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1z THE CHICAGO TRIBUNE: SATURDAY, JUNE 12, 1880—SIXTEEN PAGES, POLI’ TICAL. halls of legisIntion—the man that offered on | crisis the Republican party was boru. It [tees on the stump, Mr. Sherman Isa teifio | they have not advanced ony, great National { stilt qu {mportant fact fu tho situation of to- Tignes heartily. Lorn Js devetopin, tp. Ls the floor of Congress. the resolttion that any | drew its first Inspiration from the fire of | decayed tn Ohto, taving been Inthe publio | fen that ty not tovtay exploded snd ns dond, Hays ts, om $s mitch more ofa leader y mey Man who comnanded colored troops should | Mberty which Got has lighted in every | sight thera for nearly axguatter of neentury, | astulins Creanr, And tf any Domocrat here Kut Tam ont of politics, Lhave nothing | than the arrogant Roscoe, be treated asa pirate, and not as a soldier, as | man’s heart, and which all the powers of | Not popular enough to i ‘Was Mis mouth w: aS hentia pe President, bul so | will rise and wnmea great National doctrine | more to do with tf any waltings Tan Don Cameron rather sank out of promt. Gen, Garfield’s Specches 6n Vaz | nslave-steater, and tot as n soldfer—I heard | fenoratee and. tyranny can never wholly | healthy aud steady of hnblis as to bus enndl: | Is party lias advanced, within. that Hue, lylng perfectly still and waiting. noneo nfter the National Conmittes passeg {hat nine calmly say, with his head up in the | extinguish, [Applause.t Tho Republics | date far ahnost evory successive honor, the | tintis now nllve and beiluved In, 1 will yleld The suggestion of polities sevined to warm | out of oxistence, Lawever, fiat may hnve rious Public Occasions, it. In the presenco Of this American peo | party ena toe dellyer nnd savy | ambitious young lenders of Ohio were heart! | to him, i pause dn detaut of an ane | hina llttes and, ag he sald, “Lain tying per- | been beenins ho Is noba mukur at npeecing + " ey that the Union solders were as well | the Republic. It entered the arena when | ty sick of fim, and made a push to get him | swer [ will attenipt to prove iny negative, foetly stlil nnd watting, something of the | nnd prefers to pull wires I wgret to Dlovints rented and as kindly treated in alt the | the belenguered and assailed Territories were | inte the Vresideney: this time su as to tris. © Whint were the great central tloctrines of | oll, cratly look Jeapeil w his oyeg, and he } fg in public. Jt was sald that he Talks About Honest Money, Ane | Scuthorn prisons ns were the Rebel soldiers | struggling for freedom, and drew around Plant him and rim the Stato themselves. | tho Demoeratle party in the Drestdentint | drow t 1 An expression moro | ly sick of politics, but I guess it y 7 In all the Northern prisons,” .| them the sacred circte of Hberty which the | They could not aneceed, and they ran in Gare | struggle of 1860? ‘Tho followurs of Breckln- | Ike that he tsod to woar when he jet John | sqyeral campaigns yet to cure him, vill take dersonville, Republicanism, farts hse nd een Bt eat es femon Sf alavars: fins never are fe Stone, Pelt whose aoc veil lve fren a Senn ritige salilsslnver fr tot ellores ale boar. he bry ora eve Rone But CONVENTION REVIEW AND OUTtooR, roans, fifsses, and a storin of indignation. it made them free forever, [Grent applause | tordlp, and probably Foster will receive over thy C pa y offen! a 5 Cineinnatt and Domocracy. Gon, Gartield "1 heard him ieclare tint | anderies of "Good,’]. Mtrengiliened by tis | With th i Raretal (a Clocinnglt Conners | jt clr young and aceldental candidate | that to-day? And is there aman onthis cons | gaye him a grotesque look, and when it Cutcauo, suns. W—It. fs wonder than Gen, Winder | Victory on the frontier, the young party, une | planted in tho White Houso they have one | Unent that holds pss dlootring to-day ? Nat faded It loft the dull, heavy appearance ithad rapidly the’ myrlatt Del ort how nid his, Command Chief, Jef Davis, | der the leadership of that great man who, on | sire to begin a new era of political dominas | one. ‘That doctring is dead and buried. ‘The } usurped. term comprises nearly avery min, woman, Tho Speech in Which Garfield | sYetis of derision, hisses, ete. And (took | Uiaspot twenty” years ago was, wade Its | tion. other wing of the Demvorney held What slay; | Ono Ineldent wilt testify the extent to | and urelin inlinbitant of Citengy? Weil Put Sherman in Nomi- iL upon myself to overwhelm hii with the | leader, entered the National Capital aud as Lwatked to the linll df the Convention this } ery night be established ta the Territories if | which Mr. Tilden’s mind {3 falling, Four lon to the mai more property so designated nition Brot ine elures’ a ator ie | #NUNAse "taeda Suuslhong ont | pate Cour ie Gone itte tatty | aon RMA pentemateaty at | Alive ang agnaen feat Gat | Reve ered dvr na eed do ean 6 proo: hat the tortures you suffered, the | fApplause.) ‘The lightwhich shone from reme Court of the United je! e BANG oe tot te . 2 hy of setting things & its after adll one done to you, were Suffered and done jana ‘Tiepelied the darkness in whloh | who nominated Bristow In Convention four “Come down to 184, Your party, under | le hind previous, es to ris isturhance no kinder mene qusty performed that coultenus | of nearly ten days, that ene with the Knowledge of the Confeernta | slavery liad enshrouded the Capitol and | years ago, and shifted the Kenlucky vote | the lend of ‘Tilden atid Vallandighain, de- | ceremony, Twice he Unterrupted me in tho | the DORN for work iene the wrest What Kind of a Man Garfleld Is—A | wwthorities, from Jefferson Davis down— inelted the shuekles of overs slave, and cou- | wfterwards to Hayes), amt he sald: clared the experiment of war to save tho | middle of somo profound pulltteal propheo ho long-haired Greenback gentry and of rr ” (arent applause, waving of hats, veterans | simed, tn the fire of liberty, every slave-pen “ Hayes fs ono of tho most sensible and ob- | Union was a failure, Du you bellave that | to take my hand ant wish mo godspeed, | Pants Kearney upon the streets fall ta arou Testimonial from “ Gath,’ standing In their chualrs and cheer! ne} ttt within the shadow of the Capitol, Our Na- | servant politicians Ohio ever hud, ond hig in- | doctrine to-day? ‘That doctring was shot ta | and when Lwont ou with my discourse lio | the people into great activity or oven clinton it was a part of thelr policy: to make you | tonal industries, by an Impoverishing pol- | ilience tn this State is. seen fn thls nonlaas | death by the guns of Farragut at Mobile, and } appeared to lose the thread, and, thinking I] ty froronce the long season of tha Nationa} {ifols and skeletons, und to exchange your | ley, were themselves prostrated, and tho | tlon, aud inthe new schoo! of men who are { driven ‘ins tempest of. fire from the Valley | liad poncliuty wotthd bil me good-by again, omipitenn Convention lins Riven eve Scones, Incidents, and Gossip Anent | broken and shattered bodies and dethroned | streams of revente flowed in such feeble | taking the Capltal of Olu andof the country, | of tha Shenandoah by Sheridan. Tess than a | until we flowly renched the donr-atey and | gightserr chance to got into Ute Conver. tho Gront Struggle at Chengos | tn” (Aine) Mth x | Sag pas um a of tt | fly al a Wt RUG | MRNA ALY ASIP inode | MEE taht Masten He ot | Leama sou a ch ane ' prisoners. [Applause] ‘That policy Fanirm | well nigh empty, ‘The money of the people | fo study hard, and become perfeet in publle Jone down Mr. 3 q he chose. has ene ha its Madde for Ao ty in the Was the wrete! ed notes of 2000 Uncontroted | business and in general knowledge.” “AIL | constitutional amendinents revolutionaryaud | ten years ago intiat be obylous to all who baits rovigwing the work of nearly a week A elviltzed world’ | Apptnuse.) and irresponsitie State banking corpora | Cat he lias wot,” said tho Justico, .“ hing | void, Dors any minn on this floor say 0 to- | coma in contact with tiln. Téty trito that in | done by the Convention, it is noticeable thy Tho Nomince far the Vice-Presidonty~A Pan- Vulee—""'Thnt’s a0.” tions, which were filing the country with a | been obtained: by hard work, and absorption | day? If so, let him risa and dectare it. financial operations he gonerally reaps the the splendid body of mon who composed {5 Gen, Garfeld—* Lt was never heard of in | circulation that poisoned rather than sta. | in publle oratory and aifalm. Hs nomiun- “Do you believe in the doctrine of tho | advantage, but that is from force of hablty | wore always dl nied always pat! Saree Picture of Sam Tilden. any land since the dark ages closed npon tho | talned the life of business. {Loud applause) tlon will produce purfectunison in the party, | Broadhead letter of 186s, that the so-valled | sloadily peraisted in far years, To-day holsa | nearly always Seana Teed eamentary earth. [Applause] Wille history lives men | The Republican purty changed allthis, 16 { beenuse hie has shelped everybody when | constitutional amendments should be disre: | wank, trembilng old nian, Tha fe, the | of each other, always decorous, and in np GEN. GARIFIELD’S VIEWS. have tnemorles, We can forgive and forget | abolished the babul of confusion and gave | asked, and antagonized none. He Is only | gurded? Nos the gentleman from Mississipnl | cournge, the quick, ready mind havo bont | cage did they descent to Dersonalltics exceps . ae aire, are | Ml other things before we can forgive and | the country 9 currency ay national us its flag, | 49 years old, and has slowly worked tp from | necopta tho results of the Warl The Demo- | under the strain of yenrs tnd wrongs, and | tn the proper Intercliangs of sharp thrust IX FAVOR OF HONEST MONUY—TALK ATTHE | forget this, [-Apphitise, bused upon the sacred faith of the people. | thd constituency tothe Natlonal constituency, | cratic dovtrine of 180s {3 deadt thought the namo of Samuel J. ‘Tilden may | whieh contd do no more than prick te nied ' ANDEREONVILLE REUNION—TALK AT TUE “Finally, aul in eoncluston, 1 am wilting, | [Applause.) It threw its protecting arm | and itis well for this country that its eandl- " L walk nerogs that Democratic onmping- | alll! he tallamanio tn tho councils of his! or the most senuttive. WISCONSIN REPUNLICAN REUNION, for one—and LT think Cspenk for thousands | around our great Industries, and they styod | dates are to bo of thoso who have been edu- | ground.ug in a graveyard. Under iny feet | party it is for the recollcotions it bears rathor onkling suffered most at tho hands af the From first to last there has been no more | of others,—I am willing to sco all the bitter: | erect as with new life. It Med with the | cated in the period of reconstruction and | resound the hollow echos of the dead. “There | than the strong, reliable man it fnlls to de- debatora with whom he crossed swords, bie ¢onsctentious and consistent supporter of a | Ness of the Inte War buried in the grave of | spirit of true nationality all the great func. | know by taking part in it the pyoliome its } Hes slavery, w black marhla column at tha | scribe, It is eluimed that, though he 6 | thoy ali troated htm Kindly attor ts fue ey ailiatt f ort a ad. (Applar Twould be willtng | tons of theGovernment, Lt confronted a re- { meafately arountt us.” Judge Hatton, thon, | head of Its grave, on which Tread: Died in | physteatly frail, he alll! presorves the montal | piilating defeut, and yielded (some of then sound currency sudan honest performmnee | tha ye should fmitate the condescenduig. | bel of unexampled magnitude, witha | speaking of figures In the Convention, gattl | the Names of tho Civil Wary loved In its Itfox | Inculttes that ‘have made hin grent, Eve | against choir judgment) the Vice-Presitone by the Government of all Its obligations than | Toying kindness of Him who. planted. the | alw ehind i, and, under God, fought the | thut there were three great masters of vor- | lamented In Its deaths followed to its bler by | should that be conceded, a glance at him | to the majority of the Now York dolegation, Gen, Garfield. Mo voted to sustain the credit | green grass on the battlefields and let the | final battle of Hberty until yietory was won, | naeutar in this country: Jeremiah 8. Black, | its only mourner, the Democratic party, but | will demonstrate ils physteat inability to | tn order to aweeten in somo degree the bitte of the Government i all stages of the finnnes | fresh flowers bloom on all the graves altke, | Applause.) ‘Thon, after the storms of bat | Menry W ard Beecher, and Roseog Gonleling. dead! And here isu double grave; sacred | stond the Woarlny toll of even everyday life | pip which he, lose thmes than niost Ateriean, Guestion. Many faltered, he always stood | [Would clasp hands with those who funght | te. were heard the sweet, eal words of | ‘The ‘power of Conkling's rks was tn | to the momory fSuuntter Sovorelgnty, Died | inuch longer. Utlas grievous thing, to seo | statesmen, haa been eniled on to swallaw. Lucan, slaty abr) 9 against us, minke them iny brethren and for | peace uttered by the conquering Natlon, and } the abillty to seo what hls party wanted, and | in the campaign of 1860, On the roverse aide: | such aman succumb to the encroachmen Logan, too, was plucated by the defeat: of firm, In18i0 he pressed a resolution upon uive all the past, only on ong supreme cone | saying to the conquered fo thatlay prostrate | to give them the best reasons for his opinions } Sacred ta tho memory of Dred Seott. and tho | of decay, but men must ineet the Inevitable his sworn enemy, Washburne, for tho Vico Congress pledging that body and the country | dition: that it be admitted In practice, ne- | at its feet: *Thisis our only revenge, Mat you | anil wants, : Breckinridge dovtrine, Both dead at the | uncderstandingty, and none but one blinded Pevsidentlat nomination, and he may not be to an honorable performance of Itscontracts, | knowledged in theory, that the cause for | Join us in ling to the se firmament of Lhe writer has known Gon. Gariiold pretty hands of Abraham Lincolnt And. here a) by the, flerce Intnence of desira over judg. atogethor discontented with tho result of and in 1876, when the “fint?? rage was upon | Which we fought and fie suffered was and | the Constitution, to shine stars forever | well for thirteen years. Ie Is a large, well- | motuament of brimstone: Soered to Uiemem- | ment but nist recognize the failure at last the six days work, ‘Iho other meter of ; . is and forever more will bo tight, eternal; nd forever, the Lnmortal principles of truth | fed, file, ruddy, brawn-hearded man, welgh- | ory of the Rebellion: the war against itisa | of a man whd has cut his name in deep let- 5 Halt ‘, | the people, ant hls party frlencls In Obto fell | MNase TS iiaunded entMMstigied eee | Matt fuuttocs'thad citiuren Wwilteakbiack sail | ing ayant S20 psunttS Tees Cen eee | Putte the, Rebellion lurudlahe in fecerunt, | torgon the tablets af Ainerieam hiatory. Fron to nano t he eer at the eg Mere away from hint In all directions, he stood | “Voices That “That's #0,” ete, be free and stand equal before the Inw.’ | ors, ble eyes, military faee, erect Agure and | A. D. 180%. Dead on tho fleld of battle: shot guvel and announced that Judge Hoar would Grm, To all protests and appenis he had but | Gen. Gartield—" That the cause for which | [Lond applause.) ‘Then came tho questions | shoulders, large baok and thighs, ad broad to death by the inillion guns of tho Republic. WATTHRSON, preside, sank Into an eas elie on the sige, one answer, "It Is honorablo; it is Just; itis | they fought was and forever will be the | of reconstruction, the public debt, and tho | chest, and evidently bred in the country on | ‘Phedoctrine of Secession; of Sinte-sovercign- ASOUITERN DEMOCRATIC ViIRW oF @an- | ind, so far os appears from any remark ng + Mght. Suuiding here may defeat my noml- | Cause of treason and wrong. [Prolonged | public faith. Atarm, His targs month Is full of strong | ty. Dead. Expired in the flames of ctvil war, FIELD'S NOMINATION, < | made, or from any motion or ‘counsel he ‘natn, may dofeat ny election; but L would wu Ss 1 Uintah neko lencet ay Re . Li the nettlenatit oF Lise gugstons tne orth me yen ke mi bra ars are serougly saetL tht Une munuleen A a fea, pitted Lantvilie Courter-Tournat, Sune 22 iat? the anbsaquent proceedings thtereste 2) 9 pane i never grasp auy Rebel’s han ep ain party has coinpleted enty= ced, 2 ee DT 9 W¥ Xe 4 y Gq * a 3 1 M P rnther'be beaten in the right than sueceed | geross nny chnem, however ‘gual? [Great five years of glorious sistenee, nnd It has | of thougity tad long appliention, ri Mines of thut ruin beats on his hack nie |. Whatever may bo sald to tho discredit of | ot bin no more,” Te was supudsed to be ey high } the fl 4 sent us here to prepare it for another lustrim | above his elear, diacerning, enjoying eyes. fie | athor wAnchises of Sintesoverciguty, and | the Republican party, it must bo allowed | Willing to seoapt clitiae Binine of Sherman, it are be ly Ts oNSIN nEruMCAN | Of duly and of Victory. “How shall we do | sumutlues suigesis u country Snmaon— | brings it here In the person of tho lioncrable | that, during twenty yoars* aalling upon dan- ge thoy are orate ya nnd personal felons, . Intho wrong.” In ffs speech at Mnssilion, | nvpinuse and ehoers, i O., Aug, 4, 1873, speaking of resumption, | SPEECH AT THE : what are his feelings { 4 m Hey Ove , ontter District of oy A: REUNION. this great work ? cannot, do it, my | stron beyond Ils knowledge bubunguarded | gentleman trom the Appomattox Y gorous sens, it has encountered extraardina- | us to the naninee. jE ght weno the pois tth do | Ge Gute ak tm duly of tat syne | Hac co tainony ant tt | Haat apts tatuenunes | Csi fe auske) lavehony All| Fett and anes uel il | Fig fy, Oe, nerds i wal 4 mands It; it iy ns unpatriotic ns it is dishon pt tho Hite Sunstor Cuandlee at the twenty. God forbid that L should: say one word ta | publlo opinion, and tus one kind of behavior | “Now, gentlemen, aro you sad, are you | In emergencies, ‘The nomination of Garfield that iewill work foe te iat it ennnot tor, est to attempt to prevent It, The highest Ine AE Maan The atl const Jtep' aM cast a shadow upon any nauie on the roll of | for ull callers, which Ja the most natural be- | sorry for Nese deaths? Aro you not gind | fs an inspiration. In no other direction, |’ puar recriminations and. reproaches because terests both of fador and enpital demand ft." Tils ‘yiist nssembly: ‘must have relly en- | ur heroes. ‘This coming fight is our Ther: | havior at hand, Stranzers woul think him | that secession is dond ? that sinvory ts dead ? through no other channel, could the Chicago Grant was not tha nomines. eferni wna Spee! - et afew My ‘ opyle. Were standing upon a narrow | 0 little cold, and mentally shy. On nequaint- | that squatter sovereignty Is dead? that tho | ¢, wl q , tution ar greenback for Sationte bask moles, doyedt thy Fevlets nt tha parti’s. history er Ietinus, Ifony Spartan Hosta nretuited we | aneo hes seen to. be heart above uvery | doctrine of the failure of the War is dead? Convention--<rivant bout by tho cross: whi wee Atgronens up les ttlorles. WI 1 the hesnid: TAIN eee tne At bar the howe | cu withstand “all the Persians that tht, loving the fe nround him, his fainily, | ‘hen you are gind that you wore outyoted | of Interest and beaten by an over-neradslng | Homage repelnesy wien fie Henn an ne “Tid makes 9 complete divorea between | fay prey tte, heen OF the net, but thie ones | the Xerxes of Democracy ean bring | his Tends, his State and country, Loving | in 1st), in 1868 in 1863, and {i 1852 Ut yout | flood of passon—have found, if not safety, nt rorless Administration of President. Layea muntry and the volume | urdy tee temnbiere pute. 2 Miiged a | meainst us, Let is hold our ground | sympathotle and avhleving people, and with a have tears to shed over’ thess loves, shed | least escape trom the Immediate perils of the | and fits bintnoluss lite and record huvo given alating Medhimns, Arswe prepared | Mor ofa centary eee eed 2 | this one year, for the stars in their | lirge unprofessing sense of the Brotherhood | them in the graveyard; but not inthis [louse storm. Scylinand Charybdls having, in tho | tha Wanes no opportunkty tor tie tev ey Government ta ban~ | that tig should bo a land of Mberty. ‘There | ceusus to be taken this year, w! “ ¥ Alpes espn (Nt: Lawn hh breal She d Edmunds | Yiduals of Republican preferences, its seer sh ae silver chrestt li * aay apnblle reements and continued powor. [Ap | part which took him for chief; while as to } gentleman from Mississippi (Mr, Lamar) has } sich breakers as Sherman and Edmunds : dele pol ane ver Aran € vaudtdir gh bus, wits fr Hie. chs Hasiv of tha. Repiblie mie pinuse| Bittlu order to win this vietory | the pulpit, or on the verge of ith full of all | clothed nla Joy: with sineonees : need not be considered; a sort of harbor has Hon of poisatt ate fenehed.. suk a evel llag: fies of the country upon hotilig butlrees | Ble! ean parly ee cae fa alia ¥, We want the vote of overy Republican, | that ho saw and nequired, i “Now, gentlewen, If yout foUrsolves nro | been reached; and we inny bo sure that in | Tow on to deluge the people who tead 1 able paper depending. tor His ‘volunt thie promilsed mneh for achocte: that eee | of every Grant Republiean and every anti | It forth, after ft hud pissed through the | glad that sou have stiffored tlefent during the | good thine for the decisive, enengement. this With editorial characterlantions of tho none “upon the wit and caprice of the moment or | jshed hnprisnninent for debk oat tag Wek | Grant ‘Republican ‘in Amorlea [ereat op- | alembie of his mind, Endowed with a warn | fist sixteen yours, WI you not bo equally | wonderfully. Iueky and. adilrably-inndlod Inces whieh will scarcely bo consliterat as + npon the viowsor members of Congress seek- | tited minty wise reloriis, Bat thees eae | pianses, of every Blaine man and every ante | temperament eopimis expression, kuege, | gind when youneler detent next Novebat? political craft will show nota trace of the | soniribntions to the polite literature of the + Sng reelection or aspiring to higher places?” | Tiny conservatives ta those deve wh eee Jiaineinua, ‘Tho vate. of uvery follower of | witescuing “facuilles, nid -auperabudang flunenter): But pardon that remark; I ro- | rough usage of the cloments; that the decks | Srinpaign, tn his great speeeh at unt Mich, 0 few many Hae ieaeneeatatt i t ene eeu elie every candidate is needed to make our suc | health, he could study ‘all night and | gret its L should aso no bravado, will be cleared for action; that the auns will ‘The Journal expresses the utmost appro= weeks later he supplemented this as follows: Tepatlieat see as a ae eae i ia cess certain (applause); therefore, Lsay gen- | teach = ors leeture ‘all day, and “Now, gentlemen, come with mo for amo- | be shottod, and that avery man will answerto. Dation of the hend of the tloket, and bellaves “Phere are but two elements in this unt | valor ihe Beene ilean a ae eeetne fevE | temen and brethren, We ate hero to take | it was on providence thst. ls | mont Into the camp of the Republican party | his name When the roll of oficers: sailors, ho Will sweep tho country, Respecting Ac : Verse 80 far as we know that ean erento | Apo under new: atid Lromter, conditions og | calin counsel together, and fnauire what we | neighbors discovered he was too much of a { and review its eareer. Our central doctring | and iiarines fs called. Aine; lk wonirealneaiy oniaoua reserve Tie B yilue, One ts God that mide the material Neches: ah is well fo remember nt (tone shall do. [LA voles, ‘Nominate Garfleld. | man to conceal in the pulpit, whore his do- | in 1860 was thal slavery shoutd never extend | | ‘the nomination of Grant was certain do- | oust, too, has a defented candidate World, and the other is linman labor applled | or the greatest, names of. the Repubticun Great applause.) Wo want 9 man whoso | cillty and reverence had almost taken lum. | {iself over another foo R ot Atmericun soll, Is) feat. It was worse; It was ultiinnte destruc: 5 ¢ do the inateriala that Ho made, And no | Dartye One of these 1g Joshun iddlnges, | Hfe and apinions embody’ all the nelileve- | ‘They sent hin to the State Legislature, | that doctrine doud? It fa folded avray Ica tion'iy civil war, for the conspiracy of the Gag uaimno) and nceording to ald ries {fe ¥ y should for at other way 1g known tnider heaven smon if Dit Atebite 4 iy Yigal +} aments of which f have spoken. Wo want a | where he was when the War broke out, and | victorious bunnors its truth is ative, forevor- | third-termers contemplated a confuston of 7 oat Dy wwitelt wealthy ent bo made 5 wie fee Shells cats tas Cerone fhe) man who, standing ona mountain hight | he immedintely went to the field, where hls | more on this continent in 180% wo declared | tho Teturiis, « revole neainst tho countot tho | “ant Batty News hna been aradtesl Ro ‘ Ono of tho closing sentences of the speech hy Of two tinea seen Republican Speaker | Ses ll the neiievements of our past histary, | courage and painstaking parts, and Jove of | that wo would put down tho Robuilion | vote, und a resurt to firms. ‘The svheme, of | yubtiean paper for so long that, had the nome owght to be graven in the memory of the | ulected, and hhusolf to rontuet him tr the | ald carries In his heart the memory ofall its | open alr oecugation, and perfect freedom | and se ession,, And that dovtrine Ives | which Conkling was the author and Oamoron. Penton of tha Convention been delayed for people, It fs this: i chal, "Another jg Abraham Lintoln the | Blorious deeds, and who, looking forward, | from self-asserton, mae lim the dolight of | and will live’ when tea second Con- | and Logan were accomplices, must bo con- two ar three days more, It is Hkely that. tt « Wherover tie Kenubttean party has stood | inan talsed up by God for a great mission, | Prepares to meet tho labor and the dangers | Rosecrans and George H. Thomas suecess- | tenuial hag arrived. Freedom, National, | ceded deareo of subtlety nlong with its would have kicked aver the traces, and. bi up with Its head in the bight, and appealed | No man ever tind a truer auprabensiant ‘of | te come, We want one who will act In | ive fo would go about any work they | universal and porpetual—our grent constitu. | audacity, But it misealentated the, tempor come Democratle forthwith, It ‘has been to principles, It hus won wherever tt lis | the principles of the Declaration of inde. | 10 spirit of ‘unkinduess toward | thoso | asked of bin, was unseliish andenthusiastic, | tonal amentinents, ara they alive or dead? | of the times and overshot tho mark sot in hot for Grant for something tka six weeks, been cownrdly and. truckled and tet down pendence, that great charier which Jt wag | We ltely mot in battle: “The Repub- | and had Stently, tomperato habits, and his | Alive, thank the God that shiolds both Iib-| tho common senso of tho people for stutes- aud fs now radically opposed to the tleket, it has fost, and it deserved to lore, Now, | the misslan of the Republican: party to. ene | ean party offers to our brethren of tho | large brain and his reverence made every | orty and Union. Ane our National credit! | men to min at” Mr. Conkling i indecst nob | which it hopes.will be defeated, It is nog then, we say In this taht for honest money, | foyeo, ‘Phere was ail ness 1 thotirt pletion South tho olive branch of peacy, aud wishes | thing novel to him, ‘There fs an ontire ab- ) saved from the assaults of Pendieton; aaved | « statesman; ho is an: artist in brilltant Impossible that it will change tune two oz Wo wlll cllinb to the smasthend, and on the | of the Wisconsin Republicans that they | them to return tu brotherhood, on this su- |) sence of non-halunce ‘or worldliness In iis | from the assaults of those who atruck It |.politieal persifinges; m ready and showy three tines yet before election-lny. very top we will malt our fags and if @0 | based themse bon ‘ie eeluration uf inf promo condition, that lt shall be ndimitted, | unture. He is never indffferent, nevor vin- | Inter, rising higher and higher at home and | adventurer, too vain to be sincere ‘and too Tire TunuNe has scored the inst slgnat down we must, the -tlig shall take the wava dependence, While the Repubileans, from | forever and forever more, that, (nthe War for | dictlye. A base action or ingratitude or cru- | abroad; aud only now in doubt lest its chicf, | self-conscious to be sustalned; and Mr. Cau victory, for lt has staked muct of Its peacu Just" a the first, have been true to. thelr orinal les, | HO Union, wo wore right and they wero | elty muy nuke hin sad, butdoes not provoke | its only enemy, the Democracy, should tri | cron and Mr. Logan differ from him morely | vended on tho ‘defeat of Grant and Sherman, ¢ AT THE ANDERSONVILLE REUNION, perfecting til thoy promised, ax proved ren wrong. [Cheurs.) On that auprema condl- | rotatintlon, uor alter that falth in men or | umph in November. in belug less gifted, ‘Tho threy have mado & | Trad either canditnte been nominated, tha c "Phe following Js the text of nis speech at by the whole record, the Deninepats on the | Han wo mevt them as brethren, id on no | Providence which Isa part of | his Mr, Chatrman, Sught the Republican party mistake fatal to thelr future, Thoy have | course of THE ‘Tunun# would have been ( the Andersonville reunton nt Loledo on Oct. | other hand, steadily wrong, have been foreed | other, We ask them to share with us tho | sound stomach and athictic head. Gar | to surrondor {ts fruncheon of command to Hisparaged tiomaclves in the confidence of | horitaus and troublesome at overy turn. j Sinst: as from one bad position to another, Can any | blessings and honors of this great Republic, | field, ts simple nx a child; to tho ser-| the Democracy? ‘The gentleman from | thelr purty, ‘hoy havo lost, if thoy evor ‘Among tho pooplo Garfield is popular, and B ¥ Commanys, LADIES AND GENTLE- | Demoerit point with pride to his party plate | LApplause.] pent's wisdom he isa stranger. Having | Missixsippt snys, tf this were England, the | possessed, the popular esteem. ‘They have the re lel at his nomination was a8 unt MEN: L have addressed a great imany adi | forms of isso {kl in them canyeiiving | _ooNOWw, gentlemen, not to weary you, Tain | no use nor aptitude with the weapons of | Ministry would go out In twonty-four hours tarnished the name and fame of thele chic | versal, even if tb was not quite Ro cnthusk ‘cues, but Lever before stood’ tn the pres- | issue? ‘The issues they then. pre! ted fed | Sboubto preswuts ume for your considera- | conrser natures, he often avolds mero dis- | with such n gtato of things na We haye here. | From the aseriptions which : must. tneyltably astle, ag It would have bean had Blaine been ence of one that L felt so wholly unworthy to | us bite war and Jnvolyed us ine nh great Nu- | Hon, tho natn of aman who was the com: | mites, dees not go to public resorts where | Ah, yes! thatisan ordinary ease of chang | cling to u desperate and unsuccesstn! attempt the fortunate mar. Ag regards Arthur, tha peak to, A mah who cime through the War | tonal debt. Looking for the enuse of that | Me, and nasoclato, und friond of nearly all | mon wre familiar or vulgar, und the walk | of Administration, But if this were En- | to uilrage a yenorable tradition thoy MUL) peopte ure, to” put ie. mildly, disap without betng shot or inden prisoner ts al- | debt L say that the Damoeratte party caused | those nable dead whose faces touk down | fron ils home tn Washington to the Capitol, | gland, what would alia have done at the end | never be ablo to free ‘themselves; from ‘tha wiuted, Some are outspoken In diy Most out of place In such an assemblage as | ft. We are, asa Nation, merging from din | UPON Us frou theso Walls to-night Tehicers] a | aud wy occasional dinner out, comprise his } ofthe War? England made ono such mls- | repronches aliko of friend and foe thoy can | fia! for tho nomination, and all are this, White have listened to you this even- | culties, and the Republican panty alone can } 4a Who began his carcer of ay io services | life, ‘Tho ward public servant especially ap- | take as thexontieman asks this country to | never runaway; af Senators, they will bo | inclined. to treat it ‘almost os & iny { have vememberod the words of a disthn- | probably elali that tho brightest page of our | Henty-tive years ago, whose first duty was pile to him. ile fas been the drudge of | nake, whon she threw uway tho achiovo- | known us conspirators, and go out of place Necessary compromise, not to say ovik sulshed Eugtishman, who onee sald tat he | country’s listory has been. writ by the | cotruguausly dong In the (ays of perll onthe | hts State constituents, the public, the public | menta of the grandest man that over trod | never to return, “ ‘rne discontent nrises, however, not. from any Was willing to dig for his country, but ha | true frends of freedom and progress, ‘Tho | -Plalns of Kansas, when the first red drops of | socioties, the moral societies, and of his par- | her highway of power. Oliver Cromwell itis well for thelr country that such an | porsonal reasans that‘can bo given for oppod Would not don imean net te save But his | Remublican party has yet work to do, We | Hat bloody shower besnn to fall which Jal ty and country slice 1803, Aptitude for pub- | had overthrown ‘the throne of despotle | end las come upon thelr reckless disregard. ing his nomination, but because It 1s felt to King and hiseountry,” Nowto say thata man | are confronted to-day In Congress by nearly | Ly swelled Into the deluge of war. (Cheers{ | Ho debate and public affairs are associated | power and hind lifted lls country to a placa | of dnty and honor, For, though thelr dleas- en furtive dig at the Administration, and is willing to dle for his. country tsa god | the same spirit tint proyailed In aa years | fle beavely stood by young Kansas then, | with a infiitary nature in him. Tels ona | of masterful greatness among the nations of | ter gives their party a Hving chance to wit the people bewin to fel moro and more how deal, bus these then. who sit before us Hive | fust before the War, ‘They tell us that the | ad. returning to hig duty in the Na- | broad scalo a schoolmaster of the rango of | theearth; and when, after hts death, Nis | in tite coming atru glo, which a victory to mind thoy have loved that Administration, sald'a great deal inore than that, Lwoutd Aust helo Government is Dub the servant of | Honal Legislature, through all subse. | Gladstone, of Agassiz, of Gallatin, With as grent sceptro was transferred to a wenk | thom would have denied It, tt insures tis ex- | and how great things It hag done for t Ike to know where the man is that would | the States; that wo shall not interpose, ng a | (ene Unie his pathway fas been marked | honest n heart as over beat above the com- | though not uniinent hand, hls country, In | datence aven though defeated, and relieves country, tg the months of its duration aro calinly step out on the phitform and say: 'L | Nation, to xuurantes an honest otection in ay | YY lebors performed in eyery department of | petitors of sordid ambition, Gun, Gariield hay | moment of renctionar. blindness, brought | the minds of inen from the susponse of iin | more nearly numbored, Ono thing, how- am rendy to starve to deuth for | States’ that {ft we will Intorpose, thoy will | lealslation, You ask for hls monnmen ts, 1 ey so little of the worldly wise in fin that | back the Stuarts, England did nat recover pending elvil war, It takes 1 man out of tho | Qvor, is certain: there 1g no tloubt now that, my country? [Applause] | That isan | deny appropriations. 1s this less dangerous | volt you to twonty-flye years of National | he ts poor, and yet has been aeetsed of dls | from that folly until, tn 1680, the Prince of | way who, whilst he seemed to be a posslbll- ‘whoever the Democratle nominee may prove Ghomuns thing to say, but there ts | than thelr position In-t81? Maye iinaiet jn- | statutes, [Cheors.] Not ono great benell- | honesty, Io has no cnpaelty tor investment, | Orange drove from her island the last of that | {ty, wast mennce tu the pence of the con- to he, the State of IMlitols will remain stanch- a horder thing than “that. Find terest except in loeal elections, no power to | Cone statute has been placed in our statute { hor. tho rapid solution of wealth, nor pro- | wenk and wieked line, Did she afterward | try. And, though it magnifies ang multiplies: ly Republican. ‘Tho peril into. which tho Ill. wnan If Fou can, who will walk’ out before gird the baliot-box and. protect ourselves books lthout lis tate cea ind bowartul Tunnal TeADOOt forthe Henny: in and | repeat the blundyr #” Hoe es SE Uy bana Bra Aine | Mevived attempt at Logan to curry It for this audience and says * Lan witltg to be | new outrages Upot * does aid. neers.) flo ated sO tenet elthel : Oorala, It hoes, ith Grant had brought It is happily past, and Shere ty os Hite tor ate 1 ot Sout at only peed peste ag hand was secon In the workmanship of those | equal richer people, aud live finely, and ex. | HOW THR GREAT CLAIMANT 1148 CHANGED | siniiling and as’ sinoglh ns algahburnes ng | Mottods, aud this ho will undoubtedly do, i ; a we panted ty give y ye ot ie oni 0" , aa by I statutes that restored and brought back the | tend his sucka power is.n8 foreign to him as SINCE 1876, eool, Wary, mud palnstakin, herman, and “i ign Pane echo e hts Ataleame they {rey 10 carry tesa States by. tte ments unity aut innreled calm of the States, lis | scheming or cheating, But he fs nol v suse Naw Tork Latter tn strookivn Rugle (Dem). almost as acute and trainedus Bdmunds: (is DEMOCRATIC TRIBUTE. ' ehghty-elght thousint sv tiinlsts who may. soe a hand wus fi atl that great lexistation that | picfous nora high mottled man, and so heis | As the ffon, Samuel J. Tilden came | new leader, which something itky'a destiny | WiMAT TIE OLNCINNATE “ENQUIRED THINKS captured by the Hebels Sin eR ERTS ane ans oBiore had been setithnentat- | eteated: the war currency, und In a gtill | taken in sometiines, parlly from IMs obliging, | through the hall of his Gramorey Park resi- | hay raised up for the Ropublicuns, will unito OF. GEN, GAIPIELD, our Government. One hundred and eluhty: | fs it xceater work that redevineil the promises of | unrefusing disposttlon, | Men who were | dence and entored the parlor to greet molast | tho purty and poll Its full strength, because | Tho Cinotunatl Enquirer. (Dom.) Inst Jan> eight thousand! How many iy that? hey bat and optiulats, i the Bepabit tho Government and made tho currency selronttiue im ls posed upon him as upon Grint, ing the changes thats few years havo | He ts tho toxical expression of Its natura; Its | ary spoke of Gen. Gartiuld as follows, while , abit Paral k iat é equalto gold, And-whon, at Inst called | and other crude-o: eu inen of nt ‘alra, ‘The | Ovening the changes that y shrewd and nhublo intelluctuallty; ls moral | UY, is , Tei ate hero rg ct te Hy tds ali ites a inst, bu ha aw all bis hopes of conell- from tho huils of, legishitlan'into a high. ox- | people of his distrivt, Who. are auick to | Worked in his physique wore startingly ap- | tong; its pushing, commorelal spleles ts | the Sonntorial contest was ponding in the dtonoe by 40 uid you will have nbuut’Iss0U0 | ation frivtrated and ull his advances met | feutive office, he displuyed that experionce, punish publig vonutity or defection, heard | pant, and when he- spoke and through tho | canny thrift and Whecdling xeul In ontur- | Stato Legislature: Forty tie G u sont= |W ‘ ir intelllgence, firumess, aU polss fim in his defense in 1873 and kept him i | conversation which followed the evidences | pris reat aud small; in one word, ite go-) “Gen. Gariield ts tho commanding cand early Aart STE a erate Hii aca we All now stand together on charagver which hing carried ys through | Congress and held up his hand, and hunee he | o¢ decay. were strongly rewen y Mud forcoinmonsines, ‘hich it has, eluents date. Ie is not favored by tho Adiilnistra ‘And toevery man of that enormous cote Mee, oO stormy perlod of three years, | fs by their unwavering support for twonty- “y th selon to-di Yes, I into 1 popularidlosynerngy and would elevate | tlon, but probably he Is ‘tho fogieat candidate. is J} pany thera stood open night and. day” Me IK ECE With one-half the public press | five yours canulidate for Prostdent and: a Nn- |, 4,288 te procussion to-day. | Yes, I saw | tito q Nationaleharacteristic. Gartleld is the | in the people's branch of the Congress he has ty i TIT SPECI crying ‘Crueify him,’ ghd a hostily | tonal character,” Sineo John Quincy Adaing | ih" said ho, and then, paused for some thme. | middleman that was wanted, Ho knew It > affers “Af you wlll Jol the Rebel army, and | yy ropepsanted the average Olilo Republicanlsia % he " * WINCH GEN, GARFIELD ‘THED TO Now | Congress seeking to prevent success,—in all | no Presidunt hing lind Garficla’s selioluship, | Did you see it?” he asked at length, and | himself, and, with businesslikeinstinctunited | mora. ably than has any other membor ere OU ee a a INATH JOUN SHENMAN, DUT DID IN wACT | {hik“ha, remalued unmoved. till t autese ‘ ts Ietory | Wwhlok Is equally tp to thixage af wider facts. {| thon his lower Jaw fell and he svomed to bo | to the quick movement of sel-seeking, he | of Congress from Ohlo. Perhaps ho A yolea—'That's 40,” NOMINATE JAMES A. GANKIKLD--iT8 KE* | crowned him, LAnplause,), ‘The great (sent | Tho average Amorican, pursuing money ali bard in ae Hein not nt all ceanecien went for what was wan etl anil awh ho | has och an abler repreaentative of the Gen Curtield—""* And you shallhave food, | MARKANLE KFREGT UVON THE AUDIENCE. | fairs of the Nution just oe great business | day long, is naw presented to a man who had vith the topic, “It was a fina displ: tt | Wanted, and he got it, Behold the result; 8 | average Republican sentiment of the and you shall huye clothing (cheers), and you | ‘The notnination of Gen, Gartleld gives po- | Interests of the country ho has guarded and | Invariably put the business of othors above | With tho tople, Was a fing display. at | trump of antorprise! Consider the fitnéss ) country than any othor member 6 shall seo wife, and mother, and ella??? oulinr interest to tho specelt In which on Sat- | preaerved, while executing the law of re- | hiawn, and worked for that alleged none} was o fine display, It wasn fing display,” | of things: the Republican party tikes the | the slouse of Representatives, le Js the , A voleo—"* We didu't do ft, though.” urday night last ho nominated John Sher- | 8mptlon and effecting {ts object, without o | descript—the publie—sratitiulo ail’ hia fife, | And as ho ropoated the vuloginm he ap. | fleld under a leader who, within and without, | reeogutzed leader at the Republican minorlty Gen, Gartield—" And do you Know that y fy AF. and against the falso propliceles of ones | Hut he has not labored without reward. ‘The | negred to exort himself, and thon relapsed | 13 most like to Stsolf, of the House of Representatives, ‘Though & out of thut 185,000 thare were Tuss Chun 3,000 | 80 for the Lresldeney, producing an effect | halt of the press and all the Domageruey of | erent nomfuntion oume to-day to ng pure and | PUaTed to, 4 artisan, he is capable of some fairness, - 19 Who neospted tho offer? [Great applause | UPON his audience which undoubtedly led to | this Continent. [Applause Lo las shown | Joving a man, as ever wlaled well of any | Sought shone strongly on htm, and tho APTER THE BATTLE. Pitot a tun of wealth, and never will bo, and cheers.) And of those 4,000, perhaps | tis own nomination, ‘The following is Its | himself able to meet with calmness the great | body and put his shoulder to his nolghbar's opportunities for Aconn hilt were excet- | goy: INCIDENTS, AND GosaP aNEsr Tm | fh perlians, furtunate "for tdi that hig come nlnetentis of Mem did It with the mental { full texts ve Soarae Vio has trades, aie periiage | Looight wien torent ue Ma engaee | fant Ills left arm and hand shook painfully, eGUEAT STHUGGLE AY CHIGAO0 potltors ard nok wien of, lar Oa tlarly eserv' 3 He ' “ y vo wi oO Ye , hs ve ‘ aay iret sh wld’s strength ts porsonnt and pee! f Tourette ANidiant sane has OURS My, Prosttont, 1 have witnessed the ox- ight of public duty, and against all the | nifection, and responsibility. ‘To-day, as Fhosseond Anger was bank aud tho hat Dispateh to the Cneinnath Enquirer (Dern.). ong the people, Wit Ufted Inimself, tts ” c vos nbyolutely useless, Attimes he bent the Ny an . bt travrainary seenes of this Conyention with | shatta of iuallco has 'borno his breast une | hundreds of telegrams conta from oyery- | WS 8 t Cucago, June 9,—Lhe smoke of the bat} 4 tin froit the Kumttest paths td the post tunity.” [Appluuse.) deop soffeltude. No ‘thotion touches my | harmed, He hns stood In the blaze of “that Where, snying kind, stron things to him, gern be hl a ie eying te poneent tty tue He having eluared away It pay not be amiss | tion In the history of the country. whieh he ' But ASO put st the hyart more quietly than Fecullmiont hs honor Here ene Apa baa pazaltial the throne, ? cael a paired can eae pe gtr Tuparidt the motion to aly whole bouly, to take n survey of the fleld, and describe Be Ue erate 2 Stiuttous nih arti & No! not to seo wife aguins not | Of a great and noble charneter, ut as bes . ‘ sts vw bore but iHttls resemblance to the vigor- nf 4 t tow shi. A nobl to ‘avold atarvaglong sat oon these seats and witnessed these | armor, no stain’ on his'shlold, 1 do not Trond, oho as With two volunteer clerks tt] ous man Lhad known back in tho early part some of Its Incidents and mon concerned In re Ly ‘aco of n scholar, but he has tho lnpitlses i r t in, George I’, Hoar, the President, the facu 0 H nat to avoid: the inmost | demonstrations, It scented to“ you were a | present him as 8 beltor Rypubllean or ag a} a room opening and reading, and suddenly | of the seventies, and the ohanges that timo, | t+ Te begin, a He will Joathsome of loathsome deaths, will © lft | hin ocean ina tempest. hays seen the otter man than thousands of othors wo | his two boys gent hin one,—Il 8 a tthe follows wt of one, He will never have ao mnan enii- . ‘ te Injustice, und disappointment had wrough this hand of mino acainst my country fors ] sen dashed into Ciryund tossed Into a spray, honoe, but T present him Tne, vows iol barat sehool—a_nd ta he read tt he broke down, 4 “1 Dy e z. Was probably. tha fulrest and boat Chalrmant | ure as to prevent hls longlig for more, ‘ ! a hi mvention could have obtalned, A | and he w! er have wo tue us to mee, over.’ (Great upplanse and. cheers] “Now, | and its granduur moves the soul of thedult: | consideration, InomtnateJohy Sherman, of | and tried to talk, but hia voleo ehoked, und mete, Lmpeanritiety th panel He “ luctoneicparinunenterinn, heralee gh tas tho, annie cummin sousy by uneais of . Wery the tudies for thelr “pntrioy | est man. But Lremenber thatitis not the | Ohle. [Creat applatye,} ho could not wee (or teurs, ‘The clerks bexan | the dull, heavy oxprenslon OF tha; Whole prompt, doctsive, and intolligont, while, from | While he has Jouenayod to an euinence : oy fsiny We pralse our good” eltizens ut | billows but the calm level of tha sea frou ne fo blubber, tg and people to whom thoy | countunance, betrayed the weakness that nae iret 10" the vag courteatis and polite to |, fave reached. "Thera, fs 0 provallli eA home Cop thelr patrlotlmy wo praise | which all hights and deptha are mensured, GATIL ON GARTIEWD, pGerwunl fold It thy ries of real grent | anda busy life had brought in tholr ral, | 7st to Inst, “ho wos courteous and polite to | couviution that he was eajulod aut ut re he cil eee Aa _ tangle Us pnts} When the storm hng passed | 4 gpynous THATIMONTAL FROM A CYNICAT. peace {YL be now to the eountry, und WHT ang asf atudled him it was not diflloult to seo | all, and nt the same time 4o dlaniited in his | Sunutorship witen the Republicans. just lind an wih, bplause, ih what ut were Urabour of calm wetties on the ocean | *ouipic—-WiHAT KIND OF A MAN GARFIELD ts the Presidency,” ily wife 4 thut tho ravagus poluted {noxorably to a tor- ) demeanor aa to comtuand the respect of evory | an opportuntty to choose Unitod Suites 1 these Hungs compared Wilk Uiat yonder? | whem suntieht bathes [te smooth surface, = SARA AD onobeia | W2aoNe of bis aehotara tn Otto,” Like Min, | iho wreck, ln Wit as Wieatiacles of dhe. | nanan the halk Ae ‘Hoare profile inuclt | Sonatary and ils. thet operntes In fils favuts Tow th yovervitce. Lavould stan wih wm Hist, tha astrohontr and Surveyor takes ia ee hee asi Th Bho da of ga uugint fatal »Cranuxptantod New ware anet Tivusbrowglit datiy In eon: fysounbles thet Gladstone, the a hen Ho hse largo. follows ne vlan the vol andaled feet ly tha presence of seh hero- | level from which he menauras all torreatria! Cuntile earthing | Met with Mr ‘Tilden, and Know hin os the | Proumfer, and in bis manner and speech he is | clans cannot seduce, fim nna wel suiterine ant Eowonld suy to | hte and depths. [Applie) Contlemen, Aapatchite Claetunatt Znguirer (Dent, suming wonnins the mother of seven ar eight I i b 7 * fe | luwspaper reporter knows all sources ofin- | yery Anglical, as becomes a thorough Bo; who regard bhi as. one of thom, anil wise You, fellow-eltizens, stich an assembluge us } of the Convention, your present tomper muy |, Clteago, Juno 8—Gen, Gardold te the citldren, anid, a8 he told wie onlyn few wouks | fyrtiane ee Je eeneals Eee anatltiania rogard him as oneal then, who this hos naver yet Gofora wet on this | notimark the healtitul pulse of tha peaple, | Kind of man who, deserving to reauh the pee, al NNER, hy ue Feinnel brought hbut With my roninisconces of him, It 13 easy to ninitons diffur as to who made the speech | will not listen to the Gnticunants uf the offer great earth, (Geet applause, followed by | When our enthitstasin has passed, when tho | greatest honors, never would have done go | into tho teas trou nepal sho was un- | tnngine the dlsappointment that accampa- | of the Convention, Conkling's Sa8 8 ming canditated who present bewitehing political prolouted vhedrs.) emotions of this hour have sibsidod, we shall | but for tho intricacies of tho Amuriean | Sumpodabls hy any clamor, + it . S nled bis rianee Inst night ‘The fresh, | nilleont spectinan of oratory, but it woul arguments ‘on behal€ of thomsulyes. | “Who lave reunions? L will not trench fe tho calu level of public opinion, below | Nomtnating Couvention system. Of hhn i Hela tha alent pute aneakor ly tha coun: cheery than the bright, Motive iin werd | Navy been much botter had tts stopped when | fleld nore thin Matthews, more than fe upon forbidden ground, but let me any Hist | the atari from white tha thowagtlts of | yy truly be sald that "he wl kes, ie AE then itee Ali hecthaecter tite ee vee guns, nd (un thelr pinco was a weak, trem | dene prataing Grants and before Loiinniny to more than Dennison, is regarded In his batty Nothing on tho earth and under thes! yc n | ighty people are to bo measured, and b ean truly Be Ce es WHOL ROB fis ete toa the at nets, Iibera! itt hts | hing, whispering monument of what hohnad | draw comparisons betweun Ia conree In the | usa mutt of the people, and wanajority of Uy gall wen together for reunions except idens | which thelr thu aetion will be dutermined, | to lose his Hfcshallsave 1” “The bard work | is courtesy, notteeably tn our polities; Ms | been: ‘he eralty but not unpleasant look of | cottest und. that of lis opponenta, Upto | Republican inafority in she Lgtshiture that have Limnortal teath and tmmortal tite | [Applause] Nothere, inthis brilltuntelrelé | of the party hus been packed on his willing | 8s Ingontous; and bls plety comes by nate | ying years hns elven way to an expresston of | that thine ho liad recolved nothing but cheors | mado up of on uf the sanis. Kind, thaugd fu them. [Cheors.) ‘The unlnals dahil, Lious | Where 15,000 niet nud women aro. taseiubled. fe nd Deon dus | Wee Hy leads a farmer fe, all the recess af | Horyaus suxplelon ind applause, Ilo was roundly flssud after, | diifering in dogres. Not all of thom lave und tigers tight as foraclausly, as did-you. | 13 the destiny of the Republic tobe ecrvod: buck for fifloan yoors, tuul he tins bem do | Congress working Miku a Hold-haud and ro- | MSE Yes," ho sald. ny health ts excellent, | and though ils friends drowned the albilane | reached, not one of tham lias reached, the Wild beaafa tear to the death, but they neyer | [Yat Js sp"); not here, where Lace the ent ceived and hig dues evaded by almost all his sory Dla mlod by resting IL Uf elected, he Very good, very wood, Indeed," and al wiy | sotnds with tholr cheora they coulit hot. pro- { suine eliinence, but muny of them have LK have reuulny, [Lauuiter) Why ? Bomnnse | thustustia faces of 73 delogutes ‘walling to | Polltienl equals and superiors tH hispatienes | will give a ton af wulture and lutolligencis to | jo ngain bent dia-wtriekuu avid boning hing, | Keue Is bekug’ lntorrumted with: Puenterist | the sumo veuinniug “A ieajarity at tho elles Wild bewsts do not tight for ideas, “Lhey } cast thelr votes Into the rn-and determing | and devotion have been perceived by other | the Executive oiticn 16 hna never set had, | Magan bent tie wre exprossion of help- | What, Nevers,” and an tupltanent niet of tho State represunted by Republicans { Livrely fight for blood. “Ait these arent and afl | the choles of thelr party [applausa]; but by | working-mon In tho party and by publie | While he has no pedantry dy hls compoattion, | jesyesa about it, and lis whole mannur ine | of tae Navragausott Plurdcandul. By the way, | the General Assembly woul logleally by fa - thelr coutrades: went aut ixuited by twa tne | 5,000,008 Republtean lrexttes, so eo the ontnlann and fw the endive of pad ai ences arbatevar. | Ueot, Uarneld maay (icated a habituf {ntruspeetion, aa though he | tho treatmant aoconded Contiing and Gare favor of some al hor candidate than Gartielt taurtal Wdeass fhnat, tint Netty sult bu wale | thoughtful fathers, with wives and chitdrons | this Convontion thls asmputhy -dlseove | Pinte ives ene eels, more Ahan 3 £: | Wore aconstomed ta bury ils conselousness | sled In the mutter of thelr wpeauhios wos | ¥the rural dlatrlete will tngioully bu 1 Sere) fo Arneriea, Lapplause] 5 and, secoud, | about Wom, with the calin thoughts inspired | Co i th ued | old mathore nw muntal Indy tives in tis fants | Ma Mtsolf, AG tines he appeared oblivious tu | untirely partisan and different, While Conk- favor af Gurtiold. “lus rule dur) not apy ‘tat this obit Swe is tho tug ofa Nation, and | by love ot home and tove af countsy,awith | ered him sitting among them, and raise oy yen hes HO i" fribaregeatr i mu ¥> | externals, and thon his lower jaw would fall | Ing. waa apeaking messengera were «is> | absolutely, for Garticld has fclands from the hut of n Suits (hnwense enthusinsin, ohers, | the History of the past the hupes of thy | hinvon thelr shields, He may romind tho fivara ut the MUEA VASO are ienge te and the eyes ogaln become ditt and tiatiess, pauied to the purty of the hall from whieh | oitlssand ‘opponents from the country, and hulu) is tha, the Nation ta supreme future, and tho knowledge of the grent wen | soader of Rudolph of Hapsburg, who once, by qn ‘Then he woul rouse a little and inake som no Luterruptiony cue te learn their pructyo | tits la the tendenoy. ‘aft has frlonds with: vara pony aut all borparalgns, {area ‘eho pave, wlorawd aut Uicssed Our Fitneed {| asa rough, hospitable Haran tu’ tho Alps, fathor aud sty matt, that thy days nay roqngrk, na thot i with a pale tot . yong, and all We ee ue retort le tp out te Iitcal management, | Matthews plauge and ohicers.| Call lta States ea ays sono by,—there God prepares the vor 2 ealth Te excullent,? he repeated ‘ale Sprague wore brackated or quoted tn | political management with rows: araoction; en drm Sout; em) ita Norths | let that shalt deuermiay tho v4 alin of our usalatod Abbot across to Ltaly, who, in course if re vel [ie tu gall it anything you wish, and yet, armed | work to-night, [Applause] Notin eee erabt Z SH thn te gets ts nich iy vrs Httle Ao | of Uno, became an Klectoret the German Pr NY a LH nt eit pause, “if am Nery well hi their proper placed in tha speech, Garileld, | nfson has w very fow Clends and iw i ‘With the nationality thut God gave us, this ts | In tho heater dune, but i’ the saber quiet RA il cle etalk ron upon unimportant | on Uie contyury, was poruilttad ta revise his | politloal management, but both comblar ant iT n fyulres and ata deadlock in. the Electoral matters, and for awhile was jerk: ont ine | sycech before It was went ty the country, and | not disturb the general’ galerlation. Wi a Natlon walsh all State-sovorelguty aud | flat comes between now mid Novembor, hv there sprang the nano of Rudolph, and coherent, Ile looked arourid the hand-| to change tt materlatiy in at least one im: | the ald of the Dumoucrats ‘Tom Youny cot iv gecussion Whatever, [Gleors and appl use he silence of deliberate Judgment, will Ants | nade ttn mperon Garflald’s work hery | ¥XTRAOTE FROM ONY OF HISOLD BPERCITES— |} sone y-furmiahet parlor neryously, — fre- portant polut—that where he alluded to the | be eleuted, but tha popular ox-Goyernor car fret vnthuslaa} Tt ds the immortality of creat question be settled, (Crivg of *Good,'} | for Sherman, and the speech he" made to WALKING ANOUT IN THE DeEMOCHATIO | yuently, and out into thobroad, dark, paneled | melancholy days of November." Lord | notasoure the nomination of his eaucu nut truth that wukes these rennions, and beng Wd them tonlght, TGrenst applanse.} | nomlnate that muaucaing Bearetnsys Hespity GRAVEYARD, hall, ag {f expecting somo one to como or | Rosoos returns to New York with his comb | Hou Eggleston ty withing, but hopoless ti that makes this one. You belleved it on the * Hut now, gentlemen of the Convention, | dis remembrance of nibting Si fy EY OTA He | ayy somebody to go. hore wasa lack of self- | mutertully nbbraviuted, andy most galling to | attr hitnsulf, ja for the. whiner. It {s ual battlefield, you belteved {t in tho hell of | what do woxhinl? [A voleo,*Gardld# dnd | fey Matthews in his place as Bonater tirea | _, {he following 1a an oxtract from a spoeoh | Bull wt i‘ Kor Sade. fC tho oltpuitue wae dane | Nkely wine way cavubliyation of tho Hota will Tar’ aajou tn lils action, a wan trent | his pride, thy worst af tho ol Atulersonvilly {apjtuuse) unl you velleve cheors.] Bear with Ine a mamont. Hear me en ad and his defense of jieehibald dolivered by Gen, Gattleld Aug. 4, 17d, In | EVM rellonve, ior apmtarol Wot inte sci ul i + ui gelErcHlance. He wppearod to Unk it | by burneyard (owls of the commonoat West Mage, and nothing elas sons: [ivly te to diy thank God [elivers}; and you will be- | for this cause, and, for a moment ent | Campbell, wham ON lng wanted to throw | the National liouse of Rupresontatives: ineuu ent on wim to. ni pin} yet ata Joys Vi nia breed. dona ctl 0 Nandldato of this i it Heve It ta the Just gusp.?? hat ya, may hear, (utes of 'Qoud!') | out of this Cqnvention for ecltu ing to pled, ae tir, Chairman, tt lanow tine to Inquire for 0 toplo on which to do hiuiselt justice, fine jack” Logan cate out of the con- | seems to he atrong enonglt to beat ist fe) (Yolava—"* Yes, wa will” “"Phat’s go,” | Twenty-live years ago this“ Repuvlic was | In Buvange Wo support its nomines, brought | tothe ‘fitness of this Democratic party My bost offorts failed to reliove him of his | test worsted, but stil) In much better feathor | withaut the ald of ol! others than Gurley ote. wearing 8 triple ehein of bondage, Long bts whole bady te an tupulsive fervor for | take control of uur great Notion and {ts vast | enibarrassment, and wedrifted along through | than the turkey-cock af Now York, When'{ and ni npetiter of Gartvid can coun Gen, Gartield—“ Well, now, fellow-cltizeng | fumilurity with trae in the body and souls ec hitn, ‘chien they saw that nelthar Ed- | and important interests for the next four | a lapyrinth of chat until the question of } Conkling arose to move to hunk the nom{na- | that ald, nit fellow-soldiers—bug ain hot worthy to | Of men tnd paralyzed the conselences of a maundy, My wshburne, nor Sheruan ou years, {put the question to the gentleman polit és forced Atself, Uke an unwelcome | tion of Garfleld wianimons he Feselyu as . MN Pt —_——— ye your fellow in this work. J thank you. daujorlty OF our people, ‘The baleful doctrine | do, fils sacrifices and eserta | Troms Mississippi, Aly. Lamar, what has the Upon Ya slinuituncaual: much derjsion as applause, When Logan TWH VICE-PRESIDENOY. nus, ys having mci} ue to speak to you. (Cries | of State-sovereignty had shocked und wesk- | had previously made hin tha choles | Democratic party dong to merit that great |. (lisa ataungon, sald L, “nparalleled tn | gat up on his ohuir to “second the motion of ; i Po *Guon aN i ie | treet ba} ¥ M the wilngulshed Bepatoy from New York" er Ss SU ig to of Gg on? "Goon? “Talk to “ug ‘some | ched tho noblest wid most bunelicent powers | of the new generation of Ohio manggers who-| trust? He tres to show jn what ect ft } the history of the Natu.” i miore,’ ete.] of tho Natlonut Government, ane the grasp. | aro aulecuedl Sherman, the tpn sof | would not be deny evo, 4 antes show Well, he repiiod wearily, “Tam out of | he was cheered to the very velo; Sud SVG | ey Foner brid te oral spirit . Zuni to fay elnnly hat Thays had ong Jig vowar of ulnvery wus sefalng the Virgin Whom ure Jos luent Hayes and dov, Shartes iw ww He would be wats, Fag aad 1] politica.’ Tam out uf pulltled altogether; £ tha o hiveen dulegates From tho Wwhou Senile by the mathuslaaa over tho nowine ° nity ouly to cf , ctr o ‘est anil itrig iu | Fostey. te has beau the wheel-hory iese | bolleya I do not misrepresen! am- | don’s Jot (t traubly me any more,’ 8 had atten cop out of thelr seats, wy ears mun who stgod by my nde In tho fui the den of ‘torual bonduse that } men, : has elected them bot! ‘ty ils ger tn aan re if t " coratlo purty, thatin the lash wlxteen years | “But only temporarily, 1 hope You are.) seemed to huve forgiven Lim, for they ap, | tonof Gon Garileld for President, nuh,