Chicago Daily Tribune Newspaper, September 27, 1876, Page 1

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

VOLUME XXXL MERCHANT TAILORRING. TAILORS, No. 130 Dearborn-st. We will sell for CASH ONLY, 5 S AT TIE FOLLOWING LOYW PRICES: z FORMER rfing{n NOW. PRICE. 40 $32/|$50 $40 $45 $35)|$55 $45 $48 $38/|$60 $50 Our Fall Stock is unequaled, and embraces an endless vari- oty in NOBBY STYLE, MAKES, and COLORS, AT PUBLIC UGTION ByGED.P. GORE &CO,, Auctioncers. Tho entire BANKRUPT STOCK of FINE FURNITURE of tho late Goo, Gilbert, 267 and 269 Wabash. av., 8 to bo closed out WITHOUT RESERVE. Two Sales Each Day, T0-DAY AND TO-MORROW. Wodnosdsy and Thursday, Sopt. 27 snd 28, commonoing at 10 a. m. and 3 p. m. each da PIANOS, NOW, (iraud, Sqare, aod Dpright Pianos, KUPERIOR TO ALL OTHERS, And universally acknowledged to be TOE STANDARD PIANOS OF TIE WORLD. Having been awarded the First of the Grand Gold Medals of llonor, WORLD'S FAIR, PARIS, 1867, LONDON, 1863. Pelces ar fow an the exclisive ueo of the best materials and most tharongh werkmanahip will permit. An unlimited guuranty with every Plano, ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUES, With Prico List, malled free on application, LYON & HEALY, State and Monroe-sta., Chicago, FURNISETEN ! DR UNDERWEAR, For Ladies, Gents, Misses, and Children, The largest and finest line of UNDERWEAR, HOSIERY, etc., to be found in this city, at . FRENCHS, 168 State-st, corner Monroe, OPPOSITE PALMER flf\('.flr 0 R Desiranle Oees TO RENT I TER - TRIBUNY, BUTLDING. INQUIRE OF WILLIAM C. DOW, .Room 8 TRIBUNE BUILDING 5000 Talls Wall Papers 6 o, 6,000 Rolls Wall Paper, § cfs. §,000 Rolls Wall Paper, 10 cts SH RD. opp. Congress, Socnin SUEAN SXEAMGH NS oncs, ONLY DIRECT LINE TO FRANCE, fall Steamers The General Transatianttc Compan Mavee, at Plymoutiy Petween New York aud Mavee, {6, 11) for the Janilng ot puase Yetecls on this fuvollte route for te con Jrovided with Kle cilg, ) will aail § 44 foat of farron : 5k Germatn, & uy, bejit. 30, abrader, sanglicr, Euturday, Ocle 7, 8 o . Cauas 6 Fruigeul, “hatiirday, Gcl' 14, '3 1 . Price of togn lugold (including wine) First eabin, 8110 to {20, acconilog, "t ncconunodation, Secund, €74, ru’fl{f.ét",’%’ i3 llelm['n tickete s reducal eate crage §20, with superlor accommodutfon, includ wloe, pedding m‘nl.l ul.usnlmlwll JouLeexirL char, 8 & do uot carry sievragc LOULS DE BEBIAN, Agent,” 55 S1oadwi _OF W, Wi i Clitéago. i ent, 83 I 5, 67 Clark-st., Agent for e lorth G Lloyd T o North German Lloyd. ‘Tl sicamers of thle i 1l N tup. Lates ol possage—Front New Yo Tusspton, ih ndon, Hlavre, and Gremen, Bpt cabin, $i0; second 500, golds meeroge, §36 '}‘uncnc&' ot freight OLEIICHS & €O, Viago syl to 4 5 4 Bowling Gnml.:va )'url‘(: Gn:pt Western Steamship Line, From New York to Bristol (England) direct, ARRAGOY, Symona. cvenss WO 100MIAY, HUNWALL, Blamper. b ] termediat Frepuid Wlll%- .. BUSINESY CHANOLS, F R B R e e e et hysiciun®s Opportunity fasecurea controliing shar 1!, of a large an s uufi‘}"(‘"'““" aad fursfshed otlice, ventrally e iy u'l'luchlullfl lhuwn)lh,‘,flullnnm\ Nrow. idatt bt S e M it e o asia 3 8t suceessor, il iuedinta oa Fessoiabitern s at unce’ L, CLor's A oo s CEEN Y, uller Eclinge broricoae L DORES o i Incat, (Cabing bler No, 3 pom, JEWELRY, CLOCKS, &€ Gold and Silver GOODS. Flegant Novelties Just received, such as Fine ‘Watches and Chains, Superb Jewelry, Choice Wedding Gifts, Rich Table Silver, French Clocks, ete., ete. INSPECTION SOLICITED. HAMILTON, - ROWE & (0, State & Washington-sts. | Lockets! NECKLACES FOR LADIES, NECKLACES ¥OR MISSES. NECKLACES FOR CIIILDREN, NECKLACES FOR BABIES, ‘We offer nan nasortment of elogant new Nocklaces, Lockets, Pendants, and Croasos of entirely new natiorns,ond at oxtremely low pricos. N. Matson & Co., State and Monroe-sts, Opposlte Palmer Houso, FRENCH CLOCKS, New lot just received from Paris, and offered cheap. lles, Bro.&(h., 2606 & 268 Wabash-av. + An elogant assortment of WATCHES, FINE COLD JEWELRY, RILVER AND SILVER-PLATED WARE, AT ABOUT HALP TUHE REGULAR PRICES Now heing closed out at the BANIKRUPT SALX, Cor. of Liake and Clark-sts. Every article Warranted, T rINANCIAL - T PER CENT, Chaten targa loans on fmproved city bustness proporty lll {afi“ #10,000 and four sumis ‘of £5,000 each, 10 ead o ACUDDER & MASON, 107-100 Dearborn-st. TIONEY AT LW RATIS n Warchouse licerl,\l- for Graln snil Provis: vouchers, on licuts aad I S F on! fons, on City Certitlcates an Morigages. LAZ X Chai e, CHICAGO CITY CERTIFICATES, Iecelvabile for Tuses, for salo by JOHN H., WRENN & CO,, Washington nd Deatborii-sls. SO0 lutonding to devate the coming full and winter to n[mcmnu- in fine hooks, 1 shutl for one week offer my stock of books at very creat reductions, A rars chance for burgains s of- fered, stock cunslstsul- most entirely of cholce houky, W. T. KEENER, 03 Dearborn-st. WANTED. A e L e TO ASSIGNEES OF The subscriber 4 propared to pay cash for & #tock of Clothing, Hats, Cups, Doots and Shoes, or clther, Propoeala will he entertalned for any class of goods, provided prices aro untisfactory, Aldress J. €. WILLIAMS, Grand Pacific Hote), daring th week. e BUSINESS GATIDN, LADIES DRESSES Dry Lleanod and Dyed without removing tho irlmmings, at the INTERNATIONAL DRY DYE WORtks, H Washington-st. ANDERSON'S DINING-ROOMS, 119 FIFTH-AYV,, Ington-ats. T RRHOTOGIIATLEY, e g ) 1 MAKES THE DEST Photographs INTHE CITY. 300 Neoet Madbaonoat, Between Madison and Wa 1A, B ‘ SEE the new sn’llm oy Mew’s and Doys' Ilats at Low Prices. J. 8 BARNIS & CO,y ‘v 70 Madlson-st. ! CIICAGO, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1876. TIPPECANOE. A Stirring Time on the Oid Battle=-Ground in Indiana. Fifteen Thousand Hoosicrs Flock to See and Hear Ex- Speaker Blaine, They Greet lis Mistory of Til- den and the Confederato House with Cheers and Amens. Rousing Speeches by Gen, Harrigon, Robert Lincoln, and Others, Notes of the Progress of the Canvass in the Hoosier State. The Greenback Party as the “ Joker” in the Game. A Deseription of Don Harrison as Ho Ap. pears Upon the Stump. James G. Blaine at Waerren, O. -- His Objections to Tilden. Payment of Rebel Claims==How to Do lt-«Democratic Re- trenchment. The Democratic Love-Feast on Market-Street Square Lust Lvening. Speeches by Gen. Farnsworth, Senator Bayard, Judzo Doolittle, and Senator McDonald, TIPPECANOE. JANES G. DLAINE WAKER UP TOR 1OOSIERS. Spectal Dispatch to The Tribune, Laraverrg, Ind., Sept. 20.—The grandest demonstration of the compaign fn Northern Indiana wos that at the Tippecanoe battle- ground to-day. Excursion-trains were run by the railronds centering here, and brought not less than 10,000 poople to attend the mecting, besides which thousands came in wagous and un horseback. Blafne was to here make his first speech in Indisna, und many came from long distancus to hear and see the matchless leader whore brillfant, dashing eharge upon, and route of, the Confederato Democracy In the Ander- sonville debate made Lis name a houschold word throughout Indiana, Others came beeause of tho nssoviations that cluster “around the battle-ground, and to sce and hear the de- scentdant of the hero of Tippecanoe, and among these were 450 white-baired slres, who In 1840 voted for Williawn Henry Hurrison, and who, In 1870, will vote for Ben Harrlson. But this great gatherlng to-duy was most of all slg- nifleant of the deep futerest felt in the present canvass. T TON. EARLY SPEECAES. Farly in the forcnvon the crowd at tho Dbattle-ground wus g0 lmmiense that, without waiting the arrival of Mr, Blaiue and Ben Harrison, the meeting was or- ganlzed and epceches were made by Robert Lincoln, the Hon. M. D. White, and others, that of Mr, Lincoln, who was received with tremen- dous applause, belng a very felleitous effort. It BLAINE'S 8PEECIL AL 2 p. my, when Mr. Blaine was Introduced by the Hon, Godlove8. Orth, the great Tabernacle, which has geating capacity of 4,500, was crowded to the utmost. The broad alsles were packed with people standing, and, the eldes of ihe bullding Leing open, the throug spread outside for u considernble distance beyond the range of the volce of any ordinary speaker, and numbered at Teast 10,000 cr 12,000, Mr. Blaine seemed as full to overflowing with splendid vitallty as o was carly In the session last winter, and he betrayed no evidence of the filuess that recently prostrated him. e spoko for an lour and five minutes ina clear, firm, ringing volee, thut was heard by the entlre great audlence, and ks speceh was PULLY UP TO INIS BEST STANDARD, It was aclear, forcible summing up of the issues ralsed by the Confederate Touee, and by the enndidacy ‘of Reformer Tilden. The Cop-~ perhead most ashumed of his record durlng the War could scarce linve cmu{nnhmd of Mr. Blulne, so lightly did he touch the record of the past, and fo cuntident, evldently, wus ho thut people did not need Lo be rcmlm{ed of it hecause th uld not forget it. Instead, with characteristic dash, and thut confldence of Lis that comes of o consclousness of hls strengtly, Mr, Blume began with o keen, searehing ANALYSIS OF TILDEN'S T'OBITION an lie stands before the country s u candidate, and of the potley to which his fullowing fuevitably commits hin, There wius no divergenve to slde ssucs but with that ~ splendld enfus which”™ fa ki own he wmassed the facts with crushine effect. Most telling, perhaps, was hls caustie reference o Tllden a8 conspreunusly & hard-money man untll that thnes when the Southern chtm ugents Degan to insist upon the lssue of anore paper money, that, with the greenback-bag open at hoth enda they could put In thelr war cluime ut oue end, und GRIND TIEM OUT IN PAPER MONEY at the uther. e remlnded the Gireenbuckers that the holders of the Kebel clating knew full well that of tho dotlar fs made of full value— tho sliver dullar und the gold dollar—they cane not reeeive payment of their clabms; that there- Jure jt fa they " do not want the curreney bet- tered, snd that the Greenbackers of the North are but votiyg with the South, which doesn't meay the eurreney shull bo bettered until their clafisn are paid, nind the paper that should be issued for theso ewmo clatms 33 dssued, He also reminded them they would eome time have to be pald. “This point, which was presented with Mr, Blalue's wouted striking clearness, was A PUABE OF TILE CURNENCY QUL that hiad not been consldered by the ers liorenhouts, aud evidently 1t st Not less forclufs was his sumopiary of the fu us to tho Rebel wur clufins made upon tho ns- sumption that the In{nl people wers all wrong n puttlng down the Rebeillon, and that all they can get out of the United Btates is lawful plau- der.” llocited the recent decison of Justics Cliftord, of the United Stales Supreme Court, sltting ut Portland, Me.,, us Cir- cult Judze, rendering s judzment ogoinst Col. Newl Dow ° for sugor svizod by Dow's reclment durlng the War, as an flins- tration of how u Democrutfe ®tate’'s rights Bench might bo expeeted to compel Unlon sol- diers to [uxy out of thelr own pockets the dam- ages that could be collocted as war clalins. No Quartermaster’s certlficate was lssued to the owner of the sugar because lio COULD NOT PROVE L8 LOYALTY, but b found o Loulsiana court du which ko reenred a judement l%ulnnt Col. Dotr, and that Judement dustice Clifford, on the sacred State's rlehts doctrine would not allow 1o bo questioned. On this doctring CGen. Gront, 8s soon na his term us President ended, might have judgment. remdered ngalnat. him for renc of the tkld where IURY od Lee's surrender. Mr. Blalne algo dirccted attentlon io the ex- traordinary Daste with which the Confedernte House, by'the 70 Confederate Brizadvra, abol- ishied the rule yeaulring proof of theloyalty of war-laling, and before. thelr claims cqulil Le en- tertalned h{ the Claims Commission, In its pluce they hed mude the oath of the claimant, NONSCHAE, and of " one other person, whko might bo his portner in the clalm, ufliclent proof of Joyulty, The Hebel dulina for dumages dotie by reckless horsemen like Kilpatrick ranged In the agaregate from 3400, ) O 700,000,000, and 8o clamovous were tho Itebel claimants “that on the eveof a Preat- dential election, and well-knowing how it would affect Lhe party In the North, the Cunfederates Jad heen toreed to INTRODUCE BILLS FOR TIEIR PAYMENT, and no less than 105 suchwere introduced at the lust seasfon., 2 FLECTION FIAUDS, The Infamous action of the Confederate Hotse in tackingan amendinent repealing the efection laws upon appropriation bills was cited hy Mr. Blane” as ‘u further fmdication of ~ the purpose of the reform Demneracy o carry New ork, a5 . they . did under Tweed’s and Tilden's manipulation for John ‘T, Hoffman, by ballot-stutling, Having clisugerd the rule, the Confederates tacked upon the Sundry Civil Appropriativn bill the amend- ment abolishing the ofiice of Bupervisors of Electfon, o thuy might go on ballot-stufling in New York for 'Tilden as they did for Hoffman} :lml this hig followed up by reviewing rapidly. ho " LEGIBLATION OP THI CONPEDERATE TIOUSE Fencmlly awl In detall, He councluded by urg- ng the tien who supported the principles of the Dectmration of Independence, sigied by Ben Frauklin, and the principle ~that = this country is a nation, declared by Willlsmn Henry Harriaon, in hia inaugural address, to vote for Ben Harrlson, the representative to«lay of thesa prinelples. GEN, BEN HARRISON, It can no longer be sald that Ben Harrison does not, as a stump speaker, rank' with the loremost of the orators on either slde, from all, over the Unlon, now canvassing Indlaga. There were those who feared for the madest little Colonel of the Seventleth Indiang when it fell to lis lot tu follow Mr, Blalue, but Ilarriron speedily relieved them of ull anxiety on his ac- count. ‘Whether It was the ussoclatiois connect- ed with the gmuml, or the prescuce of the 450 veterans of 1840, or the Inspiration there was in the vast crowd, certain i {s that he aston- {shed those who knew him best by the stirring cloquence of his specch to<lay,” It was not a rabble-rousing effort; on the contrury, the matterof it wusa close, succinct, connected argument; but the rare felleity of his illustra. tlon thehumor that rung through it all, and the Jofty impassioned eloquence with which he suuimed up, carried the finmense audlence by storm. It ueeded not his name or the aesociations linked with Tippecanoe battle zround, to cvoke astorm of applause, Men listehed, and alter- nately cheered and laughed, and shouted “ Amen,” and were so carried away by his words that they forgot that {t was Tippecanoveand that &n! was a Harrison, They bebeid ovly the ora- o, To the Western Assoctated Press. Lararerre, Sept. 20.—The attendance at the Battle-Ground to-day was very large, 10,000 be- {ui present. The speaking took place in the Tabernacle and ut the stand in the Battle- Ground proper. 8peeches were inude by Messra. Blalne, iHarrlson, Booth, Kllpatrick, Goodloe, Robert Lincolu, Gordon 'Lee, and others. All were listencd to attentively. The most Interest wus manifested in Blaine, around whose stand o very lurge crowd congregated. Excursion trafna were run on all the roads Jeading tuto the i A public reecption was Leld this gven- Ing at the residence of jthe Ifon. Q. 8. Orth. Tuere was also speaking on the public square. INDIANA. TAB OREENDACK-FARTY FRAUD—''TIUR NLOODY BHIRT"' —THE DEMOCRACY AND ‘'THE D—D NIGOERV—BEX HAKRIZON ON THE BTUNE, From Our Oirn Cervespandent, Inp1anarouts, Ind.,, Sept. 23, —4I1 know something about cards, but I never could tell how the gawe wounld come out when there was & joker in the deck,” sald o veteran Indiana palitician, whose early opportunitics were fm- proved in onc of the river-countics, In the duys when fgnorance of *old-sledge’ was fatal to one's uspirations in public Ufe. It was fu re- sponse to my {nquiry as to the political situa- tion here that lhie sald it} and he continued: “And that's why I cau't tell Low it's golng to turn out. There's a joker fn this game. It'a TILE GREENBACK PARTT. That's what knocks all caleulations,” — the which unguestionably was true two wecks since, and probably s true now. My quondam friend, and distinguished political leader, whose early opportunitivs were conslderably fmproved 1n one of th rlver-countles, and who, In conse- of his edu- steamboats, quence picked-up o deal cation on the Lower Ohlo certalnly hit the sltuatlon pat. The gamblers' phrase, too, fs the ouly one that fits It,~this phase of the sliuation. The Greenback joker was slipped fnto the pack by as unscrupulous a lot of gamblers as ever stocked the cards, and who have taken a hand in the gumo to make a villainous cheating, cut-throat play. They are the fellows who affeet to be- lieve the independent-Gircenback movement will operate to throw the clectfon fnto the House, where cvery muther's son of them kuows the absulute impossibility of securing o slugle Electoral vote for Cooper. They lave TIE ASTONISHING CUEEK to proclaim there Is o lofty political principle to be vindicuted by throwlng awsy votes upon Waleott, thefr candidate for Governor. Yet nobudy knows botter thau they that the only result of the utmost attainable vote for Walcott would be to defeat cither Harrison or Williams, —the which would depend upon whethier the majority of votes for Waleott were drawn from the Republican or the Democrutic party, Nobody knows better than v thut the October election In this State, which must result in the election of Harrison or of Willlams {(Waleaft's chances being considerably less than of his translntion to the moeon o uhand-basket), will have u troemendous fnflience upon the Presidentlal election, I it dues not, ndeed, determlue {1, And 1t 18 upon preciscly this kunowledge that the political gamesters who are Plylmi the Greenback jJuker operste. Nothing bt the dense fgnorauce upon the Currency question that here has been *asslduously culti- vated by Democratle demagozues and lrnora- muses, uud that lus been watered aud nurtured by a few jgnoramuses und trimmers catling tiiemseives Republivans, could have mado possi- Dle such A gumio as the political ndventurers who hold the Greenbuck juker are playing, Nothing but that dense §gnoranee coulid’ conceal from thelr fullowing the game thut 13 helug played upon then, To certuly [s beginuing to dawn upon those of them who ere Rupublicans; and tut Is the 3 LATEST AND MOST SIGNIPIUANT PIRASR of the cunvass. ‘The wonder fs, that tuey did nut long swo arrive ut o saviug knowledige of the fuet thing the Currency question Js not an issuo in the national canviss,and thut all Indisua ca’t make it an Lssuce—no noro thun could all In- diuna run tho Misstssippt River up-stream, But u man possessed of the Greenback notion that he fs goluz to profit personully by votlug for Inflativn 18 woudrously i) fous to facta, 1le shvds the lacts filmt G st hioe, ula xcl 3 tha ol have given shay the actund lsucs of the canvass with a sharp- ness that cuts through the dullest or worat theory-befogzed understanding UTIE BLOODY-SUIRT,M 08 it lins heen derlsively styled, wus fetched jute the canvass, naturally und lnu\'uubl?'. by i the character and antecedents of the o= cratle nominces and leaders of the campaign in the State. Allthat can be written or #uld,tathy effect thot a party is an jdeal nonentity" which it §s prepusterous to try by its record, docs not do away with the fact that the scli-same ofiice- holders and omfce-seckers who practicaly con- stituted the Democratie party of Iudisna In 18505, practically constitute the Demorratic party of Indiana to-day, 'Phomas A, Hendricks llmn a3 now was the favorite son of the Indiana Detocracy, the chief nlin of which parly then wus, a8 it {s now, toput Thowas A, Heudricks futo_olllce. Duanfel Webster Voorhees was another fayorite éon of ‘the Indiana NDenocrac thon, valy less favorits than Heudricke; so ft {s to-day. ‘Blue-Jeans Willlams then, as a metu- ber of the Legislature, hud wmore to do with shaping the policy of the party than ho has to- duy, lglu of F;.ho"n{m I (X'lll, Andrew Hum- phiries, and the vest. The record of the Demo- cratie party in Indfana 13 THE NECOND OF TIESE MEN and, a8 often as these men who mude that rec- orl Infamous are put forward to enjoy the offices and sdminister affalrs In caxe the Demo- eratle party carries the elaction, so long will be remembered that record of Copperheadism, of active and covert resiatanco to the War for the Unlonand " to the Constitutional Amendments and Jteconstruction, of denuncintlon of Union suldlers, and of trearonnble couapiracies of the Knighta of the Golden Circlo and Sons of Lib- erty. Posaibly it ought to be ultogether forgotten, But It ten't In hutnan nature—tricd 23 the Unlon people of Indiann were during the War, with treason threatening in their own midst—to for- get it under such circumetances, ‘“*There roes one of the meancat Copperheads In this counity, d—n W !’ exclalmed o well-to- emluoklnu armer, in my hearing, ot Shelby- e. > “Oh, well,” safd his_interlocutor,—a New York gentleman, and a Republican too,~-*the War is uver now, and you can affurd to let hfm ll:" on, caw't you, and forget lds copperhiead- m. ** Yes, T suppose I must. Bnt‘ when 1 see him, and Dan Vorhees, aud Jim Willlams, and all those 1ellows who encouraged the Rebs and discouraged us, 1 CAN'T FORGET TIR LEG 1 LEFT ON THF PIELD, There would have been hutmlghzylluleuglw ing but for them, and, d—n ‘em!”—and he ground his teeth,—but for them I'd have had two sound legs to-day, instead of a cork etump for one of them.” And, {nsaying that, he gave utterance toa feellng that is getting almlichty comimon thmu‘mmut the State, and {8 making Ew;flu of opinicn that the Greenback question izsn't very much to do with this electlon. ‘The Boldiers' Reunion drew out a stronger ex- preasion of that sentiment, and the subsiantial result of the Reunfon w-ni that It diffused that sentiment far and wide. It set the lever work- ing: and the Indlans Democracy, with Hen- dricks, Blue-Jeans \Williams, Dan Voorhees, and the rest of its managers, {s coming to be mnore clearly recognized as * THE ALLY OP THR SOLID SOUTH,— the same South tliat tho same Democratic man- opers alded and abetted fn_the Rebellion, and are now ready to aid and abet fu attatning that political supremacy in the Unlon which was the dream of the old-time Bolid South, and which now would trausform vanquished Rebels {uto the rulers of thelr conquerurs, The [utensity of the canvass thus developed waould seem fucredible to one not in the nidst of it. It has grown as heated as was any can- vazs during the War, and it Is dweriing, and leaving less and less room for, the absurd Greenback slde-fssue. It dafly grows hotter, and wru dafly fnd it 1nore diflienlt to stand-oft on that ridfeulous, nreposterous Independent Ioll‘)' und swindle, when cverything almost {rre- sistibly impels them to take part In the great contest that is being waged. Insteud of people being talked to death st the vast numberot political meetings already heid,— {u the nelghbornood of 2,600, I belleve,—ur feel- Ing in peril of being talked to death ut pros- pect of the 2,500 meetings yet to be held prior ;g ”l.'lnz Octaber clection, every oncof these mcets g ADDS TO THE FERVOR with which the campalgn is prorecuted. It ex- tends to all classes, without distinction of age, 8ex, colory or provious conditlon of servitude; and anywhere in the State, ou either eide, it scems possible, on the slightest. provocation, tu nmuke 8 **demonstration.™ But, whlle this is truc of both partics, it 1s no less true that, from 0ne caUEC or causes, the Demuoeratic campalgn {8 not sustained with the vigor with which it was Inaugurated, and that symptoms of flazstuy wure tnanbiest fn various quarters. he aogress- ive campalin that was mnaped out by the' Til- den managers In New York ias proveda fallare in Indiuna, The manugers bere find thelr hauds full o attempting to get away fromthelr recond during the War. And for thicm to talk obout lhlz!gnu 1s 88 bootless a5 whistling agelnst the wind. Then they epytad gn carryving the election on ‘T'ilJen's bur'l'uf money. Either there was a deal Tess in it than they iinagined there would s¢ the contents hzvo been appropriated and nothiug left to o round. At all events, there Is profound disgust amang the ¢ working politiclans " of the party that Til- den don’t vome down, aud privateiy they de- dounce him as A MISTRABLE CURMUDGEON, ond are x:cnur.\llg ml!erln;i:u palpable diminu- tlon of ardur in behalf of Tilden aud Keform, The great peril that bescts the Indiana Dem- ocracy—that anent which the managera are most powerfully exerclsed—is as ludicrous as it is to them serions. The Democracy of Induna is, u8 u\'uryhud{ ynu\\'i. onee more aroused, as had to bo done if the party-managers Intended to make serlous effort to carry the State, And it's tho aroused Demoeracy that the man. agers are voncerned sbout. The first impulse of a truly-represcututive Judisna Democrat, when aroused, is to “@o Polt TIE D~—D NIGGERS,” ust as they did at the Just city election here. The Democracy I8 now aroused to a liveller piteh even than it was then, aud ‘“the d—d niggers'? aro * more aggravatinger,"'—marching rouml o the torehlignt processions, and shout- I for Hoyes and Wheeter. In consequence, thearousul Democruts nre itehing to get their hands on **the nirger"; and, in consequence, the Democratic manugers are wost palns- takingly getting into the heads of the aroused Demuerats, o8 fur as moy be without surgical nln:nulun. the awlul fact, that, it they want to elect Harrfson, all they have to do s to killa *nigger. Tulk as you please about your Con- stitutional Amendments throwing their snletd ubout the freedmen,—and it 18 a” thing to by bousted of, too,—but let me tell youthut here fn Indtann the protection they cxtend {sn't acir- cumstance to the sacreducss with which the persons of “the d—d nlggers ' are fovested by nat besctting persl of the Democracy, It GOE3 * POWERPULLY AGIN'' TUE ORAING but that lesson, no less ungratetul to tho inan- agers who teach it than to the aroused to wiom it s tought, nas to ba perpetually gone over; ond the most wearlng of all the wearing work which the Democratlc munagers haveto perform fstonct nsu bu\l_v-guunl, 83 {t were, to tho col- ored Hayes and “Wheeler cluba, 83 otten s these turn out, lest sume of the aroused Kill Sad—d nigrer” or two, aud thereby clect Hurrlson, No sonder they enter their plaint- ve ‘n‘olcsls agalnat the wicked wiles of the Re- publican_manugers, who, by recognizing tho colured [fayes aud Wheeler clubs, und permit- tiug them to take part i the torchllght pro- cesstons, ete,, are nlzhtly tempting the aroused to kill a few * nizrers.” 1 took o run down to Bhelbyville this aftere nooy, to see BEN MARRISON ON TIE STUMP, and to note the manncr of his reception by the icople. Shelby County s one of the great eioeratic strongholds of Indfuna, and Shelby- ville, the county-town, was for many years the home vt Gov, Mendricks, and the peoply there yet reward him as ono of thelr towns. Tolk. O all towns In the State, {t scems that one where Harrlson’s powers us & stumper would be put to the severcst test; and I had heard 60 inuch ubout his colducss, und blue- blood, and pofite hreeding, that put it out of the l}\ll‘hlluu lor him to coine down to the mass- o4, that L watehed the proceedings with lively ‘eurloshly, There was a big crowd out to seo and hear N, Probably tiere were 5,000 persuns pres- ent,—nearly uil furmers, who fiad gathered from aradius of 20 miles, coming i their wagons, fetehing feed for their tewns and lunches for themseives, Many of them bad brought thelr wives and daughters with them, Maoy of the young meu were orgunized into layes and Wheeler mounted clubs, bundsomely uniformed; and tho preat wagons, drawn by trebled and quudrupled teaind, were tasteiuily decorated. Gun. Harrison was MERE RECEIVED WITIL CILLNS, ed b ufl along the Iine of mnveh i the town amd to the falr-ground, Whethier this ehublition of enthustasin was for 1, of courae, oy K k little quict observation sutislied e that §t was chieily the Iatter; and that it remained for hiin to tika an impression, favorable or unfavorable, upon these people. When ho cume forward upon the stund to speak I could see that aimost the ens tire crowd was walting with no sl degree of enrfosity to hear hilm, und that ufterward they would ihake up their verdict whether ho was A lJeader of whoin they might be proud; and upon that depended the cuthusiasm witl which they would support. Loy, Hls appeurance wus perhaps a disuppolntinent. tosemo of them, Sowewhat under the aversgo stature, and of spare figare, aud witl s menuer #0 unohtrusive and retiruyg that it might have been mistalipn for embarraseinent, 1uere wad not mueh promise of the great stunip-orawr vl the secepted typo in his manner or appearstices Though haf-cncireled by,o lght-brown, wav) bourd, his fuce, which, fw'contour aud featuro, {8 rather detlcute than strongly pronounced, fndi- cated thut ho didn’t belung to the rabble-rousing order. Mo bad, in opening, tu respond to un o Duilp Teibune, | addre¥5 of welcome from the ploncers of the the county, delivered by a white-haired veteran of Tippecanoe, He did it wlthlslm‘)le mod- sty alfie removed from superfiuous sclf-depre- cintfon and from fuss and feathers, Befors he had spoken 10 minutes, it was manifest that HE HAD TAKEN EASY HOLD upon the attention of his audience, and would malntain it throughout, The chief characterfs- tic of his speech (s thorough fairness and cans dor, He is carncst beeause of It, and his ear- nestness Ia of very dlffercnt sort, and far more effective, too, than that of the orator of the nArrow, extreme partiean type. He deals in no ela tn\sn or stage-eifects, or exagy tions. Belore hie has spoken many moments, his hear- ors recognize that he is dealing with ' the facts of the situation with very much the care and precision with which a capable Judge deals with the r-,m in summing up n case to the Jury. There §» none of the judictal, dry-as- dust style about his specch, efther, Ivt is easy and colloquial, while clear-cut and precise. He'relfes plainly upon s fair, dispassionate pre- scntation of the queations at fastie, and has suf- flcient contldence in the Intelllgence and {nteg- rity of hits audlences to say, not that our Civil Service Is the beat the world ever saw, but that It is to be made better than ft st to say, not that the country is to be enriched by leaviug the greenback promisce-to-pay outatanding until they are outlawed, but that the thing to do is to Jiave them brought to par with gold. There seems to have ot abroad somchow the Impression that the people of Indlana, gencrally epeaking, {s a conglomerate cross between an {nfant and an {dlot; and altogether too much of the ptufl that s spoken from the stump has been evidently espectully prepared for a con. glomerate cross, politically, between an fdiot and an fufant. JARRISON'S STRENGTH 18, that lie addresses the voters of the State as in- telligent men, * He fsi't & rabble-miser. IHe doesn’t deal fu blue-light rhetoric; neither docs hebore bis hearers with dreary abstractions. He ducan't ralse the laugh 8o often asdo some, But neither does he make the disjointed, rambling dlscourst that is made for tic_sake of ralsing the laugl,~nud that 18 forgotten before the laughfs over. But he makes o rapid, clear, sharply-letined presentation of the real fasues, in such truthful, candié fashion as s ever fm- ressive, Men think over ft when thoy go ome after hearing bim: und it 15 matter that will bear thinking over that makes up his epeechies. Tao proof of thelr quality fs, that they tell; and that the very Republican leaders who were afrald hie would ot do on the stump now unite in saying he willrun ahead of therest of the ticket. HlanuyT. LIGONIER, &Spectal Dispatck to The Tribune. Tacoxier, Ind., Sept. 26,—Two granid rallies were held liere today, ono by Republicans, who were addressed by ¢x-Secretary Bristow in the afternoon gnd by Gen, 1. HJ Nelson In_the evening, and one by the Democrats, Gen. Bris- tow lield his audlence for two hours by hfs marvelous power to carry conviction fnto the minds of hle hearers, ¢ addressed from 4,000 10 6,000 people, and in the L'\'cnlm; Get, Nelson addressed the Republicans in Kann's Hall, which was densely packed. His meeting was = genu- ine feast,—a yrand success. The Republicans feel jubllant to-night, ‘The Demoerntic rally was ndvertised largely, while only five days’ notice was_given of our meeting,” Gov. Dorsbelmer, of New York, ad- dressed the Democrats. 1lis andleace st no titne numbered more than 500. Many Demo- crats were present at the stand where Bristow spuke, and listencd attentively., George W. Jullan, who was pusted to epeak in the evening for the Democrats, failed to cowe, and thelr meeting was almost a faflure. The Democracy are snowed under In this county, Go3neN. Spectal Disputeh to The Tritune, Gosien, Ind., Sept. 20.—It was announced early last week fn targe posters which were scattered - throughout the county that G. W. Julian, the greet Liberal Nepublican, would speak in this city to-day, snd all the faithfnl wad everybody elta were d to turn out and liror Mim epesk in favor of Tilden and Re- form. 1ie, in cowpuuy with Judge Fuller, of yourcity, was here to'earry out his part of the orrangement, but the unterritied failed to put inan appearance, and the smallness of the crowd seemed to have a depressing influence on the speaker, and &. morc listicss and uninteresting address hus not been delivered hern this campaign.—~and one, too, in which there were more misrepreseututions of the truth, The sudience did not exceed 300, and many of these were Republicans, After Julian closed, lie s followed by Fuller, who, by his efforts, soon dispersed the crowd, more_complete faflure "was never witnessed. ‘The Democrals are vory much crest-fallen over nlf‘ J]cnult, while the’ Republicans sre much clated. ANDENSON, Bpectal DispalcA to The Tribune, AXDERSON, Ind., Scpt. 20.—This has been a grand day for the ‘Republicans .of this county, liough only six days' notice was given of Gen, Lugan’s appolntiient to speak here, the whole t-uum[)- turned out to greet hlw, and the crowd s estiinated to be one-third larger than thut In attendance at the Democratic rally here last week, when the Confederates clalmed 15,000. The provession was two and u halt miles long, and was one bour and fifteen min- utcs in passing. Gen. Logan spoke two lours and three-quarters, and never was a sprech listened to with more nttentlon, or speceh recelved with more hearty plaudits or cnthusipsm. To-night o torchlight provession 1s on the streets, and the air lstllled with the enthuslastle shouts of the people, while Col. Joyce, of YVermont, is addressing o lurgu crowd in” the Court-House yanl. Look out for hi gains for the Kepubllvan ticket in this part of the State. ELKUART. Spectal Dispatch fo The Tribuns. Errnant, lud,, dept. 20.—Cul. Bob Ingersoll 1s to speak at Etkbart, Ind., Oct. 6, and the Re- publicaus of the Teuth sud Thirteenth Con- greasional Districts fn that State will unlte to make ft the lurgest rally of the campafgn, It fs expected that speclal tratus will be run’'from Lu- porte, Ligonicr, Coldwater, and Kalamazao, to uccommodate all who will desire to hear this wonderful orator, ‘The varlous Republican Comnnittees are slready getting at work, and 1t {s belleved that, shoull The weather be favor- able, at Jeast 10,000 Pou;llu will guther. Tue TRIBUNE cun assure the pcurlu of that scction »mr’t they will not be disappolnted in Col, Inger- soll. spectut Ditgatch 1, ine Tribun 3 speciat Dispaich (o The Tribune. Laronte, lud, Sept. 20.—The Hon. IL O. Tratt, of Iows, and the Hon, A, E. Cragin, of Vermont, spoke to & large audience in the wigwam this evouninz. Thu specchies were of tho solld, mstter-of-fact kind, and stimulated 1o renewed labor the Republicans who are bat- tling go ianfully in this great strugele. The toreti-light provession was small for the Hayes and Wheeler Club of Laporte, thera belng but tlves companies on parado, GOV, MORTON, Evansvinie, Ind, Bept. 28.--Gov, Morton spoks at Doouovills tu-dsy, IHe apeaks here to-night, MR, BLAINE. 1S BPEECH AT WARRRN, O. ‘There was a grand rally of the Republicans of Ohio last week at Warren, over 10,000 voters prsembling to hear the uddress of the cloquent orator from Maine. TFollowing ure some ex- tracts from the report publidhed in the Cinclu- natl Guzetle; Mt CUAINAN AND FRLLOW-CiTIzENS OF OHIO: T am opposcd to tho election of Mr. Sanuel J. Til- den for tho Presidency [checre], und 1 an in favor of the election of Kuthorford ', layes. (R nowed cheery 1 am oppossd to tha election of Mr. Bamu ccause at s great crisie in his country ute ho [;l'u\un undutiful, und witen thut country luy bieeding with wounds from rebel hands, Me, Satanel . Tildon passed by on the other side, and gave na word of mid or comfort except to her encmies, 1 am opposed to Mr. Tl den becauve—— [Interruption by the wpproach a banid,} 1wl not run f contradfetion to & bas- drusn, 1 am apposed to Mr. Tilten, [wanabout 10 say, beczike of Life being openly aud ostensthly cunnitied to the doctrine uf resuming specie-pay- mentn on the ut day of January, 178, o broke Be Bersonal faiih with the coaitey, aud yielded to tne clamare of those iniho Soath who wivh a freely {#s10 0f papec-money, for the purpose of paying Euuthern wareclaimw, 1ut [ liave niare to say of il befura I get throuzh. UBIECTIUNS TO TILUEN, Mr, Tilden goes under the name—sham pretense —of befug a reformer, & mere nominis umara, sud & name which s fualay seguciated with the worst gang that ever infeated or infected tho polltics of América,—1 mean the Democracy of tiv Cily of New Yurk., Lum up“ et to Sr. Tilden because fie. moro than uny other Northern man, §s coamit. tod t that fatal horesy, (hat most fatal of all po- Titieal Leresies that Jies cuncealed undorthio ** giite tering goneralities” of Sluto rights, That was one of tho ubjects of the giunt itebollion, with bivudshed, sucriiico of life, destenction of tres uro, and ‘lvss of property, and_ which, 1) stamped out by the loyalty uf American citizen Tl reappes ia x, miost angerous elvment In o futare adwlnistration of the Uovernment. And 1 #in opposed to ke alection of Samueld, Tlidon be- causc he is & Domocrat. (uuxhwumu‘;pl,nu-e.] A party that oven in (o eotlination of thiose who a6 Xl’)’{ux 1o support it Las wa bad o record Lhat'it & ouiy 832200 JO PRICE FIVE CENTS. §a acknowledged that the Governor of Massachu- seits does not dare to mention ita name in_ his let- ter of acceplance; s party that, since the timea of Van Buren, now nearly 40 years ago, has espoused al::l!:,lul‘u;;:%v‘l:cag uny‘ mcm‘xlm‘:elm was not at sheat gotiius and best Inte Auwerican civilization. [Great -pgllm!e.'] el o A WORD ABOUT AMMY RETRENCHXENT, Now, then, tiie same rule come to the army, and you hear a great deal abont the enormous atanding army that the Repnblicans are keeping np, threat- en!nf the liberties of the citizens, and over- turning republican Institntions, Now, wa have fiou natfon of 25,000,000 and an army of 25,000, feartul army! [Laughter.) In the Democratic ' city of New York it takes 3,000 policemon to keep 0ur pocket and mine from being picked, golng fom the depot 1o the hotel-—onesefghth of the e tire army of tho United States—the polics force of the Democratic city of New York, * And here, with all our vast frontier of 15,000 miles of coast, and with the disturbances in the South, 25,000 sol- dicra! “Never had a civilized nation, ainco'civiiza- tion came aniung men, that supported so amall an army withso large a nomber of people. We now cometo the Army bill, To go back, when ths Wae closed fn 1805, an immense number of men—~many prabably do bonor 1o licar mo this moment —went " back 1o the avocations of private e, returning stronger nicn for the great experience they had gone through. The question then came, I{ow shonld we composs the army for the tisne of peace? 1happened myself to be & member of the Committce l:nt framed tha bill, and we found a condition of things that diil not exiat before the War. We found that 4,000, - UUO men that bud becn slaves Were now freed men, and out of that 4,000,000, 200,000 had been in the rankn of tie Union army, who had dono what they conld, bad been faithful and trnc, bad fongbt, and glorfed in their acare, and thuveands had dftd. Not ooly waa thelr aid of vast conseqnence to the Unlop army, but their presence was a great lielp ta the North, The drafit was less in ths Town of Warren becaune of theve 000 men, if the drafl wan ever enforced here. When we came to make & peace establisliment, it wonld have been on act as mean us a Soutlern Tebel Democrat can got thelr Northern ailicn to do--1 cannot use 4 ironper come pariro—to bave excloded the negra fzom tie nrm, of the United Staten; and, therefore, we ondalne: o the Jaw that o certain mimuce of infantry and cavalry should be compused of colored men, and they have been, and are to-day, come oscd of the colored 1nen, and dv good mervice. Che negro is clothed with the nnfform of the United Statea, which he helped to rave, And any otheract, 1say, would have been IncfTably and fr- redeemanly mean. Now will you bleve It? You certainly would not, if it wus Atated un the unsup- Bunud asscrtion of any man, that on thls Army ill they moved to puta provision toleava those negrocs out. Under the dominion of the Rabel Congress, they were for excluding the colored reghneuts from the army, and, as_ the same time, reported a bili by Gen, Handall Tacker, of Virginia, repeallng another clause in the Army biil of 18035, which eaid that any man rerving in the Confederate ariay vhould never _be commissione: An army off« cer of the United States, 8o tuen this Congrees, 50 far as they could do it by their awn motion (de- feated. as they were, In both cascs by the Senate), attempted todrive the negro out of the United States pervice, ond to bring in the Confederato soldicr who had always been disloyal. These men are not only bad, bt thoy are crazy. They wera rashing at political destraction, but so wijd and crazy were thoy with tho scase of power that thoy proceoded to tiicwe extremes. B TATXENT OF REBEL CLAING. Now L have sumething to say of Mr., Tilden re- garding his position on specio payments. After secking to piace s Democratie character In your own view, ho immnedlately begine to call you 4 liar and other complimentary names, Tho Democrate #ay thatthe Constitution forbids tho glymenl of Rebet claims, Now the Constitation does forbld the paytent of two classes of claims. You shall not inake nny appropriation to pay the Rebel debt, nar for the elaves that were cmancipated. Tho Conetitution, in one clsuse of tno Fourisanth Amendinent, undoubtedly snys that. I willnot stop to srgud that, though I think even this ma. Do ot round, but Iwill acknowicdgo that thos gateways are closed. 1 will admlt there is no dan- er of sny moitey belng pald for the Itebel debt, o3 or the sluves thut were cmancipated, But, lnslde of that, gentlemen, there iz nothing in the Conatl- tution that forblda the payment for all the articles that were destroyed down South daring the War, all the wiid destraction that followed the War, all ‘the houses, the fences, the school-house: churches, towns, and the wheat sud the corn an «tho bacowy and the mulea snd horses, the rall- ruads, bridges, cnlverts, and thousand and ona natacless sources of loes,” are all payable to-day, is Sou cun get » majority in Congreas to vote the maney. ‘There {8 nothing in the world to prevent it. Howdo youknow thatany of them are golng tobe paid?_‘They hiave very uearly 200 bills now piled up. Thave seen It stated at 140, but itis very ncatly 200 and of overy Imaginable thing, For the number of these billa you have the festi= mony of the ffon. William Lairence, a careful, palustaking, {ndustrions man. He {s inoderate ix hlsatatements, and hos carofully examined, nod from his cxpericnce, for hie §a nore compelent thes auy other mian in the llouse, he sald that thoze siready fled would involve the payment of from 400,000,000 to $700,000,000 from the National 'I'reasury, in the event of & mejority of the House vnlile them. Well, the War-Claims Committee of the House 1 eald, Judge Lawrence, of Delle- 8 Chutrman, ond tiey had it as a rale ¥ 1 firat ostablish his Joyslty bofore cstablishing his clalms. The firet thing t{- t Com- mittea did when the Democrats - got control of i was to strike out that requirement. and let any mon pat in his clalm for losres, without regard ¢ the question of Joyalty at all. And then anather rule, which certainly the lawyers, If there be an; dulng me the honor io_Heten to me, now will loof upon v remarkoble, that auy pereon putting in o clalm for damages should have his own ovidence, should sustala tnat claln by his own atildavit, and thut of sume other person knowlng the facts, 1iere comes Jolin Smlth, of Alsbama, who has Jost §20,000 by tho Unlon army, aud then John Jones sweara that 1s w0, This wouald bankrupt the Roth- childs. ~_And these are-the men that made Mr. Tilden back out from tho dactrine ol spuclespayments of 1870, ond there is nof a Southern Rebel with o clalm to-day that doca not kuow Inatinctively and absvlutely that swhen this country comes down to the hard-pan—1o the yold aud sliver dollar—you are never goins to Pay the taxes with o portion’of the Hebel clalmn, Tor you cunnot keop the currency open at_both eads, —~the paper money ut one end and the Rebel cledins at the other. No, we will never pay taxes 1o pay Southern claima. They cannot create a southern rovulsion, but by quietly working what 18 known as tho {ntlation sentiment they hopu to pay for the vast number of mules snd Southern cliinis through the manipulation ome form of ppermoney. Takeone singlecialm. When wewere laxing everything duning the War, from the solltary bair tiat wis left on tho Lald man's pate to hla shoe, we taxed cotton, and under the cotton tax collected $70,000,000. Now they come forward and ask thut the taxes be pald back, not to the men who paid the taxes, out that this $30,000, 000 shall bu pald to the cotton-producing States in the pro- grll"llon of their bolos of cotton, There are 15 clal l:n now pending for the payment of that ono 1HOW THE NUREL CLAINN MAY NE PAID. And now, gentlemen, more etartling than any~ thing clse, on Thursday of last weck there was o declajon rendered in thie City of Portland, State of Muoine, in the United States Clreult Court, Judge Nathan CilSord presiding, with Dan'el Clark, Dia~ trict Judge of New Hampshire, sittiog with him, — and 1 waut the nttention of the lawyers agali,— confirming the judgment obtained “sgainst Neal Dow, of the Thi; uth Malne Roziment, ta Louls- fana, giving judgument to the Kebel_aged E:nuunlly for the sugar veized on hh_r y & foraging party from his regiment. They wore out foraging and welzed sozie sugar, and the man \ited for it, ‘and Dow aold, **1f you are a loyal may we will give you a recelpt, and you will easily gt your pay furit.” Now,'the sugar waa used, und s large pun of it was seat 1o the hoapltals. Dow says, **1f you will show ms your loyslty, X will give you a reccipt, " and he declined to do t, and got “judgment [} & Louisiana Court. Tha United 8tites Clreuit Court ot Portland confirmed they judgment, and onlered cxvcution to esus for $1,750. ‘That being wo, Luay, gentlomen, will It 1ot enable the nan that owned the fleld at Appo- mattox to collect ground rent from Grant for the urcu]mng of It sud destruction of the fences and crops? There has never been so menacing a cloud #s this hanging over a free r«umq. ‘More than that, thisdeclsion was warmiy disscnted from b‘vlnd{. Clark, of anllumwhln. 1o was broughtup ln the true faith, but the Buprome Court ovetruled bim In the person of Cliffard, Clifford §s 83 in- grain, hungry Demucrat, double-dyed and twhited, dyed In the wool, and coarss wool at that, [Much Imuchlur., And, in my judgnient, he haa cairled that caso for elght years, aud nover offered that decision untll hie, in his Ignorance, belleved In o Democratic trlumph. It there shonld be s Demo- cratic dreamer hiere, will not that gentleman telt ma why auy solltay battalion or division of tue army in the Bouth caunot b sucd for every article of trespass? {Laughter.) % ——— CONGRESSIONAL. THIRD CONGRESBIONAL DISTRICT. v the Kditor of The Triduna, Cuicaao, Bept. 26,1 wish to say & few words that may be of interest to your readers in the Third Congressional District in velatlon to the nomination to be made iu the Couventlon to e beld on the 23th, The Third Distrlct waa for- merly conceded to be strongly Republican. Tt Is uow kuown to bo close, it not doubtful. It very much depends upon the action of that Couventlon whether we shall recover our lost majority in the next election, and reinatate con- Adenca in the judgment and ability of the party to make a creditablo nomination,—one fitted to commend itself to the respect, and to secure tha support, of that element iu the district whose purtis) dofection mukes it possible for the probable candidate of the Democratic uls to varry the election. The ‘nomination shouls be of such & charucter as to conyince the independent Republicau voters that the party is determined to prove that its promiscs to . fustitute seform within itseif arc made in good |

Other pages from this issue: