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5 loyal In tho great 1866.—TRIPLE SHEET. NEW YORK HERALD, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, the parpose conditions, to form. oval ge" for the State conventions that were to assemble, The Sena ha pang, geal Dt r, chosen because the Convention believed I was JHE CAMPAIGN = ; { . fi second and third articles wero as follows:— come back at al.” In plain “ the enndidate to be presented to tho people—a comp ao capt Bome © ts pat up bye 4 ing wrag tromend, 4 ago nal ba given OD fous, of uneduested | ment cad onor which I have not deserved, Bets} governments BOW erares meets for Thad Keven ae] OF sla, They re — freed the din that bill thavevery one 0° thow omque yl thew liver tn the we a : Dyck senetion be recognized of paig | has been done, the Southern Bia s ugald he ene apes noms top a | Robles auth ‘ John T, Hoffman's Views on the Res | Yer ie : timitted into'the Union. Wow Wf there. ate @By Gon. 7 so~dny coady to work aud labor fon te in tb tony YS aetingtion (uot wach asthe ae ee eee . are, tht man whose name T have jost mention ‘Tho bill fariber provi ied that Witen w gonstitutioneon. | servative republicans here, end ttn wet | A ir, (Cheers) T trust that after tll: el republican, plavea ube commaatey * fae xing the rit of © a Alia, and te avr al I do not ask them very | ma i b adic pxpe beg egy ra ag oe toration Question: pore ere Tog on at cay seo whether Mr, Raymond has changed mind | ghall be M,,° 1 devote ourselves to some! ting esides thoae detoga’ ys mee ieee pol pe . pil loge paved a sy ver . more GAL ef peahegoeemediatiaes ‘Bi then | #gain; Ido not ask them to read tho Huraw— } the discnssiot thidl great question of national policy, | the rebels, L allowed the v “he convention WW + ayy bie a 4 oF mrak'd of tora to vole for dolegaiea to 42 tention thoy shold they came to form the capnsu. ~s Avdy J ‘ aren . 6 form it tawntt themselves (not doin | ahould | d, dictating what the torma of the ennetit. spe '° ¥ and when they formed it they should beatio Fey, | * sah yt rofor it back to the people for ratifieation; amd, if. oa) } ‘ porte fod, they mteht present it to Congreas” Now, T dic € jig.” Yeoed nounng but ag recognized . * Longresa fared, it | (Lissea)—to-morrow to see whether Mr. Bennett belloves | fT tris: thay mean? May be taken fo provent the rapt ie asian on nding, i A RL a that the conntry radical; but. I ask him-todetermine | was: mee ep im the expenditure of the s the coustitution should ba ratified in ir. Lin. | Whether ne is willing to pant himself on that platform, ad's mouey, to develop tas resources of this Stato coln, inthe message in which he gives his reasons for | that thero shall be no union of the States untii four mil- every possible way, under the titatien of the not signing the bill—whi¢h was that it was presented for | }ons of uneducated negroes ahail bo admitted to the suf- to foater canal enterprises and of enterprises his approval lees than one hour bofore the sing dia ad, | ago? These feauce aro getting plainer every day. 1 | wherever by being fostered they may a!d totho material Journment of Congrens—-goos on to make a proctamation ask this of every man here—I ask it of every lady here— | weal of the Stato, and thua we sail be ag mace She saying that tho were noeera bie to | for the influence of re gp bepalien ct the,country } titled to our motto of “Excelstor.” Let ua devontly him. “Congress did not claim then hat, the Routhern, | 1 Of itself a power, and Iam giad to-night to see in this | too: fur this end and earnestiy pray (and labor for It States should to tho conetitution, | Ssemblage of conservative that they are taking | As | camo up thin morning in the train, passing through which they now claim should be adopted; and that wag | &® Interest in this matter, discussions upon these | the beautiful valley in which it rong, it kecmed to me ns ‘session of 1864. Ot Paes The Issues of the Day Disenssed by’ Thad &te- vens aud George M. Dallas, ae. £0, kei —_—_—— RESTORATION, that the adnatason of! gperty. A confit Mace, of hemane revorasign, wer aad ie at " TOBA, in dele tbis, that onr lowal friend, toweth er with , odie, Wat thio proposed onnartational aritRay the loyal colored men, would carry the conyenuons and give negro suffrage. Every loyal Southern man came to me and asked moto pnt itdn-the billy There was not aloyal man, from Governor Hamilton to Gos araor Hol- den, Chief Justies Powell and Governor rherwood— were twenty of these men driven from tasie stabion Is in at the close of the But Congress at the | Subjects goforward, and let the women of the country | if it was one of the most beautiful mornings my ayes f aban at of Che tne cath Jast session ean xct making it necessary for certain | instruct their song that they shall never exact as mcondi- Hever beheld, ‘The carly morning mista were ris ng from other amendmenta to be wed b the Southern people, | tion of Ld by Graal’ oS ey a Re any ay the valley, creeping up the mountain side, and disap- homes—who daro not go back, for fear of belue ynur- | 91 O€ all dexpiroa on aniticnn party. They no where that in tt amendments are Dearing over the mountain top; and J cou! not but in- , Breech of Joun T. Hofman nt Elmbrag Ns Yor | ioveed by the Souhern people they shall have, re. | the nation four millions of negroes, Applause.) Now,.| Guice a silent prayer that, thesis of prefidvos, hats, | dered, They camet® letp mo'to fADMeato tt Hike ty § | Lbelleve My ay tothe dosyepsy > eslend= Lui olga, a presentation im Congress, On the contrury, a bill | to how you how utterly hollow is this protence of the | fanaticisin and pmasion which threaian to.overwholm the | was not the robgls (hat did it; tt wae the love’, men Yar | M the extenbto which vou w rey andy © th ‘a3 introduced in Congress declaring that whon | Tulicals that they intend to give ion to these} Jand might disappear az they disappeared, and vanish | said give ug that bit Toval white} (ny it mot only bo bla diwhieaiteas 40 toate Mate gate, Your past rer axp GuwrizwEy—I came into your beautifol eT nas the candidate of the young men for re of 4, these amendments were adopted by the States then | People upon the adoption of the constitutional amend: | in ihe clouda (Applause.) Aud’as 1 rode ‘along Taw onl | on pally adit yetan " the immedia herein you ag publicang in pet Tepubliean at Bhi Governor of your State, a stranger personally almost should have representatives in Congross—and | Menta, and in order to show you tho policy of hate, the | the doors of the laborer: in tho farmhouses alamdin r a one nic feak notonly tho weifare o6 tye cy wie of all (NO Jogvery man within the limits of your city, Bat have | tha! bil ws defeated tho Hoose, Teome, therefore, | Policy of war, the polioy of maitce, the liey. of iweane fiopen.” Taawthe emake rom the enty. Are curling up | when. Goverane ‘Tamitton tld we sto'rice. eiom that | down-trsiden ard opps t.\ been 4 london 8 greeting & elcome accorded so-sincere. so en- | to the question of these constitutional amendments, which characterizes them, permit me to read an | into the morning, Tnaw the castle foeding, as itwere, | law, and although we are now in the minority, ana T dt thin hae seers traly grateful to you all. (Cheers bocaneg YY are important amendments in this canvass, | ¢xtract from a payer wich t boll tan pata Tete an'P upon the thousand hills, I saw the little ones playing |, duro not go homo, for I should bo mardersd--zive ae wored and a ‘ore you to-night the representative of -¢' Tie chairman of thia meeting has: said, and said -very, f A4vertisement of the New. York Week! dune, pub nd the doors ofthe houses while the father went | that bill, und wo ran carry Texas on the site of the Union i Son Oe fone Colies Yay Darer, ade UP. ob that the question is not now whether constitu | lished by Horaoe Grecloy, the man who asked the Presi to his labor. L sew around mo peace, plenty, hap-, by twentystive thousand mayarite."” Gavarner Molton tt that are im arate. for gore time past lave not in political | tional amendments shall. be adopted, oe whether they f 4nt—and I will only alinde (o it in passing—-wbo asked ereatnees and power, T faid to myeolf, this land | me the same, gnd so did everyboty exeint the Virvin ekeiice, ¥ OU tho thai aren ak serine wine es come—the necessities of } shall not be adopted. Wo are not called upon in this | President Lincofn to submit theso propositions to the | has pe wed through a struggle, bat this State; with alt n&. The noble mea who went to Philad will not defend thom, fat will Father ee 1 poems - it should come—that forthe great | canvass to vote upon that question. He has stated very | Country as a basis of adjustment :— it has suffered, does not to-day know what. war ], traitors’ convention. appointed a com: fence imporsibte, You relyy inst on thone white ng et ane Apes Speety Topiotation of sit the States to} troly that the question ts simply, whetber the Southern |, 1. The Union ts restored and declared perpetaal T thought of the ravaged and desotated | resolutions asking thit thie very thing » you rele on pleadug, quiet lay.enid: : er rh mr ion, men should | States shall have representation, indepeudent of the % Slavery is utterly and forever abolial throughout the ] plains of the South, the terrinle judgments visited on | Coneresa, a copy of w! h they sent tomo ta wrengthon y therm all palit. cal power, Ghd then + ‘ ence are esr ag antazonisins, and mest | question of the adoption of these constitutional amend- SAU domplote uinddty for all polltieal offences, with a | 2c for thelr rebellion on the constitution of the United | my anda. This is confined to the robet States alone; I Heats, elovaie, OATrAMchO Maa freed nen 4 Mer BsPegoman bos Bie ees thang neck hie OPN, a cinge oe aoe Mg amend, charade ‘all ‘an Voncwiiente ot ‘Yo nil the States. iterates penne my 4 ysis spar diene fe pak it; atv se it fs ri : ce ‘ond, becanse it ren Hea bs ae He Laie phe ; ; “ , on th ery h ivfleges of citizens of the United States. nts which Heayen sent upon them; ought of | protects onr brethren there: thirdly beenves it pre eltare of the. fraedmee: | ollowe: me aber ol Soorn) 3 do not sland here to-night, ladivs and iten'lo- 1 adopted these States should Lave admission, Now those Ma Tie Uniom ty pay four hundred million’ dollars in. five » poor that they could hardly carry on their own ts the States from ening into the hands af the-rebela, Th all thle Pa jon vourvincority. Bug men, to #a) Mt, ane We regard to the candidate | qimendments aro numerous. There are four or five of | per cent United States stock to the late slave States, loyal | local goveromonts; withn people so poor thatthey could | and thereby giving Ue President and ¢ the pat avert defeat wad give victory, When poe) reaps cing: rae New York, I leave it to my | them, and itis the first time, I think, in the history of Endoappenien alike: Sake appeelicned eceey coordi fo | hartly furoish the nocosatties of life; with households | next forty years to rebel Handa, Lara for It, and J hall , uncerely Berend ee Tate raS iT leavadlt to the record of my life to | the contry that any attompt has aver boon made.to.re- |. Shearamatine' tan the lovace oF thele toval. altiaons by the f 82 Wesolute that there was hardly one'in whicly w father | go for it whan Corigross monte with all my mint Now, " miast of eat hat Tera aI eta a atthe beginning of this | quire States to adopt a fories of arnendments to the con- | Stulltian of alavery. Each state ta be enduied ty sta quota, | OF 800 oF brother bat not beep taken away. 1 thoughbot | however, remeinber that I do not say, and ever ment 1 ity, fe noe boss, ree tan pose et ieee acr a ssiugtion, ak ane time, Ove of these amendments, Foti upon the ratifieation by its Legislature of thks adjustment, ball shad nission to the conetitution of the coun- | to, that whe 5 propose, 4 Jat, Ae i 4 of alife } very serious amendment, which {8 talked about to the | The bonds to be at the absolute dispoaal of the Legislature | \try and the resuite of the war, 1 saw them sunding | are adopted tho rebel States shal 1 to come sn (0 mort warfare, ure hoand ot ontty tm the leasing city of this preat country will not Justi. 7 : foreul le > with th grr ‘ ' ripe pe okt > J people a great deal by the radical orators and speech. | aforesaid. A thero, ple with Northern men, vow that the war is } until they present constitutions containing the erence aod 1 at right « +b mploy meaut fy me be‘ore the We of the State, nothing that Tean | makers going about, is the one that declares that here- 5. The sald slave States to he entitled bencefarth to repre: over, to let peace and good will return to the country. | of liberty d when they do that | wii} let thent in at | alepted What good renown hare you aay {0 my own behalf and in my own defence can secure | after representation shall only bs allowed to the yo mrry avis ac enh gl ec nguedbll oo Shi gg my Sey Taw them. with outstretched arma maying, ‘Mon of the | nny time b regard to the queniion. of n eu.) fuetiny Vind Of av orvebee b Bd copending and thelr eatiage, I heve no | voting population of the States; or, in other words, | "'¢."4 national convention ty bm neserabled so, soon as may | Nor'h, wo bave violated thio eonstitutios wo froo States, every one knows that Tam | goiter ar reodmen absolute fo aay thet y opponents; Ihave nothing | that ‘wlierover mals persons. aboye tha ago of | bo, uruiify this adjustment and make euch changes in the | ave sullered the camsoquences, we are fl ile by tb axpreas ‘ray coletbe! everybody’ fag: { Uno thelr: pe psig Hn a say as to them persoually, The assault Lhave to | twenty-one fire exciuded, they shall not | constitution as may be deemed advisable, the ri and in the 5 ch out your | a right to vote and pay his taxes, and whoover ia | C2!rsuchi- ine , * Sake te cishbie pen thele polidy abaithet: pritelnies, ‘te calcn on tho basis of . representation. | ‘That ig what Horace Greoley asked Prosident Lincoln | ‘hands to wa; let this spirit of fanaticiam, bate and pro- | governed by the laws has a right to make them, L | Dent de the niptlon that th shall do that to the best of my ability, sparing | yon find these men ankiog the people and | toagreato Now hear what Horace Greeloy says—the | Judive die out, and let peace and good will reiga throught fvania Convention that amended | PA" that yon ars in favor of va h mothing in the attack, (Applause,) Now, my tellow Sitivens, let us look for a moment at the great issne of tuoday. TI can bardly hope to adi anything to the fercibie speech of the distinguished gentleman who pre- And as I thought of thia I fel W» of my #tate ng in this es without you find people asking you if the thera States only | man who has attempted in the issues of hie paper to say | Ont the land again had a certain amonnt of represgatation when all the | that ho who.stands before you was not trne to the con- | that I coald vo among the peo bincks were slaves before the rebellion, why they should | stitation and Union, and charging that in 1863 I insulted } newed heart and renewed of have any greater representation now? And itis a ques- | the republican party and its leaders, when he know--and | dont that the co pit in the word white and © number of voters. 1 voted It, and while every other man put his name to the conatitution that it mfgtit go down to poxterity, Tre. {th re. 2, cont. rd to past 2 In servitude ia forever prohibited, and the Ot pe Out nny “| Ere eee eR se aeespend fe he Smee Wtaoeabt or | W's: iS es Mona tame toni eae | Cer in OF the ta Power, oF shall not 2 | am proud to know that, foremost among my friends { Stars? would by pub a nee Sa, tis ¥ 1 trust there les at this meeting, I do not hesitate tosay that I | tion which strikes men very forcibly, They say, per- | it has been pnblished in other rs, hough be would dices, will earnestly + in thia work of restora- J fused my name and it isnot amone the elenere, for T 2s. pean Yee 472 tena fle shed BS 120 | haps Justly—I am not disposed now to dispts the pro. | not print Te that im October of the same year his own | tion and regeneration, (1.0.1 cheering.) Was not proud of the instrament and am not now. ‘This te thie good Judgment of ove rn bay ecpaioe i | Positlon—that States which have boon in rebellion showd | convention nominated me for the office of Recorder, and 27 Sled LINER A a question may be thought a lirtie in advance of the age, Sheers) Neverthel 1 ah ta ie not come back into the Congress of the country with | gent me a letter in which they said my devotion to the What ts thi world but a world of provress ? and wh with pecaliag ant extraordinary power, pest ng orertholess, in my own way of pro- | greater representation than they had when they com- } cause of the country hat vever been danbiful. Hear THE ISSUE, Shh salempaaretetoaie te ttr\dio mente te | it loyal mon tether away, and Congress gerting tie question, 1 shail proceed to doit, with such | monced, That is a practical and important question. It | what he says,and I ask you when yon rend {t to-say . eS tat ranks? ‘Tho liverty of the world ta hot yat afte dors not. In Chit antagonwem, on which wide are yon? oe iv ea ee tabeah a ence a 4 sae td matters little what my views are. but I do not eer whether such a spirit will bring peace and prosperity to Speech of Thad. Stevens, nt Lancaster, Pr the world fe yet inchaing, half the world iy y: Th pre te mo middle rron Ate r ” 0 weet ~~ just passed terril a our) ie . a1 , Pa, > ay . ok ac sheed. cad potiam ? Then av vo boldly, and deno ma hay eonvulsed it from one extreme to the. other. Tt | 12), tattf the amendment sinod alone, addt was sate’) the country:—'+A politival strdgylo! ‘rarely sirpadsed fo dene. ak Kingly government. We must go ahead, and tt pollem? They say wo boldly, aad ues Uy 4 fied of the right of Congress to exact it as a condition to | importance or intensity bas been precipitated on the f can do but little, Eshall do what T can; and if, when T the adm’ ssion of these States, I would give it my hearty ¥ country by the treachery of Andrew Johnson and some Tcome not to make ae ech, but for the want of one, | at dead, thero aprouts any vigor from my bonemand my mover could have passed successfully through {t if the 1 have hoaght with wonder of the fact that with two earia of the great mass of the American'people, revre- } approval. But first I deny the right 0° Cangress to r@- | of his official or personal adacrents to the great and pa- | Whon } loft Washington T wan somowhn: worn down by | grave to help forwart posterity to proclal a. th seme a Hielon before you, agrees We She eating all partios, had not been in ihe contest. (Ay | giro the adoption of that or any’ other smentment as | triotic parte bp eenien they were, intrustad mith power, | Jators and disease, Wan, disooted by aap poynia‘an | docteinen of universal torte and ctv en earn ae urine Shih you have, « Avniaes the ‘auge.) We will not look at the past; we wil! not dwell | the condition precedent of the admission of thao Statos | ‘The alm of this troachery is to put the sterdfast loyalists | neither to think, to speak nor to read until the noxt se | universal disenthraiment from kings vof Johnson, thobgh A ng ite nature by tte eon the assaults which have heen made upon individual | t representation in Congress. Thoy will tell you it 12 | of the South under. the foot of the. ‘whipped | sion of Congrass, or I sbould not regain my strength. 1 goddews of liberty is represented 1 reanile, soa have never uldered 8 bold, manly men aud individual parties. The great irath stands out, | part and parcel of the war measures neceswary to bring | but not subdued’ rebels, and to enable the latter | haye followed the first injunction most rodigiourly, for I] as avery nice little poddews, but ¥ and docktod denvnolation, Lhave asked, h tt invent and beyond dispute, that the whole people of ¢ North, almost em masse, have united their energies, Sheir talents and theircapital in the one great work of [ ereab the Union of the States, tor which their ws fouvht and bed, and, however they may hav» Gera ato She mens and peculiar manger in which war should be conducted, they were agreed upo the ge great pointy that It Tisai Etas contacted chat all tes of all this Union should be kept within the ee eee oapenitoa. and. under the restrictions pos ereby. For 1! en ow many huadreds of &. wands of lives have been sacrificed, how many thou- pases Le mag recto bave been expended, how many houses have n desolated, how many youn: Ropes have been blighted, how many old beads 4 eon bowed down in sorrow and ht to the grave for that sere abe | rere head of Union of thare ; during this whole contest, one man or woman ages anked this question: “Whe this war fe ever shall tho States in rebellion bo kept of the Union?” there would have been unanimous and emphatic “No.” (Cheers) then, was the object for which they iu then, was tho object for ymacrifices of life and saci of money were made, and now that the war is endéd, now that the re- Sefton has been subdued, now that the admitted cause of Lys aoe pe eee tay p7 hed, and now mt the South have doclared that their own debt shail de: ated, now that they have falfilied the oblign- imposed upon them by Conzress whon the rebe!- ee Geetonen > eull find the majority: wible t the y ranging amo: tof God, anoa'd ye cour enes aginst that wrath and of w Thave heen ted to fon, what [cannot my, bat gained aa vnbaianord made your t «of recone ‘ © dangerous tunn diy 0 rpeak wil wad 8 one sided and rnbalanced ta Jnivem of forgive. aninily and over you ware spenicing Thadded Stevonn am 2 rewon for your de n was RronY HAL it was with your idews of margnaltoity 4 overcoming Ovil with wand. Yor wool rebels tepower grenter than that of joval men, honor them, conlide in them, royally with benefits and gifty, and then work perity to elevate the frendmnen have sivinped of ail power. This, vou think y poles of penalty, deprivation and restrice tion towurdé traitors i¢ satanic, * e Your belief that the spirit of the age and the resnite of the war are suel that @ retracrde movement a wo Liberty is impossible to any fetare party of Seutherm arrtocrats and Northem demoors.a, ie but « tampting of God and 4 detueion, if throngh your unfarthfolven and that of oiler, aristocrackes with peraliar powers sre about perfect peace and Larmony throughout the land. |-to glut the: vengeance on the former, whom they | believe T have not let an idea pars through my mind to | to grow—to pnt on the habilime When the abolition of slavery was required as | hate und curee aa responsible far tho’ most unex- | trouble me since Congress adjourned. The second ane, | al canyyombrace within her fold« evore, natin & condition, there was senso in that, becaase all | pected overthrow of thelr darling ‘confederrey.’’? | not to speak, f war seduced from keepin’ by some noble | ev a.and every homen being within Ged'ac men, by virtue of the force of circumstanc:s, ad- | In the name of Heaven, if that bo true, as Horace | friends in the mountam districts of Pennsyivania, and T ) Teare not what vou say of negro mitted that the institution of elavery, which bat | Greeloy rays it {s, how can he stand up in his paper and | made a speech at Hedford. the only one I have made, a deen the disturbing cause of the war, and of so many | declare for ontversal amnesty on the ia of universal | The third one, not to read, I have followed a moe A with the help of God Tahal! die w irritations, was of necessity wiped out by the war, and, | suffrage? It that bo true, as. he is attempting to make | ally. [tis trae T have amused myself with a litt them, I vsk no epitaph, I shall have none; bat IT ehaif therefore, as a neceessary war measure for thé suppres- | you believe It is, then the Southern people are not en- | frivolous reading. J Lave taken up the dailies and pubs } go with a pure consciousnes? of having tried to serve ston of the cause of the war, thers was jastoo in} ticled to representation in Congress, or to association | lications of kind, and read things which wou!t make | the whole human race, and never baving injured a human exacting it; and, whether it was constitutional or not, | with patriotic men. He knows it is not true; but he | no impression upon the mind, For instanes, there was | being the people of the South acquiesced In it. Just so re- | circulates ivto intlame the passions of the people and | 4 serial ount from day to day of a very remarkable —_— gard to the repudiation of the Southern dobt—it would | misiead the conservative mind of the country, goes | cirens that travelied through the counire (langhter) from Extract f ss ace M. Dall not do to let a 10. ‘& debt contracted in the ser | on to says—‘The recent wholesale massacros at Memphis | Washington to Chicago, and St. Loula aud Louisyi!!o bn: + sila Py” pnd wee gpd pucogr +n anced vice of the rebellion; whilo every sense of prudence de- | and New Orleans were but conspicuous manifestations of | to Washington. (Renewed laughter.) I reod at with at Ashland, Pa,, Sept. 25. manded that the country’s debt should be paid, incurred | the spirit now rampant in the South, whereot the pro- | £0mMe Interest, expecting fo see in so celobrated an ‘The word “iesne,”’ which we ose w in putting down that rebeliton. But #yn these suniects-| rebel tr'umph in Kentucky is a mors recount gxample. | eatablighment—one which, trom ite heralding, was to | the differences which have arisen bet were out of thé way, there was nothing left poceiey The soldiers of Lee, Beauregard, Joonston and aro | beat Rice and oll ‘the old circuses that over for the peace and harmony of the country. And Bow the dominant power from the Potomac to the Rio | went forth, 1 expert d great wit from the celebrated understand, and means simply that the quession which ts fongress propose these amendments tw change the | Grinde; they elect each other to office in preference | character of its clown. (Great langhtor) Thoy nted for detormination by any person or party. has Fopresntation in Congress, they do \t merely torer- | even to stay-at-home rebels; they have supplanted | were well” provided with clown#: instead of denied by any other Now let ns ‘nquire where It petuate their own political power im the body in whieh | nearly all others as policemen of Southern cities; they | one there were yo. as the cirous was to bave a large | Wes that the tesne whieh the American people are now they are acting. (Applause—‘‘That’s so.”) Is not it so? | are organized. and officered ax State militia, and thoy | circniation. One of these clowns was high [n office and | C#!l*d upon to decito was feat rained. Was it when the Lot ye see, I take tt ‘or granted that there ts no ono | ruthlessly crush every demonstration of loyal whites or | somewhat advanced in age; the other was a little lesa Southern : tates claimed the right and announced their here who fears that the few members of Congress | oval blacks in assertion of the equal rizhts of American | advanced in oflice, but olver in years. They started out | determination to withdraw from the Union? A very who come back from the South are going to be | freemen. The school houses of the blacks are burned | witha very respectable stock company. In order to | fitht knowledeo of the history of the war will eames to able to revol ize and overthrow the govern- | and their white teachers subjected to violg tract attention they took with them, for instance, a | enadle vou to anawer that po tesve was then raised be tent, if they had the disposition, acainst the im- | and outrage by unchanged rebels, who re! celebrated general; they took with them an emineat | tween Andrew Johnson and the most radical members of mense Northern ino against them. Bot the | the work of murder and arson by cheers | naval officer, aud they chained him to the rigciny eo that Dix party. Himself « citizen of the South, coming from radicals say the rebel the South may umte with } for andy Johnson and execrations of Congress.” | he could not get away, though he tried to do sg once or | &8'ote where the doctrine of weceasion, to kay {he least the conservatives and keep them out of power, and | Fellow citizens, ladies and“ gentlemen, mothers, | twice. They announced the most reapectadl sto of it, was not unpopular, no voice was more clear in de- so they: ‘want an amendmentof the constitution to dimin- and fathers of children, frieuds of the. living and the | company that ever wont forth with a manager or circus, | RoWDCINE that doctrine, and no enerey more untiring in ish the Southern representation, See where this leads | dead! is tt tho duty of an American citizen to give coun- | though they bad ‘no very good man for the spring | ™pnertef the Union than that of Andrew Johnewn Aw you, Is it not astartling position to be taken that @ | tenance to documents like that, which are circulated boards; but they took with them fora short distance a | the War progressed, in thowe dave when the hearts of copcinglan that, far soune rem of trath of God ev over your mind 6 authority your mins, ese, cout com'ng © whan you sneaking of t reetore thi Tepresenting tho party in 1! io convene toceiioer vite cesveies eae ta mcs TAA onal amendmen’ adopted to keep @ | every stea: ve rt , accustomed to ground aod lofty tumb- many of those who were most bitter in their hatred | formed sud constitutionally rauctioned as a partof ship fear poople fought to keep'in the Unigo shall no: como | sere pay intmemar? some day New england, may | oy et a ne ea ene ho Dor time | loc, ‘salted: Sontgnmory Blais.” (habehter.} And as fof the South woamed to fail them, and the questiin | tation, at war WU the vaky Arve -rineiniog oF Niberty, the question wi you are to rmine in | get so mach exercised upon the tariff question, in favor | months $1,’ (Loud iaughter) Why, «man who would | they wanted to get up fide-shows, as in always prece- | Of Muccams to the North appeared to tany to be pty preyed ncgrrg werent Rm we rag ph wan dent where anything is to be made outof these con. | Ost donbttel, no doubt of Andrew Johnson's Cerna, they switched Lim off in varions directions with n | Zea! was Hinted, for he it was who. perhaps above all hand-organ and a monkey, [Laughter,) In the Kast | ther men, contrinmted in the darkest honrato strengthen they called hie monkey senator, Boatitt je, becnaws he | ent help the weak-benartad Nor warany tae mate np of pigh tariff, and tho great Western States so much ex- | try to keep up in this country the spirit of hate and ged avainst the high tari, that whatever party can | vengeance, a mau who would try to keep up the excite- t a Con! for the time being | ment which has kept «under tbe States fo Jong, a man all parties sanet be guided by their principles, And x trolling majority th may take it into their honds that they wil reduce the | who would circulate broa/cast through the country such y organiend), im inet, arietocranion, haved on savery, Partof the nation. And what was the reanit? Lab rebel ‘been subdued then the war is not ‘over. yot over. been subdued. Tho President of the United states | ro resentation of the other section. New York might | matter the face of the itions he himself | looked so much Nike one. (Laughter.) Up throngh | betwren tho President and thove who shonid now he his oreane of ble dja 4wot for rlavery and the Prociaimed peace throughout the land, Every sol- take into ita head, ax Ltbink it wil! this fall, to over- had pote fer te ase APS ee and do it merely | the mountain region, et pees OO we Hont..| friends when that resolution war pawed to which be} trea ni deer, Uke Tat: life Crom de. Ger in rebellion has gone to bis home. There is not an | throw these radicals—(ehoers and laughter) —and elect & | for the purpose of carrying ® State or @ Congressional | gomery Blair was there, and his monkey and organ wag | Still adheres, and by wh Congress doviared that the | eirict: ; ; f — conservative ticket, and the radical members of Con- | district, fs not fit to live among patriots. (Applause.) | called Judge Binnel. Dut the cireusweaton all the time, | War was not carded om for any purpose of wubincation J ls Bol one, arming cncaaihh aipel! we again os gress may that, ita representation in Congress | Perhaps Mr. Greeley may not agree with me. If be | giving performancos at diferent points, sometimes one | OF Tevence, but with the single object of resnrins the ra: thew racter, 6d With a baseneen shall be dintin! Now, this snot abrurd; Tam only | don't, haveno doubt ho will take occasion tommy so. | Clown performing and sometimes the other; sortar as I ee cbicts at tam poeghas mae Tw vertee ter Tinie Oe { Unotr Peeoptioe tke Webel rope who detuned arian showing just where this argument leads Tt can bin Set NE oe witb Boo 7) pee fos ome woe was oR eg aoe clown was the most vigor. auptiba to see p Rg cond for showing Wt or of giving’ | our contiies for extawnce, and hndtidte ty Ome the lead you nowhere eles; beca there can be no mouve | uy for the amendment I have spoked oF bring tosisted upon | general improasion in New York that the antaon- as 4 condition other than that of securi! = between Mr. Greeley and myself was so creat political and partisan power. (Applause.) Nevertheless, | that the man would get off, But be did not. I ad- wf it were in the power of Concrese to impose this | ministered the law as I thought it was duty to energy id malignity. The elder clown. owing to the wens. .nG Prsrmn. arg upall hopes of recruiting the armics of the No th wi and suffering—you know ho had bie arm broken and his | ten who, while they were willine to d vote everything jaw ‘and his neck broken almost—(langhtarjes | to the Cong te the bear ee ten 4 no by bibl eh ay ™ cl martyrs to or ‘< ne | ae Meri. inducing & necessity for certain opiates, which bad very y! ins ed peu beagge serge 9 Ayres soug of Lope mod progres: in the development of Liberuy? Fo far \« \¢ from being tras that there ia no danger of Petrogreenion, thet ifthe policy of Johusan prevaly the South will have e balance of power, (nm connection wittr I amendment, I would give it. my hoarty approval; I would | do, In the midst of the riow he bad tried to bara | much worn down his vigor. I looked upon his per- | fees upon the shrin 0 ‘was it not ir fear, a it was mine, that ev: ve ‘ her ; for instance the goo: citizens, after Copr years of the mort fearful and bloody rh allies, and hy following be noipies as wo weaned you mine, that ‘en ve oes se iteo we remove = be Kenna down ¥ F. 6 nowspaper which bad done Cae ge a Cor ets -— pond hee civil war that the world has ever known, victory wae up to ‘thelr } ! levtitay Wil be pbiy 10. inv jo than any other; but he ern men say to me, “Sir, wrong ud that amendment | had violated the lew, rend Tebnt him for the full term, is, our people should adopt it to-day, if it would end this | and fed him the full fine allowed by the law, I believe ceaseless and e:ernal nateienah es cheerfully, but they | that was one of the in my life when T had been in would adopt it “Bnt"—here comes the rub—‘Con- | concord with Horace Creeley, Baton all political sub- gteas never meant, when they suggested those amend- | jects J do not hesiiate to express myself thus plainly. ments. that the people of the South should ever adopt | And 1 am wilting to meet the »present Executive of th them.’* I will tell you why. They add d another | Siate if be pleaser, and so far as my strength will alloy atnendment which proecribes a large clase of the people | me, to discuss these questions with him before tho peo- of the South forever from any share jn the government: of the State, ¢Applanse.) My friends, you are of the nation, or of the States, They proviaim by these , bat I am not quite through, (Goon) One amendments that no maa whe has taken the oath a8 | world suppose that a Congress which demanded so much Congressman, or Judge, or momber of a Maio Legixl® | of the American people could present something to their ture shall ever agaio bold a seat m Congress, altty ‘consideration which would eutitie them to confidence. he may have been a member of the Legisiatureot a | Ty i Congress was in session, and Southern State twenty years ago. Tis very well 'o ewy | » wat country? Has itdone anything that men who have been in febellion aall not have seats | towards remor ng perfect peace through the land? Has in Congress; but it is not yery well to say thatany | it done amyt hime towards the diminution of taxes? Has people shall be asked to proscrive, by (heft own act, the | it dome anything tewerds relieving the burdens which . are he war, restore way rebel debt and renndiate that of the ma “ © an indefeanibie rebt 1 repre rotation, at ali times, ail amendinenia te the constitation should be inflata tn a Congree com. poeed of the reprenet. uttves of a!) tho Htater to be vad; If the propent Conctom only aequmen lo be a Congress hanging on Oe « ment, and all thie Johann ant bie f ht, wha’ sover prem Wen atc needed to load logioalty ty all the remutte whieh have heon epecified f Aud are #e to trast to the homer ar inere) jutrerity of thow who through perjory tnitated tho redellion to avert the reniit® There lens eafety but In @ frm adhere: oe bo the fundetgental prineipies a jos. Low and honor. I we doyiate fram trem God wilh make our pie our pariah’ At Tf we beth on that there (ee God and thet ae pationa ww noob MA Uaey comp, if Justion, honor ent humanity a HT? OADPLY Bane, lok us hot dacota dojk E who trod the stage, that he had it in hia power, if he | interibed upon the banner of the North Throoghont chosa, to be dictator. The elder clown pointed to the | OU Own section of the eorntry, the peace which other on, and said to the people, “Will you have him | followed pon the triamph of our arms was for President, or will you take for King? (Langh. | hailed with rapturous delight. while throng! ter.) Ho left you but one alternative, You are cbtiged out the South those who hat latey bean ovr to take him for one or the other, either tor Ps ‘or | enemies saw oven in thelt defeat rome cones king, 1 ‘my policy” prevails, Lam not following them } l#tion in the fact that @ strurele more full of bor ail around. I shall not describe to you how sometimes | Fore to them and their section then we, who they cut ontside the cirele and entered into street broile | %* coraparatively little of the daepart inineries of war. with Common biackgnards; how they fonght at Cleve. | can imagine, bad at last come to anand While we of Jand and Indianapolis and other points. not | the North bly hoped that the Trion and the con teil you, for is it not alt written down in Colonel For- | stittion had been saved, our brothers in’ the Fouth ney’s Chronicle? (Laogbter and cheers) But comin, hastened to offer us every evidence that they had ac round, they told you, or them did, that he hi cepted the arbritrament of war, and had reetnet the been ‘evervthing but one, He had been a tailor, J | dogma for which they bad pontenio’, The South, k he did not ey drunken tailor; ho, he had been a been teasing of property tn her willing abolition of {iaughter}—be bad been « eonstabie—(largh. | Savery, oe mibione jee in the enllanee of her find bi city aldermen—{renewed ‘laugh.., financial syatern, aod gufering in more ways from the am bad bean in * the Tecilature. Goa hale dexdiation of war than rit © o arated gladly at 4 agentes discontented spirits of tha q@rar was over, thas Congress woold have to take action ecompel the Southern people to send representat!ves to ? But whats the picture? Entire sibmsetion proportions Droprscd, mi saver eset iP ; stavery ehoert lly wiliingly abolished—the sacribs of wiiat to thom, or many of them, was ail they had; the dem, w which of them were pledged by every dictste of honor, ied; obedience to law—the States, many of them, paring laws to protect the rights of every citizen, white black, giving evidence they can of thelr ab. Walon to the result of the war, asking nothing in font but that they should have “the rights the constitation guarantees to ‘every State to every: citizen of every State, (Cheers ) T told the truth ? I'know not what tay © been | men with whom they have been in intimate assomacion | rest apom every man, fieh and poor, throughout the fot of LECHE he dnt gebednmmnn “wo travellin: My ee all their lives, It ia not ali very well to ra “S country? No Jt has Iabered until “ om ¢ oe fiat, Losiciasere | | ere gy ae - ge ato 7 hfe She arms La ae eee } yw afte broth FUWARD BEECHER, radicals atin; the a P 1 c merece, 8 0 Presi fraternal orth, M or seen si wenn pg FP a hanes mine tlre gy oil Rye read adpeabunacamins-tchiees Gevalia Pie n peergthing. bat one—be had never been hang. | thitthe end which our soldiers thensht Ee neon | Letter from Thad Steveus om Miunnneial head, om order to secure the right of repro | divided upee thix question, in order that the present sentation in Cony or that a father shall pro- | eiection may he pessed over, and, if posible the scribe Bis son, is not very well to claim that this | next Preeidential election, before the Southern States countty will ever have peacs and harmony as loug | are allowed the right © representation, That ns there are a latge numberof wen in the Southern | has been the whole aim and s ope of their legislation, Stales proscribed from atl participation in the govern | And they ended an eh ht mentlis’ session in whieh ment and ite affalra, And this radical Congress knew as } nothing bwt thie had been done, by young fifty to one well a8 vou know that there it ho people on the face of | handred dollars to certain eo 'diers and two thoveand five tie earth who would ever consent to & cousitetional | hundred ty chree thousand dolars toevery Congressman, eare; for men who come from any sect.on of the coun- bry begging tho rest of the country to keap them out of the Tn.on are not worthy of the confidence o/ the Amer fean nation. (‘heers.) The man whe claims to be o Pepresenutative of a Southern State and of the Southern |e whe does fot want his State to have ite repre- ion under the constitution, might far better stay of ome set ‘Wwavellivg about the countey nt the ex- of Yoyal leagues and radicat potiticians and nsxess- fighting to attain? Was not this the conageimhetion of (Laaghtér.) Now 1 have given yoo badinare . | the ob for whien Congress bad paid the war way As | stated that L would not make « speech, | will state remerated Andrew Jonneon heave one point of some substance, The great quertion bo. mn false to the country, false to the soldiers, sud tween the President and Congress is not how we shall | fale to the recorts of his own fife If ha bod not een reconstruct tbe States, but who shall have the power, | Willing to sorept gach & peace aa the end of the wart The ‘That ig the great question for thix mation to determine, | President wikety maid the war having been ended, and upon your decwion depends the tecurity of the } and the great bone Of Contention between the mr man, aod he asked the leave to hang Thad Btevens, Aftair The folowing letter from the alias hat bee eat exponent of rade gi¥e0 (0 the pubis Serr 21, 1906, Ma, Joan Grr Dkak Mime a anewer to your inquiry, “What etfees the onal actritien ¥ is gov 4 forever removed be the abolition of upon office holders, todenoance his own poop! amendment which would proacribs their own brothers, | (Langhter and cbers.) And with this money to spend | desp tis of this government. When tho Bouthern | Cone having been ¢ rf feet “2 pnd bog that they may be kept out of the Tato fathers and frends—tue men with whom they bed | gs an electionoermy fond, they come back to their con- | States went oot of the Union throngh rebellion, and all porn | that the Bouthers Pusten show 4 % ® ae A | oe pola _ “ ) [ball not-etop to ask what deciarations'thes | iat-red and enffered, Bat che radicata, knowing this, | ettnents, dolug what it would bave been well for the | the ties that bound whem to the Unio were consumed | mitted. by loyal representation im Concrens. 1 all thelr in the bot fires of the war, they became conquered pro- | Mets in the Union, mibject only to the pertormance vinces under our armies. By the law of mations the | their doties under the constitution — Mat the ratirate relyn power of this pation was to fx their fate, | snawernd, no, there stall be no linten until candinens ia that sovereign power? (Cries of “Cong * | unknoe@n to oor cometitation, and bering for thelr sve “Congres ') if that power te the Prosident, teem Object the continunnes of party Aacendensy, whall have fa right, and may go ob reconstructing the Sates in hin | been adopted hy them, and ao, the inna between thom the sovereign power, | and the Provident war made. That the qaretion of fege Intended to vo taie this camvass and represent the peop! country if they had done seven months sooner. And of ths So th as ref sing to adopt reasvuaiie amendments | yer we are told weare to wand by Congress, It aned to to the ronstitution, and so tide over thir election and the | be “sand by the Preside ot.” My theory always was, next Presidentia el ction, and this recarc to themselves | gtand by the government. Neither the Congress nor the othr leas’ of power. (‘They can't do it.") Uf there | Execotive are the government Wet they ray the man are any soldiers here, any sailors Here, or in this | who sands by the Preside ® traitor and the man men have made to the citizeus of Kimra Lappral to ti history of tho day, to the journals of the day, to the temper of the Southern people, mail the evidernes that ve beer, furnished to any community, 46) the rwtere I we prea nted ol ine entire submiss on of the Soathera bates to the gh wf the ‘ features, fetere im all ite , Wit T town, who would see on di-cosved in langage ho de by Conyre & loyalist, Are there’ any | own way. Bot if Con lemder gromnhach» . ‘shat "ibent. If there anything ef’ wbich | go char to" beantifal und so, exiwesive that (tmates | tue layclists herc! te there a tung wilhia'the sound-f then the iesue in in ost favor...Ax I aaid, the wo: eceizmy | 8"TmM¢@ iM involved in tia tae T do not uink ony fair sity, aod will be or Wheaber they a8 American citizen feels prond, it tz of his hover. | you feel how language is capable of expressing in the } of my vores win thinks anyihing ts to be gained by | of the nation must fix the status of the new States and | mendper Fn « Le boeken pi P igh 2 even 7 te Midermed would depen - the B there 1 anything of which an Atmorican | simplest way the most powerful acumen ay let bim read | keep ng States asundert Ih a, then the arguments of | of conquered nations. By the constitution of the United | tee «' er " U acider 6 enanttietional € wena, ofan Priladetphia, her ghtef the negro Lo yee, oF rather the glo sentence, the first paragraph of the UF Ladionin of the teeel 7 gizen feels it ie when be can throu the address of the Soldiers’ and Seilors’ Convemion | my f..end who precides have (allen ip vain, aud the States, | ie ge oe ee nerf on the wut the wort, am an American.’ Te taser ia | which assembied in Cleyvland severnt days aco;and E | hope I have for euch, aa seme wf those political 7S -4 first article in the constitution says that ail legislative pote g Wat — a Mase iD aather Fah Be enaditian 4 Of teAL bettigerente would be com saything of which an American could deviveto boat, it | trost the gentlemen controlling the organzaton of | ery may, i# through te power Of prayer. ower slall be vested im of tho Unined | *TONE wae = wpe 4 orn by tone | eidered. Yours, truly, THAUDEUS ATEVENS would bo that tue American pation never breaks treaties Bad never violates ite ted futh. Genclemen, to SS it the fath of the nation in = to this war? a it wae et cue many it lomor wi any of subjuyation, Bmereiy to keep the Staten 1 tho U Union, and wien She war was closed to give them. their rights nndor the eonrtitution, and the on which the Constitution Guaran cod to fag not that published in every rowan s cons! . ne | Conversation, Itbelng generally urged, aw o acne --s x ~My ‘ to —4 cmming to feprewen' Bonthern ennetitnencio# aa by (he power of the nation, You cannot find « word im the ‘ane from the North, that the neuro shotid be constitation whien gives t any other branch of the tallot bor t counternct the Tish and Ger tho government one particle oo hegialttive power, | may vote. Many of thore presant tnviated Oat ne ro How, then, is it that the rovereign power rests in the | frags hovid be made s prominent in thelr President? in this country there is one depositor party platform, and net one of them onnere 4 upon Of noveteign power, Of Lhe Bo’ of the nation, ft | patvcipie, bot anty upon the mroand that Mt might pot be Testa in the people, aad nowhere exe; and the people | Well to let the Trish and German citizens of Ue North *peak through Congress to all their servants. Therefore, Know what war intended before the election. (Laughter. ) this district will put it tm circulation, aud see | The bgidiation of these radi ala Ws elu erized by & that it fs in the hands of every voter im the | apart of intuleraves, It wao in the national Congres 4 % It is full of venee ft te ananswoerable in | and soin the Sia Levidatcre, Wherever by the pro arcament, it |# comvincing and and podtion of copstitetional amendments or by the man reason nat it for a moment. <0 of @ legislative act they can crush out oppo- friends, so far we sition imaforities, there they proj the smend- We come to another practical subject, aud Guat is, | ment or pars the net, They nave tried it Im the city of whether the people who are represented are sincere or | New York, where wecan roll up at any Ume ao immense not. The radical memb ta, claiming to represent the | conservative majority —(che: t)—and they do tt upon the people of the North, when they aay tl ali that ki theory, at they sy, that there area large number of the South out Is thetr re’ usal to adopt these amendments, at THE CONSPIRACY TO WANG JEFF GAvIS. Wan Daves err, Bewrar on Miurrany Jownew, Y * unm, D.C, Keys 2, ines, f Me. Ja Gono eeeert Brn —Thave to eckmowiedge your prompt complanae with my requort, im baring givew & piece im youw land? Was not itanvedneed from Bee ator platiorm torouchoat the People in the city of New York who are not Ae ip you, the Lote | of Oe ation, oe att, Bese: eas colutnnt to my COmmuniCation to yourssif of peuntry ing cry under which men, | are neteincere. The best evidence Lean cive upoa th “Universal enffrage for biack 1.@n out of the state, struc'ing these States In ho raneh «© nov tat, In reletion to the celetrnwoe Charge: ersinst me ‘without regard to party, rallied 0 our standard and to the first place, is a fact as stated in the New Yor Fostrictive vuffrage for whue men init) (Laughter and | ernment can you find « particle of sovereignty. The RECONSTRUCTION, tn antedcliad Wills (he “Gunenen seatinian wt, Che gnomes the soidiers whe had | Tim. Iwill read the paragraph. It-seye:—“There is | cheers.) fii: up your negro votes in South Carotina; | President cannot even erect a burean, be cangot doa oe een band veh ponpiiayed vidi . the cry had beem “it @ slightest difference o: opinon, so far ax we are down your demoerniic conservative vote im New York. Plegisiative act. He ix the servant of the people se they | peter tram Rev. Edw: Neecherns D. D. ding 90, L regret we God that im your rebels and keep oavahe-onte. | aware, inthe Umon , and very Little anywhere else, Weide the one by eonetiotional amendment andthe | order, through Congress, Now, then, Congress is the His Brother, Kev. Meory Ward Beecher. this commun “ation, In the Heute of pemertay, soe id there have been the same onthusi- | ay to the wisdom of ratifying the consututional amend- | other by act of Legimator:.' (Coeern, Sovereign power, because the perple speak through three | have ailegether miaeppreiended ite meaning, and. tm them; and Andrew Jobnsom tnust learn that he @ your ‘The Chicago Irdune of the 26th inst, cvmtat servant —(cheers)—and Ce an Congres pa be | colamn letter o Rev. Henry Ward Beseber, writien by Must obey. (Cheer) There is no scape from it God | big brother, Rev, Edward leecher, D, D., of Galewburg, ee eee Ne oltre on ry tion, | I. The eubjothed extracts will Indicate ite charmeter:— This in the whole questa. The question of Gaveorens, TL, Rept 21, 164, yw out States eball be reconstructed ie another one to | Rev BW. Pesce) ment by Congress.” Well, my triend Ruymend for the “tate of hed some doubts about it when he wro'e the Piitladel | epectore are appointed by « part’ add@reas and read |, but te ctreniation of bis paper and they send the tospectors from one dis- been tmpeded among the radical- who did not Lke | trict to another; the nati e cit zen de ered on weare bee and so he har concluded to administer a | tng hie vote, bat the adopted chinem, er he be Ger. few aj of fadicn! medicine (Laughter) He cop- | man, of French, or spaniel, or Ltich, or whatever he may nt bis naturlivation papers, and f they opesking of comparca the original letters ehh the mnerript of hus Ln) Aemind When Lee surrendered to Grant tindes —*It received every Union vote fn the Houve, and | be, moat prever Grant toll him ?—\“Lay down your arm-, go is sustained by every Union journal througthoot th coup. | require him, in addition to that, be mast give evidence | which [ shall not now refer, J rhail only apologize for MY Pitan Heoriten—1 am grieved to be obliged to ad. Jong a yor are obedient to the constitution try. The onty point w whieh d)ferences do preva! is } that het: the men camed in tiem, Why, aa my iriend, | having detained you. ’ Greens you in this public manner on your views of the hho of Conover 208 gor shall be protected tm your rights ax A: as tot it adoption a condition prees | Me Kernan, of Uton, mid at Albany the other day, im Mr. Btevens here fetired, but the calle for his rr reat quection of rroonstruciom Row kore the AME. | 1, rien it an mewerruntalierignifiediion Acormt: oat gens.’ And is there a soldier or o! dent to represevtatives from Southern hey will have a royal time in | pearance were so prolonged tha! he again came ean pope Tam moved to 0 lt the great Interests Conga: ainanion , ta youpnett diperaven before Geveral Grant to-day aod , “The word you | States, Upon this Union members of Congress were not | caching the vo.es of the nd d cluizens of the Empire | and, agit loud oheoring, salt — Mavotved, and 0 It anemne to me emdengrred, by your ie whtoe ony re had been bef 7 me to them shall be broken 1’ ‘o, mo! and | agreed among themseiver, Borne were oppowed to ad- | State, (Laughter andeheers.) Now, my friends, I have LT suppose you never fo ght chickens tn your young | Quence, n) far aa that influence # re to other notte Of mine whieh ? cheers.) When the President of the United States | miting therm until after the amendment ebould bave | avout done, Lhe ¢ eaid yothing about past poluies and | days, (Langlter.) es ned gon know the Your qhote letter linptien thir false sercmption. that ated in the sane wae bY PORT oor ay bares h this conntry with Crant on one sideand | become part of the fundamental law, by the raiifeation | past associations, bvery man in the Siate who ts called | breed hee they called the “Wheelers” They would | there ard some who are nat in fever of pew to: but | have eat denied, a@4 do 4 6-99, Frvagct os the citer, thoy ate two living witnesses of | of unree-fourits of a!l the Staies. Orhers hike Mr. Bing- | upon t vow for me knows that I have belonged to the | fight awhile and then go back, and then turn and fight | the receded States. 1! |» an argument the eenaieleadl of bey’ nate Gat ‘ . 4 She sense of obtigation which they fol to the plighted | ham, of Ohio, insisted (hot whenever any Southern State | di mocratic party always Lf that it mason why 8 con- | again, Imus bea Wheoler, 1 suppose, (Cheers and | try to prove that ip our eyrtom there 6 hes ‘thet ter bean pUbiiehd purport we weal faith of the natin. (Choors.) Genera! Grant may | should ratify the amendment, that Suate should there | servative republican cannot give me hie suffrage, be and | Inughter) And eince yor have tallied me out, aod fam | Bute bar In the a and thet the Cetera prvorm | wricien and meted Wy tam ’ ‘ oc aro he is no polltician, Farragut may declare he isno | upon be admitied to representation, Others, like Mr. | 1 peed nottalk about it Ldon'tdewy the feet. Leffirm | ahietoepesk, | will explain one single point, whieh F] ment te ont (© ererciee minor, police and ‘cal govers T Rate, Socee ie Genial Poiuticnn; but when these two Hoble borves of the war | Boutweil, of Masswchuert's, and Mr. Kelley, of Penneyt- | ft and am happy w doe. Mus if aay one can ray that | have heen inturmed ny friend Mr, Doolittle made pats | ment,” and (hee it he veln to attempt i govern die: gam nad d gravid vide by aide with the President, while the people of | vania, refuaed to pledge Congress to admit them even | by waing!e actor declaration of mine, im the straggle | ticalarly upon me, and which, I bare no doubt, rome of | ined and divordered Btaves by an army come ate pay - mason 61.4 Vee Mudiana, it may be, refuse to hear him, you may be sure | after the amendment Id te adopted, and others etl! fi Faden whiew ths country has pamed I have failea in | my bi can (riends cone dered partteulariy wel) made It ie Lndeed tree that there are trillions of loyst men LO EF DAVIS ME CONVICTED W 33 Bhat they desire with him to secure the representation of | did not deem it within the constitutional power of Con- | my devotinn to the Union and constitution, and can fur. | to pu ad the ticket. I cannot blame them in | who are oppwed to & remorion of © certain tind of owe wor ait the States by Joyal men In the Congress of the goun- | grena to turpoe its adoption as a condition of admiesion | pik evidence enoagl to be sulmitted to a packed grand } thie T shall not blame them for anything of the kind, | Mates, with ceriale powers, wher mrond « ely oF # sey try Let the soldiers who have returned from the battle frvetu damental right of repreventation. In point of | Jory, I wii! be prepared to anewer, Unul he can, I stand wi Mba! be jort set frends with on before, | (ateret me, Ani d Upper it becwem 0 WE tether 2 Meldwin, © premine * poutielan, replieg field, who are now at home scattered through this eoun- | fact, the adoption or rejection of the amendment has } pon my ncord (Cheers) 1 bave no act of iny public Wt me expisia: He spoke of negroequality, Let | tranquilize rocety nor benefit the freedmen, but will | bo the shove quewtion. « . ars, 4 ne for themselves when i@ election | nothing whateer to do, a the law now stands, with the | of private life which fears investieation, and I fear mot | me telbyou exactiy bow it ta 1 enderaend, foomd | tend to disorgantte the nation, enalare (he ‘reedmes aod ‘in Viegia’s, oo ¢ De out of every pomes they stand With Grant admission or rejection of mom re from the Southern | to go before the people of my State and advocate the | fanit with me, partovlarly because | advocated what be | plunge ut wie another civ! One (hemant poor 6 6 bm the eatne boat witht freut aod the President, Brates, A_ bill providing for their admission on eon. Niey of whieh Lam today the representative. (Cheers) | called equality, Under oat law there is not « word Wat it @ Get trae that even the mort radical repett | Jefferson Davi nt nagaeret” whan beny ping wih Stevens and B - | dition of ita adoption was rejected by the Howes, and Bre conservative people of the state of New York have Cane are oppemed to (hs Imewetiale reeierat on of tree re | bandret and wen ( every ome thivwen dell =Phlips, 4 mend- | united now in one great edort to put down radical em thab the | publican om, Whose Mpt and principles ere theme, | And of cmre 5 4 i¢@ 1 . any 6 » fronds, we have in the State and pation, They fight the bettie in the ong other | pot of thet eporiows demeeraty that d abomors the carne, | federate afte (bee © were whi him end Met t t ohammen estoy to adm! Hmite of their own #tate. ‘Fey do not look to Maine thet the | but of true Chritinn Gemocrney, bared on the law of be | for timo . * y oil Uw seme om Memare flor you p-resive that " Now, I ask, wth or Vermont, for the result im nefiher of those States man | nevolence and jowtive, in which ai) men are equal m | comvit bin They ¥ mer 4 ie ¥ they conis hep ot A in the Son men who represent the radical party come before | dictates the course of the kinpire riate, another, fod franchises aA etabracing, ail eunobiing, | bat thar roe ren fed ovat ome men lo Virgina oF net ap, e not an intel aude and say that the only reavon | the tid fe pegro. on any ember Mow hern Riwm > manned we © oun tt have my duty to perform in the Sout States are kept out of the Union | legistati that ? i there are Mates to the resterstion of which wil | fect, | wel ee Ged eel ome e soptated. Tene Ge perform it, let the . | te because of thelr refi al to adopt thee amendments? | not yet wy J pores etewed, ta Ge ai moe {Obeors) Tenge onnd Bat there is even a later evidence on that subject. The | elections 1 40 nem beers tn it ore af + ie “ok tation In C New Y i, wh ch i# one of the leading Jour. | What may be ihe reeuit in Penneyivanta I do whale v om a2 by 4 Giegren ence tesied nals of ¢ im the Btate—I believe i: dues not | do not care, I hope ant troet and bel eve that it There is heheved cow, thal e & question 4 ton. poblieh Mr. fermons any more, which may be pa gh 2 woperior . Hap vee power, v ramets ine, 5 I | ‘& Dill was passed for the ‘of ita radical sen iment—says — | great intinenc dave some cance to comple'n that there | Jott Derm ent met evden rrr sane ontrod: “No leading Con, means to admit the | the great power of officeholders there yet Jon, for there \# erent that thows | qoertion® be * athe on tom waiting States #i on the adoption of the const! | dence of radical men rial) atti! prevent (hat fate from wich thie provision wil) vals among (he colored race eo * recetve the approval of the ty, fearon, | tational amendment.’ Mark that. [t farther raya — | art nt the rane* 0 (hie grat conservative movement, | io basinens and in life There @ ome thing, bowever, | lation on wagee, Com rants, © and temimony io | rt ures frown z pa he sad, ‘These oe Py | ae on no cond)tions —_ Kew York will fgnt the bartie herself and eetabtieh her. —- 1 mateed we Le oped allnded ie Lhe... 1 bey a | 1» tag -r pend Y- oe = va | ‘ os wae y Fo, ‘s —e examination bi B mood | Of the equel tical rights of their loya) ¢ Uzene, wil Seif o perfect bulwark egoinm ine eurging titra, come | introdeeed for firing conan on toe fouthern | age then # rom wi ry igre been dew ad be of yA was at} out cases of ress. A Teooetruction of the Union on | they from whence they may, (beers) IT stand a9 the | Mtaue—end wecel am here I will any one word ig ex ‘They ere opposed to warren lew the power of eer poeple io Virgin of (he emt wey Of hula ate ADy ohuer Deals woG'd be apatignal dishonor, Vail) (bo | reprepeuiaiss of ihm party (Oday, choeem without mr Of thet, 1 iwtrodeeed ® pill inio Gonarem fer | pecm (hoes of Ue Whi ponEieiue wn. eumand