I f F 1 J W. U. JACOBY, Proprietor. Tra h and Right God and our Country Two Dollars per Annum. VOLUME 14. BLOOMS BURG. COLUMBIA COUNTY, PA., WEDNESDAY MAY 28, 1862. NUMBER 21. s j STAR OF THE NORTH PUBLISHED EVERT TTEDSESP AT BT - -WS. II. JACOBf, Office on lain St.. 3rd Square below Market, , TEUMS: Two Dollars pr annum if paid within six months from ihe lime of subscri bing; two dollars and fifty cents if not paid within tht year. No subscription taken for m less period. than six mouths; no discon tinaatce permitted ontil all arrearages are paid, unless at the option of the editor. 1h term cf advertising will be as follows : . One square, twelve lines, three times, SI 00 Every subsequent insertion, 25 One square, three months, ........ 3 00 One year, . , 8 00 i TIIE FISHER'S SOWS. Socces to the Jolly oKTfarmer Who sighs at the tail of the plough, The monarch ot prarie and forest, Tis only to God he may bow ; fie is surely a tortnnute .'ellow,. He raises his bread and his cheese And though hard is his labor in summer, - In winter be lives al his ease. When the reign of chill winter is broken, And spring comes to gladden and bless When flock in the meadows are sporting, 'And the rolin is builjin; her nest The farmer walks rorih to his labor, And manly and tirm is his tread, As he seiners the seed tor the harvest That yields all the nation their bread. His banks are all chartered by nature,. Their credits are amply nire, His clerks never slope wi:ti deposits, Pur ued by the cur.e ot the poor. Hit sto ks are the best in the market, His shares ara the shares ol ihe plough; They brmg bright gold lo hi coffers, Ai.d pleasure and heaka to his brow. When his crops are all gathered and sheter'd When his cattle are snug in the fold, He sits himself down by his fireside. And laughs ai the tempest und cold. A strainer ( pride and ambiltun. His diny he sinves to lulfi'l, Determined, whatever betide ?iim, To let the worh jog as it wiil. His trust is in him who ha given She seasons, and sunshine, ami rain. Who.) promised seed lime anJ harvest, So io"g a the earth shall remain. And it trom his dunes he wander, Led on by hi venturous wiil, Through, life and its changing relations, CJot.'s Providence lollows him stiil. ." WfOlTiST lOUTlCAL D.)CCHEr. Addiess f Democratic Memhem of C inures to . tkt Democracy of the Uoi'ed States. FellMo Citizens:' The perilous condition of Qurcoomry demands that we should rea ton together. Party organization, restricted within proper limits, is a positive goo-1 and indeed essential to the preservation ol pub lic liberty. Without it the best government would soon degenerate into the worst of ty rannies. In our own country the experi x enee of the last twelve month" proves, more than any lesson in history, the necessity of party organization. The present adminis tration was chosen by a party, and in all civil acts and appointments has recoguized. and still does, its fealty and obligations to (hat party. There msi and will be an op position. The public safety and good "de mand it. Shall it be a new organization or an old one? The democratic party was founded more than sixty years ago. It has never been disbanded. To-day it numbers one million five hundred thousand electors in the States still loyal i the Union lis recent numerons victories in mnnicpal elections in the Western and Middle States prove its vitality. . Within the last ten months it has held Fta'e conventions - and Dominated lull democratic tickets in every (ree State in the Union. Of no other party opposed to the republicans can the same be aid. SHALL THE DEMOCRATIC PARTY. BE NOW DISBANDED? Why should it ? Are its ancient princi ples wrona;? What are they ? Let its plat forms for thirty years speak. . Resolved, That the Ameircan Democracy place ther trust in the intelligence, the pa triotism, and the discriminating justice of the American people. 'That we regard this, as a distinctive feature in oar political creed, which we are proud to maintaiu before the world, as the great 'moral element in a form of gov ernment springing from and upheld by the popular wilt; and we contrast it with the creed and practice of Federalism, under whatever name or form, -which seeks to palsy the will of the constituent, and which conceives no imposture too monstrous for the public, credulity. : "That the federal government is one of limited power, derived solely from the con stitution, and the grants of power made therein ought to be strictly construed by a!! the departments and agents of the gov ernment, and that it is inexpedient and dangerous to exercise doubtful constitution al powers." And as explanatory of these the following from Mr. Jefferson's first inaugural : 'The support of the State Governments in all their rights as the most competent administrations of onr domestic concerns and Ihe surest bul warks against anti-republican tendencies . The preservation of the general govern ment in its whole constitutional vigor, as the sheet-anchor of our peace at home and safety abroad. - . . A jealous care of the right of election by the people-- ; The supremacy of the civil ovef tlie mili tary authority- . Economy in the public exrense,ihat labor rnay be lightly burdened. The honest payment of our debts and tiered preservation of the public faith. Freedcra of religion, freedom of the press and freedom of person under protection of the habeas corpus, and trial by juries impar tially selected." c i i . ' . t r I oucn, nemocrais, are tne prtncipies ot your party, essential to public liberty and , to the stability and wise administration of ' the government , alike in peace and war. They are the . principles upon which the i constitution and the Union - were founded, and, under the control of a party which ad heres to them, the constitution and the ...... Union could not be dissolved. Is the policy of the democratic party wrong that it should be disbanded? Its policy is consistent with its. principles and may be summed up. from the begin ning as follows : The support of liberty as against power, of the people as against their agents aud servants, and of state rights as against consolidation and centralized des potism, a simple government, no public debt, low taxes, no high protective tariff, no general system of internal improvements by Federal authority, no national bank, hard money for the public dnes,no assump tion of State debts, expansion of Terri'orj, self government for the Territories, subject only to the constitution, the absolute com patibility of a union of the states, part slave and part free, the admission ' of new States, with or without slavery, as they may elect, non interference by the Federal govern ment with Slavery in sta'e or Territory, or in the District of Columbia, and, finally as set forth in the Cincinnati! platform, in 1856 and reaffirmed in i860, absolute and eternal "repudiation of all sectional platforms con cerning domestic slavery which seeks to embroil the States and incite to treason any armed resistance to law in the territories, and who e avowed purpose, if consummate!, must end in civil war and disunion. ' Such was ihe ancient and the recent pol icy of the democratic party, running through a period ol sixty years a policy consistent with the principles of the constitution, and absolutely essential to the preservation of the Union. : Dees the history of the democratic party prove that it oaght to be abandned ? 'By their fruit shall ye know them " Sectional parties do not acheive Union triumph. For sixty years from the inauguration of Jef ferson on the 4ih ol March, I SO I , the demo cratic party, with short intervals, controlled the power and the policy of the Federal government. For forty-eiaht years ont of these sixty, democratic men ruled the conn try, for filty-fonr years and eight months the democratic policy prevailed. During this peri d Louisiana, Florida, Texas. New Mexico and California were successively, annexed to our territory, with an area more than twice as Urge as all the oriainal ' thir teen St.i'e together. Eisiht new States were admitted under strictly democratic ad ministrations one onder the administration oi Fillmore. From five millions the popu lation increased 'o thirty-or.e millions. The revolutionary debt Has extinguished. Two foreign war were successfully prosecuted with a moderate outlay and a small army ad navy, and without the suspension of the habea corpus ; without one infraction I of the constitution, without, one usurpation of power, without suppressing a single newspaper, without imprisoning a single editor, without limit to the freedom, of the. press, or of speech in or out of. Congress, but in the midst ol the grossest abase of both, and without the arrest of a single 'trai tor' though the Hartford Convention sat du ring one of the wars, and in the other Sena tors invited the enemy to "gtcel our volun teers with bloody hands and welcome them to hospil 'Lie graves " . : .. During all this lime wealth increased, bu siness of all kinds mcltip'ied, prosperity smiled on every 6ide, taxes were low, wa ges were high, the North and South fur nished a market for each other's products at good prices, public liberty was secure, private rights undisturbed, every man's house was his castle, the courts were open to all, no passports for travel, no secret po lice, no spies, no informers, no bastiles, the right to assemble peaceably, the right to petition, freedom of religion, freedom of speech, a free ballot, and a free press, and all this time the constitution was maintain ed and the Union of the States preserved. Such were the choice fruits of democrat ic principles and policy, carried out through the whole period during which the demo cratic party held the power and adminis te red the Federal' government. Such has been the history of that party . ft is a Union party, for jt preserved the Union by wisdom peace and compromise, for more than half a century. Then neither the ancient principles, the policy, nor the past history of the democrat ic party require nor would justify its dis bandment. Is (herd anything in the present crisis which demands it ? The more immediate issue is, to maintain the constitution as it is and to restore the. Union as it was. . To maintain the constitution -is to respect the rights of the States and the liberties of he citizen. It Is to adhere faithfully, to the rerj principles and policy which the dem ocratic party has professed for more than half a cectury. Let irs history ,"aad the re sults, from the beginrjiogy prorer whether it has practised them. - We appeal proudly to the record.' ' The first step towards a restoration of the Union as it was is to maintain the constitu tion as it la 1 Sri long as ft Was maintained in fact, and not threatened with infraction in spirit and in letter, actual of " imminent, the Union was unbroken. ; 1 To restore the Union, it is essential, first, to give assurance to every State and to the people of every section that their rights i nd liberties and property will be secure wit tin the Union ur.der the constitution. What as surance so doubly snre as the restorat on to power ol thit ancient organized consoli dated democratic party which for sixty years did secure the property, rights and liber ies of the S'aies and of the people, and thua did maintain the constitution and preserve the Union, and with them the multiplied bless ings which distinguished us above all other nations ? , To res'ore the Union is to cruh ont lec tionalism North and South. To begin the great work of restoration through the ballot box is to kill abolition. The bitter waters flowed first and are fed still from the un clean fountain of aboli'.ionism. Amies may break down the power of the Con ed erate Government in the-South, but the work ol restoration can only be carried on tbrojgh political organization and the billot I in the JSorth and West. In this great work ! of overthrowing or interfering with the we cordially invlie the co-operation of all ! rights or established institutions of any men of every party who are opposed to the ; State. Above all, the democratic party will fell spirit of abolition, and, who, in sinceri- i not support the administration in any thing ty, desire the constitution as it is, and the j which looks or tends to the loss of our po Union as'it was. Let the dead past t ury litiral, personal rights and liberties, or a its dead. Rally, lovers of the Union,' the change ot our present democratical form constitution, and of liberty, tu the standard ! of government. ol the democratic party, already in the field and confidenfof victory. That party is the natural and persistent enemy of abolition. Upon thi question its record as a natinal organization, however it may have bee i at times with particular men, or in particular Sta'es,. it U clear and unquestionable From ihe beginning ol the anti slavery agi tation to the period of the last Democratic National Convention it has held bnt one lan guage in reaard to it. Let the record speak. Resolved, That Congress has no powei un der the Constitution to .interfere wit'i or conirol the domestic institutions of the sev eral States, and that such Slates are the sole and proper judges of everything apper ain ing to their own. affairs not prohibited by Wie Constitution; that all efforts of the abo litionists and others made to induce Con gress to interfere with questions of slavery, ! or to take incipient Heps in relation there to, are calcnlaed to lead to the most alarm ing and dangerous consequences, and that all such efforts have an inevitable tenden cy to diminish the happiness of the pi ople and endanger the stability and permansncy ol th"e Union, and ought not to be co mte nanced by any friend ol oar political nsti tutions. Upon these principles alone, so far i s re lates to slavery, can the Union as it was be restored; and no other Union, except the nnity of despotism, can be maintain id in this country; and this last we will res st as our fathers did, with our lives, our fortunes and our sacrs l honor. , But it is anl that yon must disbani the democratic party "to support the eo 'ern- ment." We answer that the demorra'ic party has always supported the government, and while it was in power preserved the government in all its vigor and integrity, not by force and arms, but by wifdom, sound policy and peace.. But it nevor did admit, and l ever will, that this administra tion, or any administration, is "ihe go rern ment." It holds, ar.d ever has held, that the Federal government is the agent fthe people of the several States composing the Union; that it consists of three distri:t de partments the legislative, the exeutive and the judicial each equally a p irt of the government, and equal!? entitled o the confidence and support of the States and people; and that it is the duty of evety pa triot to sustain the several departments of the government in the exercise of ill the constitutional powers of each which may be necessary and proper for the preerva tion of the government in its principhs and in its vigor and integrity, and to stard by and defend to the utmost the flag ivhich represents the government, the Unicn aad the country. In this sense the Democratic party as al ways sustained and will now sustain the government against all foes, at home or abroad, in the north or the south, o en or concealed, in office or out of offi.e, in peace or in war. - If this is what the republican party mean by supporting the government, it is i.n idle thing to abandon the old and tried iemo cratic party, which for so many years and through so many trials supported, preserv ed and, maintained the government f the Union. But if their real purpose be to aid the ancient enemies of the demoericy in subverting our present constitution and form of government, and, under pr jtence of saving the Union, to erect a slronj cen tralized despotism on its ruins, the demo cratic party will resist,' them as the worst enemy -to the constitution and the ijnion, and to free government everywhere. We do not propose to consider now the causes which led to the present unhappi civil war A fitter time will caf iereat-( ter for such discussion. But e titnxrid you now that compromise made yoor Jnion, and compromise fifteen months ao would have saved it. Repeated efforts wen made at last session of the Thirty-sixth Cc ogress to this end.' - At every stage the great mass of the South, with the whole democratic party, and the '.whole constitutional ' Union party of the North and West, unitec-in fa vor of certain amendments to the ccnaiitu tion, and chief among them the well- known "Crittenden propositions," which would have averted the civil war and mail tained the Union. At every stage all proposed amendments inconsistent with the sectional doctrines of the Chicago Platform r were strenuously and unanimously resist jd and ! defeated by the republican party.. The 'Crittenden proposilions" never received a single republican vote in either House. For the proof we appeal to the journals of Congress and to the Cot.gressional Globe. We scorn to reply to the charge that the democratic party is opposed to granting aid and support to the Federal government in maintaining its safety, integrity, and consti tional supremacy, and in favor of disband ing our armies and succumbing to the South. The charge is libellious and false. No man has advocated any such proposi tion. Democrats recognize it as their duty as patriots to support the government in all constitutional, necessary, and proper efforts to maintain its safety, integrity, and consti tutional authority; but at the same time they are inflexibly . opposed to waging war against any of the States or people of this i Union in any spirit of oppression, or for any purpose of conquest or subjugation, or But no, democrat?, it is . not the support of the government in restoring the Union which the party in power requires of you. You are aked to give up your principles. your pol.cy, and your parly, and to Mai.d i by the adminttration of the party in power, i in all its acts Above all, it is demanded I ol you that you yield at least a si'ent sup- , i -- . - ut I : j : . i. l .i i j'uii iu men wuuio yuii.y auu iu wuij nuu , all scrutiny into their public conduct of j every kind, lest you should "embarrass the j administration." You are thus asked fo re-, nounce one of the first principles auj the chief security of a democratic government the right to hold, public servants respon- ! sible to their master the people; :o render -j the representative accountable to the con- sliiuent; the ancient and undoubted prerog ative of Americans to canvass public meas- ures and public men. It is this "high con- j stitu'.ional privilege ' which Daniel Webster declared he would ''defend and exercise' within the House ar(4 out of the House, and in all places, in. lime of war, in time of peace, and at all lime." It is a right se cured by the constitution a riaht inestima ble to the people, and formidable to tyrants only. If ever there wa a time when the exis tence and consolidation of the democratic party upon its principles and policy was a vital necessity to public and private liberty, it is now. Unquestionably the constitution gives am ple power to the several departments of the government to carry on war, strictly subject; to its provisions, and in case of civil war, with perfect security to citizens of the loyal Stales. Every act necessary for the safety ' and efficiency ol Ihe government, and for a complete and most vigorous trial of its strength, is yet wholly consistent with the observance of every provision of that instru ment, and on the laws in pursuance of it, if the sole motives of those in power were the suppret-sion of the " rebellion" and no more. And yet the history of the admin- ( istration for the twelve months past has been and continues to be a history of re peated usurpations of power and of viola lions of the constitution, and of public and , ptivate rights of the citizen. For the proof 1 " ' we appeal to facts too recent to need recital here, and too flagrant and henious for the calm-narrative which we propose. Similar' acts were done and a like policy pursued in the threatened war with France in the ' time of John Adams, and with the same ultimate purpose. But in two or three yreas the people forced them into an hon-! orable peace with France, rebuked the ex- 1 cesses and abuses of power, vindicated the constitution, and turned over, the Federal government to the principles and policy of the democratic party. To the ' sober sec- ond thought of the people," therefore, and i uw uuuvi wuaj nucu aaill 1 it lime JCIli with our fathers. 3ot if every Democrat concurred in the policy of prosecuting the war to the utter subjugation oi tne coum and tne subversion of the State Governments with her institu tions, without a con vention of the States, and without an overture for peace, we should just as resolutely renist the disband ing of the Democratic party. It is the only party capable of carrying on a war; it is thff only party which has ever conducted a war to a successful issue, and the only patty which has done it without abuse ot power, without molestation to the rights of any class of citizens, and with due regard (o economy. All this it has done; all this, if need be, it is able to do again. If success, then, in a military point of view be requir eJ, the Democratic party alone can com- man - To conclude : Inviting all men, without distinction of State, section, or party, who are for the constitution as it is and the Un ion as it was, to uoite with us in this great work upon terms of perfect equality we in sist that The restoration of the Union, whether through peace or by war, demands the con tinued prganizauoo and success of the dem ocratic party. i , . That the preservarion of the Constitution demands it; The maintenance of liberty and free dem ocratical government demands it; The restoration of a sound system of in ternal policy demand it; ' Economy and honesty in the public ex penditures, now at the rate of four millions of dollars a day, demands it; ' j The rapid accumulation of an enormous : nuu j-'di uiaiiciii (miujiv; ueui UfcMiauu u u public debt already one thousand millions of dollars, and equal at the present rate, in three years, to England's debt of a century and a half in growth ; The heavy taxation, direct and indirect, State and Federal, already more than two hundred millions of dollars a year, eating j out the substance ol the people, augment ing every year, demands it; Reduced wages, low prices, depression of trade, decay of business, scarcity of work, and impending ruin on every side, demands it; And finally, the restoration of the con- cord, good feeling and prosperity of former years, demands that the democratic party shall be maintained and made victorious. W. A. RrcHARDsoa, ol Illinois, A L Kkapp, Illinois, J. C. Robinson, Illinois, John Law, Indiana, I). V. VoortHKr.s, Indiana, W. Allen, of Ohio, C. A. White, Ohio, Warren P. Noble, Ohio, Geokgk H. Pendleton, Ohio, James R. Morku, Ohio, C. L. Vallanpigmam, Ohio, Philip Johnson, of Pennsylvania, S. E. Ancona, Pennsylvania, Geokck K. Shiel, of Oregon. Note. The names of absent members concurring in the above will be affixed to the pamphlet edition to this ad Iress. Ulaj. General Ilallcck. Henry W. Ilalleck was appointed Major General in the United Slates Army in Au gust last, at the instance of Lieut. General Scott, then about to retire from active ser vice. At the time of his appointment, Gen. Ilalleck was a leading member of the most prominent law firm in San Francisco Placed upon his arrival from the Pacific, in command of the department of the West, he promptly swept away the abuses which had crept into the service under Fremont's administration; and, from the very hour he assumed command the record of the war ir. the West has been a succession of glori ous victories. Under his masterly policy, the rebels have been driven from Missouri, Middle and Western Tennessee, including the Capital ol the Stase, have been occupi ed by the Federal armie; and a lo Ipemenl obtained for onr troops in Northern Mis-i-sippi and Alabama, und Northwestern Ar kansas. From his headquarters at t. Lou is, Ilalleck, with his marsterly skill, has directed the movements of the grand armies under Generals Buell, Grant, Pope, and Conies, besides controlling the action of subordinate commanders in different parts of MNsonri. General Halleck is a native of Oneida co. New York. He entered the Military Acad emy at West Point as a cadet in 1835, and stood third in the class, and was brevetted Second Lieutenant ol Engineers in 1839 In 1845 he wa appointed Firt Lieotpnant. In 1847 he promoted for his gallantry in California In 1853 he was appointed cap tain of Engineers. He is the author of a book on "Bitumen and its Uses," and a series of lectures on Military Science, de livered before the. Lowell Institute, in Bos ton. He was a member of the committee to draft the constitution for the State of : ,., . . , K c ; California; had previously been Secretarj of State lor the Territory of California. In the naval and military operations on the Pacific coast he was chief of Commodore Shrubuck's staff. He is an astute lawyer, a man of fortune, and is now comparatively a younz man, being only 43 years of-age. His grandfather, now in his hunJredth year is living in the village of. Western, tiPar Uiica, New York. Gen Halleck, in personal appearance, is ; below ,he medinm height, straight, active, and ,, fprmej. and has a bri.k. energetic ! c;n if:-an, r h firm rii, rhsripr. : Ji8'nos'e j3 delicate and well formed, his forehead ample, and his mouth by ro means devoid of humor. His eye is of ha ' zel color, clear as the morning star, and of the most intense brilliancy. When Ire looks at a man it seerns as thoozh he were going literally to read him through and through No amount of oily dup'icity, no brazen aflrontery, could avail anything before that keen penetrating glance. It is an eye to make all rogues tremble, and even honest men to look about them to be sure they have not been up to some mischief. The profound and implicit confidence of all who have any dealings with him is no mystery after seeing what manner of man he is. We know nothing of General Halleck's political antecedents. But we know from his official orders and addresses, that he conceives this war to be prosecuted solely for the preservation of the Union and the maintenance of the constitution the 'old' Constitution of Washington and Madison, and not the new (angled instrument which Lovejoy, and Phillips - and Sumner and preaching up. In entertaining aud boldly expressing these sentiments, General Hal leck has been honored with the hostility ol the radicals, but he has not quailed before the storm, and since his famous "General Order No. 3," which set the abolitionists howlingv he has given no sign of a disposi tion to prosecute the war for any other pur pose than to preserve this government for the benefit of the white race; whose ances tors framed it. General Halleck, we should cot forget to state, ha f-bown the highest i qualities of civil administration. Compare ' Missoari nov with its condition when Fre- mont was removed from the command he so grossly abused, and we have the benifi cent results of the soldier-stalesman'B dis creet and far-sighted lolicy. The President's Proclamation. ' We must respectfully beg leave to doubt whether the President's proclamation will have the effect of allaying the excitement and apprehension produced by General Hunter's order declaring the slaves forever free in the Slates of South Carolina, Geor gia, and Florida. The proclamation does not say that the Government has no power to interfere with the domestic irirtitutions of the States, or that the President may not in certain contingencies attempt to exercise such power; it merely says that General Hunter was not authorized to i.4 "the or der he did, and the Government rJ no in timation of his intention to issue 6uch an order. This is the extent of the President's disclaimer. Whether it is competent for him as Commander-in Chief of the army and navy to exercise such supposed power as a means of preserving the Government, is a question which the President reserves to himself. He clearly intimates that it is an open question to be decided as he may see fit and the exigencies of the country may demand. The fatal blunder of the administration is to leave this an open question. It should have been decided a year ago. Every day that it remains undecided is a' day lost lo the coontry. Such indecision is unbecom ing, to use the very mildest term, in an ad ministration entrusted with the control of governmental affairs at the most moment-1 ous period of our career as a nation. De cision, firmness, promptness, a settled and unyielding policy, is necessary in this cri sis; not a vascillating course, which invites the assaults of faction and stimulates the enthusiasm of theory propagandists; not a hand-to-month policy, a living from day to day upon expedients, a helpless drifting upon the tide of circumstances. When the President of the United States tells the people in an official proclamation : intended to be known arid read by all men, j that he holds in reservation the question ; whether he shall at some future day employ j the army in destroying the domestic insti : tutions of the retellous States, he intimates that he may possibly undertake to do what he has no constitutional power to perform, j We do not wish to misrepresent his posi tion, but we put the question to every nn , prejudiced mind whether this is not pre . cicely the purport of his proclamation. ; What! the President of the United States , undecided as to whether he possesses or will undertake to exercise the power of abolishing slavery in the States '. Does any man not a fanatical Abolitionist seriously believe that the President has the Conslitu- j tional power to decree the c mancipation of i the blacks ? Where is the clause in Ihe Constitution that conl.?rs tliis power? ; Where the passage that by the most re ( mote implication invites it ? So so long as 1 the rebel! ious Slates are recojjnizod as be I longing to the Union (and this is thr& theory i upon which the war has been conducted) j 'hey ore subject to the constitution and en .' titled to all the rights guaranteed by the constitution. Moreover, as our covernment i is one of limited powers, and those powers ! are specific in the fundamental law, it can not transcend or overstep the limits pre : scribed by the Constitution. The President refer to the re-olution j .-I, f ... auupieu Py congress at rus suggestion, pledging the United Stalas to give pecuni ary aid to any State which may adopt a i gradual abolishment of slavery, for what l purpose we do not see without it is to warn i the Southern States that if they do not close j with ihjg offer, emancipation without com pensation rnay be enforced. This part of the proclamation has no ronneciion with what precedes it, unless it is meant as an ! intimation that in casa voluntary emancipa tion is not acceded to, involuntary emanci pation may be enforced as a military neces sity. The meaning, however, is not clear, notwithstanding the President deems it ne ceesary to declare with the utmost solemni ty 'I, acts not the Pharisee" as if the suspicion haunted his mind that the resolu tion of Corgress was open to that charge. In fine the proclamation leaves the ques tion just where it found it. I is thoroughly non committal, leaving every oiher point in darkness except the single one, that Gen. Hunter was not authorized !o issue an or der freeing the slaves in the States of South Carolina, Georgia and Florida. The Old Tnion ajainst the Xew. The Abolitionists scoff at the idea of the restoration of the Union as it was. They are easily opposed to the constitution b it is. They are in fact revolutionists and in this respert upon a moral level with the rebels. They are not in arms against the Government because they expect to use the armies fighting for the defence and per petuity of the'Governmenl as the means of accomplishing i's destruction. Observe tha course of their leading men. Sumner in sists that the secession of the Southern States has destroye the old Union and an nulled the Constitution with reterence to those Slates, and that hereafter they are to be governed as territories, subject to such rules and regulations as an irresponsible majority in Congress may determine. He affirms that the Union is sundered the Constitution dead in the rebel states, and that Congress is not restrained by the Con - slitution in legislating for them, but may do lond, and ihe two then shook bands and be whatsoever seems best to the majority. If ! came friends. this be true, secession has destroyed our government. - It is not true, aud the man who affirms it is as much of a revolutionist as Jeff Davis. Wade, another leading re publican, says tha. whoever talks of consti tu ional rights is a traitor A traitor to what? Not to the Constitution, not lo ihe govern ment, but to the new governmenl unlram meled by constituiional restrictions, which these abolition traitors are seeking to erect upon the ruins of the old Union. Wilson., Lovejoy and other radical Republicans are equally decided in repudiating the old Union and in foreshadowing a new government in which their fanatical colions shall rule supreme. The Union as it was the Constitution as it is. This is the banner which the Demo cratic party flings to the breeze. This is the motto which meets with a cordial response from every patriotic heart. This is the only road to safety the only refuge from despot ism or anarchy. Paiutiog. Every farmer has several hundred doll ars invested in wagons, carts, machines and : implements. Now how much lonser would these alLlast if every crack joint and pore ; were well filled with good oil paint? Prob ably on an average at least one third longer than if not painted, and more , probably at leaf-t twice as long. A great deal may be done by keeping them properly housed, but they must necessarily be more or less ex posed in u-e, the heat opens the cracks in summer, a shower often over akes them and soaks into these cracks. The process is asjain repeated, and decay begins. An overstrain splits them wider or breaks cer tain parts. They must be patched or re paired, or new ones purchased. The farmer who has five hundred dol !ars thus invested might save from fifty to a hundred dollars a year by keeping a pot of aint always on band, and on an occosional rainy or spare dsy go over his machines aud implements, and fill with paint such as need it. The pot should have a tight cov er, so as to prevent the paint drying, which may be best accomplished by ning an earthen jar, with a larae cork to fit it. Every farmer should keep a vessel cf white lead paint the pure anie'e. This is the bsl for filling in cracks or joints in small tools it is good for abrasions on the backs of animals, from harness or yokes it is good for the scratches in horses that have to travel mnddy roads, and it is good to coat the mnoldboard of a low to prevent rust after plowing is completed "Wno is Gf.s. Hcntcr? ' General David Hunter, who is broajnt prominently before ihe public by his order giving liberty to one million slaves, is a native of the District of Columbia, and Is now in the fif'y-eiahth year of his age. He craJua'ed at West Point in 1822, and has been ir. the servii- in the army, with brief intern.ihsions. ever since a period of forty jears. More than twenty years ago he was commandant at Fort Lavenwor'h, being then a Cap ain of dragoons, and for more than thirty yearn, altogether, he was in frontier service, in amonpst the tavaues, and lived in turn with every Indian tribe from Lake Superior to Mexico lie rerved as paymaster through the Mexican war. When Gen. Sherman was removed from South Carolina, a ccple of months aao, Hunter was appointed his successor, and the department was enlarged so as to com prise South Carolina, Gearcia and Florida, and was designated as the department of the South. It was under his administration that Fort Tulaski was captured, ar.d Jack sonville abandoned to the rebels,, and late ly he ha been rscennoitering very close to Charleston. Hunter is a man of immens physical strength, activity and hardihood, produceJ by a life's caval-y exefcise in the air of the frontier, aided by a constitu tion that never knsw a day's sickness, and though fifty-seven is a elastic as a man of thirty. He has always been considered 8 a man of discretion, though impetcous, and in politics he has been and is a Republican. - rF Now let me tell you a secret worth hearing. This looking always forward lor enjoyment don't pay. For what I kr.ow of it I vould as soon chase butterflies for a liv ing, or bottle up moonshine for cloudy nights. The only true happiness is to take the drops bl happiness as God gives them ev?ry day of their live; the boy imi'l learn to b hap,y when he is plodding over his lessons, the apprentice when he is learning his trada. the merchant when he is making his fortune If he fails to learn l!ii art he will be sur9 to miss his enjoyment when he gains what he sighs for. How She Likkd h. A very worthy and pious old dame, who could not read had several books loaned to her. which she got a little girl to read to her. The deaco-i of her church loaned her 4Pi!jrim's Progress, and a nephew a copy of 'Robinson Crusoe.' Hearing ihem read alternately, the dame got ihe text a li'.'.U m:xed up, and when the deacoo called upon her and asked her how she liked the allegory. IMcrirn's Progress, he was somewhat surprised when the re plied, ' It's a marvellous book truly ; why what big troubles him and his man Friday undergoed. Two French doctors were fi2hting a duel with small swords, when one di-arm ed the other.lhe sword of the disarmed man flying off to some distance. "Down, and beg lor your life." exclaimed the successful combatant, as he raised his sword to split his adversary. ''Never" exclaimed the latter,"! will never beg my lile of you un less I should become so untortunate as to j .faal ,he be u .erenl rj. Unshed out ir