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«The Chicago 2 VOLUME XL OVENING, spracanansaer ny u PENING! Lo) oveltieg ” INSPECTION INVITED! Field, Leiter | & Co. Stato and Washington-sts, JUDSON & €0., W. sor. State & Washlngton-sts, CHOICH DESIGNS CARPETS RUGS, CURTAINS, FURNITURE COVERINGS. Parties about furnishing will find it to thelr advantage to call and examine our stock before purchasing. WOVEN WIRE MATTIIESSESR. ern “The Union” ith 27 DO NOT BUY CHEAP IMITATIONS. at WE MANUFACTURE A FULL LINE OF TRON BEDS. Union Wire Mattress Co., 5, 7&9 North Clark-st,, Chicago, FOR SALE BY FURNITURE DEALERS, TK. FORMOSA TEA IMPORTING CO., 88 STATE-ST. The following BWOLN ceriftientes of PUIITY. of Tonal by ive wove Company are from leading DUyeic rele ef itis tinperial Japaueso Majesty, Ih cece eth Hiei a te hat Ve Cr as oo “sh peckoa by fe fy Sonrey Yokoliauin, nd subinitied to Beier aty opinion, x aire, uuaditfarated, aud nat amit Signed: KENTANO VANOQIYA, Glia “hopertat Japanese Francisco.) Atajoaty'a Consul at pan “BAN FRANCUSCO, Jan, 11, 1830. WEDNESDAY, 4 RY GOOD SM, ROTHSCHILD, 158 State-st. OPENING Silks, Satins, Velveis, Brass Goods, Cloaks, Shawls, Hosiery, Corsets, Gloves, underwear, White Goods, Passementeriés, ak ringes,. Riibos, Buttons, House Furnishing Goods, Yarns, Flannels, Cloths, Cottons, Prints, . Notions, snd Fancy Goods, All the above Goods are entirely new, extremely fashionable, and are WARRANTED OF THE MOST CELEBRATED AND BEST MAKES. Prices are Guaranteed the Lowest. Orders by mail carefully filled. 8. ML ROTHSCHILD, 168 State-st. THE AG WALSTOVE ~ With Armour’s Flue Heater Attachment. Hust the ¢hing for theae ehilly mornings and evenings, nud for heating Conservatories, Bath-roomn, Ete,, Kee. TH ADAMS & WESTLAKE MANUP'G CO, 95 Lake-st., Chioago. , PROPOSALA, PROPOSALS For Lighting Birect-Iamus of the Clty of Chicngo with Other Material than Gus. Unving rend gho'rebule of ands of 4 apn fou me cols ackud by gowe frit ents CWeny PREROTLA WHOLE: lux were oF less n= BINANG ABs PRESTON, KEAN. & CO., Bankers, 10D Washingtan-st., Chicngo, ind dentors In U. 8. Biato, Municipal, and Rehoul i In necopdance with tho following ordor passed by nhs Uoaneh Rope, tes “Ordurod iat the Compirovlerjto and he Is horaby authorized and direciad ta forchwith advertise for Fropasulata (ht tg streot-lumps of tho City of Chl= am is wilt bo recalved by tho undere fhe Cowptrolicr’s Once untll Get. f, teou fatale price bor Iauin Hur Mett, price ter id price per year for whicu they will tucnisht Mi materials, and, do the ang, oxilnguienlug, Henwing, wid repairing of ent i clegianate bo lighted. in. wecordatce with the presont I a ren” Proposnts must be nddrossed “city Col and eerknd Grogan for Lightine stroola, ote fa the City of Chicaxo.” Weighs soxerved to rolgct ay and al ody and nthor woud aecuricies, uy wid sett Hills ef Bsebane of an arta Buh fad auner uropean unt Contta Jas erat ute PG Of Credit for Travovwryy aivo, Comiuretal Crodits, Money to Loan Qn improved property in Chicago of Immediate vl Cinity, at current rat i font rat RAD &.COF, 19 1 ate MONEY TO LOA By JOST ML. REED, 52 Willtun-st.y X Yo, 1, gin ISIEROVED CHICAGO uuptly attended to by BUN Ttandotbteen ~~ ‘Machine Screws: STANDARD MANUPACTURING CO., F.T. JUNE, Pres. sq and 56 Mishigan-st. alt Siyles Gentlements Dress Sith, Sty, anu post Mats just received. Puvest quutitees and lowest prices at BARNES MAT STOLE, 56 Madl- son-st. (Lrivune Buildluga FIELD, LANDLEY & 60, Commission Merchants, NEW YORK, CHICAGO, AND BALTIMORE, 88 & 90 La Salle-st., Chicago, KOWAUD BM, FIELD, JOUN P. THOESDELL. DANIEL A. LINDLEY, = Kuwanh 8. WASINUBN, Porn C, Vxret, CYRUH AW, FIELD, Spuolat, PA SUITS, CAMPAIGN UNIFORMS { ‘Vorches, Manuers, Flags, aud Btreaners. New and bold dcstgns, Send for Mlustrated Catalogue, G. -F. FOSTER, SON & CO., s Markei-at., Chicago. cen: “D STR 7 ey Havin eetucnie re ine West, seit Un pidved anne sumed practices a wae, cut HGP Quatmrat, ova word 1-sbelt bo piessed to r ¢ he publte In wensral, J see my tricnd3 und the butte tn gengeah a ey PRESIDUNTIAL. Three Creat Speeches Deliv- ered by Eminent Re- publican Orators. Senator ' Conkling. Addresses Fifteen Thousand People at Warron, 0. Gen. Grant Acts as Presid- ing Officer, and Also Makes a Speech. A Tremendous Arraignment of the Party of Treason by My, - Oonkling. Tho Republicans of Winnebago County Gathered to Hear Col. Ingersoll, Who Treated Them to a Mas- terly Speech at Rock- ford ,Yosterday. An Eloquent and Forcible Review of ihe Vital Issues of the Campaign. Magnificent Demonstration in Honor of Senator Blaine at Wheeling, W. Va. An Eloquent Speech Delivered by the Distinguished Son of Maine. SENATOR CONKLING. Spectat Dispatch to The Chtcago Tribune, Warnes, 0., Sept. 28.—The misty morning of Warren’s red-letter day was ushered jn by the booming of cannon in honor of the big event of the campalgn in Northern Ohio. The population, local and visiting, was stir- ring shortly afterwards, and though the raw, chilly, and disazreeably wet commencement ot the day argued poorly for the later suc veys, the morning trains were crowded and packed even more closely than those'of Inst night, andthe increment of visltors from the Interior, coming for mites through mud and raln by team, slowly but surely added to the alrendy overwheluing numbers, . The location and character of tho place, espeelalty with so great an attraction as the preserve of Gen. Grant and Senator Conk- Jung, —the one us Chairman of the meeting and the other as tho chlet orator of the tay,— ware an assurance of success which not even. the abumfnable weather that has prevailed in these parts for the last few days could damp- en, Warren Js the county-seat of ‘Trumbull County, the centre of Garfteld’s old district, boasts upwards of 4,000 people, and is necesslble = by = five Ines - of —rall- roud, which approach. it from all points of tho compass, It was the county- seat of ‘Trumbull when the county was somo seven or elght times as large as it 1s now, aud has been and still is the great political centro in this particutar section. es ae A demonstration with Grant and Conkling as the chief acters in It slmply meant that Warren would outdo and cellpse all: her pre- vious efforts; and she did so. The happening of tho morning was, of course, the arrivat of Gen. Grant and Gen. Logan from Cleveland. Senator Conkling rewnlned in-doors at the residence of State Seustor Perkins, not caring, with his neuralgia pains, to venture forth In the in- tensely disugreeable’ weather, A largo crowd, of course, congregated at the depot toawalt tho arrival of tho train, and an in elplent. procession afforded matter for tho usual local wonderment. it wag 11 o'clock before the spectal train from Cleveland, bearing Gen, Grant, Gen. Logan, Simon Cameron, aud the Cleveland Reception Conmilttee, drew up at the depot ‘Tho local receptionists boarded the ranr car, and subsequently fasued = therefrom in triumph, bringing the distinguished visitors with thom. Tho crowd sent up its noisy welvoming cheers, the aforesald fn- elplent procession got under way, and the city’s guests were driven through tho principal streets to Senator Perkins’ resl- dence, where they met Senator Conkling, aud the entire party ant down to a late treakfast, Thy MIST had by this tine cleared away, and the sun emerged from the obscurity In which he has been hidden for several days, ‘The ine roads of outsiders by train and private con- veyances had swelled the visible population to fully 25,000, and sul thoy caine, ‘The ace commodations, ng 0 matter of cotirse, were innaequate, and wretched nt that, but the personal discomforts experionced seemed to be taken with characteristle goud uature, and everybody was reasonably lappy, partice ularly the local food-providers, who had dicir hands fall and reaped 0 rich harvest, whieh much more than realized all thelr provious calculations, e ‘The spenking was announced to commence at half-pust Lo'slock, For fully an hour pre vious to that the the approaches to the wig wan were surrounded and besleged by thou sands on thousands hungry for admittance, Tho wigwam crected for the occasion was one of the largest ever project- ed and produced fy 9 politica! enm- paign. It stood just north of tho Chy-Hall, and was of the usual planed plane, quadrilateral form, 100 feet wide by 175 feet Jong, ruming almost north and south, with a baud-stand at the north 70 by 10, a speakers’ platform nt the south 100 by 8, aida gallery on the west 100 by 18 ‘Ine space between the four walls, exelusive of the stands and the gallery, was left as Nature liad mude it~ f vagt earpet of green, capable of accom moduting 10,000 people with standing-room, ‘Phu geaty in the gallery and on the stands swelled the cupacity of the place to. 22,000, and every foot of that capacity was called Into requisition, i ‘Tho splrit of decoratlon extended here as well as to tho stores and houses of the chy itself, though its favarlt form gf expresstony in the wigwam was of the patrlotio and epl- gramimatic motto order, Buspended over the speakers’ stand wag the faniillir faces of Gartleld and Arthur, and beneath these the inseriptions “ Our Prluclples: ‘Lhls 1s a Nae tion, Loyalty, Protection, Resumption, Equal Civil Lilguts, a Falr Vote Honestly Counted, We'll Fight It Quton This Line.” A pleco of canvas to left bore this pun- over 8in Y reasonable men, judged by what they sald, the right briefly and plthily expressed this sentiments * Demorrathe Finanelering— Repudiation.” Seattered around the four walls were mottoes as “Garfleld, Dro- tectlon, and Prosperous Times; or Hancock, Free ‘Trade, and Lawlesness.” A Fair Field; then Garfleld.” “Equal Rights to Mb and Dollars of Equal Value, ‘The Same Dollar for Labor as for Capital!’ * dane cock’s Ideas of Finance, 03 Cli! Service, ‘Tarif, 0003 Kebel Claims, 00000." “The World's Guest Is Ours To-Daye? “Let fs Mave Pence.” "The Demoeratle Party us Now Constitute and” Con trotted Is Not a Fit Party to ‘Trust with the Control of the Nation!’ ‘4A 'Tri- umphant Nationality, a Free Republic, an Unbroken Country, an Untrawmmeled Credit, Solvent Finanees, ant Unpnraileted Pros- perity,—Atl These Despite the Policy and Ef- forts of the Democratic Party.” The outer wall on the south bore ha large eliaracters: the following noble sentiment of Gen, Gar- field: “We would rather, be beaten In the right than sitecved In the wrong’? The admisstun to thé grass-carpeted por- tlon of the wigwam designed for the general crowd was free and unlifilted, and a living, pushing, jostling, but wonderfully good-na- tured mass of human beings passed In at the sircet dours aid PACKED THE PLACE until it beeame f{mpossible for any one to budge oreven change’ a fuot to rest it, ‘The aloors were famnied to thosldewalk, shutng off the principal source of Hight. while the stl oncoming masses pushed the crowd al- rendy Inside, unul ft became tecessary to brace the speakers’ aud réverters’ platform agit precaution agalnsta possible and probe able caving-In, While the wigwam was In- tended fo comfortubly holt) fram 10,000 to 12,000, it was netually made to hold fully 15,- 000, and thousands had-twbe disappeluted and lialt outside, 4 As the hour for the opening of the meet- Ing drew near a more ambitious procession than that of the morning marched down tho street-past the wigwan, and into the largo open square opposit It, and gave those Inside the building’a notification that the expected were nearathand. It was nearly 2 o’vlock when Gen. Grant, Senator Conkling, Gen, Logan, tho venerable Simon Cain- ero, Levi =P, Morton of New York, Gen. Beaver, tha one-legged Chuir- man of the Pennsylvania delegation at the Chicago Convention, and Judge Sutil, of Warren, Chairman of the Local Commnilttes of Arrangements, enteredatha duor at the south, and were hnmediately discovered by the packed and wedged-in mass of humanl- ty infront, ‘Che building rang with shouts and cheers of weleome. When the enthu- slasin finally sank Into @ lull, Judge Stull stepped to the fore, and INTRODUCED GEN, GRANT asthe President of the meetits. The crowd spontaneously broke jnte three cheers, When these ind subsided Gen. Grant step- ped forward, und the crowd at once divined that something unusually interesting was coming. That they, didn’t hear. it was partly thelr own fault, but more largely the faut of an enthusiastic manipulator of a basa-driin, and the equally suecessful bus Ul-thned effurts of the doughty cannoncers outalde, , What, Gen, Grant had to say was ealenlated to literest everybody present, As amatter of fact, it was not even fully or dls- tinetly heard by those immediately in front of-bin, to say nothing of Ujy vast mass far- ther back, The same annoyance was expe- rleneed during the delivery of Senater Conkling’s mnsterly address, and the focal Committee seemed perfeetly pow- erlegs to prevent It, though tho speaker's maguitieent — volea enabled jim to combat it ana come ont ahead of the drum and the cannon, As for Gen, Grant’s remarks, however, the reading public will have n decided advantage over his Warren hearers. ‘The General spoke as follows; LADIES AND GENTLEMEN! I lope wo ma: beane to have quietand order here, tls not hnportant, so far as anytilng that [wilt shave to say to you is concerned, because 2 shall not be able to minke many of you henry butafter me comes a speaker Whois 1 know yot will all be glad to hear, and you ean do ko by keeptut quiet und orderly. Not beige neetistomed to speaking publicly, 1 lave drawn off a few words Out F will say in id= vance of the gentleman who ts to follow nic. ‘Taking a rofl of manuscript from his pocket, he Guneral fend In view of the known Sharnelel mud “ability of the speaker who Is. auldvess “you to-day, and his long public ~ career ow ats sociation with the leading statesinen of the country for the past twenty years, It would nat be becoming in me to detain you with ys remarks of my own, but it may be proper for me to aecount to you, o8 the first oceaslon of my presiding ita political ueetliny, for the “faith that is tyme? T ama Hepudlican, ms the two great political partes are now divided, because the Repub- tenn party is a Natlonal party, seeking the greatest goad of tha greatest munber ot its eluzens, ‘There fs not a preeinet In this vast Natlon where Democrat cannot cast his bal lot, und have it counted as cust. ne matter what the predominance of the opposit par ty. He can proclaim lis poilltieal opinions, even if he f> only one amnung 8 thousand, without fear and without proscription on account of fits opinlon. ‘There are fourteen States, and localities In some others, where REPUBLICANS MAVE NOL THIS PRIVILEGE. ‘This is one reason why Loam oa Republican, butLama Republican for many ather reas sun. The Republican party usstires protec: tion to ilfe, property, public creat, and the. paynient of he debtsof the Government, Stale, county, or municipality, so far as it has control. ‘The Demucratis party tloes vot promisy this. It it toes, has broken its proalaes to thaextentof hundreds af mill- ons, as Many Northern Democrats can testl- fy to thelr surrow, Lam a Republican ay be teen existing parties, became [t fosters the production of the flelt and farm and of the maiifactortes, and it eneourages the wenernl education of the poor as well as the rich. ‘The Democratic party alscourages all these when in absolute power. ‘The Republican party Ist party of progress and of Mberil- ty towards its) opponents, lt en- enrages so poor, te. atrive = to better thelr condition; the ignorant to edu- eate thelr children, to enably them to com- pew sucaesat uly: with thelr more fortunute associates, and, In tine, It secures an entire equality before the lew of every clizen, no matters whut his race, nationality, or previous: tion. Et tulerates no privileged class, one has the opportunity to make hint self all he is capable of, Ladies and gentienen, do you believo this ean be truthfully sald inthe greater part uf the fourteen States of this Union today whieh the Democratic party control absoe Intely 2 ‘The Republican party is a party ot prinelples, the same, brine ates prevailing wherever tt has a touthold, «She Demveratts pars fs nnlted in but one thing,’ and that ig n gutting conteal of vie Government in all its branches, .. is for Internal Juprovement at the expense of the Govermuent in ong section, wad agalust itt another, It favors the repidiation ot solemn oblignuens: none section and the honest payment of {is debts In another, where public opinion will nat tolerate uny othervlew. ft tavors fiat oney une place and guod money in nuother. Finally le favors the * pooling of all fssues" thet it may secure the one pilnciple upon which the party Is a most harmonious unit Namely; guluimg control of the Government Ja all {ts branches, Lhave been in some pits of every State lately in rebellion within the last year. Wits 108; huspliably reeelved at every dlace [ stopped, My receptions were not by the Union. elussy alone, but by all classes without distinction. £ hada freo talk with idny who were agulust us in the War and and who have been agali the Reptidiean hhey were in all mistances: not favored by the Republicuns, to. the enil- SEPTEMBER: 29, 1880—T'WELVEE PAGES. ning inscription: “Ohte Fosters Frees ( [believed then, and believe naw, that they dom and) Grants Equal Rights — to | stncerely Ally’ while a corresponding motto on WANT A DREAIUP In this “Solid South” politleal condition, ‘They see that it is lo thelr pecuist ary futerest, ag well as to thelr happiness, that there should Le harmony and confidence betweett all sections. ‘They want to break away frou the slavery whieh binds them to a party Hane. ‘They want a pretext Chat enotiel of them can wilte tnon to make it respectable. Once started, the Solid South will go as Ku. Kluxtsin did before, and Is so admirably told by Judges Toure in his * Fool's Errand.” When the break comes those who start it will be surprised to tind how many of thelr friends have bee i favor of It for along time, and have only been sprultiig tee see some one take the Tead. ‘This desirable solution can only be obtained by the defeat and cone tinued defeatof the Democratic party as now constituted. SYRECI OF SENATOR CONKIANA, At the conelusten of his address, Gen. rant Introduced Senator Conkting, who inet with an ovation rely second to that which greeted Gen, Grant. Senator Conk- lng began as follows: Mn. CrainmMay AND FELLOw-Citizes8 oF Onto,—not of Ohio alone, because Hlinols Is here [eheers], and Pennsylvania is) hero [eheers}:’ For 2 welcome 80 grest and so warm 1 beg you all to receive astranger’s hearty thanks; and yet not all a stranger, peeause I find the Western Reserve peopled with those whose brothers and whose kindred are neighbors of mine. ‘This is, indeed, a grand meeting. Its wrestling ofleer is tne most ¢ Hlustrious eltizen of the Republic, [Avplause.] It is eld ina grand Republican State, a State which, 1 trust, will give to the country the next President of the United States, {Cheers, and a volee “We'll try it’) 1 see the woods and even the rafters are full ofthem, [Laughter.] Oblo ts the child of Virgtnia, Connecticut ceded the Western Reserve, but Oblo Is the child of Virginla, Ohio Is seventy-seven years old this year. Within the memory of men still living the tomahawk and the scalplng-knife did deeds of savage ernelty where now temples of re- ligion, temples of education, and temples of industry outglitter each other inthe broad sunlight of a wondrous civilization (Ap. plause.} When Ohio bexan her people were few, and they were strangers in the land, She began with 45,000 people. ‘To«lay she has 3,200,000. Geologists say that your solls, fertila and rich ng they are, needing only to be tlekled with a hee to laugh with a liarvest,—they say that more than halt of them came from ‘far, far ds- tant reglons,—-clays and gravels washet by the surge and the driftof ghautle primeval forests, This ty typleal. of th wht T sea. around me. Notonly from New England, but from Old England, from Ireland, ftom Seatland, from cold) Norway and Sweden, from warm and sunny France, from every: clline where iumanity strigeles, came to Ohto nen and women wilitn: and eager to eat thelr bread In. the swent of their — brow. What brought these men and women here? What made Oblo the rendezvous and asylur of struggling humanity in all nationalitt jue free labor. [Applinse,| Oh tof Virglute, ts she rose front cradle, turned her back upon the pres pis and examples of, the mother State, ff b- piause.| ‘The people who came here of rll nationalities were bound by one conimon the; they. worshiped one God under different farms, and they belleved In the Fatherhood of God and the “brotherhood of mun. ty piuse.} Here on this soil parent and ehiid have Wustrated two opposing systems of . civilization. Olilo, — respeeting: the dignity of Jabor, believing honest labor the true foundation and passport to all real prog ress aud greatness, thas risen like a meteor Info the very zenith of the grent Republic. Virgelle, beileving that labor fs degrading, that drudgery fs menial aud base, that capital should’ awn labar, tus stagnated and wele tered hattsinothered fin the pool of servile labor. One of these systems has prospered exevedlngly; the other system har been en- ervated, his remiuined prostrate, has cursed and rebelled, and at fast drowned Itself and slavery In its own blood. [Appliuse.} Tand- dn hand with respect for labor has gone in Ohio what we have learned to call THE AMEINCAN BYSTIES, That isa system of taying dutivs on imparts Bong to tax those which come in competition with our domestle Industries. What has been tho result of this? Diversified enter- prise, The farmer has found at his own tloor a market for his productlons, and the manufacturer hus soll to the farmer, and American labor has found reward, not In the starving wages of the Old World, but In wages Which could buy the comforts and the lusustes of life, [Apptause,] In the invxerable logle of events twenty years ngoone of the systems triumphed in the choive of Nattonal rulers. By a clear, plain majority the people chose for Prest- dent Abraham Lincoin, [Cheers.) Yor inny well cheer bin, for Lincoln was one of those who darkun nations when they dle. [Ap plunge} ‘The Virginia system refused «to abide by the result, and uplifted the bloody banners of revolt, plunged the country inte 5 red seaof revoizton, drenched the lund with blood, buried a wha taxes, and draped it ty inourning, Olite seutV0,000 of her bravest and her best to tread a path over burning plow. shures,—for what? Ln order thatthe great ‘epublic of hummancrights might not: perish fram the earth, Applause} ‘Tho dark velipse of war could not put out the bright toreh of Miberty, of freedom, and of equal rights for man. (Applause. And Ohio has continued to prosper, until she stands to-day one of the grandest, one of the freest, one of the most glorious conmonwealths in human history. [Applause Jler sister State of Penney twin, aul Grery ather State whilelt has plied the. plow, the loom, and the hauuner; every other Stato: which before God and man has believed in luman equal. Tyme nthe dignity and the rights of treo tabor, whiell hase! ite ty the system af protection of home industries, alone with her has prospered also. [Applause] But In tho midst of all Uils prosperity wv harsh voles rings through the fand demanding a change. [Laugnier, and 2 volee: * We don'e want it—not inuch; we don't want any of It da ours? and daughter.) | What change? Whence cones this ery for change ? Who wants a change? blees, Lane vuck,’” * Nobody? and “del Davie wauts it” ]° Well, now, whielido you yican? Ono suys Hancock, and another says noboily, (Laughter.| ‘That makes ine think of a nelghbor of my friend here (polnting to dien. Grant}, who told about his horses, and he suid ons looked go much tke both that he could not tell the other from each, (Laugli- ter} Lusk you WHO WANTS A CHANGE, and what change? 1s not the debt melting away? Has not the interest eharge—tho grinding feature, never forget, of all debts—beon falllyg, falling, falling? as not taxation rapidly disappeared? is not the currency solvent, stable, and honest? What Is the trouble? ‘The South wants a changes. Why? Js the South unfortunutg ? Why? Mr, President, Joush’s gourd, &o cording to the good book, grew as the South has grown if we are to belloye the wonders of the census, (Laughter. South Carolina fu ten years has Inereased 43 per egut In pop- ulation, [Laughtor.) Shey area wonderful gtawiug people. You know and J know thut there fs but onu way under God In whlch that census can be true, and that is by foreign inuigration, [A volews “They hain't down there, any of then”) No, sit, It has been a goed State to gu from, ter.) As to lmuigration in South roling, lot me say fn passing that, haying tagen sume palns to adk, 1 sin able to say that In ten ytars the foreign dinmigration lo South Carolina amounts to wractly 187 pore BONS. {Linuchter,| I have read from dis dngtished sources that this census dn Souuh Caroling ta not tuposslble. y it ee 4 aan Paar amiee Par ae which | only win | golag oy) you, Whausver Mm a State Sou pind three inen where before there were only two, ninety wien where before thors were ouly alaty, you maybe sure that the production and consumption, and the hundred other tell- ailn Gribmne. tale, tests will destify ta the fact. [Here the spenker save® the “production of South Carolina for the past twenty years, showlny, as In fils New York speech, her sad) att Inmentable retrograde during that. tne.) Cement Valtandizham had once said in Cougress thot politics was King. Potides bad been too mueh King in South Carolina, Tad there been more ofa disposition after the War to go to work and pay less attention to polities there would be an Inerense, and 10 such aiteanee as this te overeaunt the people for pulltical effects. Well, now Tet me say Niemen close around ine busy » ut J expect to hear that, i words [ have uttered, [have been stirring up: the sinoliering embers of seetional hinte; that] have been tehting over ain the issies of the War: that [have heen making an attack upon South Carolina and the South. As was suid ina recent letter by the ilus- trious chizen Who presides ere toalay, not mote for the sake of the North that for the suke of the South do Leume today to Jit up my feeble volce to you In opposition to that wrong-headed orgstiization known as Ute Demoeratle party, [Applase.] Why, the speaker asked, did the South ery out nealnst the = General Government and the administration of National ntfalrs: lad the South been unkludly trent [Vote “Na, tae well” treated] Let me say to you that no purpose ly farther from iny No patrioth: American, 1 care not where he lives, enn wisn i) or pave erty to the South, or to the Last, or to the North, or the West of our country. | fAp: plause.] Could 1 sit down and refolee over the poverty, the distracttons, the agitation of the Souto? J should despise myself as a Ise son, false to those Interests of that great which lias so honored me, aud whose interests and honor are su dear tome. [Ape vluuse.| But truth is a terch, and the nore you shake ft the brighter it burns, NOWMEHE IN EARTHLY ANNALS was there an fnstance tn which the victors were 80 generous, 80 magnanimons ton vanquished foe. (Applause) If anybody did not believe ft, Jet him read the terms whieh Grant preseribed ta Robert E. Lee at. Appomattox. Robert E, Lee, who, educated nt the Natlon’s cost, and presented with the Nation's sword, drew that sword agulnst the Nation's life, When in the hour of huimiline tlon and prostration he came to surrender, and presented the Milt of that sword to the . great Captain at whose — feet he had been compelled to lay ft, the victorious General of the Union said: “Noy pit up thy sword? go and sin no more.” Uncowed in thelr defeat, they were told to go home to thelr fair fields, and inake them Dlussom sis the rose, When Napoleon made his raid on Germany, and failed, what didGermany, with’ the Emperor and Inarck to dictate terms, require Democratie Administration fal U by the vet of Mex Texas and spread the caus of shivery, what tribute did Amerien take of that” feeble and vanquished people, an empire reh beyond wl the dreams of avarice? But when tho South was over- come and SLA42 pald for every Southern slave, not one farthing of tribute was laid, no contribution was levied, not one estate of a Rebel was confiscated, though the fathers had not hesitated after the Revolutton to confisente the estates of ‘Tories. Not ane mun was ever by National quthority, after the Southern St restaned thelr relations with the Union, denied the rizht to vote. The oldest citizen in Ohio had been no more free to east his vote than Jett Davis. In) Mississippl. What, then, was the trouble ft the Sonth? Carpet-baggers linet gone theres yes, and most of then with knapsacks on their back prepared to stay. What of it?) Was the Governinent a jailer to arrest men for removing from one another? Ever since peace wis ¢s there had always been an evel never-ending outery of. complaint. : THE DEMOCRATIC PARTY was against every measure by the Rebelllon was crushed,” against every amenetre since, the War closed dawn ta the present thine He would thank any Deniocrat in the audience fo tell hin what the Democratic party was for to-tuy. [Laughiter, and a voices “ Free= trade”) ‘Is the Democratle party fn favor of free-trady 2? asked Senator Conkilng. “No; gentlemen; on the same prinelple that the Demoeratie party wil not take a knife and draw It across. its own throat from car toenr, it WHI never dare te go throngh the valleys audon the hillsides of Oto and say Itls for free-trade. (Appluuseand laughter.) No, sir, the sound of the triptammer in Pennsylvania, the hiun of machinery, of all the enginery of industry atl over Ohio from Lake Erle to the South, will stile such avery, farplause.) They say’ thoy are for tarlit, In all fairness and eomuion sense, what does that mean?) In God’s name, in the bright blaze of this day, what 1s the Senge of such a position? Here Ist great debt inilleted by the Rebel with Its nn nual interest to be paid: ofan cniless: procession Of cripples aud mourners: here are the widows and children of those who mmretied In defense af the tlie and never came biek oagaln. Th a a: Fs which The Interest, penslon, and expense account make ft necessary annually te levy duties upon bine ports. Shallwe havea tarhl for revenue only to be hil on tea and coffee, while tron, woul, and aericultural inplements, on which weenn undersell England, are to come in free In order that every aman inthe Onited States may be put down on a evel with the pauperized labor of Europe. a Senator Thuruan, of whom L speak with great re- spevt asa tian of darge ability, wil never go Into Ohlo or Pennsylvania, anters he wants to defeat his theket. and declare that: the ts pried {netdental pratectlan ta Aterlean thdustry and In faver of the Utopian doctrine of free trade, And now will soma one say what the Democratic party bins favored Inthe last Henly: years JA volce, State-rights.”] ‘That Is true. Jt was in favor of States rights twenty years agu, when it scattered your navies brondeast over the sea and shipped the Federal arms to South Caro- linn and other States, in order that the Nation might. be found naked of defense, bound hand and foot, 80 that 1 oamight be murdered in. ite bed, prostrated the Applaise.) ‘The: emer wile and Snawked {It In the xtieot until it trailed in the aire, dacob Thompson, of Missladlppi, was Seeretary of the Interior under Buchanan, 2 will not say he was dtshonests 2 wish to speak of hit with the same respect that one colored man spoke of another, “1 consider Jake a strletly honest niggers’ sald le, “but if £ were a chieken, and Jake was around Dd roost Mgh." [Great Jangiter.) ln the De paeiment of the Interlor were trust funds longing to the Indians, and Thompson sige nalized his administration by allowing that ee tobe plunterea for the South. Ho came Into my reom one night, and told me wlth lis own lips that he had telegraphed to aman whout he muned in South Carolina that the Star of the West was on her way loaded with food for the starving garrison at Fort Moultrie, and he sald hily object was, that they lg ht know It and train thelr guns upon her and sink her forever, When Casked fiw {f he, a Cabinet officer, could telegraph a Cablnet secret to § authority In South Carolla, ho sald, with an oath t will not repeat, *d awenr L have.’ ‘fhe Demo- cratic party were for STATE RIGHTS, James Buchanan, then President, declared thatthe Government couldn't coerce a sov- erelgn State, According to Mr, Buchanan, if uState wont out of the Union, why, it oughtn’t todo it, butie it did, what was to bo done nbout it? (Great Jaughter) Jere Black, his Attorney-Cieneral, advised hin that If n man rebelled he usust not be moleat- ed by tho troops, but that a Fedora! Marshat should be sent out to bring him in, But about that tlio the Marshal resigned, {A vole, “Why dit he resign”; Why, my friend, that Marshal was so Disy getting a bayonet ready to punch into you that he hudn’t thue ta serve a writ, {Appluuse.| ‘Tho New York Domocratio jauty, represented by that cuifpent states Who was not nominated the utber day at Clie chinall, met at Alonny and resolved upon the sunctity of Stitetights; that no sovereign Stute could be cogrced; and one of the feud ad wore emphatic that the nel, pald that tt i empl Was IUBdo leols ani followers to us force w put down the ie PRICd FIVE bellion, the ruillotine wattis a) erected on the soll of New Yorlcand blood would stain the ground of that Commonwealth, Senator Conkling asked his hearers if thoy had ever thought how such taik had simu. lated the Rebellion. ‘The North was power- fl In resourees aud all the ineans to conquer with, The reverse was the case with the South. Could 7,000,000 of penpte, withont wmechinte arts or the means of supply, in tlemselves hope ta overcome 20,000,003 they had not relied upon the div! distractlon at the North caused by the Northern wing of the Democratic party? In 18, when the Rebellion was gasping for life, it was Wigfall who said they would water their horses In the Hudson River and feed thelr troops on the money taken frum the Boston banks. When they tnd fought for three years, and defeat starve, them inthe face, they inet in National Con- vention and dechired the War a failure. That | resnbution, as a failure, was n stiecess, and na a politien! success ft was n complete failure, (Laughter) But, having sald that, they nommluated, Just as they had done now, A UXION UENERAL, though the trick, even then, proved too thin. [Lauuhter.) ‘The General Issued no order No. 40 {langhter], putting malmed and help- less people at the merey of the mob. He are rested the whole Maryland Leaglslature, howeyer,—somethlng rather vigorous for a Democratle Major-General to do; sis- pended the wrlt of habeas corpus, pro- claimed =omartial law, and put in armed troops as supervisors atthe polls, A man Insured his house because it might burn. Without making any charges of a want of patriotism against the Democrats now, the speaker advised . his hearers in’ caso they were. in doubt as to what might happen to take outa policy of insure ance and fet well enough alone. (Laughter and applause). It had been sald—he wos glul to remember ft—that Democrats fought forthe Union in the War. Soa ereat many of them did, and were deserving of all honor, dotn A. Login, of nol, wits a Democrat before the War, bat when the Southern hat party drew the sword against ent I took hiby not the twink. Mog of an eye to decide which side he was on, and Ww! the, War was aver Democracy become te him a faded remembrs of othe thing it was, [Appliuse,] Senotor Conkling. directed the attention of his hearers, and pardicultrly these who will vote for the first time this fall, to the fact that it was the Repabllean party which had eanied on the Government during the War and maintained the public credit and the Na- tlon’s honor both then and now, It was Ohio that gave the country a Seeretury af the ‘Freasury in the person of Salmon P, Chase. ‘Tha Demoeracy of Oblo this year, sone. how or pther, dim failvd in pass miy resolutions denouncing =the = Na- tlonal-banking syste, ‘They lind sim- wy pledged themselves anew to eo traditions of the party,—traditions under whieh was warmed Tito lle thot painted Haart entledt ssion, the reptile which a nillion men went out fo hruise and crush under their hi forever. ‘The Indlann De- mocracy, however, were professedty in favor, not of & volume of currency gauged by sue ply and demand, but of ong to be arbitrarily fixed by on Congressionnl caucus. Since Adan’s tail the wit of nm never hvenied B more posticnt heresy than that the yard- sticky to be longer or shorter, more or Jess, depending upon the changing schemes of partisan potities, Who Invented the banking syst Which swept away the cat nnd-red- dog banks of the country? Who pagsed the Jaws in Congress which the sguadron in the field and kept the Mag fying? Whoso President was It that said, * Nowhere in all our barders shall the sun ever again rise upon iuaster or set upon slave”? | [Cheers.} Who rebulided the Governments in the South and ‘lifted tp the Nation’s credit in the face of repudiation 2? Who hud made the paper dollar as good as guld? lie had reali statement of Speaker Randall that the Dem- ocratic party had economized, actualy denied themselves ‘and fairly gone without the bare neeassitles of fe Hl thoy hind saved up enough and squeezed out enotth to enadla them to, resuio spec! payments. » [Sensu- fon and ton.) reconviny was of the yort which TUREATENED TO STARVE TUL GOVERS- MENT untess the election Jaws were repealed. That year they saved money, (Laughter, [t Just so happened, however, that a Congressional election was coming on. But, a5 predicted by the Republicans, the saving was overcome by the subsequent Dellcteney bill, until the total was larger thin the yeur before, as the total this year owas larger than the — total — appropriations of the Inst Republican year, He also under- stood Chairman Randall te say that good crops lial Insured speete payments. It so hoppened, however, that’ the country bad ssoud crops before the resumption of specie payments, Without suet a inw as the Rew sumption get, frst outlined by, Gi Grant, how could paper be made cqual to gold, whatever the character of the crops? What party had done all this? What party bad opposed It? He challenged any one to name aslugle instance In which the Democratlo party had not carped at and hindered any ant all of these great mensures, It was the sad omilsfortuno of = this timo that the South was the Democratic party, ond this seemed ‘odd when It wad-remombered that the poprlation of alk the lately seeeded States represented only 15, wereentof the people of the United Staves, fo had been attacked for making this state- ment by a Demacratic paper, which chose to regard it as an otttrage, Hut this was a matter of business, and the question being to what putty the coimiry should be turned over, Hy claimed the fight to Inquire into the position, aims, and hopes of the party which now songht the control of the Nation, White the South rep! nted but 15 per cens populition, It represented t of the ussessed valuation of the people, Itcontralied both Houses of Congress, and was now endeavoring to make its control complete, [A Voico~ “They can’t doit.) ‘They would’ do it, too, unless on the 2d of November u constitue tlon) ana: ory say no, [A Volee—* We are golugta’| Thops you will? sald Senator Conkling, * Bul fever consider anything done until it is ulshed.? ‘thy Sunutor substantially repeated thas portion of his Nuw York’ speech bearing on the disuppearance of tho Repub Hican yoto In the South, the contyol of the Democracy in both Houses, and the use they had made and would be table tomake of Uieir power, “Anil let ine tell , Gen, Hancock,” he added, “and those who stipport hin, thut, shot be chosen, when he becomes President ho will be as clay In the hands of the potter; asthe sheep before his shearers, Hu was dumb and opened not hls mouth.” [Laughter and applause.) IN CLOSING Sonntor Conkling sald: * You have nominat ed as candidates men who haye proved thelr tutelligence and fitness in cone spicuous spheres of — public action. You have behind — these candidates a party which has ~beon all the time for twenty years In the public view, The tlercest Nght that over beat upon & throne {s not brighter than the Ight in whieh the Repubticun party hus continually been sean, You have arrayed against it & party which las been over and over again welghed In the balance and Is wanted below. “{Grent lnugliter.) Now, fellow-cltizens, I am sol to leave you. [Crlea of “Go ou} Lau going to give this easy, restful and — comfortable place one better uble than I to occupy Ib Befory 1 go, however, 1 remlud you that Nae wleon sald to his soldiers in Egypt, * From Thess pyratulda forty centuries look down, upon you.” J tell you that all the centuries Jovk down upon this great Revublic from gepaledey of buried epochs, from the tombs ot natlonalities that have gune down in darks ness and in. dlvad, from eyery cline where human sights are trodden tuder foot, froua the Ghi World, cum distant China and Jupan, from underneath every sun, beneath whose beams huwanity’ struggles, there comes @. prayer-and a&- hove for us. | Applause.) t is not that) wa may fight. The world has seen us ight. Na nation iy Christendai will ever seek & quate rel with you, tue wen who currled the starry