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' ‘TIIE CHICAGO 'TRIBUN SCHURZ AND STORRS. atone energy followed a polley rolieving the | try needa,a Preetdent who van be depended { him py nmultitide of inen froma hundred dif [ ora sn penceful consultation, but NiGMIy. dataeel aibartn dear ies elgmrncalratn inion ane oF tie otey of the ovils of nn ferational and dnozer- | upon euccessfully to rolva the peroblens of | ferent motives, all scering to him important, | the tewildering pressure of not dred but { puntie tains ax muchied can be Minden te renubllons stds, ind “tint abpruscnt there ape Ney system, and grently promoted tho | alutexmanship which are now before us; to pre- | becnnes all aro'to him hows not a few among | thousands of cager politicians, who fil | ahortest posaibte thio, for oldeint training, ex- | which they can be worked for with any howe ot a Tivo Strong Campaign Documents ‘ by These Eloquent Repub- Hican Orators. WEDNESDAY, JULY 21, 18830—TWELVE PAGES. “9 : Aly of the people Ly tho restoration of | sorve the good things already done and improve | tho most prominent of thow who urge thelr | tha ene with on babel of gound | perience, and sense of ponal bility. Tet wil} bo. oT FEA a oe ta eta a ot Te eta leg Unttahona at avce men | anatiimmost arongty UpAn his inhale tralied | und with A qundemoniuin of “eonthettine | trremov tl, for some time nt tenet. o€ thoee enzee | Seektiny white on dhe Demosnaior side oro tect Tuasscene tho National indehtednesa atwlower | weaioat a fortified position orto winacuapaten | and skived by long practical schooling mult | ambitions. ‘This tan task that would tax aman | fully devieed guards which gro now pineed over | no reason to look for anything cleo thant come interest, nnd thus saved many millians n yenr to brn dashing: Mannuvre [sone thing; to regulate | arts of covering up tho wenk points of thelr | of phenomenal genius to tho utmost of hisea- | the public money. and its use; it will, In one | plete relnpsa into those barbarous methods which. the taxpayer, It has fait! fealty. executed the | the fnances of the country in sich a way that | cases, and concealluy thelr motives by specigus | pieity; but what will become of one who Jatin | word, be tho mrudidon distribution of so many | In former times havo proved so demoralizing na laws with a” conscientious vobservanca of | tho blessings of a sound currency may be per- | arguments, atl of innking private Interests Ape | uided oven by the least experience of pollticat { thousand places of trust, responsibility. ant | well as exponsive. sd round | conatitutional rincipies. By {ts | matently seenred to ua; to develop our com- | pear tbosp of the public. Ife, and bas nothing but bla finer conscious- | power, nuw well led, In the trio sense of the . fidelity to these constitutional principies | merctal upportunitics; to organize tho Civil THRY WAVE ALL CONTRIBUTED ness tomonsure the valuo of tho arguments and | word, ns spoils among tha hosts of the victori- | AND NOW [ APPBAL TO THE CONSERVATIVE CUT> it has removed many. obstacles whicl{ stood | Bervico in guch a mannor that tt may conduct | to nia election and aucccsa: they ara entitled to | pretenses whieh are dinner into his enrs and | ous party. ‘IZENS In tho way of n friendly wuderatanding be- | tho public business upon sound business princi: | hie regard: ho haa heard of them all wa promi. | thecharneter of the tntorests that besiege him | ye yy esters TO BAY THA’ 2 pesocrrtia | OF tho Repubtte, to you who desire the public tween the different scettons of tho country and | plex, {9 anothers and tn tho latter cana the brave | pent men entitled to respect; he has conaldered | Wil tholr urgency for immediate actlon? EARS (TO SAN SUAT TH falth sacrediy inaintained, whore will yuu qo? Uiforent clnsers of tho peoplo. Tt has, under | spirit and ability which storms hostile battories | FOMt MAT eit ocn te Re nt and now fe ESUR BR BOW F PA Can yous In viow of present cireumatanoss: cone trvlug clruitnstatces, when tho publin’ peace | und Inys low Invading hoste docs not appear in | Servers that their opinions chanh and that thoir | what, in viow of alt thie, we havo arightteex- | conte nsneulticiont number of men of ability | sclentionsly go to the Democratic party?’ You was disturbed: by riot and violonco on th part | tho firat line of Inportance, ree kce’ diferent. and contruiictur. scores | Prettromie Democratic victors ie (rene inning | Qndmtextlty to fil all thoso pluces. | Nadoubt it | will. indeed, tind thoro not m few men who think of a nuincroun class of citizens, grontly aided |. wire BUCH DiFRIOUIe CrviG DUTIKA Of thom besceching him with thole urzeney to | Connmesot our publte faltite” While there ure | whe’ hare te Caecueely, Mawosalite for ties | we yeu do: but with thom yon will find closely tho restoration ‘of ‘onter nnd eecurity by ncultt |'aeo ty be porformed weshall. na rengonable men, | make him believe that tho Cabluct Minister ho | promivent opponents of. repudiation | in the | wore ever aa well AL RT Be CT a ee nnd moderate empleyment of tho tated mower | inquiry wothor the brilane Captain, wis | trumts by tho chings to attoinps to carry outs Hentoeratlo hari, ities notorinua tact that all | Jeetiona for mr mang thousand pinces ina thet | at mennenary nenmtane.. ow will Md On the 1. y tippenta so glorious at the hoad of his | injuring the party upon whore permanonce tho | tho elementd bostilo to the constitutional dis- | time, eapeeinlly vorstd itd e Relonbttl stroten of anthoriy, JLbas reformed | LPpeurs f li ring the purty. upon whoas 19 | tho Qs . capeoinily vorinidering the fact that twuntly | side overy Stato that lna repudiated or Rieaks \ TIROe TSE Te eko pUDITCRorvieo, Ingied 7. | COMES Ie ee Caine a ae ee ee ete eT ee oe rena canter weurly altere | (aeons worthy aspiraute sre mong the most | of repitdlatingitambiedeues yous indeuere | higher aonse of duty tute ita dliferent branches, | NOx aacrasts, whlch tn omcial ciao are | hia state or the Cousrossmnn in-bia diatelet hen | hot aik tho States tant nave Fepudinted oF Speak | ceetnatee Colt eel ei esa Sgguring tha | all thora who decried tho public creditar na the rained fis moral tono, inerensod its eMcloneys | training, oxporienee, and mental habite tit inffa | Interest of his own, pecutinr ta himecits thne | of repudiatiig thole own, dabta. neo Det | (yor texiagens chit wey eae pcelmant wil | Public enews, and whorn no loyal tradition and i punished dishonesty’ and) Kept tho sorvica Wn | cieariy to distinguish on tho political field gum! | thora Interesta nro soinotinies not uxactly thoso | cratio States, ‘with hoayy Deniicratio mujor- | cost? Suppore.nfier a suicerte nf TEE Tee ey’ | sripulses attaches fo thu National honor. Yow sullled. by the eeandata ariaing from Inx notions | from evil, notonty inthe abstract bul in’tha | of tho country or even thoxe of tho party at | tes, furnishing Democratla Electoral votes | fe party ina Presidential oleetion, nil the will find thore a party, Insite of witch the public Of offielnt Integrity. Tn saytiue thls Lain not ane | Cartuatne mditipheltyamd tneletg of forms in | urwas {hae tie man who iRrecammenicd tate | and Congressmions Who. will tetl "me | figinnd torre (ruil. thie tiealen ad eaviaor Talth has stfll to Hehe a hattio with Its cnemies, mindful of the fuet thit tho roforn of tho Dub: | whjen things uppenr in reality; whothar he will | for high olicielposition, agnmodel citizen of tha | thut it ia. cortaln thoy will bo tillone af the country were tobe ified sa withoutany cortiinty of ita laste. Ie that your Nenorviec haa not. overcome in so hieh wdlexres | ho muiatontly equipped to penotraterrostrain, | Hepublic, hua attained that position, In tha opin- | more conscientious with regard to tha Natlonat | Jy with Deniaicritie PNGeinnd cee place? Or will vou go te the Republican sida, aswas intended andnswas destrablo the ob- | ind pane te wiles politient tative and the | lonof his bicker, lees by services rendered to | debt. than they showed thorsclves with rexamt | mendation or lemocrntic Conuresemon and Where tho toyal maintenance of our puliie falth stagles opposing Attn tho shape of invoterito,| Gonfiicts uf faotion nmong thoe friends which | the commanwonith than by rurviees rendored to | to. thelr own? linve wan rahe to-expect a | paiun coniitices: what would tur stocktolders | Lino caw ith mreaoeeh oete|ploe universally litical“ habie and Antuzoniette Interests'| giways purecand the chlor magistrate of wyreat | Nersong Hut tho suine man will Vereprewmnted | sound Uuanelal Oolloy?” Walia thore ara inany | Rud depenitery think of tho enfety of thelr | thequste oF Kd rad paniie euncineecat Ti Peeccoe That, ,thorefore,, tho ighest, standard tar | Cammohianiths whothae ho will show Aiinsclt | to btm iy! othory not ns tho rane citizen, but an | good, rount mimics” nen In the Democratic | tones?” And yet the interesteinvulved In tho ere eR ad youatite desire te momete tees aye beon' mado’ in tho selection of persona Mtted to move on that Held -of clyil wetion and | a villal who cannot be trusted a moment. fie party. itis equally well Known that the Demo- | hunks are certainly by no means greater than | of the sucecss gained In tho abolition of tho t 8 | duty. where forces arotiandied and mireeied not | will he told that {boso who Jule of political | Cratio purty his ireisintibly attracted to tte fold sits ‘ : ‘ ! for public posttion—polnts of which Tehallany | by ainere rule of eommand wud obodienee, but | obfects and tho means, by Twiltulrto nttaln then | artery tute maforty of che Greeabackers: ine | wetutercsts lnvalved tn thocouduutof thogreat | curea of an inredecmable piper thoney and the Government of the United States, Tio notthlnk | Fetatabllanment of soocle-puymcuite, wh : sa by Unding the just mensure of frmnogs and mod- | from a higher stancpoint than mera personal or | Hationiste, and fint-money men, It his, indecd, is 14 . m nyments, where will gertainty tito that the sorelco Is now showin & | oration in tho pursuit of wroat objcciaundresint- | partiaan fiterost are amiable tieoriats, who nro | Inits utionnl. pintforma of fate dectared for | tue buster nes oF he ceri cette Tee | Le ROE Net Zou Re to tho Democratic party, wrenter degreo of cilclunoy, A highor merit | aueyto evil Iniluonees, T eannot impross it too | well enough tu thotr was’ but are useless In tho | gound money; but in issu, while tt pronounced | payors generily, to consider It well before thoy | you do, und yet wit Tie oe ne Cee ‘ pirit.and stronger ecuso of duty than unt | etrongiy on your mints that thoro can be no | practical conduct of politica: that tho practical | for resumption ft demanded uttho samo time | Guat thelr votes," TOU ae aul vor eit them as a nowerkal. ad) Divan tho Adiatnistentive mnuehiacry: was domoc= freater difforanea thin that botwoee the fata politician, ‘wha cares ea or, public questions tho tupeul ort the Huswnps jon taw. Lusk what’) fain willing to me that tn all thor re- | fen ormuntention, wieldia Contnanding ini jomor= | "Tin, roops 11 eum palga and the hat of 4 pt nen, is ifter | would huye become ptlon hed the Re- t f . . z Alizod by tho introtuction of tho spolls syatem Le ee ee eoploand the |-alltho man who cnn alone. Ue counted upon. to | simption law been. repenledy spcola Gen. Hnnenck entertalns the best possl- | euee in agreat manyJof tho states subject to Beoretary Schurz Delivers a Long and Forcible Speech at “+ Indianapolia, Reviewing the Matchless Record of. the Repub- lican Party, 2 And Clearly and Pointedly Defining Its Claims Upon the Support of the Nation. Garfield and Hancock Contrasted Tt haa tn many of {ts branches Introduced rul 2 ey 4 pon i led? Hut while thus | bie intentions, and even bathe may form for | its control, the grout mass of tho intintionista in the Light of Statesman. | siilinelveas til nite ote uct i | Ranging of a8 Pac Aare oF RE | ae | aE ea men sigs itge mutase | WE tte, sodas ay ct | RSs, they, wen whe wer gna cr like Qualities and are capable of tho most beneficent dovciop- | “Horgover, tt must mothe forgotton what this | Rone thenuzh this for weeks andmonths, andils |'of tastutes tho iaost prominent inilaontnts | tell'yot ro, ant ment what he. riya. Veuis t | inepaer of attenedior and furnished eneay et iS 3 ment if furthor eneriod on, by coming adminis- | Government is no toner the siinvly meehinery | head begins to awitn in the confusing contestsof | aro put forward for thu hiuhyst hovers followed | wot obvious that. having no experience what file power of attraction. and furnisbed many of b rN A 5 colle ngoot America ts over. 0 interest e fe ants” @ has done or jo, 80 Gen. Butter, in Mnssachusetts, ao Mr. eres’ ¥ . - i “ ‘ that theso achlovemonts will stand tinquestioned | the Government hus to deal with are no longer | left undone wuder a pressure giving bin no rest | Dunders, in Indiana: while in Malne Democrats iaecey 96 weird phd Tra epcor thee Shere a) country hus been su magnificently uided by Storrs’ Opening Shot Against the | in history by wil fair-minded mon, Withal tie | thosg of n small number of agricultural com. | of mind, n helpless tool of foreign Ville instead | and Greontackers flisy in cordial embraces and | clamoring for the spoils strony enough to upset | vert It nil al polley, would be ready to eub- 5 , . ey ey ito abola tn Good eonditinn. ‘The | muniies with -horg and thore ncommeruia | of being tho dircotor of things, he will thon cons | while in many of tho Western and most of tho | thy Iageouits. of tho, Mrmese, and most aktiied ie Ait. aud throw the euuntey back into the ‘ Claims of the Democ- EEE Oe ee eee Hort inaas in rovive | fgets hoy nce the Intorosts of nearly G0,W),0N0 | ‘oluda tat thatepulsy of tho’ fervest onset ut |. Bouthern Suites tho Democrats nlioost.en marso | politiemn in als party? No; iet nabouy iniuige | Yue Contuston of the fut money madness? a [het our industrios ure netive: Inbor finda ready | of people, sprend over un immnonso surface, with | tho battle of Gettysburg nnd the tuking of | represent unsound fluancial deus, Ts it not true Prany detuston howe. tte t Democentic victory: WILL YOU, BUSINESS-MEN, FARMERS, THCY: and’ remuuerntive emplosinents, tho Govern- | occupations, pursuits, and Industries of ondicas {tho antle of intronchments iu the Wilderncas, | that, to the very last, resurnption was opposed | moans that the victors will take tho spoils at | manufneturers, merchants of th try, fi a eee eae re tS ptntneus come | vnelaty aud” Arent. maguitades tare cltica with | glorious fonts of nema, wory after all very aim: | in Conjeest hy DemocralicCougressuient” Why, | oneus and thi means the complote teatruction | thesatety of pane interes, thoroy Wil’ sod : munity ina rare degres, as‘ our finanelal man- ]-elemonts of population scarcely known here in | ple things compared with this. And 1s he govs | when Gen, Haneoce wis nominated the attrac- | forn'time of the whole adininistrative machine | help a party fs puwer, Inside of rich at con : Agunent bas wow tho. confidence, of tie whols | the onniy pean ail thes producing aniira: | ow ard drulusliy ua lightot experiencg dave | Hon’ for in “Greculnekere, sccmed tv be ro | Grr of the Gavernment, with aij iim check and | tsConinunent diemoute, the beittoot a sound In His Masterly Speech: Delivered | word, "Eversbaly coca roaeon to fooke hope. | Hous aid Tntereate eo pushing, powsrtul, and | upon hin and he discovers glimiuers of truth | strony thut the yeiernblo Peter Coover andGen. | Yards and the peuple will buve to foot the bills | money ayatein aud un fered bie Giga ees Taltinte the futuro yravided” the ‘condueeor | comptiontod i thelr nature, and’ eo constantly | and finds himacit, unable. to correct. mistakes | Sura Cary, of Ohio, were among tho first to pay | furthe carnival ‘Inte will bew reforin. of tbo | reacy: ie ait pending, and will you trust the at the Davenport Ratifica+ ouepublienifalrs retalun asioodas tebe heen, | SpnsuligK to “the “dovernineut rightly or | Ierotriovably made, and, to eee inure rs | tole devstion and with him success. Civit-berties to runke rhe cars of to taxpayers | curntows NE Mo poor ie wellas thc fortunes at re ete ‘Now tho tline fora ebungo In the personnel of | wrongfully, that the requirements of stateaman- | romediably tnilicted, and to recover fultures NOW, CAN ANYHODY YORETELY tingle. tha Wea byte fhe uncertainties of Wa ine ‘of tion Meeting; the Administration has ved, and If the pres- | ship demunded In this age ure far different from } which have ‘become purt of tho history of the oe eles ent conduct of affairs 1s on the whole good, pi | those which suilleed a century agu. cauntry, be finally will soc. reaann to wien Unt phat will hephen in these respects in carn of & | xo PRUDENT CITIZEN CAN FAM, TO RE REPELIAN Dr srl sou na to the Hepuulleats mili, 8 i Poe carte ot tilt citizenarwill sestee that tho | it to) beloved by mang tht it iean onsy task | his trichds had permitted iin to enjoy his mili- | Democratic victory? In fuet wedo not kiew | Ly such prospeets untersequntly great orgreator | fnve been neblaved; whero. sound nense: nnd \ chinge now to come be auch as to give the | to perform tho duties of tho President of tho | tury renown in peace instend of casting over it aputintiontets be Ha the run e ak vor the | dhugers threaton from tho other aldo, Let Us pave been ncbinveds Seber ound senta, ang t Tho Political Issues of tho Day Presented | grentest possibio guarantee for tho preservation United Stntos,-that tho only thing ho lias to do | a cloud of elvil failure. > | Fepudintioniste, whether the hurd-meney men | took at that othor aide now. Lata certulnty not | End whore wo may with certainty. look for thd " Of all that 1s good, and, wherever possible, for | fs to form a progrim of polley which ho desires ‘THE PICTURE X HAVE DRAWN tha Democratic party thromnont the country, | one or those who would nsgort that the Hepub- | gamy sound sense and PatElONer Un toler the in o Graphic and Forcible animprovement on it.’ Thoy certalnly will on- | to carry out, and to enll good and experienced : ¥ y L $s | dean party has been without fault. Thavebeen |, problems not ye! ot? a . + h : fi is cabliet to nttend to the detall of is ono which every man of exportence in polite | and which of those eiementr wilt control its probes not yet disposed off And you who de+ . " denyor to provent such n change its would | mon into hia cabinet to nttend je detail of | foal aiairs will recognize na appliquble to avery alley. T appeal to you, business men, am 1 | ON of Its most unsparing eritics, and have been | sire the adiniaistrative busiicas of the Governe . Manner, threat Jous doterioration.. Wo should, | tho business, without medilling himself with its p thal desta . Seer eer ate ten Te a ee ncet Mlontione die experience Thave | Hovice in polities pluced Jn the Presidential | golug tou far fn sayinig tint ll this te dak, and unsparinsly eriticleed myself by thoraughguing | ment performed In 1 business-like way by hon c et 1¢ C chair, even undor ardinary and favorable cle- | that in voting tho Democratic ticket you will | Partisans in return. 1 shall always elim for | est anu capable public servants, where will you ‘ denay who In this respect ean bo best doponded | xathered from personal observation. Not ons AF | cumsianees, But what ts tilkely to happen to | takon gambling chnnee, anil that chinec being | myself freedom of opinion.and speech in that | yor Will’ yoll_yo to the Democratic parts, WYO hi to to deal with t thes and thofr | Cabinet, bas couyineed mo tt this fan great | tO sue 8 man, elevated to cho Presidency with | ratuer against you? Are you prepared, taxpay= | P uti oiteniy tein purty hamindou Bt ly | Which bas no other reform idea" that candidates, ‘The Hepultiean purty. with James | mistake. fluch a motloy host upon bis back ns tho Lemo- | ersof the country. to take that rambling chance | Tela tty period uf eeeonstriction and nn ave | ReycaRer dentro to tai {he whole admltatratiyg : A Garheld nt its head, ands tho’ Deutocrntie Se ALD (He PRESIDENT JAD 70:0 cratic pnety is to-dny’ under such elreumetances? machinery of the Government suddenly ta ‘And the Great ‘Principles of Human Rights Vindicated in the int party, us now constituted, {8 intecd a | Hut one thing Id cersaln, that the Democratic | Solved Soutlorn policy, beeuuso that Hes fur be- | pioces, and to Mllit us rapidly ns possiblo with : Fullest. party, with Gen. Hnncoek., do not deem It | wero to gcleet goven mon who agceo with him as | wonderful mixtico, of SNe ee Cee | party iiite fehion, wil retormetua chet sere: | Hud us,and ts notan'iesue in. this eaminim. | Politiehuia demanding olices asapulis? Or will , ; . hocesknry to, discuss, tho puéslility of th vie- | to the principal objects to Ue accomplished, nnd | ininiy not, questibn the convictions and the mo. Toe ahnt twill certutnly ios it wiledo renee | 18 constitutional results have becononcttiv: | Fou goto the Iepubliican side, whers you have ; ‘ tory of the Greenback party and thelr nominces, | then consti and agrco with thom about the | tives of tho cnlighted and patriotic mun that | cordiug to an ol Demneratie principle, “To the | ments, uecepted by batty Eltus, in profession | tho assurance af a Civil Service whick, In spite : for tho simple reason that thelr chunces bf aue~ | monns to be used, undisturbad by the pressure of | fre in i who menn to do the best they can for | victors belong tho spolls.” ‘nat principle ts of | Atleast, and the palloy of force after tho rend | of shortcomings and mistukes, bus alrendy on £ CARL sSciuuRz. cone tenn Dersophilas te The aruinney arc: and | outalde forces, if would, indeed, bu a compara- | tho country with the means they have: but it | Demodcratle origin, and the Deinoerntic party olasion, pe ihe: tate Hebel nates has, under | tho whole proved itself capable to transuct your it (ON BPERCIE AT INDIANAFORTA, Rt ey a laa dalaewad Ey Aa eto confortable thing, But the | isnot unjust to them to say that nauy of thom |‘his adhered to it’ witha tdelity worthy of the | tls Admintatration, yleldod to # scrupulous | business honestly and elticiently, and wherd you i that the President of tho United states, | ‘arn undoubtedly not without thelr mlegivings | best cause.’ Other pilrties were Infected by it, | Tule, Of constituitonnl principles. Neithor | find alt thosa elements, that neo fulthfully and XOW I DESIRE TO PUT BREORE Your MINns | | by tho very nuturo of his position, 18 obliged to | as to tho Intter, and are held where they are by | but the Democratle party muy elnin tho al ay woul I tay nae bored repard to ne cnergetically working for a more thorough and with {mpartial candor tho question, whether tho | Send far more timo tn listening to the ndvico | tho strength of Iifo-lonz nasocintions, iby, tho | of its paternity and of tia most unawerving anl- | (ostion Of the nuuile deve At one time and to | permanent reform? Democrats candidato and tho purty behind hin | and the wishes and the urwency of inen outside | traditions of circles and constituencies within |‘voency, It may abandon any other principle, | pou vier mney ne Tee tepauliony extended per Timight go-on with tho catalog to show you ee eee ea unoe ti oreserre tune | O€ is Cabinct than to iis consultations with | which they move and frown which they Hove du- | Dut not, that, If there ever wie n Democent, | Tod. thery was tn the Republican purty ante | whery the (uth of anfety les: but It ls enowjlt. eatlol ts good In the present condition of thine, | CAbInet Ministers thaiselves. ‘Tho opposition | rived thelr position und powor: und itso by tho | cither nt the head uf the organization or in the | WEDD of opinions. a comost of contllotiue | Your own State of Indiain furnisies you ut this aad develop It In tho direction of finprovemont; | HC may encounter from the gpposing party in | opinions grown from: long struggles against | ranks, who bas proved recreant to that great | fio oayme have had Hepublican advocates of | tho contending forces here. On tho ono band, {'wlah to stnto the question mildiy, for Lam: not | Congress and In tho press tg In most cscs tho | what thay considerod, and what in some cases | doctrine, and mado proctamution of his opposl- ho payment At 0 nu att it Hf i aereen newt moment © most tustructive Mustratton. Look ot. partisan enough—Indoed, my orthodoxy In that least of tho affiicultics ho bas to contond with. | muy Lave beon, dbuees on tho other sides. men | ton to it, [ do not know his name. Itisso Te apt mt ropa pie ie onts 4e und the 1 pitt forward by the Uemocrits us tholr eun- Fosneut bag now and. then been quosiioncd—to | Tho greatest puzzica that are apt to perplox and | of good intentions, Invoring under the disud- | closely interwoven with tho traditions of that | Eome time hented und biter. hue | is Were for | dilute for the Governorship, onv of the leaders deal in wholesale and indiscriminate denunin- | sometines to overwhelm his mind come from tls | vantages of seeing tholr uspirations and on- | party thut Tdoubt very much whether ft could fone ine foe ed Lot bene H tn for n sen } of the wildest Intiation movement. one of the tion of our opponents, Ido not mean to incite | OWN party, who have aciaim upon tils attenuon, | deavors hemmed in and battled by fale | bo fbandoned without destroying the‘party’s pee . cnet tt te “et ng. lon with an | most voolferous udvoentes of tho repeal of the Your prejudices aud inflame your passions. bue | and insixe 'to have that claim rospected. Not | lowers and by olroumstances whieh thoy |-existenve, ‘That arent word, "The cohesive | Yocuetin wails ME At fue Minas bad au une | Resumption act. the successful execution of 5 Fee Tee ite ee totic | only upon the great meamtresot his Adtinistr- | cannot “control. | ‘There ia tho Southern | ‘power of publie plunder,” had ita firat and most | frit tnstiuet which in the und wade tt turn | whieh ius confotred upon tho Atneriean people ‘ mate conclusions. 1 do not want the party to | ton, but upon overy dotail the advico of the | olument, of which 1 shall certainly not | polnted ppltention to'tho Democrnoys And, | Wor tn SaiP ing Repubtionn i Fiche side Up. | such inestimable blessings. Which | belong todepend for suecess Upon the | Members of his party, cspectally those it Con- | bo inulined to deny that a marked ime | inleed, when we fool at tho heteroencons | Non, i Jie the Hepubiienl majorite in Cone WHERE WOULD OUN PitcsrEntTy nn failings of its opponents, and Tum thorefore not | ste, {surged upon him with all jutuinab’e provement has taken place in temper and In- | elements to-day, tt fs not.cusy to tinnsine any | Hrves Geena toe tt oS eae N the publi es Jnolined to exaggerate tho latter, Whilo adhor- | Sorts of argunient and from all imaginablesorts | syirtions of inany of itslending men, whohave | othor cohestve yower which could hold’ thom to- HY pring po! an is erest, in co a hore syas ] had he and his followers prevailed? And now ing to onu party L desire the ollier to be ns good | OC motive, ‘Thora ts scarcely an appointment bo | east tho old ambitions of tho War-period behind | gothor. «If Gon. Huncock, or any other leader, | IM cit on a aud disguised tn tiie: T intlon fou find lm: the representative man of the Mee ao aaibie ay aa. to compel my own todo its | bis to mike, thoro is certainly not w roform he | thom and are now with a patriot spirit, en= | should signify bis Intention to nbanion it, every | Havement, open and dituiecd, tn the Ttopub- | Domucratiy partys atl advocating bis wild doc Dest i thie respect, therefore, t sincerely doe | Wabts to excantte, that he will hot havo to carry | dcavoring tu serve the country, and to. whom, | Democrat in the land would, re the news | PS, en In 18ib the Republican mie | trines, and hoplig for thelr triumph, whlch claro that. wish well to tho Démocratio purty, | through a siege and storin of opposing wishes | thorofory, our esteem fs due. “It fs also: true | with an ironteal smite, and simply gay that that eee tn athe cial eise eI surptton ety | would ho the rain ef your prosperity. You any Toneo participated in an nitempt. which attempt | and interests. Ivory ubjoct he pursues will run | unit thoy” begin to -be supported by a class of | lender know 4 trick oF two, If such an Inton- | irencomnable oud, once ond forever, af thd | certainly mindful of thn fuet that the wlso and : miscarried, to move ft up to the progressive re- | counter to tho wishes not only of his opponcats, | orderly and well-meaning citizens; but It is not | tion were declored, and the declaration be- st at o paper menos, pusltes nthe F patriotic men among you, and Tam glad to eny: SE ee ee ene eeekantling pos | butsomne of his friends; ovory reform tho oxo | Tess true that thoy tind thomsuives hampered | loved, {tie not unlikely that thotr Hosta wontd | PuUllean party. Thorn who, remulned ree | that they were m muusority of your voters, mudy tient parties ina republic should be such In | cutton of which may appcar to him desirable | and clogged by noley. faations in tholr constitu- | disband at ouee. When the Democracy, thore- | pullutionists or tutemancy men did not rénnin | un effort to Ho away with the scandals of frauds point of mental and moral constitution and | Will tread upon tho toes of somebody whose tn- | enoics, who, whothor they nro a ianfority. ‘or not, | fore, spenks of n reform of the Clvil-Service, the ere gant ae Se oe tho jeuders or tho } ulenc voting, atlenig from tho absence of agond capability that the Government muy be in- | ferests licin tho abuse to be. reformed, (or who | oudentor, nind I regrat toany in tnany Instances | meaning of that torm, in tho light of history’ and | BAF, dhoy tried thelr fuck for some tine, ine | registration law and the seductive opportunities ne trusted fo elthor without aerioun upprebension | has a friend to protect who is connected with It} suovenstyily, to impress thelr temper upon tho | of the tor ies nt present prevailing, can bo | Sle of its then they lett It. And beonine Tiles furnished by your October elections. You know : for tho éafoly of tle public hmerest.. Thopett | and all these pleus, representations, romon= } charactet of tho Southern politics; stil emart- | nothing ele tunn that the reform shail consist | Penson’ Crccumackers. nit Bealls mestagtiiom | how wimajurity: of sour, eltizens with the np. {will bo so somo day, and £wial it wore so now, | Strances, urgonclos, ‘and pressures 4) to, tho | Ing undor tho defeats of the War and the losses | in putting +t ail the Hepublicans, and put- | Ceti drecntuckers, who Tor atime beeaime iis | Rimuse AE all falraninded men in te country ‘i ‘Let us 800 whothor It {9 now. ‘President, not through tho imnembera of bia Cabl- |) which those defoata had brought upon them; | ting all wemecrits in thelr places, What a biped shy pati le vost By wi re ba ag naire ae voted and carried that reform atin election held DOr Och REMAKE INE Sta DAMON not, bubbehind thoirbaekss aud (ism inutter of | ome of thom with n sullen fecling that thore | reform thar would bol How the North andsouth | Memendenta, ncetly wont luk there, | Gen | fur thu rutiention, of your conatituttonat fe appear ee En The emteatio party | fit dud varied. exporictieg thal. unless the | cients wero an insult an well dea wrong to | Would shubvaver the bloody ehnam led vith | Metta gute, vue wit ne. doube. Aually turer | Sue et yet Ne ete Maalorite wae aoe datos hinictlomae: wall paral eR Presi lont titngolt’ his nFuficient knowledge of | thom, for which, in some way, thay must | such good things! Want a host of mon wauld mola as ny fo, Bat wi he joubt Analy mutes | Judues that decision of the majority was sot Tituaitles ines the downelll nnd alsnppont= affairs, a clenr oyo to Ree through armiments haye’ satisfaction; - with a vagio desire to} be marching upon tho Capitut. from alt | Ma ‘sound Democrate. P nside upon recsous which made tho whole lemat Re Tee a CIICe BEG n Me TC GORTIDCE neitioal | nt mullves, und thnk tomas an SRI HX | rotriova of, | tha | old. | condition « of: | -qnaerers of the cumpuss, cach cue feeling thnk BUT WILE THE pestocnatic banty hrofussion suru tho country aver, IM that, tho Fae te ee ee eons Pomarge | Seoaaneeneney to resist without offending, and to } things | something | thoy, do not kuow exe | hw fa chon to serve tho pubic, ond) that | nos been attra.tiog euch elements, the ftepub- party: whieh as eltizens of fnlsuna, mindlul of ite logic, tte political slcill ‘and stutesmanshiv, | mun who hus not witnessed tt hasan adequate | well rt - fortit " 1 +} sound principles or ejectiig thom until they ‘i oX 2) , as in society, and Jn their worldly fortunes | when the Democracy fects sunguing of success, ost wholly disappeared aro: i Now look to tho other slic. “Your Republican that party has been floundering about, ont of if 1 ho most. populie. work of bmiast pe IPORTAL Aso tes eevOy onntidate for the Gavernorship Is one of your lon of | tho furlous , pressuro tho | as compured with the rest_ of mankind: rather | 19 it ulwaye does, t Jomieal convection with the qtesHons of tledart | Prostient.lseubjeotod tr expecta during tho | feckica of tho tights of others: with inancit | literature with Demnerate, even with those who | four ofiue Netioual: telth land que party oe | uFest, best informed. and most useful nnd pate Hover Imowing tho timo of day gntways walt | fret period of bis adinin stration: and that | {tons deatituto of a duo. regard for te wood | noyer read n bok before, ts tho Hlue Hook,” | sound moneys Tiare no doubt tent the diss | Hote men, who on every question of public in for gomothing tatumup, and, Whon somuthing | grat period ie apt to dotarnitno the cunracterof | faith of the eountey, Mlined to uy Lonny mone | being the register af oflees under the Gover | hyreunionta sill exiatiay upon Hnniveint subsets terest tants on tho site of the honur of the q et UP. spo ne 3 cutee lanai tn the the whole. No Cabinot Mintster can carry out 2 | cy system which thoy ruguely think can tie mu+ | ment, with salaries uttitched, euch active Demo- | of minor impurtaney in the Reputll purty | country: and the welfare of its ¢itkxens; whom rene oF oe ren eos eautrenionty:, Of ie reform fn tho branch of tho public xervico over | pipitated go ng to mnke them rich amin by leg- | erat solecting bls, and mnnny' the eame. Will bo solver in the sume way after inature dive | even the volvo of slander caunot reach, and to Cee ee tnt were itndy nes | {iTich Be presidos wntess ho hie the Vresident at | ordemuins deeming (tdue to thom that large ab- | Now Ler Us SER WHAT THAT souT OF Dewo- | cussion. ‘This tendoney in tho Repubiienn party SL genie cg Ouag aeciagT et Pompilsved feta: with n strange inenpaclly to | pioneer’ and aincenvice branabe to, bear upon | Pr inviong Hote Banya foe. Cu Bnet CRATIC REFORM has been owing tu some very characteristic | Hesitation commit thelr titers. x] Hpeetat Dispatch to The Chicago Tribune, Ixpranarouis, Ind., July 20,—The recep- tion of the Hon, Carl Schurz to-day has been another manifestation of the great interest taken by the Republicans In the opening cam- paign. During the «day the Seeretary’s parlors ot the Grand Iotel were thronged with callers, 9 noticeably large number of ‘those who pald their respects belng Germans, representative men of their class, Among others, Gen. Ben Har- ison called, spending an hour or more in conversation touching the enmpnign and tho outlook, In tho afternoon he’ rode about the city “with friends, visiting sev- eral of the larger manufacturing estab- lshments, where he, was received by scores of hJs countrymen, regardless of party afMiintions, By 7:80 this evening his hotel was ngaln filled, the crowd that surrounded it taking entire possession of the street, With such an escort ho proceeded to the Wigwam anid the firing of cannon and the playing of bands and the rush and blinding glare of flreworks. So ‘Immense was tho crowd that with great diMoulty ho reached the hall, where every seat and inch of stand- ing room had been pretmpted’ by an onthust- astic audience long before the hour of speak- MAL THE BTAGH WAS OCCUPIED by ladies, while many stood up In the dense Nauillence, needing no other support than the Pressure of the crowd itself. It was gener- ally remarked that 1 better ardience: or one more orderly had never been gathered in Indianapolis, As~-tho ifuinguished visitor, i if : ‘ “laa really Tee Moonie moreioahtdce ord | Hustention Indinny gives of the churucter of witered he was greeted ww Yotnds of | Understand tho pregont and tomensure the fut> | him against such’n reform, tho Cabinot Minister | hud, and {idifferent, merely to pour money inte in tho Civil ery lee renlly medns and what. ite | cause: rudut v our Natfonul contest. applause, which Wo gracefully acknowledged | Horn auntie. trele ea Aaa ee yal leg will find himself bailled ut every step. that section uf the "enuntry with senreuly, any ofee ht HT ue hate SERA aa cal tant an onde “oF toue iti ahievae tae a a WHAT 18 THERE THEN ON THR DRMOCRATIC as he elbowed hig Way to the table In front. | Blesana olomonts, and thus committing blunder 2 SEA TRAE PEORIBENCE panaliions in mevvenmant, escepy nih, i ee: tho asta of it hus’ not ino eo far ns was | Rencra Interests of the people, UuE IL was ate | a ; Gen. George Il. Chapman Introduced him, | after blunder, whieh at the moment of thalr | Whon Teny that most of the goot things that | Istod in thelr brates boforo tho War, and the re sdesiruble, but T may say atso | tho trtditional fecling yrown out of the loyal ute | whieh could eeduco you from tho mith of safety? ‘ Intonued und w with the single remark that lic was known to ‘thu : all Republicans, not only in this country, but to those of the world, wherever y tC miore has been uceomptlahed than has been | Utude of the Republicgn purty during the Civil | ta it tho noniuntion for the Presidency of a Rolloy, from tho Kecoastan) movement fu, 18 Whatever morie the reshective Cabinet stiaisters Fee eee maeiponed! UF | gunerully known and belioved. Lrepeat, itiann | Wari aupport of the Uiilon and tho preserva. | suldier who duritiz the War did brave deoils and dow the nomination of Gen. Hincock in | Ty Teeited and falthtitl support, frequently | oflice, and greedy to muke tho most ‘of that If almost universally wcknowledged tuet that tho tha 1H ‘s ne emir duty | deserved well of the country? Ix te a pense of birth it uniformly ied inas gront strokes of | huve Ween dona under this Administrntion, ediuuly atten with ane of tho party im- EOL residing. Mr, Schurz spoke with his accus- nleurchouded, and faithful support, frequently | itey gam obtain tte M present. public business Is, on the wholo, well | that all the obligations contracted for so eucred | gratitude for. thove Lirase docda that shoutd ton ‘ a ‘hore aro many good and clenr-headed mon in | galled | amluble obstinacy," with whicl ‘i find honestly conducted in the Government | & purpose must be and remulnenceed and tn- | muke you elavat®§ tho xotdier to tho place In foment Vigor, Areating Hie "mapee. Jeane en: tho Democratic part men. Wh T personally, Arwalent Hinges ins stood behind them by THERE 18 THE NONTHERN DEMOCRACY, otiices, The’ revenues nre collected with re- | Violable, Thereforo ft was that tho idea of ree | which “an statesman 13 wanted? Gratiiudoe to erteem and whoso friendship’ 1 valuo, who de- ing Off. the opposition. -It is for sich roa- | qlso with mon of statcsman-like instincta in it | markuble -fldelity, and never i tho, bistory of | pudiution never could obtain a permanent foot- | those who on tho fleld of buttlo bared their lore this condition of things ‘ns much’ naldo, | Spe Of Inostlimulilo venue to an administration | and excellent intentions, but behind them a | the country hus the loss In thelr collecuion Toe | Bott among Republicans, whatever the vaciltti- | breasts to tho cnemfes of tho eauntry Is 4 sen- Bitnre unatio to contra! the obstroperons clos | tut tho F: resident hiinsolf should havo had tho | urge nuiuber of restless ‘and ambitious polltt- | ag einall ns now. In some of te branelies It bus tons nf Individual minds auring it menta and tendencies of tho organizution, and exnerionoe ot wa ve work in logialntive podtee clans who, for twenty senrs, have been boxl almont entirely dieappenred, The postal service to fit it for the tasks and responsibilities of gov- | S24 cepectally in Hig Congress of tho United | tho compass to tind some principle or some pole | is ucknowledged to be more than everably, hon- esfuns of tho finaneitl problem | United States a mere bauble that should bo ernment. . Bene At witl require ina President a high do- | juy, to avail thomeulyes of some pasion, or | estly, and efticiently dane. ‘en itt those | inspired the inost powertul arguments that | given asa reward tor things done on a ficld of “It la not my habit to rake up tho’ embers of | Hee 0! thut intuitive genius with which but | adie prejudice by which they might whtan | branches of the public service whieh more than | Drought the Republ{can masses to a sound ap | action wholly: dierent? past discordy nd. to substitute, for tho lil very faw mon Se. century are endowed ts make | election and regain tho posscealon of power. | others buve almost from tho begining of the preciauon of the nfoney question, Je the T'restdency like a presentition sword, or questions of tho presont Issucs which Io Dentid | wis, administration successful without that ex- | such an element, however, will bo found more | Government borno the reputation of being ine | | In this way. the Topubliean party, ngift horee, or a donation of monoy, or a ta; but if wo want to ascertain the prevailing | Pgrlence. forth ages or less represented In all partics. But tho De- | efliciont and corrupt, such as the Jand, anil eae | Progressing In i try house, given to a vietorigus soldier to pl tendencies and the present eapabtiity for good Now put, forthe sake of argument, in that | mocracy has had the misfortune of oxercluing a | pecially tho Indian service, cases.of peulation, | principles of sound Hance, his bee nly If so, then slinple justice would compel 18 governmont of tho Democratic party In accord } Tost tying position Gen, Haswcook, orany mun | remarkable powor of uttraction for.the idyen- | and roguery bave become compar; vely rar, | lable sound money party’ of tho country, to | to look for tho most mncritorious of our soldiers, fheo with thoepint nud: requirements Of (ho trained exclusively in the walks of army life, | turoys aud even the dangerous elements of our | and tho general inelliciency of ol§cers is very | Which, as partics now are, tho ‘solution of now | and reward them In the order of tholr merit; punctuated with chery and at the mention of Ganrileld the crowd Iiterally rose to Its fect nud cheered, In passing out Gen. Uender- Bon remarked It was ONE OF THE GREATEST SPEECHES to which he had ever listened. At its close the crowd gavo three rousluz cheers for the Bpeaker, with three for Garfield and threo for Porter. 1t was very generally regretted that Mr. Porter could riot be present.. Owing to an cngugement: at Brazil he was_coim- ited period {| thoent of which I shall nat slightlngly speak; It 1. And tho abhorrunee of repuidla- | jen noble sentiment; but Is the Preatt font of the G an enlightened percept vn of which be {8 so Conapicuous an ornamont.—L | population; unt ita attempts to reuin power by | much tinproved; and { speite of ais with nde | Mnanclal problems can alone bo safely trusted. | and, brave and skillful us Gen. Thurcoels hus pulled Lf ip ate ‘ snes Becretary ante the Fe ee yi tice as Tptile. to ruylow eolno moan man net endowed | with shat, intuitive nib eort OF dovives and tho advovoey at aul sr aura, fr tue Fearon out Rf miggeunversint And how magnificently 09, tho effects of thy tee ect, tore ary othors who hve glatine oft stil . 7 . * 3 of principlosand policies buvo ore under with the detaila, ow bus tl in brought " higher order, Thon, Gen, Grant buving already the Indian Agencies. LOOKING MACK TO THE YEAU 18h, hia mnost ardent frionds, ast understand, donot | fanner 6 many: Miversent tendencies and. Ine | nowt? * our prosperity: heen President, we ‘should reward, Gen, Siere Z P THE BPRECT. if FetLow-Crrizens: In response to the invita- fion with which a largo numbor of citizens of Andlunapotis bave honured mo, {shall Aponte 2 job wili bo yt tho fourth year of. tho Civil War, whon tho | claim for Gon, Hancock, What has there been | con; loments, held together by the onl: In the first place, officers of all les wero Tt may be sitld that our fuanctal policyhas uot | man and Lleut.-Gen, Shortdan tret before wo See ee a eee ee ee ete Reboel SE hia past Ife eC Ie In Ton Te | serra oa tee ae oe ee eee cere eucuesty GE whats | wholly Originited tuat prosperity. “rruo, but it | gowets tho Slajor-Genorm nowminuted by the hnustion of ita resources, wo find tho Domo- | Asi buy ho waa uccepted by tho Governmont ts | Woon’ tho party comes into power nobody cun | over kind or degrey would tnder ho. clrout | has most powerfully alded it by givin us thut | Democratic purty. Cortainly, lot us bewratetul; oratto party Jn National Convention sutcmnly | a eadetat West Yotut, and that was his college | toll which olemont will bo uppermost in | stances be tolerated, Olicers guilty of corript | contidence which Is impossible without stable | but tot us not dexrady the highest und most re- declaring that tho War was 9 fuiluro'and must | and university. Ihave tigh respect for that | strength and dutermino the current of Its pol- | practices, whenever tholr guilt was shown with | Money valucy und o sound currency ayatcut. | sponsible trust of the Republic to the level of o ‘ bo abandoned, A fow months afterward tho | military school, Bvery brauch of military: scl- toy, suillelent’ clourness, bave been exposed and | And what prudent man would now risk these | mery gift of gratitude, Let military herova be triumph of our arms was deoldod, and the Con- | enoa ie ttught there, I have no doubt, with ivhus wo find there the hardest of hard-moncy | ofected from thelr places without besitation, | krent results: by turning aver our tnanctul | lifted up to the highest rink in’ the gorvice foderavy collapsed, tho restoration of our Union | knowledge, vidll, and success. ‘Tho priveiples | men band In hand with tho witdest of {utlution- | Evory man in the servieo understanding this, It | policy to the bands of a party, which, nT bave | whieh belongs to the soldier, Let thom bo re 1 Was uesured, and the Democracy wns forcod to | of milltary honor and. the. great law. of com- | fats, the freest of free-truders and:the stifteat | muy ie sald thut (f persons with thlevtug pro- | shown, Is tho refuge of all destructive elemonts | warded with tho esteem of. thelr countrymon; acknowledge thut tho War bad been a success, | mand and obedience are inoulontoi! ng the guld- | of ‘Frotectiontates we tind thom tn tholr plut- | penisities were left or put in place, they | threatening now uneertaluly and eonpustan? and. §f need be, fot woulth and luxury be show= The Democracy had prochitmed its despair of | ny stars of tho future life af the student. ‘Tha | forma declaring for the restoration of apecie | did {most cases not duro to steul.. Se Indeed not only in tho tradition® and xood | ored upon thom to brighten that life which thoy tho Hepublic just at the timo when the triumph | uffatrs of ordinary human existence outside uf | payments ta satisfy one partand tho ropeal of | ondly, the. nunbor: of removuls mude. by | senso of tho Republican party: do you tind tho | wore ready to sucriticy fur thor cuuntry, : of the Republic was ripe, It became evident | the infiltary profession and the provlems it bus | tno Heaumption Iw to sutlafy tho othor part of | this” Adminetration bas beou coinpara- | best security thore 19 it present for tho sanctity But lee i never bo forgotten thut: the Presl- : to every one that, had tho Domocratic polley | to deul with aro nocessurily treated ua mattora | tho orgunizution.» We tind mon who would goorn | tvely mall, Not only clorka iy tho dopart- | of our National faith as well aso sucecssCul | doney ise trust that is due to no nian; thut No- been thon adoptod, the War would have iudecd | of only secondury moment, Our military school | tho ideu of faithiesness to our Nutlonal obvi | mouts, but’ officers appointed for a term of | maimigement of tho tnuneial polloy; you tnd | body hng ever earned it a8 a thing belonging to become uo falluro and tho Union huve gone to | ut West Point haa given is many glorious sol- | tiona in tho closest alliaice and eoiperation | years were generally {rein thole places ns tone | equal security in the known opliiians ind pricle him, and that itshoutd not be bestowed but for wreek and ruin, : { |. diera who bave udorned tho bistory uf the coun | with thoso who. repudiated tho dobts In tholr | ns they sbowed tho nececsiry degrey of ability, | ples of ite candidate, Jumes A. Gurileld. Lis | sorvices rendered in the way of patriotiound cn- 9 ‘When slavery breathod {ts Inat and {ta aboll-"| try; butithus mover been protonded that it | own Stutes, and who would not hesitate a | and niboloney inthe diselurae or tholranties. | convictions on these subjects baye not found | lightened stateampnship. ' tion had become an evident logical necessity, |- wis mount to be, or was, a school of statesman) moment to repudiace tho debts of the Iopub- | Jn this way tho service retained a very yalnable tholr first nod best proclamation In the platforiy re At requiring nothing moro than the form of law, | ship. ‘Thut school absolved, the young man on- | ie. Wo find men sincorcly desirous of oul- | stock of alliciul oxperionce whieh could not but | ot lla party or in his lettor of ueceptunce. His RUT, AVOVE ALL THINGS, THE PARSIDENOY tho Democratic party Goolured thut tho ubolitton| tured Into the rugulur aro service, Of all | tivuting among tle Southurn poople tho heart.’ | tell In its genural eftictoncy, while at tho, rume record of nearly twenty yeurs of Congresstonul | should never be polnted ang ag tho attainable of slavery would bo tho ruin of the country and |, claysca of our soctoty {t may bo sald that our | jest sontiments of loynity to typublie and | tine title servunte ‘wore tnibued with a feeling | service fs not wblonk on the gront questions of | onl of ambition to the professional soldier, tnuat by all means bo averted, Who Js there to |, regulur army Is tho most oxoluaive, the most | respect for tho rights of all, irrespoctive of | that cho best Way to seonire thenmwelves In place | the tines, Uke thut of bis opponent. There ts | certalily do nat menn to dopreciate Hie bigh deny now tht the abolition. of “slavery was an |' widely soparatod from tho ordinury business life | color, and by tholr side men who atill think that | wus to porform their duties according totho best | Hot 8 phage of the question of our National ob- | character of the regular army. Butt cannot absolute necessity, and bea turned aut a bloss- | of the people in point of symputhy, duty, aud | dir own riuthes fare worth nothtug untess thoy |, standard, ‘Thirdly, im appointing new mun etre | Hentions; thoro ts not a polntof financial bolleyy retrain fromsuying that, iu n Ropublic ike ou: Ing’ ‘The Democrats aro compolled to admit it | hnbit. If wo bave an apart class ‘among ‘us, 4 | are permitted to Uppress the rights of othors, |! wus taken to solect such as would prosumubly |; from the frat day that the subject was consis | great care should be taken not to demonize It 1 thomsvives. | ‘ cluss whose vontact with tho cures, and endeav> Andie Muust fat bo forgotten that upan theso | be capable to: perform the taske assigned to |! cred In Congress sinco bo ‘became th inember of | by Anetitling political ambition fate the nunds of ‘Whon us ménsures of sottioment the Thir- | org, and business, and objects of the lifoof tho | diferent elomonté the olliclal declurations of | thom. in some departments, and in a number | tnt body to the present bour, wat be has not Its otticors, Pho army Is there to obey the ordera ‘ toonth, Fourtocnth, aud Fiftecuth Amendments | masses fe only oocasionn! and unsympathotlo, a | platrorina avo nat tho least offoct. While the | of the larger Government. tiatitutions In. tho | discussed with un ability and strengthen tuchiity | Of tho civil, power tila tho law ns tt Bian. | wero passed, the Democratic party deelnrod | class that fn [ts ideas and nite fd keparaten from purty In fis Natlonal, Convention declares tur | country, systoms of examinations wero intro | Of ursument, amplitude of knowledge nd firme | without looking to tho rightor tho left, And It no of & 2 3 = ‘¢ 5 o = Py & & 6 2 = 2 es Ss FI a z e acddross myself to the conservative busincss-mon of tho country, whoxo Interest. in politics is only: at of the public good. Bball appeal not to your passions but to your renson, and without any rogort to tho wrtitiecs: af. oratory give yous patie pructical talk, ‘Phe language of party wartare isupt to tly to violont exngyerations for the purpose of pro- duelng strong impressions; the lunguuge of ren- ton and common sonse will abytaln from thom, Let mo suy ut the outset, thorofora, thut Ido not agroo with thoge who apouk of tho present Moment as tho groatest crials in the bistory of American affain, The questions wo havo to dls- of nre not thoso of Immedinta Hfo ordonth; ut the bering they huve upon the futuro wel- tare of the Nation, and upon thogo Interosts Srhith most nowy: affoot ug, fsimportantonough to mnke ua conafdor well what wo are doing, to pal for our beat Judgment, and a atronuous of- fort to put that udimant, Into oxccution, In tho first placo lot ua mako It vlour in our own tolnds what wo want, ‘Tho answor Is, Jno judd, thy & | thom votd and entitled to no respect, and atmost | the multitude, it Is the ollloors of tha, regular 1 ? ic ones ty vine | ness of conviction, placing him tnt! rst rank | willho anevil day for this Republic when we ine ! Hach orm tat wo wunt a yood Govornmenti | fnmediutely attorward found itvelt compelled |' army. v = pute: paymbnty Thad dous eee eee ee oe cirisitg thommelves or boltg wyyed | OF tuo defenders ‘ae mune peiiel ited. spiro tho Genorils of ole army. wilt tug aun ANU If Wo buve It'note wo Rust arden vor ro gor. | tC Nauue that for tho peice of tho vountry and) |, THIS 18 NOT MEANT TO DISCREDIT sumption in Congress, or the Democrats of Ohio | for olficlat position, while thoy furnished piso o IF YOU WANT TO STUDY THE NEASONS bition to yeanye she hiya power by paving: ie: Whatis quod quccrnanent. Wo wuy aneeor nn basta Jor future dodelapinell. shee. const | tr any senso tho character of olir sorvice dr of | froin nomluating thelr, lnilaion lenilur, Gen. | yood mousury of tho cupnelty of tho applicants. | why the publlo fulth should be invtolably anntn= | Pele wy to Ue a ti Feel prone ae ame ' io, in qonernl terms, that ft ta 0 government Eee ae ait histor: whon | (oailoors in its it la tha almost unavoidable |, Ewing, or the Democruta in luiiant from noms ‘TUB SYSTEM OF RXAMINATION talned, why: an irrodeemublo papor etrrenoy is, A understands thu public business, and, UNderwtanding it, trunsaota tt within tho {imits OF its constitution! power, {tetalitsontlys hon- gatly’, wad justly. ‘Tho sccond question wa buve 1 uuawer to ourgolves fs, how fur tho Goverus ont wo have comes up to. these requisita, haw far tho principles upon whieh ft nots, te moth- oda it omploys, the alms It purses, and tho de- grvo of ellicfoncy It develops, answer the public Heed, and-how ‘far in this respect wo ought to Preserve what wo have or look for othor things ‘Wo buve not, SV A MEMUER OF THE PRESENT ADMINISTILA- TION pet on the point of 7iolding {ts power {nto tho ands of a now sot of public sorvants, I may bo permitted to appoit! to the vandid judgmont of 8 Ainorican peopte as to tho manner in which tho public buslues4 has been conducted duriag these lust years, Whilo ft might bu natural that, Dearing part of tho responsibility myaclr, L wl ycrining, fawn, to gnory recent bisogs, when | necuilurty of thete tein aad atuution, for | Inutiay the int-money min, Landurs, £or tho.| may mot init cnses Crna an ausolutets cll. | and wlwnyanne pooh x cra {0 ll diy econ Bede ony ately Aornn. TG Tnay Ree. S : Vi which thoy are tn no way reeponutale, Tholr |: Governorahip of those States; nor doca it pro | abty test, hut it hus oreved to be anintinitly | interests of this and all other countrica why con~ Y ot suumopuo nat fa 168, eu tho frutt of the unter |-Guticn muy we arduoiost Duty ueaope fs plaves | ent tho Heniocrats in many or the Westerauad | better eat thin inore cecommeniiation fount poe | feheo oun be, reniorwd and quuineainon» why ae ee netic rs tha protiduney, Hon of spuci-paymonte was ubnost ripe tobe | of highust eommaud iu ‘notive wirfuryy thoy | Soutuurn Bintex from pursuing thelr greenback | iitleal favor. Ht hus not buen oxtended ns fur ue | luisinead ean obtain u uoalthy dovelunment, why | Tine yan oneg estubliah such precedent, aud Soe ee Ce a art ting ts {ate oxtromoly slinplo, epecitio, and parrow; | auitation us luattly ua before, {t should be, but a good beginning hn been | furehmn commerce van be most protitably con | who knows how long tt will bo bufore. you’ bear. deolare iat the Yory wut passed for einilog and it ia ® common experience that tho WHILE THEY DECLARY VOI AN OSERVANCH made, cnpable of argu oxtension and develop | diated only wien mo Biy syatem of stuble and | of other general orders issued for purposes” Bpeolo- paymenta was un fimpodiment in its way montal horizon of mon apt to become | of or Nattonal obligations, that docs not hindor | ment. Fourthly, the pnictice of innking promos | intrinsic value, you will lind in the specches Of | yomowhat simllir to those for which they ure. SOC OA bu opaul pediment nits way | iinited by. the sphore of thelr dutiog, “T | tho Demooruts in muny of {ho Southern Stutes |, tons from lower ta nigher pluces for wood olf | umes A, Guriicld upon this subject tho test | now tusued in dtexico? Lim for the suboniina Guay mow thie, bud tuo ace boon ropeuted wuder | Have hoard tt sald a hundred ties, by mon who | from going on in tholr work “fiveal repudiation, | cinl services rendered, not only in tte depart- | instructive and convincing Information, You | othe military to the olvil power, And theres ee ud spent the boat part of tholr lives dn the reg- | and declaring that local repudiation 18 #0 Road 5 menta, but ntso In somo branches of the survive | will And there opinions not suddenly mudo up | gory Tom for making Congressman Gartlold’ iit a a Coe a TTT OGe eaogiul palioy. | War army, and then worothrown upon thoirown | thing that it ought to be made goneral. Outside of them, Has been carried outto a much | te order to sultan opportunity and tha nccoaal- mi for lottiy Gon” ikaneoek ropinin ri Cenoral, always ready to draw tha, | o resources to make 0 living in ordinary puraul those factions, tuceo Incongruous cloments, nre | greater extent than ts gencrally known, this |'ties of a cand{dute 1h an election, but tho con- nugesaatily ensuing would have, prolomred the | thas thoir army life hud winilfted thar for the, | bold toxethar by-one great guise =tbat iy the | Thrnlahing anoiner atimiiue to tha zoul Af tue | vietions ‘atin lifeline, uretully matured. by Dultler’s wword ut tie Inwful counmund of (he wh ‘wo wore thon sulforing? L Mea De joveryeday taki of socioty. ‘hoy found thom- | uppotite for publio plunder, which the exclusion | pubite servants, Irepoat that inlatakea In ap- | ‘conscientious reavarch and large inquiry, and | civiipawer. + t wh ul no further examples to show bow Isclvds, in a multitude of ex ‘uttorly bewil- | from power for twenty years bas stimulated to | polntimonts have undoubtedly uccurred, some of | malutalned with powerful rensan, bofore they bs berry tha Domocratie earty proved iteclt dored by the competition they had to run with |-a degree of koennuss sourcely vor docn | iimore or less cousplenous kind, the | bid become generally. popular. You fad WHAT KAVE WE ON THE OTHEI HAND .. atten id aud appreciate Oe ouly. tho. tie thoso who hid been trained fu olvil ‘pursuita,,| before, Now consider that, {€ Gon, Hun- | principles of n thorough veform have not been | thora —u —teachor, © statesman, und | inthe Iepublicun candiduto? His zouth 9, fo a one ioe ae herr ane OF tho times, but favta | How 9 It possible Wo arsuiuo that ion who Lave’) cock cin ever be elected, it ust bo by’s. very | us uotversally applied ng they should have heon, | leader Inu great moyomont, with | that ata poor boy. flo Hved by his‘daily labor, that Rad boon vitt ally accomplished, and how | Peat ‘tha bust partof tholr lives, who hove | honrty cobporation of all those elements—tha | Great ories have been mised about Instuncesit™| ‘principles. so truly grounded in his mull | Ho rose up from that estate graduall, hl yy. 1 putes grown old tn that exclusive atmosphoro, should | Greonback-Democrats tn Ohio, Maino, and In | which those prinalples appear to buvo been dis- | 6 well us his conscloncs, that bo would uphold | own effort, taking with him the experience of clattieg cus that hl Goesing Inova ble stow particnlar fitiea for ented comploxand | divun and the West and ‘South’ with thu hurd. |'reyardod; but undor the old rexuiar polls sy ¢ " i Y confuniug of ail dutios, tho highest olvil oflivy t in Now York, Nowd tothor | 4 insta tio rule, ¢ thom ovon wore they Hot euppariell by t powers | poverty and Hitt wor et ee K wing of al : ighest clvil offtogin | money mien in New York, Nuw Jersey, und other | tem auch instances wero tho rule, com- | ful party a wok: Thore ia double assure | wi o poor and hard-working mop. ja! Partormanes, sti foot that ay mae rit at lee ta deate yy evant tenia ae vorpal the Jand¢ a States; tho pratoctiontst3 Tn one quarter, and | pilunco with whicn would not havo’ boon ned. tncrefor, Jn the traditions and ucts of tho cultivated! bis mind by diligent stu aud ig ure Independent chough nut tobotray mo lito i awe It may be sald, thorefore, without exaggora-. | ‘tho frvo-traders in unother; the War Domocrata | ‘oriticixed at all; and tho very erica that are | party and in the charactor of tho Ivadur ut ite fe ore (E oe Beata rtd, Bron i ptés} Ub FRA ATE v Folecs eee Ff AND NOW IN THIS YEAIt OF 1880, tion, that in ao nundred cases to one, by taking | in tho North aud the rencUouury elumonts clag- | now raised with regard to them in our cide wad. : whon tho War fesues ure fairly bohind us; when | an old rogulur army olicor, who has noyor boon | whores uid to ull thoge clomonta togutber, Gen. | prove that at present thoy aro tho exeoption. | Av ta tho Civil Borvico, I have ‘stated to you | Hy called ber sons tu hor dofonse he Jolnod tho by its conallfatory apirit and. ita strict obserys || anything elue, and putting bim into the highost | Huncock, if successful ut ull, will owe big euce no very kind of criticism applied to the | what, in my opinion, its condition la to-day, and | urmy and acbleved distinction tn pottve servico auvo of vonstitutional prinoiplos the Qoyorn- | and most ditfleutt political ition, yuu may | cess; and all those elements, {f tho successsul | Administration shows thie things have grown | that opinion accords, E thluk, with that of pvery | wsone of the brave on tho battlefield. Ho was meout hus removed nll the elemonts of discord spol an exceliont Goucral fn making a poor] party isto bo miuintainod in its ptruugt ui better, In spite of the Imperfections of tho | fulreminded observer, As to what it will become | called into the great Council of the Nation, und , between tho two sootlona which it was'tn sown | President. continued fu power, wust be satlslicd In order | methods followed, tho result bug been that tho | fn casy of 4 Republican victory, L shull nut pros | bas sat thore for tearly twenty yours. No great: power to remove; when, uided by a wise and There ho 4s, with wn honest intontion to do | to hold thom toyethor. publio business fa recognized to bo conducted | divt tho millennium, neithor from tho knowledge question wus discussed without his contribuuug: successful fitanclal po ry, meneral prosperity te] right mid to serve his country, Problems of ‘That will bo the situation and such tho prob: how in waoore businest-like manner than be- | Uhove of the obatactes In tho way of a pera | thy store of hid knowledue to the fund of Ine again blessing tho land, and when the people | financial’ palloy suddenty rise Up before hiu,— || lem which tho soldlor, to whom politioal sclenow | fore,and that tho-efticluncy af tho service hag nent reforms on sound brineciplad, nor fron tho | formuthnt necessary for wise decision, His Joo! above ull things for vullehtenci | questions of revenue, of commercial palfey, not'} und managumontse far bave beon a sualed book, | bron lifted yp ton much bighor standard. Ry, platform, nor frou the lust utteranve of | speeches biye ranked not only moony tho most prictical statesmausbip that well “under | jn the way of gonoral maxima and vague prinol- | will havo to golva, What will ue do to satlefy tho ‘Now substitute fur this the Democratic reform, | the “candidate, One thing, howoyer, may be | tustractiveand useful, Scurcely a single grout stands tho questions it bus to deal with | ples, but fn the mysterious shape of pructival | hard-money ion without delving tho Groon- | making a cleanswoop uccording to tho old rpolly taken for certalu: the adiminiatradve machine | measure of ieglelwion wus passed during that tu fostor and develop that prouporlty’s problems to be 1 to a yiyon state of cies | backers away? What will ho do to koep tho nyaledt, and what will you bayey Hunitrads of | cry of tho Government will not be suddouly | lop riod without tha imprint of bis mind, No now the Domoorutlo party knows noth- | cupistunces; of parly polttics, where | Greenbuckers in tho yarty without botray te thousands of politicians, prose and sural}, but all] taken to pieces and disorguulzed, to bu recoul= | inn Gy Congress bas devoted wore thorough line ing bettor to do than to set aside ail Sts states- | tho Intorcsta of tho public und of tho purty ure petuotples of the hurd-monoy mon? How will | hunury, rushing tor 70,000 or 80,000, plnees, foaud of Taw niterial, Ln wo far ws it has shown | quiry Toa larger number of {mpurtaat subjects, wen of known and gottled npinions, political 0. ourlously mixed togettor Jn bewilders con- ce sulisty the Southern element, that claims | backed and presaod by every Democratic Cun- itself bouest and efiiciont, it will be pre- | and formed upun them opinions more nutured beslence and training, and to nominate for tho | fusion, ‘Pho oun at the heud of uffairs moans to } to buve been robbed by un autieslayery | grosamun and every lemocratic Committee In} served in tte Jutegrity and eficlency, and, | and valuable, flo waa vot ns great a soldigr os Prosidenoy a sfajor-(onoralot the requinr army, | do right; lot us assumo his Cablact alioers mean | war and ia ontitied to restitution in | the land. Tals hinpetuous rush must be satlafod | upon the good foundation laid, tery x | bis competitor for tha Preeiduncy, but ho has 4 professional soldior, who has never been uny- | tho game. Dut now w host of Benutors, Repro- | somo shape, and at tho sume time keep the | as rapidly as posalble, for thoy want to nuke tho | reason for wsauranve that it wit bo de> | made blinself, and is universally recognized as, > thing ‘élgo but that, and who from the very wut- | sentatives, prominent politicul leaders from ull | management of tha Government within tho | beat of tholr time, and in this cuse, ax well ag | veloped to Eeeaiee perfection. Thu business | whit a President ought to be, states, “Ho ure aud hocessitica of bis profession bas always | parte of thecountry swarin In upon bim. Huving | bounds of oconomy and propitiate the Northern | others, thiny ts monvy. It f# useteas to disgulse | futorests of the country, the taxpayers genenilly, | understands ull phases of Hte, frota the lowest stood aloof irom the management of political | never bud any practical contact with the work- | taxpayer? How will be content the Bouthurn | it; tho misses of oflve-suckers, sturved for | whose firstdesire it must bo tu sew tho pubila | tothe highest, for bo has lived through thoi. questions, ‘ ings of finavelal or commercial systents, haying | mun ti tha distribution of ofliges, who will clulin | twenty years, will uot bo tried back as long as | business of the Government administered in un | Ho understands the eee Probleas of politics, Tahull cortainly not attempt ta depruciato tho | xtood aloof from the intricacies of political | that thoy have furntebed tho majority of vol | thoro i a Mlouthfw on ihe table. Seventy or'| honest and intelligent way, will thoreforo, have | for by has studied them ind uatively particl- character of Ge, Hancoék and tho groat serv. | manngetuent,the manatthehcad of thoGovorn- | and nro thereforo ontitied to the Hon's share? olubty thousand olticers, selected ut random frout | no reason to fear sudden und titkal rovulsions iit utod J1 thelr discussion aud solution, Fuw mea « fees Which ie hag ronderud ta tho country, He | ment {a tho objective point of all thole'| Aud how willbe keop the Northern Democruo that multitude of ravenous applicants, will bo | the orgauization of the administrative inachin- | iu this country would eater the Presidential of- is8 gentionan of irreprouchablu private cher | otforts. Thoro are bundrod politiclaus of name | {n yood aplrita and In working ordor by a distr( | put {nto plices beld now wostly by mnen of tried | ory, us tho distribution of tho wpolls fugue tho | fleo with {us reat duties aud -responsibilitics y acter, which [ shall be sorry to sve any gifort | and importance, roal or patents who lay | bution of the patronage which will appease tho | capacity and experics they muat be taken | victors ufter Democratic stecoss would {ney- | better, ur uven as well, equipped with knowl- miads to disoredit. As a soldior ho hus shown | claim to his attontion, and, hav heart thom | hunger of twonty yours? These ure vome of thy | ut random, for It fa in ule fo tH go lunge i 4b! . ‘Thin ty the teust advantage we may | edo and expurivnce, sian only be trpo to algnal bravery and skill in the handliug of a8 be bus to bear them,—and tindiug that robluma which tho unsophisticated soldier- | nuraber ‘of places In so vhort a timo’as the furl. | expect with cortuluty; but that advantage ld so |-his record in order to become a wise, safas aid troopa under’ diticule circumstances, und his | tholr views und phiccte run counter ta one an- | Prosident, whose whole sphuro of mental | ous demand will permit in any othor way. Nead reat that no man Of sense Will fall to uppreclate | suvcessful Preaiduut, If the people tect blu It nue is identified with somp of the wost splen- | otbor, bo wudduoly divcovors bimsolf in ui un- | activity has so fur been confined to the handling | 1 tell any sensible inin what (ho elfect upon the | ht, Of the greater, wore thorouyh-yulng, and | will bu becuse bls sorvices rendered ia the past did achlevements of the Wur, For wll this every uspectnd wtuto of uncortainty us tu what {a | of troops on the fold of butte and tothe uar- | conduct of tho purbiic business wil bo? [t whl } permanunt reforms which L bave long consid | ure just of that nature which will give uur guod citizen will honor him. But tbe question is | right und what ts not, what will servo tha intor- | row borigon of duty which ariuy lifo iu thes of | be tho disorganization of the wholo administra- | crud uot only necessary, but ulso practical, waco of thu ability to reuder gruater service {a not wi or wo shai! bofbr a deserving Goncrut. | uste of tho country, and what will benellt or | peace Somp. will have towolve, And these | tive machinery of tho Government at ono fell | und which have boon attempted and in purt cure | the future. ‘The country wants a stutcsioan of ‘The question ta whether that deserving Gen- | injure tho Interosts of bis party, Ho ‘bas | probloms be will bayo to solve uot in the -quict |-biows it will be tho sudden substitution of raw | ricd out, It may be sald that go fur thelr udvo- | ability, knowledg one rionce, aud principle at oral would bo the kind of @ President (be coun- | to mect a multitude of argumenta put at } of the closot, surrounded by a fow ablo counsel: | bands for skilled aud tried public servants; the 4 cates have mado thomsclyca heard only on the | the houd of alfutr: conduct ug @ lula - Here partisun oulogy, and that womay confident. Iy' rely upon thee SudMNInE. frDSUEITT one Pressed, wot only by our friends, but also by Vory iniuy candid mea among our opponents. Ae uimatterof course t do not expect Domo- crut{e politictansand orators toyive uu that ful hess of Judgaient in the heat of un oleotion con- (est which they could not deny us auring the re- Dose of a previous perl which thoy will ‘not deny us when this content 14 over; for [t Is a Common exporlouce that partisan spirit will, Under tho exciteniont of the campalyn, call a mun o villa to-day whose worth was recognized Yesterday, and whose merit will again ba ad- Anitted to-uorrow, T think Tam not oxigger- Gling when I way that thw fnir-mindod mon of ints country will udimit, and do adsalt tn thoir . Bearta to-day, that on te whole the publio busl- eys bas been couducted by this Adniluistration, 4s farus it wus in ite coutrol, honestly, Intelll- Bently, and successfully, [should be tho lust wan. to claim porfection for it, for as one of thoda who bud‘ un opportunity to watch wires in dotutl, £ am weil aware of or- ta committed aud of failures suffered in t Is aud thut reauect. No Aduifutstration of Ger erument ever has boon or ever will be free rom them; und with respect to them claim no srgee tivasury of charity than would be olulinod be 4oy Inuinber of Gayernment acting up to core Le ee ae eral wikcocss of the Adm! Hupartlaily judged uaa whole. ee Pers fee MAINTAINED TUM PUBLIC VAITIC the credit of tho Unitud. States toa Bolut Dover reached before, It baa with con- EAZG) WS SF -L bes) WEB A