Ctarfttl D.W.MOORE. U,i:tft 0. B. GOODLANDEIt, f ditori. PRINCIPLES, not MEN. TERMS $1 25 per rmnni, if paid in clvonc9 NEWSEHIKS-VOL. IV. iC. ID. VOL. XXXIV. WHOLE NO. 1703. CLKAKFIKLI), PA. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 1003. f 1 'JUSTICE 1 WOODWARD'S OPINION ON 1 11 K UXCOXSTIWriOXALlTr or THE CONSCEIPTION ACT. i 2 J. On the 3d dnv of March. J 1803.' the, 'Congress of the Hi. iled State t passed mi act lor "enrolling and culling f . out, the Natiurul forces, arid for other pur- 'poses," iv i hell is commonly called iLeCon j crilioj Law. The plui n liU, who me citizens of .Pennsylvania, havo sot forth I ,Uw act fully In their hills, and they noiu . plain thai they have been drafted into the juilitary service of tho Government in I i pursuance of said enactment, but that the ame is unconst ltutional and void, and that the defendants, who are eng iged in 'executing tho act, huvo violated the rights and arc ubouL to invade the personal lib erty ot tho plairiiitl's, nr.d thereupon they invoke the equitable interposition of this .'ourt to enjoin the defendants against a farther execution of the said art. For the jurisdiction of thin Court to set "aside an act of Congress as unconstitution al, and to grant, the relief prayed for, I refer Myself to the vieTS of the Chief Jus tice in the opinion he has just delivered in those cast s, and 1 cuuie at once to the constitutional question. - The act legins with a preamble which "Yee'ites the existing insurrection and re bellion against the authority of the United plates, the duty of the Government lo tuppress insjircction and rebellion, to guarantee to each Stain a republican form 'of government, and to preset vo the public tranquility, nd declares that for lh;se inch purposes a mitnuiy mice is iimispt-n subl, " It) raise rnd support which all persons ought willingly l'i coniribute," and that no service is more praiseworthy and honorable than th maintenance id (tho Constitution and Union ; and then go !s on to provide for the enrolling of ull the able-bodied rntUc citizens of the United Stale?, and persons of foreign birth, w ho have declaied iheir intention lo become citizens, between tho ages of tweiily-otio and Ibny-tive years, and tTiese able-bodied citizen? and foreigners, with certain excep tions afterward enumerated, are declared " tl.f ntit'i.'iiidtir.v.s," ar.d made liable lo peilonn military duty when called out by 1 1 1 o I'resideiil. The act divide the country into military districts, correspon ding with the congressional districts, pro vider tor provost marshals ami enrolling bosids, and regulates the details of such draHs as the. 1'iesideiil shall order tu be niaUe from the national forces bo enrolled. The payment of SillM excuses any dratt ed perso::, to that it is, in ellecl, a law providing for a compulsory draft or eun hiiplioi) of such citizens as ate unwilling or uiotble to purchase exempt ice t the nipulau-d price. U is the in ft instance, in our bitory, of legislation forcing a great public burthen on the poer. Our , .Stale legisl ilioii, which exempts men who ore not worth more than f.'ld'J I'lOiu (uiying Iheir -own debts, is in Ml iking contrast with this I'onsci iption law, which devolves upou ncfi men the burthen which be long to Ilia whole " national forces'' and to which "all persons otifdil willingly to cin-nlnilc." Ibis, huAevvr, is an object ion to ihe .- ii ii of the enactiiK rit lathei tli.in to its constitutionality. Tho dcsci iptioti of peisons to be en-iolled,ablc-bodieJcilizt;us between twenty one and forty-live years of age, is hub-lan-tially Ihe dei-criplion of the mibtin as de fined in ocr leiinsylvaiiiu statutes and probably in the statutes of all the Slates. The national forces, then, mean the mili tia of lie States certainly inclu le the militia of IVi.nsyUaiiia. '1 hi expression, 'national force.," is modern language, when so applied. It is hut found in our Constitutions, cither State or l'ed.;tal, and if used in commentaries on the Constitu tion, ati'l in hibtoiy, it will generally Lo found applied to our land and naval forces, in actual service to what may be called our Mnlidin.' atniV. It is a total miMiomer when applied to tho militia, for .... ' . 'I'! . the militia is a Slate institution. Ihe General Government has no mililia. Tho State militia, always highly esteemed as one of the bulwark ol our liberties, are recognized in the Federal Constitution, and it is not in ihe pow er of Congress to oblit erate them or to merge them in "national Unlets lliore is more magic in a name lhan hn ever buen sui'posed, this con script law was intended to act upon the Rtu rnilitiii. flli-J our qaesliou 15 i i .t r Q bou ivnii'.ti' i( iiii- AW" d I" ; the S Me" """"' ... 1 rinnot perceive W h:il o1 etiii u tan oo .i .u ;.,.....,.,,.. 1 r,r il,n oin stion e omsiiou. VI It r-11 iu ill 10 nisii uiou w 1 ...w 1 - - f for surely it will not be argued Ibat calling Ue militia national forces, makes them i become necessary to nu ine iu-. something else than the mililia, If ' on-' governmental interference with popular press did not mean to draft the militia ! elections will bo subversion ol the Lonsii under this law, wheie did they expect to I tulion, and no constitutional argument find the national loroet ? " All able-l od- can ansume such a possibility, iexl white male citizens between the ages I Supposiu? then thnt the people are al- Of iwenty-one and forty-Sve years, residing in this State, and not exempted by the laws of the Unite'' Stales," with certain exceptions, constitute our Sih'.o militia. Will it be said that the conscript law was not intended to petal " thesef I think 11 will not. Then if it dope touch, and was framed and designed todrart this erv c1s of citizens, no possible oljcction . ., 1 . . . .r cm be taken to tue sums umituiein vi the question we hare to decide. I llurefore repeat the question with great confidence in ii iccuracy, h Con gress the coiiKLitutionul power toimptesi or draft into the military service ot the United Slates, the militia men of l'euo nylvaniiif This question hat to be answered by the, Constitution of the United States, be canse that instrument, framed by depu ties of ihe people of tho States aud lati fied and put into eflect by ihe Sdate themselves in their rpctie corporate capacities, delegate to Congrcsa all the porcn that bod oan exerotse. Thoie .delegations ore cither express or such im H n-. .ir essemon in win execution j licui ioijs us ire essenl ui we t-A j.i c-f iijr utirgtittu powers. ' -l'i . I . . . . . i nere are. mil inreo provisons in Hie Constitution of the United Slates thai can bo appealed to in support of this legisla tion. In our ordinary editions ll.ey stand numbered as clauses 13, 16 and 17 of the vii section of Art. I. of the Constitution. " 13. Congress shall havo power to raise and support armies, hut no appro priations ol money to that use shall be for a longer term than t'o years. 10. Congress shall have power to pro vide for calling forth the iniiiiia to execute the laws of the Union, to suppress insur rections Hiid rpel invnsiona. " 17. Congress shall have power lo pro vide tor organizing arming and disciplin ing the militia, and lor governing such part of tin ni as may bo employed in tho service of the United Slates, reserving lo the States respectively, the appointment of the ollicers, and the authority of train ing the militia according lo the discipline prescribed by Congress." " To raise armies" these are largo words: what do they mean? There could be no limi.Hlioii upon the number or size of the armies to be laised, lor all possible contingencies could not be fore seen, but our question has no reference lo numbers or sire, but to the ninth of raising armies. The fraraers of the Con stitut:on, ami the States who adopted it, deliver) their ideas ot governinemt princi pally from the example of Ureal Rrtlian eertainlv not from any of the more impe rial ant) despotic governments of the eniilr What' they meant to make was a morn tree Constitution than that of Great llritian taking that as a model in soino tilings- but enlarging tho basis of popular rights in nil tespecls that would be con sistent with order and stability. They kner that the British army had genortilly been recruited by voluntary enlistments, stimulated by bounties, and that the few instances of impressment and forced con scriptions of land forces, had met with tho disfavor of the English nation and bad led to preventive statutes. In 17U4 and ugain in 1707 conscription bills were uttenipled in Parliament but laid aside as unconstitutional, liming the Americaii revolution a s'alute, 10 Geo. Ill, C. 10, permitted the impressment of " idlr and disordeily persons not following Mny law ful trade, or having some substance sutli cient for subsistence," and lliis was as far Knglish legislation had gon when our Federal Constitution was planned. As suredly the framers of our Constitution did not intend to subject the people of the States to a fystem ol conscription, which was applied in the mother country only to naurers and vagabonds. On the con trary. 1 infer that the power conferred on Congress waj the power to raise armies uy Ihe ordinary English mode of voluntary enlistments. The people were justly jealous of stand- inr. armies Mencd they look away tho uu power from the executive, where, on- der monorch'tcal forms, it generally re- sides and vested it in the legislative do- l uiltiient, in one branch ol which the States have equal representation, and iu Ihe oilier blanch ol which the people of i. si,,i,. me directlv reptesenitd acoor- flilllT 111 iheir numbers. 1 o theserepresen latives of the States and the people, this power of originating war was lommitled, (,ut even in their bands it was restrained by tl-e limitation of biennial appropria tions for iho support of the armies they niii'ht taise. Ol course, no army could be raised or supported which did not com mand popuhr approbation, and it was ri -htly considered that voluntaty eniist inenls would never be wanting to reciuil Ihe laiiki of such an army. The war pow er, existing only for the protection of tho people, and letl as far as it was possible lo leave it i" their own hands, was inca pable of being u-ed without their consent, and, therefore, could never languish for enlistments. They would be ready enough lo recruit the ranks of any army .1 -....I ....... llw.ir unfAll. they deemed necessary to ineir suieij Thus the theory of ihe Constitution placed this ; tion, is not adapted io the exigoncie, ol J ... .. ... ...i:.. .-, i . .. -.. .. great power, il-a n fiiinr ffiiveriKiiflniai poweis, (lireilty upon me voiisriu ui mo governed. The theory ilrelf was founded n fne and fair elections which are the funda - ....... r,i... hiental postulates of the Constitution. It ihe pationage auu ponei wi w,v b...... i .r ii.. .. .. I ... i . i .... ... i l .-. ni.itirn ' popular elections, ihe nominal wprewn- .111.1,. . , k iu i .inr oe emniieu iv, .iri4,t. WHIM l v 'ij'-v .v raul t fn-pn tfl I IV P9- and then the armies : wb ch may bo raised uny not so command 1 cot the u!...n: ;.fi.l.,s .. 10 Mtmet l ie neces- ouoou rvmi-n...vv ... . - - 1 aa.iv reciuits. and then conscript law ami 1 hiv reciuits. ana men cousi.iii j . . . . , other extra-constitutional cxj.ed cuts ruaj I ays to be lairly represented in the halls ol Congress, I maintain tuav i i-. novus ', injustice to them to legislate on tho a- I sumption that any war honestly waged 101 constitutional objects will not always have such sympathy and support irom me people as will secure all necessary enlist ments. Equally uriust to their iutelli gence it is lo suppose that they meant to f . . confer on their servants the power to im press ttieiu into a war which they oould not approve. When to these considerations we add the ability of a great country, like ours, to stimulate and reward enlistments, both at home and abroad, by bounties, pensions ana homesteads, as wen as tj political patronepo in counties forms, we tee how little necessity cr warrant there is for implying a grant of the imperial power ol conscription. There is nothing in the history of the Constitution nor in those excellent con temporaneous papers, called the federal iet, to justify the opinion that tbii test power lies wrapped un in t he few plain words 01 Ihe Mill clause, whilst tho Mi'; sequent clauses, concerning the militia, absolutely foil id it. II' the very improbable cute b mppo sable, that enlistment into the Fedetal armies might beoomo so numerous in a particular Stale at sensibly to impair its own proper military power, it is not much more improbable that the States meant to confer upon tho General Govet nment the power to deprive them, at its own pleas ure, altogether of t lie uulilaa, by forced levies? Vel this might easily happen if the power of ewiisci ipiion be conceded to Congress. There are no iiitnUkioiis ex pressed nothing to compel Congress lo observe quotas ai:d proportions a uniting the several States nothing to prevent their raising armies: wholly from one Stule, inking every able-bodied cili.-'n out of it to the endangering, it not utter un Uoing, of ull its uouieslic intcrcMls. And besides, if wu conoede this danger ous power to the language of the Mill clause, wc destroy the foi c and tied ol the lO'.h and I7lh clauses. We make the ii tlrumcnt self-destructive, w hich is vio lative of all canons ol coiintrucimn. Con cress shall havo power lo provido for cal ling lorth the uuliuu in the manner ami subject lo the limitations prescribed in clauses 10 & 17, and tin I'.fore 1 aigue Con giess has not the power to draft ll.eur Is an expressed rule of tho Constitution logive way loan implied one ? ll'thel.'Uh clause confers power to draft the militia, the words of the 10th and 17lh are tliu id les', that were ever written. But it'lho loth conveyed only power to enlist volun teers, then the subsequent clauses become intelligible stand well with the K!ih, and add essentially to the martial faculties ul the Federal Government. Look at thoje ' clauses. Ihe militia are called lor in to execute the laws of tho Union, suppress insurrection and repel invasions, to be or ganized, armed and disciplined bv the Slate, but aeeniiliiig to the laws ol Con gress, such part of them as may hi em ployed in the service of the United Stales ure to be governed by Uio President, ball otlicered by the respective Stati . Now this conscription law recites an "existing insurrection aud rebellion " not lor culling forth Ihe militia under the above .piovis ions, but for dralting into tho seivtce of the United Stales. The very case has oc curred in which Ihe Constitution says Ihe mililia shall be called out under Slate of ficers, but Congress says they shall be drafted in contempt of Slate authority. Gen. Washington and the men of his day, did not so read the Constitution, when in suppressing tho whisky iusu miction in this State, they paid the most scrupulous regard to tho right! and powers of the State. I nder l lie pressure ol a ieieign W8Pt cons.tnpt hill was reported in i-on- gress in LMd, but it did not pass, and if it had, it would have been no precedent for Ibis law. because we are dealing with the insurrection, Mid insurrections are fpeo ia'dy provided. When a Slate is called on for iu quota of militia, it may determine, by lot, ho of the w hole number of its cn- i oiled militia shall answer the call, ami thus Stale drafts are quite regular ; but n Congressional llialt U supynu iaturrceUn is an innovation thai has no waiunliti the history or text of the Constitution. Lilhcr such a law or the Constitution must be nt aside. They cannot stand to gether. And, happily, n i ill consequences can flow from adhering to thftConstittition ; lor the standing army of the Federal Gov- ally prescnocj uiereior, ue .im-. eminent, recruited by enlistments in the ! articles of war. 1 believe the penalty ol ordinary way, with Ihe Slate militia called j desertion t'.v U military code is any cor f.,,.,1. i . ,1... (V.nuitniion are n1 nureal l.unislimenl court maillal ma; force ouite t-ullicieiit to r. . . . , i subdue anv renei-, lion that is capable of being subdued by lotce of arms. Such a formidable toi ce, wisely wielded, in connection with a pater nal and patriotic administration 'f all "t it er oor.stitot innal power, will ver fail I ) put down leiracloiy malc.intents, and pi e- Berve peace anil good order Httiongikc American people. T his conscript law, Ihercforc. nol mnctioned by the Cvislau- i lie i mM.u nor mteiv io navu Min.i aa usn , war me.isuio. j In its political bearing even, more than , in its military aspects, it i vubvetsive id 1 tho Constitution and of tho rights of ciu- H-ns Ihsl rlepend upon Statu authority. A lew thomdils will tmike mm plain. It is impossible to Biudy. our StaU and Fed- eral Constitutions without soeiiu bow :i. i. .3 ,n,.;.,0.l iX ei-..od IIJMIIIIUSII IU." ''IHl 1 ,hrt ,i, .-.j,.,,-. - and maintain the personal and rociai nguis of the citizen the other to late care oi his external relations. Nature, education, property, honie.wife. and children, servants, administration ol goods and chattels after death, and a grave-yard :n which Uicotata provides civil authorities, and hack of them the poisc'cvmittitui and ihe military, to make the civil adimniidratioii cllectual. .o.v, if Ihe principle be admitled that Congress may lake away the State mililia, whodqej not see that tiie ultimate and final securi ty of every nun's domestic and personal rights is endangero.1. To the extent dele gated in the Constitution nobody ques tions tha right of Congies. lo control the State militia, but if lo the extent to which this enactment goes, the 'states will tie re- duced to the condition of mere counticof agrem Commonwealth, and the citizen of the State must look to the Federal Government for Ihe enforcement of all hi domestic rights, a well a for the regula tion ot hia external telationi. The citizens of Ihe Staler, need protec tion from foreign foes and Indian tribes peaceful intercourse and commerce with all the world a standard of values and of weights and measures that shall be com- mrtn tn as 1 I lb Cl n I as anil A nnal that shall be co-ext-nsive with interitaie tmilA tA rnm mnrrA Tn ndiust anu maintain these external relaticns of the citireo, are high dutiei which the Consti- tution hit committed to the Federal Oot - eminent, and has furnished it with all necessary civil funotionaites. and with power to levy and collect taxes from the people of the States, t-j raise and support annies, to provide! a navy, ami to call forth the mililin to execute the laws. Thus is the Atnerietn citiz.'ii amply provioed by means of constitutions that are written with protection for all his l ights. iMt'iral and hi I ilieial, domestic and foreign, but, as the war power of the Gen eral Government is his iltiiuate secur ty for bis externa!, so is tho milnia hi- ulii "uiHie security foi his iuLern.i! or dn.mes'.ie lights. Could the Stale Government strike at Ihe wsr pow er of the l edei.il Government without endangering every man's rights '! In view of the existing icbdlioti, ho ni in would hesitite ho-.v t i answer tins ques tion, and yet is it. not equally upparciit I that when too Federal Government us Inrps a power over the Male militia which I was never delegated, every (nan's doun-?-! tic rights (ami thev tire those which touch him most eli-elv) are eo i. illy endangered ''. The great vice of tlm consciipt law is,1 i thai it is founded on an assumption that j ' Congress may take away, not the State, i rights o Ihe citizen, bin ihe security an. I I lound ilion of his State l ights. And how long is civ. I lihoriy e. eetett 10 nii tun r the securities of civil liberty Me destroy ed. The Constitution of ihe United Slates committed the liberties of tho citizen in part to the Federal Government, but ex pressly reset ved to the Mutes, mid the people of the States, all it did not delegate It gave the General Government a stand- ing army, bu. lott 10 the .-slates ineir i.aiii t in. Its purpose in nil this balancing of powers were wise and good, but this legis lation disregards these distiinitiotn, and upturns t lie whole Fyric m of government i when it converts the "national lot cos" and tale militia into urns to use and govern them as such. I Times of rebellion, above all ! I lie times a lien we tdiouhl stick others, arc to our fu n- id,iment.il law, lest we unit into iinareny i.m ona lit ml. or into desi..tim on the other The "real fin of the present ic- hellion consists in viomling t lie um. - litu - lion, whereby every man's civil rights arc exposed to sacrifice. Lldess the govcrt - nteiil be kept on the ioiindrilnni ol the (.:un(s n sold er why did it not occur to Constitution, tie imitate the sin ol the if:- fertile mind that Congiess could ren bels. and thereby i neourago I hem, '.vln'tsl : ,i..r m;s ;5tinetion valueie-s and unniean- we weaken and dishearten tho Iriet 1,1 constitutional order ami The phiintills in these bills government nn eg jod i iglit, l think, a; ciliztns ol l'enrj.-.) Ivanni, to compl.iiii i.f tb act in question, nol only on the giouuds l have indicated, but on another, to which I will briefly allude. The l-lh section provide? tnat the draf ted person shall receive ten days' nonce of the rendezvous at which bo is to report for duty, and the l'Hh section enacts ' that if he fails to report htnisfif in purstiatico of such notice, without turni hing a sub stitute or paying the required turn there tor he shall be deemed a deserter, and n 1 1 a 1 1 be arrested by the provost marshal, and sent to the nearest miliuay post lor trial by couri-marlial." The only qualifi cation to which Ihn provision is subject, is that upon pi oj cr show ir.g that ho is not able to Uo military duly, Ihe boaid of en rollment may telievc bun from the draft. One of the coinpla.iiiur.s, Kne-cder, has set forth the notice thai was teivod on him in pursuance of ibis tecti on, nod by which he was informed that unless he ap peared on a certain dav lie would lie deciu- d " a desert ei uuJ oe suojeci io me pen- ...II,,., I r. III., 11 1. .!!., cinmw u nunv.., v,.. . - 3 put to death. Can a cituen be mud? a descttcr before he has b"t'tmu u tut diet '! lias Congress the cops-iiutioiia. I'oaer l ) luthoiizo pro vost niaisliins, alter dr iv. ing inu u.nm of a Iiih mail troui a whee. ana sci ving linn witli a ten days' notice, to seize and drag iinu neioi c a cuu. i ........... - uiihlaiy law T i hn que-lion leucnes the hund..i ion ot pel s .nal lioerty . 1. I,,,,., l!., the. bari.ns ol r.P.iaiwt m imm , ... and tlieir retainers, "a nuinci ous 1 '""i camped uprn ihe grassy phun of Uunny mede," wrung fioin King John lhal great Charter which declined, among other riguls and liberties of Englishmen, thai l "no Ireeimin mall oe ariesieu, or .uipns- ' oned, or deprived of bis fieeiiuld, or his liberties, or free customs, or be outlawed ' or exiled, or in anv manner harmed, nor L I sill we (Ihe King) pi oeeed against htm, lior 4'"l 7 any one ajatnst him Ijjjrec oj ur ns, unless aecoruini: to Ihe sentence of Iiii peers (winch includes trial by jury J or lliui common law of England." Here was laid theslrong foundation of the libei lies ol'j the tace lo which we t-eoin-'. Ami l not here, tor Maoa Charter f .led ti riguts, but only leasserletl tnosc w hich exi ted long befi.re at common law. Jt was I n the most part, says bold Coke, merulv de claratory of the principal ground ot the rundaniciiliil laws ol Knuland. Fal back ot Magna Chin n r. i.T me customs and niaxims of our Saxon ancestry, those prin ciples of liberty lay scattered, which were galheied logcUel "in lhal immortal docu ment, ahich four huiubcd years alier wsrds were aiiam reasseiled mlwoottier great declaratory statues, 1 he I etitit Utght. ana "Ihe bill ol Kitlus which were tramp anted into our IH 1 he Fetiuon ol and Declar ation tif Independence, the bill or rights to our Slate Constitution and tno Amend nienia lo our Federal Consiitutiou, and which have thus beca n the beiltageol these plaintiffs. Says the 5lh Aaicie ol the A roendiijeiil : ' 'j person shall be held lo answer for a cspitui or otherwise infamous crime un less i n a prereiilaltoti or indicl ment of a grand jury, except in cases arising in the laml or naval forces or in the militia wheH in actual service in time of warorpublw danger-' ' What is the cope of Ihit exception? The land or naval forces mi-an the regular military organization of the Governtneii I tho standing nrmy and navy into which citizens me introduced by military educa tion, from boyhood or by enlistment?, and become, by their own consent, mbject lo the ntlltarv r xle mid liable to be liiod and puni.-hed without an p the forms or sale- guards of the common law. In like milli ner tho militia, when duly culled out and placed in "actual service," are subject lo i he rules and i t icles ot war, all their com mon law rights of personal free lorn being lor tbf lime suspended Rjt when are militiamen in netinil eeivii e VV Ken they have been not i lied of a draft 't .fudge Sto ry, in spi (i k ing of ihe aiiihoi ity o! '.'on f'ess over the militia, s:(vv : "The qursison when the authority of ; tend my opinion lurtber, I rebt nv objec C'ongress over the mi'iiia becomes exel u-' ions lo its constitutionality upon tUt.vi sive, min t cs.otitially depend upon the ! groiimlt : fact when they me lo be deemed ii: the1 1st; Thai the power of ''ongress lo rat 'ft actual service of the United Slates. There and suppo:t armies, does not include the is a clear distinction between calling forth power to draft tho militia of tho e-L.P' the militia and their being in actual set-1 2d : That the power of Congress tu ti'l vice, flies? tu e not coiiteinpotaiK'OUsacls forth the militia cannot be exerc.sed it) nor necessarily identical in their eonstitu-1 the te'tns of this enactment, tionid leaning-. The Fresidei t is not! 3J : That a citicn of I'ennsylvania can cnmmnii(bM-in chief of lb" militia, except j not be subjected to the rules and nn "''l when in actual service; and not merely f of war, uniil be is in actual military service, when ordered into servico. T.'it'v are 1th: That he is not placed in such sc. jal iw'yiC'or' Id thurtiol live onl'i when in actual Avi cici ji,1 nut ii'trrhi whet called forth, b'ore liny .'? ub-ye.l the 'cull. The nets of 1795 and other nets on the subject manifestly contemplate ami recognize this distinc tion, j'u briny Ihe militia ivithw ike nmiuy nf In'iiiii in thr act i. a! t.rcife there inu:,t Lean ' i.beilienee to the full, ami s me acts ' vryanizu tinn, muftCitxi , rfiitlfzwius. or tnarrnin'i dor.t in eji''iricr t the Collin the pu'j'ic .vri;."--Story's Con. Law, v'ol. Sec. lUOS. 1! it be suggested thai this plain luleof common senso and constuuiional law is not viobi'e 1 by the conscription an b - I ciiu-e it bes to the. " nii'ionat lorees, j i re lv lis beloii, that this is only a new i panic for tlie tnilitiii. and that the con-ti- twiiona: v t bts ot a cui.en aru nol to be sac,-;! end to rn unconstitutional name. When .luilgo Story win ndeavoring to maik with so much distinctness tho tune 1 r; ahie'u the common law n. hls ot the eiliAti censed and liability to military rule , br.-nn the linv, in a word, when he be- irni by. a new notnenclat ur? by calling I t1(. niililia " national forces 7"' It U not ' , ill'ienlt i i roneeive bow such a siul'CS- tion would have fared had it occurred or' bein made to him. lint it isdilliculi, in Ihe presence of the crave k-ues ot the present day, to In at so I't ivolntis a sugges tion with the dignity find forbearance the oecasi 'ii demand. I have shown what lights of personal liberty these plaintiffs inherited Irom a remi.te aucFstry, and how thev aie guaranteed io them by our constitutions, and at what time they are to give plao.' to tn irlial law, and mtcly il a n heel set in motion by Congress can eru.-h and grind those light' out ef c.'.iH ence, w ill. out regard to the li:i)il;.t ions of Iho Constitution, some wrightier reason ahoii'd io found foi it tlMin the misnomer which the act so studiously applies to ihe militia ionin reason that deserve to t'.atij instead of Magna Chart ri, out Con stiluti..n and all cur iraditional fieed"m. The only one that I have over beatd snggisted, and which is applicable against ad Ihe views advanced in thn opii.i on, i called military necessity. The countiy is involved iu agte.it civil v.nr which can be brought to a close by an cnergelin it"' of till out ro'ioitrces, t;nd no rcstiaiiit should be tolerated, in such i ircum-t.auces, save only those which christian civilization has imposed on ail warfare. Whatever i.-according lo the Constitution, the argument fl.li.'iis, may be d r.e, of course whatever is over and beyond the Constitution is jus tified as military necessity, ami ot that the l'i e.-i.len i and Com i e.-s are exclusive iiid final judg' s. l'tie aiiioiinl of thn atginneut is tlit the exijoneies of the limes justify tho suln'ti lulicn ol marital law foi the Cotit iuil ion. lint what is maittal law ? llbickstone iiod Sir Matthew Hale tel! us "it i built upon no settle I principles, but is cut ii e!y ai bt- Irary in its decisions, is in truth and real ity no law, but something indulged rattier than allowed as law." The unrestrained will of one or a number of men, then, is the rub which the argument substitutes lor the Constitution. It is o no con.-e- quonce that ll ine win mus sci up r-r u prerii bpv is thai of men whom a majority 1 of ihe people have chosen, beciuso aeoor-1 di.ig lo our i-js'.em the nv.j nty can only choo.e men to a Lnmister io ihe C ui-titu- ut-u as it is written. M i,;oi alt 's,j? n-coc'iisad by la, hive u m ue powef igut to; eslabli.-h a di-spitism lhati mi. i n ity s or ir.l- , 1Vl)-: i 1 li av e. bunny m ij 1 1 inn ii 'e set a prcsstiie rit re e the onstiiut ion under eliion unit in-'iirrecti'in? As 1 1, ii t uiisiuuuoii a ul ic i pates and pro- l ides tor such calamiiieo, il is it reproajh to its wis loin, lo say lout it is inadequate to such emetgMjele. No man .has any j Intone d right to c.a-l this reproach upon it. ,n cunt'ill expel lence proves n. it never cm be proved except by an unsuc-ce-s.'ul u-o of ihe legiinmue pi weis ot the 'Jontitiition agatnsi rebellion, and illeu the thing proved will be ilmt tho ii-iru-liient needs a liend oieiit, whifi its :ua chinery is flexible enongli to a. low. i ieii susti i iiieiaiiciioly deuxmslt it Mil w-o.j. l d'J tit) tuoi e lhan point out neeesssioy ameMdiuenta it ouid not tu reinler lht people io Hie aibitrii'y will of anvb-ely- Presidents or Congressmen ure mil.i varus of Ihe people, lodo their w.ll, mi as lhal Will llinv be expressed under pi-si .tj or exclienieiit, bill at ll aiamU recrd-d in the Con-ntution. It i " Constitu tion indeed whK-h makstLem President aud Congies.miui. Ti'-.v 've " nior i.o.ver In Bel up Iheir will ug.tlit Ihnt.or stituuon, than so many private cilizens would bare. Outside ol that Ihef are only private oitinen. I do not, Iheieforn. feel li e I'm" f argument drawn from lb ;.r.: cumstances of the lime. Rid us tin we make thorn worse, by ...lie itip.m;! bitrarv power for ("itist itiuioi'.ii1 in. , if we made them I etter, or rot wor e, judicial mind ou.'lit not lo bn ox-peoio - approve the substitution, lor it can rec nize no violation of the Cons' it u'.ioo r a. legitimate vindication of the Constitution To place rmtnelvfls under despotic swu" outer to I rina, back rebels to the Constitu tion we have given up, is a prvxieoure that perplexes tie stiolenl of polnii-... sc once, and will quite confound tbo uuio rian (.f our times. There are other fcaturei of the eonscrip' law that deseive criticism, but not to ez- (Servicowhen be, name has been U'ii""n from a wheel, aud ten days notice thticoi has been served upon him. For I Iiceo reasons I am fnr grantiug tli injunct ion. A ltiETCRtND Woman Whipf"- T-.c liuilingtoii (Vt.) Free Tress contain; tne following : "Considerable feeling has been ext! . 1 in tho town of Gcorpi i, by some devi l. ; merits in Ihe cse ol a kv. LIr. Hv.nid, who has been supplying the pulpil of CongregatioDal Church thre fo' a y -r last, who proves, it is nKedjed, to 1 ne lieen in the practice of u'y kiokin ar.d whipping hi young wifo. As r'i oi led lo us, some t ighteen di-'tinct wbipp ings were charged ag dnat him, w itbii thf year, coupled with stopping his wile's '. ters to her friends, locking up her c!ol! t so thai she could nol lesyo the huusn, and oil er unniarital and unmanly trealrttfttt. This became a matter of tuch nctor'iety ilmt the reverend woman iMaippcr vi -given by some of tho young men of tb town, tiie alternative of leaving; the place, or of having a conveyance furnished hnu from the neatest rail fonco. Iliscase wai recently brought before tho Aspect"! ion of Franklin county, bef-ire which, as wo understand, ha asserted his rights, as tho palriaehical head of bij family, to whip iiis wife, but expressed penitence for the extent to which ho bad exercised it. Wft urn informed that the association found him guilty of the utlenees charged, and recommend him lo abato ths scandal on the cause of religion by abandoning not only his ' p;ui iarci.ical' practices, but also the pulpit which ho disgraced." IIaz L-t.Yl'.u W oiftv M.'j. Gen. Xoall, aid, a hazel eve inspires ai nisi gi-nioe, a Platonic Gibraltar. A woman with a hazel eye never elopes from her husband, never chats scandal, never saci dices her bus band's comfort to her own, r.cvef talks too little, is an h.telligent lovely and agreea ble creature. We never knew, sav a bro ther editor, of but ono hatrd eyed woman w ho was uninteresting and unamiable, eu'i she had a nose, as the Yankees sa , ti.-n looked like the little end of nothing whit tled down to a point. The gray is the sign of greatness and talent. Great thinkers have it. In women it indicates a hotter head than heart. The ri nk hazel ii noblo in its significance, as .Tell as its Lp.vjty. The blun is amiable, but feeble. Thn black take carel lightning there. iLere is thunder ancj jtjrTh! government bakery at Alexan dria is said io brt the birgrtst in thi world Il can. and has. baked up five hundred bat n !s of fl mr in twenty tour hours, bat ordinarily works tip little more than half that quantity. Its utni'ist capacity in to tho number 'or loaves par day is one hun dred thouand,but has never yet exceeded eL'hlv-two thousand. Three bund.cd hands are employer), who are divided inti three forces, who alternately rolieve each other like seri'inels, so that '.ha work goes on day and night, without censing. fey-The I" ran U fort Comn'viw:A:?il Governor Brarnletle's orpiiiii, sitys; " Wc may as well toll Mr. Stanton that ho cannot recruit ncgiocs in Ken tucky; tlio people and tlio authorities will not povait it. Tho i nuotrliti jn ul Union men nnd tho rtutlioritioi will never submit to Hi" outrngc. . ... . . . ii , . ftvvA friend r,f il soldier, who WS1 butloriipr 4'roru :t painful wowvl, fsid to lti nt tho other day ' Wull, Tom, dq j-ou fool liko going; back to tho u"ii. jf when your wound well t" 'N'o, not utiles.-, I could o a.' a r.i gjr or a Brigadier (i( nornj." etjrSnj-s tlio Louisville ,hvmftl We don't know that the ' .7. nt can rniso IJJO.iKiJ ne.v v ho can iilaco Buell "' 11 I 'I the field, mi'l t'bit half tho numb, r- W i u , I r-.""fio" li.jsecnins :r tin: ndmii"-lf de 111 lied bt makes an I u ai 1 cVe: o ! bi'.iiico in tii . I- I" .v ,i 1 Uiliiiiko u'Iiih ii-sli ut'iiH ' .-I'e.c tiirlt lia.s been tit-Ml - n 'It' ;. nre th eiieraliiu. le c-j li'.'O UH bili as loo d.ij : to .'. ... l;l .'. 1 Oi Jsfi I' I- lah. But nobody can ailord ItMijj at the cu front prices. t live