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- ' THE CHICAGO TRIBUNE: FRIDAY:; SEPTEMBER I ol falth will not be his unl{ bulwark of resist- o hmorable n, will show affee his nomina. tion the conraga to trane & manifeetwhich In {ta de- mands for rofarm contains the sbarpest eriticlam of oxinting sbuses, solemnly pledges the eandidate to i labor ch raye tho whole dett of sucloty. ‘Thore I8 no legerdemaln in financs, na magie in law, no Alsdaln’e lamp even n Invontlon by which we enn escapa the \ur\mnl aeplence: *'n [} Anfinences in his own party which huveshown them- ° solves 8o nmvermlvp'rh & 1nn legitimato and I ance, No nooner will he u& pmr;mmwd;m + portant quostlon. T slill endeavor conacientionaly. | ord of honest renolation, than it will hecome ovle o anawerit, That Qov., linyeshanavery clear cons | dent that the Preadent dac not stand alone, Th ful rendy for the millenfum. I reme cratie partles, Tle conteat is for the adiminiet honse which was not {lluminated, greatly towy | tlon of the Federnl Governmient, Itie agreat mortitication, 1t wavalmost u aulitary excdption, | atake,—great on ncconnt of fin power nnd patrun- Tlowever 1 had my boyial share of tho gendral | age, greater on nccount of ta mornl prentign g the oned Anderson. Tt waa small comfo ' Tammany chief got, howover, far Ku)lyfl -‘uh:d:n;fi the specches anid reaped all the applause, THE DELEOATES ; Ly Yery confiict mirroundinz. bim will raie wp | the hesl reforin programine thng can be devieed.and | the sweat of the face Anlt thou carn thy bread. | jubiloc. TLwas n eutprisp nextday tofind thnt | deciatation of the will of the Atnerican people, , ception of what, genntna cieil servloe, 1efonn | Tarhim & host of frfends. Tho beat elomenta, tie | defics by Ita rceire propositiona 8l tho Viclons | Whenover a commnaity attempta to make & ahort | the wood wat Jurt na iz to mplit, that tho eow- | transcewdant {n ita lipporiance In seterminin Ao mmily deriaried fo-nighl, and go lome to begta T eyt Teston - Neithar are | nfellicent and patriotlc maesrs of hia party, willat | party iniluencea we_condem ery way giviiu | ent tu prosperity. it will realize tho truth of the | pastare was no nearer, that the school-hell rang as | general principles and nolley f the Hovernment of ¥ Bre exili 5 aticn be At his shie, Lo you doubt (€1 Let 'me ud- :wi?"’c'\"':'éi?.;l'n‘fi'ry"'a"c'r‘é"' ""s‘m'."!i’u‘u'“?.:a".;: dreas a guientlon of soma Importance to yom and #no views sinted, partly In (ho snme Jangungo, in | 4nccinlly to my Independent friends, and ask you nangural addrersea and specches delivercd by him | o answer it mmlnlll», When you |!1.1“11 Bl 8 e * years ago, Jong hefora ho was thought of ann cun- | efort like (i, which runs stra SEatnet Ah Tiame o the Trertdancy, They are, therefore, | 1owerlustincta af the poltiician and appeals to the Tho offepring. of deliberate and well-natnred con. | onlizhitoned intelligence and marul sentiment of the ~viction. It has o the courage hiecensuey for aach | Roople foraid, ta what side will yun |ankltnv uni w (ask? Conrage naa candidaio cntitles liim to the | men of that enlightened intelligence nmm‘n;n‘r:lh Dreanmption that ho will have cotrage na a Presj. | sentiment to Aght for eich a refor In good fa ol praverb and find the langest way round. Thors are (lose who recall the buniness activity and apparent pecuniary prosperlly of the conntry daring the War and # fow year mucceeding It, who believe that this conld be restured by some legia- Intive scheme for lssning more money. Thess mis- take canse for offect. 1t ia n common and fuskdious | etror. this country, =a rich in_ natural re. eources,Mnd #0 Intitanta In ite conneetlon with the clvilized world, it fa the contraction of business carly as befare, the woria did not apell any enxler, | & Itepnblic destined In the nonr 1utnee (o became and it wan aven longer unti] {ntormission.” Aftera | the ullflt‘twlilll‘ll power in the woelil, Thare In while the contracta were ;iWMl out, there wad a | no third choice, —no middle gronnd, Which {4 the grent atre to got thom, and Tor our, thata of tho | party of kdean, of pragrean, of pairiotiant Which *aystem " wo wero fa hava n Macadam rond from | lookn atoft for the principles of it guldance, and Baler to New Albany. Ganpe of men wera sct to | takes 1t reckoniug by the stara? work catting down and filling up tho strects, snd Toth parties promise paforin, Thore never has qllnrnlnf and dreming atono to bridge the creok | been & time whon both parties did not promise ro- Ava had nlwaya crosand on a foot-fog, whon wa did | form, and there nover haa beon a timo, nnd never not wadg It,* Timea were good. 0 nnt, and appear 00 think Kew York fs now s Rilaen and the party. Rl Sith ¢ |'Nlfl OHT"O?“i ¢ U] ar 9 real what {s ea tho nppinuse given ta Bammel 1 ey 40% fng risen alove mildncss, and *bolng jg marked contrast (o (bt acreaded Seymonr or oven Kelly, Bat, for love of power, the Emplro nemncmcr will awallow fta nrojudicey an enfly na Kolly nte hiw words thin morning. Trg n, in the mrent guarantee of good faith—If that question had been put to the Conference, what momber of it wonld have aafd: ‘' We can notsupport himt" Probahily nat one, Cerialnly not I ‘True, that case wan not forosecn,, bt {t has happened. “There itis, and wa have to deal with It Shall we now again, ilke liftle children, say, becanee that casa wan not foreacen, therefore it dnea not concern us, nllhcrfih 1t mn( offer ‘an un{mflnnlly to attaln onr real objecta? {What conalatency ia that? chanies were | will be ono, while humen nature remains tho same, ans 18 to lio one of thorough and hot wor 4 and with nnaclish devotion? Let your awn expe- T APPEAL TO YOUR CONACIENORS, that contracts the money in circulation, and not | Wuny making carts_and_harncss, shaaing horacs, | that reformia will ot be poasible aml neceseary. | S0 ric, and dent. Jowauld secim to be the etk intorost and | B ek You, my Indopendent frionds, mort | my Tndupsdent. fHends who nava £one to the | e conteaciion of monoy whichcontracta businces, | sharpening toole, ~Fariaes had amarket at houa, | In determining tho valie of thea promines, chiat: | the muvement of the mams of Liberal Hopublleane Sred and atrong Indigences Ui T own party in the {mly condemn the abrsca that have cropt into the Bthor pida: 1f yon shanid sncceed, by combining | Valnes fali flrst. To-day whon business [s so | Moncy was plenty, and oven tho old fogics who | acter must be taken Inta account. ~Now, without | foe e o MORE RERHEIES T M“Igl her nincle ‘best possihle humor with hlm, by creating tha im- | Jepribiican party, as I certainly have very trankly | with the Democtats, in dufeating Gov. llnyes -nfi starnant, property Is po low, the Government ia | had donbted the Pulm of the tiate going indebt | any phariseeism sehatever, —without claiming that | (Coyoledie s holp, and that help m{vmlpun\m‘d ,m,,':n., thnt b whll be all things to all men, soas | ond unsparlngly’ condemned them herelofore and | true reform, and aftar the triumph of your combi. putting a loan npon the market succeanfully st 45 | began to feel thal 3 o go rhaje. Shey had ‘mado a mis. | aline drawn between the two Jarties would be take. 1 thought {fthat Macadam rond was finished | almply s nnfinnllon of tha shicep fruin the gonts, — to the Olito Hiver, and we conld croxs the creok on | ndmitiing there are good and bad elerenta In Loth, aatone bridge, it would bo the consummation of | you dowot helicve that iu Intelligence, ability, pne earihly hopes, It novor waa completed, Ono | irfotiam, public virtue, aod private alinencter, the morning tho liorses and carts and workman dii not | Republican party wonld sullor bi the comparizon, o outasusus), Thero wasa general constorna- | Try tho ueafinn by tho history of. your awn cil lon, cointy, State, or of the whole conntry, which pa Tho Morris Canal Company had fallod, and the | ty Ia tho best ropresentative of tha heart and con- Btate fonnd that sho was ju debt to contractors for | clence of the nation? in whose hands is iis honor a number of nnfinished workn, faw of which would | afést, ta weifare most eecure? Which Is the most have bacn worth cost if cotnpleted, and the owner | Iutalerant of frand? of an undivided Intorest in asoap-factory some- The anccors of the Demncratic party menns more shere in Now J. Y. than tha control of tho Fedoral Adminlatration, 1t Then thero waa a collapee. Money In circnla- | meana a powerful influence exerted in overy State, tion contracted because the businens for ittodo | connty, and achool district, Now, thereare cor- had eontracted. Credlt which had been easy be. | laln general principles and outlines of policy, which come hard, becouse secnrities were dopreclated. | people, by tacit consent, desire should be mcnf;- The Btate waa in debt to the contractors, aud hay- | niced and pursued. Among theso are that the Ing no other money ta pay thom, and no money to | Governmout in all ita varjous departments, gener- ay cnrront axpenscs, ssucd **scrip.” But even [ 81 State, and municipal, ehiould be ocononifeally PRt not make money plenty, and though it | adminiatercd, riot to confer places and honors, but bore nterent, it wonld not remaln stpar. Never | na the common guardian of all, ite wholo power waa thers a belter {llnstration of the pnnel\flo that [ pledged to each for the enjoyment of ifs own. money will stay and circulate where there ia tusi- There should be no toleration of fraud, orof its neea for it todo. It will not remain in excoss of lnnlo;i sta. tho actual legitimato demand: {t runs away from ‘That Lhore shall be sucha reform of -the civil falling valnee. Poor monoy will drive outgeod, | service thut tness shall be the highest recommen- bat the volime and value of either will be regu- | dation for appointment to office. lated by demand, snd is not subject to arbitrary | _ That all mon ahall be freo n tholr religious be- control.” Distribute it by the carplond In exceas | Hefand obsorvances. of demand for its profitable employmant for the That thore shall be no divislon of the public- time-being, it will creato a fever of spoculatian | Bchool fund, Thatschools supported by tazation to the other nide, an Keily hirrelf admitted, To the Western Amwoctated Press, Sanarons, N, Y., Ane. $1.—The Democratly State Convention reassembled this inorning, Toratlo Beymour'a acceptance of his nomination was annonaced arid great applause, Tho Convention then Swttellnl to nominate g Lieutennnt-Governor, and_thie nanies of Moxnrg Toraholmer, Clarkson N, Potter, and Manton Mar. Dle wero presented. Finally Licut,.Gov. Dge. eheliner was renaminated by acclamation. Pe Wit C. Weat wan nominated for Blector-at-Large, vicg Scymour; Robert C. Earle for Judgs of the Conrg of " Appeals; Darlus A, Ogien for Canal Commix. sloner: and Robert 11. Auderson for State Prison Inspector, BHYMOUR'S DECLINATION PINAL, 1 ‘{"H\A'ifli nL-l-ln?vi sdeym(gm. l‘l 12 o'tlock. ast night, Lolegraphed Jndge Gray, I'residout tiv Denocratic-Convention, at Suraogn; - °! 1ain compolled iy obstactes which 1 cannot over coine o decling the profiered Lonor, the no for Govornor.” T canuot be & candldnte for any bzs™ The tc]nan wvan eithor not reccived or waa noy made public, ‘This morulng a committee from (g Conventiongwalted npon Mr. Seymonr, and tng decllnation of the night befure waa rapeated, The Committee returned to-day to Saratoga, and Mg, Faulkner, of the Committee, sald to the Conven. ton: **Lam ot liberty to nssure Jou that, uner extroordinary circumainnces attonding the noming. tlon, Goy. Scymour fccls constrained to oliey the inenre the hearly co-operation of all MEAN TO DO A0 IBREAFTEI Mit, TILDEN BREMS TO UNDERSTAKD TTIAT, And yot, qulxlnicnlmly at things ns thoy are, Now, have you considored how much strencthof | yon will be obliged to admit that an overwhelming convletlon, hiow much lionest courage in a candidate | Majority af the men who with head and heart $¥equircs'at the opening of & canvass 1o e before | Would aid {n the establishment of such reforme are 1ho poople with a manifesto like (ov. Hayes' letter | In the Repnblican and not inthe Democratic ranks. of acceptanco, which, in ts comprohcnelva and | 1t was tuat element in the Ropublican party which elnrply-defined domands for reforn, contains [ first put forth the demsnd of civil.eervice reform, ho mast unAparing criticlam of abuaes talnting ha | And obliged evan the present Administration to o pnriy? Tiia candldata talls Congrassmen that | make ao sppnront atlemptin ihat divection. Tt 18 1f ha s oiected Prealdent they must expect no pat- | irue, that element hus been overshadowed In tho robaga frot him, He tells the officers of the Gov- | batty by ofiicial infidenco and_the deepatic power cramont that from thonino party eervice In desired, | 0f mercenary organization. at it is thero now. aa e tolla natly workera thiut party acrvico will not be | 1t wns thera In the old anti-slavery days. Wil not regarded by Tt 8. c1atn [0 roward: and In tho | thatclemontatonce rally with renewad strongth face af th fact that the Prosident of the Unitod | #round the President, agsoon a8 hie 1Ifta lis hand taten naw In ofiice hail himsell olected tilce, and | for the work of reform, to uphort him with ite v:oull not huve recoiled from a third term had |t | Whole power? Aye, aud It will 'bo stronger lllx]nn Veen within reach, he frankly deciares his Inflexl- | evor. not unl(y an the advocate of a gond cunse bee Dle purposa not to be s candidato for e-olectlon, | fore the patrfotic pablic opininn of the country, ~on the ground that a sincars roformar shonld not | ut stronger also in warking ufficlency, becausa 1t nxomo‘illmuullm(hu temptation of using tho page | Wi under the open, honost, and powerfal runage for the promation of his poroual intoruate, | leaderehip of the Kxecutlve head i 38 not that conrage,—the honest conrage of truo | Hut stlll more, Notonly whi the Fresldent hate conviction? 8how me in the wholo history of.this | tho strong ald and sapport of th lfim“ el eanefl n Mepublic n siuglo candidate for the Presidoncy | hi8 party, but hie vory effort to eatablish thoroug who, In the faco of ancortaln chancee, had the conr- | reform will atrip the upposing furces of tholr moat 8y o iemnc e doiont o wanifesto he thial You dangerona Influence, i wlll find none. 1 ask you, my Indepondent triends, LET THE WORD 00 PORTTI . 10 eompare the manly, straighitforward, uncqnivo- | from the Fxccutive chatr that the civil servica cal doclarutions of this mun(feato with that artfully | ehall and wili no louger be & party machine: that canatructed tangle of words, Gov. Tilden's lettor | {he officera of tha Qovernment are denired by the per cent Interost, and upon undoubted eecurity noney con be barrowed at as low a rate of nterest cortainly sasas pakl In onrinost proaperous timen, i mune{ conld be made to grow on bushea or be ‘had for the asking, It wonld not be worth any moro than anything elfu that grows on bushes or can be had for the aeking. Alr and water are more precions than moncy, oven though gold and eilver, hank Gud they arc free (at leadt the air {s), but 1% docs not follow because tlicy are frce (hat they would make s good ** circulating medinm,** Tho War was & great business carrlsd on by the Gavernment. 16 employed a milllon of men in the field and & million more in supporting them, It created a demand for every article produced on the farm or manufactured in work. nre. True, 1t waa the bnalness of destruction, bat It was tho mont_gignntic husiness ever carried on in the world, and It constantly demandesd the use of vart suma of money. To obtain thal money we went In debt to all the world and _#i future at usurlons rates, marketable, —even human 1il of the War had been pald at nfe tazation, we shonld have realized that wo wore growing poorer and not richer by the Im- menao destruction of Fmpm{ and diversion of Jabur, 1t ia the office of n national debt to trans- fer the burden of one genoration to another, or todiatribnto It aver many generatlons, VIhe ‘ta- tional debta of the world smonnt to the appalling pnm of £25,000,000,000. They have nearly all nntion, that fountain of evil, tho apolls rystem, continnes to send forth its stream of demoraliza. tlon and corruption, anda etrengthoned ruft-money imajority In the Hotiee of Kepresentatives anbjects the country to more l‘"“ of harassiug nncertain. ty and distross~what thea? Thie s sad, indeed, ‘ou will say,—bat we bave been consistent! Oh, Iymw great” you will feel in yuun‘lory of conniat- ency! Batn ntiemen, you will Xot have been consistent. As Independents, you profeasad de- vollon to great objects, smong which stood frat true reform and a sound financial policy, . - You will have abandonud- thoss groat objects when you kiad an opportanity” eflectively to sorva them.” True conalstency it'in always to will tho right, zealausly to seck the right, and, under any name and -n': chnnge of circumatances, faithfully to stand by the right. Here we hava s candidate at Isat who openly before all the world and with deflant conrage occuples the platform wo have fo long: and alunat hopeleealy, been Ihnl."l;“nz for: ana now shonld wa turnour backsapon Il we now betray onr cause when a faltuful, united effort can make {t triumph? I speak with feeling, for 1 hiave been long nnd with earnest aincerity in thia struggle, 1t has been anid of me that "I bave done somothing to wake p!hvpo‘vullrwmclnnce ngainst tho pre- v?l‘ILuz dJemorallzation, 17 thut be so, I am proud o IT WAS THR OBJECT OF MT ENDEAVORS. Dat that duty s not il fulfiiied. Now ia the time ) wilien of ihe peaple, who have 80 often honoreg Bl ttend 1o theit oficlal dutics only.and | to Hfs up our judgment to the level of the aswak- | been crented by War.'and the Inferest on this vast | nd habits of extravagance. Seek for itina year, | In whole or inpnrt shall be frec from sectarian bins R i N e o bR b ot soFte. af JAriy tonls that the lmure af the | Bncd comselorco, Lot tako. cars” (hal the fa- | AU 1¥ he price which thia’ Ronoration fa puying | and you will fhl to 44d i, 1t will Eo whera s | oF control, and siall bo kmpia fo tho siementary | Meionzeq applauso greeted (hls annonnsement and soft money har, presenting_a tull aiwn or | OMcer will depend upon lis ofticia) condnct alone, | formatory spirit now aliveand capable of greater demand ls, - Oreate the demand for it, and there is o all children, i # for the warn of the past, A great war, carried on upon c:mmr Fiven to s nation that tctltions proa- In:rlly which decelven 0 man info Lo ieving ho Ja rich whilo ho la borrow- fng on unlimited credit, Pay-day comes at It to both, Hut somo ono ‘may snguest, the actlvity of business anda general pecuniary tmpum{ continned some years after the War., ‘cs, & rallroad tratn will run some time by its mo- mentom. An effect often continnes after tho canse, and n_moral effect will long aurvive a P’?f‘" cal causo, ‘The close of tho War was a period of hope, of exnltation. Nothing secmed mpossible 1o the American jieonls, Kvery coanty in the Northern States secemed 1o be repeopled by retarn. fog soldiera~rotarning, thank God, not sasoldiers, but as citizens, It was like a antlden nccersion of population. ‘I'he waste of the War had to be ro. paired, oxhausted stocks to be replenished, ond hat created a demand for labor and gave cmplcr meunt Lo capltal. Great fortnnes accumulated in tho Warand ninde splendid shows, Asna community wy were extravagant, Ilorses could not be fast enongh, otses grand enongh, clothes fine enoug or gow-gnwe too glittering. We had been acct tomed to hh;h‘:ricu, 1atga profita, and sudden o d not tealire that tho cause was et tho exact situation Is stated to bo as follows: ov. Scymnour has in uo way qualificd his positiys refuzal tu accopt the nomination for dovemor. iy declination was final, and will not be reconsidered, nor will he consent to thie use of his name. The adjonrnment of the Convention leaves It with the State Commttea to 011 the vacancy. Itis understood the position will be filled by some onp who will conciliate all the intcreats in the party, IREYS COMMENTS. Mzw Yons, Ang 81.—The Zridune eays edl. torially: « It wan suppoged that Tilden coull control rerterdiya Convention, The reportx feave Iy uncertaln wheiher i€ really controilod it oriiether it anly fullowed thg ersistent htllu'ln‘! of Jolin Mortfssey and Tiin Catps el in the fnal mad rusii for Seymour, ¥rom the Detnocratic nolnt of viow, the nowination would seem at any rate to ba the very atrongeat thag conld have been tnde, Seymonr s unqueatiunably tha oAt prominent and popular o, For Balf a kencrse tion he haa boen the potof the New York Demucracy, han fificd places of 1ho Wighest ARty s 1ed thim 1 Teverses an welt sA (n trtumphs, wud hay througiiout maintained his easy- asceidency oxor all associaiesor TITAIA In the affectionate eateein of Ui party. Nouther mau's name cauld lend auch welghit to the Deimoeratio achievement do not run ont in a_mere change of smtlu and personn, to staud atlll before the ¢élta- ol of the evils which have so long afilicted and dugraded ns, Who knows when it s}l riss again from the gloom of & new disconragenient it nowr it exhiansta itaolf in mlisdirectod and fruitices eflortsl ‘We havo, indced, a great nmnrlunliy bofore uts, an opporianity 0 ahaka o the disgracefal alusca which tho demoralizing habits of forly years have toaded npon our political 1ifu; an opportanity to lead onr Government back to the nolo principles and practice of the great and wise founders of the Wepublic, whose virtucs we aro eo elognent In pn}lllllnu. and whose sxample we Liava becn #0 slow w follow. ‘This |8 tho year of great memories, In magniil- cent pnlaces” we have laid before the world the waonders of out wealth, the fruits of our inventive enfus, and the astounding resulte of our akiil and industry. And certainly wo havo gained tho ad- wiration of all beholdera, Lut, great and laating ns the adwiration thus guined may be, far greater atill in the csteem of mankind, and far moro Insting 1ni the gratitude of our own prnlpeflli. will be an honest and duclslve blow now struck for the rea- #polls fur the Damoctate, with n éfarm snuco for | B R0 longar be A the merey o e e tho Tndependents, ro (hat Judge 8allo fa pleascd, | Kretsman or Lty Weants, i oe oRet i {0 O Gen. Tom hwlniz in pleased atll] more, and Johin | 4y HE L party ratrap, to rnte local politica se Morrluncy's maniy hosomn awells with pride at the | (et an tron rod, but that they will be givan or profound statearmanship of his candidnte, Com- | Wi N 1200 Tk W0 B DI R 6 Bd Sote JAe tho two, and thon (el ms on which side you | LG 'of thio publle iiterest—let that word go ind truo moral conrngel Let it not bu raid hat | UGS b o iglicst place, so that all the peo- Gov, Uayes was fearlore only boeanso he dit mot | farth TE008 12 ERECE BIRCS, *0 Qi Ao Tilte £co the ieatng of his ntterances, Defore his let- [ P&, Inclading the Fostimaators, Bud Coelol ot fer of ncceplanco was published hu read ft t0 8 | o500 anch, can woll anderstand It—and 1 ask you friend, and that friend oheerved: **1i v not un- | COMESIEY S 0L AREBIORCPTIRG S 2Nt likely, Governor, that what you eay there may | (it hecome of hat power of local leaders whose Yery much displease rama very poworful men Iy | ceoapens connisted only In thelr possession of the Your own parly,"* Add what wan tho answort | EGeAe SPACRARY Whiowo aflicnce was for. Yes, that may be so: bot thir is niant, T | midable only becauro 8t their very frown every the Icttor came out as ILwwan written. ¥ think I | Tidablo only, becayeo B thel od 1o beamblos be can sunport o reformer \sho hine the courage thus | RRETR V0w 0'CouTd make tho head of svery tofect and thns fo syt jn advacating the | oficer not subsersient 1o tuelr will fy into the et o oy e P Syre oper. § | barket; because very applicant fur place, every clection of Gov. Hnyes with my cyes open. sccker of favor, had to f:nqnlrn about thelr very avo certainly not forgotten or thought lightly of | (T with fawning anxiety? the duty 1 awe ta the causa of reform which I have T Er L o U THUNDARNOLIS forved solongj and thus, standing a7 doherobe- |\ nicily pasa. away. Every honcsb pablic sce- -1 DECLARE ZI(13 70 DE MT BINCERT coxvlm'lo.v‘ vant will romember that be hana consclence, & na power fn loglelation to keep It awey, If that T'hat the public debt aliall be honestly pald, No {omand bu & hoalthy and legitlmate one, the work | port of the Robel dobt assumed, and that no com- it accomplishes endures 04 a permauent good. 1f | Densation be mado for tho emanclpation of laves. 1t be an anwiso one, o mere -cB:mo of lnlfi’tlnn for That tho Thirteenth, Fonrteenth, and Flftcerth its own_sake,—if [t be simply discounting and | Amendments to the Conatitution, by which free- donble-dlscounting the faturo, |t must be pad | dom is made nniveranl and equality before the law back, with that compound {nterest which is uiti- | secured, shall remain undisturbed as a part of the mate rminous losa. organie law of the land. What & mongrel carrency we had in the follaws 'hat thia nation shallbo known and recognized Ing yenm—of il ehapes, shades, nnd values, | everywhero ss the r:‘[-rmnmlw of liberty and £tate rerlp, Indiann State Ilank notes, Illinola | equality, In the onward march of humanity, State Dmt notes, Shawneetown, Red Dog, Blue f thero be a genoral concarrencaof avniiment In Pup, Jonn Watson's shinplastots, and an occa- | favor of this bricf ontline of policy, the practical sionn] estray from tho Eastern States, Hank-notes | question before the lmam- in every Important clec- were not redecmable, and thora ecomed to be no | tlon b, Throogh which parly can it be best adyanc- reason In the nature of things why they should not | cd 8a @ whole?” It ls not & question of perfection— be abundant; but somehow they would not stay | that exists nowhere. It ia & q'nuuun of cholce. aronnd, or, if thoy did, would not stay good. In this Instanca it anmwees itsell. ~ And let me say remember ona of our old citizens, quite famong as | hero that the moral effect of & Presidcntial clection n wag In his day, conceived the idea that he hnd as | 89 & genoral exprosalon of public sentiment is of good A right to make paper money as,John Watson, | far more conscquence and imporiance than the and mccordingly he lssued his notes on tho aamo | Prescut auccessof any measuraadvocated by oither. torns that Watson did,—**payable on presenta- 'There I8 no danger of the ro-cetablishinent of tion in sumn of five doliars, fa State bank paper,” | slavery, bnt whatever of its apirit and teachings But Lo only iwsned fonr dollara and scventy-flye | Aurvived, lives in the Dewmocratic party. There s ticket, Noother man coald Insure such €nthntastic 00 wni Y tion of that vitue and purity of Government | Yances, and di canta, Tle might have Inflated the currency twenty | 1o danger In our generation of an armed attenptto | Hemaeratio support, Seymour will biing to the Demo- ond predict tith ne mnch assaranco ns thingn #til] [ manhood of his .owns thatLe lano maws mnn, | torn o " | moved. Wo had gona in debt and mortgaged the dostroy the Union, but whatever of discontont L4y : i mo- " comp ‘ean Lo “Jredictod, {at (ov, Harca. if | and that ble Jonar, e woll ae s prospetiiy, will which, aftor all, Ia the onlysccurity pnd the high. | mved: e hadgong in fobf td mortenged the | cents more, and atitl have boeu oo tlio rafo sids af 0 Cratle carvasm ull ot Morgan brinka 1o the Itepuintc elected to the Preafdency, wiit employ every con- | he best promoted Utational power of that grent offico, 1o ita fullest | fAIthIuT And eliclant servantof the Governmont extent to carry Info pmetice’ hia ‘programme of | ffd the people. Tty p «civil. servica reform (o the very latter. 1ie will or- tion of the slaves. The civll service will no Ionfcr ganize hin Administration with nnawerving devo- | Ue What it now fa in muny places, n argenlzation tlon Lo this great end, He will, whatever iuflu- ;‘ :7 }HI-\ Dnll:““d r‘-rfl‘:’n’e mc‘ "l:el"l‘:no‘?” b ences he may have to enconntor, puraue with un. | Ut of men who Uare to respoct, ihempelves, And tlring watchfuiness all officers of the Government | Whose ffinrfl ! NE“: i be e mpleflt fies who dave beteayed oflicial truet of falled to per. | FrY scif-respect, Eveey honemt and viclent O + form thelr dutles according to the best standard of | { f"d‘ y 'n'.h Im Anfetoat, hecuing. an aroant efiiciency. Tlawlil keep falthful prblie servauta | {riend of, e, foTormel, bysters menil. Xin thoir ofMices, ngainst nll attempts 1o have them 088 party i "—‘"W; w G ppos T Tator {\rflxlnccd by the political toals or tho personal fa- | Y11 bo strippedof thelr mos angerolndting. Cons v astglory of a freo poople. ' The yuar of the grent anniversary sannat be more truly” Lonored than by the trinmph of #o noble an effor! At the 8t. Nicholas this evening Mr. Echarz was acrepaded. He made a brief apecch In response. NEWTON BOOTH. IS VIZWS OX TNE CURRENCY QUESTION, . &pecial Dispatch to The Triduna, Tnes HAvTE, Ind., Ang, $1.—Thiscity has tha honor of belng the histhplace of the Hon. Newton Booth, the famous Californta Senator and ex-Gov- ernor, who wos elccted to the Unitod Btates Senate asan Independent, but who Lna enrolled bimsclf ‘andor the bannee of Tayes and Wheeler, belioving that In the fuccoaa of the ltepublican ticket los the highest and best good of the natlon, Senator Booth dellvered & spoech here to-night to a very Iurge andience, at whose hands he recelved a most fiattering reception, ‘Ho spoke as follows: b THB SPRECH, . FeLrow-Creizenn: 1 osteemnita happy colncl- dence that I am to nddreas you for the first time on a political subject at the home of my-boyhood. and early manhood, at the old homnestead, on this vo: wput which 1a endoared to me by many of the fond- est rorolloctions and most precions awoclations of iy life. Btanding on this wpot, In the presence of #0 many ol (riends and nefghbors, for whose long continued kindnons my heart overflown with grati- tude, [shall uot aiteinpt to play the orator, should fall If T did. 1shall not speak as n parti- san, but only endeavor mFlve some of the roasons ‘which contrul my polltical’sctlon in tho prosenco of the immodiate occnaton, Under the circumstances, I trust that a few yards of persoual uxplasatlon wil uot be doemed egotlatic. t 1a known to yon all that I was nominnted o8 a eandidate for Vice-Presldent of tha Unfted States by the National Convention_ of Independent Lhnfl.y, which inet at Indiauapolis In May. This di there {8 with the Unlon re-established on tho basia B rorormab, arroncy hieh ners | of freodam and equsl righis In representeil in. {h forma all {u promises, nnd of **limited" fnilation | Democratic party. Thereforo it ought to be 1in minfature perfection, destroyed, Itacqulesces (n the rosalts of tho War, Then corn was down to 10 conts a bushel, pork Acfl‘ucn 13 8 good word. Goorge 111, acquieaced 1o & dollar and a balf & hundred, and they were our | in American Independencel It acquiesces in tho staplos, ‘There was o long sesson of dopression,— | Victory for the right. It acquiences in _emnncipa- 8 depreasion far greater thnn we have knownasince, | ton, [na reatorad Unlon, aml universal frecdom, Tt scemed as though we never should get through, | It scqulesces in tho amendments to the Conatitu- 1 look around me now with wonder and adnira- | tion, which aru the charters of freedom and unlon, tlon npon your beautiful city, Isee the praicies | Therois a difference, my lflemll‘ between lip- around you covercd with forms with snbstantial | scryice and heart-vervico; between tha latter which improvements, & scheol-houso in avery district, a | killa and tho spirit which maketh allva; botween church in overy nelghborhood, and I o uncovored | s8ying, **The lincs aro hard, but It {s wwmlen\ homage Lo thots great miraclo-workers, labor and | and thot rejolcing shoat, **Beforo ever tho world e : oniian ru, tareoal s o s e B Tt Tt ara la trophics. . 1t achloved thers, through tribite ment during the War, the vast sums of monoy {t [ 13tjon sodsulleriog, Thoy are "d‘d I e blood put In circulntlon, the markets 1t created, tne | Of ita mattyre anditis prspared to defand them peices 1t Infiated, the men it employed, the spirlt | #5nINst il comets, in whatsver namo, w for- tune, and honor, Of ‘speculstion engondered, and rofioct that all 3 a work of dostrriction patd for at the tno | , NOW, my fricnds, let me ask youin candor, If &n, an an affection and enthustasm which ho {iepab. lican and no other Domocrat in the tate could aruute, Bucli I yeaterday's totlnation an regarued from tho Doinoeratte point of view. It thare i another vie to it. Thiero are not Damdcrats enougt in New York (6 eloet thielr ticket. ‘Tt must be elected, if efected at i Dy lielp from outslie, - 1a Hoyniour the mon o get that lielp? * We think not. : The Times® cditorlal aays: The Democratic pirly*is na barren of men ax it fy ot {deas, After ono of the most disorderly sessions which have over diegraced the records of any pAFLy In his State, tha represeniatives of tha Now York Doinucracy Were yesterday forcod to admih tiing thoro was lut une man whow tliey could nominate for Governor with (e sifghtent opoof succem. | Thie nomjnstion, In upite of Dis ows remonstrances, s fatling lealtt and waning energy of the nan_who fa_Identiied with all that tho Now Voric Democracy regard with pride {n thelr past or think dealrabla In thelr future, conveys at once 3 leenon and 8 warning. It shows how Boilow is tho pre: teusa that the cry of Tiidea and reforut hag any pawer 1o awaken Renuine enthuninsm ainoug the Deinacratic miases of this Stato, and on how slandar & basls reats the [nfluence wiich'wan created by Tlden's mocy- Dags, sud will pussaway with thelr exhaustiun. LOUISIANA. - 'DEMOCRATIO BLECTIONBERING DULLETINS, Mowrox, La., Aug. 31,~Tho Slierlll and poses have returned from the prrsult’ of the murderor of Dinkgrove, Thoy traced the tracks of hiy horwe abont three miles, and then loab track, “There Ja no clew whatover to the murderer. It 4 generally belleved the wmurnder was the result of an old fond. The murderst took Plantation lare in hia flight. Dlnkfiluvu liad scen the man, and ::}ly?&prnhw s danger, Ue will be burled ruoon. Last night the hounss of Capt, Cham- bers, who lives - nlne miles below here, was fired Into. The family hail come to thls wo dnys beforo for. sacurily, leaving & white man named Porkinn in charge of tho premleca. Perkins was sittini on n gallory, when a cp Impnednur the fenco,' He arose, when there fole lowed the discharge of a gnn, and his chalr and the gellery-post_werw filled with buckshot. Perxing fiol hll‘rh\ml and pareued the men, who fled up he road In this dircction. No one hurt, A freed- man on the place conficms thls atatement, . The whites arc sppreliensive, but are proceediog with cautlon, . not continne to indefinitely. The slow and sure methods of accninulation acemed tame and com- mon-place. The man who could not lelg into fortune waa an old fogy, The light was bright, but we ware brrmng tho candle atboth enda. The revalslon scemed to come suddealy, but it had been long In preparation, Want came In at many ® hackdoor, ‘while the front door waa as shnwy s ever, Institutiona and companies cone tinned to do buainess whose lnlolvcnc{ was known only to themselves. The great fallure of Jay Caoko & Co. did not destroy the public prasperity, butonly revealed its hollowucss, Yon mlayhuva acen in thg early spring a stream of waler ffowing beneath & coverlid of anow. 1'Le surface of the snow does not changs from dfl‘:flfln 'y thongh the water in sitently eating it out beneath, At length it disappears in sn hour. Yon may have seenu eat river bridgod from Mufl to binfl with ico, o1 lupuolo the water ls flowing in full torrent bee neath. Buddenly the ce bresks with s crash, and you learn that silently and unscen the river hus shrunken to its chaanel, 1 am perhaps wearying your patience, and disap- polnting those who wunt a political speech aix nights in the week, but I find the feeling 8o preva- lent that what 1s called **good times'' can be leg- islated Into exlstence by an act of Congrees, aud that flush times, high prices, and a demand for 1abor can be restored aimply by arbitrarily increas- ing the volume of curruncy, ~without tha condi. tions which make tho incresned damand nocaseary, that you muat pardon me ) 1 proceed still further on this snbject. 1t fs n comamon oxpression that currency ought ta be oqual to tha wanta of businces, Of course it ought. But it docs ot follow that everybody should havo all the money bo wants. You, heing very moderate, might only want & hundrod thou- sand, or fve lundred thousand, or parchance a million each, bnt thers are communities whero they aru a0 grecdy they would take fiva times ns much, and money would become so plenty it would not Do worth _any more than fourpenny nails. Dusl ness may by depressed by maony caas that 1t will not want nioney, but an sbundance of **cur- roncy ™ will not create that kind of buosiness which 1u the end 13 profitable to a community. If a company should organize hers to build anothicr railroad to Imlhnqulll, whilo the road wua bullding business would bo Increased, and thers would be on {ucreased amousnt of money in elrculation. Batif when the road was completed the Government : mon and party leaders, nojongor nble to use | vorltes of party lesdern, e 1eifs tell those who | FChRE SR I LAy helr nower, will have 10 A a0 the RroL e % | fall hack upon their churacter, their principles, and ! that " honety, competency, nd adoltty Lill ba | ST T sustaln. theniselves [ public lite, ,:egmlgd by ilin ua the on) dfli‘;nlvu quatifications | (AN, SO o wols will vaatly isprava th breeds {Xor public omployment, ilo 1l tell Congressmen | wnd 4t will turn ont, nlso, that political parties can 0t o dictato appointiments, that sncl - | Tiye without (o spolis, and be all tho better for It { terference withthe appointing power fs destractive [0 WitH f.' Qrpl tentb $ 0 e “Tlepomdont. o S skparate. que | | dhat mucha pollcy wiil displessa many lepub- ipartments of the Government, degrading the [ (€h8 politiclas, ROVIRLLY 00 i G velmeacter of the wsrvice, and will no Jonger be pers U OB TR R ER RPN R0 IR witted, He uill make Il Government oflicora un- deratand thnt the Civil Service must ceaxoto boa | That it will be bitterly onposed in the Congress to purly inachinery, tliat from them purtiesn setvice | bo elecied this year la not improbable; but that o *“neltlier cxpected nop desired,™ and that they | Will not defeat the ruform. —Let tho fiest Congrens wiill hiave o ranfine themsolves 1o thelr official du. | Wnder the new Administration ever wo Inuldlonely tew an mervante of {ho (lovernment and the people, | ¢ndeavor to hinmper It let ft over 20 stubbornly 1o 162ll cxtablivh well reeulated and public methode, g{;flfl“ v’;‘:mx 3, yl:m'l,l‘lfig-w Jor 3:"«':?: 1; 'g’%m Ln exury pencticablo way, (o axceriain tho Ntacas of | cnd. [ bave almondyiown how mach the President, candidatcs for placen, Fo erili employ every legitl- " Eaate menna it hin jower 1o indpes Congrass to pet- | tutlonal powers. And If thea Congress refuses to tuate thla reform by legislution in whatever way | #ld and porpetnate the reform Ly such leginlative [t miny bo measiires ns may be neceasary, let the President appeal to tho goutl aonew and pairiotlem of the peo- TOSSINLE AND NECESSARY, p" . In an election held withont the civil service ‘Thin 14 what I am sincercly convinced Gov. fayes "'p‘ni.pnc’ mchan appeal will scarcoly ro- wain without 4 response. | 1, thierotoro, declate (his to bo'my honeat cone viction, not only that Gov. inyes, as 3 man of Enmnd.m and_ intogrity, wiil, if elected o the resldency, be trus to hifs word in ueing alt tho constitutionnl powera of his ofico to carry out to ho letter thy programme put forth by bimaclt, but that, powerful na tho oppoxition he will have ta” . encounler inay be, the cliances will bo sirongly in favor of tho aucccss and lanting ‘establishmont of D! {hinyne the Rtebellion had scceeded, the Confederacy béen by borrowing trom the fubirs, by pultingthe wholo | estatiiahed, and the presont. Democratic candidaics I ol 1a ot there shoutd ba 5 dbproseion, bug | for Preaidont and Viea-Presldent had gono dawn T o ATt ehould boa loprostion, out | there and ran for oflice, could one_uiicrance of et o intory the mitasie of the WWar will b | theirs in their Northern iomes have bean quoted to deomod not the grant cale on which it was con. | {revent suy Confederato from volng for, them? ducted with extemporized armios, bat the fuot that | Vould et thelr Northern vecord heve mads them thieag vast armioa whon vietory wan asured moited | TEE7 SLEIRS £0C, PIORor CRAC CAEE or the highesi into tha peacoful pursuils of privats lite withont & | © ‘{5';1' "m he Son! =r';:l nfe "’;‘cl!h N disturbance. Whaon and where olke wers a million cn the great t) came which scarched the G 8 dlabanded At one time withons » | heartaof this pople, In that supreme moment of e aatagt (oIt troatment. withouts bandit, | OUF blstory when tho fnatinct of patriotism waw & o he anpgesting of « possibilily that the milliary | higher guide than Jearning of philgsopliy, wiien tho e Shah the Uor aamaat. grant iden of country camo_down lka &' revelation A ront lest has heen sald of Into 4ot thodent- | O love, Gov. Tilden took dawn tho Constitution to orand creditor classes of thls country, upon the | 200f hocould find In s ;‘m‘walgunl- auy wac- mssumption that tholr intercats were dlatinct, and [ P30t r‘fm L :‘;!‘“’Il [fl ' “fl“ ‘fi‘l a!h hfi that legislatlon which wonld benefit one would of e,:'r'o “? o cal e examine: 8 tho ) will do If clected to the Prealdoncy. T do not pretend to enll Qov. Liayes, as Mr, Til. den fs called by some of hin over-poctic friends.” **the wisest man In the world," 1do not put iim In polnt of conrago above all tho lierocs of ane tiulty and_modern tipes. Tdo not predlet that, 11 elected Presldent, ho will cure in three months all the flls humen soclety is helr to, and plunge us «etralght {nto the milinenlum of 1dcal extstenco* Lut he 1s n man who has nobody to. fear, becauso + he hae nothing to cover up. 1i¢ hasnobody (o re- ward, becausu he did not scels the Presidency, and promiscd nnllunls; Aud he bas no future favors to usk for, because ho hus no ambition to rerve ex.. copt to make, na President, his one Administration 8 blcesing to {he country and an horor to himecit, L s the other, ‘Thera uro saveral fallaciea In this, Ingia fuds finw 18 crhoinel i croditor i the samo. intaront In (o gonerat | 8ecerialn {f b bad a countey, ' The idos o prospority of the conntry, that he may recelve his ! vt "”d Ly ] his catouratt 1 Tiouby without fath, that 'the. deblor aa, that e | o peopla Rovar downod Uyon.bis e on ating s can pay it without distress, Dut, us distinct clnen- | Mctaphyalcal mind., Meonalyxed sentoncos, hun o thioy hordly sxiat in this eownitry. - Tho number | £4,81088 nouna and pronouns, adverbs and prepo. of mon who live npon fized Incomea from porma. | eitions; among, cominas and periode, colons an: nent {nvestment In bonds and mortgages Is very | Aemicolons. "hink ol s e and e Bndle Neariy all wha nro croiiiors e oino dent. | Shce Of thomation, thio question whetlor it should o, T Danke, who Loid most of the commeretal | meet rmod reheltlon with aoveralgm powar, was & mattor of punctuntion, Our destiny hung upon a PATer, 2ue debions to thelr, dopositors, ad. MIL. | wenicoion. ™A% las ho. reached & concinalon- hine 1gh compliment was aa unexpecied as it wae ug- eeerved. Ihavescen it ataled in sotne of the pnblic prints thlllvll\s;illlll*‘ of the dlscourtes of not Auknowlndglnfi t. That is not true, could not but be gratefal for so distingnished a mark of respect. By declination was come municate?, o fho Commitice. ~directly o the Teforined system, sustained as 1t will be by the best elementa of the Republican party and & patriotic public opinion, Indoed, when cnnllnln“{ tho relative positiona taken by the two candidates for the Presidency, .and the prospects tliey open to us, the oppoucnts ) N licy-halders. In Californis, and in many ather | ' Yo starsl The Unlon was a—i!federative 1lia reform plan fs the product of experience wisoly |"of Goy, Hnyoen scem (o bo ultorly'at s loss (o dis- | the Te"” e offictal notifleation lllhunldhllmrlyrunning exponses, ail the cap- | BO ; Ings banlin whose capital 1o gy | 8Fen don't know whether that is ILLINOIS. urncd to account, of mnatare roflection, and of J of my uuination, At their snggestion | ftal invested in il wouldbo a loss, and It would have, | States, the savings banks, P s made | (oo jatlve or diejunctive, whether it s B toh Gosion 16 bana tha fi:plsfi.." Tienind that gorora "‘“”"‘%m;’;“:"’:‘m'fl.‘:“l"‘fi‘;‘;‘: o Bropones | it was not to bg tads publio until fter the vacancy been fust na well, for the community, economically up of emall doposita, but sggrogating milllons, are | 0T do, Ly uuffer, .mperfect or MONMOUST v1 plan stands a clear, solid, caitlvated Intellect, the unostentatious but firm force of quiet, peralatent enorggy, ant the inviolable pledgo of a born gentlo- was filled, und since then It haaceased tobe a mat- ter of public intarest, Thia statoment sccma duo to myself here, wheralhave many personal friends who aru {dontilied with the. Independent party, My nonrnation. I presume was on account of my opiulons un the subjoct of national Gnonces s published in the Sflrhuiflohl Ttepubdlican lant Janu- ary. Thote opinfons1 havenot clanged, They were put forth as sisggestions not of inilation, but of resumptions and a reduction of the intorest on the public debt. Now, evorybody plan, and they are all orlginal, In thatl wasno exception to the general rule, . T supporo {f Ishould throw a stono Inte this an- dlence nt the man who has the very best plan that oree waa invented for supplying currency, resume ng specie payment, and paying tho onnhc dubt, most of you would dodge. Bomo of you out of an afiected uiodenty may keep your plans wecrot, but yau know you have them, and some time like myr« der thoy will out. 1t is best - they should ** out, ™ Let us finve fall, free, candid dhcuulun' the trus plan will eventually l‘mrcnr and Aaron's serpeut will swailow all the otter sorpents, . Of cotiree that will bo yours, out you maat bide your time, for this la & wicked and parverse generation, It hu consldered, if all the laborers cinployed in the conatruction had been supported in idloness, and all thu {ron and tica had boen heaped up In plles. A groat denl of the deprossion now experienced 1 the result of bullding raliroads in sdvanco of tho buslocss, at extravagant pricos, and by the ald of State, counly, and municipal bonde. We sra meeting now the draft which was drawn npon tho *future then, We can make money In circulation abundant now by repeating that ‘experience, but wo ahonld only postpous tho ovil day and add to it new calamity. 1t was my fortune (or minfortnne) to be a resi. dent of Bucramento when that city was destroyed by firo in November, 1832, In the excltement of the occasion, in the hopefuluoes and dotermination which risea above calamity, we folt richer in town Tots immediately after the fire than we did in_lots ana bulldings beforo, The dclnslon did not Jast, 11 a largo portlon of your beaatiful ¢ity should be deetroyed by firo to-night, men would mortgage tholr lota to” rebulld, and while the bullding was nlng on, money would be plenty, bualness activa, abor cmplnflfl.\. When the morigages should be- coma duv, the actual extent of the lota could be renllzed. Thero neod to be a proverb thata war Dy far the laggost creditors, ~ Low common ia tho | 1 i t Iy uperfect, an resent, or Lo comoj eXyromton, 1 conld pagmy debla it T conld col- | Bobincy e e ol vege- Tact what 18 awlnguamo,T nm‘u no diversity [ £ON > Koo RO et 1n aytnlng to Tivs I O roa O ta That e tragaan# | ta s tor. T do not think tho color-aergeant from omeyed oligatehe. of platoceats, as It i tha fash. | Otter Creek, who Ictt the home of Lis clildhood to T ey Wit watt to'ba beaedted by an injury to | Join Company #¢0;" to follow it fhrough march | fon loxsy, who oo |,and bivouc, U slekakapnd siffering, and priva- the goneral public, ia as fallaclous as it lemischiov. [, 300 218 a0 v b “0n C'atood with. bis comrades in ous, : the front of the battle, Jolned them in tha chirgo 1 am aware that T am dwelling upon this sabject | npon the batterles that blazed with the fires of hell; tao long for your Interest; I wish to apologizeta | feil bullet-plerced, grasping the standard with the the Iadies who honor me ‘with thelr prosence, for | grip of death, as the darknoss of death wank upon while money Is an interesting thing l?hnnule. ftis {8 oyes,—I do not bellove his soul went otit to the a dull aubject to talkabout. 1am aduressing that | unknown with the aspiration, ** God sayo tho fed. sentimont which seema to believe there {u some | érattve agency,” What I8 our country? It {s mot potency 1n legislation which can oxygonize the | {he land and the sea, the river and the mountains—: vor{ riF with energcy and credit} somo Tusgic wand | (ha people, their history and laws. It issomething in ilnance which con create prosperily by a M?hi moro than all those, It isa bright ideal, s livin that the ields of Industry only await a shower of | presonce in tha heart, whoso destraction wauld ro reenbackn to mako them blossom with richea; and' | i oarin of its beatity, tho siars of thelr glory, tho hat 8 a bateful ogre called the monoy-power alts | aun of its brightness, I\fo of ita swoatuess, love uf at the doors of Congreas, keeps the fairy with the | 113’0y, mngio vand in prisan, snd reatrains the greenback n’y ‘conntrymen, cherlsh this taeal. It will oxalt cloud from ising. u | 7ou ae you ezait it " dnke it your, cloud by day, o Practically thero are but five metliods by which 0y Hoormutent can (it cirroner’ wllars of 110 by ntght. " Follow woers. it o Bpecial Dispatch 10 The Tridune. o iuren oy wogs - Ranmat . Moxwourn, 1L, Aog, 31,—The Republicans have mado a big day of it. In the morning a eplens did pole, 160 foet high, wan successfully saised, At noon the Ion. 8. M. Cntlom and tise Hon. J. K. 1odeall arslved. They wero met at the depot by Qcorge Snyder, President of the Hayes and Wherl« er Club, and the Executivo Committee, conslsting of W, A, Grant, F. B. Hardin, Capt. Turabull, snd D. D, Parry, who, with & fino band of musle, ‘were escorted through the principal ‘streets of the town, and wero handsomely cnterlained at the Commorclal Hotel. It woa the intentlon of tha Committce of Arrangemeuts to linve held a mass- meeting in the West Park, and the peopls were assembling in great numbers from all parts of the eounty, and everything Indicated = large and enthusiastic meeting. A tremendous atorm of wind, however, darkening the air with dust, drove the crowd from the Park into Unlon Hall. The meeting was organized here at ouce, when the in earncat with thisplan, for if “he " irero believe oan. ° And I repeat, that plan, 84 far as the powor | io be in ehrmest thete would be a mulitudo of Te- of the Presldeutial ofice goes, ho il carey ont. 1 |-publican polliicians who would rathor sce thole speak with confidence, for ~ that confidenco: T ' candidaty defeated than such s roforn succoed, ” ponsess, 1 havo his word for It, you bave | There may bo such Mepublican politiclans, But, s word for it, the wholo American,peopld | GOV, HATES' OWN WORD, }.::aml:‘un '\‘vnn‘!‘ lz‘r lu. And n"k‘-m' ayes |"nublicly spoken, warrants me in umu§ you thal honor, that word will be kep 'S Knln in earnent, and wmnruml-hmls‘ n’ earneat, t. r Dut you may say, **Granting all this, will he bo ablotd carry ont s good. futentions in'the faco of | A1 thera wore Hepublicans who would tey to dofeat the adversa'Intorests and influences In the Repub- | o) i 1 v. liayes will ever he Ycan party which will combine to defeat the con. | CiAuge bis position, Rl 5 templuied roforiat™ Thia ko 1s a leiiimate quey: prouia lark ood i ol'so ol " couse, " and n, R ! would rathier ho defeatod an ita faithful champlon, than succeed by betraylng it~ But now Task you, my Independent frionds, 1f that cause 18 o good that tho#palln politician would fear fta success more oven than the fallure of his gm 18 not there, for you, as wincers frienda of reform, every reason fo desira and work for its trinmph? _Conaidering with candor evory circumatance aurroundiug ue, carefully wolghing every probabllity, and fecllhg tho necensity of thorough aud luu\ng retorm, 1a it posaible that ou should bealtate in LET U3 FAIRLY EXAMINE IT. 1 Al thoe who undaratand uur.constitationsl s tem will aduit that the Presldent, himeolf and alone, can do muny (hings (owar tiat end by a shiaply excrclus of the powors of bl oflcs, 1o can, for lilmeelf and for the Lieads of Dopartmonts, chtablisli the rulo thiat not_party weevice, but ion. oaty, compotency. and Adellty & ] o egaried o the only qualideations for nominatl ment o bo considered. o can keep evory officer on or appolnt- your cholca?® Can you fall "y t yet got out of the wilierness, Now, thero and a flre made good times, Bat Idonot know Engaging in war, d. N L dfed in th it of | Qlre Olub, conslsting of J,. L. Dryden, Col. 10 place who bax perfarmed bl dutles witks Intogrl+ | {o sco that there {2 n buttle-field worthy of your | {iofy’ o ald of all the various pla 3 t ¢ (nternal CAc,. O MUKyr Aves Hod Ott ot on | Willlsm Marshall, J. W, Matthows,. and 3 1y nnd cfliciency. He cannake tho oficem of the s Tl b ohy plans | that uny one ever advocated iho burning of towns | Second—Commencing a eystem of luternal fm- IEh T ead O e condilany of nraian J. W, Ma A e omte o Lo officern of Lo | 'ellorts, hore: the Ting of wivnucatowardeshs obe |iamd suggestions on nis subject, Difcring | snd {helting of wats. for the awke of the **mood | Willoy, sung with great etfoct **[layes (s tho Xan. %o much in details and expectations ol rosults, the lardest of hard-money men anid the #oftest of tho soft npon u candii comparwun will find their principal diferenco Is abuut mathods and not about general principles. Lotk will agreo that the cirrency of the country ought Lo bo atable in value; both will agree that in thls commercint age and country some form of credit will circulate us monay, Weo shall have United States notes or focts which, ot trua raforincrs, You must hold ilgheat? A chnuge! 18 yourcey. Yes, & chaugel fa mine. 1ut do you iot, with me, tisist upan a chinige that opens tho prospect of Taeting im- provemnent? Isa change of partles all you want, whatever the consequencal If you nre in eatnenst, you will want more; yon will want a change in tho very lelng, In the uaturs of partles. “Thnt ia the great thing nocdful. Dut in the snce 1d rogress, but pl for the canse ocousccrated hy Binfiond, " Sthve to plerco the futuro; listen to ho foot-fall of coming genoratione, | No chilg o ¢ born on ear ut has an intcreat In I Fourth—Issulng greenbacks to lend, of liberty and equality, Itiseto the helght of a Fifth—Giving thom avay. great accasion, Tiear the volce of the ages. Take ‘Thare Is one other method,—repudiatlon,—but T | your reckoning by the stars, Then choode, =~ On= will not {nsult any ono here by the suggustion of | ward! **With malice toward nons, with chatity to ita moral possiblity, W and o+ N Can .n}’ ono suggest any other means by which a3l," and $MAy God forfend the right. rovements, Third—Collecting Jess revenue than Is neces: for the carrunt expenses, and makingup tl ficit by {asulng greenbackn. times," Occosionslly there ls a firo of real benefit, when It destro: me old rookery which has no actual valus and stands In the way of ndvancing tmprovement., The galn of oue Civil War was that it destroyed forever un -Institntionoa old as ry, which waaa dimgrace to hnman nature, which ¥tood in tho way of hmprovement, and en- ubled usto bulld upon a foundation Ormas the racks a tomple consocrated to equal rights, dedl- not to be a party sgency, aud that they will have to canduct thameelves accordinely, Ife can refuso t be governed by the rccommendations of Congressten Who come fo bim, or to the heads of Departments, to dictate appointments, Yo can, §f need bo, even withaut appropeiations from l:un%m-r, ndopt certain muthods for sucer- talning tho Gthens of cundidates for oftice, and liave them carrled out through competent ofticers George Suyder then Introdnced to the mudience, which -had nouw flled the hall, the Hon. J, K. Fdsall, Br, Edsall spoke for an bour with deep earnestne: many solld arguments and fac! Mr, Edell thought that the lunatice of the Pantlac School of Reform {n onr Siale would probably, wlen tuey graduated, do s much for reform as would be ace complished by the Dumocratic party if thoy shoutd coun uf linyes, not that of Tilden, will yoo fnd | papk-notes, or buth, They will agreo farther that | cated 1 dom. 3 t can Inflite the carrency? Do s0 fortunsto as to hold tho refns of our Govern® in be Depascncate,| Allthatno Bstlon cun o | (7o sty then, thata Shane i Tlares | AFfent bafcacios we Bae eve 1 ot Sooire | rs s fo momenttoromck ot 1 .8 e iR hatcinee of tneo ot would NEW YORK. B st S It | ThRasna e | W e o, F sl i by | msinab et S 1 i | Sl p o) reroun scoarr. Gz ma e e My indopendent Qroanback frlends, you beliove B G o reAEnt an Sty Ihe whols tar 5 Apeciat ”’"’““"‘“;{‘_’;‘fi:‘ S ain rency of the country directly, oro ¢quitably than ARATONA, N. Y., Aug. -3l I nigh! by londing its credit to the banks and eharing the | the delegates cooled down somewhat, #o that the peilisgemiihthein, Sa dod seasion of the Convention this mornlog waa inore lore that thls can b accomplishied by an Inter-convortible bond, 80 do, 1" belleve that | ot siouldbe. A ripple of applaie ran through Uila syatem, more thas any othier, requires for ite | {he house whon tho name of Beymour w Miccess tha dlacharge ot avers mationa) bligation | bive lottera on tho watl, and this being taken asa according lo ftwIettor and nirit, and the malnte. | sign that the nomination mado amid sdch wild en- :ch: of u"fifé’é‘.?-‘e' a‘n cmdnlt? ':lh:mg‘)lmt mndnlnl thnsiasm Jast night was accepted.” Such waa an- e pu nce. ot you agren Wi To. 1t you ars doomed to corcaint diappoints | Rownced o ba the fact ehortly wftar, and thea tho monta if yon bellevo thet manoy wuuld bu more | membors did not know whether ar not ta fuel abundant under the Inter-convertible syatam than | so jubilant. Certaln delegates were outspoken under the Iumklnq. or that any magical'change will | {n thelr opinlon that Beymour's hoalth was too be wraught by It Tn_ tha bustivoes, * the tudustrios, | cocxrious for an active campalgn, snd that, whon Mablio Reglsler, which bo nald” showad the clest alma of the Domocratic party In thelr attempls fa the Bouth to rob the negro of the ballot: ‘The grave question to b# settied, st much cost, ll‘ ywhat FToo don ta” g6t ia af (he hegroas s viter Boaner or later, with more or less dirpaich, he will b disfranciised ahd thrust ont of politios. Whito men of All partica, and of every grade of religlousor morsl cun: victiou, may ne wefl cume quickly to the consideravva how tolget ihe nogra aut bt politles with the least Suac sfon &nd cost. Tla winet Ko, aud here s n prodt (8 standing lang upon tlio order of Lis KOlug. More mnale from the splendid Moumonth Dand, An original song, ** The Tilden Uarber-8hop, followed. Tho 1lon. B, M. Callom then was introduced. Tio has spokon now for nearly two wecks dall e held his audience nearly two lours wl only with regaril Lo 10w supolutiets of o ce taln cluss, may be offered by tho Senate in rofu {ug to contirm Lis nominations. —But whether o syatematic opposition of that kind cau long cone conlinue will ina great measura depend upon the spirit anlmating the clomenta componfug the Ad. minixtration party, us well as the drift of public spinion generally, Of that, more hercaltor, 1t 4y evident, thun, thatin the work of luougurat. 1ng; b genulue reformt of the ciyll servica the Prusle dent fu thy natural leader, sud thut moch of 1L he can accomplish, for the time belug wt leant, withe ut the ald, and eveu agalnst the opposition, of Cangreen, ‘1t muay be objectoll that” Gen. Grant once desteed to reform the clvil servico fn this wita, but that he had to succumb to tha oppoaition of hia own party L Congreas, . A change from Hepubliéan to Democratic spolls In olities, WhatIs o chunge to llayes? A chanye rom tho epolls ayatom 10 a truo roform of the clvil mervico and tho overthrow of machine poll- tlcs, 'That [a the prediction T mnake, and with con- fdonca I lovk Into the future to see It verlfied, Lan tho duty of aincers friends of reform ba doubt- ful? 1 ot leant sue inlnc us clearly aw over, and to the laat will § perforin it. Au cffort is belng imude to convict thees Indus pandents, and especlally the members of I MAY CONPERENCE IN NEW TORK, who think snd aet ns 1 do, of juconeistancy hecause we support tiov, Ifuyes, Illhnfll{h that Conference “did ut that ime not conalder him a dealrahte can- didate. Thoss elorta trouble me Hittlo. 1 do not belang to that claen of lirel! minds who think that ol nish tho wholo eirculation withont danger of arbi- tary inflation or cantraction thut would be dexire able. They will also agrec that in order to main- taln a wtobllity of valtie In paper currency there miust be sonte inethod of redemption, It 1sa ut- ter of surprise to tind bow little difference there fn {n the plana of redumption, The Iate Secretary of the Treasury recommonded in his last annual re- port tuat he should be allowed to fund $,000,000 of greenbucks nee month until- by a reductlon of thelr volume they would appreciate to par with golil,* This would have boen contraction, It Is true, Mutthe **precnback ™ men aro in favor of allowing the holders of United States nated to fund them dnto Interconvertible bunds. Now thin op- tivn of conversion s worth something or nath u wonld .there 18 8o much to bo doue to make It benutifnl and fruitful os & At habitstion for man, the de- atractions of war and fire could ever woem to be blessings by giviug labor vu opportunity to earn its daily bread. [low vast the labor which has been employed to rostore what has been dovastated by war and destroyed by fire, The rmpully in the United Btated, ‘the whole wehlth, Inciuding lands, averaged somcthing leas “thun 81,000 to ench fu- babjtant, ‘That svarnge syould be a liboral estimate for the civilized world, Now if tho average valuo ofa year's Iabor {s worth a $100 to each fnbabl. tant, including consumption, 1t follows the world, with 6,000 or 6,000,000 years of history behind it, hias anly put in tte savinge bank, bos iy sccimu lated, the earning of 10 years, ‘I'hat ls cupital {t has to o oLy What a all the S ng. 1 nothing, of courss the men exif ga ¢ co! i grand appeal to vols the Republlcan tickett AR, oL U AD MO0 supouRn, || e c;:;“lfilnmflrw‘“:‘:m:y‘;g ‘ml'ulc\l'::::l it they ure | ba ! '“fi“" somuihing, convemious woull be | wastetal, and desiructive warid it b ot TAnd | Wit canac hatT belloce the ul:r'\“lg-uclllz?lnl'u-! it came w;"wl derod that ho lad bobn run for | Faike Tl apeuch 'was rocelved with great oath Ty ookt et et | Zutdd and it would resuls tn cotruction. 11 tho [ It havnol got tirough sowing ite *‘wild oute™ | plcion Ly ‘the grest expctations apd visionary | Governor fiva thica and defastod three of thomm, et. sinem, enc; Vunal powers, he could ave done it. 10 Fackiton In, Hob setior 1 appens Juapotineal ciure ke eivil wervice within the roach of his cmiilllu- y promisesof many of the advocates, Ithink it will | hesldes being defoated for tha Prosidency and Sen- in this part of the Btate, rctly canulst- |- volume of our currency shuuld not be vqusl to th Tam ondeavoring to show fhat well-direct . i uducted by Cullom and Eduall, fa wakiug up tbs sotasy. e Tnseiod e diat ot ni, but A usetlon s, Howaro w (o nctn ordue | eania of burinwss, I ooy stiould bo dn-dewanul | Inbar s th only Thio sontee of plrmpcm{.hc{‘h!“{ BRI an ivenanion 1e s s veriatn_ that. bl N moamsecala wong b aoriy: tat. 1hes. :""’E{‘" Rearyall tho Indopehdents have comd o 10apport N, and, it that had been jusate | kit so haicne mlm_'“mmc‘m“n‘glm“{" A0 that the holdor of a & 65 gold bond could mako | lal bo wasted, and that when itis 1t 1s ns | and other questlons of fncal policy and general youngor man, Iike Potter, who ha ck to the lepublican party. The Iepu more than that with mouey, hes wonld taks bl houd to the TVreavury and gut currency for it. Under the Secretsry's play, If there shoulil be a do: nand for more currency, the banks wunld depostt additional bonus with the United States ‘Crovaury and {estio more bank notes, It there be any prine cipfe of inttation In either of theae plans it {6 in the Taiter, for In tho Orat the bonds snrrendered ceano to bear intercat; fn the lattor, the bond deposiied does niot benr interent, and whatover prot tiero ls Incircolation is an inducement to tho banks to make It as Inrge wy practicable, Again, onc r):m of resumption fe to éell bonds from {lme to timu aud pluce the pold in tha ‘I'reasury to redecm green - backs when preecnted. The greenbiack men say, when tue holder of & United S1ates noto presents’It for udum\ulun. ‘L’lu b the Lond and et bim sell ivorkeeplt. Tha greenback en are In favor of a currency lssued wholly Ly the Governinenl, ‘Thero wre very few hard-money men who will uot admit that the (ovorument should supply a part. It la uot ray fntentivn to dléciss the relattve merit of thees plans. 1 have long boen of opinlon that the tiovernuent could 1asyc a Jouy fund nter- convertible with currency, futeroat payabls In gold, ot a lower rate of inferet than any other drlrrl‘lllnn. and that theougl the Inatrumentality of wuch a bond the voluine of currency would ba welf-reiuluting, und would be .upplmf with loss i the more complicated a- uc, ‘The gain woald be n a 4t the Uovernment would bo compolled 1o pay. I do nat see how it would make noney wore abundant, fur eny dne who has a Guyerninont bond can get inuney for It no Whoever sxpects through this or any atlier instr mentality that money [¥to Lo madu abundant wo thut ftcan be earned without toll, mccumulated without frugallty, ls doomed to disappointment, Todividuals ey get rich by & fortunate accldent under any systom, but colmmunities can only grow d prosperily by lsbor and economy. al & loss ns idleness; that the amonnt of monoy in circulution will depend on the renl Qomand of businers: that it expanelon and conggaction are alfects of what we call good and hard times, not caunoss that speculative excltoments are followed clent, ho could Liave appealed to “the intelligent maescs of the Kepublican purty and the patriotic optnion of the country gencrally, and they would tiuvo sustained him. Tho true calise of s fallurs wad that hio neverscems Lo have appreciated whist a feunine reform of th clvil sorvico conslata In that u had other things {ar mors warmly ut heurt than that reforu, and that with no siall degreo of s |Ia:rh{heunllrd hlwsolf of tho opposition of the oliticlany in Congress to drop the wholo schome. Chat b the truth of history, sud 1 ventura to ray thore fa scarcely 8 woll-infored tnan bo the coun- iry who gueution 0 not understand me, howeyer, mating the ebrongth of the inluences inside of the Jepuldican party, wlich, In case of tha clection of Goy, Hayen, will conspire aml co-operate to de-’ feal the success of wenulne roform, | kuow thom woll, aud indulge In_no deluslon ‘with regard to them. ~No svoner will the new Presidont begin his work than many of those who uscd tho pol ether for thelrown supportur, ss & meaus of po: litleal management, will rally §n forco to humper and cripple him, Tha force will be stroug and very determined, "Tho pressure broughi to ber upoa the Presldent to swerve bim fram his pur. pose will be tremendous, It Wil bu represented bim that no party can live without public plun- der. and that the abolition of the spuils systom wili lead to tls downfall of the Republic. “¥rom Hattery {o thrents, lrnmJurlvuln Bpieals 0 open demonntrutions of hostility fn Congress, eve weana will bo employed to induce him to brea Lisword. A that vpposition will be directed by abls leaders, oxperienced in all by revources of political warfare, No, 1du not underestimato it, 0 1 kuow it but oo well, AND WUAT WILL TUE KEW VHESIDENT UAVE TO OF'POSE TO BUCHL AN ONSRT Inths frat place, the ood falth and frm resoln- Uon of an houeat'p Fu the politiciaus, adminlstration will not recoive the candid and In- ( personal maguotiem and plonty of money, In teltigent conwtderation thelr importanco dumands, | general, however, the politiclans, withiout regard whilo the Demacratic party, asa dlstinct political | o ractions, sgrae In thinking thoy bave d. organizntion, clatms the tight to adminlster the areq in tulnkinit .oy iave -dare Gernmont by vIFine of (ts past charactcr and ser- | £rest thing fn getling thelr most sminent, wise, vices snd present professions. Therefore the Dem« | and roverend siatesman st the head of the State ocrutic party ought to bo destroyed, Iknow | ticket, In the movement narty contalns many good men, ylncero, ability ond YORTER SHCOHG VEAGR petrlottsin, whose ichost anpiations and sincorcat ND atriotinms are hold In chy I:{ thu strong thral- | it was evident Dorebelmer way the coming man,* ow uf yasty discipline, Thereforo tho Deviocratlc | and John Kelly hproved th occasion to tako Datly oight to bo destroyed. back all bo bad sald against the Liberals, as well Political inatitutions are not far a day, or & year, 4 o n Preattiominl tenus, e fondly hipe Amcrican | 9 meke capltal by seconding Dorsheimor's momi- P e il irme. " Follical partios are | nation. Thls put the Conventian in excellent hu- not accldents. They have & deeper significanco | mor, aud accismation was tha order of the day till than lh;,w&m-l;.nv- -vg‘ ""‘("J.'Hff %;;':l;u publle | the eandidacy for PrisonJospector was reached. men. It the o B Torcan witis Koverning [doan and dentiments which | Kiogs County hore made ¥ clatm in tho persan of eontral thelr dirsction, If wo would understand | Hubert . Anderson, snd, since Kingu scldom suks m:lu tlnrclu=, “ 7’.1?““&:“&“;&":% :{:-.:- mv:‘: 4 fuvor, the Conventlon conld hardly refuse, even and calcalats thelr direction enea - e U eray e WAL b fof Vet “':::zll:mr. Clark wore Gov, Tildon's appolutee aud the liistory uf the party where I8 princinlea sre'ro- e Veateds Ho. studyIng tha Democratic Aty wo nd TRE KVANTS OF TR DAY It tho same it wie in” IRG0-"tH4+'68-'74 unchanged, | were the sddresses of Ularkson N, Potter, Benator ““':&""“’flfl‘" aprepuatanty theetore 1 thiuk it | Kernan, and Liout.-Oov. Dorsheimer, who all ought to bedei 3 confeas, wllhm{‘ shiame, that I have longed for twanged the siting of roform, sud thanked good- the day wiien the political 'organizatlons of this | ness that the Convention, of which they had not country should not petpetuato, sven by thelr |-8xpected much after yeslerday's scones, bad dia- Ramos, ths iemorles of onr Clvll War—when the | played such wisdom and patrlotisw. No doubt dlmenslons of the War, its paesions and hatreda | oy bad reason to feel thankful, ahiould Lo burled witk Lo dead ~when it awfal dos DISGUST, striction of lifu shonld Le remembored sy a come | Last night a delegate from a western district sald. WOD surfOW, W neceasary sacrifice, wn explatory | he would Liavo given $1,000 had the Convention oftering wade to frecdom and unfon, which no navnrm‘:. and woothgr $1,000 If ihe newspaper siatesmanship coutd uvert, inaconflict of idvas | reporta®could be suppressed. Tlo did not relish which waa {novitable. Tut Y have o duep and abid- | sasociation with men who bad wrilten thewmsel {ng soneus_ tuat whiiv the Dewmocratic jaity maine | down aesce or worse, The plcassutry was freely taiisfuy politieal orgenizations, porpoiuaica lla old | passed, apropos of Ngmum's prosence n fho vil- 0, inal 1hat overwhelming mn]ur\lr of the !(n{ Conference who to-day support Guy, | n{u will be called fn- conslstent’by candil men. - speak with pertect frankuess 10 you, Things have nol developed themselves as [ and wany others desired three wonths ago. \We hoped for the nominatiou of Mr, Drintow, who stood Leforo the country as the recoguized leader of the reform movement. And 1 moy 52y here, I other gentletnen, with whoin :vln many things 1 agroed, proclalumed the alterna- v, minjority In this county this full may bowot duws B3 about 700, " pecial DIspaLcn 12 The Trib spatch fo The Tridrne. mum.,fil. Aug. 81, —Au enthusisatlc nzrn- lican meeting licld at tho heudquarters of the llayca and Wheolor Club last evoning. Sturin; apéechns were made by John Lorrain, President of 8 Club; Dr. 8. P, Yeomoue M. Maynard, candldate for the Leglalature; mfi Hon, Wi, Spenecly aud J, Pawcelt, lfl Ai‘fl“ torchilght purade of the liayes and Whoolsr Miaaie Men took vlace early lu the nveulufi. nd tho scene along the Jino of miarch wad anlinatlng in the @ : treme, The party s splenaldly organized in thie clty, Hkewlve throughout the entire county, 88! Republicans are working with o will, ‘.“ Lo the end that no man on tholr ticket shail vo J¢ ¥ out n the cold in Noyember noxt, ~The boat mate riul in the purty hos been called to tlis frout, "‘1] the sevdral candidates are certain ta by slected, while Hayes and Wheeler, and the State tick U: well, will be given a rousing mafority, ~'Ibis 18 00 Idle talk, but posltive truth, in the light of pressdl Indleatiune. Spectal Dispaleh 15 The Trivuns. Special Dispaich to 1N DaxviLLE, 1L, Aug. S1,—Sensior John A Lo-l gonarrlved here lo-night, ‘A large delegation o} prominent cittzens met him at (e depot upon B arrtval, While the ¢raln was coming sslutes wi T gred Ly the Dsuviile Dattery, Intheavening Cay Cowsn'scompany of Jayes and Wiheelcr Guards corfed the Benator to Liiicoln by rusctions; and that speculutive values are na rual addition to the wealth of a country, Thare ls no m{nl road 10 substantial proeperity any inore than fo lourning. There is no eacape from the In- evitable law for everything that fs good—the full price niust bo pald saoner or later, 2 Home of you nay rumember tho **Mortie Multly calls ' manla thut mued in thls country aboul thir- ty-sevenyearaago, Fortunessprangup likedonah's gourd, but they did not Inst any longer. 'The wero uade fu’aduy, and vanlhicd ina night. Tt was s revival on a sinall weals of the time in Hol- Jand whon the industrioun ilollanders wers smitten with the idea that they could all get rich by selling tullp bulba to each ubiier, snd ‘)Iawnd up their cab- bagtw to plant tallps, No peoplo have Leen entircly Irew from Uicse noral epldomics, We have had weveral veaeons of them in the Western States, when papor towns werw dotted over the map, each of whicl was another Chicago, and when everybody wae rich, in expectancy, 1) corner lols, Bome- timea thuy take u very whimaicalahapo, A few years ugo therowns a rage In Jspau for white abbilta. A white rubblt with tafl aud ears of the fashiooable cit and eyes of the “most fazhionuble pink would bring w fabulo ce, and was & mors precious pat than (hs doarest littlo lapdog that ovor nustled [ o Indy’s muil, Aoy one who conld getn gnlr of rablits could go fulo the moet profitable usineas In the Kingdow of the Buw, The divid- ends were quicl tapld, 1n fact, they were too fupld, For it wan diacovered that with proper care sud stention rabbits would m\llllLIy untli they wouldake possssion of the lslands, destroy the Lerbage of the deldw, and mulliply th ol the face of the earth, Now the term HRRISTOW ORt TILDEN,'* nevor agreed with them on that. Sute of the rea. soua I hive already given. luay add that Quy, "Filden's nntiring, extonsive, and cumplicated ef- forta to abtaln the nomination for tho fiosidency were not calculuted to increate my confidence In his mixslon s a reformer, and lu the resulta which would dcvulnlulwmulvn after his electlon, Well, our hopo for the nominstion of 3lr, Bristow was lsappointed, Why had wo doslred LY Not bo. causo of perdonal (riendship for Mr. Bristow, but becaaso his nouination triumph of the reform Idea, & conduct Wunrlmml s policy in accordance witl Of the policy ropresented by hini & thorough ru- forms of the eivil wervice un: speedy rotumn to specly poyments furiied the principal featurcs, Theso were afler all the true enide we had in viow, and thelr reallzation the object of our en- deavors, And now, when a candidato stande be- fore us whose nomination waa indecd not {n ftaelf & conepieuous triumph of our Ideas, bnt who opens 10 e 10 (he 1nort courageous and positive manuer a :|ulr’prulvect ol the sttalument of thy snmogreat ende of which Mr. Bristow had appeared ns the represcntative, all Wo then refuse him our sup- port? Would It bo conslstent to run away from the cause of truv roform, merely becausy the name of Ite reprezontative (s 'not Lristaw! Are wo littlo children to ubandon our great onds la the most ve- in Danville, $Thu 0 Tho plattorn} und every aval dreds' of Indles -uap"lguuuemen were t:\gm away unable fa get . el raLbita® has & very diffcrent meaning In Japun ton of : : traditions, insista. Gpon. comina Int * e | Lo, “as @ ‘alango coincldunco which | 1lle specths wai, escollent. ' AL tho b bt o, who wlcoms o cajoly ot coerct | rious sirugyles o ifeas baon ur it ccompifah: | Wilh thess, sd it aie natural ddvanisge, | from wiat il s, ofad, i Dalddiores” umpliniy wi hnu-d: o ST R Lroudght the two mensgories to Saratogu tho samo Haycannd Whesler, the i sesounied wiil ool 5 Care, e in casenco, i a | ticle prosperity. camiot by lony. retardcd. 0 SRR " m S : o A : sy, i | have wolenoly promlacd tothe Amor- | Garb diiberchy £rot Bt wiieh swa b forasincdt Loiacin UL skt o eREHmOLE L EYcryboNs | ethd B e ey P A nathy | oy fu it W bagilono, pigrulting al) (Bt 15 bas | day.” In thelne o cuing chucrs, Tha Goneral assaultc falied to prevent Yhe fiepublican party can 1o moro CONVENTION GOSSIT, altord to dishund, to relax 148 bigh purpose or great | it 1s sald that John Morrissoy packed the floor endeavor, thay the Uniou army codld afford 1o lay | and gallorics with his followerd; who voted on all down 1te arme lu the preseuco of the urmed hosts | questivia and aidod hiu to drown th kors by 1lion. shooting **Soymaur? ‘'Qive usa Demacra fur Whaterer may bo otr individnal sspirations, | Governoe!" aud tho ifke. Thasbeand Kelly are, whetlior we lku 1t ot dislike it, the presont politi- | as ever, st swords' points waa evinced by Moarria- cal conteat b Letween the Meopublican and Dowu- | scy's voulug forClark because Kelly bad champi- fean pouple, nd an a uimi of putriotivi aud haor, who lu mindful uf bix duty Lo render hiv best o vice to hia country, and who will not leavo s dis. kraced uame to hiu'children, this promise 1 can and aliall 5ot break. 3t will be fuldlled Lo the ettor, " Aud this, follow-cltlzens, 4 what 1 am convinced Wit Rutherford B, Uayes willdo, But Lis own ’ cratlc ruuks with (b saie acdor and euergy thel e thanifeated whety at. Peachiree Creuk, b led Iife arimy agafust the Tildeuites to aveuga tha dea of McPhieraon, KINKWOOD. Bpecial Ditpaich ta Tha Tribuna. Kimgwoun, ill., Aug 31.—Cullom and Edall ll? Lere. They wro feceivad ot tho dspot by Lia Comy pro anthorizin uan of 810,000,000, “Though It Iy nearly forty years azo, perhaps suoie of you can. No ovent 1u the hlstory of the State caused more eneral rojolcing. We had no citles then, but thy r-barrels blazed at the cross-ruads, towns and villages wera fllumivated, tarpentine-balls fashed Hko wetcors through the sticetd, sad eyusybody scems to get rich by buying wild lsnds, town’ lots, faucy stocks, and discounting the futire are unl- formly fotllowed by depresulony—when Actitions valuse vauish llke fairy gold, real values are dopreclsted, and labor bas o bear the goubly burden of paying for past fuprudence ond preseut support, Ju lwst svsurt 14 But vou eay Gov. Hayes was ducluded fna cluse of candldates whony the Conference pronounced ln itu addresy unflt for snpport, ~ Aye, and whot Low? I have wore than once addressed to tha conscience of dlssatisfied fudependents, without ever recelving su uawer, thie question, liad the Muy Conferencs been asked, Can wosupport s candidate who, kuown -