......min• ._---- -- -' .• '-'.--•--.---•---- ••• 1 : ) k.f ., 1,1.EP .ossiS 1) cm 10 a'a-lr•=l2. , •,," , ~v,,,..„..; 1 , ~ , ,, , t,..,,, , :, ..1., • yri 0.1 ; ..,:Li.Lll.-.5, - .1 4 , 4...11 et:l4c,- , .41.- ---. 7 .--,—. - 7 -- ~ , ..„.. ~ .. •.. o, , , i. . 4,, ~, 4.5 A ( r ~, ~::, , ',. i - ..... '.,. ''', - . ' , ...-% ' ' • ,•.‘ ' : ..1 1 A';:! f - . F — i i • ' ..i.'• ' ...ripo. ~. _ 1,-•; • , ' , ~',.. _i 4 -2 . 1 1 1, -Tgd Irt , ' , cad' i - ,•;!.., , • . .. , ,,,1. , ;- ; ~i,l ...., . i -, . "•-:. '- - nit ;,‘,•i., - .. 4 , .',...“1 1)1s: t ni ti . .. , 1 . ..- -. ..., • , I i. j,, • .'.• '• ' . '' ''' ...., ... • -: . . .. . . .-• , .. i ' ~ • i . .... , ..f,' - ' ' . .. . ~. .. , yl' • ; i . . .4.;... , . ~ i.. . , . . _____ A. J. GEtiRITSON, Publisher./ The Peace Negotiations—Hr. Lincoln's Hoene Reviewed from History. Mom the National Intelligence; July 26. In his first message to Congress, called to meet in extraordinary session on the 4th_ofinly,.,lBol, President Lincoln held theAllOwing language : "teat there be some uneasiness in the minds of candid men as to what is to be the comae of the government of the South kAir States after the rebellion is suppressed, the7excutive - iieerntilt proper to say it will Veils purpose then, as ever, to be guided by the Constitution and the caws ; and that he . will probably have no different run derstanding of the powers and duties of the federal government relatively to the rights of the states and the people under the Constitution, than that expressed in the inaugural address. He desires topre-, servo the government, that it may be ad ministered for all, as it was administered by the men who made it. Loyal citizens everywhere have the right to claim this of the government, and the government has no right to withhold or neglect it. It is not perceived that, in giving it, there • is any coercion, any conquest or any sub jugation, in any just sense of those terms." On the 23d of August, 1862, in his well known letter to Mr. Greeley, as origihal ly published in our columns, the President wrote as follows : "My paramount objeot is to save the Union, and not either save or destroy slavery. If I could save the Union with out freeing' any slave, I would do it ; if I -could do it by freeing all the slaves, I would do it ; and if I could save it by freeing some and leaving others alone, I would also do that. What I do about slavery and the colored race, I do because I believe it helps to save the Union ; and what I forbear, I forbear because I do not believe it would help save the Union. I shall do less whenever I shall believe what I am doing hurts the cause ; and I shall do more whenever I believe doing more will help the cause." In the opening words of the prelimina ry " Proclamation of Freedom," issued on the 22d of September, 1802, tbe President as if anxious to preclude the inference that he meant thereby to change the ob ject of - the war, was careful tq declare "that hereafter al' heretofore the war will be prosecuted for the purpose or practi cally restoring the constitutional relations between the United States and each of the States and the people thereof in which states that relation is or may be suspended or disturbed." This is "the ob ject" of the war as the President under stands it—to restore the constitutional relation between the United States and each of the States in which the relation is now suspended or disturbed: In reply to a communication from the Hon. Fernando Wood, of New York, who in December, 1862, had imparted to the President some information to the ef fect that the Southern States would send representatives to the next Congress, pro vided that a full and general; amnesty should permit them to do so," Mr. Lin coln under date of December 12 of that year, held the following explicit lan guage: " I strongly suspect your information will prove to be groundless ; nevertheless I thank you for communicating it to me. Understanding the phrase in the para graph above quoted—' the Southern states would send representatives to the next Congress'—to be substantially the same as that the people of the southern states would cease resistance, and would reinau gumte, submit to, and maintain the na tional authority within the limit of such states, under the Constitution of the Uni ted States,' I say that, in such case, the war should cease on the part of the Uni ted States, and that if, within a reasona ble time,' a full and general amnesty' were necessary to such end, it would not be withheld." Early in the autumn of 1863, in his cel ebrated letter addressed to the.Sp i tir field Republican Convention, the' i dent wrote as follows, as if to exchide the cavil or objection or the part of political opponents that be bad any design to con tinue the war tor the purpose of ;emanci pation after the &cloyed object of the war should have been teethed in a restoration of the Union. To this effect the Presi. : Admit said: "You say you will not fight to free ne• Some of them seem'willing to figgpti for ,yyon,: Bat po mattertfight you then exclusively to save the Union.-- Whenever you shall have conquered all resistance's.° the -Union, if I shall urge you to continue fighting, it will be anlipt, time then for you to declare yon will not fight to free negroes." We have ranged these decimations of the President in the: , order of their othronology, Ali.; the forgo° :of shoiving that his declared - policy nnder this head 1 has been tmifornti:delibeiatc, definite and determinate. , Lithe month ofJnir, 1884 he:declared it his purpose to preservetho goVanment. that it , nught , be adminiatereduas it 3flB administered ly . the raw Wii0,44411 3 0.40 and he added l‘loyal citizens everrthetw_ have the right thissaftheli:gov maw, and the goveOupest has Inc rght to witithehlit." ITROMBIE In December, 1882, he said that if "the people of the Southern States would cease resistance and Would teinangurate, sub mit to, and maintain the national author ity within the limits of said antes, under the Constitution of the United States, m au& cue the' war would cease on the part of the United States." • In September, 1863, directing his re marks to supposed dissentients from his negro policy, he said : "Fight you then eiclusively for the "Union." " Whenever yin shall conquer all resistance to the 'Union, if I shall urge you to continue fiOting, it will be an apt time for you to deelare you will not fight for the negro." It was in the light of these presidential declarations that the reader m prepared properly to appreciate the latest terms on which the war will ' cease, as far as the President ig concerned, and without which , he proposes to 'continue fighting.' We allude, of course, to the stipulations announced by him a few days ago as the necessary conditions preliminary to nego tiations with the Confederate authorities, as follows : Ecirrivnililiiinum, Washington, July 18. To whom it may concern : Any proposition which embraces the restoration of peace, the integrity of the whole Union, and the abandonment of slavery, and which comes by and with an authority that can control the armies now at war against the United States, will be received and considered by the executive government of the United States, and will be met by liberal terms on other substan tial and collateral points, and the bearer or bearers thereof shall have safe conduct both ways. • Anitsumi ',tricots. This .declaratis important in many aspects. It shows, in the first ,place,that, according to the principles propounded by the President In 1861, the time has passed ' when he proposes "to preserve the gov ernment that. it may be administered as it was administered-by the men who made it ;" for nobody pretends chat the "men who made the government" supposed that the President had any power to dic tate emancipation as the condition of maintaining or restoring peaceful rela tions between the states and the govern ment. As compared with - the terms of peace propounded toldr. Wood in the year '62, it shows that the time has passed when " the war will cease on the part of the United States if the people of the south ern states would cease resistance, and would reinangurate, submit to, and main tain the national authority ;" for thePres 'Went in effect now announces that no proposition " will be received and consid ered by the executive government of the United States" which does not embrace, in addition to " the restoration of peace and the integrity of the whole Union," the " abandonment of slavery." As compared with the declaration of 1883, it shows that the time has come when, according to the President's own admission and consent, such of his coun trymen as are "fighting exclusively for the Union," and who conscientiously de ny the right of the goverment to fight for anything else, may aptly say that the new terms on which the President insists are such that if the negotiations were bro. ken down by his persistence on this point, ,they might fairly claim, according to his own 'theory . of their duty, an exemption from " 'fighung to free the negroes." It will thus be seen that, by applying Ito the late declaration of the President, the principles announced by him in the i yeare 1861, 1862 and 1863, we are able to measure the effect and purport of that dec laration by his own standards. And when the President thus becomes his own critic and Confuter, it would be idle in us to add ant words on the subject. But this latest declaration is impor tant in other aspects. It serves to show that the President has overcome any scru ples be may have previously had.on the subject of recognizing the confederate military authorities. He now makes it a condition of receiving and considering any proposition, that it shall come." with an authority that can control the armies now at war against the United States." On this point he - paid little heed to the resolution of the Baltimore Convention, when, in re-nominating him, it declared : "Beep ined, That we. approve the deter *nation. of the government of the Uni ted Ifitates not to compromise with rebels, or to offer any terms &peace ex tench . as may be, hosed upon an unconditional inirremier of their hostility, and a return to their first allegiance. to the Constitu tion and laws of the United States ; and , that we call upon. she, government to maintain their po . sition,,mi4 to prosecute , the war with thci , ntn- l icstpossible .vigorto the qiimplete suppression ofthe rebellion, in full reliance upon the self-sacrificing patriotism, the heroio . valor , fwd.. 'the ti-' dyiig.dirrotion of the.Anienmuipeopleto th9f: cry 4 8 , 4' 4 )0 insti/40440 1 -". The ; i'resident, it:seems, is now.willing to " compromise with rebels," for. he nye thaelf,they, accept , tha--tertost:pre scribed,,they Will be, metby ,g - liberal fOrpe,piibtheristkbeteitial atel Setae."' - • '43Eibir. Uncap laud' have tom iiiirere„ l lel,ba; President of the ovia/e4. COD ea ate States twbo le the gad/Dimity" . , MONTROSE, PA.,IatITISP4 4 -T2 1864 . f, , • • ;,, •A /1 dint controls I the armies now at yaw againit the, Vnited States,) is i ,not , em powered by any, 45f" his 'prerog4iies to stikoulate for " thi) abandonment if slaie .ry,' and therefore in sliaairTisa this as t ) one of the tenns ofa proposition come "by and witb"'sudh an 'atithori „" he asked what Jefferson Davis; eve with the fullest disposition to do so, ad no 1 right or power to grant—slavery eing, under the Constitution of the Coleder ate States, as of the United States, !,:clet sively an institution of the, separateltnws over which the central power has no 4gbt ful kuisdiction or control. I: i .. We do not doubt that tbe,people the United States will see in the imp° ible reqnisi . tion of the President as a coed, ion preliminary . to peace only a new illnktra tion of the Inextricable entanglement‘ in: to which the President has suffered him- self to be drawn by departing from the original theory of the war. And if be de sires to know .the universal impression tbatis likely, to he.produced by the utti tide in ,which he has placed himself, he may, we think, read in such comments as the following, from the only one of the New Yorkjournals that was originally in favor of bis renomination. We allude to the New York limes, which says ; "The President made but two condi tions to the reception and consideration of any proposition for the restoration of peace,• which should come to him from competent authority first, that it should embrace the integrity of the whole Union —second, that it should embrace the abandonment of slavery. We believe he might have gone still further than-this ; he might have omitted the second of these conditions altogether, and required the first alone, as essential to the reception and consideration of proposals for peace. We do not mean-to say that it will be eventually found possible to end the war and restore the Union without the 'aban donment of slavery e but we do say that this abandonment need not be exacted by the President as a condition without which be will not receive or consider pro posals for peace. The people do not re ' quire him to insist upon any such condi -1 tion. Neither his oath of office nor con. stitutional duty, nor:his personal or offs dal consistency, requires. him to insist 'up. On lt, ~That is One 'Of•'the , questions to be considered and arranged when the terms. of peace come to be discussed. It is not a subject on which terms can be imposed by the government, without consultation, without agreement, or without equiva lents." And we suppose that it was in presage of the obstacles likely to, be laid in the way of peace by the-theoretical position which 'the President:. had assumed on these and other subjeots that the N. Y. Tribune was induced to oppose his re nomination, and in reiteration of which, even after his re-nomination, it held the following language "We cannot but feel that it would have been wiser and safer to spike the most serviceable guns of our adversaries by nominating another for President, and thus dispelling all motive, save that of naked disloyalty, for further warfare up on this administration. We believe the rebellion would have lost something of its cohesion and venom from the hour in which it was known that a new Presi dent would surely be inaugurated on the 4th of March neat; and that hostility in the loyal states to ' the national cause must have sensibly abated 6r been de prived of its readiest, most dangerous weapons, from the moment that all were brought to realize that the President, having no more to expect or hope, could henceforth be impelled by no conceivable motive but a desire to serve and save his country, and thus win fpr himself an en viable and enduring fame." It was a singular coincidence that the friendly editor who held this frank lan guage after the President's re-nomination should have been called to act so promin ent a part in the negotiations which have just given the, whole country abundant reason to concur with him in his opinion. The President solemnly declared in the year .1061, in ,his message to the Congress of the United States, that loyal citizens everywhere had the rigbt to claim" that the government should be preserved , " that it might be administered for all as it was by the men who .made it." As, loyal citizens, .we, enter our " claim" in these words. And the President said at tie same time that " the government had no right to withhold or neglect", this claim. Then we-ask--that be shall not Iwwithhold or neglect" what -he has an , thorized-the nation to demand: , itarA negro pie-nio %gm hold on the Piiiiident'e grounds, in Virlishi_tvon 'on the' 4th Of July: York troupe asked permission ef r tlie,Pretill'ent do peiferixfon ttegrounds, for theiteniiilt of the nick and wounded soldiers, but 1. were refused. _ -• 7. • ti arParson lircwqlosylaidokfcw mars cdliu candidate for Vice President, that there ItAtitneget AMC 34 dal see penitentiary!" The parson ought 4.,:lieztiatszippart&titiavr, - j grEabecribe far the Dzmocasr. ' 'litkat leigth light 'has bii 6 ri v ribea . 4PLlPe ree'Plt . 14 4tres ,before .4tl4ita7„, - At. nsw seep that, ii•fitiiiiiiStanding,iliSreisSariog dispatches ~ w hich Were' , e wasie. eemi•oftkia*, respecting the great, battlefiqnW,edikesilay end Fnday, our trnemdid suffer s serious check,, and , that on - Friday the rebels - disarranged General Sherman's plans. The follow,ing extractfroni - iTribune editorial 'We the story : "The seventeenth corps, *Mira' Blair,, held the, extreme left, and held it negli gently. Two rebel carps Stewart's , and C'beathatn's . , got upeq General Blair's Sanli, surprised. him, and rolled up a large portion of his live. without Ceremony. .It was in consequence of this unexpected and unnecessary &eater, that General Mc- Pherson met ids death." It is very remarkable that all, or nearly all, the disasters of this war are due eith- - er to Mr. Lincoln's direct intermeddling with army moveraeats,4v to, the appoint ment by him of generals who are notori ously unfit and incompetent.- General Grant's first campaign against Richmond failed because political 'considerations compelled Mr. Lincoln to give Sigel an appointment in the Shenandoah valley, and Butler another on the-Peninsula.— Hunter, whom . he subsequently appoint ed, was given a command because of his standing among the antislavery Golfo clans, and also on account of his intimate personal relationship with Mr. Lincoln, which existed previous to the war. A gainst all decency, and in direct defiance of the laws, Mr. Lincoln insistednpon the I appointment of Mr. Blair to an important command in General Sherman's army.— The result in all these cases is before the country. Butler failed in his campaign ; Sigel in hie; and it was only through a merciful Providence and thequicic ry perception of the ga ll ant deceased Gen. Moltherson that we have been aaved the most tremendous :disaster of the whole war at-Atlanta. It is confessed that Blair held his fine negligently, and, in short, did not know• bow to command his corps ; and the direct inference is, that, with a competent facer in his folace, a brilliant ,vlatory, instead of a.heavy repulse, would - have erowned the•offorts.of cur =nice at Atlanta. This deplorable result, in addl.' tion to the negro failure at Petersburg, tells its own story of. the failure of lb. Lincoln's measures, and the misfortune which invariably attends his military ap pointments. The Republican Nominee for Vice .President. Te Andy Jahniiiii;" n ess ,who was nominate&•at Biltintoreb); , the Republi cans for Vice President, is known to be one of the-most consummate demagogues living. In addition to a thousand other little tricks resorted to by him to make himself popular vith the masses; we are told that he keeps standing in front of the elegant mansion in which he lives,•a small one-story shanty in which he once work'd as a journeyman tailor; this he points out to his visitors, telling them the story of his early struggles, in life. He forgets, however, to tell them one otherthingcon nected with his humble origin ; how he has an old mother, more than seventy years of age, whom he suffers to traverse the streets of Philadelphia with a basket on her arrn, selling tripe for a living. Ye who have hearts, only think of this; a man who is rolling in wealth and. aspires to the position of Vice President of this great country, suffers his old mother to trudge about the streets of a large. city, hawking tripe, that she may buy bread to keep her poor old , soul and body togeth er. Ingratitude can assume no darker shade than "this. jar The Republican leaders, speakers, and journals now admit that the purpose fqr which this war was , entered upon,has been changed ; that the administration has abandoned the work of upholding the Constitution, theljnion,and the laws, as sailed by armed treason, midis now gov erned, not by the Constitntim and the laws, but by " public eentiment," which, they say, demands that tthe war ehallbe prosecuted till -sLaxery is destroyed."— They are ao flirt frotn4enyingitigi as they did a year ago, that they,now defend it, and 'uphold the President for his ' shame ful violation of pledge.S and. of tit; snored oath: i . ' ' - The Democratic, party takes the GlN site ground. Its convictions are Woil ex pressed in the noble and p,atriotio ; speech of General liteclellan' on ;the Site'" of the. Rattle lifontinient `Whieh will'conatiterner ate the 'fidlen'heicies of the wAr for the Uniori : • '' - ' ... , ," To dram tbq Paifillt tlfrarealliwilag 1 '--yt iecnre.ourt*es.AWA tbe.44.filf,the . I :4i7 16 4r94 1 4 8 0 14** $4 11 i 11 41, A 4 iri-' 04140 PtC o .*o:PutginrernYlPt. tr 990 - ;1:M* 9 47 40 titOin-italgsh ,PcTeCJit/la Pivel4 3 nu141*A49, 11 r,‘* 4 7: ePstortgemis: --,, '' I -- 'l''''''' — '77 —. - - , - , , T r4 4l2ttraA r -V 011 14 1 47 7 1 4 i 4ra-I'. Vet2 l 4lr iti lioep v ie tr In prostitntinuthe-wii to Ole; Puy ► ll4 " l7 ... mt ,Lig t°4 i. , r" ., — ,yr es s yh v it t re 7 o ty ft.. • , T. Wastever lbws riff atelitir..4l* idAiltW - 71,45. t. Ixitriirs oule-msect4... , ablioantatrhatimi hail& ibalichvei swedusoest. vs stli vsabeirrlagram , AVi the UtiltOnottfittiolltifilittla4giatillt r6 ' ' sgeTtirtitr, tautftilkat atotilforivardt their , treixoilt..;r:Thelonir, 4 a pTh.. ~ ,Al.,tolqay 10 cos ` , 14.10r itet:of thelYth r bo id km ehmisosfiittas- - ':to 0 -1 - 71-1141:(TT"."1" ' wtratton. -- , . . ~..., I • 'WI el :IC:1 i weir i,r t el . 1 Druntgtik Mirtr 4l4s4lt ilivA, aISTOWIAZITIOIPATED: I fft :oz'r" ne t i#9lnElyytk-' erlocrgt r.eVratices a iettek,WAttet} epti'eu `tl., the Blettii.lo, etla,Aate.l,l.'elhfrerY :241,1g01.• :411, Who reisdlt Orin with our ,thaktbk,leqer the s 6 item ,:reparlititole '1 ) 611094'. ed g . acity tncf foresight:" It emh6e to. like the prOgetin warning a a great and witle statemnen, whose Worst antimpatiOns are heing,rmiltand today by the _oppreas ed .pegple mrainediemantry. What, re , can fait to see *that : the war, prosenat4 ` t nOW is sooner or later talk ' end' m't nal'. separation . and reee.ei don of the two contending sections.", The; folltiWind thefrit:ter' i - ' ' • • 'Messrs. EditOrs:--1 bare this Morning read 'withinitasenient: an editorial in your paper ofthcSoili ult., in which yon assume Otani am favcmingthe immediate with ,dravral nftherrernaining *awl from the Gontederacy, is a peace measure, to avert the' horrors of civil war, ,and 'with the vie* ofreeonstriretion on a constitutional basis.". ...1 implore .you all-"those. `kited relations ; which bavei so 19pg • existed- be twe9# us , and 740 It!.lll,'9h9tiall, -with so numb pleasert,3 aqd gratitude to dome. the' justice pro mptly to toitcoi tbe an seethintable error 'into 'which you bare been led.. ; s In regard to secessiou whether viewed as a governmental th,eory, , prse, a matter of political expedieney,'l tave never had but onedpinfon, nor uttered but - tine lan guage, that of unqualfified opposition.— Nothing Can be sOlatal to the peace of the country, fig acE4rilettlif 49. the, felon and all hopes of reconstruction., as the secession of Tennessee and the lairder States under existing eitaiithstatices. You intisiTem. ember that there are disnaionists among men -wbsiselostility to slavery is stronger , that. their. fidelity to the Constitution, and Who believe that the clisruption of the `Union would draW after it, ail an insurrec. 'tion, and finally the atter extermination of slavery in all the'-Southern States.-- , They, are both, daring; determined•men, and believing as they do that the Coned tution• of the United States ;stile great bulwark of slairery On this 'continent, and' that the dirimption oftheAniericsin'Union involves theindiapentablenticeasityto the atudnmpt or teat,_ they, are .determ ined to accomplish their paramount ob ject by any means within their power. For these, reasoniithe' Northern' dia unionianslike the diannionists of the South are violently opposed • to' all compromises or constitutional,- amendments, or efforts at conciliation whereby peace should be restored, and the Union preserved. They are striving to break up the Union under the pretense of tmbounded dedetion to 'it; they are struggling to overthrow the Con addition, whileprofessing undying attach ment to it, and a,wißingnese,to make any sacrifice . lc Maintain if; they ire tryingto plunge t&i country into civil war, as the surest means of destroyingtlie Union, up on the plea of enforcing, the laws and pro perty. If they can defat every kind of adjustment or compromise by which the points at issue may-bb satisfactorily settl ed, and keep tip the irritation do as to in. duce the Border StEite's to follow the Cot ton States, they will feel certain of the ac complishment of their ultimate designs.— Nothing will gratify them so mach or contribute so effectually to their success, as the secession of Tennessee and the Border States. Every State that with-1 draw from the Union increases the relative power of Northern Abolitionists to de feat a 'satisfactory adjustment, and to bring on a war, which seeder or later must end in final separation and recogni tion of the independence of the two con-1 tending sections: It; on the contrary, Tennessee; North Carolina; and the Border States will re main in the Union, and will mute with the conservative and. Union loving men ofall parties% the North,' in the adoption of such a compromise as well be alike honor able, safe•and just to the people of all the States, peace and • fraternal feeling will soon return, and the cotton States will came back and the. Union be rendered per petnal.' Pardon the repetitichr, but that .connot -be too sironglY itc9ressed upon all who love:our country, ' 'Woman:in:mid war will be the destruction not only of the - present:Union; tint will:blast all hopes of ;reconstruction upon a constitutional basis:. I am, very truly, your lend. • S. A. Donets - a. i :.—Mr. Lincoli,ad rased hie communi cation to the rebel agents, "To whom it may 00,40ernr'' It concerns every bocly aealea,Trinoolu i e fate at the election. _, ,The . people lusce nov.er before beQn•c the. abolition 91 qavery , vms l toi be made., paramount to Lbe preserFation of 0:1..V3)10 11 ...Th.ey %low. cpraprellena the -eltoulion, slid- wi ll elect, a President Who ignores abolition, and le first and last for,tbegaion, lIMICI yopugg XXI. ~;~,.,;> Vail FOLIO! OF 1M Tr aItOORLTXI ' • PLRIT, The ear approaah of the , time for hold ing: the ebieego .Coeventioe, and gm Ll9 , wirs prospects of the defeat of the cein party at the - November election, naiurally leaftto some solicitude respect tit* the lotion of the convention and the platform which may adopt. We think the events of the past six weeks have led to a very general belief among thinking men of all parties that the Union cannot be restored - upon the policy pursued by the present administration ; and that if so great a blessing is in store for the people of this country, it can only be obtained through a change in the chief executive Of the nation.' • •In view of tineb change, and in the be. lief that.the government must, during the neat four years, be conducted by the Democratic party, it is natural that some indications should appear in the Democrat ic papers. of the public sentiment on the 'great issuesbefore us. We copied, a few days ago, from the ,Albany Atlas and Argus., an article touch ing upon the policy of the party and of the country, which we presume may be s*etill•iu the minds of many of our readers. I he point many be found In the following :tract : "Such a contingency will arrive in the progress of this war—how soon, or wheth er it will terminate in peace or in a re gewel of the struggle, the future mustdis close. But the armistice—the conference, the attempt at settlement are merely a question of time. And if it be charged as a reproach to the Democratic party, that it is notirrevocably committed to perpetu al and desolating war—that it is ready to yield , to the impulses of humanity and Christianity, and suspend the effusion of blood longlenough to confer upon the pos aibility of peace—to confer, we mean, through the constitutional agency of a convention of the states—if this be charg ed as a reproach, • we consent to rest under the aspersion, and to abide the calm judg inent; of the people upon the issue thus made. Indeed, we are content to accept such as issue•before , the great tribunal of the people in the coming presidential eleo tion. We have no confidence that this administration, under all the complications in which it is involved, could ever end the war, except so far as it might end from the exhaustion of the combatants. But we believe that a new administration could close this fraternal strife, on terms honorable to us as a nation, and on the basis of the preservation of the union of the states." , Among our exchanges in the country we find many similar expressions of opin ion respecting the proposed action of the convention. It is a significant fact, too, that all agree that thisadministration can do nothing but fight—nothing but to con tinue the war, which must oppress the nation ;. so long as the present party re maimi in power, while a new administra tion, unembarrassed by the complications of the past and commanding the confi deuce of both N rth and South, might inaugurate masers which would lead to a restoration of the Union. From an able 'leader in the Jefer on County Union, pub lished at Waterto ,in this state, we ex tract the following : " There is yet one more convention to be held. If that conventorn is wise it will lay down a platform upon which the people can stand. The people are wiser than politicians. They have no idea of bitting their brains nut to please shoddy contract ors, lazy office-holders, or corrupt and ambitious demagogues. They demand an armistice, a suspension of hostilities for three, six, or twelve months as may be ! necessary, to establish an honorable and permanent peace, or to demonstrate to their satisfaction that there,is no alternat,. 1 ive but war Thus far the method of set tling oar difficulties has been that of two shoulder-hitters--brute force alone. We now propose doing what any two sensible N gentlemen would—reason, negotiate, com promise. We have the largest, best armies ever marshaled; they are in the enemy's country.. We should propose to the enemy an arm istice, each army .to remain meantime in. the fiela, holding what has in its possess ion,, fully armed and supplied, ready at the expiration of the armistice to resume, hostilities if so directed. The history or war is full of precedents for such a course. There would he nothing in it derogatory to our dignity or honor.' We might multiply such indications of the' popular .sentiment, but our purpose at this time is simply to direct the atten tion of the readers of The World to some of the thoughts which come'spontaneons ly from the people, and which, more than airy; other;now occupy the. minds of all 'plane& euch thoughts will continue to =pivot ewe Fes..upon the men of.tbe "North and Orthe gpitth, until reason gull So the' placii'Of p . ast,uon, and war give vex to the blessings attendant upon Pilaoe:—:Trorid. . . - .. thiii.tti. ustazumm .. Sieoutor s . otioe . . ... Nwmik to wn 4,, , r Raien,u 4s2 ta,.. ...utecir 08. m ~,,,,q tre owtO p . •;dtteAlt4,lllVo l .lticett iZ i r 3 l'indlli. sabsedbemeueall perverts having civics a e; we tibia iu•e requested to pH:2=i eh vilale,' .9, l =i t er f oi t ub l et end Moak 1040 0 Quo us 1° ft.' lac iP inlet fLY; Siltisi Lake) t' t .,.. " • ~. i: t3A. --• FACTRIag , p4M; IP: l 7*it.Wt• r:_ i July la. IW " NUMBER 31.