UNION RECORD.OROVILLE, SATURDAY. APRIL 2IDblt;fov;For President, in 1864,ABRAHAM LINCOLN.DITOR VICE PRESIDENT,ANDREW JOHNSON, of TVnn. of(Subject to the !*• - .n of the Xati na! Uni nnrConvection.) jrtrerKtiThe State Convention. lt;;IThe Union .State Convention, which a-sem tcbled at Sacramento, on tie 24th u't., closed its session on the 25th. On the first page of thi- ‘4 paper will be found the names of the delegates ‘ appointed to the National Convention, the uiplatform adopted, etc. With j-ucL men *'Thompson Campbell and Gen. Bidw.-ii to rep I** resent California at Baltimore, the loyal p** p!e of the State may confidently expect that their j views of the men and policy required in this P great crisis will receive the fullest consideration, b The people of this State, with their loyal breth i I ren throughout the nation, have, after mature lj deliberation, concluded that it would be unwise !■ and dangerous “to swap hordes in the middle , b; of the stream and our delegates are instructed !lu1 cI 1to act as a unit for the renominaticn by aecla | *Q mation of the iwheel hone of the Union—A bra- ! °1 bam Lincoln. This action of ibe Golden State j 'u will adorn one of the brightest pages iu her ^ history—proving beyond cavil her steadfast 1 loyalty to the Union in its most trying hour, notwithstanding the efforts of a contemptible minority of “chivalry and doughfaces to carry her into the vortex of Secession.All that now remains to insure the triumphant success of the Union cause iu this State atthe Presidential election, is the maintenance of! Cia harmonious and cohesive -position by theparty, which can alone be done by discarding 3:all minor issues and trivial differences. Thereis nothing to be gained fur the cause of the ClUnion, nor for the advancement of the political 1ambition of anv man or set of men, bv an* T 0attempt to raise new issues in the party, or to discriminate as to the status of persons in the * Union ranks who do not see things exactly in 1 the light they are viewed by other Union men. but who, on all questions of paramount impor- ef tance, are unreservedly, with all other true and patriotic men, pledged to a faithful adherence of to that great party of the people who are now 2' supporting the Government with such great In unanimity, despite the efforts of demagogues to cl create dissensions and distrust, in order that ar they may secure a political triumph at the ri expense of the nation. Ict our motto be, “A union of all Union men for the sake of the at Union”—and the final result of the struggle now being waged for the perpetuity of the Federal Union, and the vindication of the ar truths embodied in the Declaration of our a Revolutionary sires, cannot be a matter of m doubt. In the language of a great statesmen, t0 the Union, “more firmly Gxed thin ever, will 80 stand, unmoved, enduring and immovable.” ulai--------* _ orW I ITT AM \f StO VP t ho now lt;Ini’DrnAr /if br