: " --------- 1 . VOL. XXXll. WI10LK NO fltct Ihtiq, A M)(i OK PKACi:. II r W, L. SHOEMAKICa. Ob, lon will tlioii benignant Ponce ! Smile on our hopeless Innd again ? When will tho ilnua and truiunvt cen.o To call to arms each pntriot fwain ? When will tbo (word be laid aidi? Tb cannon cense black Denlh to pour? Jlic bitter tears of grief be dried, Aud hopo bo ours to faint no more ? (h, fome svreet peneo! and breathe agin , Thy bleasingn o'ur our broad domaiu ! .'0' every heart routine thy away, A(!T?f'' tn loads of war away ! The Genius of Columbia tigln To me tho lun t with dangeri rifo, And armed hosts with hobtilo cries, Rii-h to a fratricidal strife, . Fair Freedom vails her starry bead, Angry to boo her home profaned, Her Held." with blood of brethern rod, Jlcr Krearus with blood of brelborn stain'd 0, come, snoot I'cuce ! rfc. Witt vundor and with pain the world Locks on tho strife, and asks us why Tliero nro two bannors now unfurled, When only 0110 should ware on high. Alss ! when our forefathers built Our glorious Union up for us, Tliey btareo imagined then the guilt limt would our nation sever thus. Oh, eouie, tweet Pence! 4c. Ah ! sal the Hglit.anl sad the day, When first outlmr-t the fires of huto, And false uuiliittou led the way To break the bond ol'Statoto State, 0, North , South. Kimt, and West, resuiud Tin ties that tuado yo one beforo, Or Freedom's llowers no more will bloom, So time your glory will restore ! Oh, route. wool l'eace ! cc. Depth of Mines. TUB WORklNU OP THE ENUMSU MINIS. An Knir'.i.-li journal, says the Baltimore Sua, niter valuing tliC total product of the minis of Groat Britain at X 1 1, I'.tl.lOJ jut annum, n ti ' 1 computing that Englan d'i. fUiily of coal will last ut least seven hiin JrvJ years longer, :it resent rates of con wiuusion, gives tLo twllcivin dccAiint the (Jerith to width tliQ bowels of theeanli bye been pierced in England: l lie depth to which we nunc lor com LalreaJy great. Tho pit at Duokeniiold, in Cheshire, U 2,001 feet below tho sur- bee lo tho point whore it intersects the iiUck Mine Coal,' a seiini which is four feet six inches thick, and ot the. bo.-a fluid ity fur domestic and manufacturing pur t; from tkis point further depth of M leet has been attained by menus of an engine phirio in the bed of coal, ho th'it a prat portion ol lie coal is no raised li'otn (lio enormous depth of 2,511-1 feet. At rVudleton, near Manchester, coal is da:iy iwrked from a depth ot . I .'J5 feet; ami ikVC'antial coal ol igaii is brought fro ii luo feet below tho surface. Miny of the huiliuui colleries tiro equally deep, and fat more ewtended in their subterranean Lfcyiinths. Some of those, and others in Cumlcrltind, are woi ked out far under the bed of the tea ; and on both sides of tiiu island we are rapidly extending our sub oceanic burrowing. "flieDulooatli tin mine, in Cornwall, ir tow working at l.cW feet IVom tlio sur ges, n nd .is rapidly sinking deeper. 1 lio depth of Tresnvean. u copper initio, is .1,160 feet. Many other tin and copper ui i lies pre approaching these depths ; and ander the Atlantic wave, in Botallack, Levari und other mines, man is pursuing hi ialxirs daily ut half a mile from tdioie. Toiidlhe miner in these severe tusks, p'gantic steiiiu engines, with cylindor one hundred inches in diameter, are em ployed in the pumping of water from thoso vast 'Ifpihs. Winding engines, which aro mas terpieees of mechanical skill, are ever at ork raising the minerals from each dark ss, and 'man engines,' of conniderable ingenuity so called because llioy tiring lb wearied miner to tlm light of day, sti ing luni from the toil of climbing up per pendicular ladders tiro introduced in ma ii? of our inoiit j et fectly conducted mines, 'ur coals cost us annually one thousand lives, and moro than doublo that number of our iiietaliferoiis mine: perish from Kcidcnts in the luinec, or at an unusually ""lyagc, thiily-lwo, troiii diseases con Iracled by the condition of tlieir toil. I!y tli industry of our mining population Wo is annually added to out national ealth considerably more thau thirty mil lwiw sterling. This, whor. olabor ,lcd by the process of manulV.ture, is increaseil i value ten fold. While we are drawing pon that 'hoarded treasure, guarded by fgons wliito and red,' which tho en chanter Merl.n is said lo have concealed in the caves of tho ea'th, we should not waselo remember how much of nientul WiWund muscular power is expended, J how large a percentage of human life 'annually sacrificed in the contest with those hydra headed evils which nro very truly personified by tho dragons of the Ifgeud." "Enjovinu Lite." 1 must pity thai young man, who, with a littio finery of wd reeklekSness of manner, with his tOkrsa in..;,..,, ,.n .1.. I iiiiiiii 'iihice, goos whooping through the street, giving an animal much nobler in its con '"ctthan himself, or swaggers iato some unt ofshamo, nnd calls it "enjoying We!" Uo thinks hois lutoniehing tho or'J; aud ho is astonishing tho thinking fc"t of it, who are nslonishod that ha is Jt&stDiiish)d at himself. For looking lit l compound of flesh and impudenco, ?vifoii all this earth there is any (1gfiiore pitiable. Dews ho know any ""ng of tlu true joy of life T Wo might lay thai the beauty and immensity " Universe were inclosed in tho field H the prodigal son hy among tho , and the Rwine. 'miin 1ms a right to do as ho ploaso?, Hol't when ho please to do right. 1CGs7 Why did not President Buchanan Re inforce the Forts at Charleston and other Southern Cities ? lleeauso he had no moans of doing to Clon. Scott'n letter to the War Depart ment, dated 2'Jth ol October last, (about a week beforo tho I'rcsidents election, con-, tains tho following paragraph ; 'From a knowlc-dgo ot our Southern population, it is my solemn conviction that there is some danuer of an earlv act !of rashness preliminary to secession, viz : tlm seizure ol sumo or all of the following posts : Fort Jackson and St. Philip " l''o Mississippi, below New Orleans, both with out garrisons; Fort Morgan.beloiv Mobile, nunotir a garrison ; roil l icUens and Mc lien, Pensacola harbor, with an insuffi cient garrison for one; Fort Pulaski, be low Savanna!), without a garrison ; Forts Moultrie and Sumtci, Charleston harbor, the former with an insulricient garrison, the latter without any ; nnd Fort Monroe, llampton Koads, without a sufficient gar rison. In mv opinion all these works should be immediately so garrisoned ai to make any attempt to take any one of them by surprise or coup do main, ridicu lous." I Gen. Seott ho:e enumerates nine foils in six diri'erent States, all of which Forts, he. says, "should bo immediately garrison ed ;'' but ho submits no plan for tho pur pose, anil designates no troops available foi that ol ject. In a supplementary let ter written on the fjllowit. j day, Oct. oO, ho says, "Thcro i- one regular company at Boston, one hero at tho Narrows, ono at, Portsmouth, ono at Augustn, Geo., and one at I'aton Rouge;' in all,Vtf companies oi ly within t cJl'i, t ) garrison and reinforce the Forts mentioned." Five companies, containing less than 40U men, to garrison or reinibrco nino fortitications, scattered over six of tho Southern ! Nearly all of our small army was at that time stationed u:i the remuto frontiers of our extensive country, to protect the. in habit ints and emigrants against the to.n i hawk and sculping knife of tho savage, and at tlm approach of winter could not have been brought within roach, for sev '.'ial luuullis, liiey were employed ai they h.ul loon kx years. At tho period . when our foililicutions were erected, it was not contemplated that they should bo garrisoned except in the event of a for eign war, urd this to avoid the reoessity ot maintaining a hitgo standing army. No person then dreamed of danger from tho Slates. It is a remarkable fact that after several months had elapsed, and '.ho Pres ident, at the instance of Gen. Scott, had scoured the whole country for forces to protect the inajgurathn of the President Fleet, all tho troops that could bo assem bled at Washington, tank nnd lile, amount ed to but six Juindi ed and thirty. This is stated in a message of I'rciideul liueh annn to the llouso of Representatives. To have sent 400 men to Charleston af ter tho Presidential election, (Nov. t ) to parrison and defend three Forts, an arsen al, A custom bouse, navy yard and post olliee, would have only been to provoke collision. Undoubtedly the public prop erty was safer without than it would have been with a force so totally inadequate ;. and it is fair to presume that such was the President s oiunion. Jiesuics mere was a strong expression on tho pari of thoSouth ern Stales ugainst any attack by South Carolina upon the public pioperty. For this reason, it was not pontic lor mem lo mako an attack. Accordingly President Buchanan remarked in his Message to CoiiL'ress lird December lasl, "it is not behoved that ar.y attempt w:.l be made to cxia l the United S'ates from this proper- ly tiy lorce. in mio w.iu, n n,u juau Hed by the event ; as there was no troub le until after Major Ar.derso i retired from Fort Moultrie to Fort Sumter, as ho had a t iidit to do. first having spiked his own cannon and burned bis gun carriages. And suppose it should appear, as wo are inclined io think it will eventually that Col. Anderson himself after his retire ment to Fort Sumter, deemed a reinforce ment uiiadvisaUc, nnd so expressed him self to the government ? ,ould this, in addition to tho lack of troops before men tioned, justify the President (bucliaiiun) in not sending them forward 'I Wo have said that Gen. Scott's letter, was dated Oct. 12'Jth, Confess met about, five weeks afterwards, say on the 3rd of iw..mtier. umt tho Piesident in his nies- sago at tho opening of the session, callod tho attention of Congress to the subject , at much length. IIuU the ligiit which i:o then shed upon it been turned to pritcli-, oil account, and his advice been heeded, wo should havo avoided tho droadful fia-. Itricidal war that is r.ow upon us -a war which according to present api oArances, 'mV'Sf end either in final separation, or in 1 tho subjugation of eleven States to the pow cr or twenly-tliroo. "tir unim cm-i-a would have been healed and our Union preserved on its original basU lie how ever committed tho whole subject lo Con Kfss, declaring his readiness to exocuto the laws, to thf extent of tho power con , ferrcd upon him ; ut tho samo timo decla ring tho existing laws wholly inadequate to meet the exigencies growing out ot tho secession of a State or St ates : "It is thereforo my duty to submit to Congress tho whole question in nil its bearings. The coniso of events is so rap idly hastening forward, that the emergen cy may soon arise when yon may be called upon to decide tho momentous question whether you possess tho power, by force of arms, to compel a State to remain in ' tho Union. Hut Congress did nothing. Weekoftcr ! week and month after month passed away, ! but they did nothing. Tlioy refused to I adopt any measuros of conciliation ivor 1 thy of tho name-lhoy also refused to 1 pass a Coercion law. Congress continued session until the expiration or lru-i-dent Uuchanaii's term of service and Hie ! inauguration of his successor. As they did not sco lit to excrciso their powers, so PRINCIPLES, not CLEARFIELD, PA. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 28, 1361. neither did he see fit to usurp them. Thus the whole matter remained in abey ance; for tho bitter feeling towards tlie South so persi.-tently manifested by the dominant party, in Congress and through the pulpit and press, discouraged tho U tiion men of the South, while it encoura ged and exasperated the Secessionists When that session of Congress onened. and for seventeen days afterwards, the U nion was unbroken, no State having yet seceded. When closed, (:jd of March last,) seven largo States had declared themselves out of tho Union, ii : South Carolina, Georgia. Florida, Alabama, Mis sissippi, LouL-iunna, and Texa Alltlus was done while Congress was in session, ami w hile President liuchaiian was await ing its action, whether for conciliation or coercion. In the meantime he more than once, if wo recollect right, pressed the subject upon their attention, but without effectcertainly without any good effect. With what justice, then, can he be held responsible for l he noil exercise of pow ers which he did not possess, and which congress uiu not see lit to conler upon him! Much less is by resporsib'e for their haughty bearing toward i tho South, and tlieir determination apparently, to Lave nothing eti'octual done, either by way of conciliation or coercion, until the President elect should come into power. Thus the revolution was left to drift on j unobstructed for several mouths ; and not only unobstructed, but aggravated by the neglect of Congress to do anything by' way ot removing or relieving the grievan ces complained of. Tho rest is too fresh in the remembrance of our re iders to re quire repetition. President Lincoln suc ceeded io a legacy wh ich he might well have desired to nIiiiii, and for a few weeks pursued very nearly the same course which had been marked out by his prede cessor, liut his party would not stand it. Thcro came down from the North and Northwest an avalar.che of public senli- inent in favor of active meisures for 'on- fore. ng the laws,' (i. e. for making war . upon the South,) that bo was at length constrained to yield. J ho tirsl slop, win, I has been petitioned lor by a lurger nur.i to send an expedition to Charleston liar- j ber of electors of the United States, than bor, for the relief, and probably tor the any proposition that was ever before Con reinforcement of Fort Sumter. That was gross. 1 believe in my heart, to-day, that the inauguration of a war policy on tbo ( it would carry an overwhelming majority part of tho Government, and was so un- : of the pocplo of my Slate ; ay, sir, and of derstood on all sides. Nobody imagined nearly every other Stale in the Union. that South Carolina, lifter what had occur- J JUforu the Senators from the Siaic of Misnimjipi red,' would allow Sumter to bo reinforced, lii this VhaniLcr J heard one if than, uh, now or even provisioned, if bIio could prevent ' uuuuu'J at leiist to be 1 'resilient of the Oonthcrn it. When theGnvernnicnt sent that expo.. Conjideracy. propose to accept it and to dilion.thoy must have fully expocted that uamtain the 1'iwm if that jiroposition could rc it would precipitate an attempt to cap-1 cticc the cote it i.ujlu to receiccfrom the other ture the Fort, on tho part of South Car- side of this chamber . l'herefore, of all your olina. And they were not disappointed. 1 propositions, of all your amendments, The attempt was made and succeeded. - knowing as I do, and knowing that the Fort Sumter was captured, to prevent its histoiian will write it down at any time lefure being reinforced. The American Hag was the 1st of Janun, a tumtliirds cote for the IriU lowered, and the garrison surrendered as teuden resolution in this Chamber would hare prisoners of war. This wus enough. Tho saved ccery State in the Union but , South taro llamo ol patriotism, mingled with some Una. other flames, was kindled throughout tho Mr. Togh said this in tho hearing of land. President Lincoln issued his ploo- Seward, of Wado, of Fesscudcn, of l iuni- lumatinn calling for T-"i. voluntoeis to defend the capital, A'C. This alarmed the border Slates, ami scon Virginia, North Carolina, Tennessee and Arkansas, decla red themselves out of the Union, and uni ted their fortunes with the Southern Con lederacv. Proi,arations for war nere prosecuted with vigor on both sides to day two great .rniies confront and each other, with every prospect of a speedy and Carolina. I firmly oclteve it would. While terrible conflict," which, however it" may the C. itlend'en Proposition was not in ae result, will be but tho beginning of a cordanco with my cherished views, I struggl" of which no man can forseo tho avowed my readiniss to accept it, in order end. Journal oft .'omweree. , to save the Union, if we could unito up rrtoTt'T An.ussT tut War. tho Iowa AV'iV Journal (Republican) s:iys: . " The blows dealt by the Administration to punish disloyally a:e most tearlul in their recoil. The loyal North west is be ing ruined by tho measures taken to har riiss and disturb the eounl.ry of the South ern Mississippi. Whether tho adminis trillion knows it or rot is it nuestion some- liodv else mu t answer. Wheat in ibis cily, of a good merchantable quality, will not bring twenty cents per bushel; corn has bet'Ti sold nnd delivered one hundred miles east of us l.ir seven cents per bushel, and s.ill down, down, is the fearful ten- ,l0 : .iKvnvs nimearo! io us that the ' . itn,'nirv w in drain the South of fniiviip it. Iw-r-,. I "The loyal Northwest ami the disloyal ' South feel alike the ellocts of the blow. Tho last stimulated to greater endeavors, ' nv broad acres, and lives while v Ian-1 cuish. We can tell the "blood invoking' ' advocates of this war that the "plain men'.'cpt it. I of Mr Lincoln's administration are becom- These declarations forever settle the ii,., n'.iiiunil I icv see ruin and flosola- lion staring them in the face. They seo adoption of the Cr.ttenden Compromise that every avenue which has hitherto br't would have saved the Union and proserv them wealth choked up-more, thee seo cd the public peace. W hat a leiilbla evidences of the amwiiM orthis war, and all mistake was its rejection . f.i i ,i,i; wou ',.ii n luinnwi. 1 Wo arc now embrfiiled :n an extensive n,.a l,nimiinii to think. Fiom everv hill" (opof Iowa tbo cry will soon come "Peace, 'attempt being made by the majority ol take oil' restrictions . unlock the channels ' Congress to settle tho dilhculty peaceably or Undo give us life and peace." We 1 and amicat ly. Many propositions wero know it-we state noiliimj from hearsay j made in ihe last Congress, but they gener .' ., ..?...., i . i. . Lii, ..ill,,, p (V.siii Hie Soul hern men or coniecture: it is me nionoiouo oi um peoplo which willbecomo stronger with the need. Tho Missnsippi river must bo openod and tho Northwest saved." j 5JTho contractors who h ive furnished blankets to tho Government for our sol diers, says tho Philadelphia Jnpnrcr, have realized the handsome littio profit of two iii;ni:ifi tiioi sanu dollars. A correspon dent of tho Cincinnati Commercial states one of tho sons of Secretary Cameron is said to havo made rbout fllO.OOO on n sin gle horso contract. Cay-A husband or o wifooannot witness for or against each other, though a wife sometimes gives evidence of the bad tasto. of the husband m solectmg nor. It is dull and hurUul ploasutcto have to . I : i .1.. do Willi people w iiu arp' uvu ui uu nu v. or say. MEN. Froui the Ciucinnati Enquirer. WHEBE THE KESPONSIBILITY o. BESTS. Would the South have Accepted the Crit tnuleri- Compromise An Jin port ant ' Irflosition directly to a vote of the peo Jig, of Political JJistoru. M "j"l ollored by him, and J . ,,,. subsequently when ottered by Mr. Critten- s. 1-NbiAxoioLis, July 30, 1C1. den. Mr. Adams, a Kepiiblicao member To Ihe Editor of the Kn'Mircr : I haveneeu a statement in the Knqui rer, copied ju lo the Sentinel, of this cily, that the Southern Secessionists, as repre sented by their leader-.Jefferson i)avis and ltobeijt Toombs were willing to lake the ,Uirt'rlwHoiiixiUimi!iJast winter, and save the Union, but liie ltepublican Senators refused to adopt that mcasuro, und hence our present troubles and disas ter. 1 ii is statement is vehemently dc- nicu ny my Jiepuuncan lrienus. iliey jinore been any ellort made since. Presi say that the cotton States headed by ia- dont Lincoln, it is true, recommended in vis and Toombs would not take that bis Inaugural Address, a Geuerul Conven compromise, and that no proof can bo j lion of the States to proposo amendments given that they would. Several of litem to the Constitution. This scheme was vo. admit that if ttrt would haoc taken it, a ter- , ted for rent ntlv in the llouso of Reprc lible responsibility rests upon the Kcpub- sentatives, by all Ihe Democratic and Un licans lor refusing it, und they decline ion members, with Crittenden at tlieir they w ill never support that parly heieat- ter if it can be shown by documentary ev idence. Can you give mo any additional particulars of tho circumstances under which Mr. Douglas bore the testimony which you published in the Enquirer a few days since, ii, rcforenco to tho nil lmgniss of the South to take the Critteu- dvii Compromise if DEMOCRAT. Wo Inn'o before us the VvnoMsivnal G'i'ie (tin AnpenilLc for the Session of lMjl) unu inui. ii our corrcspouociii win lurn , to tho Ctmyrctoiimul (ilLc of March II, ' 1.-61, he will find in it u debate in the I Senate, of March '2, upon ihe Corwin Re- oluliou to aiiieud the Cons itulion of the j United States. In tho (bourse of tho do- j bate, Senator George E. Fugh said : j "I he Crittenden piopo.-ltiou has been endorsed by the idmos'. unanimous vote of the Legislature ot Kentucky. It has the been endorsed by the Legislature of nob'e old Cou iiiouwoaUh of Virginia It Lull, ol all the Republican Senators, and not one denied the truth of his assertion Mr. Douglas heard it, and confirmed its truth thus. We quote Irom the Globe re port of tho discussion, of March 2. Mr. Douglas said : 'The Senator has said, that if the Crittenden propusitii ii could huee passed early in the session, U would hace sancd all the Slates except South o;l ;0 , iias labored harder than 1 ! have to get it passed. J can am firm the ,V ator's declaration, tlwl Snal. itor Dacis himself, whenonthe Committee of Thirteen, was ready at all times to compromise, di the Crittenden (,. R. Early was nominated by acclamation. pr;jiosition. I will go further and say thai j The convention then proceeded to bal Mr. Toombs was also." lot for the other candidate, and on the This makes the matter beyond dispute, - V2li ballot, K. J. Nicholson of Jefferson that the South would have taken the Crit- , county, having received 7 votes, wus de louden Compromise as a final setlement of clared duly nominated. all our dillieultie". wc win go iiirmer, however, ami adduce the testimony of Stnator Toombs, of Georgia, himself. In his speech in the United Stales Senate, ' on the 17th January, 1S01, he said : , liut, although I insist upon tho period .. . . . I eoualltv. vet wuen 11 was proposed as i , umlersiand the Senator from Kentucky now proposes that the line of liO".'!'!' shall I bo exte nded, ackliowleding and protecting our properly on the south side of tho line, Tor t lio ssko of peace. 1 said to the Com-1 mittee of Thil leen, and 1 say here, with other satisfactory provision-, I would ac- question, US a po'.ni oi insiory, unit ino and dreadful civil war, without mi v real miji i - or from orthern Democrats, and were all m ..etei bv ll. o liepuniieans, wunoui whoso assent nothing can bo dono. The proposition of Mr. Crittenden was, as we all know, rejected by this party. Then Mr. Ethcridgj, one of the most resolute of the Union men of the South, and who is now Clerk of tho llouso of Representa tives, chosen by the Republicans, dralted some resolutions of com promise, which was known as the border State Comprom ise, ''"his compromiso tho Republicans rejected. It was not satisfactory to the Cotton States, but it would havo kept all tho P i lor States in tho Lnion, and m Umt cciit the Cotton Mates could not 1, pr.imiriPil lont out o It. Mr. L0UC- Ill'.VU -" o - . Pi, introduced a very excellent scheme of adjustment that would have satisfied Vir- ,,; a and a the Jiordor niaies. inis me j.. Jillliu .,i - - - - Republicans would not accept. 1 hey would TERMS NEW not accept the proposition of tho Peace Conference Congress. No votes were giv en for it except Northern Democrats and Southern Bordor State men. Mr. Iiis-lor's proposition, to submit the Crittenden from Massachusetts, now Minister to Knit land, hail a jdun of compromise, but his own party voted that down. Kven the constitutional amendment of Mr. Corwin, which provided only w hat is now in the Constitution, tlmt Congress should not in terfere with slaery in the .States, was voted against by more than half tho Republican? in the House. Our correspondent will toe, therefore, that no attempt was made last Winter tri settle thiinrs licaeenl lv nor line j head, but the llopubliean majority voted it down. Thus we are in a bloody and expensive war, because the Kt j ublican politicians would not allow the question in dispute lo be buttled by a fair compromise. 'They have evinced wretched statesmanship, and we fear their patriotism is but little better. There is not one of the comnrom- , ises we have mentioned, that tho iicoi.le j would not have sanctioned by an immense . uia.ieriiy, lor mo saKo ot national unity and peace. Tho people understand very well, that in this extensive country, with 'its vmyiag interests and local prejudices, tliero nuicl neccssaiily bo compromises, j in order to keep every thing smooth and iii older. It is extremely unlortunate j that a party opposed to any compromise, .opposed to even having a conference with tho South in a Geuerul Convention- to see w hat can be done, is in power. Shrewd Adtninisti ions gain more by the ptn than by tho swoid. From the Klk County Advocate Democratic Legislative Convention. in pursuance of a resolution passed at the convention held at Ridgway, August lSlid, the representative Conferees of the counties of Clearfield, Jefferson, Klk and McKcun, met at St. Marys on Thursday, August 1;'), for the purpose of nominating suitable persons to represent the district in the legislature. The convention was oiganizod by select ing Gkokue Weis, Esq., President, and J. Ii, Oviatt ami Lever Flegal, Secretaries. Tho following persons presented tlieir credent als and wero admit tied us dele gates : Clearfield Lever Floral, Matthew Og don and Dr. T. J. liny or. Jotlersoii John Conrad, II. Kretz nnd Lorenzo Ilaskill. Elk George Weis, Charles Luhr nnd J u litis Jones. MoKcan Seih A. Packus and J. Ii. Oviatt. On motion, the delegates from MoKcan were allowed to cast thrco votes in the convention. The convention ias addressed by Mes srs. liackus, lioycr nnd Conrad. On motion, the convention proceeded to make nominations. Mr. Conrad nominated R. I. Nicholson. Mr. Luhr nominated Di. C. R. Early. Dr. lioycr nominated Jas. II. Larrimer. The convention then proceeded to ballot. Dr. Early had (i votes, las, II. Larrimer had 3 votes. R. J. Nicholson had o votes. There being no choice, fin motion, Dr. un motion, me nomination was matto unanimous. Dr. Early, being called on, addressed the meeting in a spi; itod nnd patiiolic man- iicr. He was lollowed ly Mnj. Nicholson both speakers pledged tliemselvcs to use l . . .... . i ... l... mtir oesi enoris io omi- uoout un uonoi- able peace. On motion of Dr. lioyer. a committee of one from each county was appointed by the Piesident to draft resolutions: Dr. T. J. Iloyer, Selh A. liackus, John Conrad and Julius Joi es were appointed said committee. un inoiion, it was resolved llial tho next representative convention be held at the iiurougu oi -i. iu,u j -, un mu tnuu i nuia- tiay oi Augiisi i.-o. I he committee on resolutions, throuidi tlo'ir chairman, Dr. lioyer, reported the following, which were unanimously adop ted : liesoloed. That it is the imperative duly of eveiy lover of the country of Washing ton, of every age, sex and condition, to stand decidedly for peace, to stay the fan aticism of the hour, which must crush the hopes and extinguish the brightest sun in the constellation ol'govcriiuieiits ; tocoun cil moderation, arbitration, compromise showing by unequivocal nets that the in terests of the South shall be equally safe in nil their extensions in the luture while wo havo tho supremacy of power, as ours were in the past when they bail the as cendancy , and in the parting words of the Father of his country, ' Frown indig nantly upon the tiisl dawning of every attempt to alienate one portion of the country from the other, or to dissolvo the political bonds w hich unilo us a ono peo ple," knowiug no North, no South, no East, no West, but uniting in one common brotherhood, in tlm spirit ot compromise, thecutiro combined interests of men. Resnl'fd. That tho courngo and patriot ism manifested by our bravo ami loyal cit izens in responding to tho call for 7.JKH! men to dcl'cn I tho Capitol is woi thy ol $1 25 per Annnm, if paid xn advance SERIES VOL. J I. NO G. our most profound approbation and re flects lasting credit to those brave spirits, liut that wo most solemnly, nnd in the name of humanity, justico and Christian ity, protest against tho late acts of the ad ministration which haw for their object the subjugation of tho South, nnd the be trayal of our brave soldiers into acts of lawlessness find opposition to tho princi ples and feelings which actuated them in tlieir inarch for the defence of tho nation al capilol. Jic.tolccJ, That with nil good citizens wo deeply deplcre tho recent slaughter of Americans in Virginia. Wo pily . the Northern widow and the Northern orph an ; we pity the Southern widow and tho Southern orphan ; und wc swear ugain, that wo will stand together, and strive by the use of all honorable means to bripg about peace, ami restore to their friends our young men now sickening from the t ll'ects of a Southern summer. llesoleed, That tho threats of Abolition ists pass us like the idle winds, which wo regard not. Wo nro frecuicn American citizens, and wo will protect ourselves, nnd each other, in tho exercise of the rights of American citizens to tho last extremity, ami with our lives, if need be. Jlet.uleed, Thai, in tho language of Sena tor Douglas, in his lato speech in the Sen ate, we "don't undeistand 'now a man can claim to be a friend of tho Union, nnd yet bo in favor of war upon ten millions of people in the Unicn. It cannot be cover ed up much longer under the pretext of love lor the I uion. "Win is Disr.Mo.v, Cfiitain, Inevitahi.e, Final AND I KHKl'AR MILE." Jirsrlred, That wo are in favor of a spee dy settlement of the present difficulty by compromise. Ji'isolred, That when ono section of our country shall have been subjugated by tho other, Ve have already become the slaves of a military despotism. Jt'e.-olced, That we ai a ready to defend freedom of speech and of the pros, against tbopo who havo tried hard to suppress theso constitutional rights. Jlesolccd, That wherein the Chief Ma gistrate of the iiatiop has failed lo admin ister the government agreeable to the Con stitution of the United States ho is deser ving the rebuke of every good citizen. Jtesolced, That the small patriot band of Senators and representatives in the late extra session of Congress, who dared to maintain the mlegiity of tho Conslitnliot', under the menaces of expulsion and inv. prisoninent, are entitled to tho gratitude of every Ameiican citizen; and impartiul history will award them su enviable dis tinction. Jicsolvrd, That the persistent determine ntion of tho majority of the members of the late extra session of Congress to frown flown every ir ensure that hail for its ob ject the peaceftd adjustment of our nation al difficulties, indicates a fanatical mania that, would havo much belter became tho crusaders of centuries gone by, than the reprrsent itives of a free, intelligent and christian people ol tho nineteenth cciitu ry. Jlesolcd, That the candidates nomina ted this evening, lr. 0. R. Early and Mnj. R. J. Nicholson, arc worthy of the support of every democrat, nnd tlu.t wo pledgo them our determined support nt tho Oc tobor election. On motion, Jlesoked, That theso pro racdings be pullished in the Democratic papers of the district. The Convention then adjourned. GEO. WEIS, President. J. 15. OviATT, Lever Fi.lual, Secretaries, Oi'R Classic Battle Fields, In tho his tory of this country wo havo had three wars and one rebellion the present still existing eonllict. Many nnd glorious have been tho battles, nnd chivalrous the deeds that marked the war of the revolution, the war of 1 S 1 2, and the conquest of Mex ico, and it may bo curious to contrast tho names by which the battles of these three epoch are know n, with tho names of tho principle conflicts in the present war. Tho euphony of tho former contrasts strongly witb the unpleasant sound of the latter. In tho revolution we had such battles as those of Lexington, York town, and Saratoga- In 1812 wo rend ef tho contests at Chippewa, Quccnstnwn, New Orleans, and Wadunsburg. In the Mex ican war tho liquid Spanish tonguo fur-ni.-hed such names as Molina del Roy. iluf iui Vista, Chnpiiltepcc. Chcrubusco, and Reseca do la Pal run, us the scones of great battles, liut in the present war we caiiuol soar any higher in the realms of euphony than Bull Run, liig Bethel, Scary Creek, Dug Spring, Hoke Run, Bull Town and I'tg Point. Alas, for our present clas s;c batilo-lields. A'. Y.llcraid. I ii r at Niuiit. Look out for your boys, fathers and mothers, when night comes. There is nothing more ruinous to their mo rals than running abroad at thnt tiuiiv Un der the cover of 1U1 kiiess they acquire the education ol crime ; they learn to be rowdyish, if not absolutely vicious ; they catch up loose talk, th.'y hear sinful thoiigts, I hoy seo absene things, they be came reckless and rio.ous. If you would save them from dissipation, save them from prison, see lo it that night find.s them homo. Jessie Fklmom'. Privido loiters from General Fremont, siys tho Trdmne, speak of tho great as.-istance w hich his w:fe, "Jessie," well reniomliered of tho cam paign of lfCili, is rendering him in this most serious contest. ,Sho acts as his pri vate locretary, writing immy of his most important business letters, and taking notes of his conversation wi'.h officers ou matters of moment. Tho lays of a nightengaie may bo very delightlul to a well fed man, but the 'lays' of a lien aro liked much bellea by a hun- jgiy m. iu.