OF THE 'MIRTH. X JACOBY ."A IKEttR; PnMisfceriv Truth and Bight God and onr Country. Two Dollars per Annum in Advance. VOL;:XXX- j LD series: BLOOMSBURG. COLUMBIA CO., PA., WEDNESDAY, APRIL 25, 1866. NEW SERIES. V OL. 1. NO- 9 J I? THE -DEMOCRAT AND STAR, 19 PUnC18HF.IV 'EVERY' -WKrKE?n AT, IN BLOOMtUJUitG. COLUMBIA COlvTY. VA., BY JAC0BY;fi6 IKELER, TESM3,ri 00 in advance: If not paid til! the rbd or ins year. oo cent additional will be charged J IL. Tip papr nicontmued until an arrearages art paid except at Uie opl'.ion of the editors. ' ' " RATES OF-ADVERTISING. I . it . . . , - tea usti covtitcte a tcax. . One square or three insertions .......... ft 30 Lvarv lubuautut. insertion less ttianI3 .........SO trie. . lat. . -Sjt- 3k. Cm. . If. On a square 1 2.-0 3 no sou 7-00 I 4.00 6 00 I 1.10 i H 10 uo Two squares, 3 Oo 8.0') .00 Three I 3,00 8,50 1 l-'.t'O I 1S.00 Pour squares, j. -UO IHIf column, I 10. Oo On. column. 13.00 s,to I I'V'o 12 W- U4.0v f leCHh lij,00 I 30.00 - 5O-00 Ezrentor'a and Administrator's Notice. .3.00 Anditnr'. Notice.. Other advertisements inserted according to special ontra-t. . Business aoticaa, without adreniieihent, twenty carta nmr line. Trautlenl advertisements payable in adane, alii mli.ra flu rrr the Brat insertion. OKFtCE-In Ebrve'e Block. Corner of Main d4 Iron Bireeta.-1 . r ' Address. ' JACOBY it IKELER.. 6loomburg, Columbia County, P. United States Supreme Court. MILITARYtUIAIjS OFOIV'ILtANS The Indiana Conspiracy Case. ... .. ,: - ; - :A i -" AROtpfiCNT OF JRMIAII S. K&.1CK. ' ' ' COXCLUDM). ' ' The " truth is, that no authority exists aTfhere.m tLV.worldor't3ie doctrine of the Attorney Gcnetal. "No judge" or jurist, no etatesman-orparliaxueuUry orator, on this or the other side of the water, suains Lim. Every elementary writcrfrom Coke to "Whar ton .is against him.' ''AH military authors who profess to know the 'duties of their pro fession admit themselves to be under, not above, the law.'?" No book can be found in any library to justify the' assertion' that mili tary tribunals -may try a citizen at a place- where -the courts are open. Wheal say no took, I mean, of course, no book "of ac- knbwledged authority. I do not deny that hireling clergymen liave-often been found to disgrace-the pulfHt by trj'ing' to prove the divine right of kings and other rulere to gov ern. &3 ' the j please. It is true, alo, that court sycophant? and party hacks have many times written pamphlets, and perhaps large . volume?, to show that those whom they ?erve should be allowed to work out their bloody will upon the people. Xo abive of ptower is toQasrant ta EnU its I defenders among cuch servile creature. TI1030 butchers' dogs that feed upon garbage and fatten upon the oilal of the shambles-are .'always ready to bark at whatever interferes with die trade of their master. ., . . '. -v But this case doesnotdepcivldn turhority. j It ia rather a question of fact than of Ltw. - I I prove my tight to a trial by jury j'u?t a 1 -1 would prove my title to an estate if I held in my hand a solemn deed conveying it to me, coupled xiith - undeniable- ovid?ncc of lmig and : undisturbed possesion under and ac cording to the deed. There is the charter " l y which.we claim -to hold it. It i called the. CdnglitutloripT tha. United States . It is feigned by the sacre'd name of George Wath ingloh,anJ by thrrty-ninc other name?, only less iHu3triou3.than his. ' They represented . every independent State then upon this con tindnt, . and each State -afterwards ratified their work by a separate, convention of its own people. " Every State that subsequently came in acknowledged that this was the gTeat standard by "which their rights were to be measured. ''Every -man that has ever held office in the country, from that time to this, hastaken an. oath that he wotld suj- " port and Bustain it through good rejort and through -eviL. The Attorney Geneial him self became a party to the instrument when he laid his hand npon the gospel of (3od and solemnly swore that he would give to mo and Yery other citizen the full henefit of all it contains. 1 ' ! j "What does it contain? This among other N thingai : : ' ' ; . "The trial of all crimes except in case3 of Impeachment shall be by jury. - Again:. "No person shall be held to an ewer for ' a capital or pthcrSvisc ' infamous crime unless on a presenrment or indictment of a grand juryT except in cases arising in the land or naval forces, or in the'militia when in actual gervice in time of war or public dan ger ; nor shall any person be subject for the same offense to be' twice put in jeopardy of life or limb, nor be compelled in any crminal 6a3e? to' be a witness ' against himself, ' nor be deprived of life, Hbertj7 or property without due process of I.w; nor shall private prop ertybe taken for public u"wit'hyut ju.-:t com pensation." ... 1 This ia not ; all y another -article declcarcs tjhat'JIn all! cnminal prosecutions the accus ed shall enjoy the right to a speedy and pub lic trial by an impartial jury of the State and district wherein the'erimo phall hare been committed, which district shall have been' previously ascertained by law;- and to be in fediied of the nature and cau.se of the accu-. eatioa t to be ; confronted . with tlie-.-nitnesses jalxist him ; to have compulsory ' process for te . fitnesses In his,, favor, and to Lave- the fcirlstanceof counsel for IaU defend" - . " . 1 1s there: any ambiguity there? '.If that, does not signify that a jury, trial shall be the exclusive ''and 'only mean of ascertaining guilt in criminal case?, then" I 'demand ' to know wha words , or what collocation of wordi in the English language . wbuJId have it effect?. Does this mean that a fair, open, ipec Jy-j public trial by an impartial jury shall fc-e rirea only to those persons 'a gainst whom Co.-'special grudge- is felt by the Attorney General, or the judge advocate, or the head of a department? Shall ( this Intestimable privIIcg-3 be extended only to men' whom the Edniajitrotioa doe not care to convict ? Is j it confined to vulgar criminals, who commit ordinary crimes against society, and shall it be denied to men who are accused of such 6ffeiLes as those for which Sydney and RuS' ' sell were beheaded, and Lisle was hung, and Elizabeth Gaunt was burnt alive,- and John Bunyan was imprisoned fourteen years, and Baxter was whipped at the cart's tail, and Pryiin Jiad his ears eut off? No ; the words of" the Constitution are all-embracing "At broid and gen.ral aa the casing air." The trial of ALL crimes thallbe by jury. ALL persons accused shall enjoy that privi lege and NO person shall be held to an swer in any other way. That would be sufficient without more. But there is another consideration which gives it tenfold power. It is a universal rule of construction, that general words in any instrument, though they may be weakened by enumeration, are always strengthened by exceptions. Here is no attempt to enume rate the particular cases in which cicn charg ed with criminal offenses t-hall be entitled to a jury trial. It is simply declared that all shall have it. But that "13 coupled with a statement of two siecifio exceptions : cases of impeachment ; and cases arising in the land or . natal forces.. . Theso exceptions strengthen the, application of the general rule, to all other cases. Where the law-giver himself has declared when and in what circumstances you may depart from the gen eral rule, you .shall not presume to leave that onward path for othcrreasons, and make dif ferent exceptions. ', To exception?, the max im is always applicable, that ejrprcssio v.nlus cXclus'o est alterias. But we are answered that the judgment under consideration, was pronounced in time of war, and it is therefore, at least, morally excusable, inere mayor tnere may not pe something in that.' I admit that the mcrit3 or demerits of any particular act, whether it involves a violation of . the Constitution or not, depend upon the motives that prompted it. the time, the occasion, and all the attend ing circumstances. H hen the people ot this country come to decide upon the acts of their, rulers, they will take all . these things into -consideration, iiut that presents tne political aspect of the case with which, trust, we nave nothing to do fcere. 1 decline to dL?cuss it. I would only say, in order to prevent mL-apprehen.sion, that I think it is precisely in a time of war and civil commo tion, that, we should double the guards upon the Constitution. If the sanitary regula tions which defend the health of a city are ever to be relaxed, it oucht certainly not to e done when pestilence is abroad. - When the Mississippi shrinks within its natura! channel, and creeps lazily along the bottom lie inhabitants of the adjoining shore have no need of a dyke to save them from innn dation. But when the looming flood conies down from . above, and swells into a volume which rises high aoovc the plain on ekhor side, then a crevasse in the levee, bt'eames a most serious thing. So in icaeoable an 1 quiet times,our legal rights are inlittle danger of being overborne ; but when the wave of a; bitrary- power lashes itself into violence and rage, and goes surging against the bar riers wnich were made to confine it, then we need the whole strength of an unbroken Constitution to save us from destruction But this is a question which properly belongs to the jurisdiction of the stump and th newspaper. There is another quasi political argument necessity." 'If the law was violated lcause it could not be obeyed, that might be an ex cuse. But no absolute compulsion is pre tended h5re. .These commissioners acted, at most, under what they regarded as a moral necessity. The choice was left them to obey the law or disobey it. The disobedience was only necessary as means to an end which they thought desirable ; and now they assert that though these means are unlawful and wrong, they are made" right, because with out them the object could not bo accom plishod;- in other, words, the end justifies the moans. ' There you have a rule of conduct denounced by all law, human and divine, as being pernicious in policy and false in morals. See how it applies to this case. Here were three men whom it wa3 desirable to remove out of this world, but there was no proof on which any court would take their lives ; therefore it was necessary, and being neces sary it was right and proper, to create an il legal tribunal which would put them to death without proorf. By the .same mode of rea soning you can prove it equally right to poi son them ia their food, or stab them in their sleep. ; ' ' " --'- , - Nothing tliat the worst men ever pro pounded ha3 produced so much oppression, misgoverninent, and suffering as this pre tence of State Jiece'ssi ty. A great authority calls it "the tyrant's devilish-plea ;" and the common honesty of all mankind has branded it with everlasting infamy. Of course, it is mere absurdity to say5 that these relators, were necessarily deprived of Ihcir right to a fiir and , legal trial, for the record shows that a court of competent juris diction was sitting at the very time and in the same town, where justice would have been done without sale, denial, or delay. But con cede for the argument's sake that a trial by jury was wholly impossible ; admit that there was an, absolute, overwhelming, imperious necessity operating" so as literally to compel every act which the commissioners did, would that give their sentence ofdeath'the validity and force of a legal judgment pronounced by an ordained and established court ? The question answers itself. ; ; This trial was a ti olation of law, and no necessity could be more than a mere excuse for those who com-, raitted It. If the commissioners were on trial for murder, or .conspiracy to murder, they might plead necessity if the fact were truc,J just as they would plead insanity or anything 'else to show that their guilt was not willful. But we are now considering the legal effect of their decision, and that depends on their legal authority to make it. They had no such authority ; they usurped a jurisdiction which the law not only did not give them, but ex pressly forbade them to exercise, and it fol lows that their act is void, whatever may have been the real or supposed excuse for it If these commissioners, instead of aiming at the life and liberty of the relators, had at tempted to deprive them of their projHirty by a sentence of confiscation,would any court in Christendom declare that such a sentence divested the title ? Orwoulda person claim ing under (he sentence make his right any better by showing that the illegal assumption of jurisdiction was accompanied by someex cuse which might save the commissioners from a criminal prosecution ? Let me illustrate still further. Suppose you, the judges of this Court, to be surround ed in the hall where you are sitting by a body of armed insurgents, and compelled by main force to pronounce sentence of death upon the President of the United States for some act of his upon which you have no legal au thority to adjudicate. There would be a val id sentence if necessity alone could create jurisdiction. - Bnt could the President be le gally executed under it? Xo ; the compul sion under which you acted woidd be a good defense for you against an impeachment of an indictment for murder, but it would add nothing to the Validity of' a judgment which the law forbade you to give. That a necessity for violating the law is nothing more than a mere excuse to the per petrator, and does not in any legal sense change the quality of the act itself in its op eration upon other parties, is a proposition too plain on original principles to need the aid of authority. I do not see how any man of common sense is to stand up and dispute it. ' But there is decisive authority upon the point. In 1815 at New Orleans, General Jackson took upon himself the command of every person in the city, suspended the func tions of all the civil authorities, and made Ills own will for a time the only rule of con duct It was believed to bo absolutely nec essary. Judges, officers of the city corpora tion, and members of the State Legislature insisted on it as the only way to save the "booty and beauty" of the place from the" unspeakable outrages committed at Badajoz and St. Sebastian by the very same troops then marching to the attack. Jackson used the power thus taken by him moderately, sparingly, benignly, and only for the purpose of preventing mutiny in his camp. A sin gle mutineer was restrained by a short con finement, and another was sent four miles up the river. But after he had saved the city, and the danger was all over, he stood before the court to be tried by the law ; Lis conduct was decided to be illegal by the same judge who had declared it to be necessary, and he paid the penalty without a murmur. The supreme court of Louisiana, in Johnson vs. Duncan, decided that everything done daring the siege in purmiancc of martial rule, but in conflict with the law of the land was void and of none effect, without reference to the circumstances which made it necessa ry. Long afterwards the fine imposed upon Jackson was refunded because his friends, while they admitted him to have violated the law, insisted that the necessity which drove him to it ought to h ve saved him from the punishment due only to a willful offender. The learned counsel on the other side will not assert that there was war at Indianapo lis in 18t4, for they have read Cokes Insti tute, and Judge Grier s opinion in the prize cases, and of course they know it to be a set tled rule that war cannot be said to exist where the civil courts are open. They will not set up the absurd plea of necessity, fur they are well aware that it -would not be true in point of fact. They will hardly take the ground that any kind of necessity could give legal validity to that which the law forbids. This, therefore, must be their position : That although there was no war at the place where this commission sat, and no actual ne cessity for it, yet if there was a war any where else, to which the United States were . a party, the technical effect of such war was to take the jurisdiction awajr from the civil courts and transfer it to army officers. GEN. BUTLER. We do not take that position. Mr. BLACK. Then they can take no ground at all, for nothing else hit I do not wonder to see them recoil from their own doctrine when its nakedness is held up to their eyes. But they must stand upon that or give up their cause. They may not state their proposition precisely as I state it ; that 13 too plain a wajr of putting it. But, in sub stance, it is their doctrine has been the doc trine of the Attorney General's office ever since the advent of the present incumbent and is the doctrine of their brief, printed and filed in this case. What else can they say ? They will admit that the Constitution is not alto?ether without a meaning; that at a time of universal peace it imposes some kind of obligation upon those who swear to sup port it. If no war existed they would not. deny the exclusive jurisdiction of the civil courts in criminal cases. .How then did the military get jurisdiction in Indiana ? All men who hold the Attorney General s opinion to be true,' answer the question I have put by saying that military jurisdiction comes from the mere existence of war; and it comes in Indiana only as the legal re sult of a war whieh is going on in Mississ ippi, Tennessee, or South Carolina. The Constitution is repealed, or its operation sus pended in one State because there- i3 war in ! another. The Courts are open, the organi zation of society is intact, the judges are on the bench, and their process is not impeded; but their jurisdiction is gone. Why ? . Be cause, say our opponents, war exists, and the silent, legal, technical operation of that fact is to deprive all American citizens of their right to a fair trial. . : ' That class of jurists and statesmen who hold that the trial by jury is lost to the citi zen during the existence of war, carry out their doctrine theoretically and pracitcally to its ultimate consequences. The right of trial by jury being gone, all other rights are gone with it ; therefore a man may be arrested without an accusation and kept in prison du ring the pleasure of his captors ; his papers' may be searched without a warrant ; his property may le confiscated behind his back, and he has no earthly means of redress. Nay, an attempt to get a just remedy i3 construed as a new crime. lie dare not even complain, for the right of free speech is gone with the rest of his rights. If you sanction that doc trine, what is to be the consequence ? I do not speak of what is, past and gone ; but in case of a future'war what results will follow from your decision endorsing the Attorney General's views? They are very obvious. At the instant when the war begins, our whole system of legal government will tum ble into ruin, and if we are not all robbed, and kidnapped, and hanged, and drawn, and quartered, we will owe our immunity, not to the Constitution and laws, but to the mere mercy or policy of those persons who may then happen to control the organized physi cal force of the county. This certainly puts us in a most precarious condition ; we must huve war about half the time, do what we may to avoid it. The President or Congress can wantonly provoke a war whenever it suits the purpose of eith er to do so ; and they can keep it going as long as they please, even after the actual conflict of arms is over. When peace woos them they can ignore her existence ; and thus they can make the war a chronic con dition of the country, and the slavery of the people perpetual. Nay, we arc at the mer cy of any foreign potentate who may envy us the possession of those liberties which we boast of so much ; he can shatter our Constitution without striking a single blow or bringing a gun to bear upon us. A simple declaration of hostilities is more terrible to us than an army with banners, - To me, this seems the wildest delusion that ever took possession of a human brain. If there be one principle of political ethics more universally acknowledged than another, it is that war, and especially civil war, can be justified only when it is undertaken to vindicate and uphold the legal and constitu tional rights of the people; not to trample them down. He who carries on a system of wholesale slaughter for any other purpose, must stand without excu.se before God or man. In a time of war, more than at any other time, public liberty is in the hands of the public officers. And she is there in dou ble trust; first, as they are citizens and there fore bound to defend her, by the common obligation of all citizens; and next, as they are her special guardians "Who thould ugainat Iipt iniirilrcra shut the door Nut bear the knife tutinael ves." The opposing argument, when turned into plain English, means this,' and this only; that when the Constitution is attacked Uon one side, its official guardians may assail it upon the other; when rebellion strikes it in the face, they may take advantage of the blindness produced by the blow, to sneak be hind it and stab it in the back. The Convention when it framed the Con stitution, and tlie people when they adapted it, could have had no thought like that. If they had supposed that it would operate only while perfect peace continued, they certainly would have given us some other rule to go by in time of war; they would not have left as to wander about in a howling wilder ness of anarchy, without a lamp to our feet, or a guide to our path. Another thing proves their actual intent still more strik ingly. They required that every man in any kind of public employment, state or national, civil or military, should swear, without re serve or qualification, that he would sup port the Constitution. Surely our ancestors had too much regard for the moral and re ligious welfare of their posterity, to impose upon them an oath like that, if they in tended and expected it to be broken half the time. The oath of an officer to support the Constitution is as simple as that of a wit ness to-tell the truth in a court of justice. What would you think of a witness who should attempt to justify perjury upon the ground that he had testified when civil war was raging, and he thought that by swear ing to a lie he might promote some public or private object connected with the strife? No, no, the great men who made this country what it is the heroes who won her indepencence, and the, who statesmen settled her institutions had no such notions in their minds. Washington deserv ed tho lofty praise bestowed upon him by the president of' Congress when he resigned his commission that he had always regard ed the rights of the civil authority through allchanges and through all disasters. When his duty as President afterwards required hinr'to arm the public force to suppress a rebellion in western Pennsylvania he never thought that the Constitution was abolished, by virtue of that fact in New Jersey, or Maryland, or Virginia. It would have been a dangerous exxeriment for an adviser of his at that time, or any other time, to pro pose thai he should deny' a citizen his. right to be tried by a jury, and substitute in place of it a- trial before' a tribunal composed of men elected by himself from among his own creatures nd dependents. " f - You can well imagine how that great heart would have swelled with indignation at the bare thought of such an insulting outrage upon the liberty and law of his country. . In the war of 1812, the man emphatically called the Father of the Constitution- was the su preme Executive Magistrate. Talk of peril ous times ! there was the severest trial this Union ever saw. That was no half-organized rebellion on the one side of the conflict, to be crushed by the hostile millions and unbounded resources of the other. The existence of the nation was threatened by the most formidable military and naval power then upon the face of the earth. Every town upon the northern fron tier, upon the Atlantic seaboard, and upon the Gulf coast wa3 in daily and hourlj' dan ger. The enemy had penetrated the heart of Ohio. New York, Pennsylvania, and Virginia were all of them threatened from the Mrest as well as the east. This Capitol was taken, and burned, and pillaged, and every member of the Federal Administra tion was a fugitive before the invading army. Meanwhile, party spirit was breaking ont in to actual treason all over New England. Four of those States refused to furnish a man or a dollar even for their own defense. Thuir public authorities were plotting the dismemberment of the Union, and invidu als among them were burning blue lights upon the coast as a signal to the enemy's ships. But in all this storm of disaster, with foreign war in his front, and domestic treason on his fiank, Madison gave out no sign that he would aid Old England and New England to break up this government of laws. On the contrary he and all his supporters, though compassed round with darkness and with danger, stood faithfully between the Consti tution and its encmios "To hild it, and rave it or prriab there too." The fiamers of the Constitution and all their coteniporarics died and were buried ; their children succeeded them and contin ued on the stage of public affairs until they, too, "Lived out their leae of 1 if , and paid their breatb To time and mortal custom :" - and a third generation was already far on its way to the gTavc before this monstrous doc trine was conceived or thought of, that pub lic officers all over the country might disre gard their oaths whenever a war or a rebel lion was commenced. Our friends on the other side are quite conscious that when they deny the binding obligation of the Constitution they must put some other system of law in its place. Their brief gives us notice that, while the Constitution, and the acts of Congress, and magna chorta, and the common law, and all the rules of natural justice shall remain un der foot, they will try American citizens ac cording to hue of the nations ! But the law of nations takes no notice of the subject. If that system did contain a special provi sion that a government might hang one of its own citizcas without judge or jury, it would still be competent for the American people to say, as they have said, that no such thing should ever be done here. That is my answer to the law of nation?. But then they tell us that the Ltfs of war must be treated as paramount. Here they becomc mysterious. Do they mean that code of public law which defines the duties of two belligerent parties to one another, and regulates the intercourse of neutrals with both ? If yes, then it is simply a recurrence to the law of nations, which has nothing on earth to do with the subject. Po they mean that portion of our municipal cjdc which de fines our duties to the Government in Avar as well as in peace? Then the- are speaking of the Constitution and laws, which declare in plain words that the Government owes every citizen a fair legal trial, as much as the citizen owes obedience to the Government. They arc in search of an argument under difficulties. When they appeal to interna tional law, it is silent ; and when they inter rogate the law of the land, the answer is an unequivocal contradiction of their whole theory. The Attorney General tell us that all per sons whom he and his associates choose to de nounce for giving aid to the rcbellon, are to be treated as being themselves a part of the rebellion they are public enemies, and therefore they may be punished without be ing found guilty by a competent court or jury. This convenient rule woidd outlaw ever,' cit izen the moment he is charged with a politi cal offense. But political offenders are pre cisely the class of persons who most need the protection of a court and jury, for the prose cutions against them are most likely to be unfounded both in fact and in law. Wheth er innocent or guilty, to accuse is to convict them before the ignorant and bigoted men who generally sit in military courts. But this court decided in the prize cases that all who live in the enemy's territory are public enemies, without regard to their personal sentiments or conduct ; and the converse of the proposition is equally true that all who reside inside of our own , territory are to be treated as under the protection of the law. If they help the enemy they are criminals, but they cannot be punished without legal conviction. You have heard muc h (and you will hear more very soon) concerning the natural and inherent right of the Government to defend itself without regard to law. This is wholly fallacious. In a despotism the autocrat is unrestricted in the means he may use for the defense of his authority against the opposi tion of his own subjects or others ; and that is precisely what makes him a despot. But in a limited monarchy the princemust confine himself to a legal defense of his government. If h,c goes beyond that, and commits aggres sions on the right of the people, he breaks the social compact, releases his subjects from all their obligations to him, renders himself liable to be hurled from his throne, and drag ged to the block or driven into exile. This principle was'sternly enforced in the case of Charles I, and James II, and wc have it an nounced on the highest official authorityherc that the queen of England cannot ring a lit tle bell on her table and cause a man by her arbitrary order to be arrested under any pre tense whatever. If that be true there, how much more true must it be,hcre, where we have no personal sevcreign and where our only government is the Constitution and laws. A violation of law on pretense of sav ing such a Government as ours is not self preservation, but suicide. Sal us pnpuU supremo, lex observe it is not Salus regis ; the safety of the people,not the safety of the ruler, is the supreme law. When those who hold the authority of the Government in their hands behave in euch a manner as to put the liberties and rights of the people in jeopardy, the people may rise against them and overthrow them without regard to that law which requires obedience to them. The maxim is revolutionary and expresses simply the right to resist tyranny without regard to prescribed forms. It can never be used to stretch the powers of gov ernment against the people. If this government of ours has no power to defend itself without violating its own laws, it carries the seeds of destruction in its own bosom ; it is a poor, weak, blind, staggering thing, and the sooner it tumbles over the better. But it has a most efficient legal mode of protecting itself against all rossible danger. It is clothed from head to foot in a complete panoply of defensive annor. What are Hie perils which may threaten its exis tence? I am not able at this moment to think of more than these which I am about to mention: foreign invasion, demestio in surrection, mutiny in the army or navy, cor ruption in the civil administration, and last but not least criminal violations of its laws committed by individuals among the body of the people. Have wc not a legal mode of defense against all these? Yes; military force repels invasion and suppresses insur rection; you preserve discipline in the annj and navy by means of courts-martial;" you preserve the purity of the civil administra tion by impeaching dishonest magistrates; and crimes are prevented and punished by the regular judicial authorities. You are not merely compelled to use these weapons against your enemies, because they and tliey only are justified by the law; you ought to use them because they are more efficient than any other, and less liable to be abused. There is another view of the subject which settles all controversy about it. No human being in this country can exercise anj' kind of public authority which is not conferred by law ; and under the United States it must be given by the express words of a written statue. hatcver is not so given is with held, and the exercise of it is positively pro hibited. Courts-martial in the army and navy are authorized ; they are legal institu tions; their jurisdiction is limited, and their whole code of procedure is regulated by act of Congress. Upon the civil courts all the jurisdiction they have or can have is bestow ed by law, and if one of them goes beyond what is written its action is ultra t ins and void. But a military commission is not a court-martial, and it is not a civil court. It is not governed by the law which is made for either, and it has no law of its own. Within the last five years we have seen for the first time, self-con.-.t ituled tribunal not only assu ming power which the law did not give them, but thrusting aside the regular courts to which the power was exclusively given. What is I he consequence? Thi terrible authority is wholly undefined, and its exer cise is without any legal control. Undelega ted power is always unlimited. The field that lies outside of the Constitution snd laws has no boundary. Thierry, the French his torian of England, says that when the crown and sceptre were offered to Cromwell, he hes itated for several days and answered, "Do not make mC a king ; for then my hands will be tied up by the laws which define the duties of that office ; but make me protector of the commonwealth and lean do what I please; no stitue restraining and limiting the royal prerogative will appby to me." So these commissions have no legal origin and no legal name by which they arc known among the children of men; no law applies to them, and they exercise all power for the paradoxal reason that none belongs to them rightfully. A.-k the Attorney General what rulesapply to nnhtarv commissions m the exercise of their assumed authority over civillian. Come, Mr. Attorney, "gird v..n thy loins now like a man; I will demand of the and thou shalt declare unto me if thou hast under standing." How is a military commission organized? What shall be the number and rank of its members? What offenses come within its jurisdiction? What is its code of prccedurc? How shall witnesses be compcled to attend it? Is it perjury for a witness to swear falsely? Whatistho function of a judge advocate? Does he tell the members how they must find, or docs lie only persuade them convict? Is he the agent of the Government tj command them what evidence they shall admit and what sentence they shall pro nounce, or does he always cany his point, right or wrong, by the mere force of eloquence and ingenuity? What is the nature of their punishments? May they confiscate property and levy fines as well as imprison and kill ? In addition to strangling their victim, may they also deny him the last consolations of religion, and refuse his family the melancholy privilege of giving him adcccct grave? To none of the us can the "A tto ney General malce a reply,, for there is no Iavf on the subject. I Ie will not attero pt to ' 'dar ken counsel by words without knowledge," and, therefore, like Job, he can only lay his hand upon his mouth and keep silence. .. The power exercised through these milita ry commissions is not only unregulated by law but it is incapable of being so regulated. What is it that you claim," Mr. Attorney? . I will give you a definition, the correctness of which you will not attempt to gainsay. . You assert the right of the executive government, without the intervention of the judiciary, to capture, imprison,' and kill any person to whom that government or its paid dependents may choose to impute an offense. This, in its very essence, is des potic and lawless. It is never claimed or tolerated except by those governments which deny the restraints of all law. It has been exercised by the great and small oppressors of mankind ever since the days of Nimrod. It operates indifferent ways; the tools it uses arc not alwaj's the same, it hides its hideous features under many disguises ; it assumes every variety of form; "- It can chans ahnpR with t mtpa a for advantages And aet the murderous Macliiavcl to achool." But in all its mutations of outward appear ance it is still identical in principle, object, and origin. It is always the same great en gine of despotism which Hamilton described it to be. Under the old French monarchy the favor ite fashion of it was a Itttre de cachet, bign ed by the king, and this would consign the party to a loathsome dungeon until he died, forgotten by all the world. An imperial ulzase will answer the same purpose In Rus sia. The most faithful subject of that ami able autocracy may lie down in the evening to dream of his future prosperity, and be fore daybreak he will find himself between two dragoons on his way to the mines of Siberia. In Turkey the verbal order of the Saltan or any of his powerful favorites will cause a man to be tied up in a Hack and cast into the Bosphorus. Nero accused Peter and Paul of spreading a "pestilent enper stition," which they called the Gospel. He heard their defense in person and sent them to the cross. Afterwads he tried the whole Christian church in one body on a charge of setting fire to the city, and he convicted them, though he knew not only that they were innocent, but that he himself had committed the crime. The judgement was followed by instant execution ; he let looso the Pi jetorian guards upon men, women and children, to drown butcher and burn them. Herod saw fit, for good political reasons, closely affecting the permanence of his reign il Judca, to punish certain possible traitors in Bethlehem by anticipation. This requir ed the death of all the children in that city under two years of age. He issued his gen eral order, and his provost marshall carried it out with so much alacrity and real that in one day the whole land was filled with mourning and lamentation. Macbeth understood the wholo philoso- pay U the salject He was an un limited monarch. His power to punish for any offense or for no offense at all 'was as broad as that which the Attorney General claims for hiinself and his brother officers under the United States. But he.wasmore cautious how he used it. He had a danger ous rival from whom he apprepended the most scricus peril to to the life of his gov ernment. The necessity to get rid of him was plain enough, but he could not afford to shock the moral sense of the world by pleading political necessity f jr a murder. He must '.Mask the biineM fiom tbe common eye." Accordingly he sent for two enterprising gentlemen, whom he took into bis service upon liberal pay "made love to their assis tance," and got them to deal with the accus ed party. He acted as his own judge advo cate. He made a most elegant and srimng speech to persuade his agents that Banquo was their oppressor, and had "held them so under fortune" ' tliat he ought to die for that alone. When they agreed that he w&8 their enemy, then said the king "So i be mino, and thaurb 1 could With barefaced power r weep him from mr eight And bid my will avouch it, yet I mutt not. For ceitain friends, who are both tig and mine. V hose loves I way nut drop.' For these, and "mamv weighty reasons' 'resides, he thought it best to commit the execution of his design to a subordinate agency. The commission thus organized in Banquo's case sat upon him that very night at a convenient place beside the road whero it was known he would be travelling; and they did precisely what the Attorney Gen eral says the military officers may do in this country they tjok and killed him, becauso their employer at the head of the govern ment wanted it done, and paid them for do ing it out of the public treasury. But of all the persons that ever wielded this kind of power, the one who went most ' directly to the purpose and object of it was Lola Montcz. She reduced it to the ele mentary principle. In 1S4S, when she was minister and mintress to the King of Bava ria, she dictated all the measures of the gov ernment. The times were troublesome. All over Germany the spirit of rebellion was rising; everywhere the people wanted to : see a first class revolution like that which had just" exploded in France. Many per sons in Bavaria disliked to be governed so absolutely by a lady of the character which. Lola Montcz bore, and some of them were rash enough to say so. . Of course that was" treason, and she went about to punish it in' the simplest of all possible ways. She bought herself a pack of English bull dogs, trained to tear the flesh, and mangle the Hmbs, and lap the life-blood: . and with these' dogs at' her heels," she marched up "and do wn tht