I TTpi TT -71". Tp 1 1H N 1 H. il. JACOiiY, l'ublatslicr. Trnta and IUgnt God and dor Conutry $2 50 in Advance, per Annas, VOLUME! 6. BLOOMS BURG. COLUMBIA COUNTY, PA., WEDNESDAY,' JUNE 7, 1865. NUMBER 33. Mitel MCTWgniieewwaMrMaaaMslt '''1"1''3"'"'"'w,w'"'''''"'fl''l"'"'''aM"'''"'BB' UHISiL.'.U "IT.. OF" THE NORTH 1L 7 , V U'1 V 1 THE STAR OF THE NORTH le t-VER? W KDK KPDA V BY IV M. II. JjiCOUYy Office on llaiu fct., iril Sqcare below Market. TLIi JS : Two Dollars and Fifty Cents Su udrani't. It not paiJ till ibe end cf '.he yer, Three Dollar will te 'charged. No fcuhi-criptiona taken for a period legs than six months ; t.o discontinuance permit ted until all arrearages are paid unless at the option of the editor. HATES UF ADVERTISING : TEN L I N KS CONSTITUTE A SQUARE. One Square, one or three insertions, 1 50 Every subsequent insertion Jess than J3, 50 Oho coluniu one year, 5!T 00 Administrators' and Executor' notices,3 00 TratiKibtil advertising payable in advance, all other due afif the first insertion. A PSALM OF OIL. . Tell me not in.rriournlul measure, Oil i but an ompty show ; For Via earth?a deep hidden "treasure, And a pomp will make it flow. "Oil is greasy,-' "Oil doth smell bad' So say thoe who have it not ; So ol old, the poor fox lelt bad, When the grapes he had not got. Nt to stay at home and gruratle " ' Is the way to make your pile, Bat it. he.irty rough and tumble Dig and bore till you ' strike tie." , K ds are long, and we!! are siukiu;?, And the earth halt full of hole, .Show i the signs of constant drilling Shows. ihe faith that fills our soul. See at Oil Creek bow they rally, See in Mecca's mnd domain, In the Allt'ghany valley, All have oil "upon the brain."' Tmet no agent's specious Mory, 13 yourselt and get a Ieae ; Drill drill deep in eearch-of glory, Ffid it when you find the grease. Hits of greenhorn's oft remind ua We, perhaps, by patient toil, Can, departing, leave behind os 2 lite a tanking 'fhow of oil." Such a show as that another Bitting alter without luck ; Srne forlorn and lainting brother Seeking, may keep up Lis pluck Let os, t!ien. be busy boring With tlie meaii at our control ; Kp oh drilling, keep exploring, Witt; a pump ij ever) hole. JN.'CRTFKLLGW. Advtitislc for a Wife, and 7,'bat Caiae cf it. The Toronto Leader gives the particulars ol a matrimonial romance in which a Ver mont preacher, a the main character lha djudufiieat of - which was, how ever, anything but romantic to him. It eetin that a farmer in McH enry county, Illinois, named W had advertised in a Chicago paper for a wife, which wa repli ed to by a dashing y.cng law student of To ronto, ripe for fun, under the name el Helen Cari(opher. A warm correspondent ensu ed, ''Helen' imitating the hand and style of a I idy anxious to make a good match, and df-fcrit ing herself as an orphan of re-.opec-iable family confection, and of mean residing In Toronto.' The correspondence Va.fijittllj broken off by W 's neglect in paying hi postage, which in Canada amounts to !nir.eihing, ami be married some vne in his wu neighborhood. But the se quel contains ihe pith ol the story. W V father a mini-tcr iu Vermont, and a widow---r, by some means got hold of ' HtIeaV letteM to his son, and teing'Mruck with ber xiyle wrote to ber with a view of marrying ber himself. He told her, that 'I am a minister of the gospel, am un rnaripd, buried a nice little wife years ago, and have no children to tax the attention pf u. companion. My family is provided for and cfT my hand I think sometimes of di " coniinning preaching, and ol retiring to pri vate life. My age people judge to be thirty five though I am older. 1 am above the middle size of men, though not large ; have "perfect health, and a fair position in society. My complexion is dark, with dark eyes and hair; hair not tinged with grey in the leant. What makes rcy complexion still darker, I wear a fail beard and moustache." And queried 'May I ask my little girl (if Iniy be al- hwed to call her so) if you are a Christian ? Jf you can siug andplay on the melodeon ? if yoa have good, health? Wbat in your com'plexion I ' , ' tflelen promptly replied, and an. animated correspondence ensued, resulting in the rev erend inviting himself to visit Toronto to ob lain au interview with his fair correspon dent. 'This was rather more than "Helen'-' desired, andt hinking it impurdent lo bring ihe eld man on fool's errand eome tix hun dred miles Iroto his "local" habitatioa sent liim a note oser another name, pretending lo hava accidentally foucd one of bis letters, $t;d to be a rival of his for the affections of .liefen, and tLreaieniog him with casiijgatipn in case be ehocld make his appearance in this city. - Tiev J. W.'wrota again to Helen, disclaim ing any wrong intentions, and asking it his ma! should exercise any control over each a lady. She then replied that he' might ccme, when he responded that be would be there oa the 9th or lOthofUlay, when be expected to meet his "little girl," "his dear est Helen." He arrived on the day appoint ed, and sent his "little girl'' a note, desiring : sent him, which was the portrait of a prom-. I inent actress. Btt the eyes of a large party of "Helen's" acquaintances, who had been , let into the secret, were upon him. He ap ' peared sadly di8appointed,beins fidgety in j his movements, casting wistful glances at i.ir iaBero uy tie piumeiiuuau iuo sucoii whilst his tormentors, for such, they weie, could scarcely ccc.uin themselves. They were at hi side at the oostotfice, on the mroet, and even talking with him iu tho ho tel. Not finding hi "little Helen." he con cluded to leave town, bnt "she" determined he 6hould not go until he had learned a les son. With hii party of friends he appeared at the station, arid stepping up to the rever end gentleman, as be stood on the car plat form, he held oat his hand shooting. "How are yoa W 1 How are you Miss Helen Christopher MrT J. W, became pale with rage, stamped his foot on the planks, and, with upiiited hands, exclamed. "Yoa vile rascal, how dare you plav me such a trick V Just then the trsdn started, amid the shouts of the merry younij lellows for W and)Hel en Christopher, bearing oil the disomfiued foolish old lover, a sadder and wiser man, and who will probably never gel a wife by' aj verlistn,!. The Ttibnnc en Secession. The New York Tribune is de.irsus of having a rebel leader put lo trial for (reason before the Court, in order to get a decision as to the right of secession. What decision Mr. Greeley desires or expects we can judge trorn his record. He hold to the rihl of secession : ,:If the cotton states ha!l become satisfi ed that they can do better out of the Unio tnan in it, we insist on letting them go in peace. 7fi right to secede may be a rtvolu tioH&ry one, but it exists neverlhrtes. " Trii une, Nov. i, 1860. He favors Southern secession : ,4Jf the cof.on states unitedly and earnest ly wish lo withdraw peacefully from the Unior. we think they should be allowed to do so.'' Tniune, Nov. 26, 1S60. Ha says.fcrce would be wrong : "Any attempt, to compel them by force to remai.i would te contrary to the princi ples endiiciated in our immortal declaration of Independence contrary to the funda mental ideas on winch the human liberty is bueed." 77Iu.,' 6ame date. He will resist coercion : "We mutt ever resist the right of any state to remain in the Union and nullify the laws thereof to wiih-'.. w from the Union is quite another matter. Whenever a con siderable section ol our Union shall deliber ately resolve lo gu oat, we s'aall resist all coercive measures, to keep it in. We hope never :o live in a republic whereof one sec tion is pinned to another by . bayonets." Tribune, same data. He finds a precedent for secession : "If the Declara ion of Independence jus tified the secession from the British empire of three million of colonials, in 177G, we do not see why it would not jjsl ify the seces sion of five million of Southerners from the Union in 1361. ,: TtiSune, December 17, I860. He agrees to "i xward" secession . "Whenever it shall be clear that the great body ot the Southern people have becdrne conclusively alienated from the Union, and anxious to escape from it, we will do our beat to forward their views." Irtbune, Feb. 23. 1861. We woulj quote more, bnt these are enough too much. They show that the Tribune led oiT in advocating secesion from the very day after Lincoln' election, till the week before hi inauguration, and many abolition jnurn als beid to the pame views A beautiful record this, for the leading ' Union parly !"' organ which has never retracted one of tho above opinions; but holds them ready to be used in future, should that party fail to hold power, and the sixieen-starred flags of 1S56, again bo hoisted by the negro-equality parly. Was it any exesse for Greeley Ibat the present Chief Justice, Chase, and Secretary of State, Seward, had, as Tf-ena'tors, voted for a proposition favoring' a dissolution of the Union, or that Abraham ' Lincoln, as a member of Congress, had made a speech from which we quote; " "Any people, unywhere, being inclined and having the power, have a right to rise up and shake off the existing government, and form a new one that may suit them better." 'This is a most valuable, a most sacred right a right which we hope and believe is lo liberate the world. Nor is the righl confined to cases in which the whole peo pie of an existing government may choose to exercise it any portion ol such people that can may revolntionize and make , their own of so much of the territory as they in habit. More than this ; a majority of any portion of such top!e may revolntionize, patting down a minority intermingled with, or near about them, who may oppose their moveraenls."-Ccri5rmiona Globe, Jao. 12, 1343. " ' : '. NocG9,Jr., FpeaUing cf a blind wood-sawyer, says. "While Done ever saw him bee, thousands have seun him saw.'7 (Is was a poetical chap who described ladies' lipa as the glowing gateway of beans, pork, sour fcrout a id potatoes. THE HOSE CALL. Bring home the battle-flags, all stained and torn With bursting shell and grimy battle smoke, The flags that through the fierce fight ye have borne Amid the hissing lead, the sabre's stroke, And place them on each waiting armory wall, That they may speak of the great pat to all. Bring home your muskets, stand them one by one In the vast arsenals, end tten leave them there, The glorious work which called them forth is dpne, The din of war is no more in the air ; The battle-echoes fade and fade away, And Pacd is .dawning on a broader day. Bring back the cannon, let the spider spin. Her thin laced web within ihern where they stand, No more their throats shall .vaka with dread ful din The drowsy hamlets of our wide-spread land, Or cast them into bells that ne'er shall cease To fill the air with sweet toned notes of peace. Bring borne the leathern knapsacks ye have borne ' With bending backs along the dusty ways, The mounted cross-bells ye've so proudly worn ; A new light shines from brighter, happier days, The cloud of war is swiftly passing by, And once again the sun shines in the sky. Bring back your swords, and lay them by at home ; Ah is it not a proud a noble thonghl To know your children in the year to come Shall point to these and say, "Oar fathers fooght !" -Bring back your swords, and hang them on yoor wail, To grasp aain whene'er your country calls. Come home, ye veterans ; welcome, wel come home ! "Come," say the lips of mothers and of wive ; Your children's joyous voices echo "Come!" We thank toe God of Battles for your live; And now the morning dawning on the night Breaks in the Iutur9 beautiful and bright. The Tender Passion. Thackeray rays that "when a man is in love with one wo man in a family, it io astonishing how fond ! he becomes of every one connected with it. He ingratiates uimelf wkb the mails ; he is bland with the butler ; he interests him sell with the footman ; he runs on errands , for ihe daughters ; he gives and lends mon j ey to the young sou. at college ; he pats little dogs which bs would kick otherwise ; be smiles at old stories, which would make him break out in yawns were they ottered by any but papa ; he drinks sweet Port wine, for which be would curse the stew ard aad the whole committee at a club ; he bears even with the cantankerous old maid en aunt; he beats lime when darling little Fanny performs her piece on the piano ; and smiles when wicked, lively little Bobby upsets the coffee over his shirt." Swallowed a Pix. Capt. C. C. Plotz, ofj tne 143d re'gt P. V., was summoned heme ! last week by the alarm of his family at the fact that a little daughter bad accidentally swallowed an ordinary sizad pin. It gave ber considerable uneasiness for soma days, and fears were entertained of its lodging permanently. The child exhibited some kytnpioms of going into fits; but a day or two after the Captain's arrival, he had the satisfaction of seeing the pin pass from her. The little girl is now well as ever. Luzerne Union. A Plot or the Negro soldiers at Mem phis, to murder every Confederate paroled prisoner there, was discovered and thwar ted last week. Thursday night was the time fixed for the massacre, but white troops had been placed on guard, and when the negroes attempted to eally from their quarters, they met a determined resistance. In the figkt which took place twenty of the negroes were Icilled end wounded. Since then they have been strongly guarded. General Washburne has been superseded in command at Memphis by General Joha E. Smith. "Doctor, I want yoa lo prescribe for me." The doctor feels ber pulse. ''There is noth ing the matter, madam; you only need rest." Now, doctor jail look at my longue just look at it ! look at it ! "Now I say what does thai need." "1 thick, that needs rest too.'' Exit madam, in a great excitement. Schoolmaster ''Bill To in kins, wbat'a a widow?" Bill "A widder is a married woman what ain't got any husband, koz he's dead.' Master 'Verry well. What is a wid ower V Bill-r-"A widderer is a man that runs ar.ter widders." Clement B. Clay was not captured with Jelfersoc Davis,bnt voluntarily gave himself op to stand trial on the ch arge of being im plicated in the assassination of Mr- Lincoln. Gerry O'Lbdqs at the Oil Regions. I have reached the land of oil, having ta ken a safer rout than the Erie. Pennsylvania is a good sized State, and it takes sometime to get there. When you do get there yoa wish you hadn't come. There is plenty of oil and that is all ex cept lots of people. I am for "Snake Run," the most likely place for oil. They call these places rnns, because ev erybody who is after oil runs here. Every man you meet is the President, di rector, or. engineer of a petroleum company. The native?, who are while people, and repemble country folks, live by selling land and greenhorns. They have a system in both transactions. They double llie price of land every morn ing. If y6a kriow anybody who has got a few vacant lots that he wants to sell, tell him to' bring them out hero. The folks are so busy looking for oil they haven't time to build houses, and everybody is afraid to put up a house for fear he might cover an oil well. Consequently (be hotels are a little crowd ed. The Muggins Hotel, where I put op is much so. Muggins, tho proprietor, is the mo6t ac comodating man you ever Baw. A city rail road conductor isn't a circuni3lauco to him. He has only six beds in bis hoase, but be is always ready lo take in everybody. He took Ria in. Also two hundrsd more petroleum pil grims. The sleeping accommodations are various. We go to bed in platoons. When the first platoon gat asleep they are carefully taken out of bed and hung over a close line. The second platoon go through the same process, until! everybody is pro vided for. Preferring to sleep a!one, I slept on tho mantle piece wi;h the coal scuttle for a piU low. . As I observed land is precious out here, I bought a lot ton inches by four, for ten thou sand dollars, and commenced operations. The next thing is to commence boring. You wan: a sharp' bore- A public lectur er won't do,ncithdr will a skating gimlet. I took a brace and bit aod went iu. Got down about teven thoasand feet in to the bo-vels of the laud, when 1 came to an impediment. - Found that I had struck the pra-Ad mite I rock of the ossified strata of the Silurian for mation. This is geology, and yon perhap? won't understand it, but 1 will explain it all in the l .i so-. PPr 13 l Historical society i am aoout w"ting. Got 8 candle and went down to see about it. 1 found a big Megatherium, about six bun dreJ feet long, aad wide, in a capital state of preservation. I got him cat and will send hira along by express. Went on boring through forty feel of sand stone. Here enconntereJ a strange smell of sal phur which alarmed the native who sold me tho land, and lo eae his conscience gave back half the money, and wanteJ mo to ! stop boring. Told him I was beend to keep on nntill I struck ile, br come oat on the other hide of creation. Bored on. Went through about sixty thoasand feet more, when sudJonly the brace and bit went in, and there wa a grand report like that made by Butler's pow der boat that didn't blow up Fort Fisher. Things were slightly confused for awlnlo. A section of Pennsylvania went up, and I went up with it. I guess I mal have come down again, as the next idea I had was finding myself comfortable, hung orer ihe clothes line at Muggins Hotel. An investigation into the matter showed that I bad struck through into a gass factory in China, which had exploded at both ends of the bore, killing half a million of Chi nese. The casualties on our side were confined to one native aad a small dog. 1 haven't givea ap yet. The folks here a;e very encouraging: they will click t a man as long as he has aent left, and I never new Muggins to turn a mac out of his hotel to pay his bill. A kind hearted chap offered me another piece of land, the siza of a s'.ove plate, within a mile and a half of a seven hundred barrel well, lor the reasonable figure of half a millioa, and two-thirds of the oil. I had calculated that boring for oil is not so profitable as bleeding the public I thall start an oil company on more liberal terms than any yet offered. I shall be prepared to guarantee anything. The capital will be a million dollars, divi ded into two million shares, at fifty cents each. Dividens of two hundrad per cent, will be paid weekly, in addition to which'.each sub scriber will be entitled ton season ticket for Lanigan'a Ball, a new hat, a farm near La Crosse, and a ton of coal td market prices. The "Scaly ilnn" Petroleum Company will be the biggest thing ia oil in the mar ket. I am going to arrange the basinets as soon as my frienda send rao funds enough to pay ray way back. From the Old Guard The Republican a Disaaloa Tarty. Why should we rejoice 1 If the surrender of Gen. Lee were the least proof that the South has been conquered or subjugated by the North, so far from rejoicing, it ought to cause, in tho breast of every patriot, of ev ery friend of liberty, the most painful sad ness. But thank God, the event carries with it no such proof. The Sonth is neither sub jugated nor conquered. Tho defeat of all ber armies would be far enough from amounting to subjugation. Bat if there is to be an end of bloodshed, then sincerely do we rejoice in iho hope, of seeing all the questions involved in the controversy set tled by the exercise of reason and justice As to justice, the sword may establish noth- I ing it as often aids the wrong as tha righl cause. WitSess ihe triumph of Russian arnts over tho holy cause of Poland ; and of Austria over Hungary. What is the char acter cf tho man who rejoces in the murder and extermination of the Poles, and in the final trinmph ot despotic Russia over that brave people ? As good, certainly, as that of the man rho cocld rejoice ai the thought of the subjugation ol the South by lha North. He is a wretch '. a scoundrel, who is an enemy to the grand tbeory of government established by our fathers, and deserves to be execrated by every friend ol liberty and self government ! We havo no word but that of scorn for such a creature. He should have been born in Russia, or in some other hated spot, where ihe word liberty is count ed as a crime; but while a love of truth, and a sense of duty, force na to this declara. lion, we are not without the hope that hu manity and reason may now return lo tho Northern heart and brain. We speak of the masses of tho people, and not of the leaders cf tha Republican party. Of theea last we expect nothing bnt a luel of power, plunder and despofn-ra. They wanted the war. Difguie it as they may evade, cover up, and lie aa they may there stands the? naked, shameful truth, lhat they wanted this war. Among ihe last words of Mr. Douglas in th9 Senate were these, (point ing to the Repcblicau Senators,) "You want rrar!" If they did not, how easy to avoid it ! Tho proposition of Mr. Critten den, which was simply a re-aSrmation ol ihe ground on which ihe country had found peace and prosperity for half a century, if accepted by the Republicans, would havo saved millions cf lives, and a debt that no man can compute. Would have saved the anguish of many millions of hearts, which time can never fcaal. Theso fair and just measnres of peace were sustained by the whole Democratic party in- Congress, and opposed by tho entire Republican delega tion. A brief history ef this struggle for peace on the part of the Democrats, and for war, on the part of the Republicans, will fasten the crime of all this bloodshed npon the Abolitionists. Finding the Republican majority in Con gress unyielding in their determination not to accept tte compromise as introduced by Mr. Crittenden, a proposition was made in the House ol Representatives on the 27i!i of Fubru-uy, 1861, to'submit the question to a vote ol the people. The following were ihe resolutions embodying that proposition : Whereas, The Union is in danger ; and owing to the unhappy divisions existing ia Congress, it would be difficult, if U9l im possible, .for lhat. body to concur, in bolh Us branches, by the requisite nifj rity, so as to enable it either to adopt men meas ores of legislation, or to iscommend to tho Stale such amendments to tho Consulu tion as are deemed necessary and proper m v r to avert that danger; Ana uhctcjs, in so great an emergency lha opinion and judg ment of tha people ought lo ta beard, ad would be the surest guide to their Repre sentatives ; therefore, Resolved Ly tks Senate and. Home cf Hcpre scnlativct cf tke United Slcdcs in Congress as femblol, That provisions ouht to be made by law, withoGt dalay, for taking the sense of tbe peoplo, and submitting lo their vote the following resolutions (Crittsndon's) as the basis for the fiual and permanent settle ment of those disputes that now disturb the peace of ihe country and threaten the exis tence of the Union. Upon the proposition to submit tho Crit tenden Compromise lo lha sense of the people, the following was the vote in the House of Representatives, Feb. 27ih, 1S6 1 : Yeas Messr. Adrian, William C. Ander son, Avery, Barr, Barrett, Bocock, Boteler, Bonligny, Brabson, Branch, Briggs, Bristow, Brown, Burcb, Burnett, Horace F. Clark, John Cochrane, Cox, James Craig, Burton Craige, John G. Davis, De Jarnelte, Dim mick,Edmandson, English, Florence, Fouke, Garnett, Gilmer, Hamilton, J. Morrison Har ris, John T. Harris, Hatton, Holman, Wm Howard, Hughes, Jenkins.Kunkle, Larabee, James M. Leach, Leake, Logan, Maclay, Mdllory, Charies D. Martin, Elbert S. Mar tin, Majnaad, McClernand, McKcnty, Mill son, Montgomery, Laban T. Moore, Isaac N Morris, Nelson, Niblack, Noell, Peyton, Phelps, Pryor, Quarles, Riggs, James C. Robinson, Rust, Sickels, Simms. William Smith, William. N. H. Smith, Stevenson, James A. Siewart, Stout, Thomas, Vallan digbam, Vatica, Webster, Whitely, Winsiow, Wojdson, and Wricht 80. Democrats, 61 ; Americans, 19 ; Republicans, not one. Nays Messrs. Charles F. Adams, Aid rich, Alley, Ashley, Babbitt, Beale, Bing ham, Blair, Blake, Boffinton, Burlingamp, Brayton, Bornham, Butterfield, Campbeil, Carey, Carter, Case, Cobnrn, Clark, B. Cochrane Coliax, Cockling, Conway, Cor in, Covode, H. Winter Darts, Dawes, De lano, Duel'., Dunn, Edgerbsn, Edwards, El liott, Ely, Ethfcridgcj Farnsworth, Fenton, Ferry, Foster, Frank, French,- Gooch, Gra ham, Grow, Hale, Hall, Helmick, Hickman, Hindmand, Hoard, Williarc A. Howard, Humphrey, Hotchins, Irvine. Junkin. F. VV. Kellogg, William Kellogg, Kenyon Kilgore, Killinger, De Witt C.'Leech, Lee, Long- Rice, Christopher Robinson, Royce, Scrau ton, Sedgwick, Sherman, Somes, Spaulding, Spinner, Stanton, Stevens, Wm. Stewart, Stralton, Tappan, Thayer, Theaker, Tom kins, Train, Trimble, Vandever, Van Wyck, Verree, Wade, Waldron, Walton, Cadwala der C. Washburne, Elihu B. Wathburne, Wells, Wihson, Windom, Wood, and Wood ruff 113. Republicans, 111; Americans, 2 ; Democrats, none Congressional Globe, page 1261. Thus the Republicans, having a clear ma jority; in the House ot Representatives, re fused to submit the Crittenden Compromise to the sense of the people. The question then reverted to the original proposition. It was not until Sunday, the 3d of March, 1861, the last day of the i Thirtv sixth Cor.cress. that a vote was ter- miUed 5n ,he ina,e uPon ,he rlaQ of ai" junujciu KnoAii as u.o - nucnuen vuui promise." Thai vole is given as evidence that tho Republican Senators never intended that any plan of compromise should be adopted with their approval, bat thatf their party doctrines and the supremacy of their party in the control of the Government were far superior to their desire for the pres ervation of the Union iu peace and with the good will of all the Slates. Upon the direct vote, taken March 2d, 1861, for the adoption of the Crittenden Compromise, just as it was offered by the distinguished Senator from Kentucky, the following was the result in the Senate yeas, 19 ; nays, 20. Yeas Messrs. Bayard, Bigler, Bright, Cri.tenden, DoBglas, G win, Honter, John ston, of Tennessee, Kennedy, Lana, Latham, Mason, Nicholson, Polk, Pugh, Rice, Sebas tian, Thomson and Wig!a!l-rl9 ; of which 17 were Democrats, and 2 Americans. iVujs Messrs. Anthony, Bingham, Chan dler. Clark, Dixon, Doolifila, Daikee Fes scnderi, Foot, Foster, Grimes, Harlan, King. Morrill, Sumner, Ten Evck, Trumbull, Wade, Wilkinson and Wilson 20; ail Re publicans. Il thus appears that all the Democrats and Americans present in the Senate voted for lha Crittenden Compromise, aad all the Republicans voted against it. Before this vo'e was given, as a last ef fort to avert lha impending conflict, a Peace Convention, composed of delegates of sev eral cf the States, assembled in Washing ton at the invitation of Virginia, for the purpose of maturing some proposition which it was hoped would be acceptable lo the dominant party. They agreed upon measures of peace, but, like all other1, they were rejected by tho Republican party. Tha following letter, wriitun by Senator Chandler, nf Michigan, to the Governor of that State, exposes, as clearly as any lan guage we could employ, ihe spirit which prompted the Republicans to oppose every possible plan of peace : My Dear Governor : Governor Bingham and myself telegraphed you on Saturday, at the request ol Matfsachussdtts and New i ork, io seud delegates lo Ihe i eace or Compromise Conjzre-. They admit that we were right and they wrong ; that no Republican State should have sonl dele gates ; but they are here and can't get away. Ohio, Indiana, Rhode Lland, are caving in, and thero is some danaer of Illi nois, and now they beg ca for God's sake to come to their rescue, and save tke Hepub ticun vnrw from runlure. I ho:e yoa will send stiff-Lacked men or none. Tbe whole j thing was gotten up against my judgment j and advice, and will e:id in thiu smoke, j Still 1 hone, as a matter ol courtesv to some : of our erring bretnern, that jou .... i j vvill send the delegates Truly your friend, Z. Chandler. Hih Excellency, Austin Blair. P. S. Some cf the manufacturing States think that a fiyltt '.ccvld be mcfvl. Without a Untie bhod'Uiting tJs Unhu trou.'J net le Viottk a curse. Mr. Douglas, 'ia a Fpeoch delivered in tic Ssnale on the 3d of Jinuary, 18G1, said: j I fear from every indication thai the Re-' publican party is disposed to treat the mat- tcr a? a party question, to bo delormmed in : a caucus wiihor.l reference to iu effects j upon the reace of the country and the safe- ( ty ol tto union I t.e unity ot me party is nearer to isem man tno ur.uy oi ma o!b.?. Tbe American people have nol decided thai they preferred the disruption of this Gov ernment, and civil war, with all its horrors and miseries, to surrendering o:io iota of the Chicago platform. During tho pendency cf the peace meas ures, Scatter Docglae ulo said : The Senator (Mr. Pugh,) has said that if the Crittenden proposition could have been passed early in the session, it would have saved all the Stales except South Carolina. I firmly believe il would. While the Crit renden proposition was not ia accordance with my cherished views, I avowed my readiness and eagerness to accept it in order to save ihe Uniou, if we could unite upon it. I can confirm the Senator's declaration, that Senator Davis, when on thai Committee of Thirteen was ready, ai all times, to com proms fe on tke Crittenden ptoposition. I xrill go further and 3iiy that Itir. loombs teas also. And thus he placed the responsibility cf the rejection of Ihe measure : 1 believe this to be a fair basis of amica ble adjustment. If yoa of the Republican side are not willing to accept this, nor the proposition of the Senator from Kentucky, (Mr. Crittenden,) pray tell os what yoa are willing to do ? I address the inquiry to Republicans alone, for tke reason that in tke Committee cf Thirteen, a few days ago, every member from tkeSoutk, including those from the Cotton States, (Messrs. Davis and Toomb?,) txjnessed then rc idincss to accept the proposi tion of my venerable iriend from Kentucky (Mr. Crittenden,) as a f.nal tcltlemetd of the contro versy, ij intended and sustained by the Repuhli can'members. Hence, the soik responsibil ity Or OUR DISAGREEMENT, AND THE ONLY DIF FICULTY IN THE WAY OF AN AMICABLE ACJUST MKNT, IS WITH THK REFI'BLICAN PARTY. This settles the matter. We conld have had peaco.t with the Union, and on pre- war upon the Constitutional rights of tbe Sou. h for more than a third of a century. From year to year this party bad been growing in strength and. violence, until at last it elecied a President pledged to carry out to the fullest extent its aggressive and murderous spirit. In a moment of alarm ( and of well-caused alarm, the South de manded guarantees that their Constitutional rights should be respected. The Republi can 'party answered only with sneers and threats. The deliberation of its delegates in Congress, and of its State Legislatures, resembled more the gibberish of a grinning match of guntoos than the councils of states men. Their whole spirit was embodied in the so characteristic words : "Without a lit- tie blood-letting the Union would not be worth a curse." They were tbe authors, and the sole authors, of ihe war. Every drop of blood thai has been shod is on their guilty souls. The Somh wanted peace ; and it wanted peace in tke Union, on the ba sis of the Constitution as it was interpreted by those who mde it, or as il had been ad ministered from the foundation of the Gov ernment. A party had come into power, founded upon a "higher law" than the Constitution. The South had cause o be alarmed, and it had a right to demand guar antee that its institutions should be no fo ther warred upon. What an impudent, ly- ing tongue, is that which declares lhat "slavery caused the war !" Slavery caused the war in no other sense than money in a man's pockets causes robbery. To be sore, if there had been no "slavery" there weald have been Do Abolitionists, just as if there had been no. such thing as money, or its value, there never would bave been a rob ber. In a legal view, the same morality and logic which -justifies abolitionism justi fies relict y. Tbe South bad the same light to take tfie best measures within its reach to protect herself from abolitionism that il had to provide against .robbery. If there was no other way to guard its property bt,t to resume the powers it bad delegated to the Federal agency, its rijht to take lhat step is as clear as a rr.an'a right lo protect his o n life. An ignoramus, or a rascal, may deny this proposition ; bnt a wise man, or a statesman, never. Bat what the South had a right to do, and what was policy for her to do, may be very different things' The rght of a Stale to resama sis "delegate! powers" fa: self-protection, is as clear as the -sun ; but pidicy, we think, would have, in the case of the South, led to the adoption of a different remedy. A very small ppr. tion of the North was really Aboliiionized. The Democratic party was divided and de mora! zed by the long practiced fclfirhues and dishonesty of i;s leaders. It was on this account that a revolutionary and disun ion northern party slapped into power. We say disunion, for the founders of that party had been open distmioniits for a third of a century. WhiJe Jefferson Davis, and those lik him in the South, were for the Union, theae meu were for disunion. Tho reader of the Old Guard are in possession of thetr full record on this point, but though they were politically in power in ihe Norih"7they were, in reality, in a great minority of num bers. Had the South remained to fight her rights out politically, in tke Union, abolition ism would, at length, have been driven to thj.wall, and disarmed of all its power for evil. And even now, we are persuaded that the shortest way for her to be revenged op en Abolitionism is to return straight to ' the Union, by every ct:e of tho seceded States passing repealing acts. This will place those States back in the Union with out terms dictated by the Abolition admin- -istration. Then the administration will have a right only to appoint Euch federal oiTiceis as are authorized by (he Constitu tion. If any others were appointed who darjJ to make their appearance in their midst, they would be amicable to tha State la ws, ami might be punished according to , heit cr-m,c3 against theso laws. La! the Sjcth take this course, and the face of Ab olitionism will be blanched with fright ia a moment. Its heart will be seize. 1 with the most horrid lo-ar. It would bring an end to the war, end then would commence the bu siness of settling up the accounts of tha war. An awful business to those who have carried it on. It will be their judgment day. And the Union nothing is terrible to them as the thought of the restoration of tha Union. They want a "new nation." That is what they call it. A new nation, wherein dwelleth negroes and white men apd -women in beautiful and undistinguishable fa miliarity and equality. We had an illustration of theaJministr3tion'8 fear of the old Un ion in the removal ef Gen. Weitzel aa com mandant at Richmond. That officer was appoalad to for permission to assemble the Legislature of Virginia, with the under standing that it wished to call a Convention of the pebpla for ihe purpose of repealing the act of secession, and thereby placing that Stale fully tack in ihe .Union. For givinr that permission Gan. Weitzel waa speedily and wrathily set to one side, and a more pliant tool of northern disunion put ia bis place,' These persons mean not to permit the Union to be restored ; they dare not! A restoration of ihe Union will pre serve the laws which they have outraged. The idea of restoring tbe Union is ten thou sand limes more hatefal to tbe Abolitionists than to the secessionists of the Sooth. While the party in power can prevent it, thera will never be a return of lb,e glorious old Union th'ul was formed by our wise and pa-. Iriotic forefathers. " - i 4 Bit