- ' • gwrvi:74l - $. l -,. •,-.. t ......„,.... 7 . _ . • ~...:• ri - I- r.-i , .. , ., ...,,,. 0 y...„,.:i.:yr r.,, , ,, , , - " i) ,=- • - 1,-,,;--r,-ipy.,-,A!; ••- • . Fin sT Tmal.-Atiit::0111,440411101 in-18564nd, 1858 ; 4eititiOgil!Ai,Mi4;liVier MArliteti, 1_ ..1NV,4,71.2. 401 . . , : • .Z.4ert.oo4 l Wee..lPlssr Bieotrie,..7*OsetioL4able ! was 411 , 134 talk '.' The pfihlikleilliStelin - 71# Engineithirle4 elf thel4.o.;th, • The doishin of the Atternty lien** of South 0 ari:Oes 'murendere ,thh.t*itufailiviiircker to the,l3:,§: ThAloeideeistlei BlxteentliTini•: tibinlo4if34l ; 'land; ndrPeirq ,• ,:`the lieritellW,l4l4o4 ,444; ..,b 1 4 1,061 INiAffittf9.,* 01 2 g 1 ,4,1*. 1 - 4 ' 910 ' 2 '"" okolee:.„lork;oteect hijp#llr,(hAutberlaild Aehe,_,44 l'erii,44,./KelAtypt; ), , , : - .The.oe n fe r e es The Demimitik44ite .oenveutioti of Miohigali illeete at Detroit to-dsi:%. , Page's , faoteiy; In •-•Weliif;. Ohio; hitebeiri'dietkoied.. ge ~ .:Adjuts4t;Atirtir ol*ifieji ibeh . .„fp;;Qh,X'To..int , to sneet etimil - ial: *ti Soiite. '''ff ,*#O.V.fO74OI.OII,IIASION. • : We ham pao-oneFgreat-Itelegraph celebra= tion, ingioliii**4lOt obly till,hitit greet , deal mO:gi rii % . :*..* - 4itx5p0p1e.. 60 444 6 sittiiposi4mAiipixtgo.: to a, few , hourepfthetime-of‘ golig terpreas; the day has onefeViritialatkin;ride,"and AcikOni - Pf 9 l° successo. 141'9710J* Work ot.onr, finis i;prid 3 / 4 .thatiltifwas suggested by Ame rican intellect, atutmainly,completed,byme = rican T: 11 4.0 21 0010-4 1 :t. h #S 1 , Almighty,*hiat :Wl4 -0 5M ler*. - 8 '44 knowleOge,Of..theAtrrof: kature to Man as enabled this liondronalconsummation to =be ancomillehat ", • " It well,liilin4hilidelpida; j io;',long, the, adopted that which, 4afteialfe?si .fltfal:*feverr his ashes 'rest, to render ledor ' an - '"achleva- . investigaillinsWigiik;hU':SO Perieveringly and Indefatigably -parked:" Indeed, the -name Of ritsaitarisilotildreontiettedwith this - great et'ent;.fOktiot didCdid*l ning froin:ltnaien'T(c . ‘ Eripqr,7(nintene,ilO,'.!), but no Anierican gavel a:greuter bi2petuo, in this notuatry,4o - theriobbiart ofPrbiting, without which the - 90010414nd andpnranitticif science' muathave Whateiii Pitsainuntli,.,Wlidest,anticipallone may have -been—and Philoiophy .neiniitimes indulges :in dreams airwild sector thif wizard Imagination 'gavohirthAfit - may 1,4 ), ,14 1 #30 4 4:. pheree bi<,whati4seoltiiratively .a-=mere thread, - and riloidliiefhought s through' that attenuated ' line; : in' liglitninj ;; lv[iiged , words, never entered into Mind: - 11eWOildiitye• rejoiced to_aave s seen .fthis day, T this. day lo "full of gloryttiliiiimtiviland; 861101'6f pre:. mite to itiailiitid:;, : ,,ifeWonii'jiiO4ittedin" seeing PreseiitedWith air servant, more iotent.then eny.ather few eicentions; whicifhttman" means pla:ed• in ter • t . 7., of the achlevenientWhiett we_connuemorated was significaittlY4nd practically ;Fiore, and in New YorliyWhile the. population Were en the "Altl:Jiile ,of . ,,rijClobig,,there: flashed across the,*tbintic a _ message of Slop from the Direetorii cof the letlantia Tele. graph Company in- Lendon-:-a Message pro: bobby delivered Oable'soinatinie the !mut ,Whettlf. reached He, destination, in - It wOriklbeellightfat!catastiophe, if, after the Atlinitie - Telegraih'lif 'once 'in bUsiness operatiou c tho,,puhllo,.ehould gudclefilyhe pi:trod-or-its - use; Thia-..mer.oOcut, at,rny period, twat flit ennethe'', guarded 10010. - 4 It. de hapoetribleoioilbatillib Preoti4tilliky , the BabiAtitialid',WJegraPhit,...#:'fixed'. thee,. that the oomninnieo**tieetkthip , Tootattiy jinni Engiendlieltall - ha:traeted*t pouf; rile :thleinets forefinger. ' Indeed, .communication ,between Eugland,, 'and - iber lhited States, but_ betweentildThWerld and the New. - We hid an inatencelotthis the other dayOillea Atleritio*egrara brought rieneia frornOhlua, India, EtiyfotiPrtuk sia,BusskOlßOTAnylklAlcneand• of time," it4e ,raoat ; probable tluit „Fiance, and other EttrePeteveoeutilesobjoting - to their telegraphic' vomitinnipatione passing 'exclu- - 'lively through Engymd, willhaye.plantioTe /egrapheroftheir;otru. the - meantime,- accident to the, present line moot be'provided_ for. A pretty thing it;4ould be, after wehave been arouatemed,„Qm : we aeon 'ishall'bit,j to have our . foreigrr: : :i liewa,erved : a.ppi in nomPlinY,,-Fl4o,:otir,, breakfast.table, every day, IS istidden "cessation. ,s: bzeak in the I :';wire ' There • •was example ; tile; ..only. a few — years" ago; :viten. the Telegraph Cable was . drat" laid bet.ffeen; Engianll : and `trainee :" Tt ;worked very snecessfullY for a •few weeks, and then ~ the coinnunaleation reseed. The wire had got abraded by4sitite rocka;,:elsise:wthe , • terminuson sthe Frenelr[epard; and st..exiW siderabloktinteAapsedjtifore_the cable 'nenli be repiiireVoq thkenterirripleation restored. Common senie;.itealliir — pointieid.Prsidenee) iniggests. . second ,ithle; if:not ' third - and fourth; sintil he laid Wi*aajlitle delay as The money; can readily. be relied for this purpose; -_ .• . - In the *skittish of ineeessi; snWeleome and latterly jo , uslextiectudiinany journaliehl•spelte of theAtlantioTelegrapOte ibii greatest event - the annals of the world.:!!::. The'exaggOition hi of ibis pardonable hiniat; is • natural: iiiinti'gh; and certainly:we shall not-he sm. ill.natnted.er Aso OaPtionaisto,norideratt:Or ridieple it.Un doubtedlY;lt-ii-oni - 6'f:the' 'neat remarkable ,events inStittV,iiiirlil'iliiatorY+oheef the:moat 'surprising; n *the;greatest.: ` . •—• We look: back,•onlY a few hundred 'Years, and the Invention ..of4ng l9o*AraluilY out of the AttLeltitiventiOn' , of mechanics, almost Cf:'.'hanticc:raft,- *Oh- . may', be :said *finest ta -parent of every other: grand discoveiY*Since means the word God; Goikhorstofore 'sealed book to 'the multitu de,,bepe* It. '•feklarge . -. to :piKeheae - st, - ,m,Mitiscript:4oPy of the Bible; was ..ec , attCrad s ieldeciest , ever the:world, and, sooii ( Wei frarilliteiVint(i j a variety of lin-;• gliciecs : j 647 4 4, iaan Amnia/ with, Scripture history ) ;prophe cy, and ::_Eter:, • shice*.lipluting has performed ' a .wondarthl : mission , the vast importaUee of Which 'semis to bb every day upon t:tha;lilaiiiiai.....*ltiOnt the . aid of printing/more, .etTocielly;tiatkowSWhich the Atlaritiopileigapkip; convoy roe) the. ocean,mould he limited to a mere,..handl • fel of peipple=-Iteentf;ka:all. -, ICIs the fleas.; Psperthe, newel .paper which has communicated 'o.'• the' world` every deieil - :-iesPectivi. # l4 , IRCOOJOne. 0 0 ' gresek th Y e , ano essoutaateP ~ been prottilicalleCii'thei , , , trembling soul of, May cativo.; for utility, Wlth'Prffitin4#ileV*o` . :ivetild 'submit that •tho - 4144/Oc . ...4.C'Aik*,:;as„ working ,force r and si t e ,water; and land.traVelliiigie , inay , 4 take -. preeedeneo r fn imeitiiii6;2''PC4l!: hat the Atiaetio 'Telegraßg4, l oliii4, , ,?l!CYll 3o ",i)*eled:'o , accomplish. ;Indeed, the puhiligaonieWhaV • ~ ignore, ~..1,., see m ~.,- , ,•-• andifOrSe"—" si the Cable tielgraterellY- rlor to the laYin frelegraplr had tleffact ottß,Ati tlie,XleUttle7 all`„ over ` the eh eliwittlifieePeke*' '' its" hiith" .-, En g?a 0 Be- hie cou n t ry , '* Ix . -14.4" li n t'allay In t frhstoeti theee ..., ..:1 er-orld, - earth r- , one• is but ', --' for-Ens:7l,Y ~, il ; y , „. we ..o.4tacief_i.. 4.lw,Oceat#l e/ T,. Vewlt"-- t:;thduere ;le e ' .4 the'otter•' yet,l ph systemJ ~:Ato uti:.eP,-;,:rtenalon of t._,.he; , T...? u,greit d oes , We • 4 .,, , tma "--- ...10 mom, -. , - may, sloth th e v --- .`, -1 *,-1, ''' ' t .tAtaklog u ' dlitegtholtd*:,,:- ~- /0 idd, tha , Llt:-;.- eel - 4 aU , ~. 6,-g iii 014ITZu-, -,' hap. oitlV r-e felt 0 too 0 ~,,, Al'• :„10,,6# , a =We b Tr teAliaif • - r0bab17;70.48 as z :esteilielA = dangler° P.- ~ - mit -' -,. ,Dorlog, thel, .pornonO the •‘ ~ I°ll4)t* - Sfittev. - and -;...ppr5,...:,-.1.,.,-,,,44-ritiTi ~ ,K . tb, • .., - ~R,A.1•74174,-riostritiul:r,...A.-4:ari fele ..4 ; -;.-, .iti......tiCE4,,„zate,G,Fosex, - ~,j , ,,, of oink, 6 ,v,,, Sygrelyrk, ~,,m t„,„,,,,,„,, 61034,6,6 - 7,' ,„. !,,,, .„- ,- .- -,7 14idih vw,x ",-.77. ,• , ~, ,', '''T, - --3.-,._ ate --r.,-„Ailitidoil4l. ~v .-`..: ` a , = - . '' ,till -this*'4C"'‘ . -,,_ - 9 V 2; N AKIVIO"- '' ' . , '-‘•• ' fn f&V62 ~c 4 l' a .; '''' - %P. - A Y" ( 'ad ,Plll%lO 4 _ f.,.- ~,ii,441 04. ikrtstrertl4nr3 '44,, ca.< 3...i , i -'. Thut*4o.,-112, ~...,4-eeitira,rl)%heetwit, &,',,,Chef • fecteirreaYeel"-e Tioideul In v - • 2 - .-, -- A-_: 4L '-besiited ?turutY . • '""e -.."_; GABLE I THE CABLE I THE CABLE " ' THE OCEAN CABLE! • . • -434i,ASW amr,va34E;..esa.ca.T. bt&KING BOTH*, PthLA.DELPiIiA WILD ! 4 4a1MINATIONAL YEBLING putist ;AND ritoLr.d. er,GL&ND:-*ILITLRIN DYk,PLAY.,, DIAWITIcENT TM INATIONS. F'L A'S N 05.. N G - -1 1 EitiQUIINT 3 OIiATIEN OF '"0" 1:211- El • , ra "Sr. ,W 1 IRI'I-:STIItMNG .'SPEECHES, IMPSESSIYE PRAYER S . ACCIDENTS,' AND ,'-- MEETING- AT JAYNE'S HALL Zoffers from' ilistlaggishod Stalteamds. oiriluti:.i:Fign:cONtiltA.fuLATEs us TEE LONDON iitaEoToits tic) THE MOfSE REMAINS :. QUIET. BY THE FIREPSE N j4klnia: and Doings,' &e• . Oar MY Yesterday presented , a b e autif ul and joyous eppearanoe, konor: of: the great event whieh-Was so creditably celebrated. Tho streets were thronged - with people eagor.te note each fee tore oil the .dtly.• ,The 'olyie, and fire men'ke dieidays 'Were' very imposing. The- ad 'dresses,' the orations, and the prayers honor to the genius of. their „authors... The torchlight pre! °oaten and the fireworks equalled anything of the ,kindeyer beforeAritneued in our city. Many of thctrat4iriiiieleit and illiminatione were really magninoeniand, tan all, together, the ovation was a grand proof of • the readiness of the popular heart td bestow its warmest mead of applause upon ihipeapefol triumphs of - science 'nu well as upon the bloopy'deeas of war . ' . A mot's 'propitious time for the celebration could nit have been -flied -upon. The weather was de lightful; with, a cool breeze to temper the bright sunshine, without being blustery or unpleasantly troll By daybreak; or aeon • after, those whO -signed join:big tho CelePFation Woire, tied r, and everfitich,Of.;hunting. hi, Muni Was • flung the morning breeze: -; Biagi streamed from every Point—they.flotated the 'breeze 'from lofty Biafra, they- titittere4 . 4roth lines stretched across ~the streets, ~aarid ' th"ey deaniated, the muterigging Of the vessels lying in - the Delaware and in the johuylkill. • :.-„- -'THE MILITARY. • - , The tallitaiy - dhiplay was a' moat grand and !posing - one; sid,canstittited an attractive feature if tile met at the appointed. hour, the right rafting on-Broad below !Natant, then moan . letraarohing, proceeded, in the following order ?MST REGIMENT INFANTRY, - - : ‘litßilT BRIGADE, Pa:amnion inn STAPP. . Glari. - tino,OADIVALLADER AND -STATIr. • penneylyinis Cornet sa,fia: - ' ArtillerY,Battalion. , Philadelphia Band Col. W. ' . G , ey Battalion, Commanded by Col. J. K. Murphy., - ' Waihington Grays--Capt. Parry, 85 men., ' • Philadelphia Greya-Lient: Otter, 55 men. Natienal Sinnox, 25 mon. Cadwallader. Greys.•=oapt Breese. 30 men. State - Paneibles-Capt. Page, 40 ,-,Nailorial Giiarda. - --Ceptain Lyle 100 men. ft dope dont'Greya— Captain' Braceland , 34 men. Sot Legiod-=-Liont. George Moore, 20 men. Obiladelptua'CitY Guards.oapt,'Malle,"2B men. Washingtonliluint:=Oapt. Goaline, 30 men. ,„ :„ ; THIRD -,... • ; HIPLE REGIMENT. . . • . ,•• "WILLIAM MIZILLY. • - • MOOREHEAD. • " . . • - • - United &idea Ocirnet Band, „_Maniyunk Ititiel.--'.Vaptidn Shearer,' 35, men. `„Oontimentalltriirdoaptairi Spear, 30, men. Meehan% Itillest-Centain Barr, 20,men. - Bleak Riffes.7-Captalia Proaaer, 22 mop. , Charlton,,33 met. ''. Spring Garden Rifle—Caps, Barone; 35 men: - J&Citson Rifle—Capt. Randolph, 20 men. United Rife—flant. Grant, 30 men, 1. - SECOND ,BRIGADK. •"- • ' Gen: J. D Minns. AASlCALtirrreißrlgade Major.' „i • Dr: MIIREE, Surgeon. - .PhillidelphinArtlliery—Capt - Einstein, 50 men. • Hibernia Greens—Lieut. MeGough, 2tt men: - - Irish_Volunteera-.-Cept. 0 Kane, 24 men. ' Jackson GuardsCapt..lliarphy, 22 men. Montgomery Guard - a—Capt. Harvey. • The procession then proceeded over the route ,to, the square. r • CIVIC PROCESSION. • At 'lO o'oloch the oivio bodies assembled. at FranklliONenas . , s and topped in the following , Harsl ' isd r in 'Kerr: of the Niagara. ,isalstatitillarebals. W. MaGreggor, Frank , „ • Timmon. , - • Liberty Cornet Band. Milked ; States Marines—Sergeant Walmaley. 26 men., ' - The'orew'of the Niagara; omisisting of 25 men. the Crew of the Susquehanna, consisting of 20 eIL. pole, ;with a long piece of the Cable attached, was eirriedly one of the drew of the Niagara. The,,Tasper'Seetion of the Sons of -Temperance. - ' After,theline wee formed, it proceeded to Ele., ferili'and Market streets, where the St. George's and:thelAiblon Societies joined In, and .t he whole proceeded*the lagnEge., . . • - • lAREPENDE4C3I fiIiIIABEr . The impartial here_ were of a very Interesting and:. attrantitio character. The exercises were Opened at 10 minutes of 12 o'clock, by the entrance If the civlo proocasion,,keaded by the crew of the Niagara, escorted by marines, who were admitted and marobed around the Naar° with flags flying sod mule playing. The greets bounding the Square were crowded' to exoeu with people, who - mounted the railing, making a dark fringe entirely around the three open eldee.• ' ha front' of the platform, on the main avenue, wash painting of the Coa t Arms of Penneylva• nia,witlia banner bearing' the following insorip . , Oersted; Morse, .Iliald—sod sada his Ughtrdngs to bless the Union of ,the • Old and New World, ith„intelligenta, peace ' and prosperity?' _The stage was alio deettrated with flags. The Niagara's crew took up their position just `beneath the platform. - - . The military procession soon followed, sweeping around the walks in grand style, and their muslo echoing in harmonious tones._ , , • At precisely font minutes, past twelve the pro °emit% ,(Mira Common and Beleot Connell Cham bers appeared 3ipon - platform; and tightly packed it wee withthe'" distinguished" and the officers of the - meeting.' 'After the been - admitted, and Armed into, line; 'the - I: 1 W of the Square were thrown open for the idm lon of the orowds with out, when a living human tide of youth and men ponied in with' an- impetuosity that seemed truly startling, , and'yet which presented 'a scene rarely equalled-in its imposing - grandeur: On and on they eame , with.• a surge which -soon tilled the Sqnare, and hemmed in the military in an appa rently inextrieable.hunranwall, ;Those who have been familiar with the city, led its great evente ror years, declare that ,there never: Wei seen - in Old Independenie Square—the Quaternary greind of public gatherings-4w% a large, happy, gay, and brilliant s orpwd. The must° struck up its in ,apitingetraine t i e the crowd gathered and gathered around the platform hy, hundreds and thousands. lbe,musio seen changed from'!' Hail Columbia' , and the "Star Spangled 'Banner',' to - " God Save ,the Queen, ',an air which we fanoy has not been heard In that rquire since the days of the Colonies. Ai same 'anthem was also played by -the chimes e St:Su:Oozes -Church: The ringers did it is _good style. It waa'aihrilling scene, and was thoroughly en foyedbylall who were - fortunate enough to be in a' position tollee and hoar. • -- '• - , Morton MoMichael, Esq., called dui meeting to 'ordeti and headdreased all men present as felliw for suoh a title ho considered eminently eppropriate r nt.this time, whether they were born -on' our rot' cruet; whether they were landsmen or Seamen.; "Fellow-eilizens," said be thy duty lusty:Title 'pill 'this meeting to order, and to move that' the; Honorable Ellie - Loris take the *hair." [APplonse:l • • Mr, Lewis came forward, and after the applause with whiehle was greeted had °eased, be spoke se - = Janos Latvia , rixtreses. I thank the eommittoe of ar rangements for reposing, and you for eauctioning, the honor just conferred upon me., • • :We are now'celebrating the greatest event that the' wad' hairever 'witnessed. • • ' "- 'The (leettflidadral of, Antiquity, with hls Ark loaded with the riebe4•freight that evesflosted on the waters of the great deep, made thme attempts by telegraph tq gethlatelligence that the flood had abated. The third wattrairesded With the *fire bean& oreafety, When our Itrestenevel commanders of the present day were ladeaveriag. to. establish telegriphie . communication between the Old World and the New, they, in like man ner; reeds three efforts, all of which were unsuccessful but ponieverencei add iii sliding fake' in 'the flood Providence:Which overrules all for the beet, led them to s fourth effort. ',God rewarded them with , a moms that surprised andstartled a doubting world. • The telegraph established by Agamemnon Of old, to ' anconuest tithe Melee of Breese that the ten4eiri siege of Troy witinded,wee nothing to compaction with the greet line of iititelligenen which, a Jaw wasted ago, the Ayamemnon of the royal navy darted to establish.- 'fire are told. in the religious fables of , the heathen world, that , *bed.ffroreetheue brought the fire from heaven, 'sassy/tit tolneh for the vestal purposes of ilf6Jhe gotta were so , indlitint that they chained the offender toe rock to be tortured for ages, foe givlng,to` wawa bleating, which .weeteuppoced • to be fit for the dug, plena. 'But ear I:rod-Lib* f/od Of trait religion-, -blanks iwieritflort gf hie creatures to advance in know lode and prospiritr. - When the American Prometheus We - tight the lightning from , heaven and made it so b lenient t o the uses of min, Indeed of punishment; he was -rewarded' with' the% bleating of God. and that bleadug has been extended to all the noble minds which , hAvitheenAnitrilmenee .completing thegreet Oilier* ,Priefi wears .bare to celebrate. etdebtation we ehould - novei forget 'that it is God Watt nestles hie lightedog to blees the union of the Ohl edditie Kew World witht intelligence, peace, and Fprtritp,ts In view of,,opr awn humble reliance Prolidtnee. tire Reo. lir Al fr ed Nevin will open aieeenniiplinthpiapii. " . 1 • Itldge Leiria having willed ton--the Altdortjid. Pt, Giporge's OPPiptlell tg wad IT the Xngittb Asti THE PRESS.-PHILADELPMA, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1858. and Gen. Patterson to send up the American flag, those banners were placed upon the platform in conjunotion. , Col. P. 0. Elhnaker then read the following list of (Moors of the assembly :•= + ~. ..: , -- .•-orgiotgi3 OE THE MEETING. - - • , 'prissMEnT. ' - , . 1 , r' 1 1:; Ellis Lewis.-- • I -...7'.'' Wen 'PRESIDENTS. ,w iilliurilinnh, - -. ' Jinios;Roes Snowden, Thomas Norman, HoraOeßinney, ". W. L. Dennis, John Edgar Thompson; Samuel 0. Morton, M. W. Baldivin,, Henry Vethake, , W. 0. Ludwig, , William H. Allen, Samuel J. Reeves, John 0. Cresson; :- - - David B. Brown. flgOngrAulith William Bradford,E. S. Sandford, Charles Megargee, I Philip P.lCelley, These officers were unanimously confirmed by the meeting. Cheers were heard here for the 'Ainerican and English flags, - and the flaseof the Niagarai which also waved upon the platform. The Chair then balled upon. Rev. Alfred*Nevin, who delivered the following impressive prayer:— REV. DR. NEVIN a PRAYER. °Thou, nhoee name Merle is Jehovah. the most high over all the earth! non art the author of all existence, the 'source of all blessedness, and the centre of all per fection. Thou art glorious in holiness, venerable in praises, doing wonders - Thou art greatly to be feared in the assembly of the saints, and to be held in reve rence of all them that' re about Thee. 0 Lord God of hosts who is a strong Lord like unto Thee? or to thy faithfulness round about Thee? Thou rulest the raging of the sea: when the waves thereof arise. Thou stillest them. Thou art God over all ; blessed for evermore ! Thy glory fe infinite, for Then art the King eternal. Ira meal, invisible, dwelling in the light which no man can approach unto, and whom no man bath seen or can see,: And thy greatness is unsearchable. fou Thou best measured the watore in the hollow of Thy, hand, end meted out heaven with the span, and comprehended the duet of the earth in a measure, and weighed the mountains in, sates, and the hills in a balance. Be hold, the nations are as a drop of a bucket. and are counted as the small duet of the balance: behold, Thou takest npthe Isles as a verylittle thing. And Lebanon is not sufficient to burn, nor the beasts thereof suffi cient for a ieurnt:uffering. Yet, 0 Lord God,,though Thou art high above all nations and Thy glory is above the heavens, Then hum blest Thyself to behold the things that are in heaven, main the earth, and Then art the Meltzer of, prayer, end unto Thee shall all' flesh come. Look down upon us then, we devontlybeeeech Thee, in the plenittride of Thy compassion, as we - gather .svonnd Thy tnerep.seat in the p - eolons Name of Thy dear Bon, in whom :we have redemption, through His blood, , even the forgiveness of sins : and 0 for the merit's sake of the obedentiallife and sacrificial death of our great Intercessor. let our prayer come. before Thee as incense, and the lifting up of our bands as the avenisg eacrifice. We come, blessed God, lo this hallowed place, which is connecrwt - d by ao many thrilling associations, to meek of the glorious honor of Thy Majesty, and of Thy wondrous works. We come to utter abundantly the memory of Thy great goodness, and to adore Thy righteousness. . We coins to consider the operations of Toy hands, to talk of Thy power,, and to , make known to the sons of men Thy mighty acts, and the glorious majesty of Thy Kingdom, We present ourselves be• fore Thee to acknowledge our deep conviction that, without Tby blessingenothieg is pure, 'nothing le strong, nothing is afe, nothing can prosper , 0 God, most merciful, bow, great bee been Thy favor toward our' ation, through all the vieissitudea of its eventful history I Thou hest guided OW Thy pater. nal counsel. and guarded lie by Thy benignant Provi dence. Marvellously hest - Thou, notwithstanding our iniquities , so multiplied and aggravated, shielded Its from dangers, and strengthened us In weakness and blessed us with happiness, and crown.d rut with glory and honor. Thou bast ruled over those, who have occu pied our places of authority and power; 'Then bast breathed Into us, la a people; the spirit of obfidieuce to law and reverence for Thine institutions, with which we are so signally bloomed ; Then bast saved us from in fidelity and discord and dieunion, , spd Thou bast clothed our pastures with flocks, and covered nor val leys with corn, and made the little bills to rejoice on every side And now, 0 Thou blessed and only Potentate, whose tenser mercies enterer all Thy works, whilst we prates Thee for the past, we desire. in the spirit of confidence and dependence and supplication. to trust Thee for the future: Ever be our nation% light, and strength, and 'salvation, Beer let the glorious Gospel of Thy grace diffuse strong ne its healing radiance, and exert upon us Its elevating, , ,and tanotifyng, and ennobling power. Ever establish us in rghteonenses and deliver ne from 'sin. Bea present help to all the' officers of our Gene' , ral and State, Governments— Mike our aollegea and fr mimeos of learning sources of moral and spiritual,* as well as of intellectual power and' Miltivation = Im plant Thyfearinte the hearts of all who have charge„ pf the public press, that this engine may be productive' of good, and not of evil. 'Let the people praise Thee; 0 Lord; let all the people, praise Thee !. - And espeelallY, 0 God, at this time, do we pray that Tby blessing may rest upon that wornierfnl achievement which has this day convened us and upon alt the na tions with which It has brought us into such intimate connection: Ms Thy dding, great God, and marvellous in our eyes. Make it, then, we entreat Thee, a mighty agent in the promotion of civilisation. and liberty, arid peace, and commercial proaperity to ell lands. But, above all, make It a bond by which all trlbep and kin drede shall be malted in a holy brotherhood, and an in 'atrnmentality by which thou wilt subdue the kingdoms of this world to Thyself, and Jesus shall wear the die : dein and sway th e sceptre of :universal dominion! 'O, let all science and art be sanctified, and consecrated to the service of Him 'by *hem and for' whom all things were created, and not unto us, 0 Lord; not unto us but unto Thy mime give glory, for Thy merey, and for Thy troth's sake. ' Arden. Lettera were then read by Col. Bradford, of the joint committee, from the President of the United States, the Governor pf Pennsylvania, and from Cyrus W. Field.' Letters from Distinguished Persons: LETTER PROP PRESIDENT BUCHANAN. WASHIN(I7ON, August 30, li3sB.—Hon. DLL'S LEWIS, Chairratui : I have been honored by the Invitation of " the Committee of Arrangements for oelebrating, on the first of - September, the completion of .the Atlantic Telegraph, to, partici pate in the ceremonies." I regret that it will not be in mY power, on no oonnt of the pressure of pnblie business, to unit* with 'my fellow oitisens at Philadelphia in oele-. brating the triumph of hue Wonderful - enterprise; which has been accomplished by the Wend; skill, and energy of the . British and American people. It is a grand eventin the history of the world, and let us' hope that, under a •superintending Provi dence, it may; in its consequences, promote the peace and advance the olvilisation and, happiness of all nations. Yours, very respeotfully, It less 13I1OHANA.N. To Hon. Bilis Lewis, Philadelphia. • • LETTER PROM SEctiETAlty CABS ' ttantsurox, Aug. 28th, 1858.—Sir ; I beg you to tender, to the Committee of Arrangements my aoknowidedgments;for their kind Invitation to attend the celebration of the completion of the Atlantio Telegraph, and also -my excuse for de• dining to wept it, as my, °Metal duties will pro. vent me from being present on that interesting oc casion. ram. Sir, • • Very respectfully, Your obedient servant, • LEWIS CASS. LETTER PROM SECRETARY TOOOEY. 'Munn:Grow, August 30th, 1858 —Sir : I have the honor to, acknowledge the receipt of yours of the 27th inst., invithig my participation in the earemonies for eelebrating on the let proem°, the completion of the Atlantic Telegraph, and beg leave to assure the committee that it would give me great pleasure to be present on the interesting 'oecaslon, did not,my official duties at the seat of Government prevent my attendance. . I am, sir, Very respectfully, Your obedient servant, , Isaac ToucEr. Ellis Lewis, Esq., Chairman, Philadelphia. LINTER FROM CYRUS W. FIELD, ESQ. GiIAVERCY PARE, NNW Yonte, August,3oth, 1858. Gendemon:—Please accept my cordial thanks for your letter conveying the invitation of the joint committee of the City Councils and citizens of Philadelphia, to participate in your festivities on the first of September. As I have been assigned a part in the celebra tion of the civic authorities of New York, whioh will take place on the same day, it will be impos sible for me to be with you. It any place should especially rejoice that the Atlantic Cable is eutatessfully laid, it is In the city which was the home and holds the dust of that venerable philosopher, who first made the subtlest force of nature imbservient to the uses of man. I regret most deeply that I cannot be present in person; but in thought I will be with you. Folly appreciating the high compliment you have paid me, and again thanking you for your kind Invitation, I bog leave to subscribe myself, Sincerely your friend, Ornus W. FIELD. To the Joint Committee, dco.• •N ODD SENTIMENT. The following sentiment, sent to the Committee by Dr. Samuel Yorke Atlee, of W ashington oity, was read by the Chairman : •The Atlantic Telegraph Cable.—A tongue that wage at both ends; and the longest that ever spoke the Eng lish. language. May it never become unruly, and die race its vernacular by uttering naughty words ,• but In accordance within first lancele t taught by the Queen and the President, perpetually inculcate the sentiments or Christian charity and international goad Applause followed the reading of each of these letters—espeolally that from Mr. Field. Col. B. announced the receipt of a number of other letters from distinguished scums, as they would be found hereafter in the papers of the pity. JUDGE KELLEY'S ORATION Ron. Wm. D. Kelley aqui then Introdneed toAe immense audience by Judge Lewis, as the orWr of the day. Re spoke is follows : (Reported by D. Wolfe Brown, Phonographer, 810f/hest - not street ] Mr. Chairman, Gentlemen, and Yellow-Oitisens Though not tinned to mingling with my townspeople on pubiie ouselone. participating in their deliberations —sorrowing in, their morrows and exulting in their joys —it is with nelalgued diffidence I come before you on tide °Union. . And yet let me not detain you with apo logies for my temerity, but pass to my anbjeat, after haring reminded you that this celebration bee been gotten up with telegraphic speed ,• that Its suggestion is, Ai it were, but of yesterday, and that the first note of preparation made by the committee was not that which summoned your orator to perform his duty. The ocossion,is not s. local one. It has been fitly spoken of as . 1 th 6 festival of MOW? commemorating an event, the influence of which Walt be felt while time lute, and by every member of the human family. It is eminently fitting that the city of Philadelphia should participate in that feettyal, • I will not pause now to show the great Wistaria - or prospective interest she has in this event ; but, ere I alone, you will nee that no thing could be more fitting. Ours is theatre of Invention. During the last three quarters of a century, science herextorted from nature her secrete, tad genius Imagist her newly disclosed powers into combination' of utility with such rapidity, that man has almost seemed to lose the faculty of won der. And yet, marvellous as is the progress that has been made, wonderful as have been its phases since the eager eye of Columbus rested upon the dim outline of the outlying lands of thie continent, no event has on curved which is to work so large an influence upon na tions and people, upon the social, political, commer olal and economical relations of mankind—no event, theinfluence of which to to be so far reaching, or so all- Pervading.. -What is the event we celebrate ? One which has made the whole earth vocal—one which has given to the word of admonition,- the voice of warning, the menage of woe or of joy. wings that compete with time in their swift flight It has not destroyed or ob. Monied space; It has not dried up octane ; -and yet it has brought the nations of the earth face to face, that tbej may entcs into social converse. Ilse it• not, no far as it remote adence, and social, commercial, and political lift, obliterated both time end apace, and given to the scholar and, the statesman, the thinker and the man of facto. übiquity? [Applause.) To whom shell be seedbed the glory of this great event? Not unto us, not unto any men, not unto any nation of, men; but unto the great Omnipotent One. who-having created this beautiful earth and -all Its mutinies, gave „tct man the dominion let us, there fore,- -ascribe the glory to Him; and while doing so de lastly, let no .not forget that the great men and. the humble mon wile" here wrought this miracle were his ministers, deserving to bebonbred byte, and cherished in our memories. (Applause:] Thin great event does not "standsolitary and !initiated is the history of the world. It bas been undertaken and scoomplished by two great nations, -whose people, under the ,fiag of their respective countries, have in ventedy the - capital, have expended the powers of mind, and. b*rne the tortoring anxieties necessary to this magnificent work: net Its gforlee belong not alone to those WO nations. It had its precursorm,• and they, I am happy trfaiyiwire the works not of member' of a single commitosty or Stasi not of a particular nation, not of any one of earth's named localltlem,• bat they be longed to various natiothrand: races, Although :they dreamed not of the, mat result that lay before them, the AQrk they were ultimately he accomplish was for the w.rld and man • and it wu fitting that the human family should have its hand la it. It is now a little more than n century Mime Franklin drew from the clouds the' eleotrie slunk" arid made they lightning subservient, In lelne,,degroe, to the willet man. [Applause.] That mat In ~ the. provincial Mein of philadelpbta Volta, who witalmin while Franklin was planning lilt first expertmente, gave wilhe also. trio pile and the galvanic batten , . .file birthplace I wee in Como, and hie Workshop ,at th - tfniversity. of Pavia. Poor Galvani, ,who knew' not , the Power he' handled, and who died under great deletion as-to source's and rte influen,ce; made his' experiment* In his native town of:Bologna.- Oersted, without whose, die. coverlet the great work could not 'have been com pleted, comes to us from Copenhagen, and there gave no Brat the thing known as electro-magnetism. These were followed by Ampere. at Paris by Coar—our own Core—who, in 1810, demonstrated the power of con.; veytng messagesthrougla 'a long - wire, here in our city ; and Weber—Henry—a nude . never' to be forgotten in this Commotion, and which will suffer .great injustice ir It be not recorded as that of the man who gave' to successful patentees their power; Steinhell, at Mu nich; Cooke and Wheatstone, In London • Morse,at Wathington. In 1831. And, mark you, steam had not then w ought its marvels • ' yon did not then' mole the ocean in ten days and a few hour, Steinhell, Cooke, 'Wheatstone, and Mores may well hare been, so far ha their conflicting claims ere concerned, original inven tors. - , Nor et me, as I Save noticed a few of the men Idea. have prepared the way for this great'work, forget one, humble and a'moste unknown. , The others have .ex perimented in electricity, in galvanism, in elm:Aro-rang. netiem. But We celebrate the laying of,a submarine cable ; and let me, with my poor efforts, draw from the obscurity into which it is falling, the name of That toiling worker of day's works who first laid a mag. netie telegraph wire, coated inirutta percba, under, a body of water; near his town'of Newark, in New Jersey. , He laid four theta coated, and for the ime of one of them he received, from a powerful corporation, one deli , and twenty-fire rents per day! He applied for a patent; but on grounds which. if I understand the use rightly, were very inadequate for such a decision, hie claims were injected, and he lost even hie poor revenue from. the work which that corporation need. e John J. Cra ven, of Newark, N. J , made and laid the first practi cal, enbatantial, available" submarine telegraph; and let his name stand. out id its proper place, [Ap. plause ] . . But neither Franklin, Volta, Galvani, Coveted, Ooze, Weber, Bteinheil, nor any of the' umerons expert.; maritime either in electricity or the creation 'of tele graphs, dreamed of the grand remit at whichthey wets aiming. It is a modem thought, a recent Idea. Nor could thin great enterprise • have been ecooMphshed by their aid alone. The litt'e bark that bore Colum bus to these shores on his first expedition measured one hundred and twenty tone. The Mayflower, which brought the Pilgrims to our Northern coast, would' find no place in our foreign shipping. Other - 10°re .than those in the departments of.scienee leamediatelv involved here have prepared the way for this great work The naval constructor end architect , hive, - to' bring their department to perfection, courted mimes and wooed sip whitn), as though the wrinkles on her haggard face were the rosy bloom of youth Nor they. alone. When Pitch' and Fulton were making their early experiments In this vicinity, they were laboring to till., great end. They and Watt, and every workman or man of gentile, who has added an Improvement to the steam engine, or aided in its superior adaptation to ocean navigation, has wrought in this great work. Why, gentlemen, we have on earth but once known the winds and the waves to obey the human voice, when it uttered the command, " Peace , be still." It was the Divine voice speaking through human form. Invention, genius, experience have not enabled run to calm the waves and bid the winds be still' bat what wonders have Ge) , not wrought? There ' beside the peer! Island in the port of Queenstown , are four ships. Two of them contain freight that would have sub merged the vueele of Columbne and the Pilgrims; d they have pranged that they will meat at a cer tain point upon the ocean. Too may _determine that you will fleet yopr companion at a particular place; you, young man, burning With the ardor of love, may fled your way with certainty triehe glumly bower in which a moonlit maiden welts. your coming. Bat here wee an armament built for war—ships sub= ject to the winds and tides ! and they sgreo that on a, particular spot—less than the extent of the apace 'n which I now speak. they would meet and begin a work, the like of which time had not seen. [Applause.) They did not say 'We will meet about . there—we will meet in that neighborhood; hut at latitude 52 deg. 2 min. end lengthier, 88 des. 18 min. we will fill our assignation." And the storms bowl, and the lightniuga Mich, and the thunders roar, add Old Ocemi pate up big voice in competition with that roar ; and yet they move on their way. Have they been overweening In their confidence? The English flag waves at the masthead of that battered ship; English seamen man her; an Eoglieb r manages her, and God'e blessing on the brave old land from which be sprung. He golden her through the perm, and, like lover to his bower, tame the storm beaten Agamemnon to latitude 52 deg. 2 min., and longitudeeB deg. 18 min. Was not that itself a mire ,ole 1 .Hid you told it to Franelin aecentiery ago be 'Would have tip died to the statement the skeptical roe. coning of philosophy, and demonstrated its immediate impossibility. June L panning away, and the veaiels are there—the „Niagara, the Agamemnon. the Gorgon, and the Va. 'moue. The Niagara and the Agamemnbn are brought stern-toseid may they never be brought to broadsides with abetted guns—rappluse by everybody legeneral, and the crew of the Niagara In particular.] They were brought together stern-to—not that either would shrink from a conteet, did boner make it nee usury They were brought together stern-to, that you men—yea boys of the Niagatee end the 'bore of the Agamemnon' might cheer each other and say, "God forbid that the day Meted come when men like us should •engage- to mortal contest (applause]; that men et science as daring as the world had ever seen. and as able sit it new known, flight weave to gether there, at mid ocean, a little cable, surcely thicker than a lady's finger, and try to lay it be neath the ocean's depth. so that it Amid be to the world a voice. The splice is made. The veneer move, and in a little while, when the Niagara had paid out. if I remember rightly, a -little over two miles of cable, It was found that the thing which one of the tars,' it is mild, wanted to throw eyerboard, ae a continual perplexity—the continuity--; yraa gone. [Lsughter and uproarious cheers ] What then? Why, hank the vessels his to latitude 52 deg 2 min. to meet egein in friendly embrace. Again the epilog to made, and smart thee part Now each ship_ h es homeward for well nigh a day's 'journey, when that provoking continuity in missed again. Again they return—shall I call it to their arbor of love,? They had put no linger-post there to guide them to the spot. No milestone marked it; but they same hack to the old point of 82 2. Again they splice the cable, and again they move toward their res,peoUve homes. Now, let ne go among those men of ealetse, Atw eletirlfborwt— fal and hopeful 1 No ; they-are depressed - entree. but not doubting Their faith is greater than • pain or mustard seed, and their hope unbounded: There are doubters among them ; there are those who. from the first, bare not believed; but the men of science make the splice. confident that the work will yet be done. Onward again those venires move. Sadder, If not wiser mon, were those In charge of the ships. of the coils, the paying -out apperatue, and those dear fellows (members of the crew of the Niagara.) whose brawny hands had charge of the. tar pot, and some of whom came in well stained. But still they knew that there was a God above, who bad crested the world. who bad given it fixed laws, and that they were laboring an his servants to disclose thou lawsto theirlellow-men. On e ward, they go, onward and onward, until hundreds of mile/ inferrer's, god then again the -continuity is lost Backward they hasten to the point from whence they came—dispirited? Yes some of them, whosehearts were not in the movement. are dispirited. But Field and Everett, and their co-laborers of thie country, and of what I may call our mother or onr sister land—are they dispirited ? No ; but sadly determined lode The mana ders of the company were dispirited ; the directors oubted the expediency of farther effort; men whose capital was embarked ehrupged their shoulders, and counted their loeses ap already made. Bet there was American energy at the bead of that company, end I know not where you could and a nobler impersonation of the elements of American character than in Guam W. Yield [lmmense applause.] Pe said that the thing could be done. and that it would be done; and they wouldgo forth mein. Our moonlit bower bad now be come almost a sad tryatiog place Yet back again, with more fuel and with an abundance of cable, with plenty Pi pony, with excited d.termination to execute their npiertatiog, book they come to 52 degrees 2 minutes, and at degrees 18 minnten, and again the cable is rpliced. Forward they move—slowly and steadily, but ever and anon the word is given, "All's right. all's right, go ahead !" And the cable begins to roll oat spore rapid ly, and the paddles of the huge ships to move more ewiftly. Night follows day, and day follows night, through six weary, anxious days. Tell me, you who were following the doll but anxious routine of life, did lou sleep during those days ? If you did you knew a uxury which the Englishmen on boa d the Agamem non, and the Americans on board the Niagara. knew but little of. There were thole who, throuth that whole period of time, knew not what it was to have their thought withdrawn from the great work upon 'which they were engaged. Into a remmbent position they may have thrown themselves into epme darkened spot they may bare crept; but no repose of mind or rest of brain' came to them. The continuity is not lest this time. Anxious first about the cable, about the apparatus for paying it out, about the uniting of ore coil to &nether, they near the Mom of their reepective countries, Anxiety Marmite as the work Is nearly accomplished. May they not failyet ? A reward is offered to the man who shall first discover land ; so eager are they to know that the work draws to its close, that a prize would be awarded to him who should first bring the good news. Not more eagerly did Columbuie with a mptinoue crew about him, look for land than did those man, surrounded by a crew who jumped at their bidding, apd who could sauce Tutuila them- pelves from cheering at each new result attained.' , The eyes of the world were upon them, and mayhap the deathly of the world for years depended upon their sums. But land did come in slew. Trinity bay wag reached, and there the officers of the Niagara. from under their own star-spangled banner,werej /nod by the officers of the Valorous and the Gorgon. And, to ling like laborers, they carried the cable ashore—God bless them all! [cheers]—and there, upon the woody Mlle, beyond the lines of oiviliaati n, upon the rocky coast of Newfoundland, these great man bowed in thanks to the God who had preeerved them, and given to the world its last great Mewing. The feat was mom pliebed—its amempliatiment fitly acknowledged. I have said that there were many men laboring for the accomplishment of this result, and you have found that many of those whole I have named did not know anything of it, that many of them had seek beneath' the sod before this enterprise was projected or moken of. There were also men who labored specifically for the acoomplisbment of thin great work Thie is not the plane or the time for scientific or historical disqui sition, much less is th's the omission to weigh the claims of rivalmandidates for honors in this ,coronae. don, Bat there are some few persona to whom espe cial honor belongs, and there are two Governments which all wheeled should bless—the two that repre— sent not despotism and the power of arm'es, but free peoples, and the individual rights and powers of roan as a citizere—England and America! Mankind will bless them hereafter. More than a year ago they engaged in this workee Lest year the Agamemnon, and the Niagara and the Susquehanna, some of whom gallants lads Ices about me, were upon the ocean endeavoring to seem ' plish this feat. It cone not then accompliehed. Still the Governments were there, showing their will and lending their power. Our easquehanna was not there thisyear, but our Niagara was, and the Agamemnon, and the Gorgon, and Valorem of England The na tions were there in their minty, sustaining and aiding the efforts of their enterprising citizens. To them be the fair measure of honor. Gem let me say that one of our Own townsmen de nerves mention—not as having labored in this work, but to baying requested our Government to beginelt. Some of you may be surprised. to hear me nay that a member of the Philadelphia bar ought to be named on an occa sion of thin kind, and that, without the mention of his Vitae, an obvious gap would appear. In the month of January, 1819. Horatio Hubbell, of Philadelphia, ad dressed a memorial to the Congress of the United States, asking them far the means of establishing telegraphic communioation between this continent and Europe. In hie memorial he assorted that, r- from many observatione that have been made, there is incontestable evidence of the existence of a submarine table land, extending from the Denise of Newfoundland, across the Atlantic ocean, to the mouth of the British channel," and that the wire or cable could be hider suspended over that table land in water, undisturbed by eurrents, or, In the iaoguage of :he memorialist, "so as to be clear of all currents moving on the upper surface." The memorialist modestly avowed him chief purpose to be "to direct the atten tion of ()engem to this Important object," Mara you, he did not euggeet the work as one which' be believed could be donee He suggested the route be tween Newfoundland and Dingle Bay, not bee'nse it was the ehortest but beanse it lay over a table liked which was covered by a bed of water free from dig. turbing currents This memorial was presented to the lower House of Congress by Joseph R. Ingersoll, and it fell to the table or to the floor Our dietlnguished fellow-citizen who now honoraria In England, and lame I conciliatory brat manly address bee won from that -proud Government the eoncession of the principle which Involved us in the lest war, wan then Vice President of the Boiled fitates.—[Applause ] He brought the me morial before the Senate; and it was likely to meet the fate whioh had (Mien it In the House, when Jeffereon Davis, Senator from Mies ssippl, arose, and moved its re ference to the Committee on Commerce, saying that the world was not yet prepared for the project, but ruight be soon. In .1858, Lieut. Berryman, of the 11. 8. navy, was put in the command of the Dolphin, and ordered to ,make soundings between Newfoundland and Ireland. . He made his report of fade and observat'ons to Lieut.' Maury, whose magnificent apparatus for sounding the depths of the ocean ho had need—Henry, the men who has mapped the ocean, as we map a county or a towinhip, with safe roads for the mariner. Berryman I reported not In terms, but in fact, that Hubbell's ob servations wore correct. There was the table-land; there was the bottom free from currents, and the ml- I nuts shells of microscopic character that were brought Pp showed no abrasion, thus Indicating that from thee time of their death 'they had slept in their grave as undistnrbed by eurienta an though the earth Itself hii4 ~engulphed them. Lieut. bleury's report to Govern ment' upon the facts ancortained by Berryman, was made on the r oof 'February 1858. „ ', To Dr. tch tehonse Professor Thonspign4 Mr. - Liiiir,', of the • (mutter electricians; to AppoldVZthif irealtl4, .eccentric, and ingenloile mechaniolark;-„whe Wes an amateur, giving his Giusti his labor sued: his MOODS to ii,Ganiaing, Ifollinebee, Amee this '7o e liff in e e ni nt ,, l a -I n O d W ir d righ h t ; "ul .tb-G r apttins PUrdy and Budsbni end z the 'salient ..offiedis 'who volunteered to steortivateliwithlbeulAt!thsr thelea*-anstious voyage, 'MSS ehrirddrate:giverC.'BuVtinie , perniti me to do no more than to name them. They will be fitly spoken, of Ind kindly remembered always. But did these min, serval officers , and electricians; lay the -cable? No • -they helped, as did every seaman and laborer on board: in the discharge of hie duty. None were laggard. and none withheld any power which nature or education had glven - them. Did they lay the cable? Let us see It had not been laid iq DAT. , . ,- And whyl , . The shipsiyere there to lay it; the cable Was there to he laldi - the men were there to do their - * l rk; '.- - Apd'yet they did not' lay it:Amason the pep In out 'apparatus was fmnd to be defective, and to ptit the cable under each a strain that it snapped.: And when the fleet returned in that year, the master minds were satisfied that the apparatus had not yet been in. vented by which their great Work might be acoom pitched. go when the year 1857 commenced, these lay the ships. , „ .. . „ ~:kir. guild, with fits faith, hope, courage, energy, I 4 insight into Men %and , genial' sympathy with —so essential to the euocess of the work—was there, The Governments were willing to extend their former aid. - There lay the cable in , ,,ite huge coils ; there were : the recording instruments , , whetlx r of 'Maras, or - Hughes, or Whitehouse, or of the host of inientors who have applied themselvee to. that depart, , Ment recently. 7All wee there—the engines and the ship,: the"men to man there and the officers to guide 7 , them. But the cable could not be-laid.. -.. - • ... . • • New, my friends, pass with me from the month of Tedirmry to the month of March; go with me, In Jew fo - LOadon"; go wilh me.to the neighborhood of Spitaltields ; take a turn 'through Petticoat lane, and 'let' us get among the dingy shops of Gravel lane Look into title dine window: Yon see a young man whim, eye is bright, and whose taco is excresuve of manlyy character and noble genius. True, that face is srlittlo begrimed with:blackened oil; .his hands - are Marred and dark. He seems to superintend, yet ever and anon ,be seises the Implement, - and, though his visa be buttoned to the neck, plies at the work. You think you know him, do you t; Well. I •am not sure ton' do• not, He Is an engineer of the United Index rravy—a countryman of 'yours. He went as assiatact engineer,'witlicome'of yen, through the Mexican war. 'Has he deserted his country and enlisted in a foreign service t. No ; he has quit his country' temporarily, to .labOrfor mankind in a foreign workehop;• He has given upthe management of the ship in the work of destruc etfUh, to go into a foreign workebop and weave a web thit Anil bind the nation in fraternal ties of peace. ; [lihe despatch from pondop, which appears under our =telegraphic head, woo here read.' It Was' received rditti tumultuous applause.) - ;That young man le Mill a member of the , Englneeer -Berps,of the United States of America, bat he has, for the pregent, Ault the work of destruction for works of beneficence. Let no peas on from the 20 , h of March to toward the olpee of Aprd. Behold how bright his eye! Behold - how quick his Step Bea goiejoyously he meets every one, and how eagerly every man takes his hand It is his birth-day; tint that cannot bo the event that lode to these, coogrotuletions. Ile is thirty , t o years old; bet they eannot be congratulating him upon,,that fact No; he has made the apparatus for laying the cable The work le done. Field was not mistaken when be said, " The man must be found in the United States who would accomplish that work." It .le done ! Nero let me read a letter—not Obtained from him for th's occasion; not senbto-the press—but sent to one of-his old fellow-workmen, as evidence of the :moms that has attended his labor : - ATLANTIC TIMM:MAKI COMPANY. 22 O'd Broad Street, London, emit 24,1868.- . DEAN Bin : Aa you have repOrted to .the managing eMinnittee that the paying-out machinery for H. bi •shinAgamem,on is completed, and that it has been Working satisfactorily during the last three days, and that Nisi do not consider any alteration necessary to Increase its ealcieicy; , and no another set Ia required for the United States frigate Niagara, the managing com mittee have an horded and lastrocted me to reque t that yon will immediately wive directions to put an• other sot in hand for that chip; and I am further to re quest that you will continuo your supervision over tho onnatruotion of the machinery, and also undertake to superintend and direct its being properly fixed and fitted on board the Niagara. t lam [twitter lust rioted to reqneet, that you will take Marge of the operation of experimenting upon. and anbeequently of paying out, the cable frtm that ship: in doing which you will have the er.veration of Ideate. Woodhouse and Follanabee, and of such other engineers es you may consider it requisite in appropriate to such Berrie°. You are also author. lied to make nob preparations and' arrangements, as are necessary to enable you to carry out the foregoing instruction. I remain, ours truly, - OEO. BAWAED, Beeretary; To W. g, Everett. 'Bid do hie wort? Why, the'o‘ble ia laid; and the - machinery never Mopped on hoard the Agamem niiirbr Niagara from the time they left 52.02 of north latitude. Now who Is this man ? Borne of you thought you knew him, when you saw him in Lo, don. and I guessiou did. You used to work with him at Bald• -win & Whitney's looomotive fluttery, out here in Broad street. He Is a boy from a Philadelphia ma chine chop. Yes, in 1844, he—like the first great elec. triclen—eame, a youth, to Philadelphia; a widow's emi. who had never known a father's love, for before his birth. hie father had been swallowed by the waters of Ontario. He came to thin city a b'y. who loved machinery.'and asked employment of Messrs, Bald- Win*. Whitney. Thoy gave it to him, and they found him nob* but a reuniter hand. He went, while yet a mina", through all the humors of their'shop, and through their agency be Was, during the Mexican war. intered in the corps of , the United Staten Engineers. He was thetron Wahl the Masers in •, and then it was that he dieclocel to Mr Field the wondrous gifts of 'bin nature, and the rare culture that they had re. seised at Ills hands. He Is 'a graduate of a Philadel phis 'workshop. whose diploma is from the Franklin Institute of Philadelphia. [Opulence ] Honor him my friends It WM the apparatus of William E Everett. the Philadelphia machiniet that laid the cable ! AM I not right? Let opus W. Field speak. When he made his drat address in Newfoundland he said— 4, 1 could not do justice to my own feellogs did I fall to acknowledge how much to owing to bur. Everett, who for months devoted his whole time to designing and perfecting the beautiful machinery that has so 114CCeSil laWrit out the cable from the ship'; machinery Ito. eat in every respect that it wee not mir one mo zezAtristlprOtoird the Nkagara until she remelted niatesi tal'ainitv Day _ 'genet thane oenteiry,eig n the printer's boy of Philo, detrital' began this gfeat riark, arid 'now, within the last fOrtniabt. the Philadelphia rmehintetta lad had tiompletealt..,lle joined hie ,nompanions at the head of Tttnity hay, lei deroutitthankitite Clod" for the success of the voyage. bowed in adoration before fine who had disclosed such wonderful Iterate to him in private, and' had enabled him to do such wonderful .works for the public. 'But when he arose be deter mined to go forth and learn -Mora awl do more. And that 'salmon to no. lity, fellow-111 May/, let not our rejoining stop here. In the consequences of thus great work we here more at' Make .than almost eny other,aity. OW and iron are the mnselea of modern civilisation, and our State Is full of coal and iron, and water-power. Where population is most denim this great work will give the largest blooming; and popula tion must be dense where iron, Coal, water-power, tim ber, arid arable mote abouodosas they do in Pennsyl vania, Again, our greet railroad connects with wider regione of • country—with the Southwest. the Weal, and,the Northwest—more advantageonaly than any line competing with it, lint, again when the Almighty permitted that cable to be laid, He mode public announcement to man, that Ito bad registered a decree for the early comple tion of the Pacific Railroad It is no longer a (oration for man. God in lilt providmice line ordered the work to be done. For I cannot imagine that the American peo ple are willing to 6119111716 a petition of barbarism, and to refttse to permit a telegraph to cross tide continent, and be submerged in the sleeping ocean of the Far Wert, The people of the world wilt ask that the girdle of ruck may be put around the earth ; and Americana must do it. or become the jeer and contempt of the world. And that work cannot be acco pitched and maintained guinea the railroad - rune beside it It Is no • longer a question for Government or people. God has ordered the world to do it. and it wilt be done, and then philotophere will say that time and man con spired to. do it. No, Providence, time, and man con spire to do it Let us then stir ourselves. and see what Is next to be done Above all, fellow 'Milieu, let 'us remember that the remain, of the first great practical electrician—the man who, more than a century ago, started this work lie in an obscure corner of a little graveyard near by an No storied urn or monumental bust mark' the spot where his body rests. In it note charnel Why, tell it to the British tare of the Agamemnon. and they will bring a monumental coil of Atlantic cable, and inscribe upon It that Snit great electriciante name [Applanse.j Let us atiraurselves, and see that the stranger visiting our cliy need not lose more than a day in inquiring f.,r the grave of Benjamin Franklin. [Loud applause Let un learn to engage in every great work. When the thinker apelike let on not sneer at htm,but stand with bated breath to hear the wonders he may tell; and when he ban worked out those woudern, let ue fitly honor him. We detrae none from the glory of God in paying homage to His highest ministers on earth Let us praise all they names, and register them, that pea- Unity MeV know and love them. - Judge Kelley took Me seat amid Amoiferous applauds. At the Close of Judge Belloy's address, which was received with loud and frequent demonstra tions of pleasure, the band struck up " Old Lang Syne," followed by "Yankee Doodle." The following odor wore then sung by the mem bers of the Young ?don'ts Christian Association : ALL HAIL! *AN ODs—[AlA—God Ears the Queen.] All hail across the main ! Thought thrills our cable chain— Hear ! Nations, hear ! ' Mind to victoriona, Columbia's made glorious, While God pratcliiod over us— near! Nations, hear No storms the chain shall break, Nations our greetings take— Near now our call! Peace /peaks from shore to chore, Good-will be evermore, While this work we adore— Praise God far all ! TUE GABLE. (Ala—Star Spangled Banner Oh, say'not the old times were brighter than those, When bannere were torn from the warriors that bore them ; Oh, Bay not the ocean, the storm, and the browse, Are freest or prowler when war thunders o'er them— Per the battle's red light grope pale to the eight *hen the pen wields its power, or thought feels ltd might. ,Now, 'put reigns triumphaut where slaughter has been— , Oh, acid Mese our Preaident I God save the Queen ! Let the boy of the world to 'doh harmony rise; Lot the sword keep its sheath end the cannon its thunder; Now, Xntellect reigneth from the earth to the skies, And Science links nations that war shall not sunder; Whore the mermaids still weep, and the pearls lie asleep, 'Thought Bashes In fire through the fathomless deep Now, Mind reigns triumphant where slaughter hem Ibsen— Oh, God bless our President ! God save the Queen ! When the !meet of yesterday flooded the West Our old mother country lay far in the distance; But the lightning has struok ! We are close to her That beautiful land, that first gave ate existence; We feel, with a start, the quick pulse of her heart, And the mother and child are no longer apart; For Mind reigns triumphant where slaughter has been— Oh, God bless our President ! God save the Queen ! The Mood him was kindred throbs proudly once more, And the glow of our Joy tile the depths of the - ocean ; It thrilla through the waves, and it slugs on the there, Till the globe to its Dolan feels the holy commotion ! Let enjoin in our mixht and be earnest for light; Where the Saxon blood. bum, let it strive for the right; For Mind reigns triumphant. where slaughter has boon— Oh, God bless our Preeldent ! God nave the Queen ! After the singing, the following address was do livered by the Rev. E. W. Rutter : REMARKS OF. REV. 8 W. BUTTER ,ThILLOW-OITIZONS:, Without controverey, the Won der;,of the Nineteenth Gentury, the Marvel of the World, 18 Tea MACINETIO TOLEORAPH. Well may this stupendous agency of mans invention employ the pee. elon of Oratory, the genius of the Muse, the multhrn.. nous utterances of the Press, and even the sanctified decdametions of the Pulpit. Among its compeer/ of GeOlue and ®till, this rises, en extra,mundarie column, tovirrieg In solitary and sublime grandeur above them ali t flinoe the morning eters sang together, and all the eons of God shouted for joy, no such other Benefactor bakappeariskin, tl a realm of Dlncomy and agleam Vlgo•oue minds, olaesio pens, eloquent tongues, have so vied in panegyric, that it requiree no small degree of inventive talent even to say on this topic what has not already been said. And yet how much is there in re gard to it that expends itself only in silent sentiments of wonder and of joy, sweeping in thrilling cadences the diapaSon of the ;heart—how much that cannot be said More than ;thirty centuries ago. as if in mockery of" man's want --- of power over the physical forces God taunted Job 'with 'the challenge: a Genet thou-send - llghtalnge that' they - may go - ,' End - say unto thee, here we are 7 1, : - Diiring manyrevolving cycles, that challenge_ etond,on God'a Book unanswered. There appeared not , to all the earth a solitary man' so Imbued with rever ebt Glances as to venture a reply What! Control the lightning That vivid artillery of Heaven, which among all tribes and tongues hen ever served an one of the most-startling symbols of-the unapproachable re-, fulgence ! Control the lightning! Why, bad the Idumeati ratriamh dared attempt it he would either have been `stoned to death as an impious Blasphemer, or been grieved to death yrithwild orisons of idolatrous . devotion. Job never took up the gauntlet'. - - "'And the vivid Brae of the firmament bad eatuntlistnrbed jubi lee. They roamed to - and' fro, - hither - and' thither, as they Hated, without a boundary, without - a habitation: Themselves a transcendent symbol',Of übiquity, their centre was everywhere, their oircum ference nowhere. ' •, ' •• -1 1,1 To furn'eh the Sid reverent pritoticat reiponie tothe - Divine challenge was reserved for oneorhose name is indissolubly interwoven alike with the history Of Phi ladelphia esd of the United States. - His is a familiar name. Frequently did these streets!, and this State Hotos.'etho to his footsteps. In an adjacent humble grave. yard repose hie &thee. That - man was BON/AMIN 711.1.5.1CL1,N, the sago, etatesmen, the philanthropist, the philonopher: To hint pertains the renown of having first snatched the lightnings from their native theatre, Mid of holdlog them in harmlesit subjection. A greater than Raroy was Franklin. If I had no other name by ! which to designate him. I would call him The Great Lightning Tamer. All honor to his memory! .Said the inspired Wise Man: Bout thou a man diligent in hie busintse, he shall staid before Hinge" Franklin did " stand before Hinge,” the noblest of the noble.' But, great es was Franklin as a philosopher, he wan 130120 of God's prophets. .Upon him there rested the mantle neither of an Isaiah nor of a John. 'We had. no proof that the possibilities oboe evolved from the womb of geometric progression, ever crossed even the disk of hie night-Imaginings. , He had wooed and won the lightnings by hie metallic key. He bad them in hie bottle. But, except to restrain and hold them captive by the Od, he hid rio nee for them. To Professor.Mones belongs the credit of having, In the year lea, placed mina and hennas on the batiks of the dory coursers, bit and bridle in their months, and sending them, on roesseges of commerce and friendship, ewifter then thought Unit. through the world. .Few of no can have forgotten the deep notation these 'achieve ments produced All Christendom was electrified. But here, it wan euppoeed, the conquests of , Genius would and. - However familiarized "With the dartng of the hu man mind, the most sanguine did not look for new into cease.. By some it was even feared, thet, teUttempt. .more. would be a profane usurpation of the Divine pre rogative and would be venturing within that reserved jurisdiction of Omnipotence into , whieh ,arehangele themselves, albeit with sandalled feet, have never dared to tread. .'But, behold the-triumphs of the year 1868. Tinder the unalitled daring of the gallant Pinta and his cow poem, a Monster ,Oable of magnetic wires now lies atretebed—over two thonsand miles distance—along the pavement of the great deep, on which harmonies of living intelligence are dashing, connecting the Old and the New Worlds In consentaneous sympathy, and bring ing them within such convenient converse as if they were neighbors, living only on opposite aides of a very narrow street. Ouch an achieve, ent, oh ! how shall we exaggerate ! Its reality almost ur cks our most bounding imaginations, and certainly defies the descrip tive energies of language. The submerged Magnetic Cable is Itself the most won thous Leviathan of the great deep. Even in its mate•; rid aspects it 111:s Its with wonder. But its moral sig nificance Is far greater. I hail it as a earletlfted symbol and CISIITAI2OO Of HUMAN PROGRZBEL History. philosophy, scielco revelation, concur in enuring to with the be lief, that the future of our race is onward and upward. Bing 000:17101%0 will pram every wire of that huge Vehicle of Thought into his service. Alres . dy is he one of earth's legitimate monarchs. bee'rlding It with colossal power. The patriot will hall it, not as amp -y revo lutionist, thirsting for blood, betas a whisprilec angel of the watery world, breathing formation' for the spread of freedom. The nearer our thinking and ND - caking prox imity to Europe, the surer the spread of our free Mel; intioos over the globe. The Executive and Ittrlst will a' aim It as their most efficient police. for 1103V•fusitives from lutiio • can no longer, like Jonah, set sail In ahipe for Tarshish. for before they have started, the electric shes will herald .their coming. It was a remark of, Locke. that lime la only properly computed when eatima fel byresulfs. If this be so, our thirty and forty years are much more than blethuselah'anine hundred and six ty-nine, for we see mere, hear more, know more, enjoy' more, and do more, In our few years, than be possibly. could have done in his many. Io this season of jubilant rejoicing, howeier, who should most exult? I answer—the Christian. Survey log these manifold and multiplied wonder., and looking forvrard to a well-assured hope of others. equally 'start ling, who so steeped in atheistic- self-complacency. as to separate from them the Divine government?. Go I controlled the skill of the magicians of Egypt ,the. learning, the literature, and the philosophy of Greece and Rome, And he is equally subordinating to hie infinite and gracious purposes the arts, the Inventions. the discoveries, of this age, and of all ages. We bestow honor here, and honor there. We follow the chain, of , Cause and Iffeet,but we are soon lost in the asceidieg linke as they run up to God. And that God, who made the lightnings, who itoooned nut the sea, and filled It with its immensity of life; will not be dethroned from the Magnetic Telegraph, either by land or by sea. Hs will himself be the great ,Electrician, presiding at all Its junction. batteries, and wielding them for his own infinite end ineffable glory. Christianity is not a science, as we employ the word. It is not a discovery, not an invention. It is a system, a scheme, conceived in the mimesis of the eternal, and prosecuted on earth for mute redemption. , -It had ex 'steams antecedent to all tinnier' discoveries. Hence educe never midi to it, 'never detracts from it. • But Ohriatianity does seize open the conquests of science to extend itself. The time wu when 10'nbellef taunted Filth with the prophecy, that before the advancing floods of scintilla light the religion of the adorable Jeooe'wonld be swept away. Behold the taunt trium phantly refuted. When wee the Submarine Cable com mitted to ocean's depth,? In the year of our Lord DM, during the season of the moats - mime and pow erful revival of religion experienced by the church since the day of pentecoetal glory. And now, hence forward, , and forever,Revelation and the natural sciences go hand in h and Already is the Submarine Cable a bond of peace be tween the Hafted Statasixnd Great Britain. Once these tweinations were enernit—now friendlr — Alithe-mes-, Mitue that bare °rolled, e wireshaveheen pearle mea sures Peace - Peeve ' In India!' - lquiports of Obinathrown open to the trade of the world, and its wells, like those of Jericho; battered down befoto the trumpet-blasta or the gospel. Oh ! most cheering is it to think that -all these far-reaching celestial adders mute, by the power of the Holy Ghost, are des tined ultintately AO level ;Mountains, exalt rallies. and over ;all the earth prepare a highway for our Lord. °held gime to,•re-establish the world's unity—to bind both its centre and its extremes in a fraternal' brotherhood, the-secret of all happiness both -on earth. , ind in heave's. Hence we disoover - the Divingelßeleticence prodding over all earth's myste. dee, nonvertiog the whole domain of Truth into a Ja cob?. ladder, on which angels decreed and ascend. Not a' atm lake to Christianity, reflecting aunbeame ,on a glaiey surface, but a bounding river, beating waves of salvation to the perishing. Not a mere light-house Is Christianity erected on life's perilous coasts to warn voyagers of impending quicksands but a capacious life boat, wafted by propittoud gales into a haven of -biter. And now, amidst theee multiplied triumphs of our race, let us invoke God to keepue Auinate. • The virus of the human heart, moat offensive to Hod, and moat destructive to man, is pride. It is the sin by which the angels fell. Oh ! lot na write it, then, as with a pen of adamant on our hearts, that „ we have nothing that we have not received." Let no not fancy ourselves gods, living and moving in ourselves, but rather let us re member that there never woe a mari nor an archangel, that could lift a thread, or sever a spider's web, with out the power and ministration of that quiversal Pro- Menu which hangs Creation on his arm, and feeds it at his festige board. , t Praise - God, from whom Ml blessings Bow ;' Praise Him, all creatures here below; Praise Him above, ye heavenly boat. Praise Father, Son, and Italy Ghost." Ames. The exercises in the Square closed with prayer by the Rev. 4. 4. Willgto, After which, ft benedietion wee pronounced by Rev. I. P. Wilmer. amiss, INCIDENTS, ETC The display of bunting from the vessels in port was of a more meagre character than we had reason to expect. 'Prom at lout one-half of the shipping there limited not a solitary insignia of, nationality. A few, more patriotic than the rest, sought to snake amends for the others' short-com- Inge, and flung to the breeze a treble quantity of streamers, flags, etc. These were seconded, in very handsome style, from Smith's Island and Camden, as well as from other points along the shore of our Sister State, while the ferry-boats and the many little plying, steamers of the Dela ware bore the proud emblems of our nation, and really seemed decked for more than a wonted joy ous holiday. It may not be generally known, that Don. W. D. Kelley, the orator of the day, was the first person in the city of Philadelphia to ,publioly an nounce the laying of the telegraph cable. The intelligence reached this Qtly about noon, and the Court of Quarter Sessions; then trying the cele brated "Kirkpatrick Poisoning Case," had taken a recess of half an hour: Immediately after the court convened, Judge Kelley in opening his re marks to thejury, 'node a very eloquent and most appropriate allusion to the muesli of the great event. The effect on the audience as described to us by a spectator was thrilling—a suppressed buzz of applause pervaded the dense mass of spectators, like an eleotrio shook, and it was only after re peated oriel of "silence" by the tipstaves,lhat quiet could be restored. This should have found a place in our columns previously, - but we chronicle lt as one of thereof Interesting tnoidepts ponneoted with this event. Everything in the way of business adventure was resorted to by those who have ever an eye open to the main chance. Side-shows, with the Ohio fat boy; glass-blowing, where each patron " received a present;" side-walk vendors of tiny merchandise, where anything in the shape of fan. oleo, done up in bundles, were generously disposed of at the low price of three 'cents scales, where you might ascertain whether your corporeal di mensions were on the inerease - or decrease; bird and dog fanciers, cable venders—in short, any thing to catch' the eye of our visiting " country cousins," and extract dimes from their phletorie pockets—were on hand at every street-corner, and most vigorously plied was the calling of each. Just as the military were about entering Inde pendence Square, at noon, the crowd which (flus tered upon the railing caused a portion of the Walnut-street fence to give way, and it fell over upon a cluster of persons. As ,soon as possible, those under It were rescued, and the injured per sons oared for. One boy, about eight years of ago, had both thighs and one leg broken. Ile was also out about the head, and otherwise injured. The young sufferer was taken to the Pennsylvania Hospital. Another boy was badly out about the head, and a female had a foot crushed. The fol lowing are the particulars : Chas. McCurdy, aged 16, had his left ankle sprained. Taken to the hospital. Thomas Nash, aged 16, had his foot slightly in jured. Taken to the hospital. Henry Frits bad his thigh fractured, One leg broken, and spine injured. Taken to the hospital. Charles Malyard had a foot slightly injured. Taken to the hospital. Catharine MeDwain, residing at No. 610 Twelfth street, bad the bridge of her nose cut, ankle sprained, and one foot crushed. At the time the railing fell she had a little babe in her arms, and two small children at her side, but. fortunately neither was injured. She was conveyed to her residents by Officer Thornton. Mr. Daniel H. Brown, a well-known resident of Kensington, came very near being relieved of a valuable gold watch while trying to enter the southern gate of Independence Square. The dex terous thief managed to got the chain loose, but Mr. B. having taken the precaution to put a pin in the welt of his vest pocket, saved his watch. The Philadelphia Grays, accompanied by the Pennsylvania Cornet, Band, after leaving the Square, proceeded to the Arcade Hotel, where a splendid collation had been provided, and of which they were invited tOpartalle by Mr. J. D. Brown, the proprietor. After the collation the health of Mr. Brown was 'proposed by a member of the Grays, to which be made a very appropriate and eloquent reply, paying a high tribute to the sol dierly bearing of 'the company, and his apprecia tion of Abele individual character. To this Lieut.. Otto, commanding, made a brief acknowledgment; after which a most delightful serenade was given by the band in the room below the Hotel; The display in Germantown, was much better than was expected, considering the large cumber of people who came into the city. Flags were die played from numerous buildings. The church bells and those on the various engine houses were rung at She tins apriuted. THE CELEBRATION AT JAYNE'S HALL . IMPOSING DECORATIONS. ePinscusS OF REVERENDS SUNDERLAND, NORBERT, L EVEURN,'DOORDMITERVIDOATLOR, JENKINS ADD oirecrbioth — Pllkinia4T4PlY, DR. 8°3"3"- GER—REWARDS OF TlllR4Rdilit ." rArf, KR. GEO. sl STUART,_ „,„ 9:4lltloniMetnent beelerttade that The WunfrOllen'itiOtirietiatd,'„.Assoointilps would eels hifyte r h e i t e e t `tli es eg a i y at leventfor o:ie . -observance of wiiseet itpart*.',Ann manner suit. 'able to the •great obliii3tEnNtrieli` o rganization, at JaYne'sjialiVerowds irere , ireen flocking in as early infikine o'clock in the morning. The decoretions of the Hall formed in themselves an imposing-spectacle. Suspended from the lofty -galleries in the rear of the stage were fifty-four flags, and nearly as man y more were 'crossed on either side of the room. The,twenty-saved twat mottoes used on -the Fourth of -"July were again - hroligliViiite' with a few slight exceptions. The central motto In the rear of the stage Was as follows " Ifs Taw-Nairn thr.Gun , Goro Y., " WE WILL SET UP OUR BARNERs." The Stage in front Wei iitifilePed in the American' flag• and from the speaker's desk was suspended a piece of the immortal cable,' some' five feet in length. !no-large galleriei at the Ohestnat r street end of the roof were `festoons of evergreen: - ' ' ' Long before the hour for commencing had at , rimed the lower part of the house wad crowded to, overflowing, the east side of the room being osont pled almost, exclusively by ladies. Immediately in frodt 'of the hall was Suspended an immense flag, extending nearly across, the' street, and reaching from the top of the hall, to within fifteen 'feet of 'the 'pattiment. - 'Upon its upper margin was printed, in large letters, the name of the Young Men's Christian .Asseciatiol4 When the exercises commenced the platform was filled to its utmost capita ity, mainly by clergy- Men of the different denominations. When the hour of half-past 10 had fully arrived, ' the Chair Mari, Georgell. Stuart,TEq., opened the way for the proceedings in a neat speech, in which he said the Lord lied wrought great thingi in the waters. No more than two months ago there were few who bad faith.euough to believe that to-day _WO should be within, speaking,distaree ofonr friends on ; the other side of the 'Atlantic. He spoke also' of the hopelessness, almost amounting to despair, which Marked the last effort to'oenatimmate thin great achievement. The vesaele had 'seen suffered to depart from either shore on their doubtful mis sion without the firing of a 'gun. - It'Wes proper. therefore, in view of the- unoicessful termination of this final effort, that an occasion like that which had then called them together should be devoutly commemorated- and, as the opening of the devo tional part of - the exercises, he thought it was ap propriate that the congregation should-rise.and sing from the 34th hymn of the Union Collection, commencing— ' From all that dwell below the skies , Let the Creator's praise arise; Let the Redeemer's praise be snag _ Through every land, by every tongue." .After_the singing orthis hymn the'l4sth Psalm was read by the Rev. Dr. Edwards, at the close of which the Thronenf Grace was addresied in a fer vent and eloquent prayer by the Rev. Dr. Rom berger. The following passages of the prayer oc cur to us : i• 0 Lord. our God! we would extol Thee as the Almighty King and Eternal Ruler of the universe Thou art very greet, and greatly to be pralsed.and thy greatness is nnsearchable. One generation shall pro claim thy greatness to another, and another shall de clare thy majesty to all future generations. Oh, that men might speak thy mighty *ate, and proclaim thy Praises through all the earth! Helens, we entreat Thee, in these our joyful and thanksgiving approaches to thy throne to-day. Help unto unite our hearts in onion with the ten times ten thousand of our fellow- - citizens who shall thle day, in different parts of our be loved country, join us in praising thygreat name for shy marvellous sots among the children of men. We, thank Thee, the intioite and triune Jehovah, for being permit ted to live In the midst of times and In an age in which God is working mighty things' throughout our bordbrs. We bless Thy name. 0 God, for having suffered the con summation of the achievement that has caused such re joicing all over the land,, Enable us to feel and realize that this is Thy work, and, as such, let it appear mar vellous 10 our eyes; as such, let this last and most won derful achievement of human skill be made subservient. in an eminent degree, to extend the glories of Thy kingdom to every land beneath the skies, and that thereby all kingdoms under HOaven may speedily be. come one united.klngdein of Thy well-beloved Sen, our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. We thank Thee for baying pot it into -the hetes of Thy people to honor Thy great name in the transmission of messages from ' one continent to the other. bless Thee that one of the drat messages ap prised us that a people which had long held out against Christianity has at last thrown open lie doors to the elevating influences of Christianity aid civilization"; yes, that even China is to-day willing to receive re demption through the meesentere of God's everlasting Gospel: 'And we beseech Thee, thitlfrom henceforth all the motives or men may be for the extenalon of Thy kingdom in the .earth, and riot: forAhair own per sonal aggrandizement, and that professing' Christians may this day dedicate themselves anew Into Thy hinds, to be used according to the good pleasure of Thy most holy will; and to Thee, who givest success to every good and glorioneenterprise, be the - prates and the,everlast-, ing glory. Amen " At the conclusion of the prayer by Dr. Bomber ger, Mr. George H. Stuart introduced 44 theindi ewe the Rev. Dr. Sunderland, of Washington oily, D. O. Being the first speaker ; the short-time rule was waived in his favor, and accordingly,-for some fif teen minutes he poured forth a stream of eloquence' whioh, seemed to thrill every heart present and impart an enthusiasm to the audience almost in suppressible, Dr. Sunderland was :received -with applause. Addressing the ohairman, he said : There were times he felt it impossible to find wordsadeqnately to express the thoughts that bear away the mind. Snob was his situation then. , He felt'-himself called upon to say, in'commen with all - hie breth ren, that the overeating Jehovah_ was _moving iimong.the xamiliee Of earth iri a_most - unusual; 'manner, and that no time in the past - history of halals progress had foreshadoweisnoh important" indications of the speedy reign of the Son of God. - We had now attained a point in the history of time, like yonder Aloe now being exhibited for the - benefit of the Yeung Men's Ohristian .damoiation, when,in the fulness of time acrowningwork was be ing accomplished in a single day, as Were; to give, glory- to the plodding progress of ages. •- The horn scope of ;cycles, written in past centuries, was now - produoing in majestic reality the combination of powers in heaven and in earth for the restoration of the human race: The coursers of God's providende were plying with a more overwhelming majesty through land and sea. Already we could antici pate the coming glories of the great cavalcade of Christ, foreshadowed in' what was transpiring' around us, and we could appropriately exelaim with the prophet to-day-"My father! my father !• the chariot of Israel and the horsemen thereof!" The laying of the Atlantic Cable was an achieve ment of God, We were not at liberty to discourse upon it as the offspring bf''than's ingenuity and labor; although these had greatly combined to facilitate the work. We had proof that it 'derived its oilstone° from higher power, from manifold sources. Nor bad it been accomplished for the ,more aggrandizement of the nations of the earth; bat rather that it might promote the cause of the Redeemer—to make this sentiment resound around the world, " Glory to God in the highest. and on earth peace,'good will toward men. " Thtial in God's own t ime, He had found a tongue, to give this proclamation utterance, and a voice to sound it forth. When Qini, in past centuries, bad seen fit to reveal this Western buttress to the Eastern world, He , had found his man to discover It in a' Christopher Columbus. So, in fullness of time, he had found a Franklin, and a Galvani to penetrate the domain of else trinity ; and when the depths of the ocean were to be brought into view, to ascertain the prictioa bility of uniting two worlds, He called and found his men , in our Limit. Maury and his associates; 1 and no sooner had He needed a discoverer for the proper protection of the wire for such a work, than a Whitehouse and a Morse responded to his call ; and,when He wanted to shoot this fibre from shore to shore He called for hie man. and Cyrus W. Field responded to his bidding. [Loud and continued applause.) And next we hear, trembling from the great diapason of the fathomless deep, the glorious ti dings of two continents united. But he felt that he must not take up more time. He thanked the audience for the kind manner in which they had received& stranger in their midst. -He would, in. conolusion, merely refer towbathad already Sash ed across the mighty deep... Blessed news! China, we were told, had thrown 'open her gates for the ingress Of the Gospel of God's Son, and in answer to that had gone back tho tidings that God was in his majesty exerting his saving power among the millions of the great American Republic ; there- '1 fore should we lot hosannas rise and our praises ascend to Him who is enthroned in the heavens, and let all the people say "Amen." At the close of the address, the Chairman said that, in -the absence of the late brother Tyng, be would now Introduce to the audience the Rev. Mr. Carden, of the Episcopal Chttroh, who would address them. . Mr Carden, laboring under physical indisposi tion, came forward, and said that he rejoiced from his inmost soul to meet his American brethren on thin occasion; but as there were various reasons why he should deny himself the pleasure Of speak ing, he begged to introduce in his stead a brother, whom be had long known, a native of Germany, educated in England, and now a citizen of Quebec,— the Rev: Isidore Mornbert, Mr. Mombert, in appearing upon the platform, said he felt that all the victories widish mind had achieved were fit subjects to call forth our most sincere praise and thanksgiving to the Almighty. This last 'great wonder, he believed, had been mainly achieved bytwo American hems. He be lieved the laying of the Atlantic Cable had in many respects ushered in a new era. It was, in deed, not improbable that the time was not far distant when in the most literal sense the tele. graph shall girdle the world ; and wilt could fathom the consequences of so vast an aohieve 7 ment ! He spoke in the warmest terms of eulogy of the sentiment embodied in the message of the President of the United States to the Queen of England. By this time all the aisles were literally jammed with standing spectators of both sexes. - At the conolus on of Mr. Mombert'e remarks the congregation sang two verses of the hymn re cently written by Dr. Thos. H. Stockton, and dedicated to -the Young Men's ChristintrAatiociaL Gen, entitled "Glory to God.'' Tho whole of this beautiful hymn has already been publiehed in our columns. The music to which it .has been set, and to which it was sung yesterday, was com posed by Mr. John Bower The next speaker introduced was - the Rev. Dr. Leyburn, who was else greeted with marked ap planes at hie appearing, and' repeatedly inter , rupted as he p roceeded.' ' He, too , felt•it to be impossible to find words to express' the emotions that swelled within his ; bosom. They had met - together, not as the repro,. sentatives of .any ape section of this great conk deraey,,bittiiither. to unite fraternally with our brethren all over the land, to express-our filial affection for our mother beyond the sea, and our religioni fealty to our God beyond the. sky. When he saw the grandest achievements of salience made subservient to the interests of ,religion, he saw in the future the coming of that day when nations shall not learn war any more—when "Haden lances into scythes shall hew!, And the broad fal (+llion in a plowshare end." He believed there were some few among the prominent disooverers in the domain of science who sooffed at religion, yet we could not be blind to the feet that in the main the gifted sena of ge nius in the world of soienoe were men of religious principles. The event they had then assembled to celebrate was full of significance upon this point. He was reminded to-day that just about ono hundred years ago there was wandering about the open fields in the vicinity of the then' little toys ofPhiladelphia amen whom many regarded as a fanatical theorist.. Even the boys, on seeing this man wandering about, and flying his kite at the approach of a thunder-storm, congratulated them selves on their superior wisdom In having Sense enough to' seek a shelter from ,the approaching storm; while this old feel was pursuing his kite much' to the disadvantageof his reputation fervor= Sew mashie observers. That fool had,turned:ont.to-be , otir-immor Franklin. [Great applanse j The_apeficer glarit in Franklin's name ;Ai gloried in his !oeuntry2 name ;',he loved that star-spangled banner, air had felt hie bleed-tingle with the fire of ar Petrie, enthusiasm as he had. this morning, Mail ' • , gradbful folds floating' on 'the Bepteinber ..„. It had:sent, a thrill like aileleistrienhogio 10 his body. Yes; he loved - our eountry;Miffpe in stitutians ; but believed - in, and lost' see established, a monarchy -in „thindistitior ours, (hoping, that after•whatpecii r k eese d, h e - might not be- subjeetedS _ iffOliarge of 'being unpatriotie fori - advooAirk„ . onardlay;) yes, he longed for the dayOniarne,Whenthe sun shell rise upon our beloved-lei:A*sW Ilini: the-colorii:nf our beautiful flag pele - Viefoiffrthe blood-stilliedhan nor of the Orogen and-whensll the stars shall have -' vanished, and instead shall gleam- with 'all the ' lustre of God's eternal glory-the certifies - Gag star of Bethlehem:- This was the monarchy-forwhieh his Mil longed, when. the kingdom of odr- Redeemer- • shall extend from the rivers even to the elide of the earth, and then-with one great ;United voice; in .-- - one grand diapason from all the quarters. of_ the_ • -. , globe, shohld arise oneluniverial dexelogy„tellim, - whose advent -. was - heralded .Ifir..angelal , to the - shepherds Of. Judea, in the:words :- -.: -1 '' . '- • "Glory to Gand (God in the highest, tm earth' ' peace,, good-will toward men." L'. -- -- : --- -- r • :., At the close of Dr. Leybarn'e address theOpilr- * Man introduced the .Rev.--Franklin: Motita, - "who, on Coming forward, said that when he first heard ' -the news of this wonderful triumph he was at the He depicted in gl e aning rhetoric the :emotions . -his.';experieneed in contemplatieg _tide. ..inaater event of thenineteentlicantery bythe side of,the - roaring billows of the 'Atlantic. • :It really bad ' . Seemed to him that < old 'Mail had caught. the spirit and was singing out its !anthem of.9_Glory - " to-God." - - '.: .- .• . •. • . He was so compressed in dime that helot:inn himself hurried' on to an outline. ' Thfievent,ln - his judgment, was destined to Maier in new Social era. The ocean had too, long' been:stained- with _ the blood of brothers; but now:every-billow -.wee . but a flashing link in the chain thatbinchtlogether ' • nations' and worlds long sundered.by the • barriers of nature and of prejudice. - But It was also dell;'; ' fined to Taber in a new era in religion. - God had severed the netionejnst so long ail it best subset-red his purposes so to do; but now,thet the spirit-of ; ,Christian union-began to bilin in 'everYbosoth, the time had arrived when the Gospel of Christ Should' find a highway in the very air wo breathe and in the depths of• the sea.- - -He yes - not- sahanied - to own that he was awe -smitten at the `spectacle - Presented in this winderfil, aebrevemOnt. - Re felt that the undevelOguid,indleations or. Past • . ages were settling like a pail upon the assembly before him. He could f sympathize with Franklin, - whentirsthefoundthe fibrekofkite-etring4ltirate ' ' in answer to hie - dream of :expectetiono utd- had' been made to exelaiin,Thatat that inialutieni he felt as if he could havcidiedf Franklin was at the base of the' achievement theyhed.unital to,cons, - memorate, and - Field was at the pex. He-con cluded with the congratulation to'our - own State ; , that;of.all-the States narked upon this_ agnifi-. - cent banner of our country , the partiOnlar star of ' Pennsylvania might ever maintain in the future, . 'as she had done in the past, en eniinentlylonora hie and meritorious 'Position. ''- .' ' : At this'poine another. verse Of the hym already „; referred to, "XlleryteGod,", was sung by the con p gregation. The next. speaker was the Rev.-Mr.• Wilbert.' - . 'k He eminenced by saying that, he - had `-been thinking ef 'the ashes of -Franklin,-that were pro- ' , belly being agitated by the tramp of strangers.' ' -He was free to confess that he, felt considerably: -.L , exeited. He, believed. moreover that his friends• , on the platform excited:: He believedthe audience was excited, and-he did not wonder that - -' it 'was so, for there west sufficient cause foiaxisite- • meat. It bad been a remark of a late- Eleateh - metaphysician Sir William- Hamilton, that-we , ' were tale much disposed to survey each other at a": distance: 'We were tatightin the • Bible that God-. . was the Omnige Rider and Governor or all things - - . in heaven and on earth; that it wee We alone Who' could bind the sweet Influence of the - Pleiades or i loose the bands of Orion; and it was to - hiegiower • and glory, therefore, that we ' Were chiefly. indebt- ' ed for all the achievements of men. - [At this - ; point several- hands' of meta passed the Hall, - t which had the effect of Galling many of-the an& 7. . ewe to the windows in front.] r- • , - `• '-'• '"-: r In the present work • there - was to hit Mind a r sign of the times. What it was, we - Might not.yet„ r be able to discern, but he believed it was the fore , shadowing of some great movement-in the history of oar religion: He - fervently hoped that it might'- p be-the heralding of the time when `all Methane' , under heaven' would be united ; - when "Holiness "-- unto the Lord" should. not oultbe written on the, _ . belle of, the 'lionise but -- on; the Ind" when it - should indeed be ,indeliblYwriften upen 1 all the work and inter:Mums °firm, ,Befersteen- --,. r eluding, air. Cuthbert referred in' eloquent terms ' to the manner in which the claims-of religion bad :. been remembered arid anknowledgedby . Columbna, by our Pilgrim fathers, -and Tautly hyOtir Captain : , Ruben of the United States navy. - : . 2 - - 1 - Atthe close of this speech, the Chairman re:. - minded those of the audience who were etillerowd-. ing ttround the Windows in front, that they could , hear music as good as that which was now pa,ssing ,- i every day in the week, brit it was seldom ina_lifb- - time that they Were privileged to listen to such. I eloquent 'discourses on the subject of the Atlantic • Oable• (laughter,] and he hoped all pryent,might profit by this -hint. • ' -,.. . ~ , The Rev.-W.-J:lk Taylor - was then introduced, and said i We had no martial splendors to plane , . before the eye butler& es those, ((pointing to the flags which decorated the hall.) :He did not won- -. derthat all his brethren there felt as if. they were - moving_amid-prophetic scenes- He himself. lad , - be:en strongly reminded of the old,Pilgrint worship; • when the captain of the vessel became:the bhap' - ' lain of his MOIL and there, on Plymouth Reek, amid the-arches of the forest;ruiltedwith them in, - singing praises to their greatßuleemid Pitteeter..._;_, The fact thatrt,:twenty-Itnir pounder - had been on one oecattioreettaahed to. the Cable Weider: to' sink- it at a time when was feared; argaticidene from its not sinking, was one of several significant: - if not prophetic incidents connected with _the his. ~..' tory of that wonderful work. r„ • „The symbol. which the -speaker. saw. In this, as.., typifying the burying of the weapons of war be - neath the wave of Memo, seemed to be happily , aepreelated,by his hearers, and elicited no small - .., share of apPlause." There were, be said;butnne or r two nrofessera of science in this country who were . not Christians, and his prayer was that soon there ' might be none. ' The speaker's speculations as to the wonders which would hereafter be realised in . : conneetion.with the Atlantic Telegraph enterprise were exceedingly felioltous, and we' are - only ' - sorry that the want of semi, and a press of other , - duties on this bavv, bust/day, forbid a more ex tensive synepsis of them, as well as of the speeches ' yet htoe follow. , T speeches were here interrupted by the sing ing Of the following verse from the 143 d Psalm : - • " The TordotHeaven confess, - ' .-, On high his glory mine; Him let all angels bless— ' Him all his armies praise." . The Rev. - Wm. Jenkins was presented to the audience as the next speaker. He opened thus : . England and America--oan r _ [To ;which an audible "Amen" was ejaculated' all -- over the room.] One in blood, one in language, ,one In ,historical anteeedenta, one iklfienary fame, one in '._ legal institutions, -one in civil freedom, one in religion ! England and America—oak!' God bless ' 'the Union, and what God has joined together let - no man put asunder. [Loud end rapturous:4i- - plause.] - It was because they were due one, and not for , any other reason, he presumed, he had been in vited thtrs upon that occasion.- He was sore he had not been invited there to speak because he - was a Presbyterian, - for -the - Presbyterians' had - boon well, very well represented already; but the. reason whyhe hod been invited to take a part wag -- Weedy to his mind because he was a regular out- - and=out John Bull. [Laughter and applause.] At - -,"' this point. the Chairman,Mr. Stuart, taking ad vantage of the merry mood of the audience, rose and stated to Mr. Jenkins, that he would take the . liberty of informing the audience that they would have an opportunity offered them in the evening of seeing a far better specimen of John Bull on the transparency, which world be exhibited in front of the rooms of the Young Mere!, Christian Amoiation, on Chestnut street, above - Tenth, and at the same time advised all present to go early if they wished to get a look at it, or they would not be able to get within a mile of it, on sic ' count of the crowd. This little episode concluded, ' mush to the amusement of the audience, Mr. Jenkins resumed his remarks by partly suggesting, , that the John Bull, promised to be exhibited by ' their friend Stuart, might be a better specimen as • far as the physique was concerned, but the great different), In his own favor was that he had a genuine John Bali heart in him, and he defied Mr. Stuart or his artist to exhibit to them that part of John Bull on canvas. [Loud laughter all over the - room.) The speaker continued: What mean these . adornings—these signs of joy to-day? Had not this triumph been already celebrated? Yes, he saw it celebrated some days ago, as in hie thoughts he traversed the depths of the' Atlantic. As be there, in imagination, eat at the depths below; he' saw moving 'before him, in chariots of fire, a glorious procession. In that imposing line he saw marshalled the armies of Great Britain and France, and on their banners bearing the insarip• Lion, ', Peace with China." Following these be saw moving before his vision the representatives of commerce, bearing aloft the intelligence, " China is open to trade." Next came along a small band of diplomatiste, bearing upon a united banner, " China has become the free brother of nations to exchange national amenities."' Next appeared before him in this imposing train a noble host,' bearing the banner of Christ's mes sengers from England and'America, proclaiming in their onward march, " China, with her four hundred and flftymillione, is opento the Gospel," And as this vision passed before him, he was reminded of the words "As the lightning comet, out of the East and shineth even unto the West, so shall the coming of the Son of Man be." „He now desired to 'stand before his bearers as a prophet. As he looked forward, and anticipated message after massage, he saw in the future ens intended _for himself, informing him that his tainted mother had been summoned home to her Saviour in heaven. His mother was still living In England, and, from last remounts, she was nigh to the portals of her better home above. With this part of Mr. Jenkins's remarks the audience were evidently much affected. In future generations, too, the messenger would come from abroad proclaiming that the armies of England and France had forgotten their mutual fends of past ages, and virtually beaten " their swords into ploughshares, and their spears into pruning hooks." At this point the speaker halted a mo ri3entz and then concluded his capital and most 1 effective speech, by asking, in a significant tone, this qua stion : WIIERR 78 FRANKLIN'S GRAPE? The effect of this closing Interrogatory can better I be imagined than described.- , At this point a letter was received from Mr. • President Allen; apologising for his absence, I having been one of the invited speakers. I Following this letter, the Chairman read also a I stelegram, received about an hour before, from the Young Men's Christian Association of Cincinnati : CINCINNATI. September 1. George H. Stuart, Pres't Y. X. C. A. of Phila., , delphia, at Jayne's Hall. Tho Young Men's Christian Association of Cin: cinnati send. Christian greetings. May this new -- triumph of the, genius of man be made subservient to the extension of the Reedeemer's Empire, till the kingdoms of this world shall become the king doms of our Lord and bier Christ.' - - H. Tmlarz Altman, - Pres't Y. AL Christian Association. • .. After this despatch had been read, the following - message, prepared by our Association here, to be transmitted over the electric cable to the nssocia. tions of London and Europe, was also read by the Chairman : •‘• Brethren of London and Europe : The floods are lifting up their voice, and through their deep, , pathway we send our fraternal 'greetings. " Their line is lime out.'' through all the earth,' - 1 and , thelr woTdi "to the end of the world, The _-:-: ..-r - ‘ , V;. -. .. , ,r-. - 1 - 4.a.,, , - - - r.tefb-- - -- -: