THE BEDFORD GAZETTE 19 PtDUSllEll EVERY FRIDAY HORNING BY B. F. MEYERS, /l the following terms, to wit: $2 00 per annum, if paid within the year. $2.50 " ' if not paid within the year. E7-No subscription taken lor less than si* months tts""No paper discontinued until all arrearages aie paid, unless at the option of the puhlishei. it lias been decided by the United States Courts that the •toppige of a newspaper without the payment of arrearages, is priniit f'Acic evidence ol fraud and as a criminal offence. KJ"The courts have decided that persons are ac countable for the subscription price o newspapers, if they take them from the post office, whether they subscribe for them, or not. EDITOR OF GAZKTTF., DEAR SIR : With your permission I wish to say to the read ers of your paper that I will send by return marl to all who wih it, (free) a Recipe, with full directions for making and using a simp'e Vegetable Balm, that will eflectually remove, in 10 days, Pimples, Blotch e. Tan, Freckles, and all Impurities of tha Skin, leaving the same'oft, clear, smooth and beautiful. 1 will also mail free to those having Bald Heads or Bare Faces, simple directions and information that will enable them to start a full growth of Lux uriant Hair, Whiskers, or a "oustache, in less than 30 days. All applications answered by return mail without charge. Respectfully yours, THOS. F. CHAPMAN, Chemist, No 831 Broadway. New York. August 14, 1803—3 m A GF.NTLF.MAN, cured of Nervous Debility. Incompetency, Premature Decay and Youthful Er ror, actuated by a desire to benefit others, will be happy to furnish to all who need it [ ree of charge] the recipe and directions for mikii g the simple rem edy used in his case. Those wishing to profit by his experience—and po-sess a Valuable Remedy— will receive the seme, by return mail, (carelully sealed) bo addressing JOHN B. OGDF.N, No. 00 Nassau Street, New York. August 14, 1863—3 in Children owe mvrh of their Sickness to Colds.— No niatw where the disease may appear lo be seat ed, its origin may be traced lo suppressed perspiration or a Cold. Cramps and Lung Complaints are di rect products of Colds. In short Colds are the har bingers ol half the di-eases that afflict humanity, for as they no- caused hy checked perspiration, and as five- eigots of the waste matter of the body es capes through the pores, if these pores are closed, that portion of d.sea6es necessarily follows. Keep clear, therefore, of Colds and Coughs, the great precursers of disease, or if contracted, hreaa them up immediately, by a timely use of Madame Por ter's Curative Balsam, Slid by all Druggists, at 13 cents and C.l cents per bottle. Jan. 23, 1863 ly. NEW JERSEY' LANDS FOR SALE.—Ar.so GARDEN OR FKUIT FARMS. Suitable for Grapes, Peaches, Peais, Raspberries, Strawberries, Blackberries, Currants, he., of 1,2), 3, 10 or 20 acres each, at the following prices for The present, viz: 20 .acres fov S2OO, 10 acres for sllO, 5 acres for S6O, 2) acres for S4O, 1 acre for S2O. Payable hy one dollar a week. Also, good Cranberry lands, and village lots in CHKTWOOD, 2. r ) by 100 feet, at $lO each, payable by one dollar a week. The above land and larms are situated at Chetwood, Washins.ton township, Burlington county. New Jersey. For further infor mal ion , apply, with a P. ()• Stamp, for a circular, to B. FRANKLIN CLARK, No. 00, Cedar street, New Y'ork, N. Y. Jan. 16, 1863,-1 y. }3rofcsdcnal (Hariis. JVew banking git'onse. 8 So*, Y nve opened a Bank of Discount and Deposit, in Badfoid, Pa. Money lent and taken on deposit, and collections made on moderate terms. Tbev also have lands in lowa, Minnesota, Wiscon ain. Missouri and Nebiaska, for fale or trade. Bedford, Oct. 30, 1863—tf. U . II • A K BR S , ATTORNEY AT LAW, Bedford, Pa. Will promptly attend to alt business entrusted to bis care. Military claims speedily collected. Office on Juliana street, opposite the post-office. Bedford, September 11, 1863, IT. M KIMMSIX. I. W. LINGKNFKI.TF.R KIMMELL & LINGENFELTER. ATTORNEYS AT LAW. BEDFORD. PA. [QTHave termed a partnership in the practice of the Law. Ottice on Juliana street, two doors South • f the"Mengel House." JOB MANN. G - H - SFANO. MASH & SPANG. ATTORNEYS AT LAW. BEDFORD, PA. The undersigned have associated themselves in the Practice ot the Law, and will attend promptly to all business entrusted to their care in Bedford ■nd adjoining counties. (jybifice on Juliana Street, three doors south ef the "Mengel House," opposite the residence of Wsj. Tate. Bedford, Aug. 1, 1861. Jons CESSNA. °- F " SHANNON. CESSNA & SHANNON. ATTORNEYS AT LAW, BEDFORD, PA., OyHave formed a Partnership in the Practice of the Law. Office nearly opposite the Gazette Office, where one or tRe other may at all times be found. Bedford, Aug, 1, 1861. JOHN P. REED, ATTORNEY AT LAW, BEDFORD. PA., Respectfully tenders his services to the Pttb/te. second door North of the Mengel Bouse Bedford, Aug, L_IBOJ. JOHN PALMER, ATTORNEY AT LAW, BEDFORD, PA. (X7"Will promptly attend to all business entrus ted to his tare. Office on Julianna Street, rnear. It opposite the Mengel House.) AugM, 1861. A. 8. COFFROTU, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Somerset, Pa. Will hereafter practice regularly in the several Courts of Bedford county. Business entrnsted to his care will be faithfully attended to. December ~~ SAMUELKETTERMAN, BEDFORD, PA., ny Would hereby notify the citizens of Bedford county that be has moved ro the Borough of Bed ford, where he may at all times be found b persons wishing to see him, unless absent upon business pertaining to his office. Bedford, Aug. 1,1861. JACOB REED, J.J. SCRELL, REED AND SCHELL, BANKERS & DEALERS IN EXCHANGE, BEDFORD, PF.NN'A. OyDRAFTS bought and sold, collections made and money promptly remitted. Deposits solicited. REFERENCES. Hon. Job Mann, Hon. John Cessna, and John Mower, Bedford Pa., R. Forward, Somerset, Bunn, Raiguel k Co., Phil. J. A'att & Co., J. W. Cuiley, A Co., Pittsburg. gT. CHARLES HOTF.L, CORNER OF WOOD / ND THIRD STREETS PITTSBURGH, pa- HARRY SHIRLS. PROPRIETOR. April 1J 1861. . VOLUME *lO. NEW SERIES SUPREME COURT OF PENNS'A. Act of Congress of 3d March, 1863, com monly called the "Conscription Law," Declared Unconstitutional. HENRY S. KXKKDER, j vs. | Three hills in equity. DAVIDM.LANE, et at. }-And on a motion in FKAN. B. SMITHES same | each ease for special \V. F. NICKKI.SI'S same J injunction. Opinion of Justice Thompson. The act of Congress under which the com plainant in this ease is required to enter tlto ar my of the United States as a soldier, for a pe riod of three years or during the war, provides for the enrollment, by officers of the United States, of all persons liable to do military duty, between the ages of 20 and 45 years, and clas sifies them. The names of all persons thus en rolled, were required to he put into a wheel, and the requisite number for the districts, with a surplus of 50 per cent, for contingencies were to be drawn thence, under the supervision of certain federal officers. Those thus drawn from the wheel, if not exempted from disability or otherwise, will ho compelled to servo for the pe riod mentioned, or find acceptable substitutes, or commute the service by the payment of S3OO. llcyond all controversy this is a draft, or in voluntary conscription from the militia of the State, without any requisition tipon Stale Ex ecutives, or upon officers in command of the militia in the State, and without any reference to State authorities whatever. Is this enact ment in accordance with the federal constitution I The answer to (his question determines the case, for it is not denied that the complainant is with in the provisions of the act, and was drawn as and for a soldier under its provisions. He must, therefore, servo, if the act be constitutional, or seek exemption under some of its provisions. Our jurisdiction of the case, I think is plain. We have authority to restrain acts contrary to law, and prejudicial to the rights of individu als, act of lGlli .June, 1836. If the act of Congress of 3d March, 1803, under and by vir tue of which the complainant is holden as a sol dier, and sought to he coerced into the service, he not constitutional, the custody of his person under pretence of it, is contrary to law, and prejudicial to his interests. The injury too, if the proceedings be illegal, is undoubtedly with in what is denominated irreparable injury or mischief, and hence the propriety of the specific remedy. An action for damages would perhaps not lie sustainable under a recent act of Con gress, but if it should be, it would bo against parlies who intended no injury, and from whom on account of obeying what they supposed to be law, in conducting tho proceedings against him, but little could be recovered, although the soldier may have been carried to distant places, from bis home, and may have undergone great hardships and vicissitudes. I dismiss this branch of the case, with this short view of it, and with the additional remark, that if our judgment is against the constitutionality of the law, the case can he removed to the federal judiciary at Wash ington, if the authorities there see proper, and be reviewed by the Court in the last resort in such cases; u thing which the President of the linited States lias, on a recent occasion, express ed a wish for. and determination to facilitate. I now proceed to tlio main question. The coustitutiou of the United States defines and e nuuieratcs the powers of the General Govern ment, and limits tlicm by the solemn declaration that "the powers not delegated to tho United States by the constitution, nor prohibited by it to tho States, are reserved to the States respec tively, or to the people." The Government established by tho Constitu tion, is, therefore, a limited Government, be yond the limitations of which, including neces sary incidents of expressly granted powers, all exercise of authority by Congress is mere usur pation. We should remember this in constru ing the Constitution, and we should remember, also, that the entire machinery of Government, provided by it, was poised between checks and balances designed not only to prevent it from transcending its own orbital limits, but to guard against aggressions from other sources. The objecls to be attained, as declared in the pream ble must also be kept in view, when we are call ed to expound its provisions; and we are bound to construe it so as to preserve and advance tliem all. The purpose, as declared in the pre amble, was "to form a more period Union, es tablish justice, ensure domestic tranquillity, pro vide for the common defence, promote the gen eral welfare and secure the blessings of liberty to ourselves and our posterity." Each of these objects are supposed to lie secured by the Con stitution, and no one of thera must be overlook ed in a too eager desire to lend n supposed effi cieney to sonto other. To do so would endan ger the whole. To "provide for the common defence" is one purpose avowed for establishing the Constitution, and the duty devolves on Con gress to execute it; but it must not be executed in sucli a tuunncr as to encroach on the para mount purpose of securing "the blessings of liberty to ourselves and our posterity," also de clared. This is one instance to shotv that no legislation, nor no construction can be valid or sound which is not in harnony with every pro vision of the Constitution. In the light of these general and fundamen tal principles, wo must investigate the grave questions presented hy the bill of the complain ant now before us. And here I may express my regrets, that it did not meet the views of the government officials, having in charge the law department for this United States district, to appear at the argument of this case, of which they had notice, and give us the benefit of their views and researches on the momentous ques tions involved. It can hardly, I presume, be fairly attributable to a disregard of what might be the ultimate judicial action of the State 011 the question, or in contempt of State authority altogether. Whatever tnay have been the rea son for the course adopted, the magnitude of the question involved is not at all diminished there by, nor ia our duty most carefully to examine the Freedom of Thought and Opinion. BEDFORD, PA., FRIDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 27,1863. whole case tti all its aspects, the less imperative. Js the Act of Congress approved March 3d, 18ti3, entitled "An Act for enrolling and call ing out the national forces, and for other pur poses," now familiarly known as the Conscrip tion Act, unconstitutional.' In order to provide for the common defence and thereby promote the general welfare, Con gress has, by the constitution, power to "raise and support armies," und "to provide and main tain a navy." was under no extraordinary pressure of circumstances or emergent necessity that this power was granted. It was deemed to be, and thereupon introduced as, a pert of the ordinary machinery A government, the con vention acting on an axiom as old as govern ment itself, "that the .--urest means of avoiding war is to prepare for it in time of peace."— Without such a power, "it would," says Story in his commentaries on the constitution, section 1185, "present the extraordinary spectacle to the world of a nation incapacitated by a con stitution of its own choice from preparing for defence before actual invasion." It was an ordinary power, not superinduced by impending war. "In the mild season of j peace," says the Federalist Mo. 2, "with minds 1 unoccupied by other subjects they (the conven- I tion) passed many months in cool, uninterrupted j and daily consultation; and, finally, without '• having hecn awed by power, or influenced by ' any passion, except love lor their country, they presented and recommended to the people the plan produced by their joint and unanimous! councils." Is there room for a doubt that un- I der sucli circumstances, the mode in which the ' power to "raise armies" was to be executed was I the accustomed one; namely, hy voluntary en- | listments! At the tunc, this was the usual mode 1 of raising and recruiting armies in Great Jirit- j ain, and the people of this country were better j acquainted with the laws, customs, and even habits of the people of England than of those of any other people in the world. Notwith- j standing we had been at war with tlicm, and an i angry spirit had been generated between the two . countries, yet it is a notorious fact that their ! customs and laws were generally adopted in this country, and to this day continue to a great ex- j tent. Voluntary enlistments as by contract, ; was the general method of raising armies there 1 and with us prior to and at the lime the Cousti- i tution was framed. As this was the customary { mode, every presumption supports the idea that this was the only mode in the minds of the frit mers of the Constitution. Indeed, it is a com uion law rule, that when anything is directed to be done without special instructions as to how the act is to he performed, the customary mode of doing It, is supposed to tie Included til tiicdi rection. Wo cannot suppose that at the mo- j ment the country had achieved its liberty, at so i much cost of blood and treasure, that such a j despotism over the lives and liberties of men [ would he incorporated into the Constitution as j would authorize Congress to lili the armies to ! be raised by conscription, as though by the agen-1 ey of the press gang. This was no more in the contemplation of the convention than that the civil department of the Government should also I be tilled by coercive measures. Can any one I now be credulous enough to believe that if a power had been supposed to exist, to raise an army not by voluntary means but by coercive, especially as there were no limits fixed as to its! magnitude, that the Constitution would have j been ratified by the States? The idea would, it | seems to ine be preposterous. Without speb a j thought once having been suggested by the op- i ponents of the. Constitution, a standing army to ' be raised in the usual way, was a source of inn- i liy fears in the public mind. It was thought to ! bo dangerous to liberty in its very nature, but | what would have been thought, if it had been j discovered or avowed that in its creation it might 1 be directly and openly destructive of the indi vidual liberties of those who were to compose it, and that it might be extended to embrace all the able-bodied citizens in the States'. It requir ed many numbers of the ablest paper ever writ ten on ihe Constitution, I mean the Federalist, to remove those fears. See Fed. from Mo. 2-4 to 28 inclusive on this sujeot. The constitution was adopted in ignorance, certainly, of any such power if it does exist, and it has required the lapse of three quarters of a century to developc its latent evils. The j usual evidences are all against the idea, and I think something more demonstrative will show . that these evidences stand not alone against it. The power to raise an army by conscription I or coercion, (the words are nearly synonymous.) A conscript is one taken by lot from the con scription, (or enrollment) list, "and compelled to serve as a soldier or sailor," (Web. Die. verb, "conscript,") rests alone on the idea that the power is unlimited, us to the means to be used, us well as to the numbers of which it may be composed. It there was no other power or principle in the instrument to be affected in its operation by such a viow, there would be force in the idea. Hut the constitution must be ad ministered so that the whole may stand in full j force, unimpaired by any particular portion. j The limitation of a power may appear other- j wise than by express terms. Its scope may be j curtailed by the necessity to preserve some other j function necessary to co-exist for preservation j of the whole. One object in framing lite Con- j stitution, as already remarked was to "perpet- ! nate the blessings of liberty." It can hardly I be contended for by anyone, that the execution : of a power wliieh would effectually destroy this object would be constitutional. Again, a pow- ; or so executed fls to destroy the reserved rights of the States could hardly Ire claimed to be con- J stitutional. There are, therefore, limitations as j effectual as if expressed, "< res tnagis valeat ' quam ptreat" is a maxim out of which this grows. A limitation of this power was undoubtedly supposed to exist in the discretion of Congress; i but that cannot be relied on in this argument. To give it any force would be to allow tho acts of Congress to bo evidence to establish tho pro per discretion of Congress. This would be to ; argue in a circle, and would prove nothing—we 1 are testing the acts of Congress, not by Con- gress, but by the Constitution. So, too, it was I supposed to exist in a time when no more vol j untary enlistments could reasonably be procured, I or when they might not be procured rapidly e -1 Jiough. That this was so is demonstrable by : the fact that the Constitution provides for call j ing out the militia when the army may not be ( sufficient. I use this contingent expression bc | cause I look on the army as an ordinary power, \ and ordinarily to be used unless insufficient for the end in view, or the exigencies of the times. ■ However, this may be, it is absolutely certain , that the military forces of the government for | all purposes, were to be the army and the militia. In the article of the Constitution containing I the power to "raise and support armies." and i consecutive to that and other war powers and lus part of them, is the power to be found in i Congress "to provide for calling forth the mili j tia to execute the laws of the Union, suppressin surrections and rebel invasion ?" "To provide for organizing, arming and disciplining the mi litia, and forgoverning such part of tbem as may be employed in the serrice of the United States, reserving to the states respectively, the appointment ol officers, and the nuthority of training the nulitiu aceardjng to discipline pre seibed by Congress. The array to be raised and the militia liable to be employed in the service of the United States, are the constituted military force of the Government. They co-exist, and must co-exist if the Constitution be obligatory. We some times employ volunteers,but they are merely a form, as they are a part of the militia and do' not militate against the idea of the two species of forces. It is conceded that both may not be required in any given case, but both must exist, or rather the militia can not be destroyed or extinguished by an Act of Congress. The Constitution forbids this by the positive injunc tion to provide for organizing, arming and dis ciplining thotn. They are the security of the States against the Federal Government, and their only security: for the States themselves are not allowed to support armies. "It may safely be received as an axiom in our political system," says the Federalist, No. 28, "that the State governments will in all pos sible contingencies afford complete security a gainst invasions of the public liberty by the national authority," * * * "They can at once adopt a regular plan of opposition in whith they can combine all the resources of the community!" How can this security be afforded against the danger of invasion of the public liberty by the National authority, unless there be some military force with which to re sist it! What resources nre there, in a commu nity, it" all the "able bodied men" may bo ab sorbed in the national forces. It will at once he agreed, I think, in view of the constitution al provisions cited that the militia, the only power of the States must be maintained in tact and that no system is constitutional which ex tinguishes them. Let us inquire, therefore, whether or not, the act of Congress of 3d of March, 1863, known its the Conscription Act, does not in fact attempt the complete demolition 1 of the militia of the States. The preamble to the act sets forth the exis tence of insurrection and rebellion; that a mili tary force is indispensable to suppress it; that to raise and support, which "all persons ought willingly to contribute," It is therefore enact ed, See. I. "that all able bodied male citizens of the United States and persons of foreign birth who shall have declared on oath, their in tention to become citizens in pursuance of the laws tlierof, between the ages of twenty and forty-live years except as excepted, are hereby declared to constitute the National forces and shall be liable to perform military duty in the service of the United States, when called out by the President for that purpose." Then fol low numerous provisions for classifying them, for the lottery or draft of the required number in each military district, the closing up of the whegl until again required, and the order and term of service, not as militia men belonging to and officered by the States, hut as parcel of the army of the U. States raised and support ed" under the clause of the Constitution which provides for raising and supporting armies and to he officered by federal authority, exclusively. Every able bodied man in the United States by these provisions enrolled, and declared to constitute the national forces. This covers the entire materiel of the militia in the Union. All able bulicd white men between twenty one and forty-five years, and liable as militia men in this Commonwealth and it is believed tint this is about or near the standard in most, if not all, the other States. This act is broader, both as to age and color. The specified age, how ever amounts to nothing, for Congress by a very slight extension of power in fixing the standard could just as well have made it to in clude all between the ages of eighteen and six ty. Let the power be once established, the right must follow, and in this way, every man in public or private life in a State botween those ages, might le included. No one is exempt un der tho present law but the Governor. All other officers, judgos, legislators, representatives in Congress, sheriff, magistrates, county and township functionaries of every description, if under forty-five, are liable now to bo forced in to the army or to commute by the payment of S3OO, or to find substitutes. As it is, this would draw heavily upon the public, and ne cessary local officers—but if extended to the ages of eighteen and sixty, as it could as read ily bo made to do, it might include all, not ex cepting even the Governor. Can it be that the machinery of our government is so incongruous as to admit of this I Can it for a moment be believed that the trainers of the Federal Con stitution intended to create such a monstrous power? One that would not only absorb the military authority of the State but the civil al so. This is exactly the principlo of this cnnct mcnt and to a great extent will be tho practical workings of it. I hold that the act plainly and directly des troys the militia system of the States, as recog nized in the Constitution, and the acts of Con- WHOLE NUMBER, 3033 VOL 7, NO 17. gress of 1792 and 1795. By its provisions the militia are to be enrolled, as part of the Nation alforces, another term, as will be seen for Nation al armies, and it requires each individual so en rolled, to answer and report himself, when drawn, to the militajy officers of the Federal Government, under the pains and penalties pre scribed for desertion. If this is not a taking possesion of the entire materiel of themiltiaand consequently the militia itself bodily, I cannot comprehend the meaning or effect of language. The direct object of the act is to constitutute the National forces of the same materiel as that which constitutes the militia of the State, and for that purpose a Federal enrollment is made and a portion so enrolled, and drawn from the wheel and separately and individually trans ferred to the army of the United States to be commanded not by State, but by United States officers. They are henceforth not militia men but regulars. They are to be carried into the army under the power granted to Congress "to raise and support armies;" not under that oth er power which authorizes Congress "to provide for calling out the militia to execute the laws, suppress insurrection and repel invasion." If called out in this capacity, it would he done by requisition of the President upon State author ities, at least, upon State military officers, and then the militia would come forth in organized bodies, not as individuals, and lie officered by State authority. This is widely different from directing the Federal authority toeacli individ ual—to conscript him in his individual charac ter. and to compel him to serve not with State contingents and under State officers, but under Federal or army officers. In short, the provisions of the Act. incor porates into the Federal armies, the entire ma terial constituting the militia, by directing their authority to them individually, without a re quisition on the States, and without any power in any State to appoint a single officer to com mand them, although the entire force was, by the Constitution to be when called into the ser vice of the Urtitcd States, under the military officers of the State. Such an Act, disregard ing such plain provisions of the Constitution, is certainly unconstitutional, if such a thing be possible, at all of any act of Congress, and this view, if correct, establishes conclusively the lim itation or the power to raise and support armies. Those enrolled and not drawn out of th e wheel at the first draft, remain subject t) lie called out afterward. They are the unemployed natioml forrc.l, and are declared to he subject to be called into service under the plan of the act for two years after the Ist of July succeed ing the. enrollment, to serve for three years or during tho wnr. It is true, tvhen called into service, the act says they shall he "placed on tlie samtf footing in all respects as volunters in cluding advance pay and bounty, as is now provided by law." I presume it is not meant by this, that the coascripts are to elect their own officers, lint even if this were so, it would be no less a deprivation of the right of the States to appoint the officers of their militia, and unconstitutional for that reason. As the enrollment or conscription into the na tional forces for two years, although unem ploy ed, is nevertheless an incorporation of them with the national forces; it is a withdrawal of them for that period from the control of the States. The act would bo worth nothing if the States might resolve that this should not be. The act of Congress is supreme or it is nothing. If it l>e supreme then the enrolled men can be and are directly under tho federal authority all the time, and thus every citizen or enrolled person, in or out of service, may be liable to be con trolled by military law all the time, if Congress chooses. Can this be possible ? What is to be come of the States and their sovereignty, a mat ter often sneered at, but among tho most distinct, clear, and cherished principles in the whole body of the constitution. One portion of the militia conscripted and actually in the field, the balance conscripted and not yet in the field, hut su bjeet to the military authority of the United States, where are the military and where, is the securi ty of the States against l>eing entirely absorbed, and against invasions of the public liberty bv the national authority, which the writers of the Federalist thought existed in tho militia? It is neither in,tho field, nor at home, it is abolished. | Apprehensions doubtless, of just such an en j actment as this now under consideration super induced tho introduction of tho Hill of Rights by amendment and consent of two-thirds of the States, in which is the declaration that, "a well regulated militia being necessary to the securi ty of a free State, the rights of tho people to keep and bear nrms shall not be infringed." 1 contend that tho act of Congress under discussion, violates this declared right, by ab sorbing the militia into tho army, as contra-dis tinguished from tho militia; by taking all the material which constitutes tho militia and call ing them out individually without requisition on tho States, and placing them under officers not chosen by the States. It disregards the organization of the militiu altogether, not only in providing others than militia officers, but in its total disregard of State regulations and exemptions. Heads of depart ments of the States, judges of tho several courts, ministers of the gospel, professors in colleges, school directors arc exempt by our militia law. Hut the mode adopted for calling out the for ces of the country, disregarding tho militia sys tem, disregards all these. These were within the militia, hut as the militia itself is overthrown by the Act in question, they fall with it. It is , possible that this power may lie exercised, and tho States livu through it, hut although they may not fall, their foundations will be fatally and if tho precedent remain, it will in time become tho authority for their extinction. The Constitution authorizes Congress to pro vido for calling out the militia to suppress in surrections and repel invasions.'' During the whiskey insurrection in this State, President Washington called upon the militia for this pur pose. by a requisition on the Governor, and in person commanded them. So the militia were called out from many of the States during tho ' Hates of SUmrrtißina. On# Square, thrse weeks or less. .* |i ff One Square, each additional imartion leaa than three months tg 3 SOUTHS. 6 MONTHS. 1 TIAB i One squara • S3 00 |4 00 $6 Twosquarea ....... 400 SOO Three 500 700 12 J Column 600 900 IS 00 i Column 800 IS 00 30 ( 4 Column 12 00 18 00 30 00 One Column 18 00 30 00 SO 00 Adminisrratori'undExecutors' notiees S3.SO, An chors'notices $1.50. if nnder 10 lines. $2.00 if more than a iquare and leaa than 20 lines. Kstraya, $1.25, if but one bead it advertised, 23 rents for every additional head. The space occupied by ten lines of this size or type counts one square. All fractions of a square under five lir.es will be measured as a half square and all over Ave lines as a full square. All legal advertisements wil 1 be charged to the person hand ing them in. war with Great Hntain, and in every instance h requisition made by the President upon the Governors of the States. It is true that in 1814, the question was much agitated in Con gress whether or not, under the power to "raise armies," the militia might not be conscripted by the Federal authority. The bell which pro posed this had the sanction of high names—but it differed much from this Act and was never finally acted on, liecuuse of the termination of the war by the peace of Ghent. The discus sion on this bill was able, but partizan, and furnishes little aid to a judicial examination, and hence I have not recurred to it much in taking tjie view herein expressed. That a Gov ernment like that of Groat Britain may resort to conscription to fill the ranks of her armies and has done so on many occasions, is no ar gument or precedent for that practice under the Federal Constitution. Even in England, this j is far from the ordinary mode of recruiting tho army, and it will hardly be contended that tho exception to the rule wdl establish a custom, by which to define the meaning of the words "to raise and support armies,'' used in our federal constitution, so that ex tn termini, conscription or draft, both involuntary modes, were thereby meant. But the precocent would go for nothing in this inquiry, even if the practice had been com mon in England. The difference between the construction of the British and Federal Consti tutions is radical. In the former, all govern mental powers not expressly prohibited to the government, may be la.vfully exercised. In the latter whatever power is not expressly granted is withheld. There is no grant of such a pow er to the latter, as I have endeavored to show, and no restraint upon it in the former, as tho exercise of it proves. This remark is equally applicable to the dif ference between the State and Federal Con** tution. Between them that same difference in construction exists. The governmental power# of the States extend to all rightful subjects, not prohibited—and the national only to such as are granted. It therefore does not advance the argument a step in favor of those who contend for the constitutionality of the Conscription Act, to point to instances in which drafts have been made by State authorities. Militia duty is com pulsory in alt the Sates. They are not prohib ited from compelling it any more than from com pelling the payment of the taxes. It is in this way, and in this way only, in my opinion, that the national forces can be compulsorily raisedi that is to gay, by a requisition on the State au thorities for militia men in a just proportion to population. Why have not the militia been called out in the present emergency ? They are composed of the men the draft proposes to furnish. They are to bo governed while in the service, as Con gress shall prescribe. They may be reclaimed tor one, two or three years, or while the insur rection lasts, and will become just as good sol diers in the one character as the other. They are the constitutional power for that purpose, if the army lie not sutlieient to etfect the object without them. Why not employ them ? "There is but one of two alternatives," says Judge Sto ry, "which can be resorted to in cases of insur rection. invasion, or violent opposition to tho laws: either to employ regular troops or to employ the militia to suppress them." [Story on Con. sec. 1*201.] If it be said that tl;o mili tia will be sufficient, which I deny with equal training, I insist that the imperfection of tho system is no justification for the overthrow in part or in whole, of the Constitution. There is nothing on eartli that I so much de sire as to witness the suppression of this un justifiable and monstrous rebellion. It must be put down to save the Constitution, and tho constitutional means for the purpose, I believe it to be ample, but we gain but little, if in our efforts to preserve it when assailed in one quar ter, we voluntarily impnir other portions of it. Its entirety is vital, it must ull stand, or it will all fall, it can never he apportioned. Believing that I have shown that the power "to raise and support armies" is limited to vol untary enlistments, and necessarily so limited that the militia of the States may remain in full force, I am implied by no choice of alterna tives, to the conclusion that as the Act of Con gress transcends these limits, and by force of law attempts to abolish the militin, instead of calling on them to suppress the insurrection now so wide spread, I am of opinion that the act of Congress is violative of tho Constitution of the United States, and void. I most sincerely confess that it would have been u much more agreeable duty to me to have been able at this lime and at all times, to have given my full accord to the measures resorted to to restore the peace nnd order of our once hap* ny country, but looking to the Constitution, as the reasons for its provisions, and then to the solemn obligation which I have voluntarily come under to support tho constitution, I cannot, even at tlioriskof misrepresentation of motives, hes itate where the question is a judicial one, to ex press my unmixed convictions as I hare done, of tho enactment in question. Standing recently on the gentle slopes atKun nyinede, memory sent a thrill to my heart in admiration of those old liarons who stood up there and demanded from n tyrannical sovereign that the lines between power nnd right should bo then and there distinctly marked, and all my feelings at the sauio moment paid an involunta ry tribute of regard to tho fidelity with which their descendants have maintained what they then demanded and obtained, although, of ten overshadowed by insurrection and war. Our forefathers marked these lines in the Federal Constitution. 1 must Rdltere to them. I can not help it, and while I live I trust to Heaven that 1 may have the strength to suy that I will ever do so. There is no legal authority, in my opinion In the otlicere of the Government to hold the com plainant against his consent. 1 am therefore in favor of enjoining them as prayed for until fur ther hearing, and I agree to tho saute order in the other oasns. *