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They have thanksgiving for success; fastiegs and prayer in the hour,,of humiliation and de feat; triumphs and peans to greet thq living, laurel-crowned victor. They have obsequies and eulogies for the warrior slam on the field of battle. Such is the duty we are to . performao-day. The po etry, the' histories, the orations of antiqui ty, all resound with the clang of arms; they dwell rather upon rough deeds of war than the gentle arts of peace. They have preserved to us the names of heroes, and the memory of their deeds even to this distant day. Our own Old Testa ment teems with the narrations of the brave actions and heroic deaths of Jewish patriots; while the New Testament of our meek and suffering Saviour often se lects the soldier and his weapons to typi fy and illustrate religions heroism and du ty. These stories of the actions of the dead have frequently, survived, in the lapse of ages, the names of those whose fall was commemorated centuries ago.— But, although we know not how the names of the brave men who fought and fell upon the plain of Marathon, in the pass of Thermopylae, and on the bills of Palestine, we have not lost the memory of their examples. As long as the warm blood courses in the veins of man ; as long as the human heart beats high and quick at the recital of brave deeds and patriotic services ; so long will the lesson still invite generous men to emulate the heroism of the past. Among the Greeks it was the custom that the fathers of the most valiant of the slain should pronounce the eulogies of the dead. Sometimes it devolved upon their great statesmen and and orators to perform this mournful du ty. Would that a new Demosthen es, or a second Pericles could rise and take my place to-day, for he would find a theme worthy of his most brilliant powers —of his most most touching eloquence. I stand - here now t -I:tot as an orator, but as the whilom commander, and in the place of the fathers of the most valiant dead ; as their comrade, too, on Many a hard-fought field against domestic and foreign foes—in early youth and mature manhood—moved by all the love that Da vid felt when he poured forth the lamen. cation for the mighty father and son who fell on Mount Gilboa. God knows that David's love for Jonathan was no more deep than mine for the tried friends of many long and eventful years, whose names are to be recorded upon the struc ture that is to rise upon this spot. Would that his more than mortal eloquent , could grace my lips and do justice to the theme! We -have met to-day, my comrades, to do honor to our own dead—brothers uni ted to us by the closest and dearest ties —who have freely given their lives for their country in this war—so just and righteous so long as its purpose is to crush rebellion and to save our nation from the infinite evils of dismemberment t . Such an occasion as this should call forth the deepest and noblest emotions of our nature, pride, sorrow and pray& Pride, that our country has possessed such sons; sorrow, that she has lost them • prayer, that she may have others like them ; that we and our successors may adorn her an nals as they have done; and that, when • our parting hour arrives, whenever and however it may be, our souls may be pre pared for the great change. We have assembled to commemorate a cenotaph which shall remind our child ren's children in the distant future of their father's struggles in the days of the great rebellion. This monument is to perpetuate the memory of a Fortiori only of those who have fallen for the nation in unhappy war; it is dedicated to the offi cers and soldiers of the regular army.— Yet this is done in no class or exclusive spirit, and in the act we remember with reverence and love our comrades of the volunteers who have so gloriously fought and fallen by our sides. Each State will, no doubt, commemor ate in some fitting way the services of its sons, who abandoned their avocations of peace and shed their blood in the ranks; will receive some memento 'of a nation's love, a nation's gratitude.. With what he roism they have confronted death, have , wrested victory from a stubborn foe, and have- illustrated defeat, it well,becomes me to pay, for it has been my lot to com mand them on many -a' sanguinary field. I know that I but echo the feelings of the regulars when I award the high cred it they deserve.to their brave brothers of the volunteers, But we of, Abe. reguljir army have - um states to look-to foe the hquora due our dead. We betting - to the - Whole onntry. We c*neithei-expect or desire the gen eral government.to make, perbga. an 1 4- 1 ' , idiot:ls - distinction in our favor.'' We are' few in numbers, a small band of comrades, united by peculiar and very binding ties. For, with -many of us, our frienclabipa were oommetmed. in boyhood,- irt*:l4ar.O rested beneath the shadow of the granite ecent past and present, without advert hills' which look down upon tie where we ing to the gallant men who were so long - stand ; with others the ties of brother- of our number, but have now gone to hood were formed in more mature years; their last home; for no small portion of while fighting amid the rugged mountains the glory of which we boast, was expect and Sertile.velleys of Mexico ; withlnhear- ed from such men as Taylor, Worth,l3ra ing of theitternal waves ',Atha Pacific, or dy,• Brooks, Totten and Iluneare in the lonely grandeur of the great plains There is a sad etory. of Venetian. hiato of the far West. With all, our love and ry that has moved many a heart, and of confidence has been cemented by common ten employed the poet's pen and painter's dangers and Sufferings,on the toilsome pencil. It is of an old man whoselife was march, in the dreary bivouac, and amid gloriously spent in the service of the State the clash of arms and the presence of as a -warrior and a statesman, and who, death on scores of battle-fields. West. when his hair was white and his feeble Point, with her large heart, adopts us all limbs could scarce carry his bent form . —graduates and thoee 'appointed from toward the, grave, attained the highest ne civil life ; o ffi cers and ivates. In her honor that a 'Venetian bitiien could reach. eyes we are all her children, jeal- He was Doge of Venice. Convicted of ens of her fame, and eager to: sus. treason 4taiust the State, he not only lost taro her world-wide reputation. Gen• his life but suffered beside a penalty erals and private soldiers, men who have which will endure as long as the name ' cheerfully offered oar all for dear country, of Venice is remembered. The spot, we stand here before' this shrine, ever where his portrait should have hung in hereafter sacred to our' dead, equals and the great ball of the Doge's palace, was brothers in the presence of the common nailed with black ; there still the frame death which awaits us all—perhaps in the remains with its black mass of canvass ; 1 death which unite ns- , -the most endearing and this vacant frame is the most conspie that exist among men; such the relations uous in the long line of effigies of illustri which hind us together—the closest of oils Doges! Oh, that such a pall as that the sacred brotherhood of arms. It has which , replaces the portrait of Marino Fe. therefore seemed, and it is fitting, that hero could conceal from history the names we should erect upon this spot, sacred to of those, once our comrades, who are now us all, an enduring monument to our dear I in arms against the flag under which we brothers who have preceded us on the , fought side by side in years gone by. But path of peril and honor which it is the no veil, however thick, can cover, the an destiny of many of us some day to tread. guish that fills our hearts when we look What is this regular army to vvetetk we back upon the sad memory of the past, I belong ? and recall the respont and affection we en- Who were the men whose death mer. tertained toward men against whom it is lite such honors from the living? now our duty to act in mortal combat,— ' What is the cause foie which they have Would that the courage, ability, and laid down their lives?- I steadfastness they display had been em- Our regular or permanent army is the ployed in the defence of the stars and nucleus which in time of peace preserves I stripes against a foreign foe, rather than the military traditions of the nation, as this fatuous and unjustifiable rebellion,- well as the organization, science and as in- which could not have been so long main tained but for the skill of these oar form struction indispensible to modern armies. It may be regarded as coeval with the na- er comrades. Lion: It derives its origin from the old But we have reason to rejoice that up. continental and.,statejities of the Revolu. on this they, so sacred and eventful for us, one grand old mortal monument of the tion, whence, with - seine interruptions and many changes, it has attained its pres. past still lifts high his head among us,and ent condition. In .fact, we may with pro- should have graced by his presence the priety go even beyond the Revolution to Arensecration of this tomb by his children. seek the roots of our genealegical tree in We may well be proud that we are here , the old French , wars ; for the cisatlantic commanded by the hero who purchased campaigns of the several years war were vittory with his blood near the great wa not confined to the ' " red men scalping tors of Niagara ; who repeated and eclips each other by the great Lakes of North ed the achievements of Cortez; who, al- America ;" and it was in them that our though a consummate and'confident com ancestors first participated as Americans mander, ever preferred, when duty and in the large operations of civilized armies. honor would permit, the olive-branch of American regiments that fought on the peace to the blood-stained laurels of war; banks of the St. Lawrence and the Ohio, and who stands at the close of a long, on the shores of Ontario and Lake George, glorious and eventful life, a living column in the islands of the Caribbean Sea, and of granite, against which have beaten in in South America. Louisburg, Quebec, vain alike the blandishments and storms Duquesne, the Moro ' and Porto Bello at- of treason. His name will ever be one of test the valor of provincial troops, and in our proudest boasts and most moving in that school were educated such soldiers spirationa. as Washington, Putnam,Lee, Monigom. In long distant ages, when this incipi ery and Gates. These an men like Knox, ent monument has become venerable, Greene, Wayne and Steuben were the moss-clad, and perhaps ruinous; when the fathers of our permanent army, and names inscribed upon it shall seem to under them our troops acquired that die- those who pause to read them indistinct cipline and steadiness which enabled them mementos of an almost mythical past, the to meet upon equal terms, and often to name of Winfield Scott will be clear cut defeat the tried veterans of England. The upon the long forgotten .. monuments of study of the history of. the Revolution the Pharaohs. and a perusal of the dispatches of Wash- But it is. time to approach the present. ington, will convince the most skeptical In the war which now shakes the land to of the value of the permanent army in its foundation, the regular army has borne achieving out independence, and estate a most honorable part. Too fetin nun:- liShing the civil edifice which we are now hers to act by themselves, regular regi fighting to preserve. The war of 1812 meats have participated in everygreatbat found the army on a footing far from ad- the in , the east, and most of those west of equa e to the emergency, bat it was ra- the Alleghenies. Their terrible losses and pid increased, and of the new genera- diminished numbers prove that they , have t nof soldiers Many found equal to the been in the thickest of the fight, and the eqeirements of the occasion. Lundy's testimony of their comrades and cowman -1 e,Chippewa, Queenstown, Plattsburg, ders show with what undaunted heroism Orleans, all bear witness to the gal. they have upheld their ancient renown.— lantry of the regulars. Then came an in- Their vigorous charges have often won terval of more than thirty years internal the day, and in defeat they have more peace, marked by many changes in the than once saved the army from destruct organization and strength of the regular tion or terrible losses by the obstinacy 1 army, and broken at times bytedious and with which they resisted overpowering numbers. They can refer with pride to bloody Indian wars. Of these the most remarkable were the Black Hawk war, in the part they played upon the glorious fields which our troops met unflinchingly a foe of Mexico, and exult on what they as relentless and far more destructive than did at Manassas, Gaines' Mills, Malvern, the Indians—that terrible scourge, the Aptietam, Shiloh, Stone River, Gettys cholera—and the tedious Florida war, burg, and the great battles just fought where, for so many years, the Seminoles from the Rapidan to the Chickahommy. eluded, /a their pestilential swamps, our They can point also to the,officers who ntatest effigy,. _end in: which wee° dis• have risen from among them and achieved played - smelt traits of heroism as that cora• great deeds for their country in this war, memorated by yonder monument to Dade to the living warriors who are upon the and his command, when all fell save two, nation's tongues and heart, too numerous without an attempt to retreat,, At lain' to be repeated here, yet not one of whom came the Mexican war to rePlace •Whin' Vivould willingly omit . But perhaps the contests, and the monotony of frontier proudest episode in the histFy of the reg! service, and for the first , time in many ular army. is that touching instance of fi, yearn t h al a mi of, -- -,. egu y ac l i n o s wan delity on the part of the non-coramigaion. conceotrated, and took the principal ca r t *A officers and privates, who, traitorous in the battles of that.' remarkable 'ante°. ly made prisoners m Texas, resisted.ev- Mantic War. Palo Afte,Reseca' and port cry temptation to violate their oath_MA ...iblown were thcachieVeinents of thereg- dese rt thew flag. Offered commissions tilers unaided ;` tus'tr,ati;to *the battles of in the rebel serviMM9neZAd hindfreis- 1 Monterey, Buena:T*4ll/0h Crux; Cer. ij tendered Ahem, they all scorned thein ducements held out fothern, submitted to rib Gordo, and the 'Anal t triumphs in the alley, none 61 tra w, a i r th a t t h e y c ool their hardships, and - -when at last ex line been won wittout 'the'regolars..'7. °hanged; avenged thethsWettOri tlielleld , wh en peace creame d ( ki r v i ctories ic d ie ofbattlifor the Unavailing Insalt offered capital of the M'onteznintur,the-army waa their integrity: dlisKy,iiPainci,,bright• atonee dispersed over the largelrontier, er exam pl e :of bonbr than that of these spa %%Aged in harrassittg anddangeraus breve men, tempted, as I blush to say wars with the Indians of the pl a i c e.- Th t a f they . wersOly scone of theft-former offt : ,. this , long ye* W er e c pea tf, i c ia the 0i15,:F1'0,13844 tgemielVes pro's , ' 'ell falie Present' 'War broke ow ) and the MU, of it! Oeir fingt. enleAr. 4 lo 14 ' l'Oue:9-tlift the army wall 'drawn - re to' be eutpl,?yea liilo:WhObe4 4411,1tlweitthembatienii 1 0** dolikelittit )- GA.' , ' ' : t, 'bit lad 'war': 44. Motiotikeal - whti i r istinot TioOeed - tote : m o te eflthe 'refilfgelsalaigle'' ' _ MONTROSE, PA., THURSDAY, JlTf.rt't, Such is the regular army; such-ite his tory and antecellente; • such its officers and its men. It needs co herald so trum pet forth its praises, It can proud ly appeal to the numerous fields from the tropics to the frosen•banks of the St.Law fencefrom the Atlantic to the Pacific, fertilized by the blood, and whitened by the bones of its members. But I will not pause to eulogize it, let .itaideede speak for it ; they are more eloquent than tongue of mine. Why are we here thy, Thisienot _the funeral of one breve warrior, nor even of the harvest of deathOn a single .battle field; but these ,are the,Cbsequisitiof' the best and bravest chlidren-oftite)und Who. have fallen le .actio*akilest, nutaberlesa, many of thein ,the most, :sanguinary of which history, beara, record. The. men whose. names and cleeds,we now seek to perpetuate, to render them thehigheat honor in our power, have:ranee Wherever armed rebellion showed, its front, in the far distant New Wale?, in the broad valley of the Vississitipi, .on bl oody . hunting gronnds„ of „Kentucky, in the mountains of Tennessee,,ainkl the swamps ' of Carolina , and "'on " 'the 'fertile fields of Maryland; and in the blood stained thick eta of Virginia. They were of all grades, from tile General to the priiate; of all ages, from the gray-haired veteran of fif ty years' service, to the beardless youth ; and of all degrees of cultivation, from the man of science to the nnedneeted boy. It is not necessary, nor is it possible, to re peat the mournful yet illustrious roll of the dead heroes we have met to - honor, nor mast I nemesia thaste,seho most tnier it praise ; simply a few who will exempli fy the classes to which - they belong. Among the last of the slain, and among the first in honor and reputation, was that hero of twenty battles, John Sedg wick. Gentle and kind as a woman ; brave as a braveman can be; honest, sin cere and able; a model that all may strive to imitate,. but whom few -can equal. In the terrible battle just preceding his death he had occasion to display the highest qualities of the soldier and, commander.—'' Atter escaping the stroke of death when men fell around him by thousands, be at last met his fate at. a moment of compare.-1 tive quiet by the ball of a single rifleman. He died as a soldier would choose to die, with truth at his heart, and a sweet, tran quil smile upon his lips. Alas! our great nation . pottsess few sons like , true John Sedgeauk. - Like him, fell, too, at the very head of their corps, the white-haired Mansfield, after a career of usefulness, illustrated by his skill and cool courage at Fort Brown, Monterey and Buena Vista; John F. Rey nolds and Reno, both in the full vigor of manhood and intellect, men who hadprov ed their ability and chivalry in many al field in Mexico and in this civil war, gal lant gentlemen, of whom their country had much to hope, had it pleased God to spare their lives. Lyon fell in the prime of life leading his little army against super ior numbers, his• brierctireer affording a brilliant exampleof patriotism and ability. The impetuous Kearney and such brave generals as Richardson, Williams, Terrill, Stevens, Weed, Saunders and Hayes lost their lives while in the midst of a career of usefuless. Young Bayard, so like the most renowned of his name, that "knight above fear and abeve . reproach," was cut off too early for his country. No regi-1 menta can spare such gallant, devoted l and able commanders as Rossell, Davis, Gove, Simmons, Bailey, Putnam, and Kingsbury—all of 'whom fell in the thick est of the contest, sonic of them veterans, others young in service—all good men and well beloved. Our batteries have partial ly paid their terrible debt to fate in the loss of such commanders as, Greble (the flrst to fall in the war,)Beation; Haggard, Sweat, Dr. Hart, Hazlett, and those gal lant boys, Kirby, Woo4rtiffilronick, and Cushing : while the en eery lament the promising and gallant Wagner and Cross. Beneath remote' battle-fields re.f.t the corp ses of the heroic Mcßae, Bisbee), Stone, Sweet, and many other company 'o ffi cers. Besides these: there are, bests or, veteran sergeants, cor p orals and privates who had fought tinder Seot.ti t in Mexico, or contest ed with.the salvages of . the far West and Florida; and Mingled with them young soldiers whe, eel:wage:Ms, 'ateadyand true, met death unflinehingly withotit tbo hope of personal glory:\ Thhse . men, in their more - humble sphetek' "Served' their' Gently with as much faith andlinitcelsiti the most illnatrictiet'generalsOind' all of them with perfect singleness of `litatt: Although their names may not libeiu the= psgeofhistory i their nothing, oontage'svill.. Their naenieriee - will tong : be preseitied in - their regimen* for' there were many of them whenaerited as trend a distinction' as- that ' aticorded- to ('the firate grenadier of Prams"- or' - to- that' other Russian soldier. Wks- :gave: hieelife• for his _comrade:s,n Bat there is laiother elaes of men of who-have , gene Ilona.. be: since this weieomeienclea; who - fie-fate:it!. was not to die in battle, but who ,- ,are! none -tbe tto :be meatione d here- Ih.erOmlisSuMpertsbrar4aconest%' 4004 rm ~ c tiFf4nit,of imoraitiban. half a; century's_ service, WhO itad...oonfrontedi demo tiPWROPI.Pgky. eaLseoresof battle; Ilmw)fkimukariast ratdedg a more an once told laeltitathe 11641 kopc4 that , his long career would end meld the dim of battle. died atlidthationiefrectibrthehardships of his campaigns. That most excellent sold , ier, the elegant C. F. - Smith, whom many of no remember to have seen so often on this very plain, with his superb bearing, escaped the bullet, to fall a victim to the disease' whichilas deprived the army of so tatty of its bestsoldiers. -John Buford, cool and-intrepid Kitchell, eminent in , science, Palmer, and many,,other officers have lost their bysickness contracted in the field. tut - I cannotn close this long list of glorious martyrs without paying a sacred debt of offliiial duty and personal friendship; There is oak' dead-- soldier, *who possessed pecnlitir . blaittertipon -love 'and gratitride he Weal en - ardent , patriot; aatintelfish man, n tit() soldier, the beau , ideal of a staff officer, he was my aid-de-camp, 001. Colburu. There is a lesson to be drawn from the death and services of these glorious men, which we should read for the present and future benefit of the nation. . War in these modern days is •a science and it should now appear-to themost p.re judiced that the organization and arming of 'arinies ; and the high combination of strategy, perfect familiarity with the the oretical science of war is :requisite: To ant. opine suCcess when the plans or exe cution of oampaigtm are intrusted to men who have knowledge of war, is as idler as to expecithe legal wisdom of a Story or' Rent from a skilitelphysician. But what is the honorable and holy cause far which these men have laid down their lives, and for which the nation still demands the sacrifice of the precious blood of so many of her children ? Soon after the close of the Revolution ary war,. it was found that the confeder acy whch bad grown up daring that memorable - cohost was falling to pieces from its own-weig ht. The central power was too weak. ' It could recommend to the different States such Measures as seemed best,isecause it lacked the execu tive force to compel obedience to its laws. The national credit and self-respect had disappeared, and it Was feared by the friends of human liberty throughout the world that ours was another added to the long list of fruitless attempts at self-gov ernment. The nation was evidently on the brink of ruin and dissolution , when some eighty years ago many of the wisest and most patriotic of the land met to seek a remedy - tor the'grtlat ovils4hich threat ened to destroy the great work of the re volution. Their sessions were long and often stormy ; for a time the most san guine doubted the possibility , of a success ful termination of their labors. But from amidst the conflict of sectional interests, of party prejudice and of personal sel fishness, the spirit of wisdom and of con ciliation at length evoked the Constitu tion under which we have lived so long. It was not formed in a day ; but was the result of practical labor, of lofty wisdom, and of the purest patriotism. It was at last adopted by the people of all ; the States, although by some reluctantly, not as being exactly what all desired, but the best possible under the circumstances. It was accepted as giving us a form of government under which the nation might live happily and prosper, so long as the people should continue to be in fluenced by the same sentiments which actuated those who formed it, and which would not be liable to destruction from internal eatises, so long as the people pre served the:recollection of the miseries and ca Amities which led to its adoption. Un- ' der this beneficial constitution the pro gross of the nation was unsurpassed in history. The rights and liberties of its citizens were secured at home and abroad; vast territories were reached from the control of the savage and the wild beasts, and added to the domain of the Union and civilization. The arts, the sciences, and commerce grew apace; our flag float ed upon every sea, and we took. our place among the great nations of the earth.— But under this smooth surface of prosper ity upon which we glided swiftly, with all the sails set before the common breeze, dangerous reefs were hidden which now and then caused ripples upon the surface, and made anxious the more careful pilots. Elated by success, the ship swept on, the crew not heeding the warnings they re ceived, forgetful of tbe dangers escaped at the beginning of the voyage, and blind to thahideons malestrotri which gaped to receive them.. The earne elements of dis cord, sectional prejudices, interests and histitutions Which bad : rendered the for mation of tho Constitution - Imo difficult, threatened more than once to- destroy it. But.for ,long thne.,,the nation was no fortunate aa. to, possess aearies of political ie 'a d6rB 3 W l l -1 :4 0 the highest . abilities,. an. ited, the, same, spirit of conciliation which animated the fOundere of this :republic). aiyithns ler s ina,ny, years the threatened eff,giiWere.eyorted., l¢es and the log contingence of god/Mullet ,Obliteratedi thji.reeellectien ,o(the, calmiticsof years pree r eding , the adoption,of , the , comitiw tion. ~They forgot that coneiliatiqp, Conk mon interest, and mutual charity : had heee the foundation, and must bo the support, of oncgotrerament, and all the' relations of life, At length, men appeared: with abstai l / 4 isesplisnal And personal 'prejudice& oatwiigtung-alllcankideri.. 'bone of the general good. , Extreaniativot iVOLUME one gpct ion furnished the occasion, sage ; Seized as it. pretext by equally extreme men in tho other, for abandoning - the pacific remedies aforded by the Constitu tion.. Stripped of all sophistry, and side issues, the direct cause of the war as it presented itself to the honest end Pat riotic citizens of the North was eitnply this: • Certain -states, or rather a portion of the inhabitants of certain states, feared, or ,professed,to fear, that injury would ra. suit in their rights and property from thb elevation of a particular party to power.= Although the Constitution and the actual condition of the goieinment provided them with a peaceable and sure protection against the apprehended evil,, they lire -pared to seek: security in the -destrtuitiou of the goVernment which protest them, and in the use of force -against na tional troops holding a national fortress.— To efface the insult offered to our flag, to save ourselves fiom the fate of the divid ed republics of Italy and South America; to preserve. our government from dia. truction ; to enforce its just powers and laws; to maintain our very existence as II nation : these were the causes which impelled us to draw the sword. Rebell ion against government like ours, which contains, within itself the means of self adjustment and a pacific remedy for evils, should• never be confounded with a re volution against despotic power, which re fuses redress of wrongs. Such a rebell ion cannot be justified upon ethical grounds, and the only alternative for our choice a re its suppression or the deistino tion of oar nationality. At such a time as this, and in such a struggle, political partisanship should be merged in a true and brave patriotism,. which thinks only of the good of the• whole country. It was in this cause and with these motives that so many of our comrades have given their lives, and to this we are all personally pledged in all honor and fidelity. Shall such devollon as that of our dead comrades be of no avail ? Shall it be said that in after-ages we lacked the vigor to complete the work thus begun ? That after all these noble lives freely given, we hesitated and failed to keep straight on until our land was saved ? Forbid it heaven, and give us firmer, truer hearts than that. Oh spirits of the valiant dead, souls Uf heroes, lend us your o*n indomitable will,' rind if it be permitted you to com mune with those still chained by the trammels of mortality, hover around us in the midst of danger and tribulation, cheer the firm, strengthen the weak, that none may doubt the salvation of 'the Republic and the triumph of our graid old flag. In the midst of the storms which tum our ship of state, there is ono great beacon light to which we can ever turn with con fidence and hope. It cannot be that this great nation has played its part in history; it cannot be that sun, which arose with such bright promises for the future, has already set forever. It must be the in tention of the overruling Deity that this land, so long the asylum of the oppressed, the refuge of civil and religions liberty, shall again stand forth in bright relief, united, purified, and chastened by our trials, as an example and encouragement for those who desire the progress of the human race. It is not given to our weak intellects to understand the steps of Pro vidence, as they occur ; wo comprehend them only as we look back upon them in the far distant past; so it is now. We cannot unravel the seemingly tangled , skein of the purposes of the Creator, they are too high and far.reaohing for our lim- • ited minds. But all history and His ways, although inscrutable, are ever righteous.— Let us, then, honestly and manfully play mu parts, seek to understand and perform our whole duty, and trust unwaveringly in the beneficent God who led our twee& ton across the sea, and sustained them afterwards amid dangers more appalling even than those encountered by His ova chosen people in their great exodus.. He. did not - bring ns hero in vain, nor has He. supported us thus far not naught. If we do our duty and trust in Him, He will not desert no in our need. Firm in oar. faith that God will save our country, we now dedicate this site to the memory of bravo men, to, loyalty, patriotism, and honor. ( L oad applause.) One portion of the Republican party having nominated Mr. Lincoln, aid tbek other Mr. Fremont, the Democrats ire lookers-on, and listen how beantifiglif the . , friends of miscegenation are telling the truth. ' We may look out for some fine. developments. —Why don't , Lincoln suppress the Fres mont party, or send it to Fort Lafayette! Its orators and newspapers are tittering the most " disloyal" sentiments on record. They 'denounce the long-legged 4gOvertii, mint" in bitter terms, and are'pertnitted 'to'run at large! . • . —The abolition f candidate' ref Lied, Governor of Indiana, recently made, `a speech in which be said" the right of luni meanti the right of foreign. scomidrsla to . prOtectionP This has so exasperated the Germans of Indians that they all re., pudiate the Whole Republican ticket.. ' 3 •-;;Litteoln's friends continue. to hive. to save this obUnteyi beanie a goose saved florae. t NUAUOM 26.