallr excludes them from the Union. If this assumption of tho bill be correct, their concurrence cannot be consider ed as having been legally given and the important fuct is maJo to appear that the consent of three-fourths of the States, the requisite number, has not been constitutionally obtained to tho ratification of that amendment, thus leaving tho question of slavery w here it stood before the amendment was officially to hove become a part of the Constitution: That tho measure proposed by this bill does violate tho Constitution in the particulars men tioned, ond in muny other ways, which I forbear to enumerate, js too clear to admit of the least doubt. It only re mains to consider whether tho injunc tions of that instrument ought to bo obeyed or not. I think Ihoy ought to bo obe3-ed, for reasons which I will froeecd to givo as briefly as possible, n the first place, it is the only system ol freo government which wc can hopo to havo as a nation w hen it ceases to be the rule of our conduct ; wo may, perhaps, take ourchoice between com plete anarchy, a consolidated despot ism, and total dissolution in the Union, but naiiotal liberty, regulated by law, will have passed beyond our reach. It is tho best frame of government the world ever saw ; no other is, or can lie, so well adapted to the genius, habits, or wants of the American poo plo, combining the strength of a great empire, with un-peakable blessings of local sclf governiiient, having a cen tral power to defend the general in terests, and recognizing the authority of tho States as tho guardians of in dustrial rights. It is "tho sheet an chor tf our sufoly abroad, ond our peace at homo " It was ordained "to lorm a more perfect Union, establish justice, insure domestic tranquility, promote tho general welfare, provide for the common defence, and secure tho blessings of liberty to ourselves and to our prospcritj-." Theso great ends havo been nttained heretrflbre, and will bo again by faithful obedi enco to it, bat they are certain to bo lost if wo treat with disregard its sa cred obligations. It was to punish tho gross crimo of defying the Consti tution, and to vindicate its supremo authority, that wo carried on a bloody wnr of four years' duration. Shall wo now aeknowlcdgo that wc sacri ficed a million of lives, and expense 1 . billions of treasure, to enf irco a Con stitution which is not worthy j;f respect and preservation. Thoso who advo cated tho right of secession, alleged in their own justification, that we bad no regard for law, nnd that, their rights of property, life, ond liberty would not bo safo under tho Constitu tion, ns administered by us. If wo now verily this assertion, we prove that they were in truth nnJ in fact fightingfortheirliberty. And instead of branding Iheir leaders with the dis honoring namo of traitors ngainBt a righteous nnd legal government, wo elevate them in history to tho rank or self sacrificing patriots ; consecrato them to the admiration of the world, and place them by the sido of Wash ington, Hampden, and Sydney. No. Let us leave them to the infamy they deserve. Punish them as they should bo punished, according lo law, and tnko upnn ourselves no share of the odium which they should bear alone. It is a part of our public history, which can never bo forgotten, that bolh houses of Congress, in July, 1 SGI, de clared in the form of a solemn resolu tion, that the war was, and should be carried on, for no purpose of nnbjujja lion, but solely to enforco the Consti tution and laws, and that when this was yielded by the pnrtiesin rebellion tho contest should cease, with the constitutional rights of tho States, of individuals, unimpaired. This resolution was adopted, and sent forth o the world, unanimously, . by tho Senate, and with only two dis- SCIltillS Voices bv lllO UoUSC. It WHS ! accepted by tho friends of tho Union J in the South ns well as in tho North, as expressing honestly and truly the object of iho war. On tho faith of it many thousands of persons in bolh sections cave iheir lives nnd their for- luties lo the cause. To repudiate it now, by reiusmg lo i lie Mates, ami to j the individuals w ithin them, the rights ! which tho Constitution anil laws of ' tlio Union would secure to them is a .breach of our plighted honor, for which I can imnrine no excuse, and to which I cannot voluntarily become a party. The' evils which fpring from the unsettled stato of our Govormnont, w ill be acknowledged by nil. Coin- metcial intercourse is impeded, capi : ties nu'-uiuic. in ,iuvj, . nr not secure, nnd 1'ie sense ol moral ana j political onty is unpairt-u. au ibeso calamities from our connlry.it I is imperatively required that wc should j immediately fiecioo upon some course of administration w bitib cau be stead- f.tstly adb.tf'! trt