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8 NEW YORK HERALD, TUESDAY, AUGUST 25, 1868,—TRIPLE ‘SHEET. si ~ nO E REECE —————-.— ASC... a a erereeianees ba a Northern pecvsfe have no desire to keep them under | were upon their feet yelting out their views; the re- | the ablest and most moderate man connected with | cial statements when such men will thus sceX LI TENNESSEE. an iroumecd, Sue everyting to gain by discounte: | maming third were Ym thelr seats yelling out for | the exuting State , Why the project was | to mislead the people? OLITICAL IN TEL GENCE. hananneanan: nancing ae present terrible wate of adairs, and order. Harris, the shelrman. hammered away unti! | given up was with much b: inqu- nee wi candor by an -__— ‘ his elbows ached, then ly suggested that some | ential republican. Firstly, we do no* think that to Ex-Giovernor Morehead, of Kéntacky. ‘The Democrats to Prosecute a Vigorous Came | 2°!U8 to lose by their restoration to the right coe dee the Proadential electors in the Logisiature la which, ‘every free American is entitled to—when paign--Why There Cannot Be a Fair Elece | ple: ey part taxation at least tation. All SORTS 2 tiou—The Conservative Strength—The Re- | to falsifications of a thousand Stokes or Arnel!s Ghee Campaign in the State—Election action Among the Negroes Still on the Ine! ¢annot cover up the iniquities of the radicals tn this September 14—~A Lively Canvass Expected | eae phe Militia und Presdont Johnson, { Ste, It is a wench i Soe moire of every te Feadicton and Ewing on adam ~~ NAMHIVILLE, August 2, 180%," ] whole lengtu anit breadth of the Commonwealth, 1a volstion in » Gene as 0 the propriety, OF ‘apy the cities as wel i E ages, we) tw 1882—The Vote of the State kxe | THE Mooted question ay fo the Propriely, OF Yavher | the ‘nountains of the enatren as well as’ in. the is “i the advisabiliig, of tha Conservatives withtr,wing | folds of the western portion, and the sentiment aiuined—A Democratic Victory Probable, - x onnessee,has been Baily de- | will be found ever the saime—a determina- Avavsta, August 22 188, | from the canvass in Tennessee, State z tion to keep the peace at all hazards, under all To the old “Pine Tree State” at the present mo- | “Med by the ontcial action of the State Executive | provocations, and to have the right by ballot of say- 4 Committee, in conjunction with evefy conservative ig Whether or not they ust support a set of men meni the eyes of the nation are tured, Her voice Baran teeicn in the State, With & unapimity that hen berg. none euagr stg meee DOs a ay Liye has proven a source of no small astonishment to the See) a Ph ee Cees One contest. | vavocates of inaction, they Wave resolved that the She heads the list of States that are stripping them. slg § selves and girding their loins for the Presidential | Party shall enter the lsta against radicalism, eome weal come woe, and that this determination fully Duattle. Maine has spoken often, and spoken elo- ss . . expresses the sentiment of the great majority quently; and Maine—the litte State away down on of the people tle general tifleation with the border of Blue Resedon—in the approaching which it has been hailed from one end of the battle of the giants, Seymour and Grant, will speak | 1146 to the other leaves no room for doubt: Sta roo a : pannot b e i oni ane cannot be disregarded by her Now that there will be a canvass, “short, sharp mes : eS, meat, | DA ‘ and decisive,” the question naturally arises what are at aiid: selic at this carly period oe the prospects of success for the democrats? In a eu LeeY sed taeeas ple to foretell. The gst certain point of view they are not very encouraging. Dah eh hijoaibbe tare ral Several weeks 440 1 67 indeed that a majority of the voting population, a a Re, MArNg: Water te Gemoce! : naif black and white, may not be In fayor of the conser- ro! - up at ae loc a elections, phoame al us ob vative ticket, for all the indications at present go to end, pak ep ir eyes eastward, palin: pats show that a majority of the voters are strongly op = pre nuded upon the contest sn ane tee ie age posed to the radicals; but there are many other Ba ave Rrrhbags with the See ind thus in, | tgs that must be taken into consideration which a . ey Bid a he Sabeinnien! ¢ nel enter, by foree of circumstances, into the ealeula- Sanne \ee gvyee anh KUDBOTueD See. *| thons of an election in Tennessee and which may John A. Logan, the head ef the Grand Army of the Republic—a powerful organization in the State—and | Change the aspect of things very miterially oe ited Pdi iepibdn was selected as | BeXt November. In all the other “recon- Aeon structed’? States ihe whites and blacks who the wissiouary vw carry the radical gospel into the pe have been given the right to vote are free highways and byways of Maine. The prestige of his id ee to vote as they please, at least they have been so Dane Was rved to be w tower of strength, and ve sath uastek aetee tiie Siok in the late elections. True great pressure is brought cay : to bear by the radicals to deter the negroes Wherever Logan jou.neyd republicans and demo- i from siding with the democrats in these States, yet erats alike rallied to do honor to one of Sherman's Ain there is Lo law on their statute books that gives any Reutenants, whose sword had flashed in many a the power to throw. out a white or a black Dioody conflict for the perpetuity of the government | 8S Man the power to Kliat lat ogre 4 man’s legal vote at his discretion. But, as I men- aud whose milit er is without a stam. His toned mavious. lecken! there’dal a laveiin le. appearance in Maine was the signal for the uprising waa ie if ne 4 oh dis ; i : wer, 1th t of the “Grand Art which iamerely the a@eanbe | oor 0 on nee: URCTON Ey Fewer, See) makes all the difference in the world between the skiriuisbers of the army that will follow. It is a hanoed of le ti 28 in this'State and Well recognized principle in warfare that the doubt- | CHAnees of a democratic sticcess In this State an fol should be posted in the front line of skirmiahe! e in another Southern State. Yet at the last State sho brad h the front Moe of skirmishers. Hessee the saintéd parson of Kuox- The oid stand-bys, the Napoleonic “Old Guard” of | vilie, aftcr the election, threw out the vote of the arniy, are posted on the front line of battle to | Himeteen counties, which had given majori- ties against himself, he be t c keep the skirmishers from skulking and receive the | jyainst whom the mjoritien were vole! Peat a shock of conihet., Gener Logan, with his eb acted, neverthcless, according to a law of the State Verse Lin petuosity, Was not satisiled to remain with | which still pollutes the statute books. Aside from ly, aud wildly rushed to the front in | this outrageous enactment, which the Governor can rson take his geat who could maintain order, No | -Governo! Phe offered to. take it, for noone was ‘eepabie | to choose them by popular election. Secondly (and yeas pes he As Morehead—formerly a Clay enough for the task. Considerable ume elapsed be- | there was much force in that secondly), we do not | Whig—addressed at considerable length a Seymour fore sutticient order could be obtained for a motion | wish to risk the effect on any closely contested State | and Blair Club in Frankfort, Ky., on the 1oth instant. to be heard and carried to take a recess for the pur- | at the North of a resort to so extreme a measure, Referring to himself he remarked: pose of nominating district e.ectors. This being provided we can otherwise secure a free and fair saeueh Tt — the Convention again met, and several men spoke, | election without intimidation or bloodshed. For this After a long absence I find mysetf at my old home, Finaily the irrepressible Caldwell rose for the pur- | same reason it may also be added that Governor | Where I lived for so many years in the mterchang pose of speaking, His nasal twang is the horror of | Warmoth, General McMillen and their friends are of all the kindly courtesies of life and where I have radicais and democrats alike, white and black. | not disposed to press the negro militia and constab- | found the best and phy mamas on earth, The Wherefore every man on the floor opened in splendid | ulary bills, and these measures also may be consid- peones sonny as F) -bentowes, re me every style, endeavoring to talk him down, and as each | ered dead. Cenliaatoe wheal 4 rey oy wade onteaa itis man would voctierate a note louder Caldwell would ‘The election, then, reats with the people, or at least Fey ly gra mn pry. the feelings » scream an octave higher. The last accounts repre- | with such portion of the people as the disfrauchising | Which promp' their generot ; confidence seem, sented that betting Was even on which would win, | clauses of te constitution admit to the ballot box, | Wherever TI have bg fave be- the betters having to retire half a mile from the | Both sides, of course, are working more or less for ) come more intense by t apne a ae i avene to hear each other bet. Further than thig | the colored vote, which is the controlling balance of | had, for reasons boon green aden rem. te- deponeni saith not, not knowing anything further, | power. Fificen thousand negro votes for Seymour | Solved not to make any bee os rye the The following 18 the electoral ticket: — and Blair will give the whole State to the democrats. | great contest now going on be: “a ha Ameren FOR THE STATE AT LARG It is, therefore, in the highest degree important to | people, but Thave found it impossibie fase find'out what the negroes.are going to do, and the | earnest solicitation of friends who know how to ap- ‘test indications become of interest. preciate my past conduct, and to do justice to the ange morning after the first attack had been made | motives by which I have been governed. My friend, in the streets of New Orleans on the negro democrat | the chairman, has spoken of that dark period when rom a leading restaurant came | { was dragged from my native State and thrown into a torule over them and offer them every indignity, out of taxes wrung frout them while ‘the wolf is howling at their owa doors. Men who are hired at public meetings North to recite the trials of repub- cans in Tennessee without ever lay Set foot on Tennessee soi!—and peany-a-liners in the South to falsity and vilify the people, to distort every strec: brawlintoa Ka Kiex outrage, to invent horrors of “rebel” aoings which have no foundation in truth, to style every petition an “emanation of treason” — may talk and write from now until doomsday; but 1 the fact will loom up still that the people are missive to rightful authority, that they are well disposed towards the negro and have no intention prive him of any rights he now enjoys, They simply, almost on bended knee, ask for themsel what has been given already to their former slayes— release from bondage, ture will reconvene on Monday next, when, in al! probability, some definite action will be taken on the militia bill presented a week ago. The opinion still prevails that it will pass, though I now have my doubts about it, as I understand the radi- cals up North have been telegraphing and episto- liztng the members in the most agonizing lines of en- treaty not to take any action in regard to it. One of these despatches, which came from one of the Jacobin head centres in New York city, and which was shown to me by one of the honorables, who damned the petitioner for his folly, concludes in these terms:—*Pass that bill and let’ Brownlow cal! out the militia, and you'll lose us thousands of votes, As you value the success of the party tell our friends in the House to keep quiet about the bill and ail will be well.’ Appeals like this may have their effect but no one whois not acquainted with the pig-heade: ness of the carpet-baggers whom Brownlow has under his thumb can foreteil the exact result. Farstronger in its strength against the Legesiature’s machina- tions in this militia business than all the pleadings and beseechings of the radical party North combinea will be the action which, it is said, the President wiil take in the matter. A gentleman who came from Washington yesterday has given it out that Mr. Johnson would certainly, in case the militia were called forth, send federal troops in numbers suimt- cient to keep the hireiings from repeating the out- rages of last election time yet) fresh in the mind of every woman in the State; and what gives a seeming confirmation to this is that General Thomas came down from Nashville day before yesierday in great haste and had a “big talk’? with Brownlow at Knox ville, What was the result of the consultation ha not been revealed, The radicals are very shaky about the affair and act as though such @ proceeding as that foreshadowed by the President would ruin all their nicely laid plans and spot! their little terror- Henry P. Farrow. Dist, Electore. 1A. A. Wilbur... 2—E. K. Harden. 3—E. R. Higbee. 4-Dr, Whitebi . BE. Bi t. FOR THE DISTRIUTD. Alt ‘Bi . Rollins, a colored bo: fy yg into _ room where several distinguished Unitea } @ Northern prison, and I have been asked to give J. Robinson. States army officers were at breakfast. some account of the famous litue bell of Mr, Secre- . Fe lamane “Why, Sam,” said Colonel H., “your people have | tary Seward by which Iwas deprived of my liberty; F. Kirby. been raising the devil, nearly killing this negro Kol- | but I stand before yon this evening for no such par- As the above ticket will most positively lack somie- | jing, ’ ” thing between twenty-five and fifty thousand votes “Serve him right, Wish dey’d done It.” sode of my iiaprisonment shall constitute a part o' of being elected the squabbles of the radicals over | “Why? Hasn't he as much right to lus opinions as | the hjsiory of the times and tis dssissin af Uberty the nominations were whoily unnecessary. a white man?’ held up to the execration of mankind. Be oe ie Rec cae Camananation Do No,nigger ha'n’t got no right, to bo ademocrat, | After reviewing at length the course of the radical of last night did not end withouw loodshed, C emocrats wants to put usy back where we were in th struction pol articularly in forcime white citaze: ver, having nothing to do With | afore: ; ‘ioe * | in their reconstruction policy, p y Se ieee aie te in BORE SIN ente co" TANG UE HO hy obnoxious constitutions upon the people of the pose. ‘This shall be done in due time, when the epi- the row, Lawless conduct first began in the proces- hatn't got no right to be a democrat, I’se for kil clon: byte grees king on revolvers loaded wit Do. | dem: all. Ldon't say nuitin to white folks. Dey can | Southern States, Governor Morehead continied:— in the public streets, one of the balls striking vote as dey like, but niggers ha’n’t got no Ti 0 ss ui darky Who Was standing upon the sidewalk. They | jive, ony dey votes renablicaa.”” Rea with & ges. a ee oa iaan’ en pannith on bisa aconeeet next picked a row with a most decent colored | ture of tierce malignity the colored servitor left the pron so readily vieldcd to the situation. The: a named | Joe Woods, whose only olfence | room, Only the persoual iniuence anid interference | }yomptly laid down their arms everywhere, iook the that he is a democrat. The poor | of Governor Warmoth prevented the views thus ex- ide amnesty oath, and plete with honor fellow was finally shot at, the ball strik- | pressed being carried out to the full extent in the | err te eee ny eee ee oc loa they were ren mig him, iniicting = @ very serious if not | case of Rolling The fire yet smoulders and may at | {oi yo4 to abolish slavery, and w thout hesitation ite mortel wonnd, , Gabecquenty & negro Gelegate *0. any tine barge. into alamo. Thee seni ger abolition was guarantesd by constitutional sanetton the Convention fired three shots at another negro on | nejroes have heen long accustomed to see and hear | eve tates The mere ae reenter eband mitone Lioyd street, without hitting him, oue of the balls, | of the free and unpunished use of revolver and | jt Gvery State, They gave up three thousand millions however, ing in close proximity to the head of & | bowie knife in the hands of the whites (thetr former | Out q groan or a murmur, ‘They belleved that the war white man who was looklng on. At about half-past | masters); they have beem fearfully tampered with by | Wag prosecuted for that end, and they ylelded with ten o'clock several colored men called on the police | unscrupulous adventurers from the North, The pos- | naniy e to the result. "They bog eS to arrest # drunken negro who was on Peachtree | sibility, probability or desirability of the streets of |p itity fe tnirtoentte anbaninent to tas _reauined ie sirect, with a cocked revolver in his hand, threat- | New Orleans again running with human blood, of Of the United States abolishing slavery, and it was ening to shoot the first “rebel son of ab——" who | the floor of the State House being again arenched promptly done, They renounced acccasion and should conme.near him. Two policemen started for | with the gore of loyal men, is continually kept before Claimed to be integral paris of the United States— the scene, aud as the negro was too intoxicated to | them by carpet-bag orators. They are familiarized | gy ‘ates in the Union, witn equal rights, and subject listen to reason or to belave himseif they arresied | with the idea of bloodshed. They will not shrink | to ai the duties impo: ed by the federal compact. him and started with him for the station house on | from it if it comes. ‘They were met by areiusal on the part of radicals Decatur street, Perceiving bam tn custody, some | ‘This is only one phase of the question. Ithas many. | {)\cliow them representation, with an onerous tax three hundred negroes who had gathered on the rail- | 4 pleasanter thing to look upon is the fact that many | oF three cenis per pound oa Cotton, nearly their only road crossing, near Wlitelall street, rushed forward, | of the negroesin the city are withdrawing themselves | a oyicuitural product, equal to more than ten dollars declaring that they would not permit any darned | from those who have hitherto controlled them, and | 21 gore tax upon each acre plauted in cotton. It is White man to arrest # colored man. The two police- | are forming clubs of their own and inviting whom true that this tax has been since taken oif, but they meu instantly whistled for assistance, but before it | they please to address them, One of these indepen- are otherwise heavily taxed without representation, could conte they were surrounded by an infuriated | dent negro meetings witnessed @ singular scene the » jy vioiation of the fundamental principle of Ameri- mob, three-fourths of whom were in a state of in- | night before last. A white radical, hitherto regarded | (4 liberty. Under radical legislation their land, toxication. The reinforcement fought its way with | as the personification of all that is most objectiona- once worth from seventy-five to one hundred dollars clubs through the cro’ but by the time it reached | ble to tie Southern whites, and recently a delegate per acre, has gunk in’value to five or six dol- the ground the negro already been rescued. At | from dissatisiled republicans to Washington, was in- | jars ‘per’ acre, and if negro supremacy is estab- this momemt some one in the crowd of negroes | vited to address them, and his speech was in sub- lish it-wit not be worth as many cents called out to open tire on the “white rebel sons of | stance as follows:— an acre, During the past two years the people b—s,” which order was instantly obeyed, the first “My friends—I am a carpet-bagger. Tadmitit. I " Pa * wume complet Tae men who make great ets i 28 % hopes of carrying off a vic re the main | call to lus ant if need be after the election, there is | HU Baume, Cor Tbyalty and their utter abhorrence of | volley “kiling a negro named” Ex, Hale, who | have been among you for some time, and have never Ba a Seon av opportunity to participa the Registry law, which I spoke about he ago, | rehels are wonderfully a 1 of the presence of | Was quietly looking on, and nexatey wounding @ | ceased to advocate your cause in the press of the | yrige cotton with the exorbitant tax then imposed too fast. Onihe lth the yrand Which 18 brought into force before the ton. Now | the United States troops. ‘The “rebels, at a meet- | policeman by the name of fhomas. ‘The poiice then | North, in the three leading republican newspapers upon It, and at this time a poorer or more destitute ug everything b there are at the present time in the State hundreds | ing held iast_evening in this city to discountennnce reer ae Y : ‘ But t drew their revolvers and returned the fire, wounding | of New York, Washington and Philadelphia, But 1 ut to uinupaign among | of white men of weight aud influence (such as Colonel Sb ae ree Peace riven and stupbuiiders | Bingham, of Mempiis) who have, since the close of lis reception cannot be seized upon the w acted with the radical party, and who ave Of the popularity of the Heket in whose | now openly opposed to it and have come out bold he made the pilgrimage to the Kennebee; | for the couservative ticket; and the negroes, espe- yet such was the importance given it by the party | cially in i Tepuessee and in the rurat districts all Jeaders and party press, through the State, are coming over to the democratic ‘That no such deduction can be dra side in troops. These white men and these negroes from what followed. Judge Kelley, have voted at every election, and one would be @ geulicman with n xX of Major ly led to Suppose tat this accession of former awe and no milita’ rord beyond that achieved | an 1ists Would prove of great benefit to the op- im the Mobile riot Jast- year, but a statesinan that | position. it is doubtful. The registers have full towers far above him—toliowed Logan for the pur- | power to refuse or grant & man tie Nght to vote bose of firing up the enthusiasin of the people. “And | when he comes up to the polls, and if this tyrannl- What Was tue resuit? The Judge's addresses w: cal authority has been exercised in former elections rywhe parsely attended; bis pres “l | against white men and the small number of black 5 in many towns 1 wats with difticulry | men who were known tw be in active sympathy with he could obtain a respectable audience, and the | the democratic party, what guarantee has the oppo- peeches made by him fe wet blankets | sition that it will not be brought into play against eX UUs hae » enthusiasm | the nexroes in those districts where it iS already had wn into it. Known they are by the hundreds going over to the tu Bath, Augusta and other places where Judge | opposition‘camp.. The registers are all-powerful in Kelley delivered addresses few were found suti- | the matter. Against their “no” or “yes” there is ciently interested in hitn or his principles to turn out | no appeal whatever. How. e: then, will it and do him honor, and he beat a hasty retreat from | be for them to refuse every couservative the state, having © nally failed in the hegro’s vote, or, for the mere effect of the thing, to isuiment of the iuission upon wich he started | allow a few to vote and to reject all others lest the eturn to the’ Gene! race of people is of lawlessness that have been perpetrated tn two of their opponents, who feil to the ground, wile | am going to leave you. We are all geing to leave Y places of late, hailed with cheers tie remainder broke and retreated in confusion | you and you will soon be alone. My advice to you is down Decatur street. They then railied and moved | to unite yourselves to those whose favor it is your in- forward again, wud for afew intnates it seemed as if | terest to'secure, Be guided by those who aloue cai a bioody struggle Was imimineat, Lae en police tests the with work and food and clothing. Join force was how on the ground tet for Besos and | yourself to erpeonis sal gy paeanen We ste Soe supported by a large number of white citizens who, | we eannot find you work to support you. Your in- 7 Governor Brownlow, of Tennessee, address Avrakened.fvom thelr sleep by the fring, iad hurried {terest tien wiar tee eno cea bai in this county, there was a mayority of original following letter to the recent radical State Conv to the scene armed With such Weapons as they pos- How far this disinterested advice might have been ' Ow, W hese outrages sta he face, dink ty wax ville: Sesser. AS Soom as the danger ud become grave | influenced by the fact that the Speaker was an un- | {BU now, with Where outrages staring us fn the face, sandr area aT the Cily Marsial hurried to’ Governor Buliock’s | successful candidate for office on the republican | S10) PROM tations asf have, described, ie an KNoxvinte, August 10, 1858. 1 house and requested luuu io call upou General Meade | ticket it is not necessary to inquire. ‘The counsel he | 2'CGmpushed. fact, aud that no. matter to GexrieMeN—Being denied the pleasure und the | fora force to disperse the rioters. Mr. Bullock re- | gave is being more forcibly impressed on the co1ored | Var PESeN, Mn Ma ootttitut on may honor of meeting with an in person and pardcl 7 plied that this coul i be done, as General Meade | voters throughout the State in other ways. A system poe ited, ic the a Franklin and ot the announcement that the United States troops would be sent to the State, the farmers, fishermen, lumi of Malu limits of this nation, Talk of confiscation! Their property has already veen virtually confiscated. 1 know of one county, and [ doubt not there are many others, where more than half the land of the count has been sold for taxe The radicals may say that they were rebels and traitors,fand deserve their fate, Letter from Gov have been viola it ts revolutio atlempt to restore the people to their x t pating in your deliberations [ take this method to express to you hearty sympathy with yoo and the great republican party of the nation, of which you are a part, | congratulate you upon what T deem the certain success ‘of Grant and Colfax—the former the greatest general of the age and the latter the foremost statesman of the nation—in the pending canvass; ant 1 also congratulate you upon the certain utier defeat of Seymour and Blair, the standard bearers of the party of olution and of the restoration of the “lost cause.” ‘The contlict is, and is to be, sharp, bitter and unserupnions so far as our oppenenis ace had no power to order out troops uniess by authority | of high pressure moral suasion, not to say coercion, from Washington. He, however, gave Mr. Murphy | 1s being followed by the employers of labor. No (the Marshal) jetiers to three or four negro radicals, | colored man can get Work on the levee unless he be- asking them to use their tntiaence to prevent blood- | longs to a colored democratic club. Planters refase shed, Whether these worthies appeared or not! | to engage hands who belong to the Loyal League, cannot learn; but tie negroes finally dispersed with- | The issue is put before them—“Seymour and Blair out renewing the attuck. it was fortugate for all | and pork and molasses”—“Grant and Colfax and partics that they did so, as the white i States were never out of the Union, ace to the Union theory, the estabiishment, by Cougress, of military governments over them, and the exten- sion of tue elective franchise to the blacks, was a vross and palpabie usui pation, and in direct conflict ie ae Teel COnRR ELAN, and fe the people fre the ew. 7 . ‘hited States shall, by an wneguivocal majority so We are only following | decide, the reconstruction laws of Congress Ought to a Southern State. The | BE declared a nullity, as violations of the constitu- your polities ? are tion and absolutely void. There is no revolution in this, There is a peaceful remedy for every viola- 1 of the city | starvation.’ This pol 'y 18 boldly and openly justi- Say the employers: ne srom ail quarters. Had i avother shot a — bloody would have ensued. It will be per that with the exception of the police, question put is, ‘Wh: who were discharging their duty, not a white | youarepublican? ‘Yes.’ fled, re “Then step inside,’ ‘Are eut. irty may go to ruin if the “rebels” should get into | concerned, but we may well conclude this 1s their was elt i in the fray. All ou a democrat? ‘Yes.’ ‘Then clear out; your | Yon of the constitution. General Blair's letter, when Looking at the facts, then, it is evident that, as far ver. Then tf, by some unheard of calumit “last diteh,”” and that beaten here (as beaten they | I") was parneanen as 4 ae hice, at is legal.’ ‘This is just the plan we ne to | candidly coustrued, means this and nothing more, as Maine , the canvass by the Grant and ister should happen to have a conscience und | most assuredly will be), the threatened temple of our | jnjamed by politics and Whiskey. ‘The radical paper | follow in future with our hands.” I another shape and nothing but the zeai are by partisan feel Govifax | a most signal failure thus far, | allow the con five hegroes to vote, and thereby | National Iiberty and laws will stand forth im its in- | phere, pot ‘being able to blame the conserval the argument is put as follows:—“Why should not | C#2 make more out of it. The people of the 2 and that the fire kindled by Logau tas been sud- | be the “disloyal” means of puiting the carpet-bag- | tegrity, untwatred by the strife, and its permanence | ¢rjes to make it appear as ff politics had nothing the capitalists of the South vote thelr hands as wsil | #"¢,the very last within the broad Limits of this Union aN RB stat napeate (hoes er oe re- ees his county in bese rity, Why in comes | assured, In order ‘er secure pat ae rer P do with the riot, but that the whole affair was the | as the capitalists of the North? When Lwas a con- Pale A ie ket a agi a a eid didie its smouldering embers and give life and um | Brownlow with his special law and’ thre out the | petuate our party in Tennessee it 1s of the utmost ‘oes. ‘This is not e: ctor in Ohio | voted my hands, ten or twelve hun- r ~ 4 u Muation to the radical cause, vote as 4 State governu This is | Unportance chat harmony prevail in’ our oowielis: a few drunken negroes, ‘This is not exactly | tractor in y be in the North and not in the South. Whatever in- ting the honest, manly and tempe- | dred of them, too, and white men at that. Why rate speech of Senator Hill and the remarks of | should not the planter of the South hav Mr. Parrott, all the speeches made fen yesterday a what Lhe mill Kates of a 1p and last night tended to just such lawlessness as viz. pntrol the vote of his operative: ” was exhibiied. The most lamentable part of the . we eae heen —_ ee er ened ean aes Pe sie why whe: biasrocapecintee. + He aren VIEWS OF PROMIVENT MEX. cutiarily Tuined, but they know their rights aud are shot dead by the first volley tired by the mob of ~~ elie sare ofthem. 18 pete § that as nee bones George H. Pendleton in Moine. ‘ done all thas ochre ant hanorabin: meen could dau’ te Frank Blair is announced to arrive at ne jo eet Mrine. 3 ‘i im rt Ala., to-morrow, Where he will speak, | At a large meeting of democrats in Portland on {| Prepitiate the North, | ‘They cousider it degradation The deme isioyal to Un acy, on the other hand, have been | no mere talk. These laws are in blac! the preliminary canvass by the e everybody who wishes canj rea t, und now, When they have exposed Win can gaiMsay Mat they do not gi their strength and felt the public pulse, the former | thority toa tew men over their fellow men greate: Wot out their best stock fora run over ti than that exercised by any government known George H. Pendleton and Thotas Ewing ied otf at | “republican tn form, and for which, by the way, Bangor, and have stumped the State together for | the radical platform aifecta so much love and admi- Seymour and Blair, ‘They will be followed by other | ration. . @emocratic lights, Whose services lave been secured, Now, in view of this array of despotic laws, can @nd a canvass by the Seymiou riaction has been en- | any candid man North not see that an election m and white, hem, and tan au- Ata time like the present a true man would rather sacri his own interest and submit to his own personal claims than to impert! the success of the cause on which so much depends, by insisting upon th When emigrants come to settle in. our State they should be welcomed with earnest cordiality, without stopping to inquire first on which side of the Ohio they were born. Missouri, which has adopted the policy I sugge and which, more than dividual instauces may exist to the contrar; that the great mass of the population aire a pe harmo’ the right, to anil doos— fect restoration of coucord and fraternal tered upon. Tennessee ts a huge farce, that the people are bound | aay other State, has received large accessions of rations are being made to receive him in 8 ita diel wou base Vassalage to be forced, tn violation of the ‘The election, as already stated, occurs on the 14th | down hand and foot, and, do what they may of population and wealth by emgration, will give, it is Se huania. ae ‘are also being made | te 718t instant, Mr. Pendleton was the recipient of | constitution, to submit to negro supremacy. No a larger majority for Grant and Colfax 1d jn 1864 for Lincoln. ‘Trusting that you will have @ harmonious and profitable session, and that when you separate it #hall be to return to your homes and work for our noble cause like beavers, I have the honor to remain, with bigh consideration, yours, most respectfully, W. G. BROWNLOW, ime is left the friends of | themselves, they cannot shake off the monster that, reanize for it. The repub- | with constantly increasing rapacity, is fast sucking us already claim the for their ticket, but | away the life blood of the State? They may be ail it will give them # majority is by no means | very well, (hese meetings that have been held and rtain. It has passed through contests equally as ex- | the mectings that are to be held, advocating a vigor- @iing as the approaching one promises to be, and | ous canvass, for they serve to Keep the people alive the voie has taken the public by surprise. wo their own suiferings and anxious to do all and Keferring back a few years it will be remembered | everything that they can in anywise to better their popular revolution of sentiment occurred in | miserable condition. But it is very dimeult to see the State between 128 and | in is28 tuportant | how the conservatives can go into the campaign efore (he couutry and entered mto | with anything like spirit with all these drawbacks anvVass between John Quincy \dams aud staring thera ip the face. One would think that t Jacksou. The latter enter ihe « it experiences, made all the syinpathy of the peuple enlisted in his behalf on ac- | the causes which gave rise to them = are of his having been cheated ont of the election } still as oppressive, if not more so than ever, would »y Henry Clay, who, tn the election that was | deter them from entering the political arena at all. earried Into the House, threw the vote of the Kep- | Yet they are evidently determined to fight it out as tuchy delegation against him, There were other is- Ti do not seem to be atall dis- Sues raised, yg Which was the legislation of 18: mayed at the diMcuities they have to encounter, al- placing a high protective tari? on unported ge though they certainly do feel that theirs is a Heren- and opposition to banking monopolies. T Jean tusk indeed. They will go into the campaign tive policy of the administration at that time wa as a solid phy . As I have said before, the great bone of contention in which various sec- | who h b Bions of the country were arrayed in antagonism. | have be Maine in the ensuing election cast her vote almost | pariy tnanimously against the soldier and in fa of the | shoulders to the democratic wheel. These men, be stutcsinan. Jackson received but one vote, and that | it known, are not carpet-baggers,but what are called inthe county of Cumberland; that gave him the | *‘hom: udicals.”” They were Union men during the inajorily of 195. He entered upon the admin- | war when the spirit of rebellion was rife and almost istration of affairs under great disadvan‘ages; but | triuinphant. They are residents of the State, own Dis ermined hostility to the old United States | property in it and are consequentty identified with Bank, irom which he withdrew the deposits, and | all its interests. Ifthe credit of the State falle tnto iigaily caused its extinetion, his vigor disrepute they are suiferers, If taxation becomes on qnestions raised by European oppressive they do not escape the share n tripartite treaty for a joint protec of the burden, and consequently now that the United states, England aud France, of al! exist. | Tennessee is verging on bankrupicy aad their ing inierests in Amertea, that Louis Philippe was at | eyes are opened te the fact that the party that ine pressing through Minister Cas#, and his | with which they have been identiiied is the cause of prompt action in dismissing refractory councillors | tue general depression, the evils of ana! row-minded, @id bringing his Cabinet into hartnony with bis own | despotic i ignorant Legisiature come home to views ou all great issues, gave Jackson a hold upon | them with ali the force of realities, Au te affections of the people that he never lost. white radicals coming over to the democ In the contest between bim and Clay in 1882 the } there is uot # mingle c -bagger, for the canses erics were, “Jackson and gold,” and “Opposition to | which prompt a home radical to change his tact banking monopolies.” In that contest Maine sur- | now that disaster is at hand, are the very causes . She led off in a popular revul- | which induce # carpet-bagger to hang on to the radi- iiment that swept the country. The | cal kite tail with a more desperate clutch than ever. canvass Was conducted with great energy by botn Suppostig, however, that with the eyes of the rites, but it resulted in the utter roat of the Clay | North upon them the party in power sbonid be com- ton and the entire electoral vote was thrown for | peilled to allow a fair elect by far the strongest dackson, Who, four years before, bad been repudiated | element of success the conservatives wil! have will le. ve the negro vote. The white resident radicals who as given in the journals of the day, | are coming into the democratic fold are the following exhibit:— not so numerous that thelr vote, added os. Jackson. } wo the “egal” white vote as it is at present computed, would turn the tables on the radicais, even though, it must be congeded, their September, and but tut the respective tickets t« to induce the General to speak at Atlanta, Should | @2 ovation such as was never seen in that city be- | man who is a statesman or there feo would per- 9 ° 7 , J » feelings growing out of past relations by he consent, though his corps did more dam- | fore. He commenced by thanking the audience for | Petuate “ age in Georgia than any other of Sher- | tne compliment paid him, the cordiality of Shion | Sel dujustice and oppression, antes ito ee man’s ariny, he will be listened to by an iin- . statesmanship to strengthen the tles by which we » One of the most enthusiastic | Ty repaid him for bis long journey from his home | are bound together, in the language of Mr. Webster, + nel » - al “ “by the silken cords of mutual, fraternal, patriotic of the General in this State is a gen- | in the far West, He then proceeded to speak of the con.” The missow of the democracy iS t0 fe. r store the Union and noé to reconstruct it; to restore er tO yo tow warin | jt wa union of States, sovereign in. themselves ex- | jesyirt all ine ares equality and rights of the : mense av aut » from Whom he took every horse on his plan- principles upon which this government was founded. and then toid the suite place when he begged that three spavined old nags | cept in so far as they ave delegated powers to the | several si lefi to thresh his wheat. general government: independent, except in so fur Sava EeRESS unimpeired.” as they have bound themselves together; disunited. 80 far as they have united themselves by the Ex-Governor F. W. Pickens. terms I ns belgie ol ty @ gereis | of the kEx-(iovernor Pickens, of South Carolina, sent the reconstruction of ‘Congress, by whieh the gov- |, The Political -Campaign—How the Colored | Mments of the southern States were abolished and following letter m response to an invitation to ad- military rule set up in their stead, claiming that | dress a democratic meeting in Laurensville:— Vote Is Going—Powerfal Influences Brought | thereby they were surely and rapidly, though sileatly, 1 aim satisfied if the people were to meet and agree to Benr on the NegroesTheir Famile pedi J the Pg pe se atheabe pa the | among themselves upon some plan of fair and rea- speaker proceeded to discuss the question of finances, | sonable settlement of debts am each ir it larity with the Iden of Bloodshod=ftate | flowing that by radical legislation business all over | eecny pete nen i feeling, and really oe bets of Mind—Both Sides Anticipating Evil and | the country had become staguated, and that the ter for the creditor as well as the debtor, It was a Preparing for lt—Model Speech of a Carpet. | silent shipyards of Maine plainiy attested this fact. | common war, in which we all engaged with enthu- B er. Upon the bond question he declared that the demo- | siasm, and all is lost; and we tht now to and N on * cratic party were for ps A indebtedness of the | getiie with each other all old te by lil com- NeW ORLEANS, Ausrust 20, 1868, country to the last dollar. The bonds should be paid | promise. If we are freed through the courts The old gentieman in drab smatis who threw ae to the a fey Wrens the ue under | process at least one-half of all property eis nila - si " or whic! y were contracted. (Applause.) Where we | vided with the law} clerks and general costs of cucumbers over the wall oa Nickleby summed | Nive promised to Day gold pay it and wherewehave | wuc’ tains tae et or ‘Se oe ES up the plilosophy of life as “all gas and gaiters,* | prom! nod to Day t spon A them. (Cheers.) | thing left to pay with. The depressed prices for and then called for a thunder sandwich and a glass reducing the debt and equal taxation the | will not settle more than ‘one-fourth of the de! of bottied lighining. Some simular theory appears to | Witl'ne restora. euterprise will De wetite anal anor | ee Se reel? items nah beet ee GEORGIA. Stormy Session of the Republican State Con- vention—White Radicals Denounciug Each Other—An Electoral Ticket Nominated=Ri-e otous Conduc Several Wou in the South, LOUISIANA. except ded—tiencral Biair Expected ATLANTA, August 19, 1868, While the speaking was goimg on at the Capitol grounds yesterday the Radical State Convention for the purpose of nominating an electoral ticket met at the Bell-Johuson Hal. The session was # very stormy one. For sume time pasi there has been a split among the white radicals, one party charg- ng the other with being treacherous to the colored peop! ‘The negroes have naturally taken sides with those who claim to be the most devoted to their in- tevests, and tins @ lively interneetne warfare has been progressing. ‘The Convention, amid great con- fusion and considerable talking, succeeded in com- ing to some kind of order, when Hopkins (native) nomindied H. P. Farrow and D. A. Walker for elec. tors for the State at large. Bryant, of Maine (carpet- Dbawger), iamediately opposed these nominations, which opposition caused another scene of squab- bling. Finally Mr. Farrow recetyed the unan- imons vote of the Convention, while Mr. Walker did not get @ vow. He was uuani- mously rejected. J. 6. Blount was next named, and instantly a perfect stort of objections was raised against hin by the negroe He was not true to them, they declared; te had voted for General Gor- don,and by ruuning 4s an tudependent candidate for Congress (he wot about fifty votes) had defeated the regular candidate, A negro then o nil its tyranny and are determined to put their = sce have iaken possession 6f the democracy of this city. | will reap its just and adequate reward. An essential | gee his neighbor ruined and no Torchlight processions, banner presentations and | step in this movement is the restoration of the - | except attorneys, sheriffs, clerks and fireworks—tireworks, banner presentations ana | Perity of the Southern States, so that they will be | any gen able to bear their share of the public burden. He | snust be particular cases of “torchlight processions make night hideous. There | closed with an. oc uent ea nas nian oe demo- | be great wrong, but ifall are forced to "1 vel 5 crats to be w joing. that they commence fa is one arranged for every night ip the week and a = an ch a hy placing Ho ey: A Process the! mour—(Cheers) ne ent , and the | their courts, negro juries egro Knights, Democratic Broom Rangers, Fossil Guards, | shouts of our rejoicing will be answered to us from and, om ry Tau vile aed ‘Roun who Seymour Sentinels, Johnson Rangers, Liberty Guards, | heaven, as when of old the angel choir announced | petrayed their race and are merely to m4 tadet Blair Knight Mi: SL “Peace on earth, goodwill to. men.” the Si these circumstances it is Seymour CGulets, Blair Knights and Magnolia | ‘sfr, Pendleton’ resiumed his seat amid tremendous | the duty but the direct interest of every y w few of the political or- | appianse. feels for his State to cordially agree with his A 2 z g Hf Z i FF F i HH 4 i dozen exira for Saturday. Blair Guards, Seymour i I # fe Rangers—these are o ganizations which have undertaken the conduct of Ps bor upon some ciple of com} iste Speech of Hon. John Sherman, everything to on made by three or sign, and which are ready to turn I a th ipl 5 Es Fi the cam ‘ out at any Uime eight or ten thousand strong pre- a cueaatr oe etnenes aig pared for any and ali contingencies, It is very long 5 an of " a 4 mittee of the United States Senate, said:— were unanimously ado; ‘and the people are, meawen Since ae a eee eee. See * * * And now that the war is over, does the | the most part, making vet igh fo prin- vy the is i i Ina recent Hon. John She i a Be ie 5 city with such outward manifestations of enthusiasm. | qemocratic party take issne with us on any of the | ciples agreed upon if The republicans move more quietly. They have at questions of the future? Its platiorm on | suits’ should be brought I ¢! the juries would attempted no public display since the democracy | Mnance ts a serics of generalities or riddies. It | bring in verdicts upon this basis generally. inated Foster has a greenback look with @ grayback candidate. | The upper districts will be first to move, for Eincoin influence over other vuctliating republicans is hot to | Blodgett, one of the great defeated at the recent Sen- | OPeued the ball with their great mass meeting iM | Read that platforin and tell me where the dem- | the desolation of the war was uot #0 great Upom Baneock...... be despised. But the negro ts the balance of power. | gtorial election, Hut that individual dec iined in favor | Lafayette square. But they are far from idle. Grant | ocratic party stands as to the time and manner | them, because they were not so much rat and Waldo. Heretofore in this State, with but a few exceptio: . 5 jation, wher. y of resumii specie ments. Where does it | because they had more white I Pionect Clubs and Loval League meetings keep the | St oy*antye me funding of the public debt? tow | ever there are more whites there. colored voters in play as far as possible. jg nnm- | does it stand on the national banking system, | and more productions. We never c: bers of course the whites of this city have an over- bs = ES ae a ta = ped —_ generation; = Sone ority and the radical le : evelopment of the Westy as NO y, dance of provisions. @ are whelmmg majority,and the radical leaders act wisely, | fey 4 principle; its whole policy Is exnnteeed any population and cannot Support any periaps, in more respects than one tn notchal- | in the effort to restore the rebels to power. | prise, because we have no provisions lenging invidious comparisons by compelling out- | When its leading men talk about finance it is | we had an abundant provision crop we of Blount, Who voviferousiy denied that he had voted for Gordon or ran for Congress. Neither the pairon- age of Blodgett nor the declarations of Blount availed auything. The negroes declared the! “wasn't a gwine to be fooied by any sich scalarag.’? Wherefore another seene of great coufusion eosned. the colored vote has been a unit in favor of the publicans. But we know not what a day may bring, and certainly two years ago the radicals little dreamed of the turn things are now taking. The negroes aré now ne more united, The “imsidions counsels” of the white disfranchised and the conser- vatives are having their effect, and, judging from the ri g2 32 ; aE 5 é i if t ect of affairs in West Tenvessee and in smonstrations. © great rel re . | Merely general and false arraiguments of the | least be independent, and would in the rural districts throughont the state, Lshould not | Every ulgger yelled at the top of his vowwe and every | GOOF demonstrations. “One great reliance of the radi: | Peetilican party as to public expenditures, Twit | of white labor: Duty as it im, we Rave. HO Jackson's majority be surprised if twenty thousand negro votes were | fourth white mau bawl@t ont “Order.” But order | Cals 8 Upon the redistribution of districts which the | give you one or two specimens of their financial | feed white labor on any large scale, for we can hard: A ne went tn this so went ¢ polled for the democratic ticket; but as to their | was not a thing to be had. Amid the deafening | Legislature has just carried ont ostensibly to secure | talk, Mr, Hendricks, ot Indiana, who is confeasedly | Jy feed ourselves. We could not retain ey Jackson ticket r Lin the twe Biates 208 votes, the Clay ticket 51 and four | being counted, that nist be left to the ‘fecision’ ve Wirt | of Mr. Brownlow. The serious inroad on the repub- ticket 7. If four years at that period in the country’s | lean vote as it atood at the last election, and which Divtory could revolutionize parties so as to prodice | cay be taken a a baa for the ensuing election, his remarkable resuit there is no reason why itshould | which this negro “change of base” would make, i one of the ablest leaders of the democratic party, | White iabor if we had it, umiesa we ers In all the Congressional | tng recent apecch sail he wished to know What has | Uc and sheep, for white labor requires milk and bul really to swallow op possible demo- | peen done with the immense sums of money col- | tle and mutton and beef. And mutton and beef From the doth of Jane, | easier and cheaper to raise now, with “Ey: an equalization of distr eratte majorities. by the Ingentons pro cess of sand- | lected from you. He say noise poor Blount was sacrificed al the altar of nig. gcrdom and retired with the consoling rema: there was not the slight é that oral tehanee of that ele wiching each democratic section between two re- | 1865, to the 30th of June, 1863, the receipts in gold | iande, than hogs are, and far more healthy. not be done now When there are equully live iss Would castly give the vietory to the conservatives, | [cket betng elected. The throats and tungs of the | publican sections, and merging them into one dis | from customs amounted to $518,752,38t 60, and im | thing’ to be done, then, by the upper districts is to betore the people and the democracy have ax strong | The total vote cast in 1966 was 97,0%4, of which | delegates having at lengih becu exiuusted a tempo: | trict. currency from internal revenue to $768,260,946 64, | raise more provisions and less land in cotton. Them aims upon their couildence as then. Browniow received 74,004 and Btheridge 22,550, not | rary juli caine on, which enabled a white delegate to making in the whole $1,287,012,333 44 ‘The in- | we can make provision for white imm! AesiNng OF beequent elections let us look at | counting of course, th the in Julests, In 1s80 the state cast the [ whieh the successful caudidate “legally” threw out So\lowing vote:— ag “distoval,” and whiet if allowed would have in- Jncoln . teeeeeees crease Etheridwe’s by vote several thousands, The ou has Negro vote is about 45,000, and may probably at the ensuing election be somewhat over that figure, but pt more than 47,000, The conv@rvatives ssuirediy the 22,500 that were given ie terest on the public debt during these Lt ea among us and beabletosupportthem. If we could F 700 | las averaged about $125,000,000 per year, making | Have ® just and pure government | think we could sec ‘ongressional district (dem. majority). 1,200 | $375,000,000. That being deducted from the sum | advance, If we settle our debts and piant lese ‘Third Congressional district (rad. majority).... 5,000 | collected leaves about $900,000,000, Van | more | cotto: and raise breadetuit™, cattle and sheep, Fourth Congressional district (rad. majority)... 7,000 | than $300,000,000 in a time of profoun Fifth Congressiou 9,000 ‘The Legisiature as to reduce the tw rise to # point of order. Me remarked that he was vould safely predict that if hetter ju the republican party of Geor- gia that organization woul! be beaten nd majority next November. Bryant now called for tue @ cominittee, which call w wressional district (rad, majority)..... r Peace | and have less ambition for wealth, we will be # | district (rad. majority), , except so far a# the Congressional policy has | bappier and more comfortable people, The logs of structed the districts so | created a state of hostilities, This great sum of slaves is nothing compared with the loaa of thousand seven hundred radical | money has been expended in legislative, judicial, ex- | character, integrity and manliness. I at one time reckinridge.. Total vote ca «100,918 i » and son thousand persons | opposed by a dozen rpeake majority in the First district to one thousand five | ecutive and military expenses’? You see that this | owned five hundred and sixty-seven, and, as God ts —Of which Mr. Lincoln exer jugias by 88,118, | who are legally voters according to the franchise Wag) desired the party to suc. | hnndred, the seven thousand radical majority m the | 1 @ general charge, that eince the war the republican py Judge, Ttoouid not have them back aa they were. pther candidates hy 24,704, act, bot who did pot vole at the previons election be- | © and so desiring nominated A. T. Akerman Fourth district to four thousand and the nine thou. | party authorized Johnson's administration to expend | 1 have been relieved of them by violence and brute In the seevad eiccion of Mr Lincoln party nes | cause they dido't want “to beg” their certificates from | Whereat Hopkins, of Chathai, deciared that Aker: | sand radical majority in the Fifth district to six | thrce hundred millions a year for ordinary expenses | force. Zhe care, anciety and responsibility that op~ ‘were more closely (irawn and the vote was for (he registers, will set aside their seraples of pride iu | mun was the worst enemy the colored race ever had, | thousand. By this process they obtain a surplusage | of the government. Let is see how this siands. The | pressed me in relation to them I now feel relieved Lincoln. . sees OL50) 7 Novernber next and go for Seymour and Blair, This | Bryant and Higbee arose together and together de- | of seven thousand two hundred radical votes, and | total receipts are provably correctly stated at | True, the degradation and ruin of my State are con: Mevielian eve . 44,211 | Would ‘ake the white vote on the conservative side, | Nownced Hopkins for this staternent; while Hopkins, | these thrown into the Second district, which at the | $1,280,000,000, stant sources of pain to me, particularly when [ know, -- including say *,000 dispirited home radicals and con- | determined not to be put down tinued to de. | last election returned Colonel Mann, a democrat, to | document, with high commanding statesmanahip in 1963 at ‘ 106,014 | servalive republicans, Computing the negro | noupce Akerman flercely and An interesting | Congress, will eat up the present democratic major- | the public d head of affaira, the result would have been different above the soldiers’ v , and tt] Vote on the detiocratic ticket at ite lowest figure at | trio of wkers, eaeh denouncing the other, oce ity of one thousand two hundred in that district, and |} 000,000, as stated by him to ourcountry. We now have nothing left but to vote of the State at 109, of which | 16,000, this Will make the total conservative vote | pled the Convention's attention for several minutes, : 7 leave a balance of #ix thonsand to the credit of the | $45,000,000. [ find, also, that over $266.000,000 were | bear, with Christian resignation, our 3 at least » aod MeCletlan ‘ed 6 4.084, or @ 00, Deducting this from the total vote of the State, | until Griffin, who can oulbawi any living ereature, | republicans, The onty fauit to be found with this | paid on ihe priacipal of the public devi, which was } such is the case with those as old as I am. There i# majoriiy of 20,111 for the republican ticket 4, there is left @ handsome majority of 8,066 for | rose up and in @ tremendous tone of voice forced the | elaborate and sagacions scheme is that in stooping | reduced that amount, Now this ijact is en- | some hope, I suppose, of a change in the govern. Hut in the next tree years the vote slows @ still | the democrats. Such a project in many another | wordy combatants to subside. Grifin was for the | down to pick Op one district the republicans drop | tirely suppressed. { find, aigo, that out | ment from the election in November next. 1 it yublican decrease. he cow Southern Stato Would be considered a sure harbin- | blacks. If there were any but another and leave themselves just where they were | Of this sum over $140,000,000 have been | may be, and that God, in his mercy, will still pre between Chamberlain (repr ger of Victory, but in the midst of their most san- | County Who intended to vote for m before, The First district was carried at the lost ee for back pay and bounties and for | serve us much of the conservative principle of & con- and Piilebur (deraoerat, drew oul 100,054 | guine expecuutious the people tere, even with auch | he would like to kuow ther. election by barely two thousand seven hundred, | transportation and prize money for atiny and navy, | stitutional government. es, of which the republicans recetyed 67.840 and vance of triumph as these Oures anticipate, are | marked that if the recent elec ‘This scanty Majority is reduced in the new schedule | all of which occurred during the war, but was og democrats 46,005, 1 reduced the majority of nied with the bugt of those laws already | example there were plenty of biack men there who | to one thousand Ave hundred, and the change of | after July 1, 1805. Now this fact is supp! . ff Welshmen and the Presidency. ormer to 116 He we uave the evidence How would democratic people im | didn’t intend to vote for Grant and Colfax, as his | seven hundred and fifty votes will give the distri found also that there was paid during the three The f wm the Waning fortunes of radic a the Pine Tree | New York relish the fact were they certain of a vic- | county (Houston), With a majority of over two thoa- | to the democrals, and probably twice that number of | years for new bounties to soldiers the sum of following addresa has been issued to the Stole. [i seven years the republican tajerity tis | tory at the polis, with every legai voter counted, but | saad colored voters, lad elected three democratic | votes have been already secured, $49,498,859, and to States for claims for war expenses | Weish citizens in Oneida county (Governor Sey- becn reduced from 24,704 to 11,014. Local elections | were aware that tovernor Fenton could tirow out | Representatives and given a large Majority for Gene+ It may be stated as a fact that the idea of choosing | the sui of $10,390,000, and to menta for pro | mourts " the electors by the State Lagisiature hax been abate | perty lost or destroyed’ during the wat $11,000,009, ote residence), We seldom hear of our Weigh doned. The proposal met with strong support from | In allover $70,000,000 for t three items. Mr. | °!tizens taking sides as a class in politica:— extremists like Carr, Peter Harper and others in the | Hendricks don’t gay a word about this, It thus ap- To THE Weisn Resrognts IN ONEIDA CoUNTY!= Legialature—men whose perpetial harping upon thre peers that from the $1,287,000,000 received neariy | FsiLow Cirizens—at the nest of the Committe danger of “Joi? men being assaceinated har se- 100,000,000 were id principal and interest of | of the Welsh Grant and Colfax club, formed in the cured for them, even among their own party, the | the funded or noat ing debt and for bounties, leaving | clty of Utica, we desire humbly and earnestly to call 7,000,000 for three years’ expenditures, or | your attention to the importance that every one of 30,000,000 & year, ine of $00,000,000, ag atated | you should vote In an honest, enlightened and con- nm, Who Mat once | by Mr. Hendyivke, What relience cap you place on bd siuce thie Vote Was cast show still larger repub- | the vole of New York county at his discret and hence itis more than probable that | loyai to the State gov ruiuent ? The people ot tune jemocragy enter bite the canvass with | nessee are oppressed with the belief that the old they will carry the State for Seymour. To | “law” game Will be repeated this year, and that the ce the present majority it is only neces. | are again to be thrown back into ‘suffering an fo change 5,808 vores, An energetic campaign, | degradation for an indefinite number of years. They ' the merite of both parties are qua know (hatin such ® conungency their only hope for oo vetore the elegtors, © almost certan to succor Mes ia Ue generosity, the good sound common Ale 10 He GeMUCTELy. wae of the Nurivgrn peypie, They ive) Oaps the rai Gordon. Griffin eyed him savagely, but as he could not gainaay a notorious fact he gulped down bis wrath and took @ seat. Several niggers here arose and declared that Akerman had made a firat class nigger speech in the Reconstruction Convention. This carried the point, and Aker- men was declared unanimously nominated, No sooner was this result anuoupved thay another SUDEINS WO) DIAG, FwO-IhWe OF the apingqies contemptuous title of “Knights of the Phantom Dag- Td abandonment of the = is mainly due ipfuepee of Genera) Me Mii Scrntiowy magnesia the comipa elgcwon. Woe ds