TL | E OJLLAR PER ANNUM INVARIABLY IN ADVANCE, TOWANDA : Thursday Morning, August 14,18f2. glutei) spoctrg. OUR COUNTRY'S CALL. 1Y WILLIAM CULL EM BRYANT. Uy down the axe ; fliux by tho spade ; Leave in its track the toiliug plow ; Tbc rifle nnd the bayonet blade For arms like yours were fitter now ; And let th bauds that ply the pen Qu t the < ght ta-k. aud learn to wield The horseman's crooked brand, and rem Tbe charger on the battle Held. Our country call >! a fay ! away ! To whero blood stream blots the green. Strike to defend the gentlest sway, That time iu all his course has seen, gee from athousauds coverts—see, Spiiug the armed foes that haunt her track I They rush to smite her dowu, AND WA MUST BEAT TUB BRANDED TRAITORS BACK. Ho'. sturdy a;. f>e oak ye cleave, And moved as soon to tear aad flight— ileu oi th.- glade and forest! leave y o ur woodcraft lor the field of tight. The arms that wield the axe mut pour An iron tempest on the toe ; His serried ranks shall reel before Tue arm that lays the panther low. Aud ye who breast the mountain storm Bv grassy steep or highland lake, Cuine. foi the land ye love, to form A bulwark that no loe can break, bland, like your own grey cliff- that mock The whirlwind, stand to her deleacc ; The blast as soon shall move the rock, And rushing squadrons bear you hence. And ye whose homes arc by her grand Swift rivers, ri-iug tar a*av, Come from the depth of her green land As mighty in your itiaich as tht-y ; A* terrible as when the rains Have swelled them over bank and bourne, With sudden floods to drown the ph as, Aud swee i along the woods upturn. And ye who throng beside the deep, Her ports aud hamlets of the stand, Iu uuinber like the waves that leap On his long murmuring marge of sand ; Come, like that deep, when o'er his brim, He rises, all his floods to pour, And flings the proudest harks that swim A helpless wreck against the shore. I'ew, few were tliey whose swords of old. Won the lair land in which we dwell ; But we are many, we who bold The grim resolve to guard it well. Btrike for that bioad and goodly land, I>! or alter blow, till mctt tit a 11 sea That Mtour and UIOIIT move band in hand, Aud glori JUS must the triumph be. political. Speech of Colonel John W. Forney, DELIVERED AT LANCASTER, AUU. 2, lsG2. The resobitions being adopted, Co'. John V. Forney was introduced to the meeiing and received with tremendous applause. Get-aid: OLD FKIEN'DS AND BELLOW CITIZENS: li fives me sincere gratification to appear before yon on this impressive occasion However the circumstances hv which we are surrounded R.-ty sadden our hearts, it is cheering to one like myself, who has been buff.ted by the varying winds of fortune, to come buck to his g t : e nations; VuH have bunded a government unparalleled upon earth, lant yuu have not been united among yourselves; you aie not united now.— (Jh ! let your blecu.ng country, your mother and your trieud, your guardian and your stay let your country, in this her darkest hour and tier direst strait, implore you to cease all dissensions, to seal up forever liie pestilential fountains ol party, ami to move in serried ar ray to her defence. There is only oue other power, sir, that eau make a more irresistible appeal —that power wh;ell speaks in thunders from the skies. Shall we, then, be deaf to the voice ot our country, when we feel that that country is aimo>t commissioned to speak the voice of God himself. Sir, I plead tor the unity of the free people of the ft eeStateS. Great Heavens ! why should they not be consolidated into one vast, over powering mass t Look at the rebellious South ! The atrocious crimes, and the in human ohjtcts of the conspirators, so far from creating divisions among them, have produced a unity, not a nutty of conscience, but a unity of organized and savage fanaticism. They seem to be inspired by the demon desperation, winch made Macbeth exclaim : " 1 am .n blood S epped la so far, tint sbou.d I waile no more Returning were as tedious as go o'er." These oad men light against a good Govern ment as if it had not been their best aud most constant benefactor. They are driven upon our bayonets in drunken and infuriated thou sands. Our tl ig to them is the emblem of in famy, and our Union a covenant of crime.— From their hearts they have blotted the glor ious memories of the past. Every battle field of the Revolution fills theui with remorse.— The tomb of every patriot is a monument of reproach. The < fligies of Washington, and Jackson, and Jefferson almost speak through their marble lips in rebuke of their sacrilege. And yet, Mr. President, these people are uni ted. Behold, sir, what a heritage we are fight ing for! No people ever had such a cause. Not the Myriads who went forth centuries ago to recover the Holy Sepulchre—not the legions who followed C'oe-ur, Alexander, and Napoleon. Never—never, sir, has such a creed and such a couutry appealed to hutnau hearts. Mother, over the grave of your only son, who died of the malaria or the murderois bullet in the swamps of the Chickahomiuy, as you weep for the loved and the lost, do uot your pruyers ascend lor the brave boys he has leli behind him ? Do you not feel that the stout men at home should go firth to succor them ? And does not your noble woman's heart swell with indignation at the sight of a-ty quarrels arouDd yoor own threshold ? PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY AT TOWANDA, BRADFORD COUNTY, PA., BY E. 0. GOODRICH. Father, whose gallant lads have gone to the Geld, tell me how you regard the spirit of dis cord in the free States ! Is it not au insult to you, and an insult to them ! When you are told that sufe and prosperous men shell not pay the tax that is to support the soldiers of the Republic, that the property of the trai tors shail not be seized and used to sustain the army, that their farms and persons shall be protected by Union bayonets, that the stout arms of the Southern uegroes shall not be in voked to save your own sons front the dread ful work of the camp, the trench, and the fort; and above ail, tiiat sordid sympathizers with Litis bloody treason shall he permitted to re vel in luxury under the ajgis of a Government they are seeking to destroy, do you not leel that the day of vengeance must come to all who, in this dread ci isis. remaiu indifferent to their country's call ? Man of toil, —mech. n c, —laborer—bear ra°. Shall this great, free people be broken up and destroyed, only to gratify your natural enemies —to sutiate the ambition of those who de nounce you as au inferior class ? The world has its aristocracies, but none so base and baleful as the aristocracy of Secession. Its soul und body 'are compound of hatred and coulempt for Northern industry and toil.— ; Born of slavery—resting upon slavery—living | upon it, —in luxury,laziness and ease, the race thus pampered has become a race of tyrants, regarding you as its foes, and clutching to its embrace as natural allies, the despots of the old world. There is not a traitor in the South today who dues not believe, or has uot said that the ultimate design of this great con spiracy is to e-tablish upon these shores a monarchy, or, failing in that, to drag the 11-pu die to a dishonored grave; aud either result is your degradation. Farmers of Pennsylvania, a word with you! Come with us and perfect the work of popu lar unity ! Happy in your quiet homes, blessed in the midst of abundant harvests, heretofore more independent than any ether class, do not be deluded by the hope '• That trenching war will not channel your fields, Xor bi'ui-"'. yo >r ../wereta with the aroied hoof of ho.ti o p. c Unless, indeed, now as I speak and as you hear, yuu send your sous to hold back the invader. Jf rebellion is uot crushed by Northern coi Ciiitration and courage our bor ders ill soon be baptized in blood ; the fairest of our valleys will shake under the thunder ous tread of mighty .-quadrous. Now that your crops are gathered in,—your barns filled to bursting,—your broad acres shorn of their bounteous burdens, —now iet your young men advance t > gather glorious laurels ou other fields, and to crowd the national archives with the names of other heroes. In the olden time, when the foreign foe seat his myrmidons among us, the plough was left standing in the furrow; the sickle rusted among the ripening sheaves, and the husbandman flew to battle to follow tle train of artillery, and to exchange the n aping hook for the sword. O! rouse ye, then, tillers of this golden soil, and swear by the memory of Putnam. and Morgan, and Wayne, the farmer heroes of the glorious post, that you will preserve and defeud the legacies they have bequeathed to you. Men of wealth, will you hold back ? Evt ry doliar of your money has been accumu lated under the fostering cure of that good Government, whose lire is now at stake.— You have prospered beyond example. You have been foruitiale as others have been fortu nate. What value would attach to your heaps of gold tl the Republic were gone '! In that hour your houses, your bonds, and hidden stores would pass away, as the clouds before the storm, or the mists before the sun. Come forth, O Dives, and help your country ! Ap pear, O Midas, with your saining tributes ; for, of all your investments, none have re warded you so much, or returned such solid premiums, as will tnat speculation which pron-s your trust in, and gratitude for, the Government which has protected you. I now address tne politicians—the leaders of parties —the controllers of Convention—the creators of Presidents aud Governors. You have one Divinity that you worship—the Di vinity of Public Opinion. Easily swayed and moulded in peace, it is eagle eyed,keen scented and jealous in time of war. The ordinary tricks of the parhzan will not pass currant now. It is in an inquiring and suspicious mood. It seeks to know for itself—to weigh every assertion in the scales ola most exact in