Chicago Daily Tribune Newspaper, July 21, 1880, Page 10

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10 , THE CIICAGO TRIBUNE: WEDNESDAY, JULY 21, 1880—TWELVE PAGES. . , ‘ : i cook" i President in fact | stom und thase tethunate will bo au is Hitle whint or enprice ahall be gratified, nor | of 1, the Deniocratlo party plodges itself | enforcemont. Trin in favor of thom now. Lam | cornted than thé onttre population, mate and fe- | Hancock's olection, would vo Pres UPpORtEA In thy gives amplo guarantee of great promiso in all | et Noanect trom parties—more than wedo | anew, “These dangerous fad Tiganvis dercteines oppored resolutely, bitterly. and ancomproms: | nile, men, women. and children, TMB was of tho United Biatus inet stenting: ‘ ely these chilniss. pin INA Vida le—abauitte perieation. wore reafirmed by Buchanan tu kis ineasago de | jugly to any party which oppores thom, [Ap- | der a Domocratic Adiinistration.eThay opposed PROTILENTIAL POLITIOAL IMRRBIES, emoornty orators have mate flint order 4 from individuals—absutate p y fh H ‘ f thiseanpalgn. 1 will he IM A FEW MONTHS YOU WILT) WAVK TO MAKM ‘Wo must weigh those parties, comparing thom | nytng tho right té coerco a State, Buchanan ta | platiso,) every registry schome by which these gross and Thus ends thia platform, Amore impuiont, | {suc of this en: ype git. oT willingly necepe the your cholce, T know that when n party bas | with each othor asa whole, and (fon tho whole | one of that long Hno of Democratic stateamoit RTOLEN FROM REPUNLIGANR. outrageous frauds, inight be provented. Under | satormtion of peatilontial and dangorous po-' | !asuc and aim rene heen xo fone nm power aa tho Hepublican party | we belluve. ua 1 thoroughly helleve, that tho | and patriota to whom thie pintform refers, and | ‘Tho (hint plank of thelr platforn fans follows: | {to premont Election lawn, ata general etection | jitjon) horoslas bag novor boon thriit in tho tang | Wosettled fn Jette many citizens funy bo moved oe desire for x | generwl interests af this courte, Its freedom, | yet wo thnt dovtring, no Bulcidal and doatructiva us No canis awe by paration of Church | for members of Congress or for Brent lent of tho ANCOGK'S OT/DRR 11! ehiige. In not a fow enses tt miny be a desire | [te prosperity, and the proteation of Its citizens | Tn its oh ly torutry tha qicstion Which tacter, the Demacratic party plodges | and Ktato for the god of each, and common | Vulted ktttes, there nro methods not for an en- tone ol oor hie iene thee nae cone uintnenting pp the anlage for the puke of x chanue, While tho Limpulay | in the onoymont uf all their ctvil aud palitien! | itaolt anow. schools fostered and protected," tire provention but for a correction, at lenst, Of | gantiy dented: wa hive over mbt. [t | observ ateno ent, that dene Hanes ie 1s uatural, ft should not be | followed | privileges will bo bert promnted by the continued DEMOCRATIO INCONSIBTENOY, ‘No opposition to sumptuary laws and no togls- | there ovils, presented, {fs onot fe choose whothor: | appolnted to exevuta, nut the laws ut Cong without. calm. discrimination, « Prudent mon | giecess and uprempoy of the Hopublioan party, langorous and poattiontial horosy | lation whi wi never fall” to. consider whether the | thon whatever auniice flaws wo may find Int fis | 449, s0mo 4 ene only ebunge. posibln vids falr to be mHent or Ht Ma methods, as pitriotia | Hae been Puraued Man unbroken Jing, and was fa iG for to HL wnntd Intgetare. with tree whiaky, | ‘Tho repeal othe Fivetion laws by the Domo- | Wo. anit ho dmplavable or wither wo shall | Hit to curry. ant and oxeouto tie vaintent with tho Demoorntle pars cntlo part Wmduinanded nut for uso [0 (yo RuNthy wiive tho bloody abirt. Tha Demooratio party han | Andrew Jofinson, whieh wis no wore th mannge ronssorted {1 tha Democratic platforin of 161, | tye for al hn inws woukt bo clenrly opposed Pron basa LE a aia Lh and porti- | Uitde the choice for us. Wo moot with tho sanie | tho land than your volluy fine Would have change for tho better. Itia tee that purtles | citizous, to that party must we attach ourselves, | fh which, upon these grovnds, and for theso rons | fo tie constitutional doctrines and tradition of | !s Widely Insiated. upon far tho purpose of | Old purty, ts wiokod as ever, ns dangeroud ng | been, Ho superseded {gallant nod thoranyty fire apt to erence by tho long possenalon of | gnd to it must we give ourallegiunce, sons, thoy dented the right. of the Government | that party. ‘Tho division of Church and Ktate | Raclounly | meleted mpon foe tn). plrnoee Oy | over. aaincorrigitie nsover. Itmnkesthe same | loyal roldier, whose peal aut puteiottnn were power. ‘Tho Republican party cannot oxpect to DEMOCIATIG ANXIETY VOR OBLIVION, to cheroa wtHtate, and doelared that offort nnd | 13.11 doutrine stolen from the Toa Maines specu | Sirawlny dawn al Rariturs in, the Coane Or pe | olddomand for political power and publiocont- | never tneatlonod. Ho wie pbainted against escape the common Jet of humantty; NO | 1tis not aingitar,whon wo conaldor its history, | tha Warn falluro, ani! asked for acceantion of | Of Gen. Grant, and thotr declaration that coms | Trt $0 tata Sut Ue ccose thussce | dene. make, and you, Lam sure, willinnke | the wish of the great militury leader who never candid observer will _deuy shut withid a lato } ate ltha leuders of the Demucratio purty neo | hostilities tn trent for ponce. ‘This wan not | mon schools alould be fostared and pratectt..| died H the samo old anawor, “No!” [Applausu,] bud nny polloy contrary to thie witt of the oye Fee nee han Taterionntions. nnd anxious to invent, new issues and to withdraw | merely and {a not merely a Democrntlo tradi. | in view of the prnotice of tho States from whioh I. pulley ho law uf RM. TANCOCK, pier fAppiatiee.) bus acleeted. ho was ya " the 183 Electoral votes are to bo driwn, Ia at Jhut fe thoro a froo ballot in thofouth? Docs position of mitural untagouism to the Stutt 1h pomsapene| sho, Went aay srok Rie [tell public uttention, from thelr record and thelr | uont this ie Bemocratls constitutional Moe | Abwurditye After tho War, whot having clothed | auy ant of onlinnrs honesty andl ordtutry tole pivban hia platform the Domogratio party hos tho people ag expremed by. thetr Mepresat ot LE Raed gto tpeto ra Bere eg Misty et teen Joudly protesting that curtain things wre | te platforms of thelr purty, and foie ay | ae ae te ne ret rcoraising {howe Higenee clan auch a thinat fot is taka a fevr | tnd coords ao tae ay wo lave ang.incurn of | ives in Conwross. Alla duty to hls taster, nn satu pst, iu weltere it can bu mately betlar conntod upon for Milelent and taithtul survioe, while Ae appanone | Melt etroer tniist ho eliminated from political lint, thorafare, certain portion uf | plodue themaolves nuaw. Tt was nualtt nasertod sought w mal bine capable of oxeratsing t f disenaslen f ndging from tholt own life, with the “consti. | 8 Ht nppedred, tls ine! nopnoxina the proclamation vat emancipation, | Privilege intelligently by oatabilanton sono | Lanty wg Or tho vote In 1878 wie Le ny | Tt ere ca ernditigns “or tha pnety. ie | tha wishus of Htubiehti ination, was ta pande, rin Orleans," aod balding school-houses, that same party jn | and yet the Democratty voto was not Inorenged a allminat y tu ‘ Without tho silritest spportunity for obsog gpent only prospect of iheertatuty and con | HACHEM onto tt Le CeMMtIttIO NAL | eee Cone ea Mai heacponiie: tha | tHe South whion toniiny fosters and declares tts | fo lueger oxtone thon tha increnso of POT as GR any the altuntion, fa tor personitt ieuucameeet MHL pemocey_ may tu the cours ot ine | Apna gate bacn wants Cit nein | KewntVandey ines iy oppeumy af the War | neni cntoring ecto agar. myaeat | Hot pansonuey lab treo alot) That | BO ASnGh tty dau tamutute mar | ts ea pct ae hd Ia uoce be only whon the ropudiat - y i rolgned In'that department. Trant whom att nly hon the repidintiontete any (oe wy, | mor rolntions with tho Union; and that thoso | constituttonnl dodtrines and traditions af tho | of the poor whites nnd blacks aro not onty not | 41st: In 17s twas tb, The Domeortia, voto fantion a much inferior military, leader, almiply | jury, trom whom could ho hava Tenney ee vyooutu c yowLaet 80 a salle, B od | fostored, they aro not toteratod, and this deg- | inthe meantinie nd not focrenred, piv To» | begnuse ho wasn Koldior, fact?’ From Monrov and lls friends, for {franks fo. powerful and iniluen tia | eee ee ee ee ee en eee a eeaeer ity | inration carrius' ilo upon ita facd, PuUiioun vote ha boun terrorized, huilidened, pC Fead Stross tata ttpon what is ealled Gon: | staughtered loyalists of Nove Unlenna would hae an alomont oa rortoualy ta, iironten | tain astent this is trua. The wctual vonteats of | platcarm, thoy Mledo ihomaolves anew. hts + THB MONEST MONEY NODGE. ae ee ea ee a einai | Walch, an turns any ovidones has yet boon tur~ | tok bim otherwlso, Dosti, nud Fold, and iw. Counters when by an cuergotia nnd suiceosr- | erated quan tn tho Mull huvo vlused; tho war bo- | samo party onnowed the Fourteenth Constitit | Thotr fourth plank nnnouncos this ootrino: | Hy'tno ballot wna uaoiutoly and attorig edited: | Hisbed tte, holug his oarecr for a fow months nt - peacen ad quiet, for’ thoy had ret var riwee é bs y been shot.to death by those fi ful action In protecting tho rights tho voter, | Hveon frecdam and slavery, betweon Stute-rov. | Clonal Amendment, which mado the citizens of *pma riley honest money consletinur of gold |. ag yot tho party mullty of this most atipendoite | New Orlonns, and his ardor wpon assunity the et tto death by thesu from whoni Gen, a bY ck Itirned that penee and quit rhite: , * . cralguty and Natlonal wnolty, which wae thus | overy Stuto citizons of the United Btaton, and paper convertible inte cult ort 8 | dutics of that command is purndodas au evidence nincock leirned that peney ard quiet provailet Fence tics in alt pact tor teat CF | Mucdeisendod ‘The ‘Thiriventh, Fourteenth, | which deprived any State of tho powor to lnters Numande and, the aicive, muinteunues of the | MN Rigutis crime, enonkinaly and My wCorS | Ore aui and. wise. skufesminiabips aud wo:| #2. us denmctovent| 1b wis yong brief intra Hae ee eee te eee ering. | andl Fitteanth Conatitutional Amendments have | foro with tho equality of politieal peivitegesat | juuite tality State and Nation aud a tarid for | owls; tts platform, proteste that the Fight of | OP ti voa ty sunpart bin hocause ar tht iul- of pues and gute eb Gon, Hamers we Hee eer oead uaistinlopowor of pbs | Heer diopters cortatn legislation appropriate to | the citizens, ‘This great doclarntion of fréedom eee ce °F | feoo ballot ina right proscrvative, oF all Tente, | ministention and of tit onder. Wanroonliud'| Rave snes. to one sorrow. fenrned. Hy ane eee ee ae ARG Ie owill have wer tho | 80 cuforcement of thos amendments has boon | was opposed to the constitutional doctrines and iit tho Democtatio purty mean liy | Sl meh toy one be 808) Upon to indorso and approve bath, aud honeo, | HeuneCs tho matntenanee of th Author} fy cp inton wit an Wu ul ie Atiio protector | MuWor but that, after nl, has not removed from | traditions of the Demooratle party, In tho Sen- | + home nen "Tho ovidences which they have Tasid the itepublionn vote of Misaikstppl wv upan any nuency on. our part, wo are com- | {es us ° Et ae oil 0 bo it : but therg nti Fe ee a eee alcctiond, and | 82 Ueld of political debate tho ubaracter of | ato of tho Unitod Stutos in June, 140% it was furtubod 18 Of huino rulo In thowo States frum | whe TT ace te had dwindled down (i Ld. | ‘polled once mora to discugs and datermino tho “eye tn obvi aay horitloe uid the nw ddalarod Shane MIE And Athy Toupor meceveaty, ts dive | tose two great parties. ‘he eburacter ari man | adopted, every Senator voting for Its rdoptton | yhien uo 148 lectural votes nre to bo dorivad | (4 Atondoua ename cannot be necountod | merits and datncrits af Andrew Johnson's polloy’| 1, that Ho lewal Stato Gavernmonts or ydnatg MT io ntlcetot ite atutoamen ani to pit n |-Who ecoks publig trust and coutdonce,or private | being w Kopibliean, and avery Sonator vot- | aro not encournging, From tho practical ovi« | fyi gurerenacin, Coles caniot be Nemteted | or ruaonatruation, of which crn itananele yiea rotwalion fo Ufo, oF, propurty existe" 0 tag en u he anes oF ARS) DAA Never logon Punye Supe tBeUE always In tssun, 8 prea Aron a ine, Aeninst ie adaption deli a Demoornt |-Gonees thos Lave oylven we, borne rule monn rthe Matte not an ceccsslon of Democratic {gr n time tho acléctedaxent and Fepronoutatlve. a Innene Aide i iH att, m ‘obedlencg ener ta wnldion ta nonuition for the Presis | Ruy er pleco uf past xcoundrolianiattiiotgi in | with tio singlo exception of James Rt Doollttle, | swith Wioln the right to, fettar opinions, 19 stifle eee Tete Moni OF tha riaie of autres, | Tile singto Instance in his carcor iluetrutes lis | {2 tho wollcy of Andrew dolnson, dane to snake for steele a cortideate. at loynity | eseHee {t uay bondead Issued diihough the | who thon was ocoupying an Midepenidant pose | spoech, to torrorize thu votor, and bully the | AECTR Noon hold pool as to all Southern | chameter ava civilian, and shows him to haye | prostrate forms of the Ktuto Governm nay, tua a er Hk migrate conillet of the | Party guilty of it uy havo suffered bly legal | tion, baving at that tino not ontiroly defined to | conrts at home. It means tho White-Liner and tates. Ta thin n freo ballot? been fully In sympathy with all tho renetlonaiy pauereas cet ent havo te fe Jw tho settluments of the er poniltes tor tt, 3 fn Jasue, wherever bo oalls tor | witdh politica!’ party ho was attached. In tha | the KueKlyx nt home; it means the argument | ‘Thie condition of ataira I tho greatoyilof | and obstructive mensuros of the Nemocratic | {retyiied Vf, We them, nnd nullidios the lave baste ie th 8.1 ny opinian, the | ¢MPloyment. publia or private, Ifvin its paat | Housoor Kopresontatives this great moustiro re- | of tho shot-gunz It meang tho perainslon of | oupprescnty It Inn BroAt Wron Wituponafres | purty. ‘This position cannot, bu fully compro tho ee ee fue het i es ie Sti of the Fe a at ee chatuctlon or | history, tha Demucratio party lis steadily and | colved a votoof £8, all Hepantionns, and op | Chisoim ang Dixon ‘ond buyndreds of others | Cum Hrescnts It ian pront wrony put tipon tres | Faria wihoue an undorstandiny of tho bieary | PqQplO.ue which that Jaw iy tho axpression, diego ashe to tho Vrondoney of tt | SUMMA pepe mang nance aa at, | Healt Peseta tt as Oe ae | git ees mans GF aaa | Freer of abinmtuntig wrong a tier dun | Ui ayant presen Gon. nnood’® #0- | wiuen ie Mona mar Wuting and aet ih e it 3 nek Is te) Pha Ys Horo in jointmen Wiech uring, l United States, fo bo khown, “Ie tt bus steudily vinlited Its ene | Hougo und tn the Senate, rolidly opposed this | Tho white tupubllenn vnlur by tuiduieat raids, | Honseinke into Insignifienuice, and cost what ft | PNET Gon, sheridan wax in command of | Herivedl his muthority-to inakco muy declaration . migements and broken Sts pledyos if it hus | great charter of our ilborties. Thixparty, con: | py burning humed, and indiscrhntinto stangh- | Wosiice tha demund for it bo. finpincablo of | Whnt was then known as tho Department of tho funteaa Vets SIUM cuanto: tenn At the recons EMERY A. STORRS, hover mde 0 worthy promise which it ing kept, | nistently with its constitutional tootrines and | tora, ‘hia {a the practice of the homo-ruters in Heenan tee Ct the Dein anier, CE [Gulf Monroo, n datiant Nobel was Mayor of Piruetion mensurce deshived int they should WS SPEECH AT BURLINGTON, LA those fucls uro oxécedingly pertinent whon [t | triditions, opposed thojReconstruction note of | tha Soitth, and this is tho practico which this | 77 sera oe a we vet ote Fe et the Hopubs | Now Orleans, and tho inoat bittor opposition had Wud aad thit ¢ 8 ete fawn a0 galled. shoud In 5 piste, su at the Hon. Et ‘A, | ones before tho people making now promises | 187 by n Bol! vary vote, and $n 1868 In tholr | platform ‘ruttiics and Indorses, and tho right baie a Coe aE fone cainstitutionnl hoon exhibited againet the Congresstort. plan | Ne¥ HO walle Suite of otatuna teul Following Is the specuh of the Hon. Emery and seeking to enter futo new obligations, Indo- | party platform, following out thelr same doc- | which it demands, [Appluuse] ‘Nothing, bow. y Fae ieee Gone thescake | of roconctiintionsan oppoattion sneauraged and | Pluved tteelf tn the. proper, relutions with tha Storrs, delivered ut Burlington, I, on Friday | termining Just bow far we abull rely upon these Qrinds "and dholr enine trnaitionss they stritcl ever, more jmpudent (4 polities can bo found | SIROnTIN Gs ee ee ot tho flepnbite this “rent | Stimuinted by tho sympathy of Ajdrew Jobn- | Geveroment, folluw by permission terely, and evoning, July 16; [inte and accept thou new ongagemonts, 1 | thelr ax atthe root of the troe and would have | than tho declaration at tuls; plank In tho plat- 4 é r Prositont of the United States at a respectful distance. | In brict, ho attempted My Funnow-Crrizuse: his aplondit audle | Uilale Pum entircly snfe in saying that tha Dem- | overturned tho wholo schoma of reconstruction | furm for bonest jones tscotapire the | ering naninst Wiman freevou slinll couse, and | 800, thon Mresitont of ¢ toes tho repent of tho Heconstruetion jw and alle Srntte: on tr ” 2 » | beenuse the General of tho “Aries, backed ay ence asiombled hare tu-niaht. wad tho enthual- | SOTNSEo tataventnor Treetom were utelvet, | gu called, of Coneeeen sevotmtonugy aad vos? | Byveyes of tao Democratic party tn the past | gonatrained bullnt. (Chaves) “Ana wilt tint te | tn Jule, WOH, couvoution of loyul Tinton snea | napired Uy n toval naplo, balced Hin tn hist nom whieh his murked the proceedings of thls | which looked ta the protection of the rightsof | Tho opinion of the Democrutie batty ‘with ro- ‘Tbo Democratty plattarns in 1848 united for the Mecoraplleneyt ‘all une, russtions Tavptuiees} wax hold tn Now Orlouns, Which was ttackul by shins, revoked and wiuaporuled bis order, ond gathering so far, show very clearly that tho Mee | the vitizun, that tt hus kept. I think Damon | gardto those Reconstruction acts, which include | payment of the pubiia debt in Frewnbuoke, stand in ny mi Lp at p eared mob, al ey by Kaa trolieo fore and the Pendored hin poweriass for mileubllet. Ah teas publican party hay lost nono of ity apirtt, and | tirely sufo tt gay log that avery revolutionary | the constitutlonal amendments, Is not ohungeds | which, hnd ft been adopted, 3 iat v ‘J nt with would : 4 sebome which has discredited and disgraced | for thoy say, * Wo pledge ourselves anew to the | " > -pntille In tholy tonth plank the Democracy say: “We | aud Hawkins, ing Union ion, were killed. | tho pulley which hoe was expected to enfares, Wil befora this eampalyn bie proceeded far ex | aur polttion within tho) last twonty-five yours | constitudannl dactrines Guuivitont to tha repudiulion af the mublla y nee 1 i tne atnein, nis ) rues and traditions of the | det, and would huye resulted in such un intiue | ‘cougratulite tho vuuntry upon tho honesty and | Sheridan reported that tho bunror of w white | and with, the .rovplutionnry ‘ohatnetor of hig «| bus beon fathered by the Demoeratia purty, | Demogratie part, it opposed tha Fifteenth | tan Of Gur guirtoncy. as to baye Pouttared the re- | thrift of a Demooratlo Congress, ehich hus re- ie irom ths Convention rat Bits in wuld manitkorte, Loudly Assit the supromuey uf A DOW TOTOWA, L think no man will dispute tho propor: Constitudonal Amandmont, which declared that | mimption of spovid paymonta jit absolute im- | ducod the publiv expunditures $40,000,000 8 yonty ‘blood.by Spal ceman, aud 10 ut a tho Ww rien ed the evil Inw, hoe noveethe uss procecits tones This Is tha first oeenelon of whieh 1 huve | tun that tt isa geent university in which nll tho! | to citizon should bo deprived of hig right ta voto | possibility, which would tive boon the dishonor | and upon tho continitution of prosperity at wee atantail while {ying on ho prawn . and to remove miny of iclala wi hon Gen. Sheridan a “if to nattress tho Hepublieansof the | Pulitical Lerestos which haya ghdanged the por | by the Uuitod States nor by tho State In whieh | of not nly the public dobt, bit of the | home and Natiouul honor abroad,’ Huotr ueada Denton with Brlekbute.") About 2d | bud appointed, nad to, put ltebol svipathtaers availud mysel€ to nddress tho Hepublleansn’ (he | nemnity of one, free inatitutions, have beon | ho lived, by reuson of rnce, color, or previous | yroonback Itself, ‘They altned ‘a fatal Wow | ‘Tho first commentary upon thit te that iets | loyal | men, woro this brutally Killed wud Pptbets pinay GEIL 8 Ataneb, gallant Biante of town. Mhas not been | qyughi for th Ingt quarter of t century, and | condition of servitude, In 1669, thirty-nine Ree | pt the National cradit, for they demandes | false: but thls ginringly falec protansp of cons wounded. ‘This. brutal and murderous policy from luck either of disposition or epportunicy | thut tho students fn thut university who have | pubijean Senators sotod upon thut great mone equal taxntion of avery specica of property | omy will benr examination. low bag this ccon- | ct the substathi) indorsoment of Androw | A Btate Governments thon existing fi the that Lhavenover bofure addrossed tho Repubs | HTudiited uw ollicors in the Democratic ranks, | ure, "ayes thirtoun Scuators velod “naye’ | qesrltaetoltarent values including Govern, | omy wien oxblultod?. Talt economy?. In tho res | JOHNSON, and an Approval Of it wus deomod | Btnte of Louistuna, detorminay Inne 1H the sue te ‘hi es butt formor canipalynt uve heen, inthe malin, men whose polley and | overy Senator voting jn tho newative being a | mont bonds and othor public securities.” Ind | dugWonof tho army and in cutting down tho pocessnr to sastale an Carry uu Vy pel uy. jection of Jurors Woraahowld 10 NO diseriis Heuna of this states but in our formor campalins | whose practice lias boot inost dangorous to the | Numocrat, oxcept Doolittle. Tho voto in the | this polloy beon adopted, ny follow-cltixens, do | puy of onrotticors. ‘tho spectaulo of Ben Hil, | Hosmothored an sipproased Gen, Sheridan 6 | (lon on agcount of reo, color, or previous cone regarding lowa as eafo beyond alt question, ws it | best Interests of the country, TC think Lam on- | House was in favor of the rmendments a solid | you suppodo that It would have boon within’ tho Cemnera Forrest, Hnmpton, and. a crowd ot | Teports of those satrad ties, and galled Spe sat ditlon of. servitude, aud, therefore, Issued has niways Veen, tho work that! inve done bas | tirely safe in saying—indeed, Lknow Lam—that | Republican vote, aud Bppoaed to ita golld Doin | range of possiblity for us to hive reduced the | Itebel Brigndiers In Congress, sitting in Judg- | Arrcat and trial u ee nembers ot BF robs an glee that In tho se lection of Jurors in always been olsywhere, we vuunot point to Gnesinglegrent achlovemont | ocratis vote. ‘Vhs ne longer ago thin Wghihla | interest on our public debt? Would not the Na- | menton tho pay of Shorlian and Shermun, and vention W ests not box I any, 0! cone tao ‘edernt wourty negrocs, should not be exe But at the opening of thiseampaign f felt tint- in our histary ince 1850, from which ‘freedom | party solluly opposed tho doctrine that ng Stato | tlonal faltt:and tho Nationathgnor havo been eo | Union aoldiers and officers 3 onv which the foyit | Were Indloted, und nut ao single man'guilty of | chided therefrom. Y bould deprive a eltizon of his right of alitfra 1 oiutempiate with | these inhuman murders was oyer arrested or ‘This patriotic, this wholesomo, this bumane tered by the Invitation to address the Ropubtic- | Bote, und cleewhere hus derived tho alightast | shou! deprive a 0 fe ‘ave | shaken nod impaired that resumption would | monof this country do not c i 1. 8 tip the nts while shall bo overywhere a free and un- THY NEW ONGEANS NUTCHENY, ad bn have been ‘ DEMOQCRATIO FALSH PRE rdin, fndfag trom th voustritolion Int that,therd wero no leeul nop net i has been nd. | by reason of rave, color, or provious vondition vi Ability’, . ONEKE MiMItEs any very groat degree of pleaguro or suthefao- | brought to trial or punishment, ovler did not mogt with the viows of the ndvo- nuaof Burlington, and tt ocourred to ine that | Fanced, through. whietr tho political equality of | of scrviturte, and Lat oppesition thus exuibited | RAYS waa un Impossibility, and Ronaat matey | Ans very Reon ve buon commented te withiess it |, THe Woesident attempted yo wheedia Bhoridan | cuted nt ” tiny pollu,” wall te olovaling. end vin. here, in this Hepubliean elty, ono of the lewting | {he eltizer-bus bean established vr mutntatied, | only cleven yuurs aio, Mt to-day. ratitiog by We | vould nuver expect tu live to reueh It? In 180, | Our army cut dawn mud eo arippiod that tt Is nbs. into n position whore ho might keom to place tho | dlenting the civil’ nuthority of the State of Gitlesof this Republlean State, pructteally tho | {HAE Tiss hud the slightest assintunve from thé | eluting thu it pledges Itecl£ anow to tho const | tho Puble Credit hil, whieh pledged tho Nutton | solutely ineficteut to protec ‘our frontiers or Peep out or. ‘of that Convnnban in, tt 10 Ayre lela to uf palttu Seioramae. ucts. ne net 1 a ttl dou! e * 3 4 ut having no moro soldior with a plistic and | ot Congress, this celebrated. aoldler-stutesman first ovidonee might he glvon of (he inimner in | Howoeratla party, know Tam safo in suying | tutlonul doctrines and, traditions of tho Dew | tu the paymont of {ts debt in cotn, was opposed | Indeed to protat us ngulnst mobs tn our lance 1 nenstive of thit kind “ean | ocratle party, It carried its opposition to these y K " allt voto of the Dem- | celtics throughout the country—is that cconamy? | {lextble conselance to deal.with ho fulled elthor | revoked that ordor, and ostantatiously ine Which to nomination of Garield and Arthur | bo" found in our tundamoutat “Inw cor | greit imoastires to tho {irtuent extromo. It | that certs, inetd lames te. Deolictio. | Liromued itga the most wasteful extrayauanea, | $9 coux, ully, of bribe tho ‘hero of itive | nouneed the reasons why he mude this revaca by the Chleazo Convention Is recelved by the |. Upon ol statute-Looks tasty which Uint | opposed the bill to enforcy tho Bourteunth and | Chamoring to-day for houest money, thoy op- | Not only hns the army hoon reduced, but oicors Forks tuto uny ich position, but rocelved from | thon, fh eee vO aa Republicans throughout the couttry. ey, hus not Dittorly. ston ly, and oma- | Fifteunth Constitutional Amendments by avolld | posed the Rosumption bill which imukes: the havo boon retired, and skeloton regiments aro Bhar aig, fn rosponug a series OF quent oe, », The supplomentary Roconstruction act pointe WA iene ty ace ce ttint iugnantly ‘This fa "'a fonrful | purty voto, froenback and National bank-iote honest mons | loft waiting for’ tho good thine coming | whlch uiuined that tho outrages had Loon tn” | ed out tha method of registration of votura, and We are mvt to ratify tho nection of that Cone | eninge to nuke against any political orgiutza. | - It opposer, tn 1870, by a solid purty vote, a | ey, ‘Thoir platform in 1875, written by a shrowd | when wo pball have a Doemocratla Adminis. | cited by the mor! horn of that Convontlon, n tel- specitienlly Ueclnred what tha, quulifentions of yenton; met to ratify (bese nominations; met | tlon, Wut the most fonrful ubaracter of the | resolution Introduced {nto the House of Ropre- | capitalist, who hndaneya 'to-tho yoto of tho | tration. and whou from tha ranks of | cxraphic reply in whteh Gon. Shoridun sntds | those voters should be, . iy ¥ hy L i 1 turatify the platform upon which these candle | churgo ts that ft is trne, ‘Chat party hus op- | sentatives alirming tha validity of the Four- | guito of Now York, and. knew, or sup- | tho Confederate soryico — the vieant | "The rea fous oF tho masatoro was tha bitter, | Ttebala wore disquullited right and left, and tt dates eiaud; Inct to umtin renow our devotion | Posed overy measure sinco 18U8 which looked to | teonth and Fiftechth Constitutlonal Ameud- | posed ho know, that ho’ woul — have | places may bo fillod, when from tho plantations | antagoniatle feoltng milan has boon igfeow lei An) yeas mundo the duty Of tho, cuimanding General x 4 € hotd reetom; thus favored every moudure which | ments, ‘ tho South ut: att ovents, fur tho pure Brite South these 8kelcton regiments will bo | the community since tho ndvont of tho present | to sce to it that the registration was made fn ene tw the wrent enuse whose Interests wo hold #0 | Jookud ta the degradation aud sorvility af labor, | ‘This steudy opposition to thavegraat mumeures | poso of catching the capitalist voto, de- | fitted,and when tho old times aol! bo back | Muyor, who, tn tho organization of thy polied | tire hntmany with tho wet of Congroas, Pursuing : deur, and our continued adberonce to that great | 1 hive sven no evidences of « change of heart in | was not coullned to Congross, but the Domo- | otared for honest monoy, and unblustingly | again, when tha army and navy. witha twenty | force, aclected many dangerous men,and rome of | chat law whigh Gou, Sberidan Jeconnized ns tho party which hus contributed within tho last | tha members io that party, Its principtes are | eratty Loglslatucea of tho Stufes of Now York donounced the Ropublickh party for ‘ahitering yeurs after tho close’ of tho Roballion, shull bo them Ivoire murderers ‘ot Taw of the hind, he issued bls efraulurs to the of- twenty-livo yeura so muituh to thu Intorests o¢ | t-day tho eume that thoy” wore {n 14), in tho | and Indiana withdrew che ratifivation by Hupub- | rosuruption, the -ontiro. Demucraey. buying | oxelusively In the bands of thoso who solght ith this condition of agains Johnaon refused | ficurs direct tug how this registration should Lo ety > th butt & main, It has advocated no Ba y which if | ean Legtalatures of tho Fourteenth iid Fit- | provioualy opposed the soheme of resumption, | the destruction of tho Nation. ‘Thia‘is tho | te interfore: Tils kympnthios and the sympathies | dono consistentwith tholnw. civil Hberty tn thia country and throughout the | qdopted would not have beon destriative, and enth Constitutional Amendments, and sought Bue inJumuiry, 188, Init © fow months Inter, | sehen of the Democratic party; aud thie it | of his fronds wore with thie Mayor and his mur- |” Gon, Huncouk, who was than Infocted with tho world, No mora, notable Nutlonal Conventton | utany of the porlods whieh L have named, bed | to nullify them; and thus, in entire harmony | tite Convention mot, (he MIL to Fepeal the Re: | parades ns economy. Jt rofuges fo maka ap- | Aeros polieo force, No rolfef could be had save | goctrinca and triditions of the Depiocrutic party was over held than tho one whlel resulted jn | tho Leople af thle nountry approved, by the | with tho previous constitutional dogtrines ind | sumption act recolved 112 votes in tho Louse of Droprintlons for the puyment of judyiments pro; hy _Congreminual pation, aut scoordingly An. to whtol tha lator | of 1 Pledacs leseit i rt 4 gicction of the candidates, iO COUrEN oO} ie Kitlons of 1 nocratio purty, this pucty, vos, one, cured In the Court o| iltins aging: a Unites . ibe anew, rovised 6 an loy bimself, aban tho nomination of Gartiela und Arthur. ‘Tho | Tortnuratie purty, te result would tive bean | iu slureh. trl, opposed, sully in tho, Honea o¢ | Webreeentatives, all Democratic but ono. In tf opposed. Juno, 1876, a8 a rider to tho Civil ropriition | Stites, and proclaims this aa econumy. It re- | A0tand tho Supplomontal ct, Fad donad ull charge over the registration uf voto, * contest that resulted In those nominations wus | disustrous to tho lustderrco, Hud that party | Roprosentutives a resolution reolting tho action | biti,an pire ropolinig tha eninptlon Piece fo mike appropriations for tuo payment | + Tho proumble to the formerdoolures, 4 Whero- | Gnd with a mose extraordinary aul wautiicent = f tong, eager, and exelting unc, Before tut | succeeded In INA), aluvery woutd Bayo boon for- | of tho Indiana Demovratla Loglelature and | got’ recolved solid Democratic support. Moes'| of the expense of aur. courts, aud hng left tho | 98 10 legal Stato Governnionta or adequate profec~ | gonerosity—which would have been extrior ’ Convention were presented mi i tuost dis | ayer fistenod upon our ‘erritories, and freo | reafirming tho vullulty of thoso amendmunts. | this look ike honest money? Tho party was | Forleral courts throughout tho wholo country so on for Ufe ar property now exist in the Rebel * Unguished names—the tames of mea dls | inbor wontd hive been dexraded and diagracod | Every man voting In the negative upon that piloral courts throu gho Buates of Virglitn, North Caroling, Bouth Cari | Tour Gr ucea itso nee etch he 0 x G + | or led that thore hag been no manoy to pn} 1 slealt had been his own rightsa—puseed over tho des tina lshert not only fo this country, but trougu= | throughont the boundaries of the Union. Hud | resolution was a Demoernt. , ae ee ey adit teen eee atts | iueacrvicacand: it numborieas tnstunces tho | Miu, Goorin, Atlxsisalppl, Alubarin, Loulsiaya, | terminations at those. questions and thy. Ine out the hounkericy of thy clviilzed world. st is | that party suececdat in 184, our arms would It may bo profitable to Inquica—tho Demo- | repeal the fixiug of the time for"resumption | Marshnlshaye beon compelled, from thotr pri-+| Florida, Texas, and Arkansas; and whereas Its | torpretation of the Inw to tho very Mobels in enough to make wt very proud of our party that | have been dyygriced, and shameful dofoat would | cratle purty in its apposition to thoso xroat | Aug, f, 1876, rocalved in tho House 179 votes, all | vata funds, to pay tho expuuses of tho ad- | Necossury Lan PQuce and good order should be | Nuw Orleans agalnat- whom tha inw wae tobe witint tix route mail Ge found go many wen #0 | have come non tis, ond n humiliating and | wmoudments thus having boon traced down to | Domadeatle oxegpt three. Mura chau x your | ministration of Justice In tho Federal Courts, | guforced in said Stutos uni loyal and ropublienn gitreed, | Ue sutmumurily remoreit—w ! tistly honuevd ant ietinglshed. ‘Sha Repube | disgraceful termination of the War, resultfog In | 1871—whon ft mut with a chungu of heart. 1p i Bi Stato govorniments can, bo logilly catabiahed; 7 ieee 4 nlutform of 1876, in | Chis is not cconomy; thle ia a shumoful fo governments can, bo loxilly catabilaheds | fo had declared tho aypretnney uf the civit lie leans of the chile of, twa hil ignited thelr | thawepuration of tho Uulon, would hnve hoon | not material to. ino to. tnd them duclaring In | etch tho jleciaral a ee ene asorn, Thocem: | neiect. Of. duty; "A shumotil deal of | tMorotore bo It onuoted," cto, and had vauntingly aunouncad hie owe abilles + pref for that yaiant and thut great Wes | tho sitra und Inovitablo result, Mud Androw | favor of tho validity of those ninondinents fn | muittoo on Hanklog and Currenoy tt bill to reopen! | justice tu tho citizen; n shameful and a wasto- Tho net then divides tho States {nto military | ton of military authority—soveral Inyitl mom ‘ publican wheres fead we woul all Mive been | Johnson's und the Democratic party's policy | tholr platforms. 1 ini moro curlous to know | tho ftosumption net. ‘his is tho practice of the | ful extravagaucs, It refuses to miko appro- | dlutricta, makes it tho duty of tho President to | horg of the Clty Counell aud ordered tha famons i proud to have Collawed hitd the selection fallen | been sustained in 1864,.the fruits of our victory | how tho purty represented fn our Natlonul Cone Sp s 3 at Lts prot . twas nee | printions to fintsa uncompleted public Dulld- | sssign to tho command of each said distrivt an] Packurd under arrest. But tho end wasnt hand, : Upon him—Jatnes G. dking, of Mine, ee in the fel would havo been shumelesly re- | gress votes upon the propositions, and I find Ton deine pariy noee Tay theo Nationa Hi theroby yastiy inereasin the exponsa | Oollicur of the army not below the rank of Briga~ | Saving thug made himself tho dpeclal ugent for : pluie] The majorite of tho delutes Fron | turned to the Hobela from whom wonehleved | thon voting steadily uqulant thatr sulldity, | press but turouslant the States, Tuthis honest | wien completion nitiat ultimately bomade, It ler-General; that the duty af such ollleord | vurrying out Andruw Johnson's policy and thy the grent State oF Utlo proposed the name of | thom, and dotunt Hebols, those whe hud sought | (Chis same party in April, 1871, true to itscon- | Bato or Jowa tho platform of the Democratto | hag cut down the servico in tho Department of | sould bu to protect all persona fn their rights | special ugont for setting unto the wet ut Cour Hngiiehed won, tat steudfast and life. | die teslenetion of tho Nutlonal tifa, reatored to | utitutional doctrines and traditions, by solid party for 1877, uncunverted by tho twaddle of | tho Interlor and other departments to Buch nu Of parson anil property; to suppress trenson | yress, hourrayed npgatnet himuelf tho loyal peo ube. the prowl pr cheat statesimin | power. The victors would have beon the de- arty voto opposed tho Ku-Klux and Amonda- Witton platform in 1870, deatured:" Wedemand | oxtent Umt the Patent-Ollice and Ponston and violence, to punish or cause to bo punished | pig of tha North and South. in an entire body. ‘edulin Boerne {ippluitse), td hla | Fouted, and our achloyements, with tho tminenso | tory Eaforcoment nots, absolutely essential to | the immedinte repent of tho spcote-resumption | Bureau havo been nluoat practieally closed, «It all disturbora of tha public poace and oriminus; | Moreover, there was at.tho bead of our utmics Heda willingly have followed tnd | sueritices whieh thoy involyed, would buye been | render these alucndmonts operative. Further | net.’ Thia ls the-sentimont oF the, party, Its | hug refused to inako suiiciont appruprintions that he nut alow Jocal civil tribuntds to | tho sitent aoldicr, patriot, and statesmun, Gen, tho choles (of f° Convention Callen | busely surrendered to our adversaries, Hud tho | still, In 18t, by a golld purty voto, ib oppée fo | constitutional doctrines .anc “traditions, aud its | for the reventte-cutter sorvice to tho projudico | take jurisdiction of nnd punish offenders, | Geant, Applause.) One’ by one, ns roses full; wpon him phe of uk were lorielintly | Domderatio party succeeded fn 1808, ull the re- | th House of Representatives x rosolution rntl= | yores, whorevur ity votes would tell, have boen | of tho custoing rovonue, and hus lost tung of | OF when in bla judginont it mity be neu- | fett thosu axtraordinary orders of Gen. Hinvook, ‘ Garfield wen, Krom, first to ditt, and | constriction meisures of Congress and tho cone {ying tho validity of theso umondments; and In | from’ the beginning down! oven ‘to to-day | thousands of dollars from revenue whero it has | cesury for tho trial of the offondars he | under the quiet direction. of Gon. Grint, that : ull the Clie, tt L the Conve Ha fou fe tind stltuttonal amenduents whige Wire i pare ut: |e © anme year ft opposed, by a pid party, NAtes | aeninst honoat, monoyetor which fn tts pint- | derived ono from, tts higeardly, uppro elation anal Huva a eeiiniee icean coins thoy bo suspended or ruvaled. LAppiiuse| netion, my chol was Unt grentose ot all Aimer reconstruction seheme would have been Ly 19 {louse of epresentatives, a resolution yout i t vice. ns refused to mike ndo- My I$ entiro course was disapprove by Cen. lean eltine—tiat finest representative of the | Wipad frou the Constitution ant from tho siat. | thors intraduceiinnintiog ovatitity of th laws form today. W-lyingly and Gypouritivally ae.) for that Bory Mt i Quato nppropriations for tho repair and protec- | Juterferenco Under color of Ntate authority | Grant.. Tho pride of tho soldlor-statecmun typleal America tas ist sient soldier and { ute-book, aud thus all our victories In tho fleld | for the enforcement of the Aa apne Four ki it i promt z of the navy-yarda, stations, armortas, and | with tho oxoralio of military authority under | was humbled, bis vanity, was wounded, i tur xplondid In ) have beon rondered fruttiess, Not anly that: | teenth, Fifteonth Constitutional Atnendments, THY HAYONET nUGADOO, eee ean Tovinad these rene prapertics to zo | this aot shall bo null aud vold, ‘Tho det wo | kad Mer wrote te Grutdy Ustad tor & : performince, Whose gohfevedents constitite, | had they thon ruceecded, repudiation’ would | Coming still furthor along 1 fut the Demoeratlo | . Toate Hells plane docliros: “Tho subordina- | to wasteful and ruinoue decay, It hid retusod | provides ia to qualiications for votors, aud tho | further consideration, and tn ‘its ‘extranre, Perhaps, thy post elocliy perianal ors and | have. fastenod tts Inoifeccable stain of dis- | party still truo to tte constitutional doctrines | Hon of tho military to tho civil power, aud & | to make adoquata appropriations for tha ne Sioa fict provides for. registration, | dinnry lettor ho suys: | "'o stupend my order the world's history of the pres at coutury—thut | henoe upott our Natlonal naine, and tho | and traditions: for, in Innuury, 1875, t opposed, | thorpugh and gunuing reform of tho olvil sory- | gronxed uxponses devolved upon tho Mint | pol iting aut the quullflontions of voturs.undor | would be to destroy. my wgofulnoss, “Amd al 3 fust Srend—taat wetineiiie poedot, The mn | repudiation of our National obligations | by # solld part voto in tho Hous and jn the | tee’ ‘ nud assay oflices, rendered necossnry by recont | the authority of the commanding General. * show auoh a want of sense of what I conceive : who seeing to bo the epbrine ) eesenen sense ial | woul have: been the sire. and certain Fo Senate, tho Supplementary Civil-ithehts bill. ‘this sinply menns that tho military powor | togigiation, thus tending to defeat the object of Vo these “measures Androw Johnson wud his | que to ive and my position in this matter, ad vowmon justics bo Weabees aopeteent ault, Hud thoy auceecided in tie, results equal- | Tho Fourteenth and Fifteenth Constitutional | shull not be tsed to protect tha citizen nor to’) jogisiation, It hua rufised to muko adequnto friends wora bitterly opposed. Gun. Grant wus | would necessitate a respeatenl roquast to bo re. go great That [ts oy hee Jy dlsuxtrous would tive followed, Had thoy | Amondments wore rojovted by Delaware, Mary- | put down urmed and organizad-realetunce to tho | approprintiona for tho survey of tho publla | then at tho head of thoarmy, aud wastn tho | leyed from wy present command.” Ie nppenred Btates, that tt Kates ttre att steuueded (1870, with the whispecor of Gri- | land, Kentucky, Virminin, North Curollua, South | enforconient of tho laws, It mouns that the | lands: st bas inade groauly Inadequate appropri- | heurtiest syinphthy, with Congress, Under this | that tha country wag nblo to endure thut re < ton, but witase fan ond wmeroy Tari i the excoutive bead of this rreat | Carolina, Goorgin, Florida, Atavama, Mixsiesippi, | Mooushiner shall go unpunished; {t means that | Auons for ll hthouses, beacons, and for tations, | Act Gen. Shorldan ‘assumed connnand. of that | quest and was quite aule ty etrugglo. prosper: y the waters of tha Hedy fa enud ay noegetine | Nation, to-day wo would have beon etruggling | ‘Texas, and Arkunans: rejected by tho very | Whorevor an independent Democrat dotormincs thus hnpertiing, tho snfoty of our morchant n department on tho lth day of March, 1807, aud | onaly through such a calamity as that which, try but worker wil tie comiuenes Vlyyeed o. | under dopreciated currenvy, all tho burrices | States which will ylve Hancock the ove hundred | that he will not pay the revenues which the | pine, And, finally, by ono groat offort it cut or | on tho 27th day of March, recognizing the Rabel would flow trom: relloving Gen, Mancock from Grant, Aes kiae Upphinee | tosses wadrantm, | which a fosnl Congresa had erected for the pres- | anid thirty-eight Elcotoral votes pee which ho | Governmont tmposcs upon the business which | the supply of lemonade to the members of the | Mayor, Monroe, and athor officials ns tho whlef | his command. Grant was tnexorable, « He gene . 80 calied, tind shall fools buede upon what did in| ovation of purity at the polls and honest clee- | #0 contidently relies, In view of this history no | ho is pursing no willitary power shull bo | flomolur tepresontatives, but ne. Bistory. tells | avatrnetion in tho way of recanstruction, re | rally, in. LApplauue] Tho olfonaive orders blo Loluné nud what poor nervives | ranmierel (0 | tong would buve: buen thrown down, and wo | {nstruotive oven if it be tedious, how signifiant | pruployod to compel such payment: ft incnus | ug tho supply wus Kousht for By idividiul mem- | moved Monte, tho Suyor; Herron) tho At- | were suspended und rovoked, 5° : promote bit nomtnntion ty tho Nutlunal Cone | would have been back ogulu, furtbur oven than | tho opening piragraph becomes in tho | that acts of Congress mny bo’ resisted in tholt | pots from tho Senate dopurtmont fn that linpor- | tornoy-Goneral; and Abell, the Judge, ‘This In tho nighttlma Gon, Hnucock fett the seena vento without regret, but rather: us the | wo ure to-day, in tho handy of our old adyersa- | plunk wo have quoted: ‘Wo huve pledged | execution by orgunized bodies of armed men; | tant brunch of tho aorvice. Now, my fellow. | courso tyas extremoly distasteful to the Prosl- of his ‘triumphs -and tho furthdrance of the brightest peril, of any Ute. — LApolanse.} | rica. ourdelves — wnow to tho constitutional | thutuo tnilliary power may intervene to on- | Gitizeng, thes aru all wasteful nnd demngogical | Uent and to his frionds, and tho frionds of “his | gebatnes of Presidont Juinson In tho land of . 1 regar Ait cusentiaiy a National, TRE NXRUBLICAN TECOND. doctrines and: traditions of tho Dome | ferco those ucts of Congress or to put down | oxtravagances, No good altizen justitics thom, | polley " North and South, but it revolvad. tho | tho sobel Mayor, Montoo, ‘His imisafon wad tr funn nud belteved Inxubmnitting that iitmete | Tho story of qur uehlevoments cannot too | forntie party.” ‘Thoy plodged thamsolvos nnow | such armed and organized reslatance to thelr | put, on tho ottecr band, whllo these miserable | benrllcst approval and Indorsomont of the Ite- | ondud., Ito loft Now Orleans tn tho wight, Murch tho Natioual Convention that nothlas contd ba | often bo talde Ne wople can become too fail. | to tha doetring of Suito-sovureigntys pledged | onforcament. It menns that an act of Cougress | pretenses of economy fhuwvo boon mate, there | publican party. and Joyal won throughout, the | 1, Juis,.tn response, to an ardor: to report In * more wisely done thin bis noniliution. fF eluttd | tur with tho great Qeeds of tholr history, fur if | thomselves anow to tholy Dphesltiim to overs, provide for nn honest ballot und for a peice | aro to-day on tho tilos of the, dopartments aver | vountty, : so. | porson ab Washington.: LApplamio.) Hu thet i be on unworthy follower, however, of su uredt | iiistory ts philosophy tonching by example, this | Mousuro of the Wars pleted themselves anew | ble poll shall bo randured nugntery by the sur- | three thouraid millions of dollara of Rebel | “My polloy” could havo ho auccoss tn Louls- | wont inta’ business 18° a - ‘Hawouentios cae a lender did T fall torwcouize und cheorfully: | worlds bistary fhirilies no zraudor oxatmple | to thelr oppeattion to the Coustitutional Aimond- | rounding of the polls by armed and organized | oinine waiting actlan and wilting tho good | itnn so longs Sheridan way, tu command of | date for tho Preallcney, hls Admluletration % avoude to thy expreaaod wil of tbe inajority, than (hat whlch tho earcor of tho Republican | Monts: pledged Chemeelves nnow to this appost- | bands of rattians, and that the military powers timo oomlig of a Demooratic Adtitnistration, | that Departinent,und his removnl was ‘dutor- | ty Now Orleuns being his‘ktook In trade, ‘This ‘THY MACHINI, party aupplles.siuce 1800, [t-savad ult our ‘Ver~ | ton toll thu legislation by whieh thay cu bo | of the Nption shall not bo invokei'to protect tho | As the clued of tht remurkablo pinnic which mined upon, Hetore actually isting tho order, | wus in Itz, ‘Tho noxt yeur; tho tusite this lays In nvortain sense T am whitis ealled pte | tHorics trom tho blight of atavery aud dodi- | enforced; pledged themsclveaanow tothe decli- | citizens in tho enjoyment of tholr privileges, In | have Just read to you, tho cauntry 18 congratu- | President Johnson informed ‘Gen, rant, of his | fog heon, preeonted, tho Demoeratia party ve cline mun. Tat enrlulneenee fina bollover tod them to freedom. It met a gigantic | ratton of 108, tl ante regurd them all ns rovo- | the enfoyment (of which the constitutional | inated by tho Domideentia party upon the contine | intentions and cei his suggestions.’ To this | gepted It dovlurud thot: thase redonatriccton = 1m the mnuhine In politics. ‘That yrontorgunizn- | rebellion and so this Nation. it mado | lutlonary, na wa ons, us unconstitutional | amondinents solemnly guorantey bla, TAp- | pution of prosperity at home and National | invitutfon Gen, Grant replied ba fave intter@, ono Ineasures which Gen. Hancnele bad twniertaken K tion known as tho Hepublivan purty iy a ynat | 4,000, of aluyes eltizons, and trans-.] ald vold, ant necessarily pledge thomsctyes to | pluuse,) honor abroad. Gut bow in the Hghtof history |," private lettur dated Aug, J, 187, in which he revako anit sut-uside were usurpations, and machine in itself. Our Government isa vast | foriicd thom from chattels ‘Iito mén, fire | erase those from the Constitution and stitutes 3 OIVIE-SERVICE RUFOIM. has this prospority at home been seaured, and | snyss ee - +} were revolutionary, unconstitutional, and. vatde and moat complex machine, Stuje Conventions | uisbed thom with sehools and gave tham tho | heok tho first momont when thoy possess sith~ Tt Js woll that tho Democratio party was ox- | thia honor nbyoud been maintained? Dut for | ~ {GRANT TO JOUNON. 4 Geu, Hancock supported that platform, aid the and National Conventions tre a purt o} ballot. 1 protucted tho polls fram violenco und | elent loxistutive and oxceutlys powor cainbined’ | coadingly brluf In its demand for a thorough and | tho hirgo reduction of puvlto expenditures, Te: | On’ the subject of, tho jumovul of tho vary abte Lvket pltged npon ft, because he wis compelled ehfnery of our When the Sta fran. Utdecinred the equality of thy eltizon, «| 80 to do, ‘This significant declaration mustmako | yonuine reform of tho Clyil Service. Itiudl- | sitting: from resumption of specio payments | commundor o! the Hin Miltary District, lot manxk | to auppart bis pwn polloy. Aa ot ton epenke throug ite regularly-constituted | ft protceted his rights, ng such, against invasion | ws pause, [Cheers.) cates no mothod by which that reform shall bo | and strongthonlug of tho publie eredity and rox, | youte considor the umoct te would have upon the | There wis runt onony sido, ns thorepresouta delegutes in ny Bite T necept glial ly ne- | by bls own.Btuto or by the Natlon ftseli, Under CENTHALIZATION, effected, Itstntes no plan—it states uo evil that | duotion of tho rate of Intorest on tho pudlio’ | public, i} Tan vores rvedly botovud br | tiveof the araut Inynl purty, ut copt—tta volve, When the Natlonal Convention | it4 policy the National honor and lutegrity woro 5 Yi in horo was Hane {ia pools whe wustalited tiie GuverntgonttHraujht i thor h y ¢ eks to vids, LF ite atia mon—mon | debt, tho thoronyhtess, eilloianoy, and honeaty | i yfabh iad edb rin mujus ot, | cuck's famous order and. tha plutform of tho, mpenks for the Hepublenn purty of iyo Nntion | Vindlewed wad the Nutonad debe pallwith 8 | SOupuscdioeonieutecdon coud to thut’dane | thegouabiy dared to tho Nuvion and tories | witn'wiich wll oute custome dution und internat’ | tha dovormect’ te on tet ister bute wart ts | Desmouratio party rosteniling Wnt order on the! ido at put any inatvediauy dud Hetnent nguinst rapidly itezntorted in tbe biataty oe ue wor, goratis Hpirit of onuronahimant which tands.to preorvatt fon, thorough! sevotud | to tha gupport ravontos igve en calleoted ani pid ‘Gyr; ttm “du nt magoh ouaiat an armutl onesny a tion, Bhucicay st a Hr fae =, ; " ‘ oH “ik no judginent of Oo purt, thas expressed, a x ul a ul Lonsolluuty i One, ard thus to orente, 4 of tho mit sguinrantces furnished by the gone: de iS " Ves I$ enough to gn; wit Hancock an 1s orde) t Attor {but nomintion was “inide iors | iets gor beet truvo to ttxclf, until t bua vonchad | the trueet toserhonte a roa eet eee | ncieitormamdudinentec that we dvelre anaiiwe | Gone CA teh and Overy, Of doa | tO obUNY of but aw, nibts. oF othur country, to do : doutd bo no Grunt) amen, ay” Maino | the soll foundation of spdeto resumncion, It |“ Conteultzdlon f f t. his. J 3 ministration. I van: Demoeratio party, and the ‘Democratic plate 8 # very favorit word with the | flud thomn in tho Domocratio party? Doos it pos- | solemos hus tho nentlo party oppneed, IE 4 RECA re rte ARTO A EE Tete a Wore ulvarired fino thay powder. Esp, Ne nen, nor Kherman sien. We wero | has decreased the public exponditir it has | Demucratls party, und there soums to that party | sess more of tho Intulliganco of thls country | oppused the “Resmuption uct; te. wits ad | Wet whieh no uthor district communder bay one,|/ plauso.| SHuncock wus -tho ‘actected agent uf, Ror E rtlan a a a tt | HACC Ryan ta | Weaaa cee ae cy areammant | RG TANS EE onary tung | iene ee ee | eae emi il eal ena | Amer cmoenen ge uring the Convention, and are Itepablicans H Yo shill not buve our idous of U obser in apouking of the Yermncratioparty I must ho $ : Mm B ‘ . after tho Convention, LAvplatiso.) Gun, Gure | iscen ina prosperity moro widely wprond and | py words. 1 ay tha A regi peeking ake betes if ors.) i ‘Thole views atisl purposes were Ideritionl, Joh byw Tk b 1 mt ‘of tho party and not of. ‘Our credit bas thus, by a purely Repibdlican’ eon GUL tht ho was tue bed ras Neld, who fills tho wholomousure of Republican. | more substantial thin tho country hud ever bes Se ane i aeticeos Rua pEwS OF th Hee iguatnosaboe Pat h the press has 4 ba i 1} 8on's poll wrehuked In ud, havo, Patleun' party. to nuke a Nation, SLOMNTE | Hetodlvidualmoinbork, Atuny a Demooret iva | mensure, been strengthoned and advanced; the dnorear i ig Acininatration ras lated wih Pr ree Recta erat teen Jam—enincntly datingutsbed in ovary pursuit | fore witnessed, It has kopt wi) ita promiues. It | with power Yo ‘Dratuut Itselt ud Iie oitizane, | arent dei batter, thnn bis irty—lutinitly hore | ito of interest upon oltr publle debt has beon-|" jaws of Conurosm within his comuundetu-ommno dive | [Cheers] Lue Deimocratie, party, At Wey Wake, hy ing ffowed, fulunf and ule (nie Deep | hes fue! all Ute enqugenenta, “At hus nindo | hia weontealeation, it is if H % re 4 an his party. it would be’ practically im- | deorcased, and wo stand vow In tho enjoyment In evory way In their powor, und haa rendored necus- | ting ut its head the author of the famous onde heantam—pine and nuuhutengeablavswentuen, | tho namo ot iho Unitod States at America ro: | Dumoveatio purty mate ti the sioplorinencer | praaiile Laie ho suould be wore TLanghter] | of the largest mensitre of prosperity taut this ures whleh Othorwise husy HevOFhavy DOK | Hecteiony the Ameria peonio fort. reuCILe INE Bethe roaming af Sho Htenylian paris and Uk | Sisover it hus winide Choro ‘Beaton Nae ie | tee worth Rud, fo thid tho Deiwoocatio purty is ihe Fee eet oa ae ane yee doe bronds upon Walder Ine |. fuveouetuston, allow mg to any, ua frlonddoriring | nd eka for Ww rovcenyt OF our ectalon They o-day egulurly-appointed Joudur, Rove! a : sod, We 2 ' bad— * dy : tg 103 eople ifs er ol ee ee Me TA ee etm Ege haa nga, yan pid ono enta ce rte ae opposed '¢ beHuve In the rigbia of tho States | bad—bad in its Instincts, In {te history, In ite i iY tho wile country, |! usk thd loyal’ people ae meron: bay lnig ot ponice nd quist tha walfnro wu! G wastatad, Wo hollove in the eonstitutionnlity | schomes, and in ita purpose, country le hypocritiontly congratulated by the | Notand bouthethue ile in tay upiaioninare see |-pproved Crye und: Pherltin tipphuwel, und ebeerfully and gladly, [Appluusy.) [in Loupe | WC bus elottod that Nation with power to protect | of all tha. constitutional wmondinentes oe, This party has on nkzoxt Initself tho bulk of | destroyers a! Moths have been secured by these | tho loyal I poole of thie country wegn tise wi, approver Johnaon and Te aye a ‘ice, port, not under tho wlightust gumpulsion, but | YOU wad me ty the ehloyndit oF wil tho bith | sieve thit this (s a Nation possesslug central | tho ignorance, the vinloncu, and tho erlme of the | menus, and tn the face of the opposition the Muppnrtay tie Governtnent during tho: tube ow) wl “gtslon bo now reverved, and thit we now approve who osheurtediy, layullys unthliniistuitiys bee Erueues ae bt as Atlee PCHatess] Pawer auitiolont to proteut and dofend ituolf and country, $Ceultura und sy orior Geuucation ato Democratio party, LApptavso,] a quldity submit toto sug thy vur7 quan af all (enor tha Ingter, Tam roudy tht fo enngo mnoull yg enuge 0 THOMNOD OF Conve! " x ; fl 1 4 f . CUNTOSITY, vee SiH lari is i hovanso ha beworthy of Hat xuppurt. ‘Cis ait | Hnmghout the boundaries of tho groat Ropub- | “tio Futirtuduih Conutitutional Amondmont | Pemocrat whe will clita tate Dotto LHOITUISS | hla, feltor entre rokataden tis Doiaheratio | . An amain on the 17th day of August inant Geants sic teb6 Wave tertiles usta ekemntinns good Hopubiicans WII do. Tho entorzenuy Is | He, wo did it. When we romember that u grout | provides, “All persous born or naturalized In | uve furnished for procurius theso roquisits | piuatrofm ro: far ne ies enunciation of politiont | CMclal communtontion, yu wittch bo aya: vwhich wo thet held, “A ‘urea aud: progpersis foo went, and tho orlsls in ourowy Nutouubate | Ateballion th tho’ intcrasts of slavery was | fhe United Stites and subject to the Jurisdiction | from tho Democratlo than from the Repuhttoan | Tilia esta coneorned. Tit there tein thine | «Gee. Sherida hoa portormad his civil duttes falth- | vountry eecurp tts [lio Inevitable resist at tht Jnirs tou berions, tha dangers which wre thrgnt. | crushed, wo did it. Whon wo remember that | thoreot aro cltizons of the Uulte und of.| partyh Will you, with tho experiones of tha |: Erivelpies td concorned. fine tharo te in tuay | tully and incoitlccntly: tie rumuvul wii only bare..| notes de tho, wulidewt, qvigument, {1 fuvar of I ening ws ure too nmnent to Justify: any youd | thy National fulth was safe from dishonor, wo | tho State whoruiu thoy reside,” ‘This Is contrat | Orminization of tho House of ltopresentativos-|; nat wympathetio indorement Of Sumiiel a. | Trees Aen oftoed Uh de rank tho lava of Conroe te | wiadonig -{cheers]: Tueeept tha daue nn ni", Repilviicin in hnpatring bis stragth bythe | diit. Aud whon wo rombor that tha Unitod | iznuoneunutny more and hothiag lea kits, | hofero you, coutempte wane kind of reforn, Udon and 1 oannot euifer this ocenaion to past | inthasautherhoso tho did Wil thoy oouia to beau -| Ue mult? T hope for the ist. tae, trast That norsing of private grivteor disappolutwonta, No | Suites of Amorica fi not a mero longue of | tho Demoerntio Wary apposey. Tho samo | that Wil be whlch Will result from the cloution without referring to that bit. of gustiug political | 8p thls Govarnmont by army und num wish to bg tlie , Mio inst tino. und that wo shall fore, ee ee ran tie thay HBGrRIRL a, Shae Hee ne ct te cheater fone timendinunt provides No uate snail wako or | of Hancock? Krom the filing of ill the uilleos of |, jhorwettro 8 helng periaps tho most moving und | Uy wrewteN canned es Wa le al Ub cvs gue | Vor Oxtelpatu from atte polities tubay ders + it ng Ww 1 te " enforce uny law which shull ubridge the priv. | t ovorninen OY thig shall bo ¢! “ with the ravenously hungry ° ‘by ordureas a trun, Tt will ombolden thom to fer and pestilential beresjyx of which Gen. Tiane! conunon euthualaam in whieh wo are Jolned by | thetwric, howover plowis, can hlghton it | leges or fnuuunities of citizens of tho Daited | Brigudlors nud thoir assistants, who have boony symthotle a eaten afacedser ae a Bren, howud ppeateloes ¢0 cho will uf th Wont Atel bos | ke W theday tho, cto Cenaee seh tha: Oe tt nae Te eR UES tS MO | Si intrlinuny, acta RuWOvOR poste hn wit atmos. | Gates toe sual any parson He deprived of tifa, | diating as cust yelud for ovor twenty sears aod | You of Banwol J. ‘Tiden not aqui to ho meandl= | Ait this to-day makos tnvat fdstructive rend. | ¥oHr# Prat hy bs dou tho represcntatlyo, fle barry NAA +. erty, or property’ wi Cees Of ry for pines or power? Not ‘ eat! si ‘ with all our old zeal and to our uld-time results | Teapects wo may bo, wo may well say, * These yee OI y without duo prove AW | Oro Tae bt ¥ dnte for tha exalted place to which ho’ wos ing, und carries us buck to those serious, carnest, *) WASCOCK’S ATTPTUNE TOWALD TILDEN, || Nor to deny to any persion within ity Jurdadicuion | only would the triumph of tho Domearatlo putty | ofootud by u mujority of his countrymen and tin hon the Nation « to ite trio mons wh " 5 Ere ul vila Bt of triumphant victory. [Applause] are uur, possessions, and with them wa'aro rich | the equal protection of tae hws full to promote uny gonuina reform of tho Civil i : satel IG ALO EG TAO OHI Or Ff phe attitude, df Gens Elancoule towards Mth DEMOCRATIC DISCOMFITUIES. inilsod! TApplauso, *foid ie n'cleue, pulpuble, und tinutstukablo in- | Sorviug, wut te would fisen tile tc. wus vexcluied by thie Jenene Ime.) Anong tho absolutely tro und | (Tiler ut the last Presidonthl election 14, toy : q h pulps e vendervuch rofunn utterly:| Ge tne Republionn ‘party. is recelved. by | $4 ‘per orl eal RE ' aL ole hand Fivo thes trom and Including 180, has tho | q any Sonat to withdraw confidence from stich terforenca with tie “ yoverelyn power of tho impossible, No one expects the Civil Borvico to ])the Democrats of tho Onitea States with deen RRR aro nung Gi Sane any fue rae {up- Leip e iy aust: Ma Line f hey at Daa in ‘Demooratia party of the Nation uppented ta tho | flusteous uchlovornents, Tren Ho eae | Biatew this is contraltaution, pure and siuplo, | bo reformed through ny such curious and ox- |'sonaibility.” There is, penilomen, somothing | Poor the country, CAppiuuse) Castlig nbout | grout Daritvuge, aud bis engorneas ta,vendar hiv Rouply of the Nution for un apneaval of ita | Which hus anughe to provont them alle wit kona | qeeuyests, tho Slate of ite Vidwed priviicaw uf | truordiwiry channela: ~[.aninetty about ahi, ho! evolution of Bumwel |My tte ure Gibbs far ono tee whons | oeeeRS te Hie ausatucia arsine ee etre Polley. in the past, fa position tn the thon | iu eortuin be recuived With any none favor for SHOTS ENE Bug fe Vis ol eons ar euy eleizun OF NOI CIER ON, HRB ALANS SoM taen not uguine {obo w eundidate | hy adald gafuly” submit “tho excention of | croy Yark—to the wblapering wtatesnuin uf Midd - Presurit, aud for confidences in tua futuru. dive | dus than {t lus hoon received Id tho pute Tt fe | Me, yawegd states UE life) Uborty, ur property | ny thor sixth plank tho Demacrucy dec Woe not “A” resolution, | but, ‘ns overy.| is ‘seheinos “against tho «loyal peoply of | faauonitio ragioneumy, weonuut for tue lutte. oe ain at RR RSH |W an hau, ogee parce ar | Sue ower tod to any mtv baw- | fe ePMMLiyG, ag Mae eM ra: | _ AESTorn eo SES" Bini | Hatt di coder aeeat tk, | meg nich paral outa in, y nd tur lo these ap- je ri ‘ i t * | tive of all rl and must und hull be maine | laid — bd. Tt ud atlolid Reot Jancook, removed Sherkianto | day, Gon. Mungo! ulus OOVGE, wll * peals and Fepudinted aud rulected its prutehtne PaUHGS th ENO pelo) SOFIE tholr purty plat: | over anxious thoy tuy be to proseribe that pore , hy) cht, th Y ie dcutures, however, 7 a Will you plonay to tmayino- with ma tho tearful 4 on ie rch Hous of loyalty and patriotism: und'inat toa | fee Hutarethdle cesea and to docluro what for | son tha equut protection of [ts laws, ‘Thla assorta’ | ,tlied in every part of the United Statos, tatte one p Any Kelly, wad lecke and give him a place, sa that the courso of Sheridan | declired stuco his nodluatlon, that with bin ¢ p i; 1 ‘ Froin reading this platform one would almost | sensi! , might bo rovorseds Ignorod the urgent and | past ts secure, Poystily ho bulleces thle, Luh peoply of “the country In thus rojuoting | listiae tines sbi ee os aras reid critically | Ost ai these anevtions to utaoluto wprumncy |oome tot coniaeion that tho Democrutiupars |:Hiampteny “and “with whieh’ to counticss | miicotio apnents of Gen, Grant, and sent Tine | Gene dhineoele muse nobeaaplai it wo i ho appeals -of the Demoeratia party in | oxamiua y . favor, TH tho. Demogeuto party tructe ite | ty nad deolded In tts, platform to state gront | irigadiers of tha South and the Nurth received) Cock to Now Orloang to thwart’and defent tho | ‘u fow questions by way of vepsg-oxumipatlons the pavt bavo made no mistake fi now The DRMOCHATIO PLATKOIA, Sey atituttenal Noctrited and traditions: one | eruths which it hued always opposed und to use | the sad announcunient from Br. Tilden that bo | will ot tho Nation as-olcarly exprossed' in tho | (Cho past is inide Up ot miuny great avudty, ou co clear that no ordinarily Intelligent Domo: | ith tp ylow of asvertining from [tif posse | pose: he ¥itheoutte Cone a ate OR™ | sort great rights which Ib bad always dented. | vould not aunty bo a candidute for this exalted | will of Congrosa: through tho. Leconstraction | among these rout oventa js iio rostmnuption vf, cratwho will carefully exumuc the situation aud le, whether It holds ‘out uny encouragement | ‘ment provides: phe right te ry ‘Tho Bluction laws of Cangress, soe! ton, word: tee? [Laughtor) Furthor, this xroat purty, | laws then recoutly onadted. Hore the olyil serve: | speclu-paymanta, dnd astabla aud est GUT Thoncatly: epcnk bls sentiioents cath say" O tha | rornetter domg tn the qaeae rag aieos mt tho United States to ee paased to docure 4 free and bunest bullot, w us Movod to tho tttormost dopths of tts syme | jeu of Gien, Hancook aa tho sulccted agent of | rency, | Tho past hus beon obarnoturizod by people Lave not uetod wisely. Bluca THD, In INHy | tng uve pluti of the platform reads ox fol- | sult mot ho denied we abridged by the United prevent fraud and vidonoy ul tho polls, AL tha | pathetle fuelinve, Quoliress, 0 Androw Juhuson and bis potloy begins and onds, | effurta of the” Damoerutia party to Inflato tit aya nt 4 grout election in es, in Ts had 1’) jowst Le Biutes, or any Stutu onuccountoe race, coluc or | Um they wero ‘passed the Demoerntic purty | “Thotr coniidence in bia wisdom, patriotism, | buonusothp people ano Yeurlutor bad that policy| ‘currency.’ Woe bave uo guarantoy that thoy will pat cli 0 tay aJ Toe tem ue teen ty Het elections tu 15% bus | ihe plage oursctece anew to the constitutional | provious. condition of seevituilbe: Thty re "i q ‘ y B58 solldly opposed them, and dencunced thom as and fotvarity. Ue whukey by tha vsuaults of the | and ite spthor, ite wierd and abvtturs, uuder.| notreudw that effort. WIL Gen, Hancoek velo te of this country.” My 188) thous two yreat pos doctrine and traditions of the Denweratle part how charter of Uberties Is a Nugioual deolura- Uouanst eaubienals wud hua since that tue, even | common cnomy.' holy feet. LAppluuse.. ' Intlation bill passed “by 4 Demoaritle Us ‘ 1 hemes, Htc The wi ¢ Mr, Tilden, passea all unde put in f 4 4 oven by revolutionary schemes, steadily sought ‘he wisdoin of Mr, jon passe: nude uy raved hinnolf a most willlug agont pugre: be i 1 ute tical organizations again cous to. the poopie | HHustrited by tho teachiuge i and Gxarupla ot a | Hon, It iinbibliory to the ustunt wo whle it | ore toncul rue courts hivo suatiined tho | standing, ite patriotism the wholo couutry | ror th unpniriotic und unhily workes Unou.| wordcerse. tA vara teacitig farkorcoe thy Dusk and agaln sollert tho contidence of that people. | iad embodied Ii tbe pIatiorucot tha beer ee: | Nestle pee rected ke the eegutars 8 Buows | conatitutlonuiity of those iaws, and yot thelr ro- | fully approhendy. His integrity, overy mun on- | naguming commund at Now Osicans, ho laued a'| und of the presuut ta the alccton Texlelation of » 1s there, my fellow-cltizens, any reason why tho Oe i Ml et iy Bates att ora. t tho last Nu- Nothing party orrated y Ene Lo fabytury of an peal is as etendily sought, wuged in tho collection of tho, vice tax or {| igh-sounding order which practlenily sot at | Congress fooking tothe pratcetlon of the bale: Polley which wo havo Indorded fn tho pust shoul | "rhy fmporuane inqulsy Horo, is, what aru thoso | tho broadest, and, ust think, iho wiuesvorsrales | ,,THe Wlola urront of Democratic history glvcs | speculative enterprises Linon, Wall street, oF tn | naughe tha wet of Congress untae witch te we | Lot-Gox Tutlust torrotisya br fraud. Hepentedy to-day reversed? Has the Demooyatio purty Me tatlonky dontriiaa cond’ catty are those | the broadest, and, us T think, the wisest exorulso | sno iio tu this protestation in fayor of u free and | tninstctiona jn clovated milway ‘stork, fully | uppaiuted to that command und doled it in its | hos the Hemocralis purty In Conucross weught te jnct with such change fu Iti proatico, iu fis prhie | FosUtulonu doctrines und traditiuns of the | of National power and withority, | This tho | honest bullot. uppreolates, ‘Tho Democracy furthor suy, while | tortor and spirit, and in which ordur be ostentae | repeal of Mult legisiattoy. If Geu. Hancoek bo efples, or (n ius momiburallp iw should load is to Percale patty fe bleh that party to-day | Domucratio party oppasess this the lopublioan | “they pave novor advpcated 9 Itcylstry faw, | thoy aroinoved ainiost unto tears by tha welimut- | tiouwly aay: elected, will he veto aay repeallug meuspror? day to iyo to it that eontidonus whieh for tho | tePwodies act? J will Locoing hnpattant foe | party advocates, foro this yrout declaration | eng nirposo und fale operation of which whore | tlun, they assuro hin (tho aforesaid ‘Midow) that | ig General commanding ts grativod to tourn that | doubeit, Aud, It Petr ti ara aed d yours pust we have refusud tauswiut to RY Hus | Ua to nauire, Indood, whothur from, thie plut- | tho fepublican purty, was tho author, Each of | iottave been In puwer would bo to wooury u | bots followed Inty tho retirement he bua choaon | naan sadqiaiot route tn tie dovarciant,aadit wit] very fascelite,” Whore wre testiny upon tho Bled: + tue Kepublican purty dony uuytiing whieh will | Srraitedlorodiscuss all tcso old iuee wbich | SeeiCheee oaTor to ontorca, ihe prnvieenae | foo oran honest biliot, (No law for the regis. | forhimself by the symonthy and respeet of his | [ulti hurpdao 44 prosureo thi cunuiiton oEahius. | of thu Depaktinant dtube| elalan w tHommountot Justi ty us tn withdrawing from 1 the vont | eee ieee ae ee ee tia ac | HAH have, power to enforea thy peovisiangof | tration of the votcr and for tha protection. of | fullow-cltizens, who regard him ay ovo wuo, by | Ava nouns to thledruat dud bo pesarda tw wslntutt: | troy shimsaud antiiong of dollnes awaiting & which we buyo wo repeatedly reposed init? ‘Those | Weg had p,foudly, supposed wore guttieds und | this ueticle by upnroprlaly loylslation.” ‘Tho | thy purity of tho polls hus over beon passed that | clovuting tho standard of publiv morulity ‘and | ance uf the clvi} uuthoridionly thu faithful uxucution | TUmocrutiaPreidents Teuconreduruty Conuest aro very grave und serious questious, and wo | Whether that reiowed pledge He ee Deinoeraite PavHeltghte bith, | the Minforsoment bill, tbo | bus not euconntured the opposition ‘of tho Deine purifying the public sorvice, merits the lasting | of.02,°"in'war itis iulispancablede repel force by | Tecognizys tyese yilubs, Will Gen. Hanouck veld aust usuwer thom, yasty to {ts old constitutional dactring god Ua, | Kucitlux bill, ‘und the Election laws, were | Gorutio party, and whan ie bas been (i power | Keautude of hie vountry aud bis party. forgo. aid avoribrow and dostroy opfostion to tawsul:| nych legistatlony 1 MoubE. tf. He will nuts sud ‘TUM DUTY OF THY CITIZEN, of repledging nurselves to bitter and reloniless | legislation: Inmddl fee the onforcomont | sich laws bato uniformly fallen under tholr ad- : AYIRK OF MvOnM. udbycitys but, wun insurructiunney forew bus buen Hit present ‘rho duty of the oltizon to attach himselt to | hoattilty to hos constitutional doctriiey and wl amenduenty | Muistrution, ‘hus it was in Now York, this to the pat ary pot secur, ry 3 the: ie fn t Vertbrowl, pouc val ud, aud the styl authors Witte v‘ uy bills for the. repoal pf lextilae ol thoso ce ut octacly of Bamuel J, Tilden in bie back | {Ye 'ire reudy ond willl "i vat any ‘ ha. roppal p . ne of thisu two great pulitioal organizations fa | thuditidue. The doctrino of Sut sovervignty | which’ wero, “all wolldly opposud by | Judinna, thus iv Uiinols, ead thus If Would bo | onjosaurveying the. glustly ooordsut decapl-| wiNury puwsr i iepaao ls ead, und tho ln | How for tha untoruorient of the wor at too tuanltest to require cominent, No min ido | us winvuuced tu the Kentucky und Virgiula | tha Deinocratio party, and which wus un oxer- | ita our proont National Election laws werd | tated and slaughtered rallroud corporations—the | wiutnistration resume ie waturul wg rghtul do- | Hmonimental Big party und bamnsele dechin kreut ox ty be ubove politics; 10 inun (8 yo small | resoludons of 1708, and made a portion of thelr | ‘cise of Nutioual power whieh came within tho | ey suvcosy! spocticle of dir, Miden in his private howe, ror | dulnlui Ree ey ees nh LsdY that all these yuei auras worgusurpitluis {8 to Le bencuth tho fujurlous effects and conse | ereed thereattor, ‘is ovo of the constituuonal | meaning of the word “ountralizstiou.”, This BREE FRAUD, we fee ona! quencesof bad government. five no sympas | doctrines aud Hy and yald. rt . ie tradition of the Denia. | ulso the Demouratiy party opposed. ‘Tho Lewals Tho fraudulent vote of the Clty of Now York | una, aud ulsewhory, 4 an cluyator of tho stand- | BReunces, tiie erly wr atl thy’ tor thors bletly distinguished mon whe de- | cratic pany. ‘Thivall the world knows, aud yet | tuider act und the Nudonul-Sankiog law aro all | for yeurs and years isnetoudy commentary upos | ard of public morality and o8 o purifioror the | und aver sh .t clure us If they were decluring « virtua thitthoy | ta that io say thoy pleduo Thoutsoly es esuibitlons of this sumo contralbation whieh | tho Tlalty of thls protustution. cone Publlu deryice is ono which the Demncratly party | habeus corpus, the liborty of the freeway bast Ton, ty ln no wity Bea have no Jotorcet in politics. If thoy are telling | unew. Practically, this doctrino. with onai) the Dumovratls purty opposes, and which the |, In 18%, a4 wus subsequently demonstrated | can alone appreciate, Moyed unto tours, thoy | of pode, und the watural ratte of porsiis, und the Mr the truth when thoy suke such stutemunts they | still more infumous, was embodied tu the Hepubliown party bus steadily sustained. ‘Thus | Upan the trint of Ewood and the examivation of | bid him an ulfcotionste farowell, give bia uv yan 9) Arent ental te the, presvenity bead. aro unworthy ultizgns of u yreat country whose | Dred Beot deellon, ‘Thut waa Dumocratio con- | there bus buen ho chunyo In the polivy ur dov- bhauttutrs, over 0,W00 voted Were cast, or at leust | teket of leave. und assire bln that bu worite | Peo lav or iho prople alwaya furniaby thesirongess| | OLY. i) Enottn 4 to disputo—tuat wrentostiverit te that it iesclt-governed, In | stitudonal doctring; nothing #. bazy about | tring of eltber of these great parties, It there | u fraudulent vote ot 20,000 1u but very fow wards | tho gratitude of bls country, and loaye bi as a ST ee aceanta Pod sad ay perudaal Inte; Inuking the selection us to which purty wo atull | It ns tradition, but cleurly und: distlactly an: ts pli ni suvoral prec rea wore | Do! Ind thi one, @reuter than th ce Uris and ou rity no One Je ioclined ar dispHisce {3 any Chauye It must be in us, Alwaysin faver | of tbat city. Iu asaya P lucts there wo wor bebti @ throne, ir Penultted Th info distetet must nt ferredio thosone| 40 question, Nok Profeusional soldier, -f like ‘etiawh Gurel yes, Wu Must Hut expeut that every | nounced us doctrine; and to that by its platform | ‘of these great amgudinenta, and Iu favorof thelr | more yotescounted,—doub! Niscif, aa the duinian, » vinu ciphor dispatches from Oregon, Louial- | | Bulounly oP pou swod with 4! revolutionary, unconstltytl Up wrest princtulos of Aiubricaa iib> | dary not vais Jeglalalion Witch shuld wives i tafe Ey a ot eek itt aby 8s | prewvion to eat ald opinlons Azo will. nat. ‘SHE press, en ‘ fi aikiiy' no eritichin upyn Gen, Hancock's it be presurved. Fred Inetitue | career ud x soldicr—thut hy wue wu gallant ore ne atl 1c fe fy arnt oF | an the 4 a ju tho number of yotcs | throue TAN WHO, iu tho cyent of | sluvrutlon aud Judgmuntof tho regular civil uutuorle | to preserve the eternal burmony of things. 4

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