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- The dhicage Dailpy Teibmn VOLUME XXXI WESTERN TRADE. ' “Representative Houses, branch house In Chicago T"’T"‘;:;:?f;:cfl. i alarge addition to A ortance of Chicago s & business centre, m‘mm\:l(knce of tho fact that the business o I‘le the Weat prefer to buy fn Chicago rather mm? New York. The Weatern buyer is an “,m"n at one, and to the extent of his means pie gcwmu the best, The tendency of Intelli- d‘:’;\crchnnu 1s largely to encourago this de- 4, for expericnce hos taught that the dealer mm; oods and whose manner of doing busi- 'na!hg! attained a public celebrity is not only 5 m::led to scll, but_forced to acll, at moderate Y and to furnish 8 good article. In cvery mw:;y 1n tho world & well-established mercan- wunc utation i8 & very valuable clement in :,I:;;m, and rccognized as the very best guar- sotes 8 stranger can nhave in making purchases, A countryman thinks ho I8 buying a watch very cheap at somo ‘auction shop. o heara every csentation made that will be Itkely to in- ;xe;nfihe sale,—yet if the samo countryman lied to N. Matson & Co. he would have b el that every represontation made would v,un'tl:)m to tho truth, and that whatever ho gnght bad Intrinsic value. Tho purpose of tho Inclosed scheme of news- r advertising 18 to bring intelligent and re- o nsible buyers into & wider acquaintance with »mlm of cstablished reputation, to the mu- {ual advantsgo of both. Travolers' Guide, N firc-proof)— PALMER HO?SE : Bnrtu m{t)d Monroe-sts., The best furnished house In the U, 8. PorTer ParMeR, Proprictor. PACIFIC HOTEL— cilio Cor. Clark and Jackson-sts., Joux B, DnaRE & Co., Proprietors. Desters In Artistlo and Fine Goods for Jtousehold and Porsonal Use. 18— DIAMOND: ¥, Marson & Co., Cor. 8tato and Monroc-sts. OfL, PAINTINGS, LITHOGRAPHS, AND IPORTERS OF WORKS OF ART— M. O'Brizx, 208 Wabasb-av. 1STIC TAILORS— A «Epwaxrp Err & Co., 105 Wabash-av, + ART FURNITURE— W. W. 8troxa Funsrrore Co., Cor. Adams and Wabash-av. ART WORK IN 8TERLING SILVERWARE— Goruax MaNuracTunixe Co., 1 Bond-at., New York. SEWING-MACHINES— BiNazR MANUPACTURING Co., 111 Btate-st, CARRIAGES— BTUDEDARER BRroTnERs, Bouth Bend, Ind.; 205 Wabash-av. FINE WATCHES— N. MaTsoN & Co., Cor. State and Monroc-sts. GUNS, RIFLES, ANDSPORTING OUTFITS— W. E. Seaxcer & Co., 54 Btate-st. UATTERS AND FURRIERS— Bisnor & BArnzs, Monros and Btate-sts, PIANOS (Chickering & Bons)- A. REED & 8ox, VanBuren and Dearborn-sts, ORGANB- Masox & HAMLIN ORoAX Co., . Boston, Now York, Chicago, JEWELERS AND SILVERSMITHS— N. Matsox & Co., Corner Btate and Monroe-sts. WEDDING STATIONERY— Jansen, MoCrura & Co., 117 and 119 Btate-st. CHINA AND GLASSWARE— BunLer & Trreeer,” 83 and 85 State-at. STOVES, FURNACES, ETC. (Wholesale)— Ratunosg, Banp & Co., 83 Lake-at. For sale fn all the princlpal towns In the U, 8. BCALES— Fu1RBANKS, MoRsE & Co., 111 and 118 Lake-st. SILVER-PLATED WARE— Mertpex Brrranwia Co., 558 Broadway, N. Y. N. Marson & Co., Cor. Btate and Monroe-sts. BAFES— = HaLw's Bars axp Lock Co., y 147 Dearborn-st. ; Clreulars, pamphlets, notices on business mat- e Intended for publication In newapapers, pr';pmd 8t short notice by the undersigned, - he charactor and exclusivoness of this col- ma will bo strictly maintained, and only cards of atefetly “TW e limx-’l:pn:u:m.nu\m Louses will be inserted becards will appear dally i y 1o first column g;-; Pgeto Chicago Times snd Cmioaqo Thin- For further particulars address Jonx MANxma, Caro Publisher Chicago T¥mer. CIGARS AND TOBACCO, FOR SALE. 2,000,000 Cigars Tobe s0ld 1n the noxt thirty doys, emb £ et Domiextic and Bpanialy bnnu’s-; 0;:“"1‘::; % o tfl. Also 810 £10; brincipaily 3 Y tv?ifi'f.fl'fi.“‘“é’".'&’ ir?lhlcco, A rare opportunity gm U0 Gayepecial discounts for cash; on good S & 71 WABASEL.AV. WALL PAPER. e Ceveil b lunnt SOOI WALL PAPER. The Fall iy the bes I st ¢l L) Papery, 8, 10 cta :‘; r‘(’x‘ll?.pu TR 2 papered at hort notice. - 120 ' A'I'Bf"l‘r pposite Congresa. G EID GLOVES M thnY-ULEANED AT 100 A PAIR, o Intornational Dry Dys Works, — 34 WANHINGTON.NT, I3 OGIL R MAKES THE BEST BY Photographs INTHE CITY, 300 \\ West Madlson-st, hand-made goo __ANATS, = We have three thnes the va- flft{ymou‘kmtl ?ther tll&uw, e the lowest prices, BISHOP & BAR ES‘,"“ ruer Stato & Monroe-sts, ‘Thia wook gg;:}d“i;:'m"‘i;:é’é-'.“"i‘fié 4, try Eu’i‘a:‘t. matled ug;nl‘:fi J.5, BARNES & 00., 70 Madison-at, SITIRTS, REDUGED, SHIRTS, MADE TO ORDER, $18, $21, $24, $26, $28, $30 per Dozen, For tho Finest Shirt we make, Our Linons aro guaranteed tho HEAVIEST and FINEST usod. Our Fino 8hirts aro made with All- Linen Bosoms, Cufls, and Bands. ELDREDGE&CH, 56 Washington-st. LARGE STOCK OF Underwear, Hosiery, & Gloves. PRICHS LOW. TO ORDER. Great Reduction in Pricgs, But NO CHANGE in QUAL- I'{"_Y of fabric or workman- ship. WILSON BROS,, 67 & 69 Washington-st. OLOCKS AND BIRONZES, ‘We have just opened several cagses of French Clocks and Bronzes, direct from Paris, which we place on sale to-day. The assortment contains many entirely new pieces and sets, at very attractive prices. N. Matson & Co., State and Monroe-sts,, Oppostes Palmer Honse. UNDERWEA UNDERWEAR, For Ladies, Gents, Misses, and Children. The largest and flnest line of UNDERWEAR, HOSIERY, etc., to be found in this city, at FRENCHS, 163 State-st,, corner Monroe, OPPOSITE PALMER HOUSE, FINANOYAL. Preston, Keax & Co., BANKERS. COPIMERCIAL BANKING la all FOREIGN EXCITANOY, Latters of Credt, Gov- chango. IR, “Town, County, City, Bchool Bonds, and othor Securitics, 100 WASHINGTON-ST, Dranch—Cor, Washington and Halate 7 PER CENT, TS s o hsa o ot D A MARON IO 165 Deatborn-ats MONEY AT LOW, RATES ‘To Joan on Warchouse Receipts for Grain snd Provis: fons, on City Certificates and Vouchers, on Itents a Morueuca.” AZARUS BILVERMAN, liank Chamber of Conmerce. COAL. COAL BY CARGO. COAL BY CAR. COAL AT RETAIL. Having bought oor Coal since the lata decline East, wo are ablc to give customers the very low- st prices. We are still selllug our OELEBEATED LACKAWANNA C0AL. Give us a call bofare purchasing. BOGILE & CO., 133 LaSalle-st. DOCK—Chicago-ay, Dridge. CANNEL COAL. We are now prepared to deltver our celen . EYh uuAN.\'uf Locohaumers ana deaters ;;{i",’l’f.fi'é, singi ton, BRAOKEBUSH, DIOEBON & 00, Mala Office, No, 1 West Illnllullm-{l. Rallrosd Yard, souibwést cor. Carroll aud Morkan-sts. T Dresss D0y Claned & Dy ‘Without removing the Trimmings, At the Internstional Dry BDye Works, 84 WASHINGTON-ST. STOV market a quallty sad STOVES. i ave your Money | A J. D, MACLEAN, 804 Btata-at, E ool “Belf-Fueder for 10 he usw EU- KR Parlor ang 81 jf LEQY asio Jesa ihe CHICAGO, DRY GOODS. A.T. STEWART & €0, HAVE OPENED TEHEIR LHICAGD HOUSE Wabash avenue Washington.st,, Where they will be pleased to see their friends and cus- tomers, and the public gener- ally, OPENIN @ |GRAND OPENING! THIS DAY “BROTHERS. 121 & 123 STATE-ST. WATCHES, LIY, &c. Thoso in Bearch of Bargains in GOLD WATCHES, ADND GOLD CHAINS, Call and examino stock of @ A MITLER No. 61 ‘Washington-st. (Established {n 1850,) N. B.—Partfcular attention pmd to Diamond Setting, Fine Watch and Jewelry repalring, An olegant assortment of WATCHES, FINE COLD JEWELRY SILVER AND SILVER-PLATED WARE, AT ABOUT HALF THE REGULAR PRICES Now being closed out at the BANIKXRUPT SALLE, Cor, of Lako and Clark-sts, Every article Warranted. AUCTION SALES, MORTGAGE SALE Of Valuable Timber Lands and Lumber Manufacturing Proporty. Will be s0ld nt public auction at the Court-Touse in Bay City, Mich,, on Monday, Qct. 10, 1876, at 2 o'clock p. m., abont 18,000 acres of land, com- rlaing Pine and Oak Timber lands and cleared anduanitable for tllnge, on which there is s valu. ablo water privilege, with a lnrge Saw Mill, Plan- ing Mill, and Shingle Mill, and a large amount of vl n‘: property kuown as Kawkawlin, now occu. led by O, ‘A, Ballou & Co., and located near the argo and flourishing City of Da; gty with admir- able railroad and water {facilitles for transporta. tion, A rare chance for a profilable in o, For particulars address or inquire of Messrs. Mo- DONNELL & MANN, Attorucys, Bay City, Mich,, ar of JOHN W, ELLIS, Englncer, Woonsocket, I RY ORDER OF MORTGAGKE. lce. Ice. lce".' Dest quallty of Ice for sale, 150 18 inchesthick, Inquirs of P, JUHNSEN & CO., Kenosha, Wis., Drawer 61, DISSOLUTION NOTICES. 5 DISSOLUTION., oticols horowlth givon that] hava d - nershlp With B - SGreonbai e s redpart, busiucss carried on In Chicago under the tirm name of 8, II, Greeabaum & Co. I will not be responats ble for Ansy transactlon done under the said frm mameaf £, 1L Gressougi 0 \TZENSTEIN, Bushuell, 1L, Sept. 20, 1676, ) WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1876. POLITICAL. The Undertow that Suc- ceeds the Tidal Wave of 1874. ter the electfon. Five noted characters atarted Inat n(g‘t‘:r. for the ranchie of Bamuel McDonnld, near Terre Haute. This ranche bears a sizn rending, ** Welcoms to AlLY Beveral othiers will start for their destination to-morrow. From all Information collected' by Republicans in Baltimore to-day, this place near Terre Hauto is agreed upon naoneof the rendezvous from the East. A qulct inepection of Western-bound trains hees to-ay by those who have had expe- riencs {n watebing the operations of those Dal- timore roughs and repeaters, hoth at home and in Philadelphia, has established beyond ques- tion the fact that, under cover of ‘the coming convention of tne Boys Who Waore the Blue, & heavy exportation of the worst clements Baltl- more contains Is belng precipitated upon Indi- ana. Colorado Casts Her Virgin Yote on the Side of True Reforn_x. WHERE TNEY ARE RNOWN. Spectal Dispatch to The Tribuna, BarTimong, Md., Oct. 3.—A delegation com= posed In large part of notorious rowdafes, with & alight sprinkling of decent men, left Baltimore at 4:30 p. m. for Indianapolis to participatein the Democratic soldicrs’ celebration on the 5th inst. Very few of them ever served In the Unlted States Army, and a atill smaller num- ber received an honorable discharge, Among the more conepicuous characters in the motley crowd may be mentfoned the following: Joseph Beard, adrunken brawler, ballot-box stuffer, and professional perjurer of the Filth Ward, He was the Ieader in the attack on the colored voters in the Fifth Ward at the last Btate clec- tion, and fs considered the worst man In the city, Ile never was in the army, and was In the Penitentlary during the greater part of the titne covercd by the War. Michact Conghlan, a_notorlous bummer and dead beat of the Fourth Ward. He attempted to register in & half dozen kifTerent wards last fall, and when detected drew a pistol and _shot the man who fdentlffed him, e escaped the Penltentlary through the efforts of his friends, who bribed’the wounded man not to appear against him, John Wiseman, a desperate character, who has killed two men, and scrved s term In the Pemtentlary; has alao been tried for other In- {famous eritiies. At the last tern of the Crim- {unl Court was convicted aud fined for commit- ting'a murderous assault. Joseph Peters, a Deputy-Warden of the Cit, Jail, A ruwdy whose only military record s that of a bounty-jumper. Legs Maberry, a dungerous and bloodthirsty rufflan, who has been in numerous brawis. Wester Marchant, proleasional rowdy, dead- beat, and bummer, who is now under indict- ment for amoshing a ballot-box {u the Nine- teenth Ward at the Jate municipal clection. He has been tried once for this offense, but a jury of hls sympathiziog triends failed to agrec. Hence he fs stlll at Jarge, and ready to do ser- vice for his party in Indiana. MORE AND WORSE. Danicl Murray, one of the most expert ballot- box stuffers in the city, who would now be in the Penitentlary for practicing his favorite art Securing Two Republican Sen- ators and Three Votes for Hayes and ‘Wheeler, The Sort of Material of Which the Indianapolis Conven- tion Will Be Com- posed. Plug-Uglies, Blood-Tubs, and Repeaters en Route from Baltimore. Boys Who Wore the Blue Long Enough to Get Their Bounty. The Situation in Indiana- Republican and Demo- cratic Meetings, How the Soft-Money Men Snubbed ' at the lust State electlon if the Crimina] Court Baya,rd—-flaloulfl.tmg the Wwas 1ot eontrolled I‘;y r]";:lulclm:‘a of fif@lu."." Oh an oeb. Jamnes Hogan, a vicious, desperate sboulder- hitter, who was one of the leaders in an attack on a Republican meeting in the Scventeenth Ward some wecke ago, at which he and four Tilden reformers attempted to asaassinate C. Irving, Esq. He 18 now under indictment for riot, and for nseault with intent 1o kill, and his case witl be called for trial next Monday, Out of the ifty-four men who compose the delezation, twenty can be sclected whose record is no better than the rest of the rowdies whoso names have been mentloned, ‘TheHon, Thomas Swann, Representative in Congresa from the Fourth Maryland District, furnished funds for the trip. He invested the snug little sum of $1,000, which was divided among the boys who wore the Blue hefore they cmbarked on the cars at Camden Statlon. SPOTTED. Special Dispaich o The Tribune. INDIANAPOLIS, lud., et. 3.—Ucorge W, Fricdley, Chalrian of the State Central” Com* mittee, has {ssued the following eircular: To the Republicana of Indiana: 1am in recelpt of informatlon which I deem entirely authentlc that there will be brought to this city on the Gth Inst., under the guise ol Union soldiers to attend the so-called rounivn, gangs of shoulder-hitters, roughs, professional ballot-box stuffers, ang re- peaters from Daitlmore, New York, Louisville, Bt. Louls, Chicago, and other citiss, The Ku- Kiux, Wiite-Liners, and Confederate soldicrs will be hore In the clinracter of Unlon soldlers to. re- main until aftdr the elestion for the purpose of voting and Oghting in this city and other placea in the State to which they may be assigued. ~ Lot the Repablicans of Indiana ba on the lookout for these rutilaus, The Democratic leaders naderstand that if the Republicans carry Indiona 1 October sli prospects for the election of Ttlden and Hendrlcks will be absolutely drnm'rnd' and no means will be left unemployed to defeat psin this State. We deaire nothing but an honostand fair election. With such an election we shall certainly gains glorious victory on the 10th of October, 'Let Ko~ publicans everywhere be on their guard, and let emocruta understand, once for all, that the Mis- sissippl plan sball not be inaugurated in Indluna. THE PRESENT SITUATION. REPUBLIOAN AND DEMOCRATIC DEMONSTRA- TIONS. Special Correspondencs of The Tribune. INDLANAPOLIS, Oct, 1.—~Thedemonstrationsof the past three days have shown some things quite signlficaut, and not set down in the programmes. The regulation demonstration, if I may so term it, which 1s such a prominent featurs in the canvass here, secms to consist in demonstrating that cach party can muster a larger iine of torch-bearers than the other; that cach party ls posscssed of orators who can talk down o big bnss-drum and full flcld band to boot; and that there Is anoble band of patriots, who so re- Jofea In going tu procession behind a bass-drum and bearing torches that I bhave a dread- ful suspicion they take part in the demonstrations of cach party. The regulation demonstration, besides, demon- strates little else, excopt that people have grown so used to it here that Lut for the deals ening rub-a-dub-dub they couldn’t be made to bellevo an important election was at hand., But tho turn-outs of Thursday, Friday, and Satur day nights were not of tho regulation sort ex actly. Thereis here, It must bo recollected, no great metropolitan press Jike that of New York, Chicago, or Cincinnati to shape and conduct the canvass, nor {3 thero in this State acity large enough to sustain such a press. The result is that here the canvass {s made very much as it was as far back ns 1840,—it is shaped and con- trolled by the stump orator, and it is at the political meetings that tho {ssues of the cam- palgn are chiefly discussed. Hence the SIONIFICANCE OF MERTINGS SBUCIL A8 TIIOSH OF TUX THUREE NIOUTS REPRRRED TO Thursday night, at the Opera-louse, Mr, Blaine addreased what by all odds was undoubt- cdly the best audience that has been collected to hiear any speaker during the campaign in this State. Every scat from parquette to gallery was fllled, and the aisles and approaches were througed, Butit was not In point of numbers, but in s charucter, that Mr, Blaine's audiencewas the best that has been brought together during the Indiana canvass. It was composed, ascould be seen at & glance, of rcpresentative men in bus!ness, professional,and industrial clrcles,—an audience disposed to be critical, and not_casily carricd away, but of preclsely such sort that when moved it carrfes with it by weight of the influcnce of the men composing it many times {ts own number. IL was als0 unmistakably made up chiclly of men who are lable s a rule to qu small fnterest in olitles—who are liable In short, through mero ndifference, to turn over to *tho boys' the husiness of clecting rulers for tho city and Btute, Tho presence of that audience was a eiguificant manifestation of the interest the solld nen of this clty feel dn the approaching ca and, the enthusiasm with which they received Mr, Blaine's spocch was convincing proof that they do_uot nean to et the election go by dofauft. Tho meeting, in short, was an cffectivo dcmonnmflon-renflu red tho moreso by the elguificance that would he attachied to ft'by those classed as the foating vote, who arevntent only In getting upon the winniug slde, i ‘The next rriday night, according to the pre- u’rnngud‘l)mgnmmc, the Democratic managers attempted to get up, also st the Opera-louso, A COUNTEH-DEMONSTRATION, Senator Bayard, Licut.-Gov. Dorshelmer, and Secret Democratic Devices to Get Republicans into the Green- back Scheme. . The Influx of Kentuckians and Alleged Boldiera---Spirit of the Cam- paign. Can Rebels Rob the Mails 2--Ran- dolph Tucker and IMr, Blaine. An Interview with Carl Schurz ---Glowing Accounts from Ohio. TALLY THREE! COLORADO. A GREETING TO MAINE AND VERMONT. Dexver, Col, Oct. 8.—Reports from the principal pointsat 8 p. m., indicate heavy Re- publican gains cverywhere over the clection of 1674. The Chalrman of the Rcpublican State Committee clalms tho State by 2,000 majority and the Legislature by a majority of 40 on joint ballot, Dexven, Col,, Oct, 3—8 p. m.—Comparisona 1l bo made with the vote of 1874, when Patter- son, Democrat, for Congress, was clected by 2,103 majority. Arapahoe County has elected tho entire Re- publican ticket by o majority of 800. Repub- Hean gain, ¢48. Jeflerson County—Republican majority, 75; Republican gain, 213, Glipin County—Republican majority 200; galn, 250, . Boulder County—Republican majority es- timated at 300; Republican gain, 274, Clear, Creck County—Ropublican majority estimated at 200; Ropublicpt galn, 234, Park County—Estimated Republican majori- ty, 765 Republican gain, 230, El Paso County—Estimated Republican ma- Jority, 850; Republican gain, 235. Pueblo County—Estimated Democratic ma- Jority, 100; Democratic loss, 85, Las Anlmas County—Estimated Democratic majority, 800; Demacratlc luss, 73, Bent County—Democratic majority, Democratic loss, 53. DenveR, Col,, Oct, 8.—~The Republicans have undoubtedly carried Colorado by a decided ma- Jurity, and electod thq entirc State ticket, Con- gressmen, and securcd tha Leglslature by a majority in both branches. This Legislature elocts two United Btates; Senators aud threo Prestdentlal Elcctors, INDIANA. - WON'T WASH, THE NBW MATERIAL FROM THE CONFEDERATE DYE-WORKS, Bpecial Dispatch (o The Tridune. ‘Wasmngron, D. C., Oct. 3.—The advance- guard of Baltimore roughs passcd through here this afternoon for Iudlanapolis, and left on the 6:80 tratn by the Baltimore & Ohio Road, A small party went on this mornlng. There scemed to be two classea. One, car was packed with notea repeaters and roughs, though in se- Jecting them from the dilferent wards caro was taken to accept for this party only such as hud been in the Union service at some time, The character of this conunection, Lowever, wass matter of no conscquence, as shown by the fact that some noted bounty-jumpers were ace cepted, and one who had desertod the Unfon service and entered tho Confedurate army joined the excursion, Thomas Hagal and Thomas Hegan, who were LEADEES IN THB LATE BALTIMORN RIOT— accompany tho party, Among uthiers ol his calling, A C. Wiillams, of the 8ixth Ward, well kuown as tho leading spirit in repeating at Philadelphia {n 1608, 1s of the party. ‘Thenames of all were obtalued here to-nlzht, and have been forwarded to the proper persons West in order that thoy may be arrested it they remnain snd atteupt to vote.or create a disturb. ance. To prevent the eutiro falluro of 1003 the plot on account of the exposures | SBeustor Mc onn‘d. all fresh from thelr big which™ bave been made, s party bas | Democratic mecting at Chicago, were n:; han been formed of those who will go out and re- | at the appointed hour. The orators with Gov. turn together. Ou the return, an attempt will be made to create the finpression that all have coms back, and that the statement of any at- tempt to fusport roughs and ropeaters fnto In- diana wos wholly false; but thoss who have been working for the past week to discover what was golug ou have ascertained that this return of a part of the organization is 10 by ONLY A BLIND, and that & large number are to stay and work st their pecullar tactics un! afe Hendrleks took scats on tho stags to face a dis- nal array of crapty beuches—not 100 persons, alk told, belig in tho house. A company of Tilden wnd Hendricks torch-bearers, about fifty in number, were ondered fnto the Opera-tlouse, and, after persistent drumming up of recruits, about 200 peoply were gotten lul.'t:llxt‘r- ll.nym-J. had the nerve to go through with his set spéech, Dorshelmer sought refuge in s stage-box with some ludics, and McDonald aud iendricks, very chap-falien indeed, remalned on the stage to guard Bayard’s flanks, as it were. it was ull over thers was 8 of “heavy curaing ™ at everyhody who miuht have nided in getting up a crowd, but didn't. Finally Dr. Fuller, Chalrman of the Democratic County Committee, was singled out as the vic- tim at whom the *cussing " was to be aimed, because be hod remnrkcfi to the effoct thad! 4 Bayard was o d——d hard-money man, and they didn't want auy crowd to hear him snyhow." Whether Fuller ever made the speech or mot, certafn It s that it embodics preclscly the_spirif that in any event must have nade the Ba! demonstration a faflure. The appearance here of Bagard and Dorsheimer had a tallsmanic ef- fect upon tho workers in the Democratic organ- fzatfon, It aroused them to a realizing sense of the fact that neither Blue Jeans Willlams nor Gov. Hendricks was running for the Presiden- cvy and that enthusiasm poured out over Whiiams nd * Heudricks_was more than ‘wasted h{‘ the Indlana Democracy, which though first, last, and all the time, a rag- baby party "had been sat down upon at 8t. Louifs but was now counted upon to elect Til- den, the very man who sat down upon them— of which fact Dorsheimer's presenco was in particular a reminder. The Indians Demor- racy can't be mado to enthuse for Tilden, and precisely as_often as reminded of how they were treated at 8t. Louls will not enthuse to speakof even for Blue Jeans and Hendricks, uyard fsn’t their kind of a Democrat, atill less orsbeimer; and, least of all, is Thden, and 80, eyen with 'Hendricks himself on the plat- form, enough of a crowd to tolerably fill the Opera-House parquette couldn't be gotten to- gether. The incldent but served to “show the emnity that rankles in the breasts of the sub- ordinate managers aod of the rank and flle of the Indiana Deimocracy nst Tildenand his Wall street bond-holding railroad jobbing trickery. To zive emphaais to it, on the very evening that the Indiana Democracy thus snubbed Bay- ard and through him the "Tilden Democracy, there was an OUTDOOR INDEPENDENT GREENDACK DEMON- BTHATION in nrngrels. It had been pald for out of Demo- cratic funds, and, with the ald of Democratic torch-bearcrs who generously turncd out for the occaslon, the Independent Greenbackers made, onthe whole, quite a formidable show- ing, and Gen. Cary and James Buchanan ad- dressed audiences numbering many times that to which Bayard spoke. Saturday “night again was_the Opera-Houso crowded with people to hear and sce Ben Harrison, who was recelved with a spontancous ovation, such even as fu this red-hot politienl season {s kcldom accorded to anybody. While the old dissatisfaction among the soft-money Democrats of this Statz at baving to support a hard-money Democrat for the Presidency was revived by the affalr of Friday night, and was stirred up the more by the laborious efforts made by the managers to get up a biz meeting for Dorshcimer on Saturday night, the Repub- licans bere are workiog with AN EXTHUBIASM AND ITARMONY that has not been surpassed in any recent can- vass. Of course the rigorous drill that has been maiotained by the Democratic managers bere will not be disturbed by the occurrences of Fri- day and Saturday nights. Butnotwithstanding, at this most eritical period of the campaign, when there {8 no time to be lost, the whole iiaa had the effect of casting a wet blanket upon the nctive workers, who are all creenback men, and the threats that are made of removing Fuller from the Chalrmanship of the County Commitice to atone for thesnub put upon lln}mrd but. mmfillmlea the embarrassment. The Greenback demonstration, though the cxpenses of It were defrayed chielly, if not alto- gether, by the Democracy, which also furnished a considerable quota of men for the procession display, neverthicless e sell-cvident the fact that in this city, where, of all Indiana, politics are hottest, there {5 a hody of devoted Green- backers numbering some hundreds of voters, possibly o tnousand, who, as matters now stand, arc determined to throw away their votes by casting their ballots for Wolcott, the Inde- pendent Greenback candidate for ‘Governor. There i8 such prodiglous lyfug about it, and o much sharp practice, and such difliculty in get- ting at the facts, that it 1s impossible to make au approximato estimate of THE INDEPENDEKT GREENDACK VOTR with reasonableassurance of any near approach to accuracy. But, from present fndicativns, it will not fall short of ahout 5,000. snd may reach 10,000, or even more. Wash McLean, of the Cincinnat! Enquirer, and the inventor of the Greenback theory, who was hiere a few days agoy is reported to have eald that all that was wanted now was for somebody to go back to Ohlo fu a hurry and run the Greenback caucus there as Jadies Buchanan and others have here, to ive the State to the Democrats in October. Mr. James Buchanan, I learn, has stated that the Greenback move- ment in Indiana will give the State to Willlams, ‘That undoubtedly is what it is being worked to doj and, if Indiana is d ced by the clectlon of BlueJeans Willlams, it will be because Re- Publluma of the Greenback school, so absorbed n their theories that they cannot see an inch before their noscs, throw away thelr votes by casting their ballots for Wolcott, when cve!rz man of them would see, did he but open h eru. that nothing can come of it unless it be to throw the State and possilly the National Ad- ministration into Demouratic control. And yet nothing would more provoke the boiling-over indignation of these same Republicans of Greenback principles than to tell them that practically they will be vounfi the Democratie ticket when they vote for Wolcott. Of course the Democratic managers are mok- |n§v.bcumvul for reformandretrenchment; and reduction of the burden of taxation made nec- easary by the Democratic robellion is the theme of every mmp-tmlower and spollsman who shared in the ** Georgla land-grab, the swamp- laud steal, and all the other stenls that have been pu;petrnted under Democratic sdministra- tions, This ery of retrenchment and reform re- calls powerfully to the minds of Indiana tax- payers the stugnal retrenchment and REPORM THAT WAS PERPETIATED BY THE DEM- OCRATIC LEGISLATURE OF 1871, For buncombe's eake, that collection of reform Solons reduced the State tax for, 1573 to five cents on the hundred dollars. At the samo timethey made appropriations for that yearthat necessarily required o greater levy, und when they voted the fivecent levy they knaw thoy were legislating for a deticlt which ‘must be met by a loan at high_rates of {nterest. That emi- nent_economlst, BlucJeans W{liams, was a member of that Legislature, and voted for this sham retrenchment, and the result was that the Stato was compelled to borrow $700,000 at 7 per cent Interest, #o that the cost to the people of Indiana of this sham Democratic retrenchment was, forthe two years of Democratic ascendency in the Leglslature, $03,000. At tho snme time, there was fo the Btate ‘Treasury $600,000 of the State tax fund, which might have been applied to other purposes, since tho debt it was Jevied to meet had been anticipated by the Republican Administration in 1570. But tho Demnocratic rcform Legisla~ ture, with BluoJeans Willlams as ope of its lhlnlu¥ lights, omitted all_legislation to compel the Irensurer of State, Ryan, to make npgl cation of the $600,000 to_meet the current liubititles of the State. 8o while to mneet theso tho Stato pafd 7 per cent interest on the loan referred to, Ityan speculated on the $600,000 of the 8tate’s funds Lis hands, realizing 8 per cent upon it, or nearly $200,000 duriog Listwo yoars of ofilce, That same rotrenchment and reform Legislaturo of which Blue-Jeans Will- lams was u shining light, by a strict party vote refused to make an appropriation for tlic pay- ment of the unsurrendered bonds of 1834, tho valldity of which Lad been aflirmed both by the Supremo Court of the State sud by the Su- remo Court of the United States. “That left it open for the Canal Ring to have sold out tho Wabash Cunnl, which = would have made the Btate lablo to the canal creditors fn cash ~ for the full asmount of the clalms fn payment of which thoy bad accepted the canal, and would kavo saddled on the Btato a debt of nearly twenty miltions. That was prevented by the uction of the next—a Re- publlcan—Legisiature, which \rrovidcd for the payment of the unsurrendered bonds of 1836 in scason to block such game. This bit of Democratic ref. retrenchment which docsn’t aute-date the War, which consisted fn retrench- ment by putting olf tho payment of debts that had to be pafd, and which the people of Indiana have only just done poying, double-discounts thoe retrenchment-reforni clamor of the Demo- cratic mavagers, Wers the rank and file fn earnest about reform, it would alone suflice, to defeat the ticket the managers have put fip, th the rank and flle of the Indfana Demoeracy s the 1DBNTICAL COPPERNEAD PARTY TIAT OFFOSED TIE WAL YOR TILN UNION, that proposcd resistance to the draft, and that pledged itsel! to contribute not 8 man nor a dollar to the ’:rmacullun of the * Abolition War." “The rank and filo of the Indiann De- moeracy have not taken Inanew idoa since 1860, and ycb.dumn the ““nizwer and hato nothing so bitterly ss the Fificenth Amend- ment, Roform and retrenchinent meaus noth- 1ng to the uvuugg Indiana Democrat miore thau the rallying-cry by which to secure the ajd pf.a L. m( . @ = — e #UCE FIVE .CENTS, £, dissatisfied Republicans to beat the *biack liblicans.” It is with this rank and fils bo- & | them ready to vote for the devil if hawero 43 heticket, that the Democratic managers aro 2 é iing o most vigoroua canvass, relying for ~g88 upon the disafaction produced by hard 28, .which it Is casy to charge upon tho Re- ~waulican Natlonal Administration, and the di- zfi:-g:: pt:)l’ tlupllblllcfin “‘f,““’{‘“",'g}“ H&r‘nugh erous Independent swindle and farce. ‘The 1abor before the !{:;puhllmns here Is to FIX THE RESPONSIDILITY FOR HARD TIMES where it belonx-—u‘pon the party whose res bellion the debt was fneurred to suppress, and . whoso assaults upon the public credit have in- 4 creased the burdens of that debt, and to ex- b pose the swindle and farce there fs in tho Inde- Q ondent Greenback side-show in the {nterest of ; Tilden and the Belmont Democracy. The tremendous activity with which the Republican canvass i8 being pushed augurs succeas, though 1t would bo shecr folly to conceal that it is only by the maintenance of just such efforts as aro being made, up to the very hour of election, that tho State can be carrled. With them it %1‘3( Ef for Harrison and tuc entirc Republican With all the solicftuds manifested by the Democratic managers to prevent “nigger. killlug," there is an ominous threatening of ‘* IMPORTED NIGORR-VOTEKS ! £ by the aroused Democracy, which, considerin ¥ am nohady has yet discovered an_importe nlgger " voter, fudicates mischicl. Tho aroused Democrats of this city swho liave had to keep thelr hauds off the “d—d-niggers® sinco the spring election mussacre will be very hard to hold on election day. Three fingers of Whisky will be very lable to transform in their vision any negro voteg Into an Importation; and it wuould ot be su¥prising if there should' ba a re- currence of violeiice aud outrage such as at the city election disgraced Indiana,” Nu doubt some- what of the threats that have been made wero designed on the Mississippl plan to frighten negro volers awny from toe polls. But tactica of that sort will aot be tamely submitted to here, and the rounders and plug-uglies who of Iate have been nbserved to be congregating licro may find it prudent to be quict and retiring on election day. Hanwrrie, TIIE GREENBACKERS. SCHEME TO CAPTURE REPUDLICAN VOTERS~ BECRET DEMOCRATIC ORGANIZATION. Special Dispatch o The Tridune. IXDIANAPOLIS, Oct, 3.—For the information of the readers of Titz TRInUNE, [ submit tho following regarding the political condition of aflaira in this State. I have circutated largely among the class called Iudepondents or Green- backers, and find the organization composed of about equal numbers from - the Republican and Democratic parties. I find the same condition of affulrs herons in Illinols, viz.: a seerct or- ganlzation of the ‘* Golden Cirels” stripe, s the propeiling power of thie whole machine. Insido of this mystic circle no Republican Greenbacker Is permitted to enter. The workings of this conspiracy are absolutcly restricted to such Democrats as have herctofore proved themselves true to the party by their untiring opposition to the Administration from the commencement of the late Rebelllon. This scheine to neutralize the Republican vote of enough of the Western Btates to get tho requlsite number of electoral votes, united to o solid Southern vote, to elect their ticket, was concocted fn New York City about one year ago, by a scleet few of thoe old Tammany experts in politleal devlltry, with John Morrissey and Til- den at the head, TUE PLAN OF OFERATION has been Jike this: In every favorable locality a certain number of the falthful Democrats have been sclected to avow themselves as Greenback men, and denounce the financial policy of both the Democratic and Republicau .partfes, and urge as many of the Republicans to join as pos- sible, always caleulating to bring inabout as many Deniocrats as Bcpnbllmna‘, to avold any suspicions of insincerity. Even a portlon of the Democratie recrults have not been admitted into tho eecrcts of the plot, the con- spirators. taking the chances of controlling ihe votes of the uninitlated Democrats. on election-day. The utmost caution und sc- crecy has been pursued, aud all gatherings that would be noticeable or filvu tisc to suspicions have been strictly prohibited. The real sceret has been kept in the breasts of the faithful, and only passed from lip to lip under the most so!- cmn oaths, when ouly three persons were pre: ent, two as witnesses aud ‘one for initlation. This insidious, cautious plan has quictly crept along, slowly but surely capturing tho unsus- pecting Repiblicans, disarming them of evena suspleion of treachery. This is only another phase of the treasonable conspiracy concocted by the Knights of the. ‘‘Golden Clrcle.” Tho same men aro {u it that were the prime movers of that nefarlous plot to ald the Rebels to over~ throw the Government, This Jast movement is purely & litical one, g to ace complish with tho ballot what thoy 1ailed to accownplish in the fleld with the bayo- net, They saw before them a fiold ripe for tho harvesty they saw the party In power partially divided in its views upon the question of finance, tho oountry suflering from a partial pnrnl{yula of its industrics, aud o murmur of dissatisfaction or uneasiness in consequence of stringent times coming up from almost every section. This they deemed tho auspiclous tims to put in motion thelr devlish schiemes to obtain control of tho Government that they have labored so longand villalnously to overtiirow. TIUE REPUKLICAN GBEENDACKERS In Indiana are getting thelr eyes open to the dangerof tho situation; they are becoming thoroughly convinced that they have been the dupes of 8 counsplracy, and now wonder that they had not discovered the infamous plot before. The Democratic leaders of ‘tho Independents are howling themselves hoarse avowing their honesty, an dcnylnai a wnn‘glmcy to decelve Republicans, but the evidence is con- clusive, and in every instance almost, when we pull the mask from’ thelr face and hold them ur to public gaze, we find a reanimated skeleton ot the Knights of the Golden Clrclo. It is ¢ marvelous coincidence that in a large majority of casea the Democtatic-Independent is showi to bo 8 member of the old treusonable Order of the “Hons of Liberty,’” or the more anclent Qrder of the * Knights of the Golden Circle.” This perhaps is unfortuuate, but it is a fact, anc 1 have often (before I understood the situation; asked myself the question how It was thai every blataut Independent (fortnerly 8 Demo crat) harpcncd to In:lrmfi1 to either one or th other of these trcasonuble outfts? If It §. mcrnl{ s chance operation, all I have tosay | that Mr, Chance sclects his material with a eye to conformity and uolformity: some Mt terfalist can probably explain this pbcnomeno, 1in chanee operations. For the last few days I have fallon fn with largo number of Grecubzekers, who arc on o PLEASUMB EXCUMSION FHOM KENTUCKY AX. OTHK SBOUTHEBUN BTATES, ‘They are ardent in thelr advocacy of the finar cial ‘situation from a Greenback standpoin They are bere nuusly fora changeof atme phere, they say, and not ou account of any a prouchin; nlw.]un {n this 8tate, Oh, no! The tell me they have goue oul of the political bu: nuss entirely, and closed up their manufactorie. and arc merely off for a recreation, end will r. main in Indiana until after tho 10th fnst. t drink fn the beauties of Iudiana’s romant mountain-scenery, Thoy tell me that there wi about 4,000 of the excursionists who will ste over in Iq-lhnl ou their way to the Centennis I think I nover saw before so many people who. - minds seemed to run in one particular channel ¢ thought as I have scen from the Sunny Souti They toll me that there was a'time when th S nigger? was a little off, on account of cou ing u contact with some of our Northern chap., who went down there before they wero falrly rc constructed, They tell meit is an awful ban job for s man from a cold climate to go dow: here, and reconstruct bimself, but if he auc- ceeds, and lives through it, ho never fails ti. make a fine gentleman aud an awful plous, Clristian citizon. A gentleman with whom I conversed eald that 4 bio was luclined to the oplnion that it woulu be prudent for any cold-climate man who con- um{phted »_residence in thelr Bunny South to perforin the journey gradually, and comeby the way of Soutbern Indians, and reconsiruct bly dogrees, for the reason thst to change climate and dlet too suddenly was very apt to throw them into radical fever, and It invariably ended {n buck-shot cholers, which fow ever ru- covered from.” 1 know that this gentleman is rellable, ava his oplulons are unquestionably correct, there- fore, when I go, I shiall go slow. Wo have only a few men in tho Nortlh who do this kind of business, and thoy nave been reconstructed and got through it saie, showing that we Northern 1nug can stand the process of reconstruction if wo take. it slow. Tilden and Mendricks, and s 1ot of other chaps, have reconstructed, but the; cowmenced sixteen yours agy, weat slow,