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',:';,'' .; it ," t'lr ' : `'f,. ' rf4' ,- ;: -. ..", .c. • ... 4.• - .I ~ C , - ,' ,3 ' ' .. ":4' , 1% . '-, '• ,: r . ,i'f 1- ..,;• , 1 ,. . 4 .': '. 4 .:., ~,,-- -, t I • ' t-: , -t 1, 14 - . • `;'• I,i , :' ll MEM :A. 41. . •A• •!-.04‘.4 ~ ,; - i. , :::;.•:; Z.,':'i . 0':. , : - ,;:' , '-.1 , • . ;::.•:. :t - ::' i'' • '.", ( - .'l ir,`:,!,.'!.:-,!'-,.:..•.:.,.,;.7.1,.;:!,;-;._,',:,.;!;! . ... . . , 4. • [l' y,,' -_ ;;:f '?1! - ii..k;'...'", ......-....„.„ : „..,.. , x . ?,.:,, • `, 4`.' .• • - A .. .. . . . . .... . - ", t .:1.1 . :;':•A' . ` . ' •- • . i -- " . ' - ' 7 : : P .- .. - ', ti - .. ,.‘'.'., - ,. ; •,,. a:3 ,yi : ,: , y : ,._,... 4: .,,,.. ,, ,, , , :.:7; . :::...i .:... ::::::: : t : , , ,,... 7 : i ~_ -,._:1:::::,.:,- !rfr4 magic &Mitt S. RIDDLE & CO.. rathaum - yanrurrins. TUESDArIdORNING:r.it::NOV. 10, 1863 The Injunction Again. Well, it is just as we expected and pre dicted. While Minx and his gallant army are pushing the rebels across the Rappahan nock and the Rapidan, the gallant triumvi rate of non-combatant copperheads—WOOD WAßD and LOWRIE, with their associate TRORPSON—hare been operating a diversion by a tiro in the rear, and declaring that the act of Congress which was intended to re inforce that army is unoonstitionaL Wows- WARD weal° speak after the election, and he has spoken. And Lomas, too, has flung his Parthian arrow back, as he is about to gather up the reins for his lael — precipitate flight. from public place and public OW, fol lowed as he will be by the hoots and hisses of the people who have dismissed him, and can now afford to laugh to scorn his impo ; trot attempt to cripple the army of thirne tie% and deliver it and us over to the tender mercies °this Southern masters. And sox, too,—unpoetio cognomen—compara tively unknown to fame, but sympathizing with his fellows and ambitions to shine in the ' same constellation among the bigger lumi naries—twangs his infant bow, and sends a puny arrow In the same direction. While &mesa and READ—the two remaining mem bers of the Bench—the former a Democrat, and the latter of the Republican school of politics—are both dissenting. This result is in precise accordance with our protpostications, and we are not sorry that It -has not disappointed them. Hap- , Idly the time has passed when these men ! could help Jars. DAVIS, or injure any body but themselves by their opinion. In the now drooping fortunes of the Confederacy, with their own concealed purposes entirely foiled by the results of the late elections; they will only draw upon themselves the scorn of all good men, and forfeit the little "teapot which was still paid to them in the eastern part of' this State. When they were denounced here for their infamous ,tyranny and entire disregard of all princi ple and authority in the eases of the rail road bonds, the complaints of our people were unheeded beyond the mountains. There is always, however, an avenger on the track of a great wrong, and as Provi dence has made the slave holder himself the destroyer of his own idol, so the same 'Providence has left it to these men to con vict themselves in the fullness of time of their entire unworthiness of the high trusts which were to foolishly confided to them by an honest and loyal people. —We shall of course return to this sub ject by and by. The news from the Army of the Potomac is of the right kind ea length. Just as we had read the first dispatches which appear in our telegraphic colUms to-day, a Wash ington letter, written on Saturday, came to hand, containing the following paragraph: "The army of the Potomac, Is at last, again In roc,- lion. It. route le not definitely known, but It Le, known that the goal We time sought for le not the chain, of defence* around Wmkington—bot Rich mond." So many assurances of this long looked for movement had reached us during the past months, that even our excellent corres pondent's rove more would have hardly sp. peared worth adding to the record of pre vious disappointments, has it stood for a day unsupported by the subsequent develope meats which have token place. In com mon with a large portion of the press and the public, we have been anxiously looking fur this movement of the army of the Po tomac. for some time past, as an essential part of the action of the campaign, in or der that nearly all the rebel army in Vir ginia might not be concentrated on GIANT or Berassina, while a few companies of guer rilla cavalry, a show of campfires, or earth works with quaker gnus frowning terribly therefrom, might possibly be all the army and all the obstacles really confronting the cautions : and unenterprising Oeneral com manding the army of the Potomac. 'Whatever may he the resources of the rebels in Virginia, certainly there is every reason to rejoice that this movement of MEADE will now prevent any attempt to direct' them against our armies in East Tennessee, and that thus we have the prom isp of reaping the general harvest of vic tory, by concentrated action oTer the whole field of operations. The Difference. While the people of the loyal States are subseribing to tho Government loan by mil lions daily," - tho sent of confidence in the rebel aovertment is so great that the Government • o obliged to think of the expedient of forced loans to enable it to raise the means for keep.. int itself in existence. The despotism in the South has become so absolute that they talk now of seising upon the money or property of the citiserts to carry on the war, as they have • king since done upon tho citizens to supply the • • lessee in their armies. The condition of the -- ••rebel treasury must be desperate, indeed, when this system of totted loans—practised Only in emeh countries as Mexico—is consider :-::;;;;;-eid. the only relief. The expenses of the rebel Ff! - --/Golternment are yid down at four hundred millions a year, en a specie basis, or about one thousand millions on the actual basis of do ptThis, ht ;anenosmons tax ftstry.of ths country and to be borne by apopttlation notmord than one-third ;`,-; •• ;that of the loyal States.. • TEE itratigt:rsisoluuti3 at Camp Douglas, Ch oavii luse made several att empts to escape :67 means of Mtge underground a tun .l:44liie!.r.:, Thesis tunnels Maio about four feet high' and - terW and a half,:feet eride,the sides reef ierfectly lined with boards and planks. The total length of , the mein tunnel feet.,' ThMo'isere fotr • _ brancliss, tisedfor storing - away the di*, bid , Mg tools and clothes, and in one was a nice bed of hey. where the =tired workmen could tett.* ' One of these branches was large mouth, settonimodete the nun . who sawed and Atte& the plank; iothat all the work could be done laridatgroubdi to avoid nolle 'and defy Erupt- Oion-lind cariosity.. Upon the discovery of heft=ochemo:theprisoneri,attemptedto tome fire grand , but werabeetee'liack, swami oeisleg serious monads: — . ; ~ . .', 1 .7; 'Ai r i' , ',' .-?.;;'..:.•,,:.-;',-:::•:-.,'i e n : t ri a t i st the 11;111: Orison:zeeuoraf 7. • Me or lty. inatedllia.idatee for of er city ”, • . • xyds~aaysof ritsh , goodi Upsets:l thi-pres into- the United Stater' ti, l33 , - ----771.2;iss$ name In tour lautdxs4 ilia eighteen g~ are pima sovarelgos In - Zatar. 2n tlile eanatry - ,tbOo us thirty raillioni, and ! :vary jaa.irithaat *atm. - f --*;-lailiapaiacilatint War ficouirt)tailtaapra! Auttod*alovia'reati a yard. M22l==l THE -6oNtiinuPtioN""la. . . The' conititutthuauty the- , Act firmed—Dlesetithig Opinion of Jas. See Strong. On the outside of this morning's paper we publish the Opinion of Chief Jostle° Lowrie, of the Supreme Court, deciding the Conscriii- lion Act unconstitutional—a decision con- eurredin by Judges Woodward and Thomp son. Below we give the dissenting opinion oi Judge Strong: Kneader vs. Lane, Barrett,-Welle and Ash mend. Smith re. Lane, Barrett, Wells and Young. Nicholls re. Lehman,Marsdir, Blur- phy old Scanlan. In the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, in equity. Motion for an injunction. STRONG J.—The complainants having been enrolled and drafted, 'under the provisions of the set of Congress of March 3d 1883, entitled "an act for enrolling and calling out the na tional forces, and for other purposes," have presented their bills in this smart against the parsons who constitute the board of enroll ment, and against the enrolling officers, pray ing that they may be injoined against pro ceeding under the act of Congress, with the requisition, enrollment and draft of citizens of thecommonwealth, and of persons of foreign birth, who have declared their intention to become cilium; under and in pursuance of the laws, to perform compulsory military duty in the service of the United States, and particu larly that the defendants may be enjoined from all proceedings against the persons of the complainants, under pretence of executing the said law oT the United States. The bills having been filed, motions ire now made for preliminary injunctions, until final hearing. These motions have been argned only on the part of the complainants. We have therefore before us nothing but the bills and the spe cial eilidavits of the complainants. It is to be noticedthat neither the bills, nor the accompanying affidavits aver that the complainants are not subject to coirollment:and draft, into the military service of the United States, under the act of Congress, if the not be valid, nor is it asserted that they have been improperly or fraudulently drawn. It is not alleged that the defendants have done anything4ai that they proposeto do anything not warranted or required by the words and spirit of the enactment. The complainants rests wholly upon the assertion that the act of Coagress is unconstitutional, and, there fore, void. It Is denied that there is any power in the federal government to compel the military service of a citizen by direet.action upon him, and it is insisted that Congress can constitutionally raise armies in no other way The Good News. than by voluntary enlistments. The necessity of vesting in the federal gov ernment power to raise, support and employ a military force was plain to the framers of the Constitution, as well as to the people of the States by whom it was ratified. This is mani fested by many provisions of that instrument, as well as by its general purpose, declared to be for "common defence.' Indeed such a power is necessary to preserve the exist cope of any independent government, and none has ever existed without It. It was, therefore, expressly ordained in the eighth ar ticle, that the Congress of the United States should have power to "provide for calling forth the militia to execute the taws of the union, suppress insurrections, and repel inva sions." It was also ordained that they should have power to provide for organizing, arming and dtseiplining the militia, and for govern • ing such part of them as may be employed in the service of the United States, reserving to the States respectively, the appointment of the officers and the authority of training the militia according to the discipline prescribed by Congress. Nor is this all. It is obvious that if the grant of power to have a military force had stopped here, it• would not hare answered all the purposes for which the Gov ernment was formed. It was intended to frame a government that should make a new member in the family of nations. To this end, within a limited sphere, eivery attribute of sover eignty was given. To it was delegated the absolute and unlimited power of making trea ties with other nations, a power explicitly de nied to the States. This unrestricted power of making treaties involved the possibility of offensive and defensive alliances. Under such treaties the new government might be re quired to send armies beyond the limits of its territorial jurisdiction. And, in fact, at the time when the constitution was formed, a treaty of alliance offensive and defensive was In existence between the old confederacy and the Government of France. Yet more. Apart from the obligations assumed by treaty, it was well known that there are many cases, where the rights of a nation, and its citizens, cannot be protected, or vindicated within Its own boundaries. But the power conferred upon Congress over the militia' is insufficient to enable the fulfillment of the demands of such trestles, or to protect the right.; of the gov ernment, or its citizens, in those cues in which protection must be sought beyond the territo rial limits of the country. The power to call the militie.into the service of the Federal Government is limited by express terms. It reaches only three cases. The call may be made "to execute the laws of the Union, to suppress insurrections, and .to repel inva sions," and for no other uscC. The militia cannot be summoned for the invasion of a country without the limits of the United States. They cannot be employed, therefore, to execute treaties of offensive alliance, nor in any case where military power is needed abroad, to enforeerights necessarily sought in foreign lands. This most have been under stood by the framers of the constitution, and it was for each reasons, doubtless, that other powers to raise and maintain a military force were conferred upon Congress, in addition to those which were given over the militia. By the same section of the eighth article of the constitution, it was ordained, in words of the largest meaning, that Congress should have power to "raise and support armies," a power not to be confounded with that given over the militia of the country. Unlike that, it was unrestricted, unless it bo consid ered a restriction that appropriations of money to the use of raising and supporting armies were forbidden for a longer term than two years. In ono souse this was a practical re striction. Without appropriations no army can be maintained, and the limited period for •whielx appropriations can be made, enables the people to pass jedgment upon the mainte nanceond even oilstone° of the army every two Pars, and In every new Congress. But in the clause conferring authority to raise armies, no limitation is imposed other than this indirect one, either upon the magnitude of the force which Congress is empowered to raise, or upon the uses for which it may bo employed, or upon the mode In which the army may be raised. If there be any restric tion upon the mode of exercising ' t he power, it must be found elsewhere than i n . the clause of the Constitution that conferred It. And, if a restricted mode of exercise was intended, it is remarkable that it was not expressed, when limitations were so carefully imposed upon the power given to eallfor the militia, and, more especially, when, as it appears from the prohibition of appropriations for the army for a longer time than two years, the subject of limiting the power was directly before the minds of the authors of the Constitution. This part of the Constitution, like every other, mast be held to moan what its framers, and the people who adopted it, intended it should mean. We are notat liberty to read it in any other sense. We cannel Insert restric tions upon powers given in unlimited terms, •y more than we ran strike ont restrictions Imposed. There is sometimes groat confusion of ideas in the consideration of questions arising un der the Constitution of the United States, caused by misapprehension of a well-recog nized and oft-repeated principle. It Is said, and truly said, th at the Federal Government is one of limited powers. It has no other than inch as are expressly given to It, and such as (in the language of the Constitution' itself,)"are necessary and proper for carrying into execution" the. powers expressly given. By the tenth article of the amendments it is ordained that the powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor pro hibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, 3r to the people...Of course there can be no presumption in favor of the existence of a power sought to be exercised by Congress. It must bo found in the Constitu tion. But this principle is misapplied when it is need, is some times the case, to restrict the right to exercise a power expressly given. It is of value when the inquiry is whether a power has been conferred, but of no avail to strip apowargiven - in general term", of any of tie attributes. The power* of Ile Federal Gov. ernment are limited in number, not in their nature. A power vested In Congress is as am ide,- as It would be Ifposseued by any other legbdatiire; none the reel because held by the Federal Atssiornment. It is not enlarged or dlmlnished by the of its possossor. Correll , hlis KffOr,to lorrylr - modey f Is It any tied thlurthe power of altate to borrpys mope -Beeanevap .Yederat-eopensesent has not all the powers *blob a State Govern. matt: bui . srill Übe contended Mit it eannoit , beriavvenagey, or regulate colunirrisjoa fix i4 standard et. weightiandsimantres,,in the asurte; way;by the same titans, orate thtteaMe ax i s tent, as any State might have done, hatrio Federal Constitution ever been forted? If not, and surely this vrilinot-becontended,why is not the Federal powef to milsemmies as large, and as unfettered is the models' which it may be exercised, as was the powerto raise armies possessed by the States before 1787, and possessed by them now, in time of war? If they were not restricted to voluntaryenliet manta in procuring a military force, upon what 7rinciple can Congress be? In Gibbons vs. Ogden, 9 Wheaton, 196, the Supreme Court of the United States laid down the principle thtt all the powers vented by the Constitution In Congress are complete in themselves, end may be exercised to their utmost extent, and that there are no limitations upon them, other than such as are prescribed In the Constitu tion. It is not difficult to ascertain what must have been intended by the founders of tho government when they conferred upon Con gress the power to "raise armies.' At the time when the Constitution was formed, and when it was submitted to the people for adop tion, the mode of raising armies by coercion, by enrolment, classification end draft, as well an by voluntary enlistment, was well known, practised in other countries, and familiar to the people of the different States. In 1751, but a short time before the revolutionary war, a British statute had enacted that all person. without employment might be seized end coerced into the military ser vice of the kingdom. The act may be ' found et length in Ruffbead'e British Statutes 1 at large, vol. 7, page 625. Another act of a ' similar character was passed in 1757, British I Statutes at large, vol. 8 page 11. Both were enacted under the administration of William Pitt, afterwards Lord Chatham, reputed to • have been one of the steamboat friend' of English liberties. They were founded upon a principle always recognized In the Roman Empire, and asserted by all modern civilized governments, that every able bodied man ca pable of bearing arms, owes personal military service to the government which protects him. ' Lord Chatham's acts wore harsh and unequal in their operations, much more so than the act of Congress [WV assailed. They reached only a select portion of the able bodied men in the community, and they opened wide • door for favoritism and other abuses. For • these reasons, they must have been the more prominently before the eyes of the framers of the federal constitution, when they were pro viding safeguards to liberty, and cheeks to arbitrary power. Yet in fall view of such enactments they conferred open Congress an unqualified power to raise armies. And, still more than this, coareioa into military service by classification and draft from the able-bodied men of the country was to them a well known mode of raising armies in the different States which confederated to carry on the Revolu tionary war. It was equally well known to the people who ordained and established the Constitution, expressly "in order to form a moredierfeet union, establish justice, ensure domestic tranquility, provide for the common defense, and secure the blessings of liberty for themselves and their posterity." It is an historical fact that during the later stages of the wax, the armies of the country were raised not alone by voluntary enlistment, but also by coercion, and that the liberties and independence- sought to be secured by the Constitution, were gained by soldiers made such, not by their own voluntary choice, but by compulsory draft. Chief Justice Marshall, himself a soldier of the Revelation, than whom no one was better acquainted with revolutionary history, in his life of Washington (vol. 4, page 241) when describing the mode in which the armies of the Government were raised, makes the follow ing statement: "In general the assemblies (of the States) followed the example of Con grese,and apportioned on the several counties within the States the quota to be furnished by each. Title division of the State was again to be sub-divided into classes, and each class was to tarnish a man by contributions or taxes imposed on itself. In some instances a draft was to be used in the last resort." This mode of recruiting the army by draft, in rev olutionary times, is also mentioned in Ram sey's Life of Washington, ( vol. 2, page 246,) where It is said "When voluntary enlistments fell short of the proposed numbers, the defi ciencies were, by the laws of the several States, to be made up by drafts, or lots from the militia." Thus it is manifest that when the members of the Convention proposed to confer upon Congress the power to raise ar mies'in unqualified terms, and when the peo ple o f the United States adopted the Constitu tion, they had in full view compulsory drafts from the population of the country, es a known and authorized mode of raising them. The memory ortbe revolution was then recent. It was universally known that it had been found impossible to raise sufficient armies by volun tary enlistment, and that compulsory draft had been resorted to. If, then, In construing the Constitution we are to seek for, and be guided by the Intentions of its authors, there is no room for doubt. lied any limitation upon the mode of raising armies been intend ed, it must have been expressed. It could not have been left to be gathered from doubt ful conjecture. It Is incredible that when the power was Oren in words of the lar gest signification, it was meant to restrict its exercise to a solitary mode—that of vol untary enlistment, when it was known that enlistments had been tried and found inef fective, and that coercion had been found necessary. The members of the convention were citizens of the several States, each a sovereign, and each having power to raise a militaty erns by draft, a power which more than one of them had exercised. By the Con stitution, the authority to raise snob a force was to be taken from the States partially, and delegated to the new government about to be formed. No State was to be allowed to keep troops in time of peace. The whole power of raising and supporting armies, except in time of war, was to be conferred upon Congress. iS'ecossarily with it was given the means of carrying it into full effect. I agree that Congress - is not at liberty to employ means for tho execution of any powers delegated to it, that aro prohibited by the spirit of the Constitution, or that aro Incon sistent with the reeerved rights of the Staten, or the inalienable rights of a citizen. The means used mast be lawful means. But I have not been shown, end I am unable to perceive that compslling military service in the armies of the United States, net by arbitrary con scription, but, as this act of by directs, by enrollment of all the able bodied male criti- TOM of the United States and persons of foreign birth who have declared their inten tion to become citizens, between the ages of twenty and forty-five, (with some few excep tions,) and by draft by lot from those enrolled, infringes upon any reserved rights of the States, or interferes with any constitutional right of a private citizen. If personal service may be compelled '- if it is common duty, this is certainly the fairest and most equal ;node of distributing the public burden. It was urged in the argument that coercion of personal service in the armies is an invas ion of the right of civil liberty. The argu. moot was urged in strange forgetfulness of what civil liberty is. In every free govern ment the citizen, or subject, surrenders a por tion of his absolute rights In order that the remainder may be promoted and preserved. There can bo no government at ell, where the subject retains unrestrained liberty to act. an ho pleases, and is under no obligation to the State. That is un doubtedly the best government, which im poses: the fewest restraints, Iloilo it secures ample protection to all under G. But no gov ernment has ever existed, none can exist with out a right to the personal Military services of all its able bodied mop. The right to civil liberty in this country never hooluded a . right to exemption from such service, Before the Federal L'oestitutioa was formed, the citizens of" the different States owed it to the govern ments under which they lived, and it was ca. acted. The militia systems of the States then asserted it, and they have continued to assert it ever since. They assert it now, No one doubts the power of e Stale to compel its litia intopersonel service, and no one has ever 1 1 contended that such compulsion Invades any I right of civil liberty. On the contrary, it ie conceded that the right to civil liberty is sub ject to such power in the State governments, and the history of the period immediately an tecedent to the adoption pf 4le Fosiertil Con- • stitution shows that it was then admitted, Is civil liberty now a different thing from what it wan when the Constitution warformod Y It is better protected by the provisions of the Constitution, but are the obligations of a citi zen to the government any less now than they were then? This cannot be maintained. If then, coercloa litto Minter, Sery too wasno In 'aeon of the rights of civil liberty enjoyed by the people of the States, before the Federal Constitution had any existence, it cannot be now. 'Again, It is insisted that if the power given to Collarsss to rules and support armies be con strued to warrant the eellipulslon of oitlrans into military service, it must With equal m op be held to authorise (arbitrary seizures of 1:7 --, - - ,i. _';'• - ,e,.,: - ....: - ........,. protierttfori the s'Opport i f the 'army. 7no. ..ey - z if ~. aLP I 'ERTISEMEXTS. f raiii ° lll :l 7 4l ll 7: b ar t illb, i4 a l l t a r tr ee re d , Li l ti) eg n a i '- o . L i- 4.' so.` itl6 fi.r a Me i--nable lot • • 0 1 mAnkt“`BY toll cans It: must elfin °" I P' lc r• r"l lti v .‘" ;::rt ti:i . r " iv 't" t . t h r " iwVi d i •e r e " . d ported.. It has already' been shown that en- ~„,,,, •.1 THBERI a auSe. d Mai le-i It. rolment and draft aro not illegal; that t0 0'1 . : 4 IN LAWEENCEVILLE FOR make them illegal, a prohibition must be L SALE, pleasantly el tooted on Ewalt o met found In the letter or in the spirit of the Con- Pro,. low. Terms. emeetneole rash remainder In stitution. Arbitrary seisu ros of pro, sts pro- ~,„,,...,,,,, p.y.,,,,,.. perty'ior the encTeet of the army are illegal bolo S. CETIIDERT a SON'S. M Market st and prohibited. Not only dots the Coneli- ItrANITEII--lit turd had Locigote , w a tution point out the mode in which provi- 1 I respectable private family, Cro .1.7 shoot Is sion shall be made for the support of the years old, a Rhin 'Ol minnow or half an hour's walk army, but in numerous pros kiwi., it protects re ne the Post Office. Address BOX ten, Pittsburgh the people against deprivation of property 1. t'.. ...ling locality and terms, _ no/0.2t. without compensation and due course of law. $lO II EWA it I/.—POCKETK- 1300 K Exemption from inch seizures was always an LOST, on the (Risen. Pawners Hallway, asserted and generally en &dilated right, riii holeerdaY afternoon, TM instant, containing Prom while exemption from liability to being corn- 11.1..'"1.• Ash The above reword a ill . be paid to . the rem rrmittlng It to TIIIS OFFICE. vint...it pelted to the performance of military service was, as has been seen, never claimed. There ANTED—A MAN OW HEIN aAN D 45,1- , 4. le:f a ß t l h !i!lCS EFELI3IOII 8E111101MA )\:„,7on are, therefor , limitations upon the means . .0 to open up • house fur the manufacture moot me t ed pod popul•r Invent lea which may be used for the support of the army, while none are imposed upon the mean , or the day. of raising it. All Inquiries cheerfully northwest et Again, it is said this act of Congress is a nolo lw Pi ST. CLAIR STREET. violation of the constitution, because it makes 11 OR E. Bllliol, H A lift Etc{ AN I) a drafted man punishable as a desert& before i / JENNY LINDS.—ion WEI/NEM/AY MORN he is mustered into 'orrice. The contrary INO, Nov. 11th, at II o'clock, will be solo, at ate was declared by Chief Justice Marshall, when Commercial Saks Remus, 54 fifth street, oue Homo, delivering the judgment of the Supreme Court Trotting Buggy a t i , lll , ll r yt a iseo m i A , 1 , .. two : lrtioy . Ltod e L AIN k., A n,i r.. °fere United States in iiituston vs Moore, 5 g' W 111 le added to the tale of Stw ks .d Real Wheaton. Under the act of 1795, the drafted BANK OP PITTSBUIftaI sTocK.— men were not declared to be subject to mili tary law until mustered into service. This is 7 r r /i ."':,';',,,:r . i n g , ',Thr,.l:::,,,Er„Vitgit4sl:ll°.• ii.. N.: .„ 1 , 0 : 1 , 1 . , .. , A " the act of which Judge Story speaks in hie ri ft t, . tr ,,,„, t . commentaries. But in the opinion of Judge 20 share. Bank ref Pittsburgh Stock Marshall, Congress might have declared them hot° DAVIS a IiteILWAINE. Anerre In service from the time of the draft, precisely PIANO AND MELODEON —NS ED. what this act of Congress does. Dodge Mar- L NEeDAT MORNING, Nov. 11th, at 10 o'clock. shall'sopinion, of course, explode , this chjec • ii ill be sold, at the Commended Odes atrim, No. 5i tion. I 11111 street, one rely superior rosewood ou ee r Mel deem, large des, Mason A Hamlin's make, Boston. The argument most pressed, in support of Also. min roiwwnod Piano Stool, and ono a alnOt rase the alleged unconstitutionality of the act of I p i ,,„„. i v, ~,,,,,,. Congress is that it interferes with the reserved nein leA NIS A. Ur I LWAINit, Aert'ro . I rights of the States over their own militia. It n ELAWAKk(4 it A PE 'VINES —I ant is said the draft takes a portion of those who I I._, prepand to furnish those celebrate ei flues, far ewe militia seniee to the States, end thus thi. 1.111, at Ow following esce•difiglY le. Pr. , . I diminishes the power of the States to protect One year old, strove'. well rooted twos, themselves. Tho States, it is °Wien-LI, retain I Sin to s'Ll per hundred; 81110 tee 5'15 per I tompand the principal power over the militia, and there- V fore the power given to Congie to raise order. left at 72 YE0 . 1., T ilor ' STREET, "I.W A I' II Bon . eirtiet o sAllegheny, armies must be so construed, as not to destroy out he promptly attomied to. im pi.e, lor impair that power of the states. If, eqy I_l 011 S E HOIM FUJIN au RE.--on the complainants, Congress may draft into 111 TUESDAY AfTSUNOON, Nor. 10th at 'I their armies, and compel the ecrvioe of a per- o'clock, will be sold, at the Commercial Soles Rooms. Hon of the State militia, they mar take the 54 fifth stre.ct, a large quantity or good Household whole, and thus the entire power of the States r i g e rni e t e , :i : tr .:prising,. lies ktaliogeny wardrotc, over them may he annulled, for sent of coy t , 0 ,..,,,, , l eg - I , 7 e 'l c g t " .. ( p. : - t i . .. s r. p ; t 4 e g g. it ee. g t" e gi t t: e b e 7 .. r . s , zLiii subject upon which it can act. 1 have stated itremany Bureau, Turned Bedsteads. Mahegeny Had the argument quite ea strongly as it was pre- i Feet uivans, Tall Case Clhck, Kitchen Ceepboard tented. It is more plausible than sound. It Dining Boom Dolt; Glassware, Cooking Stoves, de , a assumes the very matter which I. it,.. question j, n°l" DAY LS a Mel LWA ISE, a net'la in debate. It ignores the fact rust Congress COUNTR Y 11.1 0 .1DENCE WAN 08 1 / FB/ hasafro power over those who constitute the —Wanted to pnrchase, • small FARB, TO t 0 ACRES, more or km, within 30 neeles•of Mil itia. The militia of the States is also that of the general gee 01111M0131. I I is the whole 1:1 , 1 , 14 . 1 i 1ir . g1 , , ,, c , 1 , 1r , e , c , t1y i i m e. th r e r, l . l a n . e of n rit w il o wx..Zi .. it h. able-bodied population ',Table of bearing The house buildings must be good mid stviesh, alit, arms, whether organised or not. Over it -er- 7to to rooms. Also, the necessary" stable and farm tale powers are given to Congress, and others buildings. Ths land most be of good quality and are reserved to the States. Besides toe power well 717:Lt1Prtr'd with fail,ant for grain defined uses, iirnsl n iii:•• H. D. C , G.. 1.1.. Offlas.Pritutsburgh,"Ystat of caning it forth, Congress may provide' for its organisation, log Om, location, price, number of moms, and par arming and discipline, aS well us for goy- I tauten!. to improvements. erring such portion as may he emp loyed in N S.—Would be willing to leans for a term of its service . It is the me,te„ei anal Iho only ye t. l 73 tr ,d,,d the owner was not dtsposed to eel. material contemplated by the constitution, out of which the ensiles of tho federal govern- 1. - /lOR Si 1... - X —tw - u superior Cvliniter went are to be raised. Whether gathered by 4- Boller., 31 inches diameter, 30 feet long, made coercion, or enlistment, they are equally to '..4r:;:inh:',"ll::',,,` wrought "d . 'sthk . g• n'lr'' out Of those who form a part of the and it ia of the Also, One Po:4"able Engine and Toloiler Ilot‘sr of States. Taking a given number he draft no 11.1[ hero lower, 5 loch tytinder and 12 !nen s•r , As. more 00061ela wfth the reserved power of ;he Tau Engine low bored one well almost 71X1 feet deep, States, than does taking the same number of ei ,,, e....l i t n ee eidtedr i a r b o l r y i., •ua o l o tsa i l „, h; men in pursuance of their own tont, set, No Mot kind of work, or Almf, (Me Engine, hoary Imo I I ;'.ite, 14 Inch citisen can deprive a State of her rights with- cylituter, 30 Inctme stroke; net.. .tab balance valve eat her consent. None could, therefore, vol. ei ...suer Well adapted to rim a grist milt or small , untanly enlist, If taking a militia man into her still.' I twittery service In the army of the Dotted ''''" l:l ! nor Point Alley ane l l L lM M . : l 2.C . ' it h e E ß' ' ' ' •y. States is in conflict with any; State right, over ' 0 „ 1 , 1 ,,,, Pittsburgh. ri the militia. These ghts, whatever they may . - - WEST NEWTON, Nov 4th, loio. be. it is obvious cannot be affected by the mode S. KATES, Esq —Dusit Sin We of taking. It is clear that the States hold I ' • are duly In receipt of theme., of adjustment their power over the militia, subordinate to or the lone in part of one of oar Paper Ilille by fire, the power of Congress to raise armies out of end tithe pleasure In saying that your immediate si dle population that constitutes it. o ore it init.. , in wlui.e the soma .. Avat of the ilmm i not so, the delegation of the power to Con. le:lteere'ttnetel794Wh,gyctitthe Ttretp.reet.lxbeist grim would have been en empty gift. Armies ' !tested by your Company in responding to the amount can be raised from no other source. Feliit- insured. lie have Lad. for many years, coven or • means in other lands are generally prohibited eight Policies of lestiranco In tha Lycoming and , othe .r eo . n h imill o an n, il . b41: 1 1 . to stier oi Ir . no cog pa n n I by foreign enlistment acts, and even where rote I they are not, they may, under the low of na- have now additional femme for rocommenTlng . oar I tions, involve a breach of neutrality. Justly, • weeds to Insure in yeer company. I therefore, may it be said the objection now With high reepect, We are yo C. P. ur. t MARKLE. ruly, ',under consideration begs the question in doe S. B. et I:liir ui, he onto, Ls located in Lawreucertile. 1 bate. It assumes a right in the State which has no existence, te-wit : a right to hold all "CARD.—UN lON . PACIFIC; HAlls- I the population that constitutes its militia men A way,, AT CO3IPANY BONDS, Euvrceis Drvistov. exempt from from being taken, in any (Somas Brandi gf lha At . Boarood 1 I into the armies of the United Staten. NS bon A. bonds of the above dermiptlien will probably be it is said, if any portion of the militia may offered far sale in the money market, the public is , be coerced into such military service, the hereby cautioned against purchasing, or to any way whole may, it is but a repetition of the rem- 1 negotiating for them, for the tuadenimoed have an i men, but very weak argument against the g .. t r :tighr° ,vamp the 717 ..ly= ii. .r,„.. k . i .: I existence of a power because it may possibly ' Laws of the State of Kansas give them. nude- their be abused. It might, with equal force he u-ged ' contract, a poor hew, to nil mortgagee nr denim of I against tha existence of any power in eith- trust which can be executed by told Company. Any er the State or General Gov ernments. I t „ I , e • tcetmont In said bonds, without authority from plies as well to a denial e( power to raise ar• I the undersigned, pill let Invalid, and will entail a i n t.' toss npun therpartlese who shell venture to per ttales by voluntary enlistment. It is as con- , i,,,,,,, t h e m BOSS, STEEL et CO., i meltable that high motives of patriotism. or , °enactors for building the Leavenworth, Pawnee inducements held out by the Federal Govern- And NI relent Railroad, now called the Union Pa- Ment might draw into its military seri ice theeon iw , relic Hallway, Eastern Division. entire able-bodied population of a State. as i A LL KINDS that the whole might be drafted. Wo tiro not L - 1,- to deny the existence of a power because ii • OP may possibly be unwisely exorcised, nor are we to presume that abuses will take place. Especially aro we not at liberty to do so in th. ; BOOTS SHOES AND GAITERS I , case, in view of the fact that the Gen era] Government is under Constitutional , . obligations to provide for the common defense ; of the country, and to guarantee to each State a republican form of government. That would be. to Impose a duty, and dopy the power to ' perform it. These are all the objections, deserving of i notice, that bare been used against the power of ' Congress to compel tho oomplainents into mili tary service in thearmy. I know of no others of any importance. They utterly fail to show that . there is anything in either the latter or the I spirit of,- the constitution to restrict the I power to "raise armies," given generally, I to any particular mode of exercise. For the reasons given, then, I think the provisions of I the act of Congress, under which these tom- i plainants have been enrolled and drafted,' , mast he held to be such as it is within the cue- 1 still:atonal power of Congress to enact. it follows that nothing has been done, or le pro- ; posed to be done by the defendants. that is contrary to law, or prejudicial to the right! of the complainants. An attempt was made on the 11 , 211t111111L to maintain that theta Fieldstone of the act of Congress which allow a drafted man to com mute by the payment of 8300 aro in riolation lof the constitution. But this is outside of the 1 eases before us. By these provisions the cora- I plainants are not injuriously affected, and the hills do not eomplain of anything done, or pro posed to be done under them. It to the ooni- I 'misery service which the plaintiffs resist; I they do not complain that there is a mode provided of ridding themselves of It. It it ho conceded Congress cannot provide for commu tation of military service, by the payment of a ' stipulated sum of money, or cannot do it In the way adopted in this enactment, the eon- i cession in no manner affects the directions given for compulsion into service. Let It bo : that the provision for commutation is wine th- I prized, throe for enrolment and draft are such I as Congress had power to enact. It is well I settled that part. of a etattito may he unoonsti- : tational, and the remainder in force. Ibyno I means, however, moan to be understood as I conceding that any part of this ant is uncen- I stitutlonal. I think it. might easily bo shown 1 that every part o! it is a legitimate exercise of the power vested in Congress, but I decline to discuss the question, because it is not raised by the eases before us. Nor while holding the opinions expressed, that no rights of the complainants ere unlaw fully invaded or threatened, le it necessary to consider the power or propriety of interfe rence by this !mum, on motion, to enjoin fed eral oiliest: against the performance of a duty imposed upon them in plain tones by an act of Congress. Upon that subject I express no opinion. I hare said enough to show that the complainants aro not entitled to the injunc tions for which they ask, and I think they should be denied, . - - PUBLIC VrEITICIES. s .uricE.—A meeting of the Brick- Nero' Untnn will be to.lll on Tlll:y.s7tA . FY F."; I hltl, o'clock, In the XL HNOI N Ili/VFW, Ire In .trey{. rt o2 l ny nriler nr TUE riii•liorgit ; Ontulot 97th, Vat N HI,N FOB Till It'rEN •. , t9 Pinvrro EUTlO ns of this Orrm play, to eerie h for the involnit year, will be lial4 st.lte W Othoe, I. Bags olin Must, on 1111.11,LiAlf, her tOth, between Ihe hours of 11 m. and Ip. m. VINNEY, Sectvtaty. °met) Wtositirrocoutccs Comossy, Pittsburgh, Oct6her kith, filtEmAN ghlieTlON roa DIRECTOL a c mcpil. „ , be bold at It. No. 92 Wider MI tIDA Y, November 10th, lift, ltdor 1 s. tn. and 9p. «mos tr. AL 00110071, LANK 1411 . Neil, im -I: 1 00 bble. Perron* eons' Flattened 01), VAT plied ter between this and the Sliflth but. nolO DION 1Y fn. _ K ..; .~.z w... ..h - t - McClelland's Auction House, 66 FIFTII STREET VERY Cli EA P.—We have on hand. at present. a very large and well iwlected sbwk. of BOOTS AND SHOES, which am bought before the late advance on goods, and we will give our custom n, the benefit of low price.. \Tr have4he latest and most fashionable idyl. of Gentlemen's, Ladies', Miser.', Roy.' and Children's BOOTS, GAITERS, BALMOILtLS, SLIPPERS, BUFFALO SHOES, P AND GEMS, Of every elan and description. Call and examine. Country merchants will find it to their advantage to give ns a Lil. JOB. IL BORLAND, 98 MARE ET STREET, doer (rum rum. H . O EVERY BODY BOUND TO BEAT t WANT aV MORE! But coma to th• FINLEY VILLE STORE, When, you can buy mom for your mcooy than any other place. From this limo Ito aro datortoioed to give eatisfaatima to .11 who may favor tts with a call N (-166-ri! MISS SHANNON, 11.1. FEDERAL STREET, Allegheny, bas jnat rerelved Large assortment of MILLINICIVY GOODS, o,oe4ting of BONNETS. lIATS, RIBBONS, BON• NET PATTERNS, etc., which Me 1.111 be pleased to shot, her friends and onstontere. Coll sod examine - - T u I'IIOI,STERING, or ALL ITS iiii.ANC.ll- Fa—Having purchased • large clock of goods fur cash, we are able to offer great bargains at ex tremely low prices. A great variety..a BLINDS, TALL AND FLOOR OIL CLOTII, EMBOSSED TABLE COVEILS ,• ADFLADE, GRASS mid MANIL LA- BORDERED MATS, CARPET BINDINGS. and every variety of goods kept In Wag es, We invite the attention of tho public gettentliffb oar ant "- nirted clock. All orlon promptly attended tn. Please eve us a rill at IT:. FEDERAL Allegheny, (house formerly occupied In Mr. Semple.) na:lw BAJO/Ell bi /DLO. N - EW BOOKS! NEW BlX)KS! D.aing and Puffednit. A history of the Great Railroad Adventure In Geor)ria, Ly Lieut. William Pitt Auger. I vol. Beyond the Lima : or, Ali sakes , Prisoner L•swe in Dixie. Mareel's New Book—')le l'llren of 1 sul my. 71 - ho Last Time, by sebnk. Wendell Ph Epee. brawl Leo Orr. 'Our Sunday Seltuol. And lbw Is. new tagaiill jns, nu) J. L. MAIL TN roarth street. IK EL'S NE W 800 K -Mv Vann .1 Sdirevrood. A countr, book 5 k Reveries ots Bachelor. Nost and beam WI IlreAm Life. A tam and boscrilful PLillp isua Arteirel4e. By Henry Te,ylor tU Peter earindlue. Oarolloo eLvadoebro FA) Broken Oulumsa. A wow naval . . . Our Old Home. D 7 Etawthorus 1 25 Tooesant L'Ororture of tiaytL A Blography... The Black 11., his Ardeosdents and las 001114, 1 00 The Ambor Gods. By Barden Pre5c0tt..........1 XI itheke's Meditattoas uu Ufa. 1 25 Preedout and War. By Hoary Ward Beecher... 1 10 The Ring, of Amasle. By IL Bitterer Lytton... 1 (.0 The Old Merchants of how York. 2d series.... 1 50 The Dead Shot. A book for Sportsmen 1 22 nue Ureat Bloat *IA of Nature. By Armed... 1 25 Fur WtP , AY 4 CO., 5 _Wood .üb.t. DEWING I BELTING I—Loather am JP" Our Belthsp; also Lace Leather, Elude, alit aye yk bead add for ell.ataketefu prkts, by U. UILLIPS, 040 NM >A and 'Mgt. aalretreet. :IrEIIr.ID.r.E#ALSE.MEXTS.; vralfir jar witgszarjurrs 10 4 " ) 61 TtVE ~ FOF TE. COIRIFI,trtE.r: • - Ntorrs party ALF. BURNETT. The worll.reuowned HUMORIST. will Kly, two of ial /al Irrtn laments at CI)N CECIZT 13_4..L. On WEDNESDAY and THURSDAY EVENISGS.Nor. 11th And 19th prograwn. connted & Melange, of Mirth Oratory, Mimicry, Laughable Dellurationiof Char- er, 11c.utital rmtic Gma,, Comic Sperotes, Old Men, Tour: Men, Dutch, 17ankee, French and VaritrilogniAl Imitatiotu Admission 25 CENTS. Doors open st.GX, eom- Mance at 7X o'clock. no10:3t 11.31. STEPHENSON. Agent_ AA N OIiDINA,NCE to authorize the Grading of Ridge street. Sac. 1. Be ordained had resoled by the &fed 4. 1 Common (bundle of the City of Alkybosy, usul if le herby actiniumt owl otocfel Go the authority of the .area That the Committee en Streets be and they are here by authorized and directed to invite and receie prce posala for the grading of Ridge meet, from Irwin avenue to Cloutier* atrootOtt the Fleet Ward, and to contract therefor with the Iliwest and brat bidder or bidders. at their discretion. Sec. 2. That for the purpose of defraying the CONt and expenses of the said improvem be equally ents, there be. etud• is hereby levied, a special tax. to ooae.ard up,n the several lots bounding and abutting npon the maid street reepeerively, In propmtion to the Pet front In them r.pectively comprised, and !mending and abutting as aforesaid. Sze. 3. That as soon as the cost and ellen... of wild improvement , . shall ee folly ascertained, It shell be the deity of the Street Commissioner to 611116.11 bad apportion the same among the several lots bounding and abutting upon said street respectively, according to the rule shore intik:Med, and thereupon proceed to make demand and collect the mum, according to the provisions of the Act of the Gontral Assembly of the Commonwealth of Pcnnaylvania, rdlithd ein Act defining the manner of collecting tittOsespensea of grading and paring of the streets and alley. of Ihe Ity of Allegheny, and for other purposes, • - paaacal the day of Verdi, 1E74. Sec. 4. That so much of eny Ltdinance na may ev ince with, or be impelled by'the foregoing, la end the swim to hereby repealed. Ordained and ermeted Into h law, this the 511, day of November, A. D. JAMES MARSIIALL, President of the Selec . t t`ouocil. SYLVESTER BA it Ii ER President, pro Pol., of the Comman teunrn. Attest 1.. kta, 'moms, Clerk of the Select Conncil. 51. McGoss [eke. (lark of Ito Common e,uncil. nointit - - --- AORDINANCE eotabliehing the rate of Wboot.,-e and regulating the landing of Petroleum, Caries and Cool SEC. 1. Et• ft ordeMed and enacted by the &led and Clorvesoe Cooed. e the Oily of Allegheny, and d is hereby ordanond and enacted by the authority of the some, That from and after the peeress of this ordinance all Petroleum, Carbon or Coal 01l landed or platad on the Allegheny Wharf, In front of the city, shall be charged at she rate of one rent per barrel, If permit ted to remain on said wharf ken than forty-eight hour., and mu—half cent per barrel for each unli t:onel te - enty-four hours thereafter. dec. 2- It shall be unlawful for toy person or per sons to land in bulk at the wharf any boat or boats containing any kind of 00, at any point opposite the city or above the Stagnation or federal Street (fudge.and any pereon or per offteading against the Pio , Oslooe of the foregoing dull. upon conviction be fore the the Mayor or ono of the Aldermen of the city, forfeit and pay for the use of the city. a fine of not tees than $5O or more than $100; owl In men of neglect or refusal to remove the CLIIIT edditional flue of $OO shall be imposed upon the odendurs for roc . i, and orory twelve hours the Lazae may remain at the wharf. Br, 3. That no boat containing Petroleum, Coal or Carbon Oil. In balk, shall be permitted to recant at the wharf bee... we !Suspension Brid a e and above the outlet Lode for • period of more than forty-eigh; hours, under a penalty of ten dollars ($10,) fur each and every twelve hours. Ordained and enacted into a law, this tho oth day of November. A. 17. l&gl. JANIS MARSHALL, President of the Select STITESTIR BARKER, Preardent, pro tem., of the Common COnbril Attest D. Maerraann, Clerk of the Select Connell. M. hicaosatotr, Clerk of the Common Council. 3 1, , ,9:3% _ _ _ TN ITED STATES TAXES.-The-an ll naal Assessment List, for 1063, containing Taxes on Incomes, Licenses, Slicer Plate and Car riagre, No.l of the Twenty-third Collec tion District of Penn's, comprising that part of Al legheny county north 'of the Allegheny and Ohio ricers, has been received, and the undersigned will attend at his °Mee, No. 07 Water street, Allegheny, (met door to the Cite Trrantrer,),lther la person or by Deputy, until fIATURDLY, the, 14th day November, for the purpose of recelviog said Taxes. Ile will also attend In person or by 'Deputy, for the cooTenletwo of Tex Peyote, et the following to wit: At Tarantula, at the house of Bezeklab Veritine, on FRIDAY, Nov. 6th, between the home of a a. m. and 3 p. to. of that day. At Bakerstown, at the honee of 'lts. 'Hockey. on TULSDAT, the 10th of November, from 8 o'clock a. m. w 3 &ob.& p. m. of that day. At dewickley, at the store of John Way, on TIIBEFIDAY NYUNING, the 12th day of November, from T to 9 o'clock of that day. The ten per cent. and other penalties prescribed In the Excise Lew, which will he incurred after the 14th, wilt be strictly enforced in allows. Government Funds only DA rece Vl ived. D N. Il'.ll /SE, Collector of the District, Penn's. oc3l:2wdewT -- -- -- --,,-- AN AliY hi 16. v . id P. i .. . • STLICA... ..... .....—.4 9 . 50 fitP ALtram•—........_31.50. St. LOUIS. MO, Pm Ox.. Ism.— 130. Lisa --. .01. \L A. 45. MAG 5.1,........... . .01 WArea—.....--16.40. Having awsspted the Agency for the sale of the SEMPLE CLAY, mined near St. Lords, Mo., 1 in vite the ettention of Ohm and Steel Manufacturers to the Analysts given above, en reported by Prob. A. A. Hays, of Boston, and J. C. Booth, of Philadelphia, which, together with the trot of actual experience by manufacturer. In Pittsburgh, Cincinnati and R. Lout., determines it to be the purest and most valu able Clay now known, whether Foreign or American. Pots mule from it have stood In the Wass Furnace from tly to 9 wonting. The Analysis L. of the Clay ea taken fro, the mine, without any washing or preparation whatever. 1, pommel; greet adhesiveness and plasticity qualities, which are net shown by the Analysis, and which ad crilt of the mixture of a large proportion of shell or burned clay. J am now preparecPto 811 orders for Ora above Cl, to ho chipped Limn St. Lords or delivered here. so. in swore risszr, ell, ft ALISUIIII OVER 100 DrYEIIIMn STYLES, FROM 50 CENTS TO 615, TOR SitLIC BY CHAS. C. MELLOR, Sl, WOOD STREET . _ HATS AND CAl'l4l :: Of MK' style • I.Amtc,+ . Of dairy khr toil gratify. LADIES' AND MISS S' HATS ! EMI DY WEIOI,LI/.LI /0 , 1:D ELTAIL, AT MOOORD, & .00. 1 8, 131 WOOD STREET. !`EN ERALThREIGN AGENCY AUSTIN smaArrff & co., 72 ISROADW-AY;srw YORK. Ribtittxtucts at ley ratan un Grest.Britato, Ireland, dr. Map poooor froro Lcerpool or, Quorusioral. Porkvos S.,rxonled to .I Lports of tho,wotinl. WILLIAM BrNctuic Jr., Aped, oc2l:3insud Adana' Szpre . es 019ce, Fitt burgh, DESTISTRY, DH. W.. Q. VI33ID&NILEI3O Bat rcitam . ol the prietiee of bill profecaioo, at N 0.112 PENN STEZET, too &oral:okm Pitt Pittgairsb. October 80 s 1851, FOR Mids. TWO az,commtAzakintqms. Ons Ir. inch foot itnAs, One T inch - so se - • Fans net of Batas Too,tookivt cheap kw wax. • EL NUM . we lU,POSIO. retEL. , NE ,,,- AVVAINra - UkferVD (1C.440 'LI selected for retail Conine. for saki hs 0c26 TjYl4 Y, BEA OCta VEGETABLE am STRIP, ' rU. rui.us atketiens Of -lb. LUNGS AND THROAT, Colds, Coughs, Atlima, Croup, I:awn:a, Hoarseness, Bronchitis, Spitting of Blood, Weakness of-the Chest,lngiii. ent Cott4p . niption, Catarrhal Affee- Lions, and all diseases Or the Lung 4; Ilabiturd Costirepess, Liability to take Cold, Ha bßunl BBhominess, Rush of Bliwd: L iho Head, Dizzinesii; Pain in the Shoulderli,..Pa* un- The coughing op of a lightish phlegm, often sagiri - . tough and stringy, difficulty of breathing, ot• and, roes of breath, mid chills W tbe morning with Mlle after, limb and red cheeks on excitement, split* up of matter eutnclimea streaked with bind, ISt.' quent emaciation and debility, nosh soft . and gabby, dying pains In the chest, side ind shoulders,thosat the of coughing on awakening op In tha:nterninge, frequent attacks of the diarrhea, rains in Os bresiv' phthisie In early life. rogsrafrrroN IN ITS FUIST STAGES. NV• will guarantee it to relieve the wont COLIne or CUBE A COLD, no difterernw of bOW, Wog Kan& Inn. when used In time end according la ea dims, Dona. f .`2 Brad the following certificitm, imblistied rtoa- among many others, received daring the past taw Enowcpeanc4Jett. Sib, Isar Jobe M. Foltas.—Dearilir3 For year& jay wits has been sulieting with a very violent sough ' at she would hien to get op out of tar frequently to get her breath, or to keep front 0. rsting. Ilearing of year Cough Eyrop I determined to try it, which I did, and got a battle from lease Lewis, end owd tt eecording to directions. It gars inuneellate relief, and acted like a charm an her producing the greatest chattels on her in ens week. p roducing no more of the hand roughing 0. 11 . now, and, to feet, I may way she I, entirely cured. Respectfully, ALEX. .r. FuTion—Deer Sir For Some time I have been suffering with • revere cough and cold in the head. But after vaalug a bottle of year Vegetable Cough Syrup I was entirely cured of it. I consider it an excellent remedy, and recommend Ilia anypffr so ti with a Cough or Cold me ono of the rely b. 11.4 remedies ever discovered. Itospeethally ware t/ROBIIE W. B. COMBS. SPITTING OP I3LOO, ASTHMA. CROUP, PAIN IN THE BREAST FULTON'S COUGH SYRUP, We do not my that In all Imam It Will CIIIIS CON BUMP/19N ; no medicine can bet relied - upon to do that. Bet we do allege, and stand-reedy - to prase, that by the aid of this medlelne,contabarmith saudtery regulations, such es Minim rest, e>