the press, pushed daily (srNu.iyn kxoeptjbd,) by JOIIJJ W FORWEY. [CE, No. 111 SOUTH FOURTH STiIEET, THE DAILY PRESS, , t VH Osnts Pkr Wrrx oayable to the Harrier. A to Subscribers oot of the City at Six Dollars Akkom, Kodr Dollars for Eioht Mouths, x Dollars for Six BIoKTHs-tavarieblr In ad- I for the time ordered. THE TRI-WEEKLY PRESS, led to Subscribers out of the City at Turfs Dol, Pan Annum, in advance. SUMMER RESORTS. >N SPBINoI, OAMBBIA PA.— Thin rtoliKlittOl E” 1 ”! 1 ?* t, located direotty on the line of the iroad, on the muuwifc of the Allegheny 7 three bu rred feet above the level of j oneiJ for *a««® from the 10th of June jctobar. Since l**t season the grounds tty improved and beautified, and a num bnve been erected for the accommoda te rendering Oreaaou one of the moat ttractivt pieces in the State, The fund* tbprougwiy renovated. The seeker of the sufferer from heat and disease will find are fu a ftrat-elaa* Livery Stable, Billiard dn Alleys, Baths, An., together with the water, and the most magnificent mountain j found in the couutry. food for the round trip from Philadelphia* Pittsburg, 83.0*. ' information, addreaa_ Q. W MULLIff, Orewacw Springs, Oambrifr 00. % Pa, IST GKOVM HOUSE— (LIST’S MOUNTAIN BPBINGB, NEW The popular Hotel la now ready for m SEASON, having bean thorougSr»t in 10 accommodation of visitors to Bchootey’s brings. < *? T 4 G sPy®, Jfl ft capacious Honac, do tted, with wide-spreading lawns, and com tew of scenery unsurpassed in attraction and offers to visitor* a Quiet retreat from the istle of city life. jxorbitant Tent to pay, the proprietor of the tOYE HOUSE will accommodate families t a* low a r*te as a strict regard to the re rf the House yplll afford. The moderate v House, as with the neighboring ?s, is a feature which must commend itself a o r families who do not deeire to pay ex >r a lew weeks 1 recreation. TEBM3— jARm PBB »EBK. the FOREST GROVE HOUSE will enjoy jfint driven, finest scenery, and the purest of utters, whilst its accessibility to the cities tong the most desirable of Inltad resorts* jDications addressed to the undersigned will rumpt atteatiOQr P MATHEWS, Proprietor. BATBiNS BBANOH, MONMOUTH 00., N. J. METBOPOOITAN HOTEL, NOW OPEN. J, H. A I. W. COOPEB, Proprietors. BATHINCf. Jf HOTJ3B, GAPS ISLAND, H. J., iow oven for th« reception of riaitow. ISRAEL LAMING, Proprietor. , HOTEL, [Hurl; opposite She United States Hotel,} atlantio oin, s. i. SAMCKL ADAMS, Proprietor. BO cento. ia to Hire. accommodated on the most ATLANTIC CITY, TED ON KENTUCKY AVENUE, Opposite the Surf House, suit the times ED«ABD DOYLE, BRIGANTINE HOUSE; brigantine beach, rr. j. the season. Tbe Bathing' Fishing,jGnn '.ug being very superior, Ait guests ae tbe inlet on arrival of trains, c, $B. p, 0. Address* Atlantia City. H. J>. SMITH, '*rietor nr DAVID SOA’CT MB&OOD. tIVATE BOABDINb HOUSES* beantifol he foot of Peawylvanta Avenue, visitors for the eeagon. te2o-2m CAPE 1811 vtfD, H. J. HOUSE is now open* and has superior Terms moderate. J. B. MEOBAY, Proprietor. ATLANTIC CITY, B. liBIL Proprietor. iTtog been thoroughly renovated and eu pea for permanent and transient boarders. The bathing grounds The Bar is conducted by Mr. EBIBIi, of ■> wiH keep superior wines, lit. and m and ready for Boarders. A few i obtained by applying soon. The .os bis tafole with fresh milk from his vegetables from big farm. ' hundred desirable Cottage and Hotel M. Mo*' „ « splendid newhcraae, south* w and MASSACHUSETTS Avenues, iona® d after J one 29th. The rooms jambra ” are unsurpassed by any iere is a spacious Ice Cream and Be* ittaobed to the house. Term* moderate* O. DUBOIS & 8. J. TOUNO, the terminus of the railroad, on depot Thin House is now open for tent Visitors, and offers aooommods >tel in Atlantio Oity. Charges mo servants half price. \eep their seats until the - -iDg Home, coraer of TOBK sad l», Atlantic Oitr, convenient to the atifnl view of the Ocean, la now open ’he acoommodattona are equal to any Prices modur [ING.— .OHG BBANCH, N. J., i» now open, <• yards from the seashore, central of the itlng the ocean 600 feet | two hours Steamer leaves Morraj street twice 4P. SL: thence by the B. and B. B. a B. A. BHOBMAKEB. from Philadelphia Is by the Oamden a 19 BASK BOW, MI ABTO* BOOS!,) HBW TOBK. TKBMS KI.BO PKB DAT. Hotel baa lately bees thoroughly rood 1 , and now vossmsm all tb» react PIBST-OIiASS HOTEL. of PhliadeiiMan* and the trayelliti* beat accomodation*' and modernt« Hy aolicif ' " HE UNDERSIGNED, 4A.BD HOUSE, PhllodaJpWa, h«Y* jf years, WILLABD’S HOTEL, ]b take this occasion to retttrn to thdr comers man? thanks for past favors, them that the/ will ba most happy to >w quarters. __ . BTKSB, OHAJDWICK* 4k 00. 1«. ISBI- »o«8-J TOY, AND FANCY GOODS BMFOBIUM, 1&3& WALNUT BTBMT, IBLOW aUTOTIK, PHTCAD! DERSIG •oral their friends and the public it'sl their LBHIOH (JOAL DEPOT SET WHABir, on th 6 Delaware.,# ■at comer of EIGHTS and WILLOW intend to keen the beat qnalitySW at the most approved mines, at tat ttronage is respectfully solicited, JOS. WALTOH A 00., "nth SBOOHD Sir' :totie and & CAMPION, . Booth SECOND Street, their ext nelve Cabinet Bneinwe, «*• ■ a interior ertiole of iARD TABLES, an bud » foil raMfy', flnUbad with the tHPIOK’B IMPBOVBD CUSHIONS, toooced by all who hare rued than to be leri. tj Bud flnleh of tbeae Tsblee the mann to their uomeruM petrosa throughout ere familiar with the character of their fesa-dm than and brand*. wE* »U dwcriptioM, for ronk«nd Wwnoo7(w< _ »b 2 5 ri * r from Ito 8 Twine/io. ~ JOHS W. BVJSBMA.ST ft 00;, *8 JOKES SUoy.' VOL. 6.-JSTO. 3, •DAKGAINS IN DRY GOODS. ou’tf tif ** “ * ereat —“" 87«e? l9taB1 * CkßDk “ aa W ° ol Ohall i 0 » «t worth til* J} ecM Barag* Anglh at 4c, worth 100. FWe pieces plain Barege at 12*c Shetland Shawls, at very low prices, splendid for travelling or at watering platee. At JOHN a STOKES’, 703 ABO a Street rpWEEDS AND CAS3IMEttEB. jard« heavy Cassimeres, just opitned. A 150,1,000 yardi all wool Tweed*, 62 t < 75 cento, Snamar and Fall Oassimeres, a I oil fl eck. Uto’l and hoys’ wear, onr stock is coraplote, „ DOMESTICS. Bleached and Brown Shirtings. Bleached and Brown Sheetings. Cotton Flannels, Domet. all wool, and Saome do. Cotton Coeds, at lowest market rates. HONET-COMB QUILTS. Marseilles and Lancaster Qnilta. Bathing Flannels, Mosquito Nets. Linen Table Oamaeks and Napkins. Cheap lota of 4 4 heavy Irish Linens. CLOSING OUT. Silk Mantles, Thin Dusters, Laco Goods. Boys’ Sommer Clothing. Thin Drees Goods, Black Tamartinese Chillies, Mohairs, Mozamhiqnos, Ac • . „ • „ CO IPICR 4 OONAED, jrBl-tr B. 11. corner NINTH and MARKET sta. CUMMER STOCK. fp During July and August we wlli aelt’Bummer Dram Goode, euch as Dawns, Organdies, Bareges, and'their fabrics, at very low iirioes to clear the stock. " 6 >uu fair ’ and th? 80038 ot thta Jyl9 lost OHISTHOI STB - ■ E. M. NEEiSL.ES - — ..Invite. the sped.l attention of Ladkfwh, !n . two wending the rommer ont of town to a very large assortment of MADE-DP GOODS rest ceived,in • ■ . - , SLEEVES, SETS, HANDKERCHIEFS, „ NATHAN BSOWN, ; .$ General Partners. THOMAS BBOWN, Special Partner. July Slat, 1863. anlltmSt THE COPARTJNTERBHIP heretofore exfßtiDg under the firm of BIEOBL, RAIKD, & 00., la this da? dissolved. . PBTEB SIEGES, JAOOB BrBOBL, ■. WM. S. BAIBB, JOHN WIBST. Jura 80. ' pl-for "\TOTIGE OFLIMITED PARTNER- J3I SHIP.—The subscribe;* hereby give noticefthat they hare entered into a limited partnership*, agreeably to the .proyisionfl of the laws of the Common wealth of £enneylvania relating to limited partnerships. That the name of the firm, under, which said partner ship is to be condncted-is BIEGEL, WIB3T, & EB rm. ;; Tbat.the generalnaturnof Hfebasinew intendedio be trassactedls the Importing and. Jobbing of 3>ry Goods* That the names of the General and Special Partners, all of whom reside in the city of Philadelphia,' are JACOB BIECTHi, .General Partner, residing at 527 Uorth Sixth street; JOHN WIEST, General Partner, residing atB22 New street ;D.B. ERVIN, General Partner, residing at Ifild Girard avenue; HJSNBV ; 8. IPIBI SB, General Partner, residing at 416 North Third Street; JOSIAH BIBGBIr, General Partner,-'residing at 436 ! North Third, street; 3P3OTEB SIEGER, Special Partner, residingiat 717 North Eighth street; WJL S. BAIRD, Spec&l Partner, 'residing at the Continental Hotel* - r . -■ • ■ Thai the aggregate, amount of the capital contributed by the Special Partners to the common stock is One Hundred Thousand Dollars, of which Fifty Thousand Dollars in cash has been eo contributed by Peter,Silger, Special Partner, and Fifty Thousand DoUars in oashhas been so contrfbnted by Wm: S. Baird, Special Fanner. That the said partnership!# to commence bh : thel first day of July, A, D. 1862, and is to terminate on the first day of January. 1865* ■ , JACOB BlEGfcli, 1 , JOHN WIEST. < } s*: a a D* B. ERVEN, General Partner*. HENBY B.FIBTEB, JOSIAH BIEGEL, J * frl.dw WM/E BALMh’ 1 Special Partner*. QAWION. The w*ll-*ar«Wd repataeon of PAffiBANKS’ scales Eu lndooed the maker* of innrafect Seles MB to o«« Sum ee “ f AIBBAHKS’ SCAMS,” ■“> *nrehaeer» hare thereby, In manyin*tenoe«,b6Bn rahjeeted tofranc end ImsodHon. »AIB» AMS®’ 80AMBS eremenn&a. taxed only by tbe origtnal Inrentore, ft, Irl. BABKB AOO., airfare adapted to every branohof to fcaelne**, where a correct end durable Soalaf to reanped. FAIRBANKS & BWINff, 6eneral Adente, «*io-a masonic HAXiih Ti» oHka-taU'f CT r^AUTION.—Owing to. the popularity A>end comiJate aaocßM which our PATHHTBBJIT ADJOSTDSO OLOTHIIS-WJHNMB haa met with, other isurttei ere endeeyotlnit.to toll thoir inferioriciS" afalnea,by Bdojtlng oot nernßot “ BHU-ADJUSTIHa” u » meani to dewlTe th« pubilor We, therefore, iciTe notice that oar name will be plainly rtamped on oecb Machine maanfactored andwldbyna, and noneotben are gen sine. - Any one rains our hade, nuuk wIU be dealt with according to law. Mr. lit 1. SHOW, corner of FCTTH and CHESTNUT Street* PhUadalphla, is onr SOM AOBNT for Mae IjWIUJIA HAMY, MOBS*. * BOTDXH. JeMtteia , TNGOT COPPER- FBOM THE X AMTGDAMttD JUXIfM OOHPAMT, or £*k* Snaarior. foe Mi* ii lota ic drit pcrehaacn, at tmfonor, m Q*o. I. WOMKATH’B, 416 ABOB fltrwt IS- wain* NUTS. Atotterndfl, Cream Nuts, GrraobM BnfcßiMe*axW«tontt, Fe«Hnta,p. Sbrtei Beam Hnt«i ta-rtdwgg**' * " yriMß fltreei SHABPLBBS BROTHERS, CHESTNUT and EIGHTH Streets. COPARTNERSHIPS. JOHN WANAM&.KJSB, NATHAN BROWS. D. 3. BBTOJ, H. 8. ITSTEB, JOSIAH BLEGEIi, MONDAY, AUGUST 4, 1862. THE RALLYING CRY Great War Meeting at Lancaster. HOW THE HOME OF BUCHANAN RESPONDS 30 THE CALL OP PRESIDENT LINCOLN. RAPID PROGRESS OF THE RECRUITING. GREAT ENTHUSIASM Speeches of Dr. Muhleuburg, Col. J. W. Forney, Morton McHichacl, Tsq, Rev. Al. I. Cookman, and others. ADOPTION OP PATRIOTIC RESOLUTIONS. 3ho war feeling in Lancaster county ia Intense, determined and practical. The meeting held in Lancaster city on fcaturday, in response to the President’s call for three hundred thousand troops, was an evidence of this fact, but a still better evi dence is the rapidity with which the quota of men required from the county is coming fa. Now that harvest is over, all other, business seems te have been laid aside, and with one common impulse the farmers are leaving their peaceful fields and taking arms to serve their country fa fields of strife ,and bloodshed. Already over five hundred men have enlisted, and long before the time ex pires it is expected that the regiment now raising fa Lancaster will be on the march to the seat of war. Every street has its reef Siting station, and the busy note of preparation is heard on all sides disturbing the usual tranquillity of the quiet eld city. On Saturday last one of the largest mass meetings that ever assembled in the connty was held in Centre Square. The trains that came fa from east and west during the day were crowded, and hundreds attended fa their private conveyances. At one livery stable we nOtioed over one hundred vehicles, and at another over two hundred. The city appeared, fa gala dress on the occasion, all the stores being closed and flags flying fa every direc tion. In the middle of the square a great tent had been pitched by Thaddeus Stevens, Jr,, Esq., who is raising a company, and on Saturday he obtained a large number of recruits. Mr. Stevens is the nephew of Hon. Thaddeus Stevens, the Representa tive fa Congress for the district, who is offering large snms out of his private fortune to encourage enlistments. It Is a noticeable faee that the most prominent aetors in the great meeting were such prominent Democrats as the elder Mublenbarg, Hon. B. Champneys, James L, Reynolds, Esq., -Col. W. B. Pordney, W. R. Wilson, Esq., and hosts of others, now heartily united in support of the Administration of Mr. Lincoln, and in oppo3i tion to the traitors and their sympathizers. , . At two o'clock, the meeting was called to order by James L Reynolds, Esq., chairman of the com mittee of arrangements. Dr.F. A. Muhleuburg was chosen to preside, yriih a fang list of Vice Presidents and Secretaries. Oh taking the ehair, that venerable and beloved oitizen said : ' . SPEECH or DR. -UUEILBNIJURO. It is scarcely necessary, my friends, that I should state the object .of this, meeting. This vast assem blage of the solid matfe m of the city and conaty of Lancaster is a oonelusife nroof that vim value the institutions which were framed by vour an cestors, who lived under them and enjoyed the greatest amount of happiness, and handed them over to you fa trust to transmit to all fature generations. Yon , have aeeepted this trust, and I have no doubt are willing to carry out the conditions. The South governed this nation for fifty years, and while they had control of the Executive and the Senate, they were tolerably satisfied : but so soon as their power began to wane, they became restless, and determined to repossess the power they were gradually losing. The first exemplification of this effort wastheOttend Manifesto, issued by gentlemen with whom you are well acquainted. That famous manifesto- urged upon, Spain the sale of the island of Cuba, and at the same time intimated that if she wonld net sell they would take it by force. Was not this modnst on the part of onr representatives to a friendly Power which had possessions ra juxtaposition to ours? When Spain would not sell or be frightened-far filibusters; the South? saw that-tbes*\ attemptto o& tain more territory in that direodoh was fruitless; and In order to regain their power the KanaasafTair was broached. The compromise which, years be fore, had been made by them, was no-longer useful, and it was abrogated. Free fcemtory was to- be invaded and used for slave purposes, and slave institutions were to-be forced into free territory, in l spite of all the. resistanee that could be made; When this attempt failed, they ultimately resorted l to force .and villainy—villamy, first, in robbing us of all the muniUons of war; and force, secondly, in bringing on the crisis which resulted in this un fortunate civil war by firing upon Sumpter and' compelling its small garrison to surrender. Everybody, I presume, knows that the last Ad ministration had the destiny of this country in the hollow of its hand. If it had possessed asinkle spark of the spirit of old Andrew Jackson; if hiacha raoterhad had any influence upon the late tive, that officer would have contracted his hand and crushed the rebellion in its bud ; but alas!' that wasnot his object. [Cries of “True.”] Ido be lieve, however, that if the South could have hada prospect of their devastated farina, and the fields of old Virginia. saturated with fraternal blood, they would have hesitated before embarking in their* rasb adventure. If the then Executive could by any possibility have had an intimation of the consa-- cjuences of the wioked-aots which he knew traitors were attempting against his country, he would'ne ver have permitted them. Nor would they even* have attempted them. It is too late now. I will not enter into a detailed account of all the causes which produced this atrooioaB, this villainous rebellion. I will leave that matter to the more elo quent gentlemen who surround; me. lam not in the habit of making public-speeches,.as you know, and I merely rose to thank you for the compliment you had paid me, and to state that the particular object of. this meeting is to supply the wants of oar* weakened army. By the greatest acts of despotism, the South has brought into the field, and massed in the neighborhood of Richmond; a force at least two to one,' compared with our small army, which has been lessened by disease and the sword. It now. becomes our duty to use .every efibiV’collec tively and individually, to : sustain our army, on the Peninsula, and tolfili the vacancies-which have occurred in if. Thatshouldibe oiir first; our itm immediate object. There ought to be ho delay. Our second object should be to supply the.e&U which has been made for three hundred thousand men. These troops, as a matter of eourse,. will be an army of occupation, to take ahd hold possession of the coun try which properly belongs to üßi The rebels are not entitled to an inch of ground and it should be taken from them and converted to the use of the army as it progresses, and of the loyal oifcizens of the North. [Great applause]. I therefore trust that there will be no dissenting voice, hut that eve ry man in this vast meeting wi l be prepared, to do his utmost in this the cause of his country. And may God prosper it t [Cheers. J ; The Rev; Mr. Porter'made-an eloquent and int-- pressive prayer, afterwhufii the- following resolu tions were read by Janies I*. Reynolds, Ewj , and approved amid the greatest enthusiasm, each re solution being heartily cheered, and three cheers given for the Pennsylvania Reserves: RESOLUTIONS. That in this groundless-.and wicked war waged by a portion of the Southern States against a Government whose policyy sißce its establishment, they mainly origi nated, whose patronage ~ttey chiefly controlled, and ;whose power was .exercised in regard -to them only to promote their interest; and protect them againsfcforelga foes and domesticdanger, there chit be only two parties —the one;cpm&osed of tbose'who. are unconditionally and ,unqualifiedly loyal to the Government, and earnest end zealous In the maintenance of its supremacy; the secodd composed of all other : persons la the United States, whether the? are in open rebrillon.or eeoretly aid and ,abet the rebel*, or stand indifferent to the result; and that ail persons in tbis second clftsj are/and should be, regaided and treated as enemleato the Republic . That self-preservation aid patriotism require th*t the Rational Government shall prosecute the present war with unremitting vigor'and energy; employ all tbe re sources in men and money .at their command, and use all means to injure and destroy, the rebels in their armies and property that the Jaws of civilized war permit, to ' the end that the rebellion may hespeedil? suppressed and the authority of the Cons itution of the United States be acknowledged throughout the land. - That policy and the laws of v»ar alike demand that the jGovernment, in suppressing the rebellion, shall inflict on the at mieaand pro petty of the rebels the greatest injury in the shortest time and with the least leas to the so d Lera and treasures of the Union; that lenlency to rebels who are actively and energetically workug to overthrow the Government by arms is a mistaken policy, unsound iu principle and eroei towards loyal citizens,and that we will support the President in the execution with all the power of the Government of the .confiscation ,and libera tion enactments of the last Congress inthsirfailoat mean ing and extent. XI at we cordially approve of the patriotic action of our County Ccmmieeiouers in pledging Lancaster county to give, In addition to the bounty paid by the United States, tbe snm of fifty dollars to each volunteer within its limits who shall be enrolled and mustered under the late call of f»re«dent Lincoln and GoverriorCurtin. We thank them for their prompt recognition and performance of the duty required of them by tha condition of our national affairs, and we recommend them to give a like sum to each per son from the ‘county, who shallvoiunteerandbe master ed into any of the old regiments. lhat white we with to live on terms of peace with all other nations, and will strive tu.preserve the friendly re lations with them we have maintained since the estab lishment of .our Government, no Christian nation shou’d desire the present unholy rebellion'*) succeed; and that we wilt not tolerate,,on any cause or pretext, foreign inter ference in the rebellion, reflet the same, should it be attempted, at all cost to ourselves, and at the risk ofidvolvft?g Ehr6pe in a general war, . 7b a t wvare grateful to the officers mid soldiers of the Union for their-suvices in defence of our country, and fhat‘ we fendei' bur especial thanks to the patriotic citi zens of Ban caster connty ln those armies, for the courage and; valor theydfepUaeAia the battle-field,and oar < hrertfrit sympathy in their to XPfcfaaUta hionrmmsras have lost any Of their number In the couidj'of Laccasterwiil promptly and sheer rotl* forfißh the boinber.oi ’soldiers. uuota try Gov. Curtin under the late cah of President Lincoln. We assure the President that in the ianne dlate adoption asd determined nee, wlthoat aualificatton orreetifdtion, of all the means and ways perm ted bv the laws of war to.be need by a nation struggling lor liberty and self-existence against the boat of wonla-D0 national parricides now In arms against the BspabUC, he will be sustained by the fdrtnnee and Uvea of the citi zens of Lancaster cunty.; red thatrne apoeai to thrtr patriotism wilt be disregarded lyWoh la prampted by a stern deb ruination to condnbfthe'brar with rigor and energy,ut regard to. no jer thetnactociiwof Oouireßajmd tha rntes of Yr&ry to the or iiny of the property of the rebels. ’" PHILADELPHIA, MONDAY, AUGUST 4, 1862, SDIBCH OF COL. JOHN w. FORNEY The resolutions being adopted, Col. John W. Forney was introduoed to the meeting and re ceived with tremendous applause. He said : Old Friends and FellovCitizens : It gives me sincere gratification to appear before you on this impressive ocoasion. However the circum stances by which we are surrounded may sadden our hearts, it is cheering to one like myself, who has been buffeted by the varying winds of fortune, to come hack to his old stamping ground and be welcomed by snoh a demonstration as this, f Ap plause], The spot whereon I stand is filled with peculiarly pleasant associations to me. In this very neighborhood I began life as a printer boy, and within the circumference of five or, six hundred yards I published two newspapers, advocating cer tain definitive principles, up to the period of my re, moval to another sphere. Situated as I now am fa another sphere, I often look baok upon this old town with singularly agreeable feelings I remember the old court house, which seems, at least to my eyes, to have been removed by some rode and wan ton sacrilege from the spot where it so long stood I remember the old signs which used to look down upon me from this Centre Square. I remember the men who are gone —names honorable, names never to be forgotten, napiea always to bo cherished. I remember, too, gentlemen, that on one ocoasion* fa April of 1856, in this very place, and probably from this very stand, I participated fa the reception of a distinguished citizen who came baok from a foreign land, bearing, as we supposed in his hand, the olive branch that was to still the troubled wa ters, and make us all peaceful and united. Strange to say, you, my venerablefriend [Dr. Mublenbarg], also presided on that interesting occasion, and headed a vast throng of people who weldomed this .statesman back to his own home, indulging with them the hope that he wonld.be the saviour of. his country. Your praenee, as chairman of this great meeting, to-day. is a suggestive oomment upon the manner in which this high expectation was disap pointed Remembering these thfagß, I also oall to mind how many of yon, now before me, pledged your selves to hiscause, stood by him -through the suc ceeding controversy, (tided to elevate him to the Presidency, looked with pride upon, the commence ment of his Presidential career, and rated content fa his integrity and his patriotism. These recollec tions are pertinent to tins occasion. JTheir revival certainly cannot offend any man who is the friend of his country. And I do not believe fa that philosophy which restrains the utterance of essen tial-truth in a dark and dismal hdiir like this, lest it may give offence to some tender gentleman who hesitates whether he shall stand by the flag of the stars and stripes or by the flag of the'ratUesnake and tlm scorpion. [Hear, hear, and cheers j Ho w the distinguished gentleman, to whom I have al luded as being thus honored and thus elected, car ried out the pledges he made to the people ot the United States, end confirmed the . expectations en tertained fa regard to him, you yoursaif, Dr. Muh . lenburg, bave fearlessly'stated fa your opening ad dress. The page that records it is now being writ, ten with the heart’s blood of some of his own neigh bors and friends. [Hear, hear ] ’ Gentlemen, the occasion that .has called you here to-day is to con tribute of your pecuniary and physi cal wealth to the.maintenance ©f the Union and the protection of the Republic, and I- propose, fa the few words I shall say, to devote myself to the object of securing unity among aii the peopleof the free States "to those ends. Our trouble is not that we have not a good cause; not that we have not a gallant armynot that the wishes of all pa triotic men are not with ns; but that, with all these advantages, we conceive we can go on discussing the trarions issues involved, embarrassing, criticising, and interrupting the operations of our constitutional leaders, precisely as if we were in the midst of a profound peace. And many honest men fall into this blunder, without thinking that they are being misled from a high public and conscientious duty by partisans, who desire to create a division among thepeople of the free States, in order to bring aboufr a disgraceful peace, and reinstate to power the men who are now fighting against the Federal Glow In dent. [Cries of “ That’s it.” J If; the veil that conceals the. secrets of every household could be lifted, Mr.Presidenfc, we should find .that one lesson of life, frequently taught to ourselves, has as frequently been impressed fa fasting characters upon other hearth. Differences between brothers and sisters,- between wives and husbands;-Between' parents and children—differ ences that have run like a bitter stream through many years, are oheoked and closed forever, when the Angel of Death passes over the stricken thresh old. As the long-alienated kindred meet at the bedside of the dying father, mother, brother, or sister, and behold the tranquil, spirit preparing to wing its way to the throne of God, that spirit often implores, with dying accents, that peace may de scend upon the divided circle; may rolight the fires of love on the chilled hearthstone, and warm thebosoms too long estranged. Rarelyis this inno vation faeffeetoall The tears shed for the parting sonl mingle with those that reconcile the separated living, and the-family, Umg lacerated by its own strifes, joins hands in token of perpetual affeetioh over the bed of death. Mr. President our country "s not dead, nor, let ns hope, dying: hat she urtted like a martyr to-a stake, and ib surrounded by a wild and many weaponed throng. -- There is a shade of grief upon her brow: her sufferings are groat, for her wounds are many, ohe sees with agonv that those who . .plunge the dagger into her side and try to light tbe- Sfaggot at her foot are her own children—childreu she has nursed and nourished at her own generous breast, and, m imitation of Him-who bled upon the orem eighteen hundred- and sixty-two years ago, she exshnms, through' all her acts and signs, “ Father, forgive them,- fbr they know not what ibjgr db." Turning from these degenerate children, she appeals teas. She tells oe-that her reliance now is upon those.who have been always-loyaland true; who.have returned her bounties-and; blessings with a constant gratitude, and hare-rewarded her trials and* toils for them by spreading before her eyes the triumphs of their genius and the trophies of theirin dustry. [Applause ] But, as she calls ue to the rescue, she bids us, first of all, be at peace with each other. Metbihks Phear her divine accents- new! “ Obe dient you-have- been tome, imy children; yon have made yourselves a wonder among the-nations; you "have Builded a government unparalleled upou earth, but you-have net been united! among your selves; you- are not united now; ©h ! let your bleeding country, yonr mother and your friend, your guardian and yonr stay—let yonr country, fa this her darkest hour and her direst strait, implore you to cease all dissensions, to seal up- forever the pestilential fountains of parky, and to move fa serried array to her defence. Thera is only one other power, sir, that can- make a more irresistible appeal —that, power* whieh Bpeaks fa thunders from the skies. Shall we, then, be deaf -to the -voice of our country, when we fee! that that country is almost commissioned to- speak the voice of God himself? ‘ [Cheers.]! Sir, I plead tor the unity of the free peopleof the free States, Great Heavens! why should they not be consolidated into one vast, overpowering mass?' lioobat the rebellions South ! 'The atrocious crimes; and the inhuman objects of the conspirators, so far from creating divisions among them, have produced a unity, not a unity of conscience, but a unity of organized and savage fanaticism. They seem to Be inspired by the demon desperation, which made Macbeth exclaim: , *• I am in blood >. Stepped in so far, that should X w*do no more Beturning ware as tedious as go o’er. 3 ’ These bad men fight against a good Govern ment asif i-i had not been their beat and most con stant benefactor. They are driven upon, oar bayonets in drunken and infuriated, thousands. Oor flag to them is the emblem of infamy, and our- Union a covenant of erime. From their hearts they have blotted the glorious memories-of the past. Every battle-field of the Revolution fills them with remorse. The tomb of every patriot is. a monument of reproach. 1 The effigies of Wash ington, and Jackson, and' Jefferson almost speak through their roarWe lips in rebuke of their sacri lege. And .yet, • Mr.; President, these people are muted. Behold, sir, what a heritage wo are4ghpng ; for!' No people ever'had such a' cause. Not the myriads who went forth centuries ago to recover the Holy Sepulchre—not the legions who® followed Ctesar, Alexander, and-Napoleon ‘ Never-never; sir, has such a creed and sneh a country appealed to .human hearts..-, [[Cheers ]; Mother, over the grave of your only son, who died of the malaria or the murderous bullet in the I swamps of the Chickahoniiny, as you weep. for the i loved and the list, do not your prayers ascend-for - the brave boys, he has Jeft behind-him?' Do.yogi t not feel that the stout men at home should, go forth f to succorthem ? And doeg.not your noble woman’s f heart swell with indignation. attheflsight of party quarrels around your own threshold ?- Father, whose gallant lads have gone: forth, to. the. field, tell me how you regard the spirit of discord jn the free-Statesl Is it not-an insult to you, and an insult to them? When you are told that safe and prosperous men shall hot pay the tax that is to support the soldiers of the Republic, that the pw>\, perty of the traitors shall not be seized and used to sustain! the army, that their farms and persons shall he protected by Union bayonets, that the .stout arms of the Southern negroes shall not be'invetted to save your own sons front the dreadful work of the camp, the trenoh, and the fort; and,abdye,aU, ; that sordid sympathisers with this bloody treason shall he permitted to revel in luxuryuuder the : cegis of a Government they are'seeking to destroy, do you Dot feel that the day ot vengeance must oome to all who, in this dread-crisis; remain iodif-, ferent te their oountry’s sufferings, and refuse to respond to their country’s call? [Great cheering ] Man of toil, —mechanic,—laborer hear me ! . Shall this great, free people bo broken up and de- : stroyed, only to gratify your natural enemies—to. satiate the ambition of those who denounce you a& an inferior class? The world has its aristocracies, but none so base and. baleful as the aristocracy of Secession. Its soul and body are/compounded of hatred and contempt for Northern industry and toil, Born of slavery—resting upon slavery—liv ing upon it, —in luxury, laiiness and ease, the race thus pampered has become a race of tyrants, re- f aiding you as its foes, and elutehing to its em rsee as natural allies, the despots of the did world. [Cheers.] There is not atraitor in the South to-day who does not believe, or has not said, that the ulti mate design of this great oonspiracy is to establish upon ihese shores a monarchy, or, failing ia that, to drsgtheßepubUcto a dishonored grave; and either result is your degradation. Fenners of Pennsylvania, a word with you I Come with us and peneot the work of popular uni ty! Happy in your quiet homes, blessed in the midst of abundant harvests, heretofore more inde pendent than any other clam, do not be deluded by »b6hope . ~*j “ That trenching war wIU not channel your fields, Nor bruise jour flowerets with the' armed hoot of ho - .- tile pores;” ' . Unlets, indeed, now as I speak anil as you hear, : you-send your sons to hold back the invader. If re bellion is not crushed by Northern concentration and courage our borders.will soon be baptised in blood; the fairest of cup valleys will shake under the thunderous tread of mighty squadrons. Now •bat your craps age gathered - in, your barns filled _ to bars ting,—your broad acres shorn of bounteous ; burdens, —now let your young Dien advance to - gather glorious laurels, on Othor fields, aqd to crowd the national arohives with the names, of other heroes. In the olden titoe, when the foreigu foe sent his myrmidons among uSj the plough was left standing in the far 'row'; the siokiernsted among the ripening theatres, and the bnsbandman flew to battle to follow the train ; of wHUeiy, and te exchangejthe reaping hs»k for &e sword- 0! rouse ye, then, tillers of thii golden | soil, and swear by the memory of Putnam, and Morgan, and Wayne, the farme/heroesof the glo- I riousjptst, that you will preserve and defend the ; legacies they have bequeathed to you. [“ We will j go,” and great cheers ] I Men of wealth, will you hold back ? Every dol f lar of your money has been accumulated under the i fostering care of that good Government, whose life !is now at stake. Yon have prospered beyond ex ample. Yon have been fortunate as others have been fortunate. What value wonld attach to your heaps of gold if the Republic. were gone ? In that hoar your houses, your bonds, and hidden stores would pass away, as the clouds before the storm, or the mists before the sun. Come forth, 0 Dives, and help your country! Appear, 0 Midas, with yonr shining tributes; for, of all youwfavestmeuts, none have rewarded you so, much* or returned such solid premiums, as will that speculation nhioh proves vow trust In, and gratitude for, the Govern ment which has protected you. I now address the politicians—the leaders of par ties—the controllers of Conventions—the creators of Presidents and Governors You have one Divini ty that you-worship—the Divinity of Publio Opin ion-. Easily swayed and moulded fa peace, it is eagle-eyefl, keen-scented,, and jealous fa time of ( war. The ordinary tricks of the partisan trill not pass ourrent how. It is fa an Inquiring and suspi cions mood. It seeks to know for itself—to weigh every assertion in the scales of a moat exacting judgment; Deceived on former occasions, it remem bers the adage, “Cheated once, it is my ene my’s fault, but cheated a second time, the fault is mine,” Whatever may be said of the fickleness of publio opinion, in one thing it has always been steady and unchangeable— and ibat is in love of country. Publio opinion has sometimes been compared to a great ocean tossed by contrary winds and torn by many currents. Faction may disturb it—unisrepresentations of mea sures and men may oonyulse it, But, beware, gen tlemen politicians, of the other sea that rolls be neath the tempeßt—the' tranquil, deep, and eternal flood that finds its- source fa every loyal heart—love of country and devotion to the Ameri can Union. [Cheers.] And-if : ever this emotion existed before it exists now. If, ambitious men desire pl&ce or promotion, lot thorn carefully consult the auguries before they offend their chosen idol. [Cheers ] I would hotfa this presence revive party names* but I will appeal to the politicians to come forward.and assist in combining and consoli dating .tnq, people fa favor of the war. Is there. before me one who was- a Breckinridge Democrat two years ago? To him' do I address myself. Youf candidate has gone into the rebellion; but many; who acted with you are now leading the 1 bests in the army and firing the pnbiio heart in civil life—standing like heroes ,by. the flag, and denouncing every man who .dares to be .indif ferent to‘the cause .of the country and to sympathize’'with the traitors. Let me name in this connection Governor Dickinson, of New York* Andrew Johnson, the noble Governor of Tennessee, the soldier-statesman Gen. Benjamin F- Butler, and fa our own State, snob men as ffm, With ins and Wilson MeCandiess., [Cheers ]. They Show theirsense of the error of 1861) by acts of gal lantry and patriotism that cannot fail to bo felt by all the honest men who, 00-operated with them fa the Presidential campaign.' But, oh! gentlemen, those of you in this quarter who are to-day fol lowing the lead of a oertafa “ O’. P. F.”—[laugh ter]—as indicated ‘fa oertafa of his newspaper organs hereabouts* should look well at the same time to the lessons that are taught to you by the Breekinridge-Democrats, Butler and Johnson. If these men have.one feeling of hatred and hostility more bitter than that they entertain against the traitors in arms, it is for those men in the loyal States who'diire to slay hers and secretly aid and sympathize; with the foes of our glorious coun try.' [Cheers] Is theTe a Douglas Democrat before me? He cannot be one to ,aid fa dividing the people fa this dark and trying hour:’ Such tmfln would forget his own father and stan er the mother that bore-him. His great leader sleeps ill holy and unforeotten solitude near the metropolis of Illinois. In life the embodiment of high principle, enlightened progress, and daring purpose he rail od to bis standard a mighty army of believers and devotees. The highest type, of a knightly gentleman, be was the best ideal of an und mted patriot He died early after leav ing behind-bim afame'that wiil endure aS long as the great lake that rolls by its busy and populous shores; and with hie last wordshe uttered truths and .warnings that ' should stir the scute of all his countrymen.- and should, confound the men with shame who. m their blind party hatred, hold the Republicans, responsible for the war. and thus relieve the murderers of our country a liberties of the damning gunt of having conrmenzed and con tinued it. i oaunot avoid, as well to awaken the, Douglas Democrat to his duty, as to shamo those whosympath sewithtra tors oall ng our attention to these familiar farewell wordeof the lamented Douglas: . “ The election of Mr Lincoln is a more pretest The. pi (seat Secession movement is the result of an enormous conspiracy formed more than a year stnrß—formed by leaders in the Southern Confederacy more than twelve months ago. . They uss tber slavery, question'as a means 10 aid the acoqmplishment.of theirends. Thsydesired the election of-pNoi thorn candidate, by a sectional Tote, in order to sbbW that the two sections cannot five to gether. Wben tbe history ofthe two years feoarthe Lee compton question down to ihe Presidenttal election abaU be written, it will be shown that the scheme was delibe rately made to break up tbia Union. w They deanfe&a No, thorn Bepnbhoan to be elected by 'a purety-Ncrthorn vote, and then assign tbis fast as » reason why the eections cannot lire together. X? che Disunion candidate m the late Presidential contest had canted the umted South, their scheme was, the Northern .candidate successful, to seize the Capitol last spring, and: by a united Bentb and,divided. Hortb, hold it. Their scheme was defeated, in the defeat of the Disunion can didate in several of ihe Southern States “But ibis is notime for a detail of .causes. The con spiracy is now known; armies have- been raised, war is le vied to accomplish it. There are only two sides to the question. Every man must be for the foiled States, or against it. There can be no neutrale-fa this war; only gatrioia or traitors/’’ [Cheer after cheer.] Can Douglas Democrats require other induce ments to duty ? Need I tell them that all the men who sustained his eourse in 1860, with some disore ditable exceptions, are now the uncompromising, and unquestioning friends of the war—that they are trusted by the President and his Cabinet, and that they are as eloquent in the council as they are intrepid in the field? Were l Stephen A. Douglas living this day—and I speak astone who knew his inmost thoughts on this great question—he would be among the foremost ehampions of the whole policy of Mr. Lincoln's Administration. [Applause.] We should hear from him no criticism upon our public agents,, who l have ho! interest save to prose cute the war vigorously; no demands for leniency to the traitors;; no lamentations over-the- sus pension of the writ of habeas corpus; no advice to the people to resist enlistments and taxes, apd no advice to- his friends to unite with his foes toem barrass the Government of the country. As my eye rests upon Ibis vast throng; I recall many of the scenes of other days, when, in this luxuriant region, the adopted citizen grewfrom poverty to opulenoe in Ms efforts to improve the modern thoroughfares of our noble State. Coming from-a foreign land, he found, here a welcome and a home. Some of the descendants of this brave and brawny race are nodsnbt listening to me to-day. Many of them are away in the athletic eolumnsof the Union army,under Hambright, and Welsh, mid Mc- Carter. Maoy have died in the imminent deadly breach, and-seme have returned among you mutilated monnments'of unselfish intrepidity. Side by side with their. German- brothers, they have marchsd to victory or to death; the one shouting the war-song of SohiUer, the ether advancing to the exhilarating strains of Brin-Go-Bragh. There is something impressive , in this practical gratitude of the adopted citizen. How hideous the spectacle of an Irish or German, traitor V [Cheers.] If a native born recreant is entitled to infamy, what must be thought of him® who, havinggiown to wealth en the generous bosom of this country, should seek to take the life he was apesially sworn to defend ? Have you ever, fellow-country men, upon the signal evidence of the loyalty of our adopted citizens,.that there is not an Irish or a German generab in the rebel army ?-' [Great .ap plause,] What more significant protest could be ’ altered against the bloody ritual of treason ?' There tone Meagher, or,Shields, or Mulligan or Coreo- ' ran, or O'Brien—no Sigol, or Blanker, or Schura. under the flag of the rattlesnake and scorpion. - . Why is this?' It is because the traitors fear to trust, ohr.adopted citizens.in .the lead. - They drive the Germans and Irish at the point'df the bayonet into their ranks, but when they want leaders they select from their slave-drivers and aristocrats, who look upon labor with oontempt, and. hold their soldiers as we de our damb ,beasts, as so much-cat tle, to he driven, to be worked, vto be slaughtered. [“.True," and applanse.]; But-if tho oath; of the adopted citizen and , his .gratitude to his. adopted country Restrain him from, treading the hellish labyrinths of the rebellion, his nerves will be strong with a new resolve as. he casts his eye beyond the seas and; beholds the enemies of - freedom preparing to assist the slave murderers in them-war--upon, this -Government. I have, heard the intimation that the best pro eess to. bring about complete : unity: among' our' peep'® would Jbe the. intervention. o£ : the.fore%n : Fowass, and it -has-been whispered; that some of our adopted, citizens needed this incentive to ac- - tion- Sir, it is-impossible.to add.to. the justioepf the appeal of the Government to our' own people, sniiit would seem to be equally difpcult to add to tbs, infamy of the rebellion. But I can. readily coao; ive that wben the despotic designs 'of the tjaiiors are confirmed by the intrusion of the azmies of Great Britain or of France, or of both together, there will be a new rapturein the strife; a new motive to make it desperate and decisive, and a new opportunity for the development of onr natichalmaiihood. [Cheers ] Let us,be frank, Mr. President. The royalties of the old world are holding a carnival. The very last speech of Lord Palmerston, and the very lasfleader of the London Timis,' which arrived on Thursday, admonish us that tiiey are preparing to take a part ia the sfcrug , gle. Their fleets are hanging like clouds upon two of our frontiers, and toe English Premier is making “impressive and warning speeches" to- - the, volunteer -riflemen in, Hyde Park, 'This prospect must not discourage us, Mr. President. If we are to fight this great-battle against, do mestic slavery anil foreign despotism, why sq be.it! Wiih all our advantages, living as we now do upon dursslves; borrowing from each other, and in'dbbt only to each other, with a soMaa prolific as toe Gar- - den of Eden; may we not for a higher and a holier purpose emulate that seif-sacrificing spirit which - was exhibited by the French people in the most feirful period of their extraordinary history? When' they entered upon the work of reforming the abuses of eenturies. of corruption .and tyranny they found arrayed against them too sentiment of the European world, toe prejudices of an Eng lish king, and toe keen, unsordpulous intellect of the greatest of English Prime Ministers. They found an insurrection of the aristooraoy ia La Vendee—they found disaffection and treason among all classes. Rising to the sublimity of Spartan he roism, they crashed treason at' home, and, with bleeding feet snd famished forms, and no weapons but the pike, they resisted invasion and saved the honor .of their oonntry. The insurrection was, crushed—the o*d tyranny was destroyed—and the sword Of a Republican general, in a spirit of magni ficent revenge, punished thejperfldy of his foes with Marengo, Austerlitz, and Uim; [Shouts of ap plause.] _ ' . Thus, Mr President, this ruay become the war of the wor]d; and.if so, it may prove to,be to.toe enslaved nations of the eaTth what the earthquake, which nearly overthrew Lfeedamon, Was to the' Helots -of Sparta. Forvtois is inieed a inoral earthquake. It is historioaliy slated that many centuries ago an eartoquake, 'uhpreoedented in Its ■ vlolocofij occurrea ui 8pul&« TkV greater of its capital was overthrown, and it is said, probably with_ exaggeration, that only five houses escaped. This calamity did not cease suddenly as it _ came. Its concussions were repeated— it buried alike men and treasure—and one his torian states that noless than twenty thousand persons perished in the shock. In the midst of this fearful convulsion the slaves, whom the oruelty of Sparta had nursed inher bosom, resolved to seize the moment to execute their vengeance and consummate her destruction. Now was the mo ment when Sparta lay in ruins—now was the moment to realize their vengeance. From field to field, from village to village, the news of the earth quake became the watchword of revolt. The earthquake that levelled Sparta rent her chains. Nor did the shook create one chasm so dark and wide as that between the matter and the slave. It was as if the great mother herself had summoned her children to vindicate the long-abused, the all inalienable heritage derived from her, and the stir of the angry elements was but the announcement of a stern and solemn union between nature and the oppressed. Mr. President, the fettered tribes of mankind may hail the great moral earthquake in this country as the signal opportunity for their do liversaoe. And the attdbpi of Earopean despots to destroy this Government may end In their own overthrow, and in the disfranchisement of their own oppressed and down-trodden millions, rlmmense applause] L At the conclusion of this speech. Colonel Forney was greeted with nine cheers. Before retiring from the stand a note was handed to him, which lie thus ajluded to:. A note has just been presented to me, which I will refer to, at, the risk of speaking after having finished a speech. It is a tribute to the patriot daughters of your glorious old oily and county. [A voice—Three cheers for the patriot daughters of Lancaster.] The ■windows of the houses surrounding the square were crowded with fair ladies, smiling down upon the crowd, and the oheersthat rose in re sponse'to the call fully shewed'that the patriot daughters of Lancaster were appreciated by her gallant sons. . . [Colonel Forney—l intended.to pay them an ex tended compliment, hut the cheers you have given are so much better than anything I could say, teat' I rest here. [Laughter and applause.] - SPEECH -OF MOHTON M’SUCHAEL, ESQ. - Mr. MoMichael was next’ introduced to the meet ing. and was cordially received. He said: I came here to-day, my friends, in the hope of addressing you, but|since Ijhave reached your town, what with the heat, of the weather and previous predisposing erases,-I find myself so unwell that I shall be obliged in a large measure to forego my pur pose. But being here, and standingin the presence of the men of Lancaster, whom I have so often had the honor and pleasure of addressing, no sickness, no bodily infirmity, while I have a particle of voice left, shall prevent me from saying how glad f am to see yon here upon such an occasion, [applause,] how I rejoice in the patriotism that has assembled yon together, and how I pray, with my whole soul, with all my heart and all my mind, and all my strength, that the spirit which animates yon hero will carry snoh of yon as can go Into the battle fields of the country, and will prompt those who caimot go to do ail in their power to aid ns in this oar hour of extremest peril. [Cheers.] For, my friends, painful as it is to say it, the oonntry is in peril. [A voice. “ Take off your coat!”] Mr, McMichsel. I have been in the habit of taking off my coat, hut never, of turning it, how ever. [Laughter, j. lam afraid to take it off now, bnt shall not wonder if if melts off before long. [Renewed laughter.] Much as I should like to smile with you and laugh with you, as I have many times done on other occasipns, it is impossible, at this hour, when, as I have said, our country is in danger. We have been deceiving ourselves, my friends. Wo have been deluding ourselves with fond expectations. We have been flattering our selves that we are strong beyond the possibility of' any power on earth interfering with ns. We have been flattering ourselves with the belief that it Wa3 only necessary for us to stretch forth our arm to eruEh ■ out the great rebellion we have met here, to deplore and denounce; and we find ourselves now in such a position that if you,' thei strong-limbed, stout-hearted men of the coun try, do not come to the rescue—yes, to the instant rescue—Sod above only knows , what may happen. But little more than a year ago, when this conspira cy was formed, Or rather when if first culminated in the attack, upon-Sumpter, the whole country was startled because 75.000 men were eslled for. We all believed that that number was more than ample to put down any insurrection that could ever grow-up within the borders of this Union. We found at the expiration of a little white how. widely we had been mistaken. Then 500,000 men were sent - into the - field, and.. .we thought that with - that number we would utterly destroy the ' conspiracy that had then assumed the shape of a Tast rebellion.' We know to-day that we have not succeeded in doing so. Shis conspiracy which hue ripened into a rebellion—this rebellion which has ripened into a war of stupendous, colossal pro portions—stands face to face With us, and' unless we crush it it will crush us. I tell you, men of Lancaster, and I tell you in all sincerity, that if the Government be not aided with ail the men it asks, with more indeed'than it has' yet asked, the day may not be distant when you, who-have up to this hour reposed in calm security, surrounded by .peace and happiness, may find, as my iriend, • Colonel Bbrney, has Just so well said, your own homes invaded, your own fields channeled by the hoofs of rebel' cavalry, and your fair and smiling . farms devastated by the reckless hordes which'fol low the baseness of Jfeff Davis. [Applause.] £ travelled, this morning, from Phiiadelphia with a gallant colonel of one of the Pennsylvania regi ments, freeh from the field at Harrison’s Landing, and he said, to Colonel Forney and myself, “ For God’s sake, gentlemen, .when yon address themeat ing at Lancaster to-day, do not hesitate to tell the truth. Bo not hesitate to say that, if there be not at least 600,000 men placed in the field before the first frost, Pennsylvania will undoubtedly bo in vaded !” and ■ I believe it. I believe that the foe, grown insolent by success, and strengthened by a resort to-all the arts which tyranny oan employ,., emboldened and furious beyond all measure,, will, unless prevented; be upon us, and, believing so, I coma here to-day, and, in despite of all bodily ail ments, I stand up now to say, that every man capa ble of bearing arms, who can leave his home, is benhd by every obligation of patriotism, by every obligation of duty, by every obligation he owes to his country, to his family, and to bis God, to place himself in the ranks or the American- soldiery. [Cheers.] Yes, yonng men, let not one of you go away from here without having formed the resolu tion that, if you can possibly do so, you wi lgo and join your brethren who have so manfully and nobly battled upto this period againstthe pestilence of the swamps and the swords of the enemy in Virginia. And older men, those of yoa who have sons, do not leave this place to-day until you have resolved that you-will urge those sons, by all the motives you oan addnee, to give their lives as others’ sons have given theirs, to the service of the country—a serrioe, as you have been well told, snch as no other oonntry and no other time ever afforded an opportunity to engage in. Just to think of it; my friends 1" When I came here to counsel with you, only two short yews ago, peace- reign ed throughout the bind, prosperity smiled in all our borders, content was everywhere, each man reposed under his own vine and fig tree, and had ample wherewith to feed and clothe, himself and all those dependent upon him.' How changed are things-now !: This land, selected by Almighty God above all other lands on the face of the earth, above, all other lands upon whieh the sun ever shone, as the favored reci pient of His bounties; this land, stretching over ah interminable continent, embracing within its limits all the varieties of climate and soil which supply all the varieties of agricultural and mineral produc tions ; this land, enjoying political institutions snch as, in no period of the world’s history, has ever be- • fore been.vonehsafed to a people ;;this land, thus • blessed, has been converted from the condition in which it was two years ago into- a scene of fratrici eai bloodshed, detestation, ruin, and, in msmy places,'despair. And by whom has all this been brought about ? I do not mean to go ihto any discussions here as to'remoter political causes. I haveiny own judgment about those, and at the .proper time and in the proper place Ido not heti tate freely to declare it;: but I have nothing to do • with that now. But by whom, I ask, baa this frightful result befo-e us beep immediately brought about ? . ,By' the Southern, rebels, who have; dragged the country into oivif war. By the desperate-traitors who areseekingto overthrow the best government, whioh the wisdom of man has .ever devised-., And yet we are sometimes told that' We must deal gra ciously with them. We are sometimes told that, as < erring brethren,, wo must win them back by acts of conciliation and tenderness. I am §ick of ail this cant. My very gorge rises at it. Yes, my fellow oitizens, it is this mistaken leniency ': it is this dis position "to make on our side a rose-water war, against the bloodiest modes of vengeance that hu man hatred had Conceived or human fury executed, that baa lead to.all our reverses. ;If w» do not now’ change our policy, we shall find that, not content with inviting the most.horrible evllsupon themselves, they will roll the tide back upon us. and come hero ■ upon the .hitherto., undeseorated soil of our own Pennsylvania, re-enact the scenes of desolation and death which have already marked their course in the States of the South: [Hear, bear.] My; fellow-eitizens r l find £am very rapidly her coming exhausted, for upon this subject f cannot speak without feeling my whole soul passing into my voioe. I cannot.Bpeak in that cool and eatable way that would enable me to pontinne as long as I> might wish, but my whole heart is in’, this oauge, and if I conld, by laying down my life at this nib-' ment, save my oonntry, I appeal to myMaker for the sincerity of my .purpose, when I say.l' would: cheerfully do it. [Tremendous applause ] lam almost too old to go to the war, but if it comes: to me, what I may do shall he done—yes, dohej even to the death. Being too old to go myself, I have sent two sons. (Cheers.] One of them has spent tbraemonthsin-fi Southern prison, and is ready to spend. Sizemore, or . his bCBt blood, in the cause that took, himthere. [Cheers J Two-thirds bf nil my male relatives ate engaged in the war. and the remainder, and I, my self, are ready to give ali we haze to the saryiop ofc the (Cheers] Will yon do less? Will yon, who owe so much' to it, ml now, at the mo menty ouroountry most needs jonraid ?■ Will yon, who hare derived snoh unspeakable advantages from your Ameiioan, citizenship,' whether native born or foreigner, will yon, I ask, now, in thishour' of peril, hesitate, in the performanhe of yoar dnty ;? I mistake yon, of Imneaster county, ifyouwill. I mistskethe men I have been acenstomed to meet here, if they are notapw prepared, in all ways, by all means, and at ailsacri&oes, to dotrheir whole, their absolute duty in this great ianoture. My friends, the Gtoyernmenthas called for three hundred thoussnd men. That number will be wholly insufficient, unless it is very speedily fur niebed, toa'oeomplishe ven the purpose for wbiohjit has been asked.. We have to deal with an enemy bred under almost tbesame insdtutions as oureelves,- men sharing in a large measnre the blood whioh flows, through our veins, men like onrselves brained in lie .perl ormanee of active duties, and we have proved' them to he ho mean or feeble foe. They have been enabled by their merciless system of conscription to All up .their armies.: While ours have-been daily .diminishing, they have kept up more than their full coinplement, and now have in the field nearly 800,'flOOltoen. " „ ■ ' ' . The three hnndred theusand. just called for by our Government yfill be berely sufficient to reprait our old jegimenta, irfiiah have been rapidly deoi mated 'by sickness: and hardships and slaughter, s .Whatever aid we-hah give in thißmatter.musV be given at once. It will not do for you to go homo TWO CENTS. and think over the matter day after dav —a ~ after week, and month after mas£? What vnn h? lieve ought to be done must be done at om/ now u the time your services are needed, and now to the time they must bb rendered to make them feobve. For myself, I am for using the whole power of the oonntry , every able-bodied man in it every dollar in its treasury, every dollar in the pockets of its citizens, to put down this rebellion if it be necessary. [Cheers], I would not oare to survive the day when am United States, which, for more than three quarters of a century, have been the cynosure of all nations; these United States, of which we have been accus tomed to boast, that in comparison all the re publics of antiquity, and all the republics of mo dern times shrank into insignifioanee, should be do minated by an oligarchy or slaveholders. Heaven Eant that I may be in my grave before that un ppy time comeß, if it ever shall come. And it never can come, and it never shall come, if yon and the other loyal men of the country are true to yourselves, [Cheers.] If I have spoken gloomily, my friends, it is be cause gloom overhangs ns, bnt I have not spoken despondmgly, because I feel no doubt in my heart Of too result, Let the present peril be what it 1 So® 1U the not far distant future indications B>°ri°M triumph, because I see you and the other loyal men of the country coming up to the rescue I know we shall triumph, because m your ■ good hearts and strong arms to the power, and with your aid we shall meet assured success. [Cheers ] There were, my friends, a number of topics to which I had purposed briefly to call your attention, but I find myself unable to do so. There is, how ever, one upon which' I must say a few words. Shun, as you would shun a pestilence, all semi traitors of the North. [Applause ] Shun the men who profess loyalty while they practise treason. Avoid them everywhere. Avoid them at the social board ; avoid them in the marts of business; avoid them in all public places; for so long as they are Permitted to exeroise the influence they now exer cise, just so long will this rebellion be fed and fat tened by Northern aid. [“That’s true” and cheers.] Yon must put down domestio foes before you can hope to put down the traitors in the South. I do not khopr if there are such men among you. 1 hope not. [Voices—“Yes, there are,” “We have them here. ”] lam sorry to hear you say so; but if you have them, and know them, every time they appear upon your streets, let the slow, un moving finger of scorn be pointed at them. [Cheers I Every .time they open their lips for the utterance of traitorous sentiments ball around you all the loyal citizens within reach, and, though you do 1 them no harm—be careful not to do that [laagh ter and applause]—-do not break the peace for in breaking a head you might break the peace—[renewed laughter]—join m one hearty, out spoken gush of contempt for them. [Cheers.] Little harm as you may think they do, and little harm as some of themselves may suppose they ac complish, I know, and all who have had opportu nities of observing the workings of this rebellion know, that to no ono source are we more indebted for the defeats and disasters we have met than to these Northern sympathizers who convey to their friends and associates in the South the knowledge of all we have done and all we intend to do. These men eat of our bread and drink of our onp,- and share the protection ol our Government, and yet they are ready to snatch the bread from our hand, and to dash the cup from our lip, and to break down the Government which upholds them by Its power. Of such as these,! intended to speak, but I have not strength. I oan only say, shun them, avoid them, despise them. Do not hurt them, or evilly entreat them; bat make them keep out of your way. [Cheers. A voioe, “That will not stop them ; we must have laws to do it.”] Mr. MoMichael—My friend says that will not stop them, that we must have laws to do it. We have laws, only let us execute them. We have the law of public opinion. We have the law of social intercourse. We have a law by which we can isolate a man In the midst of a neighborhood from all his fellows. We have that law by which we oan en circle him ronnd with such a hedge that no re speotable man will passthrough it-to take his hand. [Loud cheers.] We must apply such tews. Brand them; show the world who they are,'mid whenever they-appear, let them be shunned as you would shun a mad dog or a.raging fever. [A voioe, “ Four coal oil on them.” Laughter.] Mr. McMichaxi,- If it were hot enough it might have some effect upon them [laughter], but if my friend Intended to convey the idea that, the smell of the oil would annoy them, I rather think • he would find them used to worse'smells than tha t [Great laughter.] , ; Let me, after this desultory talk, say a word in conclusion.- I have come up here for the purpose of solemnly urging upon you the performance of your duty in this crisis. _ I have, as I have already said, full confidence in the final result, and it is because I have confidence in the' ability and determination of my fellow-citizens to per form their dniy to their country. The old spirit that broke out so gallantly after the fall of Sumpter is beginning to rovive. From all points, we are receiving daily and hourly indi cations that the great heart of the people is once more being stlrred. Everywhere the masses are in motion, and before long there wilt be an army with banners ready to go down and take its place beside our brethren who have fought so gallantly, struggled so nobly, and suffered so uncomplainingly, aeoom pliebing triumphs greater thou the triumphs of arms m the patriotism and devotion they have exhibited. [ Great cheering.] Soon we will send troops to reinforce them, and to march along with them to assured and certain vic tory. [Cheers ] Bichmond will be ours, f“lt begins te look that way,” and tremendous sneer ing,] and along with Bichmond all that band of de tested traitors who have brought this trouble upon us. And God send that when we get them that, in- , stead of doing as wehave been doing, instead of re- ’ cognizing them as kinsfolk and brothers, we shall treat them as foul and infamous traitors, [applause,] and bang them as high as Human. [“That’s the talk,” and a storm ofapplanse. j We must cease making this war upon peace prin ciples. We mast learn tiiat we arff in a fight re quiring all onr energies; a fight, in the language of your resolutions, not only justifying, but de manding, that whatever you eau do, within the rules of legitimate warfare, to annoy, harass, and destroy the enemy, must be done. We must no longer have any squeamish delicacy about employ ing black labor. ,Our gallant men must cease making ditches and building fortifications when we have thousands of contrabands ready to do such service. [Cheers. J We must ask no permission frem their rebel masters, but employ them, and as a reward give them their freedom. [Cheers.] My friends, I have never been ah Abolitionist, [“ sound and , applause,] but lam not afraid of that name. The time has gone by in which that bugbear can any longer be nsed to frighten grown •up men. [Laughter and applause.] It does not alarm these, bright-eyed young women who- are now smiliEg upon us, though it may scare a cer tain elderly lady in breeches who to living out an inglorious old age some- three or four miles from this town, [great laughter,], hut it cannot scare men who know they have the right to think and act for themselves, who feel that the defence of a great, country has been con fided to them, [applause,] and that upon the manner in which they deport. them selves in this great crisis will perhaps depend the whotefnture ofhnman liberty here and throughout ■ the world- .[Cheers]. Such men wiii use the ne groes just as the negroes can be of the most service, and will not oare who chooses to call them Aboli tionists. . [Cheers.] , A voice, Beep them at work. . Mr- MoMlohael— Yes, we*wiil keep them at work at whatever they oan do-to leteen our labors and to promote our interests. [Cheers]. We will use them, having regard always to humanity—for. God forbid-that I should here insinuate that we will do anything ineonsistent'with humanity—wo will use them in whatever way they can best promote the sucoess of the cause of this great Union and pat down this unholy rebellion. [Cheers. ] I read te one of the papers, this morning, an ad dress to ;jthe people: of Pennsylvania,: ■ occupying some three or four columns of the paper in which. I found it> in which there* was a labored argument to prove that this great'war in which we are how engagedjwas brought about by the Abolitionists. No harm, it argued, bad ever been done by the delicate gentlemen : of the South. They had never wronged tthe. Nprtb; . they had never uttered a : syljable m derogation : of .our. rights;, they had neves encroached upon our privileges; they had 'never asked-that we should' bow down'before them :and eoneent t© bo kicked and cuffed ■ for thoir ; fleaahre. Oh, no; they had been the most patient, :he most enduring, and the most forbearing of all .men; but:we,-the people of the North, char, acterized in. this address under the general term of “ Abolitionists,” we had done all this mischief. : [Laughter.]]' We had broughfc upon our selves all these evils,; We were the authors of our own woes. And what think you was the remedy proposed to end this way ?: That we should blot out the Abolitionists—that %. we,, of the North, should blot-jont ourselves. [Laughter ] For, my' friends, whatever our opinions may have been on the question of slavery in’the past, this term Aboli tionist to now" applied -to every loyal man of the ■ North. [‘-‘.True.”]: I say that the time has’gone by .when any man who to.aman, who to not afraid to look his fellow mail in the eye as I now look’iny venerable friend Dr. Muhlenberg, will shrink from! •being called an he shrinks back to . aima hlowat the man whoso pailed hlm. [Cheers.] . I tell yon the tiniefor duly-dallying and shiliy ' shdUying has gone by. “The time has come when' yog have got to nerve yourself to fight like men engaged in a struggle for life or death. It to a struggle whether slave labor os-free labor shall pre dominate; whether these great-United States shall :be split up into contending factions, or., whether our-Government shill be one great, glorious, free ‘and indivisible Republic ; anrl in such a struggle we ought all that we «n;to maintain, the Go vernment, and uphold that Constitution whioh to 80 rouoh vaunted by those who would gladly see it troddpn under toot, in osier that the South may .triumph oyer us. To maintain the Union, our .prideahd bosk, we must do all ws oan, events beibg called Abolitionists. [Laughter and on plahse.V, But no matter what we are edited, no matter by what epithets they reek to deter us, , from; enr duty, let ua pash this great cause forward. Ifcmust move forward. Ittonot in the book e£ fate that this great revolution shall stop half way. The hand ol destiny to moving it, and no man can turn it aside. [Cheers ( The idmighty sitting ap therein the great heavens hasdeoreecl in .the ptenitnde of.his wisdom what shall be the final result.; I cannot peer into bte seerets. I have no prophet ken; bnt this Ido know, that I, sod , Syery loyal man, will accept the result, let that re sult he what it mayr-dye,’even though, it Siould be the mancipations slavery. [Three cheers.]: Mr. MeHiohael liras followed by the fiev .A. J. Cookman, who,made a most eloquent speech. The Crowded statd of our eoiumns will us to 1 give it to-day,but we willprint it in. full to-morrow. Dr. Sohaff made a stirring speech In the German 1 language, and after abort patrigAie speeches from the Bey: B. W. Conrad and O v * Diokey v lbqi,tlie meeting adjourned,. , , •,,, .™* 11 . • The feeljngs aroused by -ttio speeches earned many h? tte recruiting offices, and even the 1 Begulars, who do not offer the alluring, bounty, so attractive to the person about to enlist, were sue ceßKulm takißg YecruTtg. CaptaraPbilip R- Foy ney, of the Regular Infantry, who-ls rearuit in the city, 'obttined twelve men, * mdsfgrati tJVß tes^t; ajidvif the volunteers were sudeessfhl proportion, "many ihundreds mast haveentered *h« asrvloe-before’ and £ good day’f work have beep dope, THE WAR PRESS, (PUBLISHED WEEKLY.) Thu Was Punas will be sent to subscribers by mail (per annum in advance) *t.„ M Three Copies « “ .V" s m <> “ « ; IH ™ m L T wUI charged at the some rate-tens: ToTZZZ ‘°“ 8245 60 cople * 001,1 »« J ' on 4 Tot a Club of Twentr-one - . S 0” setter-rip or the dub. WBT Postmasters are reuueMedto sot a> ■ Thu War Pesss. m W Anvertieements inserted at the usual raten m. Uses oozkstitixte b BQu&re. ** WAR MEETING IN ST. LOUIS. Speech of Colonel F. P. Biair. A. meeting to stimulate enlistments waa held is St, I*onis on Monday evening last. Colonel Frank P. Blair delivered the following speech, which we find reported in th Missouri Democrat: a«s^te.. I w' 01 ' mEirS: I* gives me unfeigned pleasure to acclamfSi^ 6 / 011 ,n tiie ward, in response to yonr “ dolto man’»“r ““prison to the feeble cry for the to-nifiht tn Fremont ] f. am not here ro a r B i™dcttr?to“ r t hDt to bw b! “ [«*««■► amidst which Colonel Blfl r r e “™!;„S ri 1 M l " J, htaont! to-night to speak Of ] 1 0111 not he , r ® has shed his Mood on the bat'tiJ**?! 011 ]’ bnt of om wbo of Colonel Caveudcr'yoiir ufi’^' 1 ' lam bere '° oue of the friends ume «,eat y r °? r friMd ’ and stained field S^° f « Ur V. what will a&y ot ns? [Loud cheers.] VLy friends, thoaa nf t o ,oef6n d .tlle country, defend it under the riJSS ”“™> stainless, as long as it shall ba umiltrODhalOmjikr- [Cheers.] e,Swl a ° d JSl < y- eltl! ‘ ellB . ! . Seme remarks have been ftaSelSdv a 0 regard to onr State administration. laid that it was notin harmony with the im7rQ^TOo-?„ t -'y as H I! i !,on ' 1 am m>t here to defend the Governor s acta. Ido net care to dig up the part ■ f “sut him in it; letus help to dimdetee sheep from the goats, so that we can exwl the latter from our State. [Applause ] w ““ Let us drive out every mother’e son of them; nnd when they are driven ont,letns drive them out of the next State, till they are driven into the Gulf of Mexico I go tor the Union SB it was: and I say to yon, that if any policy will bring this about, will give us peace and our former boundaries, such a policy must command the an provH of every man who cherishes his country. [Loud and prolonged, applause.] IT anything lean aayordo will hasten the organization of these forces, [ am hero to no m I have never had a doubt as to what would be the c ™ , ™t 1 kave known from the find that tba .of PU? and that after it had sup pressed thisrebelUon it would continue its career of nn rCrt«aof “What about slavery™] Why, my_friendß, I have given yon my views on the daTery ’i 11 , st - Lonis more than a hundred times, and you ought to know them by this time. rEe newedcries of “ Tell ns your views of slavery A | How tie?’ 1 °h2- 6 plea |? rs , of rearing to this ques tion. I don’t beheve Frank Blair has the re«n !«ri° I 1 clty ? f , lodging his views on any snb ject. T say, my opinion os slavery tithe same as it ever has been, with the single exception, that it is new devil cvor painted it before. [Cheers.] The gentleman says he has been a Free-soiler fifteen years. Doe, ho know how far Frank Blair date, back? I state what is known as “ feet by every raiizen of St Louis, that I made the first Free-soil speech In St. Louis from the rotondo of the court house. But I have been led into egotio m. Ido not care to epeak of mj self—l come to appeal to the peo ple to rallF around onr flag that It may never more see disaster. When ve see navies idukiog and our armies perishing, I come to the people to apply for new eacrii flees; It Is lamentable that we should be met hr personal reminiscences. [Cheers] Co!ez.el Blair dosed by announcing himself a candi ®?at Ck>pgressional district, and by appeal the election of next fall For the test of hia popu- Commencement at Vale, On Thursday the exercises of commencement wfek at Tale College dosed, with the find addressee of the grada- B«D8 does. Tho week began with the Baccalaureate eennon on Sunday last, by President Wooleey. Hie text waa Prev. xix„ 21, “There are many devices in a man’s b .l ar i ! ,, M l? rtheless > the c0,n186! of the lord, that shall stand.” The sermon was . worthy both of the preacher and the occasion, and made a deep impression on those who heard it. Subjoined is a copy of the obitt a. cord for the past year: Sl L_ NAMB ASD AGE, CLASS. SAKSt ASD AQX. 1828 Levi H. Goddard, 53. 1825 John N. Lewis, 53. 1828 Isaac W Stuart, 52, 1831 James H. Adsms, 50. 1831 John A. Tottes, 49. }ff i Wynkoop, 50. 1832 John J. A. Ebbets, 48. 1833 J as. X. Sherman, 47. 1838 Thos W. Williams, 51. 1839 Daniel Br.-oka 48 1840 John B, Alley. 41. 1841 Wm. H. Porter, 43 1842 Win. S. Hneginv, 40. 1842 Jas. M. BandalL 44. 1843 Fred’k M. Latbrop, 38. 1844 Arcbelaua Wilson, 44. 1846 Jeff. F. Jackson, 40. 1847 Henry 0 Kutz, 34. 1848 Fred’k.Packard, 34. 1848 John B. Watrons, 35. 1849 Hamilton Ooupsr, 33. 1850 Sam’l H. Edwards, SO. 1851 Jas. M. Spencer, 32. 1852 Myron O. Alien, 30. 18 i 2 Dudley Poet, 3L 1855 James McQose, 36- 1856 N Bariholonaew, 26. 1857 Albert W. Drake, 27. 1859 Edmond B. Allis, 25. 1794 The*. a Williams, M 1795 Nathin iel Holky.- 1795 David fcnriih, 94. ' 1796 Wm H Jones,63. 1797 Beth P Staples* 85 * 1799 Eli Ives, 32. 1801 Joseph TromhulL 78. 1802 John Hough, 77. 1802 Erasing Bcranton,B4. 1808 Wm. 8. Barites, 78. 1808 Hittott Mitchell, 77. 1806 Sam’l H. Devotion, 79. 1606 Tbos.G. Waterman, 74, 2807 Abm.'D. Baldwin, 74 1807 Dovid.E. Dixon, 78. 1808 Wnuvßiljimap, 73. 180875 280fJ*aPE£a&e&s».7& 1810 1812 72. 1813 Steph^Tt)Water, 68. 18J4 John F/ffoyt, 68. 1814 James Potter, 68. 1814 SathT 8. Wheaton, 70. 1815 John 8. Bodgere, 64. 1822. Jaatß W. Arisbie, 63. 1822 I thenar Pfllehury, 70. 1824 Fred*k J. Jodaon, 58. 2826 Wm. W. Dwight, 54. 1826 Wm. A. Earned, 55. BOKORARY Edward G. Herrick. 51. Total number.. _ Tbe Cmcte ad CUrum was delivered, on Tuesday. by Bev ? Mr. Atkinson, of Westport, Conn. At the business meettog of the Phi. Beta. Kappa Society, Francis Lieber. bk D., was elected orator for the ensuing year: sub stitute, Bev. Ed ward "Beecher, D D.: poet, Eev. A. L, Stone, D. D , of Boston. The Hon. Marshall S. Bid well, of New Tork, and Bev. Walter dark, of Buffalo, were made honorary members of the society. The-Alumni met at nine o’clock on Thursday morning, rad, as the orator, Wm, H. Xvarts, was absent, tberw was no oration. Ex-Governor Hoppin presided. Eula gies were pronounced by Professor Thacher on the lata treasurer, Mr. Edward C. Herrick, and on Professor Lamed by Professor Porter. Judge Ellsworth, ex-Go vern or of Connecticut, offered a resolution calling upon the Government to use every means consistent with civi lized warfare to put down this mist stupendous, wicked add ruinous rebellion known in the history of toe world Com. Foote, being called for, spoke earnestly in favor of toe regulation. Dr. Edwin Beecher also spoke for the resolution, which afterwards unanimously passed. . The anniversary exercfees of the Vironlan Society took place on Wednesday afternoon, in their haH. Bev. Mr. Bobbins, of Philadelphia, and Bev. Dr. Jackson, presi dent of Hobart College, were made honorary members. The Brothers in Unity met at the same hour. Their name was well sustained in toe cordial and delightful exercises which tock place. Ex-Governor Hoppin pre sided. A great number of speeches were made, and some on the present times, were received with unbounded ap plause. That of Cyrus Northrop, editor of the Palla* dittm* it was said by Governor Hoppin, would be worth’ ten thousand men if it were delivered outside the college wall. Small Cftaage. [From the Sew Tork lodependeat J The quantity of paper money thrown npon the com- working its imrritable effect of raimog the price ©f_ specie. There is no power on earth that can control this, particularly in toe case of gold, which is wanted for exportation, and which must therefore assume its equal value in the markets of the world. But our sliver small coin is net property subject to this universal law, because it has bef s made of lees intrinsic value than its face, on purpose to prevent this liability to exportation. No person buys it for exportation so long as there is gold to be bad. The apparent scarcity iB therefore owing to its being bearded, to paDfc, to the unjust refusal of toe banks to pay it ou« r to the machinations- of petty sharp era, who make a profit ou& of toe public distress, and therefore do all in their power to keep up the panic. The remedy is not simple, and era be only partial, but .toe severity of the evil can be.greatly mitigated by a general understanding and a moderate-share of public spuit among the intelligent portions ef tbe cozmnnnity. The first, thing to be done Is that every such person should feel it a matter of duty to keep the small change a moving. A little coin will go a great way if it is kept in brisk circulation. But if a great man? people hold on to what they get, and keep it as long asthey cm, a small sum in each man’s pocket will absorb toe whole. There must be an understanding among tradesmen and• others, who take in a good deal of change, .that they will pay it out in tbeenurseof business juet aa freely as they take it In, and wilhnot sell it unless they get more than they fairly need to use. The fury companies, the city railroads, and other like • establifchmeEts must rescind their rules prohibiting the - paying out of change by their employees, and allow and ri ftuire each one to give change oolong as he has it t> giro. It is abominable that such companies con spire to Increase the evil, in order that they may make a petty prt fitby selling changeto-the brokers.' The hanks must understand that their customers have a right to expect the usual accommodations ia regard to a reasonable supply of small ehshgei Ami, in' addition, we believe they may safely give out small change to all comers,' in f ademption of- their owa small bills, In amounts not exceeding five-dollarsto one person-, in one day. It iain thepower of. the-merchants to make the banks see tha&it is keep the commu nity supplied uith small change. The needless stoppage • of tola like closing the pores of the skin, it tends to consumption, weakness aQ& dissol&rien. Keep ► the pores open, and you-keep un the power of-endurance for ah other evils. Finally r tot .every man set his lace resolutely against toe circulation of any ablnptoatopa as currency. With patience and-good foaJtog. amonglus all, these rales wiU carry us through, and the change panic will lose half ite terrors, and soon came to an cud. While all the papers, are setkng a fiscal remedy which is impracticable, our readers will see that toe true remedy is in the power of the people. , . 'P. &—The abc&o was-in type for Iret week'aissue, but-, crowded out forwantofrocm Since toattfms, Congress: harpea*ed,-?an-ac* givteg legal Gurreucy to postage stewpe, as a subetimte fo* specie change. Weathers to. our former counsel The device cJ stamps for currency ishtdged aboat with-so. many diScultiea feat we do.nofc believe It will* answer toe purpose, and may aggravate, the evil. Tbs stamps Am: currency are not to be Issued by toe Post dfftceDepartment, hut by, toe UnitedStstes. Treasury; toey are not to ho sold for currency by the. postmasters-at all. bat only by special agents of the Trea sury ; and the stamps used for currency are not unable, for postage purposas. Theonly remedy is, that all hands, keep cisoulating all toey get, and then insist that the. hanks, femes. As.,-shall pay out all toe change they take, in. Wb can and must have specie change. TS-E CEISTESE SV CAIIEOKHXA,—These pseala. nre -awakeitisg a great concern among the citizens, and a. waa of< races seem* in fall progress, aad.inita eonne do* vt)cp9 some very canons facts. 50,08 ft Chinese are at ,7fad}‘ these* and uwy mow coming. Tha liegtelatora ht Us last session enacted &4aw imposing a heavy tax on this species of ahd adopted a memorial to <*ongr»es appsaHnsforiprotection against tbeeontiiigency of an overwhelming. hnmigratioß of Mongolians.. Tfaa petition expresses the opinion' that they are feir more- nn* desSrabla than negroee.iuia predicts that wriest the infios: of these peopteia arrested a now system or slavery wIU be* engrafted upontbe instHntioDS of the State. The vie* preTmtntameng theae peocie. as diseased in the petition iet forward, is startling. MOXfcTEB BADDOOK.—A balloon, fifty-ftvofeet to sixty-nine feet in length, has just bow* bqilt in England for scientific purposes,, The bonder ■’propose* toAscecd five miles, ror the purpose of making t observations.on the temperature and humidity of the ate ‘ at.different heights. , TH3TTAX OK LOCOMOTIVES.—Tt Is said’' fliat *• locomotive of ordinary power and cowstrdetioß, thenew tariff Jaw, wilt cost at .least more thaTt formerly. Those jvho have contracted at' low rales raffer much in this way 5 several work* have deo&’jdte wait a little before beginning. A PBOVITABLB 'BTBEAK Off LIGHTNING.— Daring a terrible Korn at Iron Missouri, oa rhe 20th Inst.,. the lightning struck a large o re bank to one of the fnniace cuts, and dldodged threw down, from 2,000 to «,600 tons of ore.* To T e dlriodgrf tho same by er would hare cost company *iK®tos bnhdred dolters. WYSfKOOP’S CA.VADBY.—KashviUe oonsspond ent says: ult Is reported, how nraob truth J ain tmable to say, that an entire 'jompany of Colonel Wya* hoop’s cavalry was py the rebel bsvalry tow cently, about fifteen m^ 3 f ZO m this place, on gtsliabf non r0«4,” h. (2838.) 69