Chicago Daily Tribune Newspaper, September 18, 1876, Page 1

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- The hicago Daily Tribuwe, . VOLUME XXXIL CHICAGO, MONDAY. SEPTEMBER 18, 187G. PRICE FIVE GENTS, tha hotlest objects, the Toftiest impulses, the heat purpotos of the colntey, and calle itnell the Re- prblican l.m:! 1 ank them If they remember when lint great vroceslon swelled in yolume so that it embraced the whole continent, when It meta rebelilon In arma, when it theatticd the lifo out of it, when It saved 'the great Nation? 1 ask them if they remember when these loyal people burled the " loyal wone In avery valley ahd on cvery ill- Aide in ihe land? I nak them if they remembier tha thoneands and mililons of dollars and the connt- Iesn thonsands of lives ascrificed that this nation mightliver Insk them, finally, if they remember, when peace came, and when, to protect the na- tional credit, another war qults a4 kreat fn ta pro- portlons as the firat to vindicate and maintain the national credit hias been fonght and wwon against the same ardvereatien: ana | ask them to-day If, when e AR ; POLITICAL. Speech of E, A, Storrs to JANDET BROTHERS, | * = 121 & 123 Statest., The Issues which Are to Be exhibiting largo and complete linos of 3 the victory is finally achloved, we may not he per- Aro irablo atyles, {n Y mmedwnudnwn\'. the hearth-stones which we ":,"5";’")';‘;1%’5%'153”55 OFRSTRY BRUS. Settled by the Com- Binva anvel) and nh’l:mt o' rolbers :n;!*l’xlinnder- A i . of " the - mational . honor ‘con- PoLs, THREE.PLYS, snd INGRAING, ing Election. cilinte “ust ' (Laitghtor.] Wonldmt It be woll B following : tuat thera shouid he a Confeierate dcputation com- ing up from the rice-fields of Bouth Carollnag wouldn't it be well if & delegation of Confederate Democratashonld come here from lamburg, here to this heautiful Town of Freeport,—! Ing the olive.branch in their 1ands, and any to the gaod old loyal cltizens of loyal old &,flfimumon. ' 'We POPUL@BRICES' Record of the Democracy. Body Brussels, Enforcing the Constitu= tional Amendments fl’x‘n“l”anmh‘lfie'fm}:"hl“:-’g'" Jinnt l“‘!l‘“d}:“ o c ' running for” President to-day, an 1,60 per yard up, lon g all hie Torces, Tray, Blanche, and Sweethoact, Ay ussels thatthe brond-browed, big-hearted men of Sto- Tapestry Br e Ep e Phetern oo e leniuns, s sonctaie $1.00 por yard up. A New Application of the Para- | anld do no s, (hngs sna. if (RS 3 o tha wost of It, Three-Plys, ble of the Prodigal Son, TIIX DEMOCTATIO PARTY, Tepeak of the Demncrafic party, It comes to $1.35 per yard up. mES—— you to-day asking that the confidence which you . S & withdrew from it twenly years ago nearly shall be Ingrains, Where Was' Tilden During | s rotoraiofy Wit bis tdonet Tuenty 3 mocratlc party In 400 per ny;rd ;;Plul'l‘ i the ‘Vi:}.l‘?;}--A. Confed- ;I)Iuc'lnnnlfl ;’I'? unn!gxuyi ’c‘p‘%fi.&;::;l gnuolc):‘nrllltl an in- TE A o cmocratic party, which 1o eman ,o',',‘&n.‘?}a%g?fum Y aWISS and NOT- cerate Congress. sullrages of the ' people, . organized ftsell into n party which' eald the sunshine of trecdom shall be local, and the Llack shadow of rlnvery shall be natfonasl. Thissame party orzan- {zcd accession in the War, and, having failed in meeling reavon hy the bullet and srgument by tho Dinageon, took ita political principles to tho ant feid to which those quustions are ever referred, [t car- tied them into battlo; its banners went down inde- feat; te hopen were crualicd; its arma were defeat- nd 1sald, and you sald, ns we stood tpon the edge of that mighty confilct,—its roor still ringing In our cars, and {ts smoke sull Mg the aky—*‘Surrender®—not only the men who fought, and the guns with which they lou‘,'ht. ut ¢*Surrender every single political Iden for which . you ‘fought." 11, when Lee's armies snerendered at Appomaitex, they did not surrender the * damnable heresies ont of which the War grew; if we did not demand that sarreuder, the War was a fallure as boso nnd shamcless as Tllden doclared it in 1804, 1 supposed, we all supoosed, that, when their armics wero annihilated, thelr political idens wero annibllated ns woll. Has thero been any conversion? Toint me to a single Demno- crat sonth of Mason and Dixon’s line, big or little, who to-day will tell you that he entertains on tho quicstion of State Sotarcignty an apinion {n' tho slighteet degree different fram that which ho held when the War began. Pofut me to a single lend- ing Democrat North, prominent In politics, who was & Democrat when the War began who to-day will tell you that he belleves on the ?muun of State Bovercignly one lota differently rom what he dld sixtcen yearsngo. s it pousible, then, that u party made up of thoaame membors, each Individual member holding the same bellef that he hold twenly yenrs ago,—that the parly has CURTAINS, TERRLES, CRE. e TRIMIIINGS, oto., which wa are offoring at unususlly low pricos, Can the Democrac: ¥ Be Intrust- MANDEL BROTHERS, ed with the Care of 121 & 123 STATE the Finances ? COALs e | Qooking Record of Tieut.-Gov, Dor- (overcd (oal---Clean and Dr ¥ gheimer, of New York. COAL CO. PITTSTON COAL | * 5ot Somvascie ™™ Northwest. Prices reduced tb norrespond with thoso East, as follows: GE AND SMALL EGG-...$7.00 fosti LARGE AND #1:00 | Enthusiastic Hayes and Wheeler RANGE.... 7,60 Rallies Ban;‘g Held Every- cusniod whea. ticce Jin bosn n0 shings. in, the ere. 1861 ) . TIL! B Aatwirataatiag the i s R T T TR ) late heavy rains, we deliver it per. nithough a State had no right to sccede, the Genernl y - Government had no right to_cocrcs it into tho foctly dry, froe from wator, dirt, and E. A. STORRS, Unfan, Tina Tilden changed? s thero a Deinocrat slate, 2,000 1bs of clear Coal, THE BPRECIH AT FRREPORT, in tho whole lon;lh and breadth of the land that Torms-~-Cash with orders. The Republicans of Freeport had the pleasurg | has changed? Not oue. 1f no individual member has chauged, how, then, has the parly changed? "It they have changed, If “they have revolutionized that belief, if lller Are now honestly of the epinion thnt this nation Is one and Judivisibie; that the right of sccesslon does not vx- ixt; that there ¢ inhorent in the General Guvern- ment the power to crush out the attempt wlenover i Friday evening of listening to a speech from gm&?fi:fl?fifimfim:& Bridge. Emery A. 8torrs, of this city. The announce- y. wment that ke was to speak, and the meeting of H. 8. VAN INGEN, Supt the Congresslonal Conventlon in the ufternoon, had filled the town with people, and the largoe AWE v = 2 ¥ it I8 mads; 11, to follow this out, there ta & singlo JEWELRY, WATCHES, &c. hall which had been secured for the meeting | 330 0008 (o', 00 60T a Y eached thoso conelas An ologant ansortmont of could not hold the crowds—Itepublicaus and | ions, there s but ono way” in which the genuine- ness ‘of bis chiange of conviction can Lo demon- strated, and that 1s by. leaving the Democratic }mrly and joining the ranks of Republicanisn. Domocrats—who thronged to hear the cloquent é!é EI C H E S advocate. Followlug fs a_full report of the , speech, which was Interrupted continually by FINE COLD JEW ELRY the plaudits and laughter of the audience: Mn. CoAIRMAN, LADIRS, AND GENTLEMPN; T SILVER AND SILVEB-PLATED WARE, | by no means feel n nddressing the magnlficent Applaitee.] Wlhen the beathen censca to worship iz idol of block or stona aa the real Gad—when Lio Lelloves tn tho divinlty of the Bavior, and In the traths of the Old and the Not Testamont, o dockn't stuy ainong the hedthen, but joins the AT ABOUT audience here to-night assembled that T am gy;:flet"&';flllwy‘;mlflgflg l";e-&v"gcgfimu e HALF THE REGULAR PRICES | among strangers, or that I am spesking fo | out from among your heathen sssoclations, stop Now belng closed out at the strangers. Ihave known Freeport, its people, zvr:.r‘:g‘lan:lggr .yanlll-erfl(::‘n Ifi.-'m'::fr J’Jififieu‘nfifi ufi)‘e‘unxflg' BANKRUPT SAILIX, |tssurroundiugs, its patriotic splrit, its loyal | FlySin youraelvea clean, put on s now ahirt, ¥ impulscs, for the last 16 years. Iam somowhat c.o rh?::,f;afifi, %‘:Ensi?lrk atas rencwing to-night an acqualntanca commenced — — 10 years ago, and I am renowlng that nequaint- TO IENX. B auce on an oceasfon very much like that under which we met when the acqualntance began. It is curfous to me, and, perhaps, may bo soto [ you, to sce how long a time it takes to wipe out old polltical lssucs, and to substitute in their place entircly new oncs. Wo lave all walted, watched, and boped or theday to come coma into the ranks of Repubileanlsm, don fta garments, aud thua provo tho genuincness of the cliange of hoart which ou claim Lo Lava. experi- enced. [Applaue and laughter.] “Tucy toll us, howevor, to look back upon THE GOOD OLD TIMES. 1 linvo listencd to soine, and I have road mora re- cent Domocratic apeeches. There Is a sad, poetic {ouch about come of them that is quite Impresaive, They tell us whiat tremendous wrongs this Rtadical tepublican porty hus done, what injurios It hsa intficted upon the people. Look back, they may, to tho good old time when the Domocratic party was {i power. Thero was the old patri- arclinl slaveholder setting under his brond-brimmed hat on hie brond. plagza, - conservativo_in ull his sentiments, reading the ordinance of 1787 and tha when bygones should be really bygoucs,~when the past with all it dreadful inemorics could be erased,~when all the troubles which we had overeome would be behind us as o bad dreams IN TETE when, withnew lssucs, new partles, now orgunic | Kentucky resolutions, whilo his litle chattcls, 1 AT zations, this great nutfun, sturting afrosh upon | male and female, wore danclog Jubs upon the T 4 its career, mnight say to itself that, whatever i"“" beforo him. 1t is a preuy‘ picture. IThc clsc may happen, tlic past s safe, and to the | Jtopublican purly Lins one to prescnt not nearly so o | future aloue are we called tolouk, That time, | FOStIS but ta {t fot a hetter wnat No longer’ it o to-night tolls upon his broad plazza the patrlarchal alaveholder ™ cvery heart that Leats beforomo to-night tells | under the shade of hix broad-brimmed ht; no QUIRE OF me has not yet arrived. lonyor reads ho the Kentucky, resolutions or tho DBYGONES ARE NOT DYGONES. The past {8 not altogether past. Thoe pustis not quite secure. We do not stand tony o nation with that past absolutely safe, with ihe broad future before us absolutcly uutrammeled Ly any history which Hes behind us, We con- front to<lay—and it s one of the wonders of this century—tho same great political orfinnlzn— tlon, conslsting of the same membership, In- gpired by the same feclings, devoted to the same purposes, holding precisely the same fdens, that that party leld sixteen years when it organized treason and sought the destructlon of the natlonal ex- {stence that we met avd defeated in 1860. We had hoped—and yon ull had hoped—that, long lefore the centennial year had arrived, this Democratie party, from which the cause of Tnunan freedom and of good governinont uvcr{- Ly ordinance of 17873 no longer danca upon the green before him his chatels, mujoand femalc, Theclat- tels are, thank God, clinttcls no longer. They eurn thelr own broad, and they own their own bread after thoy have carned It. " The chaticls that onco danced §i that happy and blissful Democratic timo now work on their own_plontations, or attond schools for which thoy pay. The patrlarchal old slnveholder now paddles hin own canoe, (Laughe ter, 1 1t bn hard, but it is eminently just, 1tfanot poetic, but it Is altogetber right. [Applause.} Aud whot makes the condition of affalra more dls- tresaful Js, If Do hasn't got Wo musclo of his former chattel,* If ho cannot handic a pad- o as well as he, the negro probe ably will mot row him and make muuch botter tme than bo, [Applses. | Aro you sorey that this thing Iy s0? This Republlcan party of oiira conies to you to-day with substantinlly tho sume membersbip, 141 tho same party with ity unbroken record of glory, that wade four milllona of chattels freemen and citizous, 1t found tha old atructure of Stato flled with the rotten and de- cayed timbera of African servitude, It removed them all amidl the thundera of war, and ropinced them with tho everlasting grablio of freedom, Apblauso.] . Thin_samo - Hopublican ~party hat crowded Into four short years of *war tho most coloseal und resplondent results ever recorded In history, confranted at its close u vast debt, and houestly, manfully, faithfully, it lsa [leded tho crodit of the wholo nation that it ahall ¢ pald, aud reduced it more than $100, 000, 000 of money. Thia saulo groat party, confronting this new condltion of things, found these formor o freemen, It made them citfzens, Muklng them cltiz teald to thom and the mation and the world, **We will clothe them with all tho wenpons by which the right of cltizenship may bo protected : we will nmiako them voters,® It made them voters, and, maklng _them volers, the Congress of tho Uniled Btates lan placed 1t within tho power of the Generad Govern- ment ta protect thow fn tho oxercise and enjoy- meut of thut right. It has Yifted milliionn of dollars of tax from the shoulders of th people, It han decreased by mill- fons of dollara the nattonal vxpenditures. 1t hian increased by miltionn of money the natlonnl revoe nues; and this brings [te history down (o to-duy, TIIB CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENTS, o Tut whilo 1 atn dlscussing qucstions of this char- actor, somy Demacrats tell me, ** Why, those aro old #"Viho freedom 'of tho sjave, ™ they may, **lanccare beyond all «‘:muun. His citizen- ship, as you have sald, is fimbedded in the Constitu~ tion," 1118 Fight to Yote, thev tell us, lssecure, And #wiicn thoy make that line of arguinent they scom to think thot the whols dlscussion la closed, * Ltight here, my fellow-cltlzens, let us pause and think. Let mo suggest to you that thero §shardly a tluuvo inour Fedoral Coustitution which 14 self-onforc- ing, Wo have a provision that thero shall bo Foderal courts, and I think 1sce a conservative Democrat—ong of the old-time Domocrats who ro- Bpocts tho Constitution beyond al} ieasure—stand with his tocs turned out aild his bick to the fire, and with his band onder his cout-tall, saging, **1 am In fuvor of the Constitution—1 am it (avor of that clavay which provldes for Federal courts but I am not in favor of thls "Congressiona logislation Ly which the Court is croated.” ask you, gentleron, notwithstanding tho fuct that thio Dumocrat I In favor, of the Conatitution, {4 o tn favor of tho Court? We huve our cluuses In that Coustltution providing for mall routes and V' ¥ a clause In the Const{tution worth unless thore bo some Congressionul fogisla., tlon to put it fnto forco? We huve these Canstifil- tional Amondmonts by which cltlzenuliip and froo- dom are both conferscd upon the negry, but they aro ot solf-enforcing. Each onoe of thess amend- menta provided that they shall b enforced by p- Jruptiato leglelation, Now what s tiat appropriats ogislution, snd what s its precix i oot a1t Eongro o ongr and Jos {h ' WILLIAM C. DOW. Room 8 TRIBUNE RUILDING FIRM CIIANGES. 3 DISSOLUTION. 2 AND 44 LAKE a7, Cuti ; A The copnrinerahip herelofore 5&‘:‘.‘1::}3'»'“8:31%:. the underalgned under the rm amo of d. W blearns & 5ons §a tils day disauived by mutuai con BYRON RAWHON, COPARTNERSIIIP. The unidersigned as s ors 1« Ut duy Tarmed & COpaRinershin for the faorariiee of & wholcwalo grocury busincss, undor the fon mame of Stearns, Dang & Cor Thoy will sceney ho labilitics of ‘and coilcet ai) tho debts. and ae conts due the late fizm ol J. W. Stenrnn & Sons. Lk, PopRA . E. BTRATNG where had sufTered so much, would huve utter] passed out of ¢xlstence, and would have vexed us no more. You had Imrml, my good (ricnds, that all those old political idens on which that purty was based, and to maintain and cnforco ‘which It organized a gilgnnuc rebellion, would have been burled in olilivion and ubsolutely be regarded among the things of the past, But, as eagerly ns you mfght have hoped this, you nre doomied_to disappointment. In the year of race 1676 this same organizatlon, whose record 8 record OF IROKEN PROMISES AND VIOLATED PLEDGES, —thls sama politieal organization, which has earried within jtsclf all the most dangerous po- litleal heresles that lave threatened the de- struction of our national Jife, —is prod, asserting, domlinant, demanding that tho custudy of the af- falrs of the natlon, whose destruction it sought, ahall be by 8 loyal pcople turmed ovt to fta keep Ing. And the'solemn question which you are to anawer to-night, —the solemn queation which, men and women alike, you ara fromn this day furth to put to yontaclves withiout ceasing, 1a this: Shall thoss who would have murdered this natlon, the grand- cat on the face of the earth, within 11 'short_years after thele atiempt had failed—shall they be called Jback fnta power, and {ntrusted with tho life ond lmu‘rlly of that uatlon, whose deatructlon they xoughty {A volco, **Nover,” and applause, ] This 1s the question which s constantly recurring. 1 am told that theso aro bygones, and that wo are muke ing tho Bamo old spceches that wo mado fn the yeurathatare past. “This question of loyalty, of “devollon tu the national existence, 18 2% virlue, and the vicos of the ratic party aro as old as sin, _[Laughtor and As iwell might Jou ask s préachior to his volco and lot the pulpit vo untonanted be- cauee preachers before lim have denounced sin, pa tonk Republicans to hueh thole voices and closs thelr meetings as longas a Domacrut lives aboye ground. _[Applause. ) “Waare masured, however, that the Democratic ‘party has changed (1) the tho War la past ()3 that wo should have a porlad of tilcnco; that the bitterness of the War should be buricd: that a feeling of univeraal gushing sen- timental brotherhood Should pravalli (hat e should at once proceed to shuke hands across the **Dloody chosm™; that we should foryot all the sacrifices nud glories of the past, andthat'we shonld call to our bosom with a sort of paroxysmal ene thusiasm, whicli no blushing malden ever yet ex- colled, the organizers of tresson and the uncon- f the freo spirlt and tendeucles of CONCILIATION, T an In favor of wucn1nllnn—lhnrnufim,y and al together in favor of conciliation, wimplo question In my mind [ who ehall be con- ciliated? 1 tumn to the old Tcpublicans on | this latform I turn to (o old Republicans in the body of this hall; I ask them if they remember tho days when wo atarted out in our processlon 22 years ugo; 1 ask them If they ro. SR AN e e i llg:llillx.'l tosnson imprived city property at JER & MASON, 107-100 Dearborn-st. HONEY AT LOW RATES Totoan on Warehiouse Itecelpts for Qrein and Teovls, lons, va City Certiticates and Vouehers, un Rents aod M agLy. Ly MAYN, In (%Scmfin and Ilmpl'n\"‘f]fl suburbs, in sums of 2,000 and upwards, mad ot cuerent rat i BATID & DRADLEY, 060 Lasall $100 t0 800 Hayea a slected, iuu 10 €100 Hayes carrica the Slate of New York, 1,000 0n Hnye on the general recult, Election pools at 1 m._daily, IWATS, MEN'S AND BOY'S Ilats, all the Now Fall Styles,nt Pop= ulur Prices. J. B. BARNES & CO., 70 Madison-at. FOIt SALE, CIDER BARRELS. Parties wishing to buy New or 8ccond-hand Bar- Tela forcider, car-load 10t or fces, can bo supplledon ‘dh“ notice by addresslog ¥, 3L BRADSHAW, aler {n uccoud-band barrels, £78 and 280 Ceatro- A%, Chicago, you, vou slonal leglalation upon Amendments standin) T member how amall & procession it was; thut we 1 useful NEMOVALS, went afoot; that the Ins was bad; thal our feet p upon ‘p 1 . o Hepa! arty }n’uemu;lhnl ::nlw lunld:h lu?u‘m:fi‘:l%fi:r’n :nglo {;‘: 1!’.'7.“"'L|¢"1f"‘ nxll Im%;led those mennlgbgl REMOV. n our garments; o wkics W 3 Consiltution. 1o 1 ST oy | B R c b | st vk il sl ng on thy sidewalks h a e o cse no {dle gifts. ee0 ana! a8 it passed? [Lsughter.) I wsk themif they | be notreacherous benefactions. “MRS. DR. GROSS 81 it paisedd ILATRRIEL | ok MEINORIE they | Midpiseachstounbentiuclione, Wemean praclisly nZ' removed berOfice and Realdence ¢o tho Palmer cession B Ue, 1loons near clovator g were hase not to protect him in ite onjoyment, .8 great party, oW, when ft came u) when it erystallized about itself Ifi Wu gave citizenship to the negro. It wero base not to protect him in the enjoyment of alt taprivileges. We pave him the right to vote. it were outrageona Wo protect him in the full and complete enjoyment of the right, and legislation provided any privileges thus conferred be interfered with, this grent central which we call the General Government may inters profect the negro in the enjoynient e which the Constitutional Ainend- It eays this: **Wegive you by tho Conatitution theright to eitizenship and o vole, and more by leglelation, brethren of the South with the same Chrlstian apitit that the fatlier [n the parabla trented TIIE PRODIGAL BON. he Prodigal Son, and I, for one, wonld ern_prodigal preciscly cratic speech that told lM mf Dumocmklnld‘?mmlluu of e, n the ml of thosa If ftwere an ldlo gift, never attered one single word o wrote ona single line which betraye sympathics werc, Is thers a single Instance to which you can polnt where, when the learts of thouzands and tens of thonsands of mothers wero bleeding for thelr sons lost in battle, the he: mother was comforted or cheered word that Ssmuel 1. Tilden uttered? WIIERE 18 TIB WIDOWED WIFH T0-DAY, wherever has there been une, whose heart has been comforted for her husband, fillin; the South, by one single worl of J. Tilden haa ever spoken? test was pending, when onr own hearts were ail in our throats, when good men trembled everywhero lent this natlon, tha sacred custodian of the price~ lesa treasure of [ree guvernment among men, mi not a man o conspicuous ' av atand up when It seemed that the very throne of y wan nssalled? Why could he not come out from his barricade of law books and raile road_bonde and 1ift up hisloyal voice and say to- the Boysin Dlue, ** All'bail, 1 fight in_the noblest cause that cver ifted u human heart or nerved the human arm to action. ' Bnt no, not one word from Mr. Tilden—not one, dollar, And, when the clonds hung ovor us like s, a free pass upon a raiiroad, he ¢ City of Chicago, and went down ta' that disreputable Convention, and, while the thun., ders of tho great cunflict were ringing in his ears, put his name to an Infamous resolution which dos groat war was & fallure, snd’ most basely and aubnileaively sued for the Eternal, If { hail a war recard of that ki ofme I would ratherboa dogand bay the modn,” ~=rather be lizzard and crawl Inthe dust, —than ta! carry a record 5o dumnable and so Infamons on shoiilders, and laok a loyal people in the face, s sk them tf vots for me, 1 m n o Democratic leglslator, and made ono single practical character lnoking! reform of the Clvil Service? Wada throug long-winded platform, {f you plense. eaty platitude with thie utinost care; | ient annlysis and criticist I have read the willing to sccept that tes| be willing to treat the Sout astheold man inthe story trested his prodigal, The prodigal of the parable was a pretly good sort of hoy, aa the world went. Congrees han b ommendation of a pr ch it all with the keen then tell me §f you can, Can yi remedy sugzeated by the Demacrtic reform of the Civ(l Servica? M. withaut reference to platforms, wl 10 Jetters of acceptance, lot ns take this t. We all know that, as long s this Government continucs, the natlon must's 53 I bellova In political o= Mtitnted that upon xfl"al!knnl“lcnl < 2 He came to man's ea- by one’ single ment confera upon him. Hle~ portion_was ko & single dollar 1f 1 have reud history "This is no hleal oslt your ballot, that he State in which y, 1ive cannot or will not protect you, thls great € ernment will protect you, with by force, we wiil protecl’ you by force. it armed men threaten you in the enjoyment of any of those privileges, armed men ahiall ' march to your our full ana complete enjoy- ;ncnt“nl them.* Thisis what the Democratic par- y ¢ aid aver to him, hat did not helong to him, aright, tiat wae not precisely the courae which the Southern prodigal pursued, ~ [La Heripture prodigal wes a the threshold of life, thousande of b Fight ia Interferid w And when that can- axoi by partles, 8 Liave been since, with hia pocket ¢ wont out (0 sea the world, fell among the Democrats, and natneally enough was Laughter.] 1le did not scek tho destruction of the old homestead when hi Tla went away with no ihl-will, t to plunder either the old man or the brother But he found thal playlng When lis_money wan and his credit wus gone, andhlaDemocratic{ricnds had no further uso for him, ho went to feeding to fecding with ot ahout aslow down ashe could, and, sore, aick, dllllelllkneld. covared with bile- It With lis unlAnps LXperlence, bitt wlih his heats got op from among_the ng snd rays, **1 will go back to my father,"" and back he went. And, an he was tottering on the way, the old man was looking own the long snd dusty y to return, 8 he knew ha would:'and he raw him coming hobbling slong, od, and wretched, and miserable; but he was oy still, and he went out and threw his arms Lilin and bid him welcome and mnit of clothes and a rin; support, ana aszert think twopretty evenly-Dalanced parties, and gealous, are the most healthy indieations that yon can find inany freo Government. 1 belleve, ‘moreover, and _you_belleve it, that the party Ih pawer will flll the Government officen to n gresf the same political belles This I8 n necessity. never reach that beatific condition of government when it will be othorwise. that the only fssue were hard of soft money: & large majority of the people vole that they will have hard money, and theyslect a Presldent upon you say to him if, continu- g upon thatgybasia, representing that fdea, he at the hicdd of the ary, 8 man who_belleved in i this' to say: 1If 1 were CENTBATLIZATION, It Is & centralization of which Iam enthusiaati. 1d glve nothing for that Gove erninent_ 80 utterly powerless and helpless that coulid not, even at tha cost of war, at the extromes of the globe, protect the mennestand poorest of it citizens _when bis rights wero Insulted and out- Twould aplt upon that Government wiiieh rotect, even at the cost of pooreat ofita citizens in the enjoyment of every privilege which the Conntitne tiun conferred vpon him. man to-day who Is in favor of Amendments, auil is opposed to that legisiation by ‘shall bo cnfarced, 18 & coward and & sneak, and fittingly pelongn to tha Democratlc [Lunghter and applause. | s nubject still further, Let me Ithink Iam familiar with this 1 have read jts histor Hle did notat- extent with men holdin Gad bless yon. vrodigal didn't pay. arty entortain. would not ot homne war, the meaneat an that Lasis, what woald plause,] And tho stillin the right place, he Constitational reasury, a8 ita 8 Togn where he waa grove nflation? 1 have Becretary of ihe Treasary, and belio I believe in it to-day, 1 it that my firat asslstant, my second s third assistant, m cinred that the chief clerk, and my I could commnand it, should be hard. n Ishould see to it that they talked, when they talked anythine, hard money; ard monoy out of the office; that rd money all tho way through. When I deeired to advance hard-money jdeas I wouldn't go to the soft-money men to hielp me. SUFPOSE YOU UNDERTAKB TO REPOBM THE CIVIL SERVICE, Let me eayto yon here that out of one or tiwo of thiese great aggregations which we call the Demo- craticand the Republican be flied—either by Repabl From which aggregation will you fll them? you deales men wha can weite, Where will you find tho niost men who can read and_who can writo? Iri the Republican party, or In_the ranka of tha Democracy? If you want to find the great masa of ent, ‘honest, patriotic thought of the ot go? The queation is an- carts the instant it ls asked. You know that within the boundaries of this Jepubllcan "pa [ eat el which aro Inscril of anclent or modern b are to-day assembled, a quarter of a centary T will par Hustrate s litsle, Democratic party, been burned into me and into you. War, all through the North, you funnd magiticent Democrats who were in favor of & vigotons prose- cutlon of the War. were [n favor of a vigorous prosccutionof the War, deufting n_singlo man. 'liey were in favor of the suppres- obellidn, but were | Laughter.] They wors suppression of treason, RUTHERFOND 1. NAYES was no Chairman of o State Committce, but he had what was better than rmanships, —astrong arm and a loyat uger was, and camo, t el lhul;.-nd roaked] n ecem as If upon Ureabiold of this elertion al the sucred ansceintly of nsacred, and a holy, and a noble past crdwd full upon us to-night, at the late mansion of Lee at Ariing the sun waa gofng down behind the hil me were the zreal, aplendid trecs, the broad river, and beyond it the Capitol, with! flagn fiying, for the Confederato Howse of Hep: sentatives was in scesions and buck of me w thoneands and thousauds of the slaln hotiiest great Republic. as if there might Noyw that Is ali that boy tenewed laughter.] I want you to ob- e didu't come back > SIEADED BY A BAND-WWAGON AND A BARNER with **Tllden and Reform" on it nsk fort He did not come back after the fashion of thesp large-headed gentlemen from the South, will run this farm.” N Father, T haven't a cent; r 1 have been ablo to diacover, preachera here they will carrect me, —he did kitch- en work forever alftor, loyal stay-at-home bo that arrangement. 1 heart. i went whero the da not home until the danper waa pns History {s slow, bat it always In all things right. ppored to buying u favor of the ut opposed to invading what they call a Soveroign State; upposed Lo seces- utting it down: upponed (o nlon, and opposel dissolving ft. In other words, tweon the Uemocratsand Repube Heans all that time may bo Ilke this: ‘Two men ure on shipboard W’I’:h their wives. Danger tureatens all, Democrat, who stands by that inatrument when the Unlon for which 18 Is inade Is goln in that hour of peril andshouta, **\ tlage certificate? Save my narnsge certificatol” and his wife goes gurgling to the buttom, But the otlier, an nnconstitutional Tepub- ays, **Let my morringe certificate go to the puts alife-proserver around his wife, and (L.aughtorand ap; 1t is well enough te stop and piil ONE MORE QUESTION on this point. You havo scen one-lialf of a Con- They cannot distnrb tho But place the whole of the affairs of this nation n the Lands of (ke Democratic party, and where do yon supposc, within 30 days after owar, where do.you sup ation will'ne left t 10 enforca the provisions of thuee amendmentu? Away back in 1863, in the Democratic, patriotic, honcstly-governed ' John_ Morslssey-Sam Tilden- Isajah ltynders-Bill Tweed Clty of New York, thero was inaugurated a little one-hurse Domocratic re- ‘The Drnft law had been enforced. mour, Tilden, all good Democrats, had assurcd the rank and flle that a1l that legislation was revo- lutionary, unconstitutional, and void, ever wasa man that loved the Constitution and talked ebout it ail the time, that carried it about with him, and slept with it ander his pillow, it Is ona of the meck and lowly followers of John Morriseey and Isalah Rynders, therc evor was & class of men np In sclonce. Wwho denled privileges to the negroon the ground that they were not men, and that tholr aste fered from that of a white man, it was the learnad savuns whosa noses have been broken and whoso ears have been bitten off in those discusslons in Groat langhter, ] Atthat emocrats really belleved atriotlc souls” that the artics must these offices sion, and opposed to leans or Ly Democrata, but a fow wecka:ajic: & dissolutivn of the if there are any ughter.] And was not quite satisf e looked at that calf when about immolating him in congratulation for the re- d to the old man: “*Father, 1 never went off fo be a prodigal. never spent my money and snbstance in riotous A storm arires. the grent ships a_constitutlonsi geemod tac.mat _some almighty agency U @ thova poor bodics srce. from graves where they have bocn 0 long buriod, amil 0 down 1o that Confederate Honso and sake thalt; ¥ finsers In thelr facen, and o We fought In a holy cause, Wo See to it that” no cowarndly, ro: creancy aball ritter wway e frults of our ) ries.” ‘Till8 1S A BOLEMN QUESTION 3 Hilntory will make thaui b haa calied Abraiam Lincolu up tol ndid sumumits, und ‘some of theae doyeit( U, 8. Grant 1o stand; to pleces, runa fiere Is my mar. n grandest records cither tory, —~that 1n that tomple d Bave been gathered for st, the wisest,and purest, and best, and the mot patrlotic men ou the con’ cf gueation. From elther one our chofce be cmocratic suc- not cara how well-intentloned Mr, Tiden may be: I do nat care how resolute he may bes: that man doesn't Jive sufiicfently strong to en- connter n eolid pacty against him. come floating down ) waves of uld ocean a tis 1ittle bachelor clean up into the clouds would domand for theso tned around to him and sl Al that ] havo s thine, i mouey, not a fuot of land, notan office, ¢l of an ofilce, goes Lo this returniny Cheers, and_ upronriona_laughter. atriotic Nurthern ex-Senator says that Southeru prodigals take thls Gov. crument—this farm—and run it for all im= in the future. Now suppose we do ofer the Southern Suppone they do come back say they nccept the situntion, ftnot a liitle extraordinary, after the surrendr nt Appomattox, tuat they sccept the sitnotion? Ian't it a littie extraordinury Ttehel army ncceoted the rituntion at Vicksburg? Isn't it quiio sirange and atartling, and docan't 1t tmaka the world como out in violont gushing kind- nesn, to think that Bragg's army acce ustion at Chattanooga? Ian't {t curious that the Confederata army accepted the situation ai Five Forka? Isn't It rtrange that Floyd and the rest of them accepted tho aituation at Donelsn? Ace n? Ab. of course they did. Ine under God's Heaveris that they could do. [Applausc.] They did accept the altuation, and that ia sll there §s about it —nut only beaten n the feld, when the last ditch was reached, when their banners wero trafling in the mud and mire of everlasting and eternal defeat, with their arms stricken fruni thelr Lands, with thele cause hopelessly lust. ‘This was done After the natlon bad been flled with mouming, and the Noriborn people burdened with o dobt of threo thousand milifons of dolfare; after tho little hera to-day at the head of the Govern- ment_ bad Rebelllon by the throat and the lifc out of it. Then the courteous cepted tho situntlon. & noble victory, 1 ok you one oth of these two aggregations wmust swhich presees u lmnglm; such a thing as & 0! things right. 1 federato Congroan, Bros: rodignls this nation, will call the noble, ' silent beaide him, and Layes will take his tao, and, with uncovered heads In the presenco uf, ose every single on him ilke tho resisticas at was Intended e that wonld swamp that women of this world will’ stand and hail and blcss them. And, perhaps (for 1t would bo likely), the little, tortuous. cronked, ! twisted, wiry spirit of Samuel 3 accepted the sit- dertake to corkucrew its years been dicting on lost wind, a reward for thele City of Waslington. Th! that wonld be there nesembled. and tens of thousands of the helpless, d lost Confederates there appealing for an office and in_sesrch of a re- form of the Clvil Bervice. our remedy? Straws show Wwhicl lows, We valnly thought that the old Union ‘We saw the old flag floating supposed that the cause lf up to thusc majestic) helghta whoro it doca not belong, and the Muses of; ietory, looking nt tho wretched little apalogy for, 1oy say, **Samuel, tuke olf your white- wash; take oif yourmaxk; taks down your venoer. * ‘There 18" no patriotism in you, among your old assoclates, who sought to obstruct a great nation in its glorl. ous morch for the highest emincnce of hurol achiovement and nationul renown.” Hayes and Wheeler and for 3Mr. Storra, DORSUEIMER. CAUGAT BWINDLING THE GOVERNMENT—GONR TO MEET TILDEN, 5 8pecial Dispatch to The Trivuns, Wasmorton, D.C., 8ept, 17.—Willlam E. Dorgheimer fs the Democratic cnudidate foi Licutenant-Governorof the State vt Sew York, He s put forth as & speclal candldate of *ro. form," and has the support of the Tilden “ Re. form* party. Like all so-called Democratic ro- furmers, he preseuts himself to the people on the ground of virtue in publlc office, Lieut.-Gov. Dorsheimer's record been consist. ent with his high pretonsions to virtue? Thers are vouchers In the Treasury Departinent which seem to show that Dorshelingr’s pretensions ag areform candidate are a hollow mockery. In 1808 William E. Dorsheimer was United States District-Attorney fn New York. learncd that, whilo acting {n that capacity, ha was In collusion with the United' States Coms missfoners &t Albany, Troy, Saratoga, and other prominent places within his district, to have duys for hearing causcs so fixed 0s to ena- Dle him to make extravegant charges for come Tho charge {s that he arranged to have examination in causes set, for instance, for alternate days at Albeny and Troy, 80 that he might be able to charge miloage at. the rate of 10 cents per 1alle from Buflulo to the place where each examination waas held, while in fact the distance actually traveled by bim was but eight milcs, ‘Whether or not there was any such actual colluslon, It is a fact that the Treasury record shows that Willlam E. Dorshelmer, the Tilden Reforin candidato for Licutenant-Governor of New York, did make charges for milenge which are entlrely consistent with the theory hero For Instance, tho Treasury record latse. ] “Think of the of the congrogations cepted th sltuatiol atloss, shirtless, There was nothing ol (o down among those ‘when thelr armics wore cauge had triumphed, ahave our heads, and which it represented had telumphed. we had trlumpled, but In dn dle hour, fn an evil were ungusrded and the Rebel {Laughter.} If hour, our outposts in they threw their plckets ont, skirmistiers of the Ugion army, the old Boys in Rlue, who had watched the doors and attended to the messuges of Congrers, have surrondercd,— surrendered to tho foe who but eleven years ago Tn went agan the” old con- quered Confederate soldler. Out went the vic- torioua soldier of the Union, who had fonght that th driven from lils place. the City of Now Yok, timo those good, zenlous in the bottom of thelr Constitutlon iad been violuted by tho Draft law, and, organized o mob aud brow in the midet of which I wrote o letter to President Abraham Lincoli. e We nre all in favor of We all devoutly pray ughter and appiause.] Itlsthls enme purty which to.day demands the custody of the national finances, and at the head of their ticket they have o - QIEAT PINANCIAL REFORMEIR, and stumping in vurious scctlons of the country are Domocratic oralors, cager aud earnest, intro- ducing their arzumenta to the people in order to conyluce them that 8 sound currency, a restorcd credit, must be the neceasary result of a Demaocratlc Somewhere In the Btate of Indi- ana §4 o dlstingnished Senotor denouncing the Re- ublican party in that it fixed n day for the resump- Tio anys if that policy ts ht on a great surrendered to them, { 0 o Lincon e Soldler after soldler o Unlon might live was Soldler after soldier, witl lantation threat on s 1 at the Union might bo destroyed, was put is place of triumph. if Samuol J. Tilden, in 1864, spoke the words of prophesy when ha a3id the War was a failare? P'oint me to a ity under Democratic rule where the treasury bos not been robbod. city under Democratic government where tho revenuos have not been plundered. little patch of land, J do not carc how small it Is, that has been under Democratic management for ears; and I will show yon withiered flelds and Tasted political crop: whore their policy has liad ita full swi, whow you poor schools, bootless men, shoeless children, and rained wives. They fell ua that we have FOROED UPON THE NATION AN IGNONANT VOTE, hint the black man Is ignorant. Dot the black man He has learned that much. 4 the Robels tear themn ra; they elaughter them, And yet, with the blood of the innocent cltizen upon their hands, and with the smoke of burniug asylumns and achool-houscs on their they turn around to this great loyal North, and spit upon thelr history for the last’ 20 years, sud ask to take charge of our un.all that.. Not only have they ambodied assassination in th but they have, and wonld be a ¥afd to him practieall; the prosecutlon of tho ¥ tisat the Unlon may he saved. Wo pray every night thut we retire to anr couches that the Unlon may Dut thls Draft law opposca and vio- lates, as we think, some of the fundamnentul pro- vinlons of the Coustltutlon, loyul peoplo of this State, arouscd,” and therefore he pruposes Lincoln that the draft he suspended, and thatn Jawsuit bo commenced In some conrt'in the City of New York and carried throngh to the Hupreme Court of the United States, whicl, in tho course of two or threc years, might be terminated, and by e nscertaloed whether the draft Docen't it secm ag The temper of the | Administration. Polat me to o tion of specic-paynients, mv‘;lm o‘:ll |hnpnlr\dll ba such a contraction of the greenback that It will be quadrupled in {ts valne, und that, therefore, every debt which every cltizen aweas will be practically quadrupled In smount. Isn't It s terrible calamity to think of * Let ua Has'lt ever vceurred to you whether it {s very probabla that any time witlin our prospecta of living a_ greenback by which it migi olnt ‘mo to any atop and consider i\, dear eir: Icannot sec our proposition will work, The difiicuity is our Confederale fricnds south of Mason and Dix- on's line won't wail for your lawauit. They go right along and Al upthelr armles.” And he says, +*My doar Beymour, go on with your Iswauit, ono or two, or as inany of them as you o along with my draft, and we Wil 1" 1lnes";"and, nu it turocd out, the other emocretic rebellion southof Meson and Dixon's 1ino was crushed into powder long before Horatlo Boymour's sults wonld Lhave been reeched upon [Appluuse an.laughter. ] igcly thit ‘moted colerprising _citizen County concludes Iy il his cows, and hla machinery for runnlig He fssues his milk tickets, aud Le fiuds by and by, so nuuny tickets has b lssucd, that 1ie hae'a great many motetickets than milk. What 18 ho going to da? Can hia contract histicketa so us 10 reanme? Supnose he be; calls in his tickets, —the time will nevercome when the milk ticket will be worth morc than the milk, What is the policy of the Republican party? yon cannot cuntract your 2ull those in, nfiate your dairy, —get more cows: ut for God's sake got wore knows ho {s [gnorant. We erect school-hous: Wo send teacl structive mileage. n contracting, ~that he BAMO pArty Dr dangers as thos ks that the affal thus when such ng ua which now of thla natlon sliall b tarned ovor o {is keeplng. 1t Is the saume party, HEEKING ALL THROUGH WITU IT8 POLITICAL CRIMES, that Insists upon it that from the honds of thls great Joyal organization that enved the nation, it il bo taken, ond passed vver into the keeping of that great disloyal mob who sought ita destructiuu, 1 do not belleye that the time hias yet arrived when thin loyal people have so far forgotten the history ot they oro prepared to ace code to this request. Why, my good friends tho wolf comes to tho farnier an the old bittorncases that have existed botweon them shall be healed; when tho wolf insfats upon it ygones, and that they shall nnds over tho bloody chusin of “sheep corpacs, 1 do not belleye you can find u farmer suf- ficlently kindly to tako tlie promiscs of thu wolf 2 tickets, —if you cannot by a relgn of tarror which dit to 8 Turlk, driven every white man from their midst, ' Farmers of Steplicn- son County, business men of this thnvin #end your son with his Jng ambitions to the . Trco tongue with him, the free thought and free speech which lie has enjoyed here, and go there, 1le koea there In pursuitof an honext lvinz I an Tiow Is he met? Droad-hatted Dem- ers demand of him not what le can do, And, if his views on political question does not agree with thoss of the worthlers men who were Lo there, he in denounced mlu“u curpcli-hsu:fi{ x:’nd-hnuu tho night. 1 spit upon this cry of carpet-bagyer. ¥ Carpot-bag principlo, 1 bellove tiat 1 jta broad domain,upon which I ans not to be per- miited to tread, o frec man 10 ba pormitted to utter whut And the man who would deny me that d if It comes into the politicaof the 2] WN EVERY DARRIZR, open _every avenne of or God's sake, if we have to_fight for [t [applause]; Jet us have the Jargent, brosdest freedum of thought nnd oplnion of which any Government is capable, o, what &rs you, who talk about carpet-bagers? Were you born here! lHundreds of thousands of ou ara frow the old fathierland, where patriotic fnstinct with m From all the hills and valls men, flled, however, with apirit which' s characterlstic: of @ carpol-uaggers the most magniticent em- , pirit, Send it all' oy gol no more tlckota, WHAT IS THE LOLICY OFf TNE DEMOCRATIC PARTY Tt 18 to Inflate your tickets, and to inflate your milk at the same time, toward honest resumptlon of your tic of enlarging your dairy, the, V::'“n %m outhful bopes and Let him take that of the past 20 years Domacratic _oratars, you pretend to ress cannot make money; that the uts upon 8 plece of paper t sctual value? Do you,'" the power of Co 1 have the utmost revers vwer of Congrese, but therd are many things that Cougresa canuot make a canyot nake 200 value by suying that it is actual valno, Takea S gold ylt{cu (ynll ) froin the mint, with the Inscription Clearand bright upon it and every ""“ffi ll L el nto uny shap t, and it | then worth 820, iterato the Inscription f ry rull it up Into a wad, Democratic curse. wood for nothinz, 10 inherent valie in'It; and the only worth it pos- acsecs is the boliel of * the holder uf two thinga: First, in the ability of the nation to ke tho promies good ; and sccund, in the wilifng- neas of the natlon to muke the promise good. Vi cannot enforce o llability 2 Al s huithink July 24, 1808—Willlam E. Dorshelmer at- d an examlnation at that bygunes shull be "l'my and chury 1 doesn't confer upon i, turn he carpet-bag b July 25, 1868—Wilila "ongress cannot do. Norae. " [Langhter.) - Congr scres out of one. charee of the fluck. Tasa will mako tho dog In chiargo of your ‘fio o 18 ugly; ho Is vicions; he hins paps who have he hias trented me witl o liaw pursicd anid followed me vine dictively everywhere: and, iu his old age, nuw and ‘e farmer will sa; to htm, ** My dear doluded Democratic wolf, it moy be quito possible that I will change this shep- herd for wnuttier shepherd dog, but so fon as God lives £ will never chungo o ahepherd dog for o [Langhter awl upplause.] No t tired of uur old ahepherd dog af irs, Whoso tecth have gone into and through it womo of lin 1 The wolf doiht. Look ut tho mhepherd 110 18 gotting ol and churged milleage uflalo to Albany and IR 117 P . ‘Tho Jaw theo allowed 10 cents . Mr. Dorshelner, thercfore, recelved for traveling frumn Troy to Albany between July 24 and July 25, 1503, o distance of eigit miles; the sum of §120, wherens he morally was entitled to recieve but eighty cents, which was 10 cents & mllo for thic distance actually traveled. This {8 an {llustration of a great number of bills rendered by Dorshelmer, covering a perlod of about four years. Toascertain the aggregate amount of this conatructive mfleage would fu- volve much time and labor, a3 these accounts are seattered over a period of years, Tho following are 1llustrations of & few of the bills for coustructlvo mileage which wero prosented by Mr. Dorsheimer on sccount of lifmaelf or Lis asslstants, and which were pald. The dates [n each fnstance show that it was fm- - osslble for either Mr. Dorshelmer or his ns- | stants to have roturned to Buffalo and started out sgain for a hearfug which was held at ane other place on succceding days. Mr, Dop shehiner churged mileage from Buffalo to each of the following places and return on each of tho dates namcd for one of his assistants, Thease charges all occurred fo the year 1808: and whore [ am not think. (Applause, ] Obliterate every letter | yation, the war ia ne n Demucratie 4 of New England and young wen, puor 2% unconguersble zalust o uatlon by an Itls toa cerwnln extent de of grore und graln of wheat {8 pledged to {he payment of the greenback 8o tong us the Kopublican been golny on, all wo have gottosay Is thet that glorlons ofd dbg that lies tlierc to-day In the ceth u littlo 16oso from onthng Deno- , bos & magnificent record of fidelity Duck of ki’ ho is falilful and truo ln every fibro of his boluy; he goes out of business on the 4ih day of next Marchi, bt thers 1s anotli whie name 14 Rutherford, {s and you have rearvd plre that the world b yith, the carpets and of th honds, party 1a In power, that s true’ but with the Demo- cratfc party In power it ls false, clther Lie green Tho credit of X or thie bond depends upon tho intezeity uf the parly In power, and just manuge- ment of natlonal ffaire. swift-runntng atresmn active with tho wheels of swift-running machinery; dovelop ita mines; In- crense {ta romourcen: develop everything of 5 ma- terial charucter; educate ftapeople; and then wo wii) ligve whist wo will nover hnve otherwisc,~a uuited, homogenous vationallly, I8 treason, pleate make iho most ovents, uo wolves Placo to-day—If the should ees it do it—thils Democratic party ot the head and o custody of our national intere 1t 1t LONU BLACK RECOID OF REPUDIATION behind it, and where, 5o faras the national credit 1s concerned, would the national credit bey Le Wiers come up from the South, from every Confed- aid, & bearer of 8 Confoderato’ heart lief that tho lost causc lu won: let the Governwuent be iado up in that way, and where would our nutlonal credlt be Do you from thurns, and Ois from thlsticsy cratic party characictized to-duy Dy beingn solid o ty, whick for years aud years has . aninst (he natlonal life, to be {rusted with its old docl aud its old bltterne: heartt st to bo intruste 1t occurs o o that hero In A PROPER PLACE TO BE SORIPTURAL. T have watched, as I have told you, this Democratlo party curlonsly—watched s promlses, jarty absolutely without performance, and depends iltogetlier upon proulse, this town, or o citizen who i not a bunker, If that, 1y fel- n kel TILDEN, if s s bkt i The Democracy have nominated Samuel J, Til- den an 8 platform which reada well enough, but who Is ho? 1 desire 10 ¥ay no unkind thing Tilden, hut the unkindest thing that I coul d bLe truthful things. Si eay that lie wan born with a Domocralle platform in 4 a railrond charter fn the othor htor]; that, at tha early sy thie fellow has never paid, ho —let that b o bygone; but I don make anothor kuow that this D romisvar Ry judging from w belleve ho will 14 ta keep fta ot It bina done?” Oh, « will #ave the nation," Wy We hiave saved you that (rouble. 2oy, **We will protect It." Why, you so iy, **Wa will maintain Iy, you sought to ruln It say, **\Wo will mako groenbacke cqual to gold. ht ta destroy thein allogether, ' 1 LIft up tho national credit to and pay the natlonal debt.” We ug. G~Nofalo to Oswogo and returm. ..v.ee. SU0 A% G-—-liuflalo to Oy d\'l‘\?hnn; Ir:d return, burg aud return ratoga and return 0 of 12 yenrs, ho he bas bad no woul sitce; dated with the Democratic party sudrun In conuection with DI Tweed 88 & great reat milrodd physician, un- ons thiero Lsve been more 7—Butlula to Pl that ho was consol il Hngering in Its tlonal credit. rallroad wracke der whosu min! B processions . of Wiero 1Y belonge, s the corporstions thut in all the timew o bias triwinphod, that it has charge of the nat debt, that it hascharge of the natlonal credit, Snowing thut that party has always sought and de- both, whero wanl credit by Where would be tho p bladea of grass, your g corporation hears have ever flourivh lunse,] 1 auk this alinple question of hims Mr. during the War? What wero you doing during e War) It is an important questlon for us Lo ask. 1ask the loysl nien to-day, whowa hearts and all whose sympathles aud feel inga wore with and are with the kreat cause, wl war hot Now and then we bave o atray ol from some Inconupleuoua individusl that Samuel J. 'Filden quletly, modeatly, away down at the bottom of heart, a_genuiue, all-wool, ¥ man. | have never found it out, patriotism that is o stealthy. in loyuity that 1 so shy, ewergency as g wan hide the wi small & bushel. "Puke the cssc home to yourselves. vory man hero—1 sk every wo.uan here—If thore was, during the dreadful period of vorhood where you | sbout whove position thers w uu kiiow @ man $0 inconsplcuouy, ittle known, that had not his pos War absolutely and clearly defined? Aund tihie presenca of Ui great robellion, whon Srifvs that nutnbered inillions wore muking tbo whole beueath thelr tread, when the very globe paused boneath tho thunders of that m) contlict, when the whols beavens wers redde with the flames of this great zebellivn, this great Bead of the Demucratlc 4 elght years agu that you sought to t."" "Thoso aro the promfeca It v making ‘these ure the purformances of the past ilow 70 you galng to Judis from promlscs? Hu poe (hicro cotiios §nto your place of burlnosea young n magnificently sdorned with & platfarai, ahiuen and gllstens alluver with It. Hobas bougnt, Pen Commandinenta, tly Salnt's 1 sleed thu ruln of ilden, where were you s £ Aug.13—Buifalo to Piattaburg and seturn. 7—Huifalo to Albany aud roturn 10—Huflalo 1o Albun 20—Bufalo to Platta 27- Buflalo to Albany and retura, Buflalo to arataga snd reto! Rulo ta Albany and return,. uilalo to Troy and retura.. g—Buflalo lo Plaitaburg and roturn 11—DBuffulo to Plattabury and return.. ....874 14—DBullalo to Plattsburg aud return 674 16—Niufalo to Albany and rururs. 17—Buflalo to Alhuny and retun: Mr, Dorshefiner’s uccouuts wers not always audited or paid. Soweti 80 1anifestly inonstrous ofticer veutured to refuse pal probably, was wo legul gro s ubALE stric techmiea shelnier, under o stric "milght bave becn entitled to th age. Morally the charge might bo & very unpleasant name, swarn to, There Is oue account Dorshelmer, {u 1867, fn which he vernment mileage for an asaistant, Geor n ¥ ¥ caries—whero would the plodge of the Dewocratic party in powert "hera is nothing i this world more sénsitive than nations] credit” to the alj Place in charge of through with the name of repudiativn, snd this nutlonal credit which we all hold so dearly to our Jieart would nerfuh ina night. 1am told that we cannot interfera with the “patlonul delt. Lam assured. however, that i the ailon of this Confedorata Congroms wore Alian 1,000 ollls for PRIVATE CLAIMS PROM TIE S0UTH waro presented, and smuggled in by that more as- Uemocratic geutloman _haviug charge of thoss aflairs in Commitice, U] the condition of thoso If they should triguiph! Curds aod corda, scores and scorc, of claims of nto Congress, an( f additional Indebte dled upon the people, which woald render the time of reaumptlon of sjecio-] indefinite postponemynt, bul hiteat outside interfer- nd ho says, °*I wouls Hike to'bo treasurer of your {nsurance compan; aud you produco to hin & record from the Fol Court simply showlug that e bas been indicted and convicted twice of larceny, whatun earth bo- comes of hs platfor? [Liugbier,) Aud when this Demucratic purty comes to you with its plat. feleguten of the Democratic nveutlon assembled in thollty of i, Louls, Insist upou it that the country de- manda fmiediate roforus, ™ you suy, **All Fight; buat, fucase anybody should duubt you, to tako a hanu in. sclvos first.” 1saw an annouucement some doys 8go of & meeting of & **Tilden Ruform C.ub." °I asked them which they {ntended to reform, Tilden Now, then, ostothe Scrl}v(nu- Anoted ex-Senstor aln, and he 1s slways Soriptural, s heart e sunalyj ky kind Of gooduuss that woul poons from bim, ana then give him your hat and overcoat that there understandlug nor unkind [Ureas laughicr. ] dle says that we should treat ous hia little corporation 1 do not ballove 1do not beliove do not believe in an reat a2 tliat was that made 80 good & hule of bls patriotiam underso that the accounting %0 obacure, 80 that charactor wou! lon during the construction of ountless milllo n(s not only au n overlastiog fine 1a on tho stump ‘The acvounts were , continent rock THB CIVIL SERVICE, assuro us they deslre to reform the Have you ever hcard & l)e’mocnl ssy how? llave you' ever reud s Dowo- hould bo uo mls- ng in the future.

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