Actrti—eleel4 HUNTINGDON, PA. Tuesday, May 7, 1861 TLANKS I BLANKS BLANKS I STABLE'S SALES, ATTACIPT EXL:CUMNS, ATTACHMENTS, EXECUTIONS, SUMMONS, DEEDS, BUDINEXAS, MORTGAGES. SCHOOL ORDERS, JUDGMENT NOTES. LEASES FOR ROUSES, NATURALIZATION WKS, COMMON BONDS, JUDGMENT BONDS, WARRANTS, FEE BILLS, NOTES, with a waiver of t e $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 ease of Assault and Battery, and Affray. eCIERE FACIAS, to recover =omit of Judgment. COLLECTORS' RECEIPTS, for State, County, School, Borough and Township Taxes. Printed ,m superior paper. and for eale at the Office of the HUNTINGDON GLOBE. BLANKS, of every description, printed to order, neatly, at Chart notice, and on good Paper. News Items. .The Norfolk Herald of the early part of last week, made the number of troops at Richmond 4000, and at Harper's Ferry 3,500, but said that by the close of the week there would be 25,000 at Richmond. —Norfolk is effectually blockaded by a fleet of ten ships of war. So is the whole Chesapeake bay. Brilliant opening for Virginian independence —ln New Orleans the secessionists are.said to,ebe forcing the occupants of prisons to enlist. Northern men are compelled to do so, or run the risk of lynching. Troops are scarce in Loui- siana. —A steamer with $115,000 worth of arms for the South, was captured at Cairo, 111., by the military forces there, on the 26th. —On the 30th, Gen. Bragg had un der his command at Pensacola, about 8,000 men. Preparations were making to attack Fort Pickens. The coin tnander of Fort Pickens was unceasing in his labors. Like'Brages, his men work day and night. --Schuylkill county has sent to the army twenty-two companies, and rais ed in the borough of Pottsville alone, a relief fund of $12,000. The county will increase the fund little less than $lOO,OOO. Well done. —Virginia stocks are selling at forty cents on a dollar, and go at that rate in purchasing provisions. --Valparaiso dates to the 3d ult., have been received. The town of Mendoza has been . destroyed by an earthquake, and 8,000 people killed. It occurred on the 20th of March. The same earthquake is reported to have de stroyed the town of San Juan and the bed of the river turned. on the site of the town. —Authenticated •statements reach Washington daily of persons being forcibly driven out of the State of Vir ginia without having time allowed to them to dispose. of their property.— The cases are numerous. —A lady arriving at Washington, direct from Portsmouth, Va., on the 4th, reported that both Norfolk and Portsmouth wore under mob rule; that the inhabitants, or at least most of them, would be very glhd to have the United States take possession of both places. For two weeks she had not been able to sleep quietly at night on account of the continual alarms of the Secessionists. —The 11. S. Recruiting Office was opened on Baltimore street, Baltimore, yesterday morning, and the Stars and Stripes displayed. —Two thousand stand of arms that were sent to Baltimore, from Harper's Terry, by . the Secessionists, are to be returned to the Government. —Col. Wm. K. Piper has tendered to the General Government, through Gov. Curtin, one regiment of Infantry, now organized in Cambria county, to serve for any period of time that may be designated; and if accepted, ho praffeia a bonus of $lOOO to the State. Cambria county has already four companies accepted. ta. Thousands of the young men from the farming districts are to-day under arms. The withdrawal of so much productive labor will certainly be felt in the coming harvests, unless those who remain at home use extra diligence. The indications are that Europe will ask a great part, of her supply of breadstuffs from America, especially in the event of a war on the continent. Every available acre should be planted with corn, as every bushel of it will be needed. While the young men - carry the musket, let the old men wield the hoe. SOMETHING WRONG AT CAMP SOOTT, Yon; PA.—All , correspondents from Camp Scott, complain bitterly of the niggardly treatment,- soldiers receive there.. And all agree that the fault is with the officers in- command at the Camp. The Government should see to it, that mere paper generals, not fit to have command over brutes, are in stantly removed. ' A number of men have secured high places in the army for flash notoriety and plunder only. Such men must be kicked out of the army, or the willing soldiers and the people, will refuse their support to the Government. fSli" The worst enemies of the Southern people are the secession leaders. Theme leaders ignore people in everything. They refuse to allow them to vote upon secession; tea them in order to support an extravagant home government, and shut them out from the commerce of the world. now long shall this struggle last between the Southern peo ple and the seCeeeion leaders. The Twenty Days Ended. The twenty days given by the Pros- 1 ident, for the Secessionists to disband and return to their homes as peaceful and law-abiding citizens, expired on Sunday, and from the determined stand heretofore taken by the Presi dent, we presume he will proceed at once to march our troops to the South and compel the rebels to recognize his power and. the power of our govern ment. We may therefore, expect, un -1 less there is some beautiful backing down on the part of the South, to hear of a desperate conflict between the contending parties before the week is ended. Lincoln has done nobly thus far, and we hope he may not falter for an instant, until secessionism is buried so deep that it will never be heard of again. Our soldiers are " spiling for a fight," and the South has carried the joke so far, that she must either "come to time" or "take to the water," which we opine she will ere the second en gagement, at farthest. Had the South known what she does now, six months ago, we believe she would never have allowed it to go as far as it has. We will meed them" the praise of being chivalrous, but in this instance they missed their mark, They made their calculations for a united South and a divided North, but - in this they were sadly (for them) mistaken, for they find it just the reverse—a divided South and a united North. Their pa pers sneeringly remark that our sol diers aro all poor house paupers, and that they can whip five to one. Well, from the way the wind blows from that direction just now, they will have a chance of trying it on, and they will find that our paupers know how to fight, more especially since they are all volunteers, and have not been pressed into service. We want to see the Gov ernment carry the war to . the bitter end. The time for compromises has passed. The time for treaties ended long ago, and they must now be brought to see their madness at the point of the bayonet. Their leaders must be given up to the proper authorities, a fair and impartial trial allowed them, and a Regiment of their own soldiers should be made shoot them. The country will never be safe as long as these rebellious scoundrels, who have become so aristocratic that they sneer at a poor laboring man, and call him the mud-sill of society, &c., are per mitted to roam at large over this glo rious land. Thinks have come to a pretty pass, indeed, when the bone and sinew of our country are despised by the very men they feed, when the Stars and Stripes are scoffed at and trampled beneath their feet, and when the Constitution and laws are set at defiance, and the Unien declared null and void. The retribution of a just and holy God, will surely overtake them. TRUE PATRIOTISM.—On - the 30th ult., upwards of two hundred citizens of Philadelphia, of all parties, signed a friendly letter to Gen. Scott. The following is an extract of the letter, which we hope speaks the sentiments of every Pennsylvanian : "In the civil strife which has just lighted up our land with an unnatural and deadly glare, we do not stop to inquire into the soundness of conflict ing opinions as to the origin of the de plorable controversy. It is enough for us to know that the beloved and glorious flag of our Federal Union has been assailed, and we ask no further questions. In such a crisis, we aro for sustaining, to any and every extent, constitute authorities of the Union, believing, in the language of .Mr. Jef ferson, that " The preservation of the General Government, in its whole Con-, stitutional vigor, is the sheet-anchor of our peace at home and safety abroad."— While the Goverment stands by the flag, we stand by the Government.— In this determination we obliterate, for the time being, all traces of party difference, by which many of us have been heretofore widely separated." The Southern .Troops Concentrating for an .Attack upon Washington. (From the Louisville Journal.] On Saturday a gentleman called on us, who, on account of ill health, was recently a sojourner in Florida, and who has just come through Georgia, South Carolina, Alabama, and Missis sippi. He says that the people of the rest of the country have no conception of the rush which the people of all those States have for some days past been making and are now making for Richmond, the headquarters of the Southern army, destined for the con quest of Washington city and the Dis trict of Columbia. He says that in all his journey he did not see a solitary railroad train, going in the direction of Richmond, that was not loaded with troops and munitions. From Charles ton alone, during the two days he was there, 4,000 armed men started for the Virginia rendezvous. He states that these general and rapid movements are not reported in the papers of the Con federate States, but he has no doubt that the artily at Richmond will prove tremendous in its strength of numbers. He tells us that all the men he met with, military officers and others, spoke of the conquest of Washington as a settled thing, just as well settled as if already accomplished, and that the avowed determination is not to preserve the public buildings of the capital for the uses of the Southern Confederacy, but to demolish them ut terly, not leaving one stone upon an other, We do not believe that the Admin istration or any of its friends in the North had any adequate or faint idea of the extent and formidableness of the preparations made for the attack upon Washington. No obstacle what ever has been or is in the way of the rapid concentration of troops at Rich mond from twenty or thirty Southern railroads and we are well convinced, that whatever the North may think, the army at Richmond this day, if it has not moved upon Washington, doub ly numbers the army in the latter city, and is made up of as good Belting men as can be found in the world, FROM WASHINGTON.' Correspondence of the Press.] WASHINGTON, Atay 1, 1861 Whether the history of the present times is written in blood or preserved in ink, it will be read by our posterity as the most melancholy of all the an nals of our race. Nothing in the past can be compared to it. The causes which have produced our divisions, and the events that have arrayed ono section against the other, will excite equal surprise and regret. It is rare ' that so much hatred and anger has re sulted from provocation so light. If war is to come—and I do not see how it is to be avoided—the fact that the strife was precipitated by the South, and for many weeks evaded by the North, will become a main accusation against the former. It will not avail the South that their people are on the side of the leaders. - When a war is wantonly begun and pushed forward with savage persistence, in the face of all peaceful proffers from the strong side, the unanimity of those who make and maintain the war will not excuse their crime before the bar of God, and in the eyes of other nations. Mr. Cal houn was the author of the theories that have finally captured and perver ted the Southern judgment. _His phil osophy, so pernicious and so unsound, has been a thousand times refuted and rebuked by the best of the Southern statesmen, As long as it was confined to South Carolina, it served only to render that State ridiculous. What it did for South Carolina, it will do for the Southern Confederacy. it has made her people social and political slaves, by obliterating their franchises; it has erected her leaders into petty despots of the meanest character. In deed, Mr. Calhoun's theory of govern ment, and of separate independence, rests upon the most abhorrent of aris tocracies. The Southern Confederacy would not last a year, if subject to public discussion and the ballot-box. It must bear the relation to other nations that South Carolina has borne to the United States. It must estab lish a property qualification, prevent freedom of opinion, and muzzle the press. The moment it attempts to be liberal it will go down in utter con tempt; will, in fact, be devoured by its own factions, and probably find its own slaves howling over its grave.— What sort of respect such a Govern ment will receive from others I need not anticipate. It will be among them like a fool at a fair, tolerated for its weakness, and 'laughed at for its fol lies. Nothing will prevent a conflict but the weakness of the conspirators, the divisions among their own people, and the knowledge that the Government is resolved to go ahead regardless of everything but the honor of the coun try. They must either fight or yield. There is no middle ground. They are concentrating troops at Alexandria, and had yesterday some fifteen hun dred on the ground. With all then• care, their operations are made known. They run their trains at night with men and provisions, and threaten to expel all who disclose their plans, but they are made known. Alexandria may be a point worthy of the attention of Gen. Scott. She was retroceded to Virginia not to become a depot for arms against the Union. I think if she is not legislated back by Congress she will be held in check by the milit ary arm. Winqeld Scott is a Congress in himself, and he makes capital laws. While we have no despot, and need none, we are all ready to bow before the patriotic decisions of that hero, who is as necessary to us as Welling ton was to England in her dark hours, and as ready to die for his country as he always has been to fight for it. Virginia is not Florida, nor yet South Carolina. Her brave sons in the Pan Handle will fight the tyrants of the tide-water to the last. They will, as I predicted, refuse to yield to the decree of. Secession, and have al ready, in defiance of Leteher and Wise, enrolled twenty-six hundred men for the Government, who will reach us over the Pennsylvania Central, by way of the Ohio river. Bather than yield, they will demand re-admission into the Union as a separate State.— The blood of the mon of the free States runs too red through the western counties of Virginia to make submis sion to Secession a possible event in that quarter. The conspirators must look to Charleston and Pensacola, as well as to Baltimore and Norfolk. I give them notice that while they threaten the capitol, our guns may be announc ing that vengeance has been taken for Sumpter, and that punishment has been inflicted on Florida. There is need for their energies in all parts of the South. They have waked a wrath they never knew; and if its limbs are gigantic and wide-reaching, its eyes are Argus eyes, and its ener gies exhaustless. The determination to reach Wash ington through Maryland is about to manifest itself in various ways; and I am glad to see that the people of Bal timore are preparing so give that di vision which is to go through that, peaceful city a star-spangled banner re ception. This is well. The people of Baltimore owe it to themselves to es tablish a polite deportment hereafter. There is no disposition to do them any harm; but our troops • and mails must go through. We shall outdo them in courtesy. They may bow low, but we shall bow lower. - If they prefer compliments to cannon, we shall shake hands; but if cannon to compliments, we shall be ready. The American flag, the American troops, the American people, must pass through Baltimore to Washington; and it depends upon Baltimore whether they shall go through in cars or gun carriages, The now demand of the Administra tion for troops, which looks to a per manent military organization on the grandest scale, will call for the appoint ment of 4 great number of officers, all at the disposition of the President and his Cabinet. There will bo six major generals, twelve brigadier-generals, twenty-five colonels, twenty-five lieu tenant-colonels, twenty-five majors, two hundred and fifty captains, and five hundred first and second lieuten ants. This is exclusive of quartermas ters, paymasters,. and other military agents. The increase in the navy will be in proportion. OCCASIONAL. gel_ The In disna Legislature has au thorized the Governor to call out six regiments for immediate service for one year, for the defesee of the Suite. wAR Rews,-,:- [Br TELEGRAPH.] Maryland in the .71,ands . of the Secession ists—Gov. Hicks:expected to flee from the State—The Pr'esident Determined to do his .Duty—'His Proclamation— The Force to betaised—The Missis sippi to be Kept Open—Baltimore will ' have to Yield. ANNAPOLIS, May 4. The Secretary of Gov. Hicks says that the appointments of tho Commit tee of , Public Safety now pending be fore the Legislature must precipitate the State into civil war, as the majori ty of the proposed board aro sworn friends of secession and men who dep ricate the political fortunes of Gover nor Hicks, who may soon have to re sort to Washington or to Pennsylvania line for protection. The great seal of the Statb is now in Annapolis, ana it will be thrown into the Chesapeake sooner than be placed on an ordinance of secession. The absence of the seal is an effec tual veto, a power not possessed by the Governors of Maryland. The Senate adjourned last night without final action on the public safe ty bill. The Union men are battling it with various amendments and parliamenta ry tactics, and there is a prospect of an all night session. An intense feeling has boon aroused there on the measure. BALTIMORE, May 4.—Rumors are current that tho United States troops have crossed the Maryland line, and are now moving towards the city. Union ward Meetings were held last night throughout the city, and delegates elected to a city convention to meet on next McVay. The delegates are now in session to take action relative to the public safety bill. Resolutions• were adopted in all the wards to the following purport : That we cherish the Constitution and laws of the United State; and will devote our fortunes and lives to defend their integrity against all revo lutionary or violent assaults. That we regret the violent attack on the troops of the United States, while peaceably marching through the city to protect the seat of Government, and indignantly repudiate making it a pretext to organize au armed mob' under the disguise of a special po lice, to place the city in a hostile attitude to the General Govern ment, and hereby declare our 'abhor rence for the attempt of the Legisla ture to inaugurate a military despotism, by a bill for the creation of what is called a board. of public safety. That the persons named for the said board have not the confidence of the people, and we protest against the whole measure as an invasion of the prerogatives of the Governor and a usurpation of Executive power by the Legislature. These Union meetings were largely attended, and very onthusitratie. A strong , tbeling of indignation is manifested against the proposed action of the Legislature. WASHINGTON, May 4.—Each day is new pregnant with events, and the country has but patiently to wait the coming of recruits, to be assured that wo have indeed a, Government and a governing policy. From the President to the lowest official, all are busy with preparations for the approaching move ment. Special agents are dispatched from all the organizihg departments to the several Navy Yards and army posts, who are directed forthwith and speedily to place all things in perfect order. The President issued the following Proclamation last evening : By the President of the United States I= WHEREAS, The existing exigencies demand immediate and adequate meas ures for the protection of the national Constitution, and the preservation of the national Tinion,ly the suppression of the insurrectionary combinations now existing in several States for op posing the laws of the Union and ob structing the execution thereof, to which end a military force, in addition to that called forth by my proclama tion of the 15th of April in the present year, appears to be indispensably ne cessary. Now, therefore, I, Abraham Lincoln, President of the United States, and commander-in-chief of the army and navy thereof, and of the militia of the several States when called into actual service, do hereby call into the service of the United States forty-two thousand and fifty-four volunteers, to servo for the period of three years, unless sooner discharged, and be mustered into ser vice as infantry and cavalry. The proportions of each arm, and the de tails of enrollment and organization, will be made known throughout the Department of War. And I also direct - that the regular army of the United States be increased by the addition of eight regiments of infantry, one regiment of cavalry and one regiment of artillery,making alto gether a maximum aggregate increase of twenty-two thousand seven hundred and fourteen officers and enlisted non; the details of which increase will also bo made known through the Depart ment of war. And I further direct the enlistment, for not less than one or more th an three, years, of eighteen thousand seamen, in addition to the present force, for the naval service of the 'United Statei,— The details of the enlistment and or ganization will be made through the Department of the Navy, The call for volunteers hereby made and the direction fertile increase of the regular army and for the enlistment of seamen hereby given with the plan of organization adopted fOr the volunteer and for the regular forces hereby au thorized, will be submitted to Congress as soon as that body - assembles. In the meantime, I earnestly invoke the.co-operation of all good citizens in the measures hereby adopted for the effectual suppression of unlawful vio lence, for the impartial enforcement of constitutional laws, and fbr the speed iest possible restoration of peace and order, and with these, of happiness and prosperity throughout our country, • In witness whereof, I have hereunto set my hand and caused the seal of the United States to bo affixed. Done .ft, the City. of IVHsbingto„this ''''''''''''' Lord one" thousand eight hundred, and .sixty-one, and of the, Indepeti donee of the . " United States the bight- ABRAHAM. LINCOLN. By the President, W M. H. SEWARD, Secretary of State , Seventy thousand volunteers, twen ty-five thousand regulars, and eighteen thousand naval force, are shortly to pro ceed upon this iinportant mission, and their march, truly the march of Mighty armies, will not falter until he Whose right it is to rule shall,be 'recognized from one end of the land to the other. Captain Meiga returned here yester day from his recent expedition to Fort Pickens, which, he says, is so reinforced and otherwise strengthened as to make its reduction utterly impossible for six months, for which time it is well pro visioned. The Mississippi will be kept open to an untaxed commerce, and those at tempting to obStruct it or to collect duties from our citizens will be sum marily and fearfully • punished. Nevi Orleans will find the mouth of this riv er filled with teeth in the shape of armed vessels ; and if her rulers persist in their desperate 'game of collecting revenue' not their's, or of retaining the • property and treasure of the Govern ment and the people, they will be speedily brought to their senses. A rigorous blockade of all the ports in the seceded States Must produce the most disastrous consequences to those States, and will add considerably to • their existing embarrassments. Missouri has already detected the designs of the secessionists in her high offices, and will stay where she is.—' Should she falter it will only be to ruin herself, and to divert the over-land trade from her to some States loyal to the Government. The President, accompanied by Mr. Seward, is visiting the different regi ments in this city, at their quarters.— Ile is received in a manner becoming his eminent position; and he, during his examination of the regiments, com ments freely on their attainments in military tactics. He will continue his visits until he has - reviewed each of the regiments now in or advancing to wards the city. Gon. Scott telegraphed for Gen. But ler to leave Annapolis and come here, and all day long he has been closeted with the Commander-in-Chief, receiv ing detailed information and instruc tion concerning his future movements. It is also decided to approach and occupy Baltimore. The army of occu pation will move in four columns, one from Perryville, ono from Harrisburg, ono from Annapolis, and one from Washington. Of course no opposition' is anticipated, though no possible suc cessful impediment could be placed in their way. A decisive military movement may be looked for on the Mississippi, below Cairo. Distrust in Alabama A gentleman from Mobile, states that money matters in Alabama are in a state of the utmost confusion. lie was compelled to pay a discount of thirty per cent. on Alabama money to obtain the means to go South. There was a stron g Union feeling prevalent in that part of Alabama. It was gen erally believed that if the Federal Ad ministration at Washington would ad here firmly to its position. and . prose cute the war with vigor, so as to as sure them of sympathy and support, there would be an uprising of the Unionists in strong force. The despotism of Jeff. Davis was considered as resting upon a sandy foundation. The planters were gloomy and despondent on account of the ap prehended insecurity of their slave property. They are convinced that their tenure is very frail. One man, the owner of four plantations andefif teen hundred slaves, declared openly in the streets of Mobile, that he expec ted to lose all his slaves. Slavery, be avowed, was doomed by the firing of the first gun at Fort Sumpter. The impression existed that if the Federal Government would act with courage and promptness, sixty days would suf fice to end the war ; that by that time the seceders would sue for peace, if they did not actually beg for security for their own lives. THE LATEST NEWS. Good News From Maryland BALTIMORE, May 4-10 P. M:—The "Pub lic Safety" bill, appointing a Secession com mittee to rule the affairs of • this city and State, met with so much resistance in the Senate to-day that it was finally recommit ted. The Union men consider it as good as lost. The Union fooling is evidently gaining ground throughout the State. May 6.—At noon to-day, the Fifty-second New York Regiment and the Eighth Massa ehusetts Regiment arrived in a train from Washington at the Relay House, nine miles from this city, and taking possession of the telegraph wires, planted eight howitzers on the viaduct, investing the entire neighbor hood. There are rumors that several vessels load ed with troops are coming up the river. • On the Northern Central Railroad a large force of men from Pennsylvania were en gaged to-day :n building the first bridge out side the city, and the road to the city from that direction will be finished to-morrow. Union Sentiment in Western Virginia WuEmma, May 4.—An immense county Union meeting was held here to-day. The lion. Frank Pierpoint, of Marion county, and George MePorter, 'of Hancock county, late a member : of the State Convention, ad dressed the people in able speeches, urging resistance to the Secession ordinance, and favoring a divisionsof the State. Important Movement of Troops WASUINOTON, May s.—General Scott for warded despatches to General Butleiyester day, at Annapolis, placing the Sixth Massa chusetts regiment and other troops at hie command, and giving him three days to take possessiori of the Relay House at the junction of the Baltimore and Ohio and the Baltimore and Washington railroads, nine miles from Baltimore and thirty miles from Washington. General Butler responded, and inforined General Scott that he , would have religious services on the ground to-day,' The Sixth Massachusetts regiment went up the: road early this morning. This movement is made to co-operate with the Pennsylvania troops now advancing upOinaltimore on the other side, ' An Attook on ea,iro Meditated Cum), Illinois, ItlsY 4.—:-General Pillow, General Ely, and three other prominent ors of the Gotliederato oath with a largo number of .Miesissippi, Arltapeas, and, Ten-' nessee troops, are at Memphis. , Heavy guns 'are 'arriving, there. dikuY , • Ccdonel -Prentise,llM commanding off!e# at this point, has just receive&the 'folle4ing despatch 'from three -prominent''crtizeini' Of Cincinnati: " • c:•": "General Pillow has several; steamers` ready at Memphis., He meditates, amitume, diets attach on Gairo." To which Colonel Prentiss iopliod,: • .Let him come. He 'will learn to dig a ditch on the right aide. lam read.y." - ' Disturbance at Flarrisburg., HARRISIIIIRO Map s.—Almost a riot oc curred hefethis • afternoon, in' consequence of the arrest of a this: by a police Officer, for disorderly conduct. The offieei .used his, billy in =long the arrest, when the com rades of the prisoner attempted a rescue.— The soldiers made threats, and if large crowd soon assembled; The Mayor called out the [bide. Guard with loaded muskets, when or der was restored. Three companies from Camp Curtin were marched in, and , all the soldiers found in' the oily were escorted . to the camp.' Our Army Correpondence. COMPANY D, PA.. REG., WestuNGTON, D. C.,7 April 29, '61.• DEAR FRIEND TYIIIIRST.: In the In auguration Ball ROoni,' the Standing: Stone Guards, of the sth Ilegnnent of Penna. 'Volunteers, 'are now quartered. We have bad a week' Of Severe'mili-, Lary :'night and day, frequently laying on our arms, expect ing attacks from, the sebessionists.— Throughout Pennsylvania we met'With hearty and welcome receptions.. At Havre do Grace wo lay on our 6111.8, expecting an attatli,', but our,boys— spoiling for a fight—were disappointed. All in the company are in good health' and spirits, and :could not be coaxed back. .I - Ohn ()unison, who was sick and at Anapolis, came in yesterday in good health and spirits. With this ex ception, our men have been quite well.- Washington 'presents a war-like ap-, pearance. The capi building is filled with the 7th N. Y. Regiment and Avo ; or six others. Our Regiment, the sth Pa., consists of ten companies, 'num bering about eight hundred 'men, four of which, CaPts. Medler, Branan, ilow er, and Lawrenceilmil from . Schuylkill county; Capts: Dawson, Seacrist, and Emling, from PittsbUrgh; Capt. Miller from , Huntingdon ' Oclrich from Leba non, and Cooly's from Reading,. We get uniforms to-morrow. Drill three times a day. A groat many reports prevail. One, .that a Southern army of 15,000 is marching to take the Cap itol. But this cannot 'be take,d. We have now 16,000 troops in, this City, and others coming' on daily at thereto of 2000., The result of the Mary land election has - bad a salutary effect on the people here, and I think embed out secession.' Coming from Anapolis to this city, our Regiment caught.a spy, who is still under guard, and if, sufficient evidence is adduced,' will be shot. - There are plenty 'Of secession spies yet amongst us, and it is difficult to tell them from Union men. I heire beard once from Huntingdon county since I left, and was, pleased to learn that they were abont, to raise another company in Huntingdon. 'Now while we feel still more eager than over to go to defend our country, I trust there will be a generous and unmistakable turn out of volunteers from our coun ty. Our company has met with much flattery, on account of their hardy and fearless appearance, and got tho name of "Pa. Pine Knots." •• " PLUS. We Must Have a Government ' It is quite idle now to talk of a war of defence. Aggression and defiance have come to us in every shape from' the South. The firing upon Fort Sum ter under the circumstances was an act of unprovoked aggression, and the seizing of Harper's Ferry and Norfolk, in Virginia, that of the United States Mint in Georgia, the property of the United States in North Carolina, and the recent capture of United "States troops and a steam vessel in Texas, all render the declarations of the traitor Jefferson Davis in his Message, that ho desires peace mere revolting hy pocrisy, Government is the only thing that " stands between the naked breast hnd the assassin's knife." It is the Only thing that enables any man in such a world as this, to lie down in peace at night, surrounded by his family: It is the thing that distinguishes England and America from Dahomey and the Cannibal Islands. The right of Seces sion is the right of disintegration. It is the right to reduce a nation to a mob. It is the right of repudiating debts; of destroying freedom of speech; of muzzling the press; of making forced loans; of forcing men into the ranks of an army against their consent. It is the right of leaving the Union and breaking up the United States, When-, ever the majority vote against - our, real or fancied interest. The 'inevita ble result'of allowing it would bo that, California, would `secede if the Pacific Ilload were delayed; Maine would go out if the Doundaly Question were not immediately settled; ' Penrisylytinial would secede if there were not a pro tective tariff, and New. YOik if there were, and the Northwest would go off in a body' if the Hoinest6ad Bill were not passed. If we are asted, then, why we can not let:the Soulh - go- in' peace, we say that the principle 'gives'np' the very idea of government, and the very es sence of all for which' our 'father's have contended since the origin ,of Civiliza tion. Bettor,.a thousandlimes better; that thousands should die on the' field of battle, than that goVerninent itself should be dissolved and' one . wide an , archy involve the whole nation..,—Phil adelphia Bulletin. - :"- The, Phila. Press of Saturday says: !‘ A gentleman of our acquain tance, who has a married sister resi ding,m a large town, in the interior of - South Carolina, recently , received a letter from her, husband, a violent Se cessionist. The writer, Among .other ,things, states that he Was)at Chailes ton, with the soldiers, during -the late military operations at that place, and whilenbsent from home; the negroes burned. down four dwelling: houses and eight, stores, in the town In which he ;resides, and four dwelling houses'in. the vicinity. , Eight negroes were kunged . and the writer sriya 114 V supposes they shall have to hang a dozen-more be fore a month pusses._' Here aro theta which do not getinto the Southern papers,,,but which show the state of feeling at the South; and how poorly, her , people are prepared . to go to war on a large scale." The Adminletratten , Uniteq f9t War (Frorn - tho New YorkTrThEino.] .WligalNproNi , arayt—Thp factii3 at last demonstrated-beyond the shadow of a, doubt that-the policy of the A dministration, now( and • beneefortiiiis war t To ilia- conclusion \ law Lincoln hag - urged hie 'Cabinet for, ten days peat. ifessts. - ChaSe;‘Blair and Cam !-entefe'd licart- and Beni: A r ntd the . plan, and batforthe - waveringor Sew ard and:Wass on.thip.point,the, - ,Vah- Tnet Would' have been an. . Tdr. - Welles - has received Such let,tera - PO4- tions•and appeald•lfroisf'bib oiiirState ,aa haveinsiired'. Conversion -, to an anti-peacedoctriae,.and ,finally Mr. Seward hai added-his undoupting,as sent to thO'neCesqty of such a - Course, :Senator Wilson, with Sialge.Hoar of Massachusetts; palled 'upen coin andeach member. of, the Cabinet tyklay, ,and urged, 'upon them 4he,itn., perative demand of the • country that active and positive aggressive mead urea be adopted.' Twice theysaw3Tr! Lincoln, whose: whole • nature - seems bent,upon re-asserting the t dignity - and unity of this,, great - I:tation,. before, the eyes'of the world. ' • The 'country May rest assured that the.Court3e of, the 'Administration had been, is, and will-be, onward and up ward. The standard 'will • 'suffer Ino degradation ! while in its,larids!' No% thing, in the-end, have been lest; and ajl'good - /111012 agree in come, Mendations 'upon the action 'of our leaders. The Navy :Yard =at Norfolk; will be retaken' and rebuiltiand that speedily. „'• : COMMUNICATION THROUGH. BALTIMORE grOniinent, Baltimoreans have bee , importuning Lincoln for" several ,days s to re-open communication, to send de: spatehes by telegraph though theii city, and to insure speedy Mail Mai , : ties. This has been manfully opposed by Senator Cameron, who .was , deteri nt ; mined-to force •the_ tolheir' senses ' deeming a wholesome' . punishMenfthe best thing for them:" He said, when the United States had possession of the city, and his own men Were in charge of• the offices at Baltimore, he would consent. Mr. Blair joined-his. petition, to those of the delegation, and: at fast, when Mr. Cameron had gained' his point and : humbled the Baltimore ans, he consented. The consequence is, that an advertisement now annonn ces-a direct line' of travel open. 'Mr. Cameron is as true as steel. • England and the Southern Confederacy (From the London Telegraph April 5.] Mr. Lincoln has appointed Mr. Chas. , , Adams minister at the Court of St.. zanies, and Mr. William. Dayton min-' later at the. Court of .the:Tuileries,---= • Simultaneously with Allah! , arrival in Europe "will probably' be :that ,of the ; special commissioners nominated the Southern. Confederacyto represent . 'it in Europe—three - haying. been in structed-to treat for 'recognition with , the Governments of Great Britain and. ' France. ' Colonel Mallon°, one 4:of the • Southern delegates - to the ,Old World, 1 declares his belief -that the . acknowl edg,ment will speedily be Conceded as a matter of course. We have more that' a doubt on the point, .It arid has been for, years,,the policy of , Eng- ' land to recognize-all existing Govern ments, whether revolutionary or not, which can produce the credentials of a: 'nation. We ieeognized France under I the- Provisional Goverment; We re cognize Italy under Victor Emanuel; .- we should recognize the United States . of North America were they to pro claim. an Emperor at Washington; but „ we refused to acknowledge Icossiith as Governor of llunaary • we should have • dec.:lined • to_ receive a mission from • Normandy or Burgundy had they, instead of France as a whole, success fully revolted against the Government of Louis Phillippe, Our negotiations are with the United States of North America, ineorporcited .Irashington; and until the Central Governinent 'de-' dares the Southern Confederacy to be 'a • f 'separate and independent Commonwealth, , • • we shall be bound to regard Mr. Lincoln, as no less the Chief Magistrate - of South . Carolina and Alabama than of Pennsyl vania and Massachusetts. It would be highly impOlitic and indacorous indeed to pre judge. the; question` between North and South before the Cabinet at Washington , has. announced „ its ylti mate Views, or before ' the. great lssee has been fairly tried. Lord John Rink sell, therefore, while adhering to' the principle of neutrality and non-inter vention, will in all likelihood, refrain : from recognizing the _Credentials of Messrs. Yancey, ost, and Mann, until • events have progressed beyond. their present Jitnits, hall in the American ,-„ ;- Congress and on the - Secessionist bor.„ ' 'ders. • There appeas, 'for the time, danger of misapprehensions onthe. subject of the oomtemplated blockade, fori at the outset, the naval loreee of the, New-Worldßepublio r if'they cannot:l'o7: . cue Fort Sumpter, cannot surely under:J. take to lock .up a prodigious ,seakoard s penetrated b y large and accessible hbors,..- - and 'Open for hundreds of miles _to the commerce - of the 'world. ""Tii - e 'time 'has - - not come; then, for Great• Britain to express any ,diplomatic opinion• upon the politics,of the. United, States, and: least of all to, antigipate the solutionof: a. formidable crisis,, by, acknowledging. the ee of arninority pledged.' - - :only to the . principle of outraging.hu, man natare in perpetuity by establish ing Slavery as '.the , basis. of a political constitution. , SMITHS IN THE FIELD.—It , is said to I -be the intention of a Mr. Charles SMith, in' New Ydrk; - . to come `forward' to' the '. aid:of the corintry with fe regiment of Srniths. thitilni that - there'' enough. men of that name iriNew`Yerk•i';, , 'alone to establish 'a right'of way Vire ngh " 1 13altiinore at-once. The 'olllcers the regiment will all bo'namcd Joliet. . , PHIL4LIBLPfEtAII. Al . P.ZOITt i • - 6 . .- • • Fancy and Extra Fand, SS,2X&S 111 , 3, , 50 Vora Neal." ty 'Fllgnr • ita.7 5 7, 00, 5) Common and, SapeiLlue • , '$ , ' .. Rye Plod " " $2,75•:!. • ' Extra ' ' 11' 4° @,M? lyllitallrkaat ' loir 414 Prime led ye Corn, prima Yellow Oats • • Oloversoeg,V 04 lbs. Timothy IittRITRT,GDCM.MAIMETEI -, pORAECT.ED WEEKLt White Meat Bed Wheat.— Coro Onta - Clovonseed ..... Flaxseed • " DrINI Appl,3, Ilutt.or t4r Oaru - • !Nile's.? • • " MIME El CI MOM .$7,5004,75 $2 75 @2,87 , :4 %10 0 ' 1,00 ....... . .. 1,25 • • El2l