" 11 - T ii- ii i ii -i ii i ii "I " ' - ii - - - 1 i l- i mi mm i mm r i r " UcFiLaiur : ;:. TRUT AND RIQHt-qod and our country.- : : .: ; ;; : tw doiu p a ' v ."' Y OlXtf S B UKG. COL UINIB I A C b., :r A AVEDNE S D AY, JULY 25, 1 SGG . irS YOL. 1. NOi 22, : SLR i i, a 9 ' .x - m - " . i t j in z J?TJBTJ5TTrT ITERY WEDNESDAY, ,.,;,1N BLO 0 ZISIU UG, PA,ii BYi j ac o By; &zj k e c e n . , TEHMS, 00 in fYrinci?i- imol frf titVthe h& of lh irr. 5fl -eot mJi'itiorml will be cliff (J. tyotHipfr Sieontinued olitir.all Trergr fcft pt ticrpt t ii8 opi'.joit of thc cdliorN ,, , 'i""" RATES OF ABTIRTOtSO.'' ;iifc.i- - i - , p wt it( KTr7-intbi(u9t lusartion let ti,an 13 so itict. 1m. 2j. .3u.i, Ca.L-r ,Jr. ..-l JH i Muart. I 2J-- 5 3TO J 100' I fi.OO 10 g rum, a.oo'f 5.0.) J".io I o.ou,H r - -3,00 1 7,00 8.80 ' I T M 0 t-H. CO .00 M0 00 Two Half column IP ) I 30 () 13 oO 'f nooo - 50 00 kx1' mfiA 'AUininJrtrator'ii Nolicu 3.0') AadHor's Noitce.. t- 2.50 Ctber adTeniaemcnts inicrtnt according to apecial ntra-t. " J n f- .- -- ffuvine atice, without aJyeriMement.'twentx;, ru pr line. - " ' " . " . '''''".' TranaJent a.lerti"m',nfi paynhleln 'aJtanee, all jra 6ur altr thr firt tnfertion. - CT OKFiCE-Ia Shiva'a Btoc; ComerofMain lit fra etr-fi- a - ' ' " " " Addre. JACORYfc IKELKR. ,z liiooniabnrj, Columbia County, Fa. - v .-Courting Iiow-A.-Days- .!() -VJJI . . . x.-j . . 1 Ve a!wjr h4 (frat dislike - i For: all the toniU wry. -' .-'-! 'TbaHf ralea which folkahar got ' Kr-court in now-a-daya Tbry'vv cat aile Iba good old alrtf - of f,ut; m if vvflu cnn," " " And imitate. lik el-i''pea. mlit'' 8om hateful fureign plan., , , .,y w ' ip hour it nikea sor (In iidrr raice .J j To ' iliew counting noy dy. tim'ea ar'ni at lliry used tin was, ' . , " A one can eaay tIl." ' . Fur when a frjie sees a rat That amis bint pretty al . ' . ., I.. Il'a gut to M firat--itroduc)l.M . And Uiea lift pnia her Rota a. , , . And pretty toon he roinea around. " - -v tTu 'ttir Kiad old folk -1 ,t By Jtarke. we do at beliere itpays, - t -iJ'i iTkt way the boy coart now-a.-days. ., ai PiradIrvaaBn then hegoeato pay,- -. - ( rby-doat apatk any BMre-.)' . i Anal aa-ervntsl't yon aea him pull t , The white k to at the door ...,. . J . YiHi. sfKiav 'servant" uahrra him Into the parlor glMot; "i .. 1 hear eontes Ms duck and lakes a asat Osi t'etttef side ihcyiotii f r, tj ;l A1thre they sit and sigh and faze I .11 ''Thy call that coarting uow-a-dajal Ma . - . ' '""'metimes tlley talk ,bot't'ry books ; ' fonietrines tbelaify' sinrs ' : t"'rlOirt,tiioes he plava the Organ,-' too.' ' ' ,,,iJ"-T atrow hei flnKet'rlngaT , "f Vometiinea they take a pleasure walk. ' aiowieliuiea thry tike a ride. 1 And by-anJ by tkc f-llnw aran ' "t -h t oa tyuw be-say bride f"1 fi , Te bow and acrape a thousand, ways.,, . liiiuk that's eoarUng now a days J 3 " Tl)y tel a'dat and hire a priest, . '..'s Ad rent a rbur h or tw, i w c.cr uvaf soul wir n 5 ' Caaj hare a separate pew ' " . . ' ... . And when the hour at last arriref ' . In gone. array, v , i ... They t.orii up lo the "witillnt priest, V'h -tje tb knot" Straightway , . ... .. Congratulations, words of prai.v . VViXid up the courting aow-a days,' , , . . tk' ll ,1 : . . O gi re us back the good old aiyle Of merry days goue by. - When wecould go" with any gal Thai ebwnced to lafca a s eye . flilltodk her home frm spelling school, ."" -tlott nine rMocfc ae nrglH", -- - Tea) by the o'd stone- hearth's warm aide. -War aparked rii broad ilaylisht 1 ' ' -' f- . t ' We hufg'd and kle.'.tit brraif of day, : - Nor hears' the old clock toll the hours away ( We tell you. chum. m h courting py-- ' It weel ahead. of now M-days I. . C0iMMu'A'l(JATlUi& i Abolitionists and Abolitionism. Messes." Xd'itoss .--Some time ago I no ticed, in the" Philadelphia Jnquirer, jkj ac count of a Lecture delivered in that city by J. rLtJiixaore; Esq!, inrivhich ha .ppoka of the white people of the fcfouthdividing thein into' three clas-e and says : : "The poor white ,cla3 are lowerhan,' the negro.'. , Poof people I Thay must be very low in-deedl-JJut this' ij jut what Mr. Gil more and all hi3 radical friends arc working for. 2 aery:, Is this Fj-q. Oiimore any relation to at Gch." Gniuoro1 wh'. TEfofc ! IhVJ liioil-V harness, carriaffei &n'Jtare? &c, from the citizen? of, Charleston," 8crath' Jaroiina,"o,' Whicli the Itev. Dt. Baa'climan. cave,. xu, 'a history a. few-months ? aso , hi the public prints? ' I should Mike to knovr.-iire pnb fic would like to know. ? But. to. re turn: Defiradcd and low as is the nejrro. Ai r. ( il- more and Lis Abolition co-wbrkerS ai-creCriv inr in every possible waythey ean, topiaea U9 wmce people, ayu (espeeuui wunt-a . c. .l t-.it t i u: ii. u:.. Ol tile OVUUl, BUli KVIUW J1I1IJ. lACIlw ' 11119 Romp Conrre3!, (which the President and the people ought not to have recognized as the Congress of the United States for it is not a Constitutional Congress) has been Jg isljiiri thLi whole session to heap taxes and rjther hardens on the whites to depress them in order to provide fOTj and feed the blacks in filth ana idleness at the expense cf our hational trea.Tiiry.In confirmation of thi'j I need but cite tne reader .to the 'Negr'Bu; reao Bill, which, thanfc" lod, President Johnson has yetocdy,thus paving millions of taxes annually to thtrwhite producers. - I win riti rotrir fact to "prove that the Wsktion of the Rump is. ftll for the negro,; rtn. LvOss,ot i.iJvnoi. utejy intxouuceu a res olution ill the "House WspC ppartonediy in each week. to be 'calkd, the C white., man's day,'! for th purpose of eonsiderine the in terests of ..white peppIe.'But, the Abolition bero-worshipping, majority true to their in-tinct-atnrl the nigger's out.tinct?; voted thi. down! - Tliu.-i poleianly declaring by a delib erate vote of the Knmp, that not onesixth part of the time shall be given to the delib eration of white' men's interest.?, tut all must be devoted to the exclusive advantage tf the blacks! - -And yet those blind fanatics do not really fcenctit' the negro, because every Act they pass neglecting the interests of the white racevalio 'icjnrer the rrgrp, who is dependent oa the white man JW guidance tud grtecor.1 always looking tip to him for inotruction. and-tupport. "; '. ' ' ' 'J" . Con?rec3 ought, therefore, to legislate after,, Ihe manner of .our illustrious ancestors', viz: for the intereatsof the wh?t3'iaan,'who under the Constitution and ".wholesome", laws can Manage the Lxl interests of both white and thek flt to a 8Tece.ful issue,' trv the pros per'!, tl e pr-.nee and comfort af alL ; But Mr. Gilmore is reportel as frying Ihat "th.13 cla.a of poor white folks is so un intelligent that, many of thcra "yet "vote "fur Thomas Jefferson for President.' ' This is an asisertion, Ilki? most others made' by llad? al Ab;litionist that nepfUmtich proof be-' iom r'am peorla can believe it Butvthe re 1, the ' enlightened, ; pious'.' Abolition thi PLilvlelLhia liwvirer, will, no a r ? lo gati.f:ed with mere assertion,' nn- -. . t rA f t1 thr.n-n it. i. a-iTTsf V :1 ti cm rsce in the South. - or they and tir ilk- will rctiva anything but the , ,c :.z-;i:z2 . tha .white . pcojIadown kt tLi, tai fhda cfl tne f-nrarrect. ' - - - rr in th3 South yet, vote for 31 f. Jefferson for President. In so doiug, they how ayener ation for One who was a Man afoong rnier', a real white man, the true friend of aU men; and the, greatest KUtesman; that ever, lived. IiV-ithuii voting, for. Jefferson,", those. m en show a love for the principles he enunciated in, the glorious Pecfaratioa "that white men are-created, equaJ,'A- they prove theniclves patriots in striving to maintain the Constitu tion and the rich nerifage of Union 'fend free Government which." Jefferson and his oeni batriots bequeathed to' their descendants. Be it rcmemberedj'Thomas Jefferson was a consistent friend of the : Union,' 'sovereignty and rights of the States.'' ' And those voters adhered to .the fame 'sound doctrintfjthey loved Jefferson and those principles "estab lished by the revolutionary fatherland under which, our Union prospered for nearly" four score years." t ' '- "'I'- ' Those poor men doubtless thonglit it" bet ter to have a dead lion than' a Union-splitting nose of wax in the Presidential chair ! Therefore, they' were much more consistent in their regard for Jefferson than are any of the Disunion Abolitionists in ' howling for Lincoln, who was a mere echo, and a tool for demagogues, utterly incapable ' of enuncia ting anything but, ."that a smalldebtis easier paid than a larger one." He had not the first qualification for the Chair of State, and yet is virtually voted for by all the fanatical negro-worshipping disuniouistjof the North. Democrats never vote for dead men; we have good living men in our party who hold Jefferson's undying principles to 'vote for, and with fair elections these would invariably trinmpliJ ir "y -: !" ' V";'' ' ' ': But dead men vote for Abolitionist?, and hence they sometimes get into ' olnce, as in the Cae of Curtin against Woodward for Governor, Lincoln against McClellan ' for President, and in the case of Given against Weaver for Commissioner in Philadelphia. Will the Jnquirer and E.-q. Gilinore stick a Ein there ? and say if they don't smell a rat ? ut if the rat should smell them, he would certainly have the worst of the bargain. , , :' "; '.',,' .Jeffersox ' Gnbernatorial. No. 10. " Editors Democrat and Star': With all the migrations ; and changes of .sublunary things, even, in these daysof apostatedegen eracy, the undying principles of Democracy stand as firm as "Truth Kternju.'''.; It , was upon this corner-stone that the glorious struc ture of our government was erected, which has how'existed over eighty years, and will continue to nuv, co-equal with time, and must become the' conservator, in all future time, of free Goverrtmeirt and Constitutional lib ertythe inheritance bequeathed to, us by our Revolutionary Fathers. And may God forbidthat this Imperishable' legacy won by patriots and scaled in. blood should ever agin .be marred or stained, either in our State or Nation,. by. the cowardly handsof any dis union abolition crew. .. . . , ..I tarn.. with iively interest from the con templation of the past daik history , cf our much loved and greatly, oppressed country, and view with feelings of deep emotion and fond anticipation the tar of our coutry '& fu ture hope. IIiester Clymer is the coming man. His election to the Gubernatorial chair, in next October of which- no doubt exi-t will shatter the ranks of thedisunion Geary paTty, and inaugurate the establishing of a white man's Government again in Penn sylvania. " ' - - Pellow Freemen ! Lay firm hold, with strong hands and ; out-strtftched arms of the sawed Axk of our politicalcovenant. Guard it with watchful vigilance and -unfalterine: fidelity. It is our only boon of liberty. ' It is the Fait of .the earth, the light of the world, and the hope of mankind.- And whilst the Democratic party lives, and where ever its holy principles are developed, equal laws, common justice, and Constitutional Freedom, will be. perpetuated.' ; . . . f , ' 3Iy Countrymen, this has ever been my advice to you, and never in all my life were such teachings , more important than in the present crisis. ;: Yea, ii it were to be -my fast exposition, T nm ' willing that it should be received aa my dying admonition. ' Guard W-ell the sacred' ballot-box and preserve the purity .of. the elective franchise. " ' - Democrats make . your enemies tremble before the all-powerful inliuenceof the silent. Ballot. ,-JLearn them everywhere ta tear ita cogent power. jid in it they willfind i "A weapon that t snr-r set And firmer ihar they bayonet A weep.! that rome tlown a still ' ! :;r ' v As snow-flakes fall upon the scd, - - i But elfrntrs a- frcentae will '. As ighlniig iloes the wil. of lrl " . . - ' " .' "' A jAacsoy Democrat. - The Vice Presidents of the Uni ted States. ,'. 1. 2. 9 John Adams, Ma.??.. 17S9-1797. Thomas Jefferson, Vx, 1797 IbOl.. t Aaron Burr, N. Y., T801 1805. : "4v George Clinton, N..Y., 1S05 113. 5. Elbridge Gerry, Mass., 1813. Died in office. . G. Daniel D. Trtrhpkius; X.- Y.," 1S1 25. ' 7. John C: Calhoun S. V.slS 1833 JS.; Martin Van Burcn, N.1 Y.1833 37." 0. Richard M. JohnsnT Ky., 1837 '41. 10.' John Tyler, Ya., 18-11; Became Pres ident by the death of President Hajri.-jon.", ' 11. GeortreM. Dallas, Pa., 1S4.WS40. 12 Milliard; Fillmore," N Y,i 1 Re came Preiidcnt by the death oi President Tavlor. ..--!,.---.. 13. William E. Kmg,,Aa., lS53. Died in office. ' ...'.'.':. .. : ' 14. -John C. Breckinridge, Kentucky, 1857 lSfK "'.; ' ' 15. Hannibal Hamlin, Me., 1SG1 1SG.V 16. Andrew Johnson, Tenn., 1864. 'Be came President by the :dcath of President Lincoln. " ' . It thus appeara from; the organization of the Government we have had sixteen Vice Presidents.' Of these "three became Presi dent bv the death of the Chief Magistrate. Two Vice: President have died in office Mr. Gerrvand Mr. Kinr. Four of the Vice Presidents were, afterward ' President,,viz : Adams, Jefferson, Van Buren and Johnson. Tliree.ofhe 'Vice Prcsidentsffigned the IV.C laratioa of. Independence, viz : Adams, J ef ferson and Getty;. New York lias had the. Vice Presidency more than any other State, viz : Four tpaTs Under jJurrr eigh I years un der , Clint6n. eight; years, under 'Torapkins four years under- VaajBuren, ' and Qne.year under Fillmore.4 ''Total; twenty-five years. or about ane-thjrd of , the lime, e ' Of the seventy-five years the office has. been in existeriretB !?Qfth'fca.5 hatd,it ix- ! ty years to the Month's seventeen. , " Ay old man rvrmmitted suicide in - Pater son, N.' J; on his first wife'sgrave, hecane he hrid married a Becond., "-. "Widowers take RAttxrii Eay3"Jhat rrinfers ink X3 the best friend he ever hadi ije Invested in it large ly by mdiciouaadrertisin,' and prospered THE DESERTER CASE ! brrxrotf and - judgment-' of THE SUPHEME CO UR T ON THE ' - DISFRANCHISEMENT ACT. HUBFR V& RE1LY. :' Error to the Court of Common Pleas of Franklin County. ' Stomr, Justice.' " ' , . The act of Congress under which the de-fendant-bclow justifies his' refusal to receive the vote of the plaintiff is the one approved on the 3d day ofMarch, 1865.' The twenty first section is the only one applicable to this case, and it is as folliws : "And leit furllwr enacted, That in addition to the other law ful penalties of the crime of desertion' fi-om tlie military or naval service, all persons who have d 3 -erted the military or naval service of the United States, who shall not return to said service, or report themselves to a pro vost marshal within sixty- days after the proc lamation hereafter mentioned, shall be deem ed an 1 taken to have voluntarily relinquish ed and forfeited their rights of citizenship and their rights to become citizens " 'and such deserters shall be . forever incapable of holdinrr a nV office of trust or profit under the United States, or of .exercising any ritfhts of citizens thereof; and all persons who shall hereafter desert the military or na val service, and all persons who, being duly enrolled shall depart the jurisdiction of the district in which lid is enrolled, Or golxyond the limits of the United States, with. intent to avoid any draft into the military or naval service, duly ordered,, shall be liable to the penalties of this section." This is followed by a clause authorizing and requiring the President to issue 'tis proclamation setting forth the provisions of the section, and we know judiciously that this was done on " the 11th of March. 1865. , ' . . ; The act of Congresses highly penal. It imposes forfeiture of citizenship and ; depri vation of the rights of citizenship as penal ties for the commission -of a crime. Its avowed purpose is to r.dd to the penalties which the law had previously affixed to the offense of . desertion from the military or na val sen-ice of the United States,' and it de nominates the additronal sanctions provided as penalties. Such being its character, it is, under the well known rule of law, to receive a strict construction in favor of the citizen. The constitutionality of the act hat been assailed on three grennds. The firt of these is thnt it is an ex pott tctoaw, imposing an additional punishment for an offense com mitted before its passage, and altering the nils of evidence so as to require different and less proof of puilt than was renuired at ' the time of the perpetration of thec-rinle.: The second objection is that the act is an at tempt by Congress ti regulate thfl right of , suffrnce in theSkates, or to impair it; and the third objection is that the act proposes to i inflict pains and penalties upon offenders before, and without a trial and conviction by 1 due process of law. and that it is therefore prohibited by theBill f)f Rights. In the view which we take of this co?e,r,nd giving to the enactment the construction which we think properly belongs to if, it is unnecessary to consider at length cither of ' these objections to its constitutionality. It ' maybe insisted with stron rr reason that the peraltyof forfeiture of citizenship imposed upon those who had deserted the military or naval service, prior to the passage of the act, is not a penalty for tne original desertion, but for persistence in the crime, for failure (in the language of the statute) toreturn to said service, or to report to a provost marshal within sixty days after the issue of the Itps ident's proclamation. ' If this is po, the act of Congress is in no sense cx pnat fnrto, and it is not fir that reason "in conflict with the Constitution. Its operation is entirely pro spective. I? a drafted man owe3 service to the Federal Government, every new refusal to render - the service may be regarded as a violation of public dr ty, a public offense for which Congress may impose a penalty. And as it is the duty of every court to construe a statute, if possible, so uvt rex marp ralectt, qitnmprreat". that construction of this act luut be adopted which is in harmony with the acknowledged powers of. Congress, and which applies the forfeiture of citizenship to the new offence described as failure to return to service, or to report to the provost mar slial. - " . ' The fcond objection also assumes more than can be conceded. " It is not to be doubt ed that the power to regulate suffrage in a Stat, and to determine who shall or who shall rot be a voter belongs ex clusively to the State itself. The constitu tion of the United States confers no author ity upon Congress to prescribe the qualifica tions of electors -within .the several States that compose the Federal Union. Congress is indeed empowered to make regulations for the time, place and manner of holding elec tions for Senators and Representatives, or to alter those made by; the Legislature of a State, except those in relation to the places of choosing Senators, but here its power stops. The right of s afi'rage at a State elec tion is a State "right, a franchise conferable only by the State, which Congressman neither give nor take away. If,- therefore, the act now under consideration is in truth an at tempt to regulate the right of MitTnige in the States, or to prescribe the conditions upon which that right may 1 exercised, it must le held unwarranted by the Constitution. In the exercise of its admitted powcr, Con gress may doubtless deprive an individual of the opportunity to enjoy a right that be longs to him as a citizen of a State, even theright of suffrage. But this is a different thing from taking away, or impairing, the richt it-elf. . Under tht- laws of the Federal Government, a voter may be sent abroad in the military service of the country, and thus deprived of the privilege, of exercising his right; or a totcr mav te - imprisoned for a crime against the United StateSj but It is a perversion of language o call this impairing hLs right of suffrage. - Congress may provide laws for the naturalization of aliens, or it may refuse to provide such laws; Its jfction or non-action may thus - determine whether individuals shall or Ehall'fiot become citizens of the United States. And I cannot doubt J that as a penalty for crime against the Gen eral Government Congress may impoe upon the criminal forfeiture of his eitizent-hip of the United State, ) Disfranchisement of a citizen as a punishment ibr crime is no unn uat punishment BarkiT vs. the People 20; Johns 458." If by the organic law of a State citizens of the United States only are allow ed to rote', the action or' non-action of Con- ?ress may thus indirectlj' affect the iramber of those entitled to the right of suffrage. r i'et,. after all, the rightis one whichits fo sessor holds as a citizen of a State, cured to him by the State Constitution, and t be held on the terms prescribed by that Con stitution alone." i It is an integral part of the Stite Government, T:' ; ''' . But It is not a correct riew of the 'act of Congress now before us to regard it as an at tempt to override Stats Constitutions, orw rrrerir the rruaHfiestioM of vetr. Tb a jt makes no chanere in the' organic law of the State. . Ifc leaves thatas beibre, to confer the right of suffrage as it pleases. t The en actment operates upon an individual offend er, punishes him for violation of the Federal law, by deprivation of his citizenship of the United States, but it leaves each State to de termine for itself whether such an individual may be a voter. It does no more than in crease the penalties of the . law upon the commission of crime. . . Each State defines fir itself what shall be the consequences of the infliction of such penalties. And with us it is still our own Constitution which re stricts the right of suffrage and confers it upon those only who are inhabitants of the State and citizens of the United Sates. The third objection againit the validity of the act of Congress would be a very grave one, if the act does in reality impose pains and penalties before and without a convic tion by due process of law. The fifth article of the amendments to the Constitution or dains "that no person shall be held to an swer for a capital or other infamous crime, unless on a presentment, or indictment of a grand jurv, except incases arising in the land or naval forces, or in the militia, when in ac tual service, in time of war or public danger; nor shall any person be subject for the same offence to be twice put in jeopardy of life or limb ; nor shall be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himsetf ; nor lc deprived of life, liberty or property without due process of law." The sixth article se cures to the accused in all criminal prosecu tions certain rights,among which are a speedy and public trial, by a jury of the vicinage, information of the nature and cause of tlffc accusation, face to face presence with the witnesses against him, compulsory process for his own witnesses, and the assistance of counsel. The spirit of these constitutional provisions is briefly tint no person can be made to suffer for a. criminal offence unlc-s the penalty be iullicted by due process of law. What that is has been often defined, but never better than it wasboth historically and critically by Judge Curti-4 of the Supreme Court of the United States in Den v Mur ray et ai, 18 Howard 272. It ordinarily im plies and includes a complainant, a defend ant nnd a judge, regular allegations, oppor tunity to answer, and a trial according to some settled course of judicial proceeding. It must be admitted there arc a few excep tional cases, Prominent among these are summary proceedings to recover debts due to the Government, especially taxes and sums due by defaulting public officers. Rut I can call tq mind no instunceJn which it has been heldt that the ascertainment of guilt of a public offence, and the imposition of legal penalties, can be in any other mode than by trial according to the law of the land, or due process of law, that is the law of the par ticular cae, administered by a judicial tri bunal authorized to adjudicate upon it.. And I cannot jiersuaJe . 'myself that, a judge of elections or a board of election officers, con stituted under State laws, is such a tribunal. I cannot think they have .ower to try crim inal offenders, still less to adjudge the puilt or innocence of an alleged violator of the laws of the United States. A trial before such officers is not due process of law for the punishment of offence-, according to the meaning of that phrase in the Constitution. There are, it is true, many things which they may determine,such as the age and residence of a person offering to vote, whether he has raid taxes, and whether, if born an alien, he Iras a certificate of naturalization. These things pertainto the ascertainment of a polit ical right. But whether he has boen guilty of a criminal offence, -and has, as a conse quence, forfeited his right, is an inquiry of a different character. "Neither our Constitu tion nor our lav has conferred upon the judges of elections any such judicial func tions. They are not hworn-to try issues in criminal cases. They have no power to com pel the attendance of witnesses, and their judgment if rendered would be binding upon no other tribunal.. Even if they were to as sume jurisdiction of the offence described in" the act of Congress, and proceed to try whether the applicant for a vote had boon duly enrolled and drafted, whether he had received notice of the draft, whether he bad deserted, and failed to return to service, or failed to report to a provost marshal, and whether he. had justifying reasons for such failure, and if after such trial they were to decide that he had not forfeited his citizen ship, all this Would not amount to an acquit tal. It would not protect him against a sub sequent similar accusation and trial, it would not protect him against trial and punishment by court martial. Surely that is no trial In due process of law, the judgment in which is not final, decides nothing, but leaves the accused exposed to another trial in a differ ent tribunal, and to the imposition by that other tribunal of the full punishment lire scribed by law. Moreover, it is not in the power of Con cress to confer upon such a tribunal, which is exclusively of State creation, jurisdiction to try offences . against the United States. Notwithstanding the decision in Buckwalter vp. The United States, 11 S. and R., 193. which was an action for penalties, declared to be recoverable as other debts, the doc trine seems a plain one that Congress cannot vest any of the judicial power of the United States in the courts "of any other government or sovereignty. Martin vs. Hunter's lessee, Wheaton 3()4j ?,Z0 ; Fly vs. Peck, 7 Conn., 142, and Scoville vs. Canfield, 14 Johns, 23S. And clearly, if this is so, Congress cannot make a bo.tr d of State elect ion oliicers competent to try whether a person has been guilty of an offence asraim.t the United States, and if they find him guilty to enforce a part of the prescribed penalty. '. If therefore the act of March 3, 1S65, really contemplates the infliction of its pre scrilied penalty or any part of it without due process of law, or if it attempts to confer upon the election officers of a State the pow er to determine whether there has been a vi olation of the act incurring the penalty, and to enforce the penalty or any part of it, it may well be doubted whether it is not trans gressive of the authority vested in Congre&s Ly the Constitution. . ' But such is not the fair construction of the enactment. It is not to be presumed that Congress intended to transgress its powers, and especially is this true when the act ad mits of another construction entirely conso nant with all the provisions of the Constitu tion. - v "What then is its true meaning ? ' As al ready observed," ' forfeiture of citizenship is prescribed as a penalty for dejertion, an ad- Lditional penalty "; not for an offence commit ted belore the passage ot tbe acty minor continued desertion and failure to return or report. It is not a new consequence of a penalty, but itisan integral part of the thing itself. Nor is it the whole. ' 5 It is added to what the law had previously enacted to be the penalty of desertion, "as imprisonment is sometimes added to punishment by fine. It must have been intended therefore that it fhould be incurred mthe pstne way, and im posed by the same tribunal that was author ized to impose the ' other penalties for the offence. It would be very absurd to suppose that two trials and two condemnations for one crime were intended, or that it was designed that a criminal might bo sentenced in one court to underero part of the punishment de nounced by tile , law, and be punished in another court bv the imposition of the re mainder. The law as it stood when the act of 1 805 was passed had provided a tribunal in which alone the crime of desertion could be tried, and by which alone the penalties for desertion could be inflicted. The conse quences of conviction may be noticed in oth e crourts, but the tribunal appointed by the law for that purpose is the only one that can determine whether the crime has been com mitted, and to adjudge the punishment. The act of March 3d, 1865, is not to be considered apart from the other legislation respecting the crime of desertion." It is one of a series of acts pertaining to the same sub ject matter. It must therefore be interpret ed with them all in view. This is an admit ted rule of statutory construction. So long ago as Rex vs. Jaxdale, I Burrows, 147, Lord Mansfield wild, when speaking of acts of Parliament, "that all which relate to the same subject, notwithstanding some of them may be expired or not, notice must be taken to be one system and construed consistent ly." So Chancellor Kent, in the first vol ume of his commentaries, page 4G3-4, said; "it is to be inferred that a code of statutes relating to one subject, was governed by one spirit and policy, and was intended to be con sistent and harmonious in its several parts and provisions.'-' In looking through the numerous acts of Coneress relating to the desertion from the military or naval service, it is plainly to be seen that they all contem plate a regular trial aud conviction prior to the infliction of any penalty, and conrts mar tial are constituted and regulated for such trials. The 20th article of war, enacted on the 10th of April, lhOO, (Brightly's Dig. 75) is inthese words : "All officers and soldiers who have received pay, or have been duly eniisti'd in the service of the United States, and st'ill le convicted of having derserted the same, shall suffer death or such other punishment as hy-xtitcuce of court martial, shall be inllieted." Other enactments have been made at different times respecting the f'inishinent to be inflicted lor the offence. he punishment of death in time of jKacc was abolished in 1830. Corporeal punish ment by stripes was abolished by the act of May 16, 1S12, and by the act of March 2d, 1833, that section of the repealing act was it self repealed, "so far as it applies to any en listed soldier vim shall becomvictrdby a gen eral courtmarti.il of the crime of desertion." By the act of Jan. 11, 1812, an additional penalty was prescribed for desertion, and itl was declared that such soldier shall and may be tried by a court martial and punished." Brightly's Di- 89. The 1 3th section of the act of March 3, 1863,, which declared that any person failing to report after due service of notice that he had been drafred, shall be deemed a deserter, enacted that such a per son "shall be arrested by the provost mar shal and sent to th-; neatest pot for trint Ly court martid, unless, upon proper showing that hois not liable to military duty, the board of enrollment t-haH relievo him from the draft. ' ' All these acts of Congress man ifestly contemplate trial fordescrtionincourts martial, and the infliction of no punishment or forfeiture except upon conviction and sen tence in such courts. The act of 1806 pro vided for geueral courts martial, and made minute and careful regulations for their or ganization, for the conduct of their proceed ings, and for the approval -or disapproval of their sentences. Subsequent acts made some chamres,- but they have not restrained the jurisdiction or diminished the powers of such courts. It is to such a code of law?, forming a system devised for the punishment of ds sertiou, that the 21st section of the act of March 3d, 1864, was added. It reibrs plain ly to pre-existing laws. It has the single ob ject of increasing the penalties, but it does not undertake to change or dispense wi'Ji the machinery provided for punishing the crime. The common niK-s of construction demand that it bs read as if it had been incorporated into former acts. And if it had been, if the act of Ij-06 and its supplements had pre scribed that the penalty for desertion or I'ail ure to report within a designated time after notice of draft, (which the act of 1863 declare.-! desertion) should be punished on con viction of the same, with forfeiture of citi zenship and death, or in lieu of the latter, such other punishment as by the sentence of a court martial may be inflicted, would any one contend that anj' portion of this punish ment could be inflicted without conviction and sentence ? Assuredly not And if not, so must the act of 1865 be construed now. It means that the forfeiture which it pre scribes, like all other penalties for desertion, must be adjudged to the convicted person after trial by acourt martial and sentence ap proved. For the conviction and sentence of such a court there can be no substitute. They alone establish the guilt of the accused and fasten upon him the legal consequences. Such, we think, is the true meaning of the act, a construction that cannot be denied to it without losing sight of all the previous legislation respecting the same subject mat ter, no part of which does this act profe.-s to alter. Jt maybe added that this construction is not only required by the universally admitted rules of statutory interpretation, but it is in harmony with the personal rights secured by the Constitution, and which Congress must be ps-esumcd to have kept iu view. It gives to 1 he accused a trial before sworn judges, a i ight to challenge, an opportunity of defence, the privilege of hearing the witnesses against him, and of calling the witnesses in las behalf. I t preserves to him the common law presumption of innocence until he has been adjudged guilty, according to forms of law. It gives finality to a single trial. If tried by a court martial and acquitted, his innocence can never be again called in ques tion, aud he can be made to suffer no part of the penalties prescribed for guilt. On the other hand, if a record of conviction by a lawful court be not a pre-requisite to suffer ing the penalty of the law, the act of Con gress may work intolerable hardships. The accused will then be obliged to prove his in nocence whenever the registry of theprovost marshal is adduced against him. No deci sion of a board of election officers will pro tect him against the necessity of renewing his defence at every subsequent election, and each time with increased difficulty arising from the possible death or absence of wit nesses. In many cases this may prove a gross wrong. It cannot be doubted that in some instances there were causes that pre vented a return to service, or a report by per sons registered as deserters by provost mar shals, that would have been held justifying reasons by a court martial, or at least would have prevented an approval of the court' b sentence.-: It is well known, also;' that some who were registered deserters were, at' the. time, actually in the military Bervice as vol unteers, and honorahly discharging their du ties to the Government To hold that the act of Congress imposes upon such the ne cessity of proving their innocence, without any conviction of guilt, would be an unrea sonable construction of the act, and would be attributing to the national legislature an intention not warranted by the language and connection of the enactment. . It follows that the judgment of the court below, upon the case stated, was right. The plaintiff not having been convicted of deser tion and failure to return to the service, or to report to a provost marshal, and not hav ing been sentenced to the xenalties and for feitures of the law was entitled to vote. The iudement is affirmed. .Woodwarp, C J. 1 concur in the conclusion stated in the above opinion, and in most of the reasonings by which that conclusion is reached. But I do not concur in treating the act of Congress as a valid enactment, for I believe it to be an expoxt ftctohvr, in respect to all soldiers, except such as commit the crime of desertion after the date of the law. This is not a case of desertion subsequent to the en actment, but prior to it, and the penalties of the offence are such as were fixed, by Jaw, when the offence was committed, and it is not competent for the legislature to increase them, except for future cases. A Reverend Seducer.. HE DRUGS TWO YOUNQ GIRLS AND THEN OUTRAGES Til EM. A correspondent at Salem sends us the following startling revelation of a shocking crime perpetrated in Yamhill County, which did we not positively know the veritable character of tne writer, we should le inclin ed to doubt its truth ; but we are compelled to lielieve the statement notwithstanding its diabolical atrocity : "Salkm, April 20, 1866. "Rev. W. F. Boyakin has finally capped the climax of his infamous and amorous ca reer, by drugging two girls and debauching their person. The outrage, for cool, delib erate, lialolical atrocity, is unsurpassed. Boyakin, who has been residing in Salem during the winter and officiating as pastor of the Bapti.-t Church, recently went to Yam hill County to deliver a series of lectures on the Revelation. Here he became the guest of a worthy minister in the same church. and for some weeks partook of the hospital ities of that gooj man and his very estima ble family. The family consisted of the minister's wife and three daughters, the eldest of whom is married, and was at her father's home, sick of confinement. The parents had changed their sleeping room to one adjacent to that of their sick daughter in order to administer to her wants, and Boyakin was permitted to occupy the vacant room, which was of convenient access to the chamber of the two young girls, who are about 13 and 15 years of age, respectively. Into this chamber Boyakin introduced him self in the night, and with the aid of drues, overcame their iunoccnee and outraged their persons, as stated. Night after night did this lecherous old ruffian satiate his infernal lu.-t.s upon his powerless victims, until the crime speedily manifested itself in the ap pearance of the daughters. It was with difficulty that the lives of the unfortunate sufferers were saved, never, however, to re cover from the sufferings that Boyakin's crime has brought themselves nd their stricken parents. ' ' - Boyakin escaped the just retribution pre pared for him by the neighborhood, by flee ing from it. He 5 supposed to have effected his escape on the Sierra Nevada, on her last outward tri p. lie is about fiftr years of age, with hair and beard gray. He was guilty of some impropriety in t'alem last winter, while at the theatre, and public indicnation .was quite strong aeainst him, but the church of which he was pastor nestled him in her lap and screened his unworthy cartas. The faiuiby in which ho ha wrought this ruin is one of the most estimable in the State, and it is a pity that they gave such implicit confidence to a man about whom the world had rumored bad things even if he was gray-haired and a minister. But what i most to be regretted is that the Baptist church in Salem did not, when his notorious conduct in the Salem theatre had excited such universal comment, put its foot upon the monster and crush him, instead of giv ing him a passport into homes to blight and destroy them. Boyakin was for some time editor of the Coryaliis (iazctte. He has perambulated the valley divers and sundry times, lecturing on loyal tv and Sambo. La;t winter he was esteemed and worthy correspondent of the Oreronian, over the cognomen of 'One of the Smiths.' He was a great favorite with the editor of the Statrsnum, who was eager to champion him. He was a 'burnin' and 'shinin' light in the 'Union as well as in the church. He was very pious, loyal, and lustful, incessantly haranguing on f)olitics and belaloring copperheads through lis favorite medium, the Oregon iin. His services had been procured to stump Yamhill county for the 'Lnion ticket' in the present canvass, and his untimely flight will be a severe loss to the ticket in that county. The old devil was seen in this citv about the time of the sailing of the Sierra Nevada, and we hear it stated that some one had him arrested for debt just a3 he was going on board, but the matter was settled, and we suppose he has made his escape. We hope, however, that steps will be immediately ta ken to secure his arrest, if possible,' in San Francisco, or any other place where he can le overtaken. Portland, 0&on, Herald. The Rev. W. F. Boyakin.'whose exploits arc related above, was a chaplain in the 3oth regiment Illinois volunteers, when that regi ment first went out, and was loyal and pious to a degree. His home is in Bellville, Illi nois, where he has or had a family living. He has probably had to leave the Pacific coat, and is douhtless in Illinois at present Ed. Chicago Times. Not a Christian, but a Baogage Mas ter. An accident happened to a train on the Atlantic and Great Western Railroad awhile ago out in Ohio. The baggage-master sat in his car reading at the time, but perceiving by the motion of the car that an accident had taken place, he attempted to jump out, but was canehtbetween two boxes and badly jammed. He was taken outin an insensible condition, and being laid upon the ground an attempt was made to revive him, which proved successful. As he opened his eyes to a con.sciousnessof things, a clergyman stepped otvt from the circle who surrounded him, to offer prayer for his complete restora tion. He kneeled down by the side of the victim, but before proceeding with his work ot mercy, he asked the youtn, Are you a Christian ?" "No, sir," as emphatically as his weak condition would allow, "I'm a baggage-master on the Atlantic and Great A Clergyman Whips hlr Child . . I . to Death. V-;i We learn from the railroad men who came from Medina this morning that there- was -great excitement in that village arising from a report that a Presbyterian, clergyman, named Lindsley, residing a mile Eouth of tha village, yesterday whipped his eon three. , years old, so wvcrely that he died two hours subsequently, because he would not pay ' his ; prayers. Report adds that the child's fin-' gers were broken by the blows administered. The report seems so monstrous and unnat- ' tiral that we telegraphed to Medina to learrl ' if it was true, and received an answer that it ' was. The telegraph states that the minister was two hours whipping the child with a heavy rod, and it died from its injuries with-4 in the time stated above. Lindsley had not; been arrested at the time the dispatch was : sent, but we learn that an officer from Albi- ' on has gne Medina to take him into cus tody. For the sake of common humanity we hope the htory is exaggerated, and it may b possible that it is. ."';.' Since writing the above we have receivod by special telegraph the statement of Mr. Lindsley, the father of the child, made to jury summoned by Coroner Chamberlain "On the eighteenth of June the child dis obeyed his step mother, and I commenced correcting him, using a shingle f r the pur- pose, and continued to chastise him for more ; than two hours, when the child began to show signs of debility, and I cea-ed to punish him and laid him on a couch and called, my wife. When she saw the child she said he was dy ing, and before twelve o'clock he wmsdead." .; The coroner's jury returned a verdict yes terday "that death resulted from chastise ment by the father." It will be wen that the whipping, was given on the eighteenth instant, instead of yesterday, and that com- -mon report did not in this instance overstate) the facts in the case. A child three yean old whipjred to death by its father because' it could not or would not pay ita prayers ? Is j it possible, and of all other persons, that . a clergyman should be guilty of such a piece of inhumanity ? The condemnation or the ' public is not enough. ' The law should take) -firm hold of him and deal out justice to hird . with an unsparing hand. . .A cold Mooded murder it can be called nothing less should not go unpunished. No wonder ths ' people of Medina are indignant and -excited; Jiochtsier Lnton. Territii.e Affair Near Marios, Ala- ' bama. On the night of the 21st ult, about nine o'clock, some persons unknown entered the residence of Mrs. Kcnningtoo, and with ; some bluntpicce of iron probably a hatchet crushed her skull all to pieces. The mur- -derer then attacked the children, a little boy and a little girl, aged respectively eight and K ten years. The skull of the boy he crushed; in two places, but failed, as the surgeon V thinks, to inflict fatal injuries upon the girL In tne house, at the same time, was a very : old lady, the. grandmother, we believe, of Mrs. Kennington, and her daughter, Becky ' N'arramore, an aunt of Mrs. Kennington.. The skull of the latter wa? crushed to piecea . above the eyebrows, but the presence of the old lady in the house not being suspected she escaped. When the bodies of the dead and wounded were found next morning, Mrs. Kennington was lying across her bed, her head swinging offj as though she had been in the act of -rising when struck down. The blood from her crushed skull had run through the mat trass upon which she was Iving, and formed a puddle upon the floor. Persons who wit- , nessed the scene say it was shocking beyond expression. . The negro has since been arrested, and is .' now in thej'erry County jail. Marion Com ' vionicenJth. ' . A Horse Thief Shot. Early last Spring , a man calling himself William Greely, and a woman who passed for his wife, hailing from ' Manistee, Michigan, arrived at Richmond, ' Bay County, Mknuri. Shortly after Greely ' opened a school in the vicinity, which ho ker.t until it was broken up, in consequence ' of his unmercifully beating one of hispupili, whose father beat Greely in return. Shortly af r. it appears, he took to horee-stealing, which he carried on without suspicion for some time. Finally, he left under dubious cir- cum stances was followed and overtaken near Chillicothe, livingston County, having three stolen horse and a stolen revolver in his pos session. This occurred on the 2Sth of June. On his way back to Richmond he undertook to make his escape, and threw snuff in the face of. one of his guards to tmable him to. do so. Unfortunately for him the snuff af fected only one eye of his guard (a Mr. Brown, of Bay County,) who pursued Greely as he ran off, and ou his refusing to stop when ordered to do so, Mr. Brown shot and instantly killed him. Next day Mr. Brown surrendered himself, and was discharged after a hearing of the case. Greely was sup- fosed to have accomplices in the neighbor hood. Missouri Republican. Costume at Pan Asia. A n ewspa per cor respondent at Panama says: "The chariest maid of Panama is prodigal enough only when she unmasks her beauty, not merely ' to the moon, but to the blazing sun and en tire populace. The whiteness of her dra pery is in sharp contrast with her tawny skin. Some boys of 12 years, and under, wear shirts, but most are entirely naked, while girls appear 'in elegant costume of the -Greek Slave. They form striking couples' for promenade young arrayed only in straw hats, and juvenile gentleman in the same attire with hats omitted. ' If there be any Calvinism in dress, thev arc hopeless exam ples of total depravity.'' A Man in England imagined that he liad" the rinderpest His physician, unable to convince him to the contrary, gave himi a sealed prescription with which he hurried to the drucgist. His bad symptoms immedi ately left him when the clerk opened it and read, 'This man has the cattle plague ; take him into the back yard and shoot him ac cording to law." In Chatham churchyard is a stone iriseri- bed: A man had buried two wives; after stating the name and age of the first are the words, "The Lord gave and the Lord hatfcu taken away, blessed be the name of the! Lord." In a few years his second wife died ' and after her name and age are these words, ' "I called upon the name of the Lord and he: heard me, and delivered me out of all my troubles." , . Mrs. Partington says the only way to pre vent steamboat jexplosions ig to make engin.; eers bile the water on shore. Inher opinion, all the bustin' is done by cooking the steam on board. ' ' - A Florida planter estimates his cotton yield as high as eight bales to a hand. - This s considered Yprygood., -J n - Y - S: