filE HUNTINGDON GLOBE, A DEMOCRATIC FAMILY JOURNAL,N DEVOTED TO LOCAL AD GENER N AL EWS, &C. T', GLOBE. ' I-11-4 gITEVEHDOBD. a) A. Wednesday, December 19, 1860. LANS:B I BLANKS! BLANKS! vNSTABLE'S SALES, ATTACHMENTS, SUMMONS, DEEDS, SUBPOENAS, MORTGAGES, SCHOOL ORDERS, JUDGMENT NOTES. LEASES FOR HOUSES, NATURALIZATION B'KS, COMMON BONDS, JUDGMENT BONDS, WARRANTS, FEE BILLS, NOTES, with a waiver of the $3OO Law. JUDGMENT NOTES, with a waiver of the $3OO Law. ARTICLES OF AGREEMENT, with Teachers. MARRIAGE CERTIFICATES, for Justices of the Peace and Ministers of the Gospel. COMPLAINT, WARRANT, and COMMITMENT, in case of Assault and Battery, and Affray. ;MERE FACIAS, to recover amount of Judgment. COLLECTORS' RECEIPTS, for State, County, School, B.,rongh and Township Taxes. Printed on superior paper. and for sale at the Office of the HUNTINGDON GLOBE. BLAN KS. of every description, printed to order, neatly, at short notice, and on good Paper. .New Advertisements. Court Proclamations, by Sheriff Watson. .ifap• A Book that everybody wants, by Ewd. T. James. rtegi , ,ter's Notice, by Daniel W. 'Womelsdorf, Esq. New Watches, Clocks and Jewelry, by Swartz & licCabe. ' Advertisement of the Howard Association of Phil- AQ- Advertisement of the celebrated Root and Herb Doctor, W. Levingston. .4537.• Applications for License, by Adam Zeiglerand Jno Hurts,. Notice to the Stockholders of the Huntingdon Gas Company. gEr Elenurahles Wm. Montgomery and S. Steel Blair, have our thanks for pub. doe. received. THE HARRISBURG DAILY PAPERS DURING THE SESSION.—The Pa. Legislature will meet first Tuesday in January, and as some of our readers may want a more full report of the proceedings than we can give, we would ad vise theth to subscribe for either the Daily Patriot & Union, Democratic, or the Daily Telegraph, Republican. Both papers promise to publish full reports of the proceedings.— Single copy during the session, $1 in advance. The News. —President Buchanan has issued a proc lamation recommending to the people of the United States to observe the 4th day of Jan uary next as a day of humiliation, fasting and prayer. He says—" All classes are in a state of confusion and dismay; and the wisest counsels of our best and purest men are wholly disregarded. In this,the hour of our calamity and peril, to whom shall we resort but to the God of our Fathers 1" Hon. Lewis Cass has tendered his res ignation as Secretary of State, and Hon. Jer emiah S. Black, Attorney-General, has been appointed in his stead, Edward M. Staunton, .of Pittsburg, succeeding Judge Black as Attorney-General. Gen. Cass resigned be cause of the refusal on the part of the Presi dent to send immediately additional force to protect the forts at Charleston. Union meetings, irrespective of party, have been held in Philadelphia, Reading, Harrisburg, and other cities and towns in the State ; the proceedings of all breathe the right spirit. A dispatch from Washington to the Bal timore Sun says : " A letter from a distin guished source has just been received from Alabama, which says that it is now certain that the co-operations or conservatives will carry every county in Northern Alabama in the election for delegates to the State conven tion, and ten or more in the middle or south ern portion of Alabama, thus rendering doubtful the quastion as to which side will tri umph in the State convention. Col. Taylor, a leading Bell man in that State, has pub lished a letter strongly favoring co-operation. If, however, an ordinance of secession be passed, the conservatives will insist that it be lsubmitted to the people for ratification. Private accounts from Georgia state that the conservatives, under the lead of lion. Messrs. Stephens, Johnson, Jenkins, and others, are in strong hopes of carrying a ma jority of the ambers of the State convention, and that the conciliatory tone of the Repub licans will do much to strengthen the south ern conservatives. Mr. Howell Cobb, of Georgia, the great est arch traitor in Washington, has resigned the office of Secretary of the Treasury, and departed on Thursday for South Carolina, to hatch some new scheme of deviltry and inju ry to the Union. Mr. Philip Frank Thomas, of Maryland, was offered, and - has accepted the appointment. Vr.Mrs. Adaline Hobbs, thirty years since, addressed a letter to Dr. Joshua. T. Hobbs, New York city, which appears by rec ord to have contained two ten-dollar bank bills, was sent on the 28th of November, 1828, for the delivery to the writer on the 6th of February, 1829; the postmaster at New York not being able to find the writer, returned the letter, with its contents, to the dead let ter office. After a lapse of thirty-one years, the letter is now claimed by the person ad dressed J. T. Hobbs, Mount Vernon, 0., and a draft for the money has been accord ingly remitted on the very day of the appli- Cation. A FEMALE INVENTlON.—Elizabeth M. Smith, of Burlington, N. J., has invented and patented a much desired improvement in reaping and mowing machines, and one which renders their use a matter of safety and not of danger. The improvement con sists of a device for throwing them in and out of gear by means of the driver's seat.— Thus, when the driver takes his seat on the machine, his weight throws it into gear, and when he leaves his seat the machine is thrown out of gear, TILE VOTE OF Abssotrar.—The electoral college of this State met at Jefferson City on Wednesday, and cast the vote of Missouri 12. r Panglas and Johnson. ATTACII'T EXECUTIONS, EXECUTIONS, " Blair of Pa." Never did we read three short words with as much of shame and mortification as when we read those which head this article among the " nays" upon the vote in Congress to ap- point the Committee of one from each State to consider the present troubled state of af fairs. It is true we did not vote to put Mr. Blair where he is; others are responsible for that ; but it is also true that we have a right to expect him as a public servant to pay at least a decent degree of respect to the senti ments of the people of his District. That sentiment we have no hesitation in saying, he has grossly outraged by this vote. %Ve say this not as a partisan, and not fur parti san effect, but as a citizen of our common country, and we but repeat the sentiment of every sound conservative man we have met, regardless of party. Mr. Blair could have done no single act which so strikes at the whole business interest of his District and at the same time forever blasts his own political for tunes. Were the election to come off to-mor row, however his talents may be respected, he would not receive the votes of the business men of this town, he would be abandoned throughout the county, for his vote stamps him,whatever may be claimed to the contrary, as an agitator for evil, as one who can see his country suffer, and refuse even an Ifort to bring relief. Shame be upon him and the few with him who could not rise in such an hour to the dignity of patriortism. We write in sorrow, not in anger. The District will speak out. No District in the broad land has hearts more loyal to the Union than ours. Our mountains and our valleys, our work shops and our farms, will all re-echo their love for our whole country; and our people will set the seal of reprobation upon every man who refuses in this hour of peril to sec ond every reasonable effort for the adjust ment of the troubles that now mar the unity in which brethren should dwell. We mourn fur the honor of this District, and hope if Mr. Blair has not yet irrevocably joined himself with the mad fanaticism of the hour, that he will retrace his steps, and wipe out his own disgrace—if not, beware of the future! ! Southern Manifesto The Southern Members of Congress held a caucus in Washington on the night of the 13th, and the following declaration was signed by some thirty Members and Senators from the States of South Carolina, Georgia, Florida, Arkansas, Mississippi, North Caro lina, Louisiana and Texas: WASIIINGTON 3 Dec. 13, 1860. To OUR CONSTITUENTS— The argument is exhausted. All hope of relief in the Union, through the agency of committees, Congressional legislation, or constitutional amendments is extinguished, and we trust the South ~rill not be deceived by appearan ces or the pretence of new guarantees. The Republicans are resolute in the purpose to grant nothing that will or ought to satisfy the South. In our judgment, the honor, safety, and independence of the Southern people are to be found only in a Southern Confederacy—the inevitable re sult of separate State secession; that the sole and primary aim of each slaveholding State ought to be its speedy and absolute separation from an IMnatmal and hostile Union. Mr. Davis, of Mississippi, made the follow ing statement to the caucus: Beim* a member of the Cemmittee of Thirty-three, state that the above witnessed dispatch was communicated to the committee this evening, and a resolution passed pro posing no specific relief (eight Northern States dissenting) avowedly intended to counteract the effect of the above despatch, and, as I believe, to mislead the people of the South. From information derived from Republican mem bers of the committee and other Northern Representatives I fully concur in the above despatch. No friend of the Union can read this with out amazement. It will be seen that the first step towards conciliation by the .douse Com mittee of Thirty-three in passing Mr. Rust's resolution, terrified the Secessionists to such a degree that they sent off a c&spatch demanding instant and separate State secession, and call ing upon the Southern people not to be deceived by the favorable indications put forth by the committee. We are glad to perceive that not a single member of the Southern Union party signs the extraordinary manifesto originated by Mr. Davis. It now becomes the solemn duty of the Republicans, -the Americans, and the National Democrats on - the house com mittees, representing, as they do, an over whelming majority of the American people, to stand fast to the doctrine laid down in,the resolution of Mr. Rust, of Arkansas, and if, in the face of this proffer of peace. loolcing, as it does, to practical remedies to right Southern wrongs, the Disunionists arc enabled to carry out their treasonable designs, then let the conse quences be upon their own heads. The Popular Vote for President As near as can be ascertained, the total vote of all the States for President, at the November •election was as follows : Lincoln, 1,786,480 Douglas, 1,354,423 Breckinridgo, ' 784,897 Bell, 605,801 Although Mr. Lincoln has received a ma jority of the electors of the Union, he . is in a minority of nearly a million in the total pop ular vote. The vote of Douglas and Breck inridge combined exceeds that cast for Lin coln by more than a third of a million.— Thus: Vote for Lincoln, • _ 1,786,480 " Douglas, '1,354,423 " Breckinridge, 784,897 --2,139,320 Maj. over Republican vote, 352,840 The total vote for Bell was, 605,801 Total maj. against Lincoln, 958,641 It will also be observed that the total vote for Mr. Douglas is It early double that east for Mr. Breckinridge. In Illinois, (Mr. Douglas' State,) the vote for those two gentlemen stood, 'For Douglas, 160,549 For Breckinridge, 2,272 Mnj. for Douglas, 158,277 In Kentucky, (Mr. Breckinridge's State,) tbeir vote was, For Breckinridge, 52,856 For Douglas, 25,144 IVlaj. fur Breckinridge, 27,812 But for the secession from the National Convention, it is clear that Douglas would now 1)0 President elect, instead of Lincoln. [Correspondence of the Press.] WASHINGTON, Dee. 14, 1860. The increasing demonstrations in the free States in favor of doing strict and ample jus tice to the South are producing' wholesome results in Washington. -The news of the monster meeting held in Independence Square, in Philadelphia, on Thursday last, telegraphed to our morning papers, was ea gerly welcomed, and the resolutions, received here by your evening dailies, were heartily and almost universally approved. The great impediment in the way of an adjustment is, what side shall first surrender to the other? I have no doubt that Jefferson Davis, R. M. T. Hunter, Benjamin Fitzpatrick, James Al fred Pearce, James A. Bayard, and other Senators—although little has been said by either—will gladly undertake the task of re conciliation before the close of next week if the Union fire is maintained. The first substantial indication of peace from this quarter was the adoption of the resolution offered by Mr. Dunn, of Indiana, and accepted by Mr. Rust, of Arkansas, in the Committee of Thirty-three, yesterday af ternoon. This is of so important a charac ter that I must ask you to reprint it. Mr, Rust, of Arkansas, offered the follow ing : Resolved, That, in the opinion of this committee, the existing discontents among the Southern people, and the growing hostility among them to the Federal Government, are greatly to be regretted ; and that, whether such dis contents and hostility aro without just cause or not, any reasonable, proper, and constitutional remedies and effec tual guarantees of their p eculiar interests as recognized by the Constitution, necessary to preserve the peace of the country and the perpetuity of tha Union, should be promptly and cheerfully granted. The yeas and nays were as follows YEAS—Mr. Corwin Republican Ohio. Mr. Millson --Democrat .Virginia. • Mr. Winslow...Detnocrat North Carolina. Mr. Canipbel 1-Itepu bl lean Pennsylvania. Mr. Love Democrat Georgia. Mr. Davis ......American Maryland. Mr. Stratton --Republican Now Jersey. Mr. Bristow....American Kentucky, Mr. Nelson......Arnerican Tennessee. Mr. Dunn Republican Indiana: Mr. Taylor Democrat f ouisiana. Mr. Kellogg..... Republican Illinois. Mr. Phelps Democrat .Missouri. Mr. Houston --Dem= at Alabama. Mr. Rust Democrat Arkansas. Mr. Howard Republican A , ichigan. Mr. Hamil ton... Democrat Texas. Mr. Curtis Republican lowa. Mr. Burch Democrat California. Mr. Windem....Republicau Minnesota. Mr. Stout Democrat Oregon. ABSENT ON LAST VOTE—Mr. Whitely, of Delaware, who is known to be warmly in fa vor of the resolution. The nays were all Republicans,as follows : NArs—M r. Ferry Connecticut. Mr. Humphrey New York. Mr. Robin , on Rhode Mr. Tappan New Hampshire. Mr. Morrill Vermont. Mr, Morse Maine. Mr. Adams Massachusetts. Mr. Washburn Wisconsin. The above vote of the Union Committee is so auspicious that I am glad to express the hope that it -will lead the Secessionists to moderate their demands—particularly that which looks to the recognition of the right of a State peaceably to secede from the Union. But it must not be forgotten that all the eight dissenting Republicans voted for the two following propositions, offered as amend-. ments to the resolutions as adopted—the first by Mr. Morrill, of Vermont, and the second by Mr. Ferry, of Connecticut: Re/WNW, That. in the opinion of this committee, the elf isting discontent among the Southern people, and the growing hostility among them to the Federal Govern- . meat, are greatly to be regretted; and that any reason able, proper, and constitutional remedy necessary to pre serve the peace of the country and the perpetuity of the Union should be promptly and cheerfully granted. Resolved, That whatever grievances exist which affect the rights or interests of any part of the Confederacy, and are capable of removal by the action of Congress, ought to receive lull and appropriate remedies by the speedy action of the Federal Legislature, either by resolution, by satis factory amendments to the Constitution, or by a recom mendation for the call of a general convention of the States, as may be necessary to accomplish the purposes aforesaid. It will be perceived that these propositions contemplate large concessions to our a c hed Southern brethren, ','i Com mittee vi nci - the action of the Corn- Thirty-three, with the exception of the two Southern men, absent or refusing to vote, may be regarded as the beginning of a unanimous peace-offering for the sake of pre serving the Union. The Republicans who co-operate steadily with the Union men from the Slave States, deserve special mention, and are as follows: Messrs. Corwin of Ohio, Campbell of Pennsylvania, Stratton of New Jersey, Dunn of Indiana, Kellogg of Illinois, Howard of Michigan, Curtis o lowa, and Windom of Minnesota. Mr. Kellogg was appointed on that committee as the represen tative of Mr. Lincoln, President elect, and he has no doubt faithfully carried out the' wishes and expectations of the friends of the incoming Administration. The members from the great States Maryland, Delaware, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and Ohio voted together on the main proposition, sinking their party predilections, and exhibited the most patriotic desire to do right for the good of all. Among other hopeful indications which I have gathered to-day is the growing prospect of passing the Pacific Railroad bill, reported at the last session from the Committee on Military Affairs, (Colonel Curtis, chairman,) and contemplating two great roads—one striking through the strongest slave States, and the other pursuing a more northern route, and if the good feeling which began with the above action of the committee is maintained, I think Mr. Hunter and his friends can be persuaded to Jet the Morrill tariff bill, now on the table of the Senate pass into a law. The passage of the treasury-note bill will compel some revision of the revenue law, and no better response to the friendly offers of the Republicans on the slavery question'could be found than the enactment of Mr. Morill's bill. I do not know a Southern member, with the exception of the avowed fire-eaters, (who look to disunion as the only remedy for their al leged aggrievances,) who does not speak of the conservative indications in the free States with genuine satisfaction. The remedies offered by the great Phila delphia meeting are sensible and feasible remedies, and they derive importance from the fact that the chairman of the Committee on ResolutionS was that eminent merchant, John B. Myers, Esq., so well known in Wash ington—who has always been, as he now is, a member of the Oppositition, and more late ly of the Republican party. The noble speech of your patriotic, enlightened, and highly es teemed chief magistrate, Alexander Henry, (himself a representative of another organi zation, and heretofore adverse to the Demo cratic party,) will produce a soothing effect —particularly when it is borne in mind that he is not one of those who speak idle words, and that he will do all in his own position to make good his declarations, to see that the laws are properly enforced, and that all at tempts to interfere with the rights of others are resisted and rebuked. Great interest begins to attach to the fu ture movement of Hon. Jefferson Davis, of Mississippi. He has said very little up to REUBEN DAVIS PROM WASHINGTON. this time, and, although generally recognized as a leader among those who contemplate se cession as the only way to vindicate the rights of the South, has too frequently pronounced in favor of the Union, and too gallantly de fended his country's flag on the field of battle, to be indifferent to the spectacle now presen ted. to him, and to all our leaders in Congress, by the conciliatory and imposing attitude of the Northern people. Equal interest - is man ifested as to the movements of Senator Doug las. The galleries have been crowded for several days past on account of the public expectation and desire to hear him. He, him self, is not only up to the crisis, but fully prepared to address his countrymen, and I predict that when be does speak, he will put the case in such a light to our people as will induce all extremes to pause, and add new laurels to those which already encircle his brow. Judge Douglas, holding the idea that there can be no peaceable secession, and, armed with abundant authorities to prove this position, is yet deeply impressed with the importance of avoiding a violent conclu sion to our present dissensions. In what lit tle he has said during the debates that have taken place, he displayed a force of reasoning and of language, comprehensiveness of thought, and a breadth of statesmanship, that showed how profoundly he had reflected upon the questi:ms in issue. It is earnestly to be hoped that such men as Douglas and Davis will no longer be silent,. but that they will grasp the opportunity to prove that the confi dence which is placed in them by the sections they respectively represent is not misplaced. The truth is the violent men on both sides must stand back. Should they be permitted to control the Republican party on the one hand, and force Mr. Lincoln and his advisers upon the plan of refusing all efforts for an honorable adjustment, and on the other by uniting the Southern States, upon the as sumption that secession is rightful, nothing can prevent a civil war. Therefore, I hail every indication of the Union sentiment in Congress and the country as a pledge and a proof that the American people are beginning to take the matter into their own hands, and that their Representatives are showing a prop er readiness to respond to their wishes. I re peat that if this spirit is maintained to the end, the Disunionists in the South and the fanatics in the North will, in three months, , be in as contemptible a minority as they were when Mr. Buchanan was elected President in 1856. OCCASIONAL. 1 Great Union meeting in Philadelphia. The Union meeting in Independence Square, Philadelphia, on Thursday last, was one of the largest outpourings of the people ever known in that city. All parties, the Abolitionists excepted, united cordially in the proceedings. The resolutions, which we publish below, were unanimously adopted.— The Mayor of the City, Republican in poli tics, presided, assisted by a large number of Vice Presidents and Secretaries embracing the names of many of the wealthiest .and most influential citizens of Philadelphia. After the organization of the meeting had been completed, the Mayor introduced the Right Rev. Alonzo Potter, D. D., Episcopal Bishop of the State of Pennsylvania, who de , livered the following prayer, in a very im pressive manner: PRAYER BY BISHOP POTTER. Almighty and eternal God! the author of every good and perfect gift, the ruler of na tions, we come to Thee in our hour of need. Thou art more ready to hear than we are to pray and art wont to give more than we de sire or deserve. Pour down upon us the abundance of Thy mercies in this time of public difficulty, and danger. Oh God ! our sins as a nation, and as individuals, have provoked Thy just displeasure and have brought us into sore trouble ; but Thy prop erty is always to have mercy. Arise, we be Beech Thee, and stretch forth the right hand of Thy majesty and deliver us for Thy name's sake. Thou hast interposed in times past at critical and perilous periods of our history. We have heard with our ears, and our fathers have told us the noble works thou didst in their day, and in the old time before them. Great God ! wilt thou-now come forward to our res cue, in this time of general perplexity and fear. Pour down upon our hearts, and upon the hearts of the people, the spirit of wisdom and understanding, the spirit of counsel and strength, the spirit of the knowledge and of the fear of the Lord. Abate the violence of passion, and stay, we beseech Thee, the mad ness of party; banish pride and prejudice, land pour into our hearts an abundance of that wisdom, that patience, that large-hearted patriotism, that brotherly kindness which we so greatly need. Wilt thou be pleased to look graciously upon those who are in author ity over us, the President of these United States, the Governors of the several Common wealths, the Legislatures and the Conven tions ; and grant, we beseech Thee, that by by them, and all this people, things may be so ordered and established, that the good of Thy Church, the advancement of Thy glory, and the safety, honor and welfare of Thy united peo ple may be established, enlarged and perpetu ated through all future time. Wilt Thou meet with us who are here assembled on ground hallowed by memories of past wisdom, past services, and toils and counsels, in behalf of Liberty and Union. Great God 1 may the spirit of this venera ble place be in our hearts, and rule over our proceedings. May a double portion of the wisdom and patriotism of the fathers descend and rest upon their sons, and over this place, and this hour. Oh that there may go forth an influence which may be felt throughout the Republic—an influence which should tend to the healing of the waters of strife and dis cord, and to the bringing back to our distrac ted land the reign of unity and concord.— And to this end, oh God! Thou who host taught us that all our doings without charity are nothing worth, send Thy Holy Ghost, and pour into our hearts that gift of charity, the very bond of peace, and of all virtue, without which whosoever liveth is counted dead be fore Thee. And may the Grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, and the love of God, and the fellowship of the Holy Ghost, be with us all evermore. Amen. SPEECH OP MAYOR HENRY. Mayor Henry then came forward, ,amid loud applause and said.: Citizens of Philadelphia: You have been -called together upon this momentous occasion by request of your municipal Councils. You have been invited to assemble in this hallow. ed place, that, divesting yourselves of every partisan emotion, discarding all sordid and self-interested views, you may intelligently consider the present unhappy condition of your country and the danger which threatens your National Union. And what is that con- dition ? But a short time has elapsed since twenty millions of American freemen re joiced with proper pride in the wide-spread prosperity and full security afforded to them by the best perfected Government that man ever devised. To-day those twenty millions are wrapped In gloom—are paralyzed by the forebodings of evil, which no experience can depict, or agitated with projects which no breast can resolve. Eighty-four years ago the jubilant shouts of new-made freemen hailed the declaration of their independence as_it was proclaimed from this very spot ; and now thousands who have been born and reared under the rich blessings of constitu tional liberty, are gathered together on the same ground in the sad stillness of coming despair. And what is the danger that hangs over your National Union? A form of govern ment projected by the . liberal sentiments of patriots, framed by the consummate skill of statesmen, which for nearly eighty years, has attracted the admiring wonder of the world, which has fostered the growth of this people from thirteen feeble colonies to thirty three sovereign States, has ceased to retain the confidence of a portion of its confederacy, and to-day is convulsed with the premonitory throes of speedy dissolution. The giant intellects that in former days have expounded and illuminated its admira; hie Constitution, that in times of peril have guided this nation safely through the embit tered contests of opinion, have gone from us, and,there live none to fill their places. In this crisis the only remedy for existing evils must be sought for, in the sovereignty of the people, in the responsive patriotism of the masses ; approved only by their firm re solve and prompt effort, can this Union be perpetuated. [Applause.] Hence it is that you, the people of Philadelphia, are now called upon to avow your unbroken attach ment to the Union, and your steadfast deter mination that no honest effort shall be left un tried to preserve its integrity. [Applause.] My fellow-citizens, I should be false to the position in which you have placed me : should be recreant to my sense of duty if I withheld an avowal of the truth which this occasion demands. if in any portion of our Confederacy, sen timents have been entertained and cherished which are inimical to the civil rights and so cial institutions of any other portion, these sentiments should be relinquished and dis countenanced. The family discipline which you choose to adopt for your own fireside. whilst it does not violate the laws under which you dwell, is your rightful prerogative, and you are prompt to resent the officious in termeddling of others, however well intended. The social institutions of each State in this Union are equally the rightful prerogatives of its citizens and so long as those institutions do not contravene the principles of your Fed eral compact none may justly interfere with or righteously denounce them. The efficient cause of the distracted condition of our coun try is to be found in the prevalent belief of the citizens of the South. that their brethren of the North are as a community arrayed against a social institution to which they look as essential to their proslfurity, You are ready to aver truthfully that such belief is mistaken and unfounded ; but it be comes all who are actuated by an earnest brotherhood, to see to it, that where public sentiment has been misled, it shall be restor ed to its stand-point of twenty-five years since. The misplaced teachings of the pulpit, the unwise rhapsodies of the lecture-room, the exciting appeals of the press on the subject of slavery, must be frowned down by a just and law-abiding people. Thus, and thus only, may you hope to avoid the sectional discord, agitation, and animosity which, at frequently-recurring pe riods have shaken your political fabric to its centre, and at last have undermined its very foundation and these glorious proportions which, under more kindly influence, might have proven enduring as time, seem now to be rapidly crumbling and tottering to their fall. I adjure you citizens of Philadelphia, by the proud memory of the past; by the rich privileges of the present; by the fond hopes of the future ; I call upon you by the tender endearments of your homes; by the holy influence of your altars—to send forth a voice that shall be heard throughout the length and breadth of this land proclaiming your immutable devotion to the Union of these States; your firm resolve that, by the favor of Almighty God, this Union must and shall be maintained. The speaker then retired amid loud ap plause. Three cheers were proposed for Mayor Henry, and given with a will. During the delivery of this speech there was considerable applause from a part of the audience, gentlemen on the platform earn estly participating. Mr. John B. Meyers now read the resolu tions: THE RESOLUTIONS. WuritEes, The people of the city of Phila delphia having assembled in cheerful obe dience to the proclamation of the Mayor, is sued by the Mayor, issued by request of their Councils, for the purpose of testifying their love for the Union and their devotion to its perpetuation, and to the strengthening of those bonds which hold us together, whether of the north or the south, the east or the west, as one great and united people, do Resolve, That with one voice and united hearts we proclaim our attachment to and reverence for the Constitution of the United States, and our earnest and endearing love for that great Union which it creates and protects —a love which is not sectional, but national, and that greets our brother, from whatever State he comes, as a partaker with us in that noblest of all inheritance, the title of a citizen of the United States. Resolved, That the usefulness and the en durance of the Union both depend upon a faithful observance, by the people of all the States, of all therequirements of that sacred instrument which the wisdom and the patri otism of our fathers framed, and under whose provisions we have become a great and happy people, prosperous and renowned among the nations of the earth. Resolved. That we do therefore more deep ly deplore the fact that some of the States of this Union have placed upon their statute books enactments which evade or defeat pro visions which the framers of the Constitution wisely inserted for the protection of the valu able rights of citizens of other States, and that we pronounce all such acts to be viola tions of the solemn compact by which we are made one people, and that we earnestly ap peal to our brethren of those States instantly to repeal all such enactments. Resolved, That the people of Philadelphia hereby pledge themselves to their brethren of the other States that the statute books of Pennsylvania shall be carefully searched by their Representatives at the approaching ses sion of the Legislature ; and that every stat ute, if any such there be, which in the least degree invades the 'Constitutional rights of citizens of a sister State, will be at once re pealed ; and that Pennsylvania, ever loyal to the Union and liberal in construing her obli gations to it, will he'faithful always in her obedience to its requirements. Resolved, That we recognize the obligations of the act of Congress of 1850, commonly known as the Fugitive Slave law, and submit cheerfully to its faithful enforcement; and that we point with pride and satisfaction to the recent conviction and punishment, in this city, of those who had broken its provisions by aiding in the attempted rescue of a slave, as proof that Philadelphia is faithful in her obedience to the law; and furthermore that we recommend to the Legislature of our own State the passage of a law which shall give compensation, in case of the rescue of a cap tured slave, by the county in which such res cue occurs, precisely as is now done by ex isting laws in case of destruction of property by the violence of mobs. Resolved, That as to the question of the recognition of slaves as property, and as to the question of the rights of slave owners in the Territories of the United States, the peo ple of Philadelphia submit themselves obe diently and ..:heerfully to the decisions of the Supreme Court of the United States, whether now made, or hereafter to be made, and they pledge themselves faithfully to observe the Constitution in these respects as the same has been or may be expounded by that august tribunal ; and further, they recommend that whatever points of doubt exist touching these subjects be done in an amicable and lawful way,forthwith submitted to the consideration of said Court, and its opinion he accepted as the final and authoritative solution of all doubts as to the meaning of the Constitution in controverted points. Resolved, That all denunciation of slavery as existing in the United States, and of our fellow-citizens who maintain that institution and who hold slaves under it, are inconsistent with that spirit of brotherhood and kindness which ought to animate all who live under and profess to support the Constitution of the American Union. Resolved, That we candidly approve the suggestion that a Convention or Congress of delegates from the States contemplating se cession be held for the purpi 8 1 of consultation upon the cause that induced them to medi tate such a step, and of suggesting such rem edies as they would propose, and that it is the firm conviction of the citizens of Phila delphia that the propositions made by such Convention would be received by the people of the other States in a fraternal and concil iatery spirit and with an earnest desire to re move all grounds of just complaint. Resolved, That we appeal to our brethren of South Carolina, of Georgia and Alabama, f Mississippi and Florida, and of such (idler States as are considering the question of se ceding from the Union, with all the affection a'e eornestness we can express, to forbear. That we remind them of the innumerable ties which bind us together as one people, and which seem to us so stroll , * that no power short of that which parat,zes all memory, and effaces all history, can separate us.— That the ashes of those brave men who fought with us and for us rest beneath our soil, and that they have in their keeping the bones of our soldiers who perished in their defence.— That our glorious institutions under whose guidance and protection we have attained to so great prosperity and renown, and which have made this Union of States the joy and hope of oppressed millions throughout the world, were framed by the wisdom, built by the toil, and defended by the blood, of a cord mon ancestry, and cannot perish without an eternal reproach to us, their children, if we destroy so great and so fair an inheritance. News by Telegraph. The South Carolina Convention. COLUMBIA, S. C., Dec. 17.—This city is full of strangers, and the delegates to the State Convention have generally arrived. There is a great display of Palmetto flags and cock ades, hut no great excitement, as the whole feeling is for immediate secession. The Con vention will organize at noon. Universal Zszion Tribute to Stephen. A. Doug- WASHINGTON, Dec., I.G.—The best Vindica tion that Judge Douglas should desire at the present moment is the almost universal expectation indulged and expressed, that be shall make his great Union speech at the earli est possible day. lie is regarded as the best living exponent of the national sentiment that now thrills the heart and unites the masses of the American people. Ex Premdent Fillmore a Messenger of Peace. ilurrni,o, N. Y., DEC. 12.—Three hun dred prominent citizens held a olceting last evening for the purpose of requesting Es- President Fillmore to proceed to South Caro lina as a messenger of peace. National Convention of the Union Prayer Meeting—A Day of Humiliation and Pray er Appointed. WASHINGTON, DEC. 13. —The National Con vention of Union Prayer Meetings was in session here to-day, and passed a resolution by a unanimous vote, recommending to all Christian churches, and all praying people, to set apart the first Monday in January as a day of humiliation and prayer, in view of the present dearth of spiritual things in the churches, nud the present dangers which threaten the peace and prosperity of the country. The United States Government declared a Nuisance by a United States Grand Jury. MONTGOUERY, ALA., Dec. 13.—The .Adver tiser publishes the presentment of the Grand Jury of the United States District Court de claring the Federal Government a worthless and impotent nuisance, as it permits viola tions of the Constitution, allows States to nullify the fugitive slave law, and for other causes. SINGULAR, PIIENOMENON.-MiSS °MOIRA, a citizen of this town, has been deprived of sight and the power to articulate a single word for the last fifty-five years. About three weeks ago, as she described it, without any extra effort on her part, she began to converse,, and now holds conversation with all who vis, it her. It seems to her as if a new life and a new world bad been opened to her. Al though she cannot say " whereas I was blind now I see," yet she can say, whereas I was dumb now I speak." Miss Ormsbee is now seventy-five years old, and become dumb when she was twenty years of age.— Worm? . Telegraph ,