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10 THE CHICAGO TRIBUNE: SATURDAY, OCTOBER 9 ae UNION PRISONERS. National Reunion of Ex-Prisoners of War at the Wigwam in Indianapolis, Sarvivors of Andersonville, Libby, Bello Iste, Castle Thunder, Charleston, Cahaba, Alex: *andria, and Other Sonthern Prison-Pens, Velerans Who Propose to Vole as They Shot —They Have Opinions Regarding the Causo Leo and Jackson Fought For. “Weill Rally ‘Round the Flag, Boys, Wo'll Rally Once Again, Shouting the Battle-Ory of Freedom!” Inpranaronis, Ind, Sept, 20—At 3 o'clock yesterday afternoon there gath- Gred at the Wigwam 800 men. It was no ordinary meeting, for these $00 aro grander heroes than the 600 whom Tennyson has im- mortalized. They are souvenirs of the Ne- bellion, survivors of Southern prison-pens, The names of the more notorious of these prisons, Andersonville, Libby, Betle Isle, Castle Thunder, Macon, Aloxandria, Flor- ence, Tuscaloosa, Charleston, Cahaba, were displayed about the building, bringing to mind the scenes of thelr sufferings, though these reminders were hardly necessary as comrade gazed upon comrade and the vista of tho past rose before them. The meeting was called to order by Gen. A. D. Streight, who introduced the Hon. John Cayen, who, a3 Mayor, delivered the address welcoming the veterans to the city. At the conclusion of the Mayor's address, the band struck up “ Rally ‘round the flag, boys,” which met with a burst of cheers, and then the veterans sung, Jolning In the elo- rus, while handkereliiefs waved and the erentest onthusiasm prevailed, The Hon. Samuel McKee, of Kentucky, a prisoner of Libby, and who wns in that hor- rible place among the longest of the many who were confined there, then responded, THE WON. SAMUEL M'RKER’S ADDRESS, Sixteen years ago on the last day of April, at the dawn of day, eleven officors and thirty- one enlisted men had thelr names called out in the “Libby Prison,” at Richmond, Vay, and were told “ they were to be sent hone tothe United States.” How oddly such a sentence reads, and how strangely to our people now: From Richmond, Va, to the United States!” Out of this number nineteen were abla to walk from the prison to the trice-boat, about 400 yards below the prison, and twenty-three went down In wagons, or were carried ou stretchors. Worn, aud wasted, and starved, their eyes brightened at the thoughtofgaing once more where the flag of thelr country floated, and where it was respected and loved. , COMING NACK FROS Prison. * As the small Rebel boat went down the James River the poor sick boys spoke words of cheer, and tried to rally each other, but before thirty miles had been run, and before we came In sight of our own gallantsteamer, with our own flag atits masthead, three of those tired spirits had crossed the river, aud only their cold dead bodles went over into our good ship, and before that ship had landed at Annapolis next morning four more had joined them in another world; and of the forty-two whose nunes were called at daylight on the Inst day of that April, thirty- five only answered the roll-enll on that bright first duy of May which followed when we went ashore Where Mberty was our own, ‘This was tho Inst fot of Union’ prisoners re- leased from Rtehinond during the War. Inn very few dnys ufter this ourarmy wentup the ‘dames River, Grant advanced into the Witder- ness, Richmond became alarmed, and all the Union prisoners were sent away from Richmond and Belle Isle, where, during the winter whieh had closed, our poor boys had starved, and frozen, and died,.to endure still greater li reeh lg, aulferings, ond tt: i at Ander SMisbury, and other pyjuts in the Sout! he worl! does not knof, it eannot concetve, ant our people will not be Heve half even of thehorrory, the sickening beenes, the awfnl experiences, tho fight for Uife, the desolation and death, which was tho Jot of tho Union prisoners of ‘war. ‘Te you, my comrades, i need not recount nor reeall them. So long as our memories last we en never forget them, ‘To our children and onr children's children we enn repeat thom, and to them it will always be wrominder o! what we suffered aud what wo endured, Itis well, however, to-day’ that all who sustained our flag and our country tn that aenetn struggle from 1861 to 1805 remember hal THINTY THOUSAND BRAVE MEN gave up thelr lives and dicd in loathesomo risot-pens, because every man among them loved his country and her flag, and preferred death rather than see that country dismen- ered or ts tag dishonored, that when re- lease was offered them from their horrid tortures if they would forsake and forsweir thelr allegtanee to pur banner and our coy try, they scorned the offer, nnd firmly faced death—every man of them—rather tin bring repronch upon their own HAInie With these facts In the minis of our ehiftren, and re- incinbered by our whole people, alt will love and yenernite the memories of the brave men who divd, and thoy will love their country inode beciuse such men were resly thus to aje that this Republic and Wberty should not perish from varth. (Applause.} The great people of ourcouttry, when they reenl} this fact. will the more and more firmly resolve that Hoery {stice, and human rights, and human freedom, THE EQUAL RIGHTS OF ALL MEN in the Great cause for which these martyrs died, shail not fall so long ag tho Natlon lives. Yes, they will swear by thelr graves, over which our banner of Iberty doats, that that banner shall never be torn down and trailed in the dust, and that this Nation, whieh more than one hnindred years ago minde the Stars und Stripes its emblem, shall itself live until the end of ume, May wo not further hope that after a thne, at Jenst, all this will serve ns 0 lesson to those at whose doors all this suffering und all this death will aver stand? Men who refused to aubinit to the Inwa and to the people's voice brought all this to our brave men, and they brought death, dishonor, and suffering ant hoverty wutolt te thelr own doors and thelrown households. By a most wicked stop of thelr leaders the South: ern people were tulsguided, and by thelr conrse and acts caused these fearful sutfer- lugs to us and to themselves, Will they notin the days to come, when thes recall all this, resolve that never again will they suffer themselves to be let astry in an attempt to destroy tho only Goyernment on carth whose priuiples are Justice to avery living human beng? Alrendy they must know that a great and intelligent people will neither surrender the. prinelples which have mindy us the great Natlon wo are, nor will they give up that grand principle that here there 1s but onesovereignty, and that ‘TUE SOVEREIGNTY OF THE NATION yereat Aula uae , Sud thatnoStute cun set up for itself or defy that sovereignty without bringing upon liself at once the entire power of tho Nation to cuinpel alleghines—and that by armed force the State, or the Nation wust He dowit piey will not, perlips, again doubt which will go down fy such na cone Test. Will they not look back on the fearful seones of the War and resolve that hence- forth they will know no fag but that of our fathers, no Nation but that of tho United States, atd, no State which does not acknowledge thut this Nation iy first, and the State comes after, Will they hot unite with us and with all the survivin heroes ofthat fearful strugyle of death through which wo -passed, with tho great pone who sustained our cause, and declare in all tne to cong persecution for opin: fon's sake shal! cease; that freedom of thought, freedom of opinion, freedoin of ex- pression, freedom of action, treedom to vote Ay & VAN’s Own consclence dictates, freedom it support any party or principle, so long as tat buinelple does not directly attack the authority of the Nation; freedom to go where citizen plousen, ww engage In Bly bushiicas which is lawful; that all these things shall prevail in every partof thelana? And that wot only shall the strong arm of the law ge- cure these to every huimun being, but let them sesulye, und sev to dt, thut public seutlmenut and private acts sustain this, and then will the South, where steep the 80,000 Union pris: oners who starved and died that all these great blessings might come, becomo ttsell prosperous and great, and its people be DETTER MEN AND BETTER WOMEN, {Avptause,] ‘The spirit of hate will dio; and, While the widow and thy orphan of the dead heroes who perished by such an awful death can never cease ty motirn thelr husbands and fathors, and while the mother will never forget her bravedead hoy, our whole people wil be better; our Nation will be stronger; and these men, and the soldiers who wend down In battle in the same erent cause for which they dled, will not have yielded up their ves tn vain, In tho struggle for the enuse of truth— mid we were on the right side, and never will we yield our clalins to this position—it was our tnisfortiune that Rebel pris jh us In during tho period when ¢: were stopped, and we had: little hope of ever marching, to the. music of tha Union, until that day when wo knew in the end the Rebellion must be crushed, Our lot was a gloomy, a desolate, and a lonely one. ln the tremendous struggle between the great armies, from the enrly spring of 1803, brats: of us were chatng inside the confines of Rebel guards, Aud while under our great commanders Vieks- burg gaye up Its 30,000 to the assaults of our boys; When the roar of our guns drowned ont SOUTILERN SENTIMENT. United States History os Taught in the Schools of the South. Admiratton of Engtish Aristocracy,and Denuncla» tion of * Dutch, Irish, and Niggers.’? ‘We Are Now Jnst, What, We Wero Then,?—t. ty Secesslonists, Rebels, and Traitors, “Tho Thing Is Not Over Yot, and We Shall ot Last Triumph,” Epectat Correspondence af The Chteago Tribune, CunveLann, 0. Sept. %—-A few days since ‘Tuk Tainuny contained an editorial volnting out the extreme danger of intrust- ing the offnirs of tho Nutlon to tho Solld South so tong as the peopte of that region continued to tenel thelr children the lessons they now do In their schools, A trner thing hever was written, and, having apent some thne recently In that portion of our common country, I desire to add my contribution to- ward enlightening the people of the North in reqard to the kind of lessons that are at pres cnt being taught the rising generation tn that benlghted region, Optinists of both parties have consoled themselves with the assertion that as soon as the present generation shall pass from the scene of nettyity, thers may be some hope for better thmes in the South. To acertain extent this is undoubtedly true, but it will not be tra In case the present genern- tlon ean prevent It ‘They aro doing all in thelr power to. KEEP UP THE FRELINGS OF TITE WAR, THE REDEL YELL, and turned back the hosts of the enemy at Gettysburg; when Klipatrick nnd Daliigren, with their old riders, caine tier the guns of Richinond, anil so near to us that we coult almost see thelr guidons, and could hear the sound of thelr cannon; when Grant came into the Wilderness, and shot and shell went whizzing through the woods so thick that trees wero cnt to pleces and fell, a8 well ng men; when he swing round to Cold Harbor and Petersburg and drew closer the Ines which werestrangling treason; when Sheri- dat up the Shenandoah was sending Jubal Enrly’s Revels lying before hin us leaves be. fore an autuinn wind, and Sheri with that. Great, felting vary, (OF sollcrs, grag | and to instill the be lef that what was lost when that matchless hero, George H, | wiust be regained, They de not, by any Thomas flong-contintied applause], stool | means, recept the inevitalte, and look for- lke a wall of fire at Chickamauga, and with.) ward to the future for a brighter and n better a storm of lead and trom hall repulsed every attempt to break Jig Jing; and when again at Nashville he patiently and carefully gath- ered his army, and when all was ready, he went aut, struck Ilood at every point, and smote hint hip and ‘thigh, utterly destroying the army that had set out to reach the banks ofthe Ohio, Through all these scenes many of us were shut up, and could not ajd our brothers n3 they struck these great. blows, and sent A WICKED REHELLION type of Ife. They are fHke old men in thelr dotage, and constantly bemoan what might have been, There ts, perhaps, no one thing that Is guarded so carefully, and with such «degree of Jealonsy, as the kind of school-hooks that are placed in the hands of thelr chtldren, Thereisa decided feellng ngatnst the free- sehoot system, which has done so much to ward enlightening tho Nations aud tho op- Tecling to death. But we Jet ou. keenbrs position arises very largely from the fuct now ve belle our bro! wel ru “ “8” coming. We shonted when. we heard of | 8h lo those free schools, the “niggers ean have an equal opportunity with the their grand aelitevements, We stun son : HS | whites to Prepare themselves for successful which reached even the ears of Jet Davis, — gongs with a ring’ of freedom,—songs | citizenship. ‘Tho grentest degree of watch- {shal + ean act ay en Justice, fillness 1s exerelsed over such text-books as taught tim, and his.’ followers that | tfeatof geography and history. In many of the back counties thoy use on tho subject of geography a book in the “Palmetto Series,” called “A GEOGRAPHY FOR BEGINNERS, By the Rev. K. J. Stewart. Illustrated with Maps and Engravings. Richmond, Vis: dy W. Randolph. 1864." On the first page Is a icture of the senl of South Carolina, I ob- tained a cony of this buok, and now retain It asncurlosity, Below are given iberal ex- tracts from it, to Mlustrate the kind and ae: curaey of the knowledge that the Southern yout are obtaining; and from this it can be judged whether ft will take more than the thne necessary for the passing away of the present generation before the South wilt be regenerated and a safe factor in our National Government. I questioned tho teacher of the school in regard to the accuracy of the hook, and he said that it was satisfactory to his pupils and to thelr parents, and, while he knew It was not quite up to the times,” he sill thought 16 ANSWERED THE PURPOSE VERY WELT. finaks the flrat quotation from page 40 of the OOK s “ When Vitginia ndopted the Federal Constl+ death and only death could crush our hopes and end our love for our country and {ts cause; and that every ong of us belleved a day of salvation would come to ts, aud a day of destruction to him and hiseause. Thatday did come, and our relense—the release of us all—came with it. OUIt PEOPLE HAVE NOT FONGOTTEN US, they have not forgotten our struggles, our sufferings, and our toils; thoy, the great peo- ple of ovr land, who love Hberly and justles ant our country, bore this stragele with us, As we meet, year after year, our numbers Row less, a8 thoy wilt as time goes on, But this people will, a8 yon, sirs, and your city and your State, so heartily welcome us, so will'a free peaple never forget the nen who perlled all they had—aye, thelr ives—in order that the Nation should not perish, ant that freedom to every human being should be preserved and protected on every foot of our soll, WE ARE NOT VAIN of our longsuffering. Every oneof us would tathor have fought tho enemy In the open field every day than to have been shut up as we were,” We donot forget our comrdes who did not share our hard fate, We do not forget. the people who remembered us in tution of the United States, in 788, the Comtils- prison. We will never forget the kind hos- | sioners é¢ the Stat wore directed ‘to. annex the pitullty since the day of our relense every: | coudition and reservation of the right to with- Where offered and shown tous. We will not forget this elly which honors us to-day, We Will not forget thls State and ‘ HEL OUEAT GOVERNOR, who never ceased to care for the soldier {ereat applause, long continued, with cheers and waving of handkerehlefs], and while this honor Is extended to us we will never cense to remember and be proud that all is showered upon us beenuse of the part we draw from the Federation at will. “In the exorcise of this reserved right, Vir- ginin withdrew from tho United Stites in the Your 1681, and ulso refused to altow the troops of the Northern States to pnes though her territory to subjugate the other Stntes whieh had already needed, She was formully received in tho Southern Confederuey, then represented in Montgomery, Abi, and beemma the principal seat of the war of Scuthern Independence,” From page 1 the following [s taken: wok in the great fight which won uw re- [© The tiest volliston of the War for Indopond- stored Union, which won freedom for | enccof tho Southern Statns occurred at Churlos- all men, whieh feat down. by aris | ton In the spring of Init, wis ocensioned by the miserable. doctrine of State-rights | {Me President elected ‘by tho ettizens of tho and established as its superior the Nation's soverelgnty, and which gught to, and must. seeure to every citizen of this Republic full amd complete protection in hits life, hls per- son, hls liberty of speceh and expression of yolee, with no inan or party to mnke hin afraid or persecute him beeause of his opin- ions in any part of this great land of ours, Unittatt this is secured the great fight tn whieh we strugyled is not completely Woll. df we who survive fall, to contend that all these blessings ure of right the trultof our toll, and that that toll Itself was for the right, then our comlngs together are mockery of 0 #reat cause, and hospitality and honors paid ug aren sham anda fraud.” [Applause] PERMANENT ONGANIZATION, Gen. Stretglt then rose and sald that he had been aeting as Chairinan of the Local Connuittes, but it was now proper that a permanentorganization be made. A veteran proposed’ the mune of Gen, Strulght. for Permanent President, and in spite of the teneral’s pratest he was chosen by acctamn- ton, Dr. WK. Fleteher was mide Secre- inry and Col, ‘I, 11, Butler Assistant Secre- tury. en, Streight, on taking the chiutr, said tat the meeting had been called xs a none bartlsin one, and as he had been pial polities! speeches, [6 would probably be didl- cult for him to talle without saying some- thing or other that might be construed to. havea politleal signiticanes. [Laughter and erles of “Oh, go on; we're all the same way"; “WE VOTE AS WE si10T,’’} No; Twill not talk now. The State Board of Agriculture has Invited us to vialt the fuir, aud we are to bave a parade to-morrow, and the Indies have prepared a dinner for us at half-past 6 o’elock in thoafternoon, twill introdnce to you the venerable Prof. S, K. Hoshour, than whom 9 botter friend of the soldier never Hvedd, Prof, Hoshour sidd he would try not to talk polities, though it was dilleult, for him in the present e: ey of the comitry to re fran. He had sven the soldiers as they re- turned from the War, and was glad to have livad to see, tho velarans lo-«lay, and his eup of joy would be full it bo tived to ace the cause for which Qwy had fought fully se cured, Sergt, Frank Smith, of the One Hundred and ‘Twenty-firat Ohio, den gaye a graptile picture of his return from Andersonville prison, and lily COMING HACK ‘TO Gop's COUNTY and tho boys in bluse at Annapolls, Me welghed bot a hundred pounds when he Jookud from the cars nnd siw his country’s fing ond the boys in blue, and he wanted te elwor, but his stomach was on the wrong side, ‘The band thon played “Tramp, tramp, the voys are marching,’—the prisoners’ own tuid—and nearly every foot In the house kept time to the musle, while a large number of the veterans sung the alr, A. 8. McCormack, of the Ninth Indiana, uve noticu that ders was a petition we dressed to Congress in the hands of the Sve- retary, wich any soldier desiring coutd «lin. Tt was asking Congress to take favorable ave tion on Gen. Kelfer’s Oi to pension surviy- orsof Rebel prisons. ‘The nieeting then adjourned, a Northern States attempting to selze, provisiin, and occupy the forta in Charleston Harbor, and turn thetr guns upon the elty they weredeslned to protect,” after tenching the youth how tho War all lappened, in the above and simflar language, the Reverend author continues, and INSTILLS A RELIGIOUS LESION on pages 42-13: id “$n 1802 the Governmont of the Confederate States was daly established at Hichimend, Vitu Uoder a Constitution which had beon adopted by: the several States, with thy invuguration of Jef ferson Davis ng its Nest, Prostit fora torm of ax yours,—Alexander H, Btev Hote the apeli- fog} os Vice-President, Evory effort that human ingenuity could contrive, or dinn 2 FESOUTELS, ofmoney and vast armaments on soa and hand could ucoomplleh, was mude by tho Northorn Government to capture tho Captial and other {inportanc cities, and broavk up tho politieal or+ ganization of the Southern Confederney, “But, by tho constant, evident, and iknow! edged aldat the God of Battles and King of Na- dons, these eiforts have all failed: and, at vast expense of auttering and blood, the people of the Southern Btates hive fought thelr own way to political independence and tho reapect ana muity of tho grout nitions of the world. May dat God who his graciously blessed their erorts keep thom in His most holy faith and four, and jong secure to them tho blessings of puuce oud progperity."* THE QUESTIONS ¢ at the bottom of theso paxes, referring to the above inatter, ara ay follows: “When was the Government of tho Confeder- Ate States catublished under its present Consti- tution? How?) Where? “Did the North try to break it up? How? “ins ong tate a right to subjugate another? * Did they auccoeds “Who itded the South? Who ts King of Nations? an nation full without His word?” ‘The cry that Is ralsed by the Democratic demagogs ot tho North, that thelr party is “tho poor mas party? is most beautifully seb at nnught by the Southern wing of the warty which has always been an arislocracy, and has always adinired the English form o government. ‘Che English aristocracy is the WYPE OF THY OLD SLAVE*OLIGARCIY $ and this fact fs nowhere better set forth than in’ the work of our reverend author, He says: * These nolles [of England) as nclassof men are tir superior to aay ainiiar class of othor nado Whlesd ft be ates tnenot the ane race in the Confederate States of Amoriea, who, te thu exception of titles, resemble them very Much, dnd ATE nut AL all thelr interiors, Both Y generaly characterizud by noble and gene eros natures, sincere respect for rollglon, re. Mnement of miners, anda Hberal ¢ fitention; while inany of thein dre examples of a, highly. auitlvated Intoitvet and a dovetud ploty Notone word bs sald In this volume of the manufactures of the Unita States, or its commerchil Interests; but the author dilates wlth great eluquence upon thoseof England, —thus proving tho oft-nsserted propusition tbat the South would delight to THKOW ALL OF ITS THANE INTO ENGLISH CHANNELS. ‘To quote again from page Bit * Hy the dlligent use of tho, trousures of cont, Tron, tn. and other aninerals that: Providenco hay stored under her soll, and the catton braught by her ships from the Buuthern states, shoe hid provided ciuploymontand sustenance for a very. une population,” : ‘Tho Urlah population are expected in the present contest to contribute: thelr votes award thu suceess of the Demoeratls party and the ascendency of the South, The ave erage trish voter Hite understands In what rent conta he ts hold by. the dethroned aristoeravy of the South, Ho ts held by that elise of otir commen population to be a Httle bolow the accursed © nhzger” both dn point. of respeetability and Intelligence; aul tho common oxpression at the South fy, that “TUE DUTCH, HUSH, AND NIGGERS are wolng to ruin the country.” In egurdto the trentivent which the Dish people hive recelved nt the hands of the English lords of the soll, this author snyse i * Notwithstanding all the oforty of ‘ainbitious und discontented incu, Groat Britain bas suc- eccdod In avcuring ta the citizens of Ireland the samo liberty and civil rights that ber own peor plo enjoy,” z. One more quotation and I will leayo tho book. On page 200 ocours the following pas sages “ty the year 1fUl the Fedoral Government of those States, vlected by w sectional niinority of 1,700,000 tout of @ total Of 6,0W,00), utlempted to subjugate tho Bouter States by wiltury ogeus A &ympathotic Man. The other wiyeht the proprictor of one of the great boulevard restaurants in Paris wad to be seen eighty and tumuntln: vstublishment, Bure bubitucs. us thoy wory go: bg Out, asked bim whut was tho muttor, “Ant Meastonrs, four Fe eaep havo just sone.“away without paying fora gumptuois dinnor whlch they bag, caten," ‘out fs unfortunate, but you need not duspair au viotontly.” AnI" ree Pilon! the reataurant-keoper, in a tone of deep Iatreas, "itis not on wy. awo account. fam rich, But ny walter, Megsivura,—my privates rou walter,-tho fathur of u fuinily, who has nothing but bis place to yo ont He will huve jo bear tho loss, und not 1!" And he sank duwa on a chalr und invited foto t . a Bellable WalleNtroct Brokers, ‘The unusual notivity 0 stocks during the past three months bas Jott muny 0 man tho richer fur 4 fortunate Investient at the right Mine. Bo one Unaccuatumed Wtho ways of Wall atpuet the roliahlo udvica of ua reputable firin, lke Jonn A. Hoda Bt »y No. 13 Wall street, New York, and others that might be mentioned, tg ot greet Unportunco, Firms like this one do not eultuly to advise their eustomers rospectlug thelr speoutative lovestmunts, and thole advleo i yeuvrally sound, say Mttlos vt Sy ity pation, ‘This ocensioned the Mnal acpnration of those States, and the formation of theCoutedors atte States of America as an independent Gove ernment.” ‘The book which eases the managers of the free schools of the South the grentest trouble fs UNITED ATATES IsTony, In tho flyat place, no Southorn, writers make text-hooks a3 a rule and toe Southern houses publish them. ‘The falr, careful statement of faetas elven ty most of tho books tised at the North, does hot meet the Approval of the late Rebels, They desire to have it put inn far different feht. ‘They preter some old book whieh was written bes fore the ate unpleasuntness took place, and then Inve tho part relailng to the War sup. plemented by partisan teachers to sult the destres of the community, Tina certain town which Linight mention If occasion required, nschoolhistory of the United States beeame in some way ititroduced which tsed the wn pardonable word “Nation.” It spoke of the “National army and navy? tov, and of the “Natloual Constitution”? ‘This was unen- durable; and, as soon is it was discovered, the obnosxtous book was kieked out and ‘dee stroyed, and another putin its place whieh dahl not so sin agaiust the Southern understunding of thiigs. No book whieh speaks of Rebels or traitors ean under any consideration be tolerated, As one man suf to mes “We were Secessionists, and were called Rebels, and, perhaps, we vere traltora; but He don’t want our children taught any such niniygs. NOW JUST WHAT WE WERE THEN, i hall always rematn just is we are, We believed our cause was Just, and we still think we shall have justices In one way or another. We fafled to get it by tighting for ft, and ought to have known better than to have tried that. We have lost heavily, but the thine will coma when we shall get’ some of this back.’” One man took pains to go over with mo the plan by which the South expected to get out of the Union without war... He sald: “Phe War was all the mistake of some of tho hot-hended! ones among us. That is, It was a inistuke in the way it came about. It was the plat to get everything rendy, and then quietly withdraw from the Union and seb up our own Government. When this was done, it would haye been tho prrt of the North to whip us back if possible, We could have thrown tho responsibitty of the War on the other side fn that way, and this would have accomplished very much in the begin: ning, We expected to get control of the army very largely, to have our men in just as many plices as possittie. amet thus make coercion Impossible. White this plan was being carried ott, the: mistake of tiring on Fort Sumter was innde, and the contest wns precipitated before we were ready; and we thus falled. It was impos- sible for the matter to linve resulted other- wise under the circumstances, But THE THING IS NOT OVER YET. If we wero fy the right, “we shall at last triumph, Noxt time we shall not mhke the attempt in such nm way that our friends of the North cannot’ assist us; but we will fix things to sult ourselves, antl, if ourenemles do not like it, they can withdraw from tho Union and leave it to ns.’ With the Southern youth thus taught the ciples of State-rights, and to believe that ecession Is right, It ean only be a question of time when the seeond attempt shall be tnade ngatnst the Natlon whieh they all de test. The Deninerats of the North to-day, a3 they did fn 1860, say there Is no danger, and Jangh at the evident signs of the times, Thelr hunger for power blinds them to everything that stasis In the way of the ae- coluplishment of their desires, Gary, THE GE Editorial Comments on Carrent Pollt« ical Toples by the Leading Germans American Nowspapers. . In reference to the doctrine of; State-soy- erelguty, the Milwaukee rele Presse writes as follows: “Woe German-Amoricans are not Wisconsinians, Pennsylvantans, or Ill- {noisans,—-we are Amerleans, The United Stntes is, according to our understanding, a Natlon, a great Republic, and not a weak and-nceldental combination of States, whteh singly boast and blubber about their individ ual greatness, All Germans know tho tls ery of this ‘klelustaatorel (little States’ eom- bination), and they detestandabhorit, If there are among the Germans a tow State-Flehts doctrinurluns, tho grout wines of thom de not bo- Move fn.a Republie, of, boors and transyaal cow- boys, nor in a Jesuit State, hike Paraguay, Tho German left bls futharlind to found anothor. Whother in tho end his nutionallty will ‘be abe sorbed In the vortox of amalgamation ta imma terlul to him so long #8 he knows that he isn component part of n Nation, Tho ‘cans tounl pres texpesnater for dliference in pollt- ical opinion among tue cuntons of Switzertund) does pot predominite wmong tho Germans af North Aiporien. Tho German mny be, aceord- tng to his own conecption of the Ider, a Saxon, 0 Frusatun, a Heseo-Darinstaedter, a’ Bavurlan, Outin Americn he la an Amorican, ‘his very idea und doctrine ts stficiont to Induces every: German who Is not in alllunco with the *greeti+ islo bDlnck spectre * to vote the Republican ticket, The Germun-Aterican citizens are true to tho Republican ise for this reuson: They may they are, as A rule, reserved; bit hoy will vote necording to thelr judgment without losing many words.” 2 Ls} I iI wm oe Relative to Thancock’s letter in reference to Rebol claims and {ndemniftentions, tho TUtnots Stacta-Zeitung writes as follows: “dlancock took his pen in hand and wrote a letter, Me asserts (1) that he does not believe that) = oany claims = for Ine domnifications will be presented by the Southern people, and (3) that he will veto all such bills, passed for tho purpose, Ills bellef ts of no consequence; his asser- tion, that he. will veto all clatm-bills, is, If Hancock does not botieve that any Rebel will make his claim upon tha Federal Govern- ment, he simply demonstrates py this «is- bellef that he Is an ignoramus, Clatms to tho amount of nearly two thousand millions of dollara buve ulready been Intromiced In Cons aress. Ifnucock should kuow this, o8 overy une olae docs who ts nota candidute. Following nro the clalins Introduced: (1) Payinont of the cotton tax, wimounting to sixty-eight milllong, and with hitercst to one hundred and seventy- four uillllons; (2) remuneration for all property coniiseated by tho Federal Gov grnimont, amnaunting to itty . miltlonas (i) indemuttentions for requisitions mide dur ing thy War, amounting to six or seven miitons; (4) rent of ground for felds of battle, cunips, cle. mimounting to twonly wittlons. All of theso things are pot imaginitions, but slmple tactd, Which are introduced in Conuress and Med uway in tho several departments at Wash- tngton. If, on the face uf these facts, Mr. Hane cork oxpreasys hls belief that no such claiins will bu made and introduecddien ho olther demun- strates hin great fynoni’e ora superhitive de- gree ot fmpudence, Hancock says that bo will Wover give bis urgent, ag President of the United Bratos, ton Hebel claim. so fir, su good; and we are the last to doubt his word, Wedo not doubt for a moment tat ho Hancock) would refuse payment ton Rebel outof tho Foderal uxchequer Lor assisting in the inauguration of yobleltion, But these claims ace nut presunted in this” form. ‘They aro presented by helpless widows, — burmicss mothers, and aul more harmless cbilidren through thoir guarding, = Tho roul Orsitss, aud proprivtors, whenever thoy woro {tebels, disuppenred entirely inthe buekground. None of theso took actual part In thy Rebvilion: they can conaclentiously swear to thut. Hancock's promlusory lottoy would have na reference to them. No iebe) sholl ve yriid for bis cabeltlon out of thy Federal ‘Trousury, saya Hancock, Vers well; but the clalms ure not prosonted in thatform. ‘They are presented by the daugh> tors, alters, cousins, und auiptel “Wo veto un! such propositions Huncook bas not suld a word, Any ono can tyht tha devil around the stump when he is determined todas. The readiness and willingiess to do 80 we wust Judge by tho company lia which a person moves. The Nobels have already Introduced thely claims, by Hongense to assort that they would havo lesa chanco fur the colivotion under a Demo. eratlo than under @ Tepublienn Prosident, Agu gontlemnn, Hincook would koup bis prom tae verbally und iiterally, He will voto ath wlll which ehnply demand payment for n Rebel ne a tube. 60 tiuch be hus promised tn his fetter, ond nothing nore, Allother olatns he woul wpprove withont coming in collision with thu Janguage of bits letter.’ a Tt would ‘Tho only Democratic German papor on tho Pacific Slope, tho San Franelsey slhend-Zee Qo, os joined the Republican ranks, Domocracy out there does not seem to bo very wuch In demand. ‘The <bend-Zettung writes ag follows; “Wo recognize with » great deal of satisfaction the {net that our German fellow-citizens are stirring and mak- Mug prepirations foro lively partielpation tn, the Presidential enmpalgn. Bu far the Gore man clement, which holds the balance of power and Is strong enough among us to de- gids any election, has rested in mod- vst retirement, It cannot be denied that tho Gorman clement, as compared with tho Arisd, is a purifyog elewvat in polltles. Isisthe sdentiil eampalgn our Nationa ‘1880—SIXTEEN PAGES, if stepping-stone to alien, and strong enough to keep all unclean elements from the public ertb. Noone eau say that our Germans put theme solves corward for ofice. So far they tive not nsserted thomselves ns they should. Withovery chine of cers thoy trembled for the safat: af aur cosmopolitan suhools: or that jorsant Atberty might: be endangered by tho pasaure of sinptuary Inws, Tn aaserting ite streneth the German element docs not entertain any purtice ulneiatio or kiuwenothing tons, We do not want any Ainerionn Germans, but Germain Amerleans. It $s the duty of the Repubtican Central Cut to -see to tt that the German cle. nent I4 Hot neglected, Tt atands almost tnited ton in favor of the Mopubiican Presidos tial tioket.” The New York IMenrdel-Zettung has the following: “The exeitements and commo- tlons which the pending election and polliieat agitation have produced are gradually benr- ing their fruits. A certnin-degtce of depres- sion Ig perceptible in flaanctal cireles, auc it 's tho enuse that several undertakings of a greater innenttude have been postponed, for the present at least. But this ts natural, ‘The result of the election, us I Is antielpated by elther party, inust affect the mouey mar ket, beenuse the solution of tinportant fin elal questions depends upon these few words: Who will be the successor to Rutherford B Hayes? Perhaps this depression js uot well founded, Huteven the most remote possibility that the Greenback element might be success: ful should Induce every solid business man to uso his infltence in favor of tho party now in power, and against any change in ote Aaunelal polley, This polley ths Its shortcomings, but ft fs, to snuy the least. an honest ee And tho Milwaukee Terotd adits the allowing: Millions Upon indians of gold aire Janded on our shores, ‘They do not find their way nmong tho penne, but ure ansfoualy ror tained by our capitalists, who are afraid of what tho next fow weeks muy bring us, ‘The taborhy chigees must xutTer when enpital becomes thn, The Uolted Stites d-per-eent bonds have since the Ma ts olectlo: to lustig In jean capital js to an erent ex. | these sequelti Vanderbilt can bear loss of 2 per cont a s bonds, but tho widows and orphinia cannot, 0 Toa of 3 percent on our ieper-cent band Jeaue amin to $15,000,000, Before the ppentig of the Prest- eredit: stood equal of thit of Great Reltnin, When Ber consteld demanded ly 1878 Bix millions sterling sth directed troops to Malta, a panty on tho Loa- don money murket wis the eonseqtence, Col sols fell trom Mt to03, One percent) Aid p after the first shot has been tred lin the 1 dentind campaign, our own Niutfonal securities recade 2 percent, and from Londen comes the news that English holders of American bonda Are Auxtous to dispose of thom, If. in eee Of victory by ludlagut. they should Bill further de. ellng [i vilue, ft must haturally aifeat All othor securitics, and the consequences will ho felt in tho poorest homes, And why ail Unis discourage Ing depression and wenere! distrust? Beene the finanelal world hus no contidence In the Domoe: party, which Is hugging the Gi buek put, ite heart, The taanelul pot ot tho Greonlnckors Is tou well known, ‘They are the sworn enemies of the National banks, Jf those institutions sre abolished, they will forco 450 millions of ©. bonds upod the lourket, aud the sule of such a yteuitic sum MUSE nattirally caviso ndtevling in these securl- tics, If the Democratic party ana tty next best Friend, the ‘worn in green,’ should be victoe rious, our gold baste world become nu iluslon fgaln, Our present prosperity will goon vanish, tind the tines of 181 will be the order of the aliy. We ndinit that In the reuks of the Det uratio pirty there tre honest, third-monuey 1 In favor of a sound Ananelal polley, but they are in the minority, and, ng mutters aud things stand at present. thoy will he pushed to the wall in ense of a Demuoratic-Greenback victory.’ The Washington Journal prints the fol- lowing editorial on Mnj.-Gen, Half-Cock: “The hinnor of the people Is a singular Uiing; but dnvarlably tt hits. Mancock wrote his dispatch to Viulsted, and the consequence owas) a onew | enn dklate, 'Gen. HMatf-Cock ‘ils dls patch was a great inistake, and something had to be done under all circumstances to counteract Hts bad effect, We always antiel- bated a letter from Huaneock fu relation to Rebel elatins and: indenmifications, but we must confess we did not expeat It so soon, 1 seems Democratle leaders insisted uvon it; they folt thut soiwnething had to bo done tn or der to wipe out the bad effect of his Ptalsted dise patch. As far us thut letter goos, It 1s necept- able, but It doea nat cover tho ground; Gen. Hulf-Cock {s the writer and ‘hulfcoek* 1s the ro- sult. We aro of opinion that thia letter basbeen lctated and written by and with the consent of Southorn political tenders. It ia not the Inten- tion of the Democratic panty ta force Southern oluims, but to secure ftvelf. in power. No clatna will be purtted, but" the’ Supreme Court wilt bo tied ‘dad arranged, States will be erented, and United States Senators manufactured aevarding to tho bill of admission into the Union of the Btate of Toxua—ln one word, Democratic power will bo hedged all nround against dinger, that colosaul awitidling instituvion called the: United Stites Census will procure the nevessury: votua in the House of Kopresentatives, and there were. ‘Lhe prosperous, thrifty, anter= prising North, with its energy and business wealth, 18 lemed by an inshealticant minority of ite own peoplo; for the North need not to Tour the South only for the handful of Copparhoads amnong ts own ranks, Deincerate sin tr tugaln proved and demonstrated to the world, tht they ore’shrowd and observing polltielans, They retained this tramp” card until late In the campnign, otf Enneock = had not written tho Pinisted letter, bls Southern chums letter would not have made bts appear. neve until ft had beeome uv polltient necessity. ‘The Republican purty has reuson to be glad that the effusion hus como. We are ovor tt, und how the laat card tins been played ty Gon, Half-Vock, If he should write another Pinisted dispatch, he bas ne more stuck on band to counternet it. Whnt will the Southerners, who: nre guiding the Democratle party, do then? Or course, Invent some ather scheme to befog the peoplol Whut Huneoek saya in that letier is Hot the sentient of the Democratic party, ‘Tho Amertenn people understand that, Tho Ameri- cun people understand fully that 28 soon o6 tho Democratio purty docs come into power it will work, suck, and muke every dollar out of tho Federal Government for its own benollt, and, as the main strength of that party is located in the South, tho money wil ge there also, Itls Ofyeutsting to observe Denioeratia. bankruptey fa polltiont (dens, principles, and dootrines. Rit Ut Ja distressing, indeed, to wee that part y resort to the hist and meanest trick of the bankrupt J. @., to ubtaln tha confidence of the people un~ dor faleo pretenses by placlug in nomination a Union General." “Phe statesman Iancock has enught a cold,” says the New York Zeitung, and con- Unutes ns follows: © [fn deputution selected by an Important branch of our industrial business waits upon a Presidential candidate, then the people have a right to expect thut that candidate shall at least speak a few sensible words In relation to the purpose and object — that brought them together, Whoever exneets any such thing of Gen, Hancock expects it Invain, A deputution of American shin owners walted upon Mr. ancock fo. express —_thely =. sympathy and deyation to the Democratic cause, ‘Thoughts and Ideas were ndvanced by these visitors in reference to American navigation and tho ditt eultics—from: a Democratic standpolat—by whieh {t fs aurrounded. And what did tho states: man «newer? Did he say that ships bullt in forelgn countrica should be perniitted to carry the Amertonn tig, or that the tari on all mates rhul for sbipbulldiny eboutd be overhauled and reformed? Nothing of tho sort, although theso. navigating gentlemen felt the effect of their short but vory stormy trip over to Governor's Island In thyir stomnichs, which uneny feeling tight have been vssiaged by a few appropriate romuarks, But he did observe somothing, which beoutse of ig brendth and depth in thought and conception should be bsorved) to posterity by ull means, *Gentlomen,’ ho suid, * Tun vory much honored by your visit, Indecds Jain proud that the represeitativos of Amere fern navigation cull upon gne, the Democratic cundidate foe Uo Presidency, tum delighted to recelve your address, Your visit lan great source Of delight to ine. Lo enunot say inch more, beeausd of a feurful cold, On ata Twas 60 souk city: bourses that 1 didnot thin to bauble o reoolve this deputation to-day, but Fam awlid to acknowledge that J haye been able 0 doso, i ‘ Over this anawor of the pandidete ! tancocksos,! Ensueda gonoral shaking "a ‘avn? (dobstade,) ‘The genyemen dinapponredt and they ary now convinced, Tf whut the Democratic candidate for the Presidency thinks ubout Anmerionn navlgae tion interosts,"" The New Yorker Zeitung contains tho follows ing loader on Hancock's congratulatory Wispateh to tha Greonbacker #luisted: * fy a Republic Uko ours such cluments as those te whom Hane epek directed nig congratulatory dispatch can cause more harm and disturbance than in amon: urchy, in monarchies tho- bonor of tho State ta maintained by the authority of thu throne, while: in Republics, the Inate sense for justice and tho right of the people ws the only condition Upon which shoir national honor and existence van rest, If this condition dauppears such Ku- publica bave loat‘ their right tocxlmence, Tho Repudlaton and = Gicenback wovemonta, which bave beon *inuugurated by a sot of visionary fools and politicul swindlors, aud which threateped, iu conse- guynce of the susceptibility of the groat musies -thnony us to tha eMleacy of. tha Miuburg RADWAWS READY RELIED. DR. RADWAY’S SARSAPARTLLTAN RESOLVEN'T, THE GREAT BLOOD PUNIFIER Changes aus Seen and Felt, as they Daily Occur, Aft- er Using a Few Doses. for fustinn fantoma, and a Jingo of words, to Assume dangerous dimensions, are tho very movements to do tnealeulablo harm to tho Wulted States, These movements are, in facty nothing ele but ¢inasked fight of Communism Nealnst capiti, The Greenbackors ure doter~ inined to erento un finaginary valie printed on piper, by which net atone overy enpitaliat, but every one who calls something his own, will be deprived of what Surmorly constituted a yvaluo in commerce, Jinnner, or business, ‘The repus Hators are: desirous either to wipa ont en- tirely tho State and Alional obliguttons, or ‘forces such arrangementa upon thelr creditors na will, partiy at lenst, change the contracts made fe rood talth and oxisting bes tweon tho debtor and creditor to tho [oss and detriment of tho latter. The doctrine of repus lation 's by fre more dangerous than the vis- Jonury ideas entertained by the Greenbackers, The latter could be brought torcason by nsound J sson, appled througt tusiiess dls and genoril prostration ft al} industrial and com. inereial branches, caused by thoir own vogarics, But upon the former neither reason nor misery | 4, Good spirits, idisnppenrauce of wenknes wil have any effect. beeauso tho doetrine | fanuor, mele! Ay diivreage and bardlaess of of repudiation is) bused upon alshonestyy | 4 and muscle: which cannot ba oxansed — and pallinted Ntrength tne .anpetite {mproves, rele hy. any theory, " Tho | ish for food, nu more sour eructations of witer r whntever, laters of the pare, of Itepudiition deelare that tho debts of thelr’ Btates have been itegully contracted, and, therefore, they need not be mid, Hut itis a wellesettiod principle among nations that nny and every porty acquiring the rrtowgavern and cule a nition invart bly wiezes the debts contracted for pubila by tho Irrecnding party, and recowntica ences of debt of thé State creditors, AM sophistry and all evastons will ava nothing todony this, for al eredit world otherwise be uniderms and alt publis affairs would sorl- ously be affected and dainnged. Wo have had ce enelon to observe tho consequences of tha repudiation mania on the Stutes of Lonistann, Virginia. and ‘Tennessee, Tho party which ine tents to abolish tho monoy accepted by tho wartd as ino and supplant st by ‘fat’ paper dollars, sa eventiniiy no batter than the ropu- duttors, Inthe enine proportion as the volume of fae’ money Inercuses, in the Rime Prope Hon its valua will mensurad by the soli standard, When stich destructive ten the Domoerate with oy brash, geod digestion, calm and undisturbed aleop, awukon fresh and vigoret # Uiaappenrance of spots, ches, pimples the skin looks clear und teed the urna elanged troin Its turbid nad cloudy appearances ton clear oberry or mnber color; wer pisses: freely from the bladder through the urethea without pain or scalding; little or no sedunenty no pain or wenkness, 4. Marked dinimtion of quantityéud fre- Menoy of Involuntary wenkening ‘dixcharges Uf afllicted fa that way), with certainty of pore manent cure, the secreting glide, and funetion burmony re+ slored to the eeverad organs. ; &. Yetlow tinge on the white of the eyes, and tho swarthy, saffron abpenrance of tthe skin: rhanged toa clour, Hivelys and Jrealthy calor, 6. Those suffering from wenk or uleorated (tings or tubercles witl-reallza rent benettt io expectorating freely the toigh phlegm or macu€ Crom the lungs, ale celles broneht ar windpipe, throat or head: diminishiyr the frequency 1 cough; wenern! inerense of strengih throughout the system; stoppage of night-sweats and patna = body who Ia lucky enough now to possess any | and feelings whnkness arownd tho ankles thing of Intrinsic vale cun be in doubt for | legs, shoulders, etc; cessation of coll an whoin ha shoutd vote In the coming Presldontiat | chilis, sense of suffocation, tird breathing aud election,” paroxysin of wee ow lytige dawn or arising in a the nioriing, A these distressing By mptome ayy a vrauially and surely tlsuppenr, GRANT'S IDEAS. i AM any. after ‘lay the RASA PAIULLTAN te . taken new algnsof returning health will appears His Opinion of the Democratic Party, an Now Constituicd=Why Mo In n Republican. ‘The following manly and comprehensive view of tho political situation was given by Gen, Grant on Introducing Seyator Conkling nt tho great demonstrauon in’ Warren, 0., just Tuesday, “They appeared In ‘Lie Taine une of Wednesday, but will bear Fepublish-. ing. Gen. Grant said: : Lam a Republican, ug the two great political purtivs are now divided, beeauso the ftepublican purty t6n National party seeking the greatest oud of tha greatest number of its oitizans, fhere (s nota preainut inthis yrwt Nation where at Detwocrat. cannot cast his ballot, aud have tt counted ng cast, no inntter what tha predom- inatico of the opposit purty. Tho ean prociulm his polltien! opinions, evon if be is only ane umong a thousand, without fear and without prosoription, ‘There are feurteen States, and, lo culitics in some others, where Republicnns have nal thet yritcge, ‘his Is ane reson why Loum ww Hepublican, but Luma Republican for many othor reasons, The Iepublican party assures protection to {ife, property, public eredit, and the payment of the debts of the Governinent, State, county, or municipality, so fur ns it ean control, ‘The Demverntice purty docs not promise this. Tt it docs, it hits broken tts promise to tte ex- tentof hundreds of millions, ns many Nortborn Domvertts cnn testify to thelr sorrow, Tain an Republican as between existing partics, breause it fostert the production of tho tteld aud farm and of muunfactories, and it encour nes fener educution of the poor as well as the itch. The Democratic party discouruges all these when In nbspiute power, The Republican party {8 a party of progress‘ and of liberality toward fts opponents, It en- cauniges tho poor to strive to better thalr con> dition, the Ignorant to eduente thelr children te enable tem to compete more suecesstully with thelr moro fortunate associates, and, In tine, it seeures an entire equility befure’ the® nw of ovory cluzen, no matter what by raed, nations ullty, or provlous condition, olerates nO | five or six tinies as Nuch. privileged class of men. Every one hag the op- etunity tomuke bimeolf all that ho ts.capne ONY DOLLAR PER BOTTLE, 0 of. — Ladies and gentlomon, do you believe this can RR FR, ° ° be trnthfully suld in the grouter part of four- Rm. feen of is ces Uris Pilon Resins which the 4 emoeratic party control absolutely’ eo ale Tho tepucitenst sack lan Bury: of prigotptes, RADWAY’S ere improvement at tho ex pensy of the Government In ono section and agningt thia In another. It favors ropndintion of soldmn obligttions in one by the Republicans, to tho ond that itmay secure the one principio upon which the party isn most. harmonious unit, munely: gaining control of the tho sume principles provaillug w ver it has a section and tonest payment of its debts in ane | oa Governinent {4 ull its “branches, Ihave been ag tho blood tinproves in purity and strength disease will diminish, and all foreign and tmpuira deposits, nodes, timors, canunrs, tard Lumps, ete, be resolved and tho wnseund made sound and bawtly era, Fover Gores, ChTUDIG ekits digenses, gradually disappenr, B, In uses where the syatom has been sali- vated, and Mercury, Quicksilver, Corrosive sue inate have accunitluted nad become deposited tn the bones, Joints, ete, cuuatiw caries of the aones, rickets, spinal curvatiires, contoriions, white swellings, varicose veins, ete, tha S.Al- SAPATULLIAN will resolve away these deposits and cacerminnte the virus ef tho disease from thesystom. . a 0, [f those who are taking these medicines for the cure.of Chronfe, Serofttous, or Syphilidg disensen, however sluw mity be the cure, "feed better” nnd find tholr generat health improving, thoir tlesh and weusbt incrensing, or even keeps fog its own, It Is 0 gure sign Unit the cure ts pros grossing. fu there diseases the pntient elthor. wetn better or worso,—the virus of the disease Ia not invetives If not urcested and driven from Ue blood, it will spread and vontinue to undor- mine the constitutlon, Ag soon as thy SANSA. PAIILLIAN makes the paticnt “feet. bettor,* every hour you will grow batter and Incregse in health, strength, nnd tlean, j ‘The xreat power of this romedy 1s In dlsense¢ that threaten death, ns in a CONSUMPTION of tho Lungs and Tuberculous Plibisla, Scrofis la-Syphilold Diseases, Wastlug, Degencration, and Uleerntion of the Kidn Dinbetes, Stop Page of Water dnstantanes elivé atfornes where catheters hnve been . thus doing away with tho patnfte) operation of uxine three instrumentsr dissolving Stone the Bladder, and fn ali cases ‘of Inflammation of the Blad= der and Kidneys. In chron{e caars of Leucurrhaa and Uterin™ disouses, ©. . +.One hoetle contalus mere of tho activa princl+ les of Medieiues than wus other Propuration, rakon it Teaepoonfirl dnses,whileathers require foothuld. The Lemocratic party Js united in but _ono thing, and that fs in getting control of the Gove orminent in illite branches, It is for internal pipe cwherempabtle opiaton vould not Soients any other view), [t favors ilat money in ‘one an Rs plies and good money In anothor, Finally, It ‘ CURES AND PREVENTS ‘nvors the * pooling of wll Ixsues"™ not favored | Dysentery, urrh a, Cholers Morhue Fever in same part of every Btute Intely tn res belLon during tho pet yeur, 1 was most hospitubly revolved fn uvory place 1 stopp:d. My receptions were not by (tho Union cluss alone, bi Ay i Sli without distinction, bad free tall with many who wore against us In the War, and who have been against the Ropub= Hean purty ever xince, They wore in all ine stunces reasonable men, Judgiug from what they enld. Ubelteved thon, and believe now, that thoy sincerely want a brouk-up in thu “solid South" political condition, They sce that [tis to.tholr pucuniary Interest a4 well as to tho.r hipplness :that theresheuld be harmony and vontiduncs botween allwecttons,” Thoy want to brenk away from the shivery which” binds thom toa party name. Thos want ‘a protext that enough of thom can unite upon, to reike ruspeotable. One started, tho Solid South will gons Ku-Kluxisin did before, as is admirably told by Judge Tourgeo in his’ Fool's Errand. Whon the break comes, those who start [t wil) De surprised to tind how inuny of thelr friends have been in favor ot it for a long timo, and have only boon waiting for some one to take the fond, ‘Lots desicutite solution can ooly bo matn- tuned by the defeat, und continued defeut, of the Democratic purty as now constituted. ss THE ENGINE, For The Chicago Tribune. Into tho gloom of tho deep, dark night, With pantlig breath and a startled scroam, Swiltng a bind in sudden tight, Durts this creature of steel and steam, huletu Morbus or psintat dee are sty in for Amine lee by taking Radway’s Ready Mellot. No sans Hon or iniinmmation, ny weukness or lassitude, wit follow the une of tho H. i, Mu ” TY WAS THE FIST AND IS THE ONLY PAIN REMEDY that Instanty.stops the most exerucimting pains, allays Intammations, and cures Congestion, whether of the. Lugs. Stomach, Bowels, ot other glands or ors, by ong, apne Hon -IN FROM ONE TO TWENTY MINUT! No matter how violent or oxerucluting pul Rhuetmatic, Bed-ridden, Infirm, Printed, Ne ous, Nournlgio, Otay with dlguase ty, suffer, RADWAY'S READY RELIEF will ‘altura Instant ense. INFLAMMATION OF THE KIDNEYS, . ” NFLAMMATION OF THE BLADDER, INFLAMMATIUN OF THLE BOWELS, CONGESTION OF "THE LUNGS, BORE THROAT, DIFFICULT BREATHIN' ., PALPITATION OF ‘THE AEAleY, HYSTERICS, CKOUP, CET AL UENZe 4 ‘A . INFLI HEADACHE, TOOTHACHE, NERVOUSNESS, SLEEPLESSNESS, NEURALGIA, KHEUMATISSI, COLD CHILLS, AQUE CHILLS, CHILBLAINS, AND ROS! TES ‘The application of A Ready Relief tu the he ROST BUT part or purta where the pain or difficulty exists will afford cnse and comlurt. Thirty to sixty drops in belt a tumbler of water will int few minutge . cure Cramps, Sprains, Sour Stomich, Hearturn, sien Hend- ache, Diurrhia, Dysentory, Cotlo, Wind in the Bowels, and all Internal Pains, ‘Trave; should always carry a bottle ut Rad- way'a Henity Kelief with them. 4 fow drops in water will provent slekness or pains from change of water, It 1s better than French Brandy or Ditters as 4 stimulant, FEVER and AGUE FEVER AND AGUE -ourod for fitty cents, Thore ia not a remedial agent in this world that will cure Fover and Ague and ull othor Muturls Qwhat am [but an ongino, shod ous. Bilieus, Scarlet, Typho d, Yotlow, and othe With musele and fleab by tho hand of God, fevers (nided by RADWAY'S PILLS) sa quickly eddie on thro’ the deep, durk night, as RADWAY' futded lone by the soul's whito ftghtd Ofton and often my mad heart tires, And bites its way with a bitter hate, And longs to follow ita awn dosirce, Leuving tho ond in tho hunds of Pato, O mighty engine of atecl and steam? O mumnd engino of blood and bonot Follow tho white light’s cortaln boam— ‘Thoro lies satety, and there alone, ‘The narrow track of fenrloss truth, Ast by the soul s grout oye of Hyht, O paselanate heart of reatioss youth, Alone will carry you thro’ tho night, ELLA WHEELER. Awful dangors aro lurking nigh— Rocks and chasms are near the tracks Hut straight, by the light of {ts groat white eyo, Jt shouts thro’ tho shudows, dense und black, Terribie thoughts and flerce desires Trouble ita mud heart niany wn hour, When burn and smolder the bidden fros, Coupled aver with mixht and power, It hates, ne a wild horso hates the rotn, ‘Tho narrow track by vale and hill And sbrieike with acry of-Srewzieil pata, And longs to follow its own wild will, Y DWAY'S READY RELIEF. FIFLY CENTS PER BOTY'LE, Se HADWAY'S — . 2 * . Regulating Pills! PERPECT PURGATIVES, SOOTHING APEHI- ENTS, ACT WITHOUT PAIN, ALWAYS: RELIARLE, AND NATURALIN, THEI OPERATION. * A Vegetable Substitute for Calomel, Perfectly tustuiess, oleminely, conted with Sweet gui, purge. regulute, pur! fy elvanse, aud strengthen, Kadwas"s Ills tar the cure of. ull disorders of the Stomnoh, Liver, Bowols, Kite neys, Bladder, Nervous Diseases, Headiche,Con- stipation, Costiveno-s, Ind gestion, Dvepepain, ihliousniss f, Iniiammattion of the Bawels, Piles, and ull derangements of the Interual Viae cera. Warranted to ofeet a positive cure, Purely vegetable, coutainiig no moreury, mine ered, or deleterious drug ‘Obsorve tha fallow! from Disorders of the Di; Constipation, Inward Siles, Blood in tho Mead, Audity of the Stomuch, Nausea. Hourtburn, Disyust of Food, Fullness of wolght in the Stomuch, Sour Eructutions, Binkings or Phutterings in the fa ot the Btome ach, Swimming of thu tead, Married dud Ditle cult Breathing, Fluttering of thy ieart, Choking or Sultountany, Sonstions whan law lylug pes. ture, Dots or Wobs bofare tho sight, Fever and iDull Pain tn the fond, Detleiency of Porspira- Hon, yellowness of the Skin and yes, Pain In the Side. Chost, Lamba, aud sudden Flushes of Heat, Burning in the Flesh, ny ‘Dts will (roe,the wy Muniticent Gifts to Princotone Sifts Mark Tribune, Sent. 2. PeincotowColleye bua Just boon the reolptant Of the princely git of 8100000 from Mr, Robert 1. Stuart. one of New York's best known and most publlo-spirlted oltizens ‘This ia uot the, first thine that Princeton College hus been ine’ debted to Bir, Bluart fur liberal bonefavtions; but this gift atthe present time, Sein ta the reduction in the reek interest on all lnveut. ments propor for institutions ef, loaruiig, must: be. and donbticss ts, more than ordinarily ace ceptable, [his save du trast for the support of such professorships as ure not now enduwed, or. only partially ao, which khaws the oxe ood: Jidgavent and wise discrimi part of the donne, Wo und cieton peal Somlairy at Princeton also receives $100,000 from Str. Bluurt for the cudowiment of w hew profesiorsbip, which the Rey, Franols t. Pasion, of Chicago, bus reoontly been invited 10. > A Fomalo Metuphyslelan, Tho trial of Homer Merry ong chargo of theft, at Bordanviile, Mo. resulted in nn aenulttils ihrough the toatlnony of bis wifes Attor his diécharge, however, she parted froin him, saying that sho bud sworn fulsely to save nim front rison, but that she wquld not live with a thief. | 4 fow doses of Iadwiy's syatons from ull tho above-named dlsordota., +. PHIVE. 23 CENTS PER BOX, ’ ‘ SOLD BY DKUGGISTy, fam Read “FALSE AND TRUE.” Bend a letter stamp ta RADWAY & CO. NO. WARHEN-BT. COR, CHUNCH-BIN NEY as bas been indicted for perjury. A niediclue, Ike au ny fi “jna ed by the ii y ; liclis nan, 1s a cad Ht aceoniplishes, ‘The Widueprend tes- | you, Antorrabunn Worth Housunde will te sant Drops, and its contuagds use. wherever {n- troduced, constilute # reason suflelently strong for the ludorsement. of so valuable 0 preparations blues no inferlor compound, however well managed, could meet with the remotest degrou of favor compared with that which tho Hamburg Drops were recelyed, TO THE PUBLIC. There cun be nc butter guarunteo of the yalue of Dr, Radway's old established RR, ite Homes diea than tho buse and wao,th ess hinitations of 2 there are Fulse Hesolvonts, Rellets, and Pills, be suro and ask for Radwuy's, nad see (Chak Gay Dauny udinay io ou what yuu Ways Tnereused strength exbibiecd ta F i 7