PROCLAMATION OF PRESIDENT JACKSON.
105
sidered as a discreet friend to the Judiciary, I should think, who desired to embark it in this fearful strife.
I have answered this first objection, founded upon the suggestion, that the Supreme Court of the United States is the common arbiter appointed to decide all questions that may arise between a State and its co-States, touching the violation of their mutual covenant. My answer to the remaining objections I must postpone to another number.