The New York Herald Newspaper, September 29, 1868, Page 3

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NEW YORK HERALD, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1868—TRIPLE SHEET. 8 a ‘SER ONY Sings Oe Has RERUN, a RRR TE ENS than to the whites, contcading tnat_ it was crime | lived up tothe principles of the constitution, which | from these democrats who keep up a fire in the rear.”” mean! thetr SEYMOUR AND BLAIR. not only against free government, but against civil- a must and shall be equal.” (Applause.) | The hulk gold was rotten. 1t was laden with a thou- B E N B U T L E R. bored Pent ae fn Ag pd wish ye ite peated set ization and june Coen = Gisclosed the | When the war commenced taxation a wencasel. oe ee. ¥ gd brothers, sous, £04 started for if he had one, he would hazard the success of the 7 pera oe =| hypocrisy pai retended | were called upon to put down an racy in the came a storm; down went your 2 in ingle district Great Democratic Mass Meeting in Pittsbarg— | morai ideas. Such “& course would” eventu- | South. Let us look at that aristocracy. ‘There was | troops, Your muskeis, article after article, which | Tue General Renominated for Congress—His pa RS very life at tie nation to Speech of General Frank P. Blair. ate in negro sapremsey in the South. Con- | a9 aristocracy South that held men in bondage. had cost the people money. Up comes a call for Acceptance ef the Nomination aud Declarae | put in issue by the contest of the hour? With PirrsBuRG, Pa., Sept. 28, 1868. gos had [in to three millions of blacks | ‘There was an aristocracy that lived upon the fruits | more troops, for more muskets. I have contracts tien of His Futare Course if permission, gentlemen, I will make the m4 Aen i Macey 3 : in the South twenty Senators in the United States | Of the earnings of others to a great extent. But | with my rich New England friends, who don't like Blected-= Hie gentlemen who signed that call and ai : c 5 usiastic meeting of the democrats of this | Senate and fifty members in the House of Represeu- | that aristocracy had a right under the constitu- | the democratic majorities because they say they war Platform Unanimously Approved by the Cone their own persons to to Con: — eee city was held in front of the St. Charles Hotel to- | tatives, while it required four millions of whites in | tion; that aristocracy paid its pro rata share | with New England inierests. I have achanceto| vention, either of them will produce a letter from (en night. Not less than 20,000 persons were present, } tie State of New York to sond two Senators to the | Of *axation; that aristocracy brought us of the | sign more bonds. | am growing richer. You are SALEM, Mass., Sept, 28, 1868, Grant, heretofore or hereafter written, py ' br nb United States Senate and three millions of white | North more than iteverdid curses, It made | growl rer. The war is not being carried om! pen putter, wh res to become the radia) | one of his confidential friends authorized go todo, and throughout the proceedings the greatest excite- | people in the State of Pennsylvania ty send tivo sex, | money South in oe season of the gear ant eame | successfully. Hut we Fepubllean leaders, the great m Rater, WHO Oem f qudical | lace it in your hands, Mr. President ine Ment was manifested. The meeting was called to | ators, and the three millions of ‘blacks at the South | North and spent it at our watering places at another head Nights on tls “God and morality’? machine, we | leader of the next Congress in the place of the late | General Grant wishes the republicans ‘Of thls district 7. y as qn mbers in the House of | season, ve employment to hundreds of thou. | are last the war is over. The rebellion | «G; ” 7 ¢ ake by Mr. T. Keenan, Shortly before eight o'clock | Hepresentatives as the ‘seventeen’ millions of | eands of mechanics artisans and workingmen. ii | ia put down. Youare told you can return. to your tt PONS: COUNIDREET SE hetevees paneed, Yon Md and fe great BOntET wil chosen ge ! leneral Frank P. Blair was introduced, amid great | wnite people in the great States of New York | bought pianos, it bought clocks, bought the handl- | homes. The President told’ you you were not war- | the regular republican convention 0 trict. | Tore, ifour candidate for Viee. President, who 3s cheering. General Blair addressed the audience at a eee omatinady so that, 2 fact, the work “ orsbern mechanics, and ship loads of then | ring er oe rgnia of States or of any people, You | His district is number flvye of the ten in the State, | Speaker of the Hou iy i Brinn —y = K 4 ri neg! A ese reconstruction acts, was | Went into the Southern country, because there was ; Were efending your own interest ou re- v \ Sth shoal Ol Ee eee ee team verrapted | image equal to ten white men in the States of ‘New | not there the superiority of industry and mechanism | turn and find things ‘greatly ‘changed, T'was poor | 827 among the larger towns which It combines may | friendship and Rriaeeane (nee oe 1 FELLOW CiTIZeNS—It_ 13 impossible to. exaggerate | York and Pennsylvania, How could such a thing be | that existed here in the North. ‘They were wealthy. | When the war commenced; I could not have got | be mentioned Newbnryport, Salem, Lawrence and | sie Chmicteen will aap ti Twill withdraw. q the importance of the issues pending this contest, | Justified? Upon what theory of human rights can | They helped to create a revenue for our country, | trusted for a No. 2 mackerel. I was immensely | Gloucester, the latter town being the scene of his | Yurtner, if my honorable Sollemens Ye ge Feo miititehes toot Me aera ag public | @2y Person ti any other motive than that | They made money there at the Sonth; they brought ut now ain allsafe and sound, residence. ‘The Convention was largely attended, | chusetts delegation, who have mate ed = ae fpoeches attest the Me ceoneh ‘appreciation which the | Which seemed tobe transparent? That the radicais of it North, and ail of us reaped the benefit. We de money by selling confiscated goods, 4 4 | Congress, will say to you that the 1 terest he people have of the importance and vital. conse. | Pave lost confidence in the white race, and are will- | put that aristocracy down by force of the bayonet, | I got along very well, but the people did not gat | Nearly every town sending a full delegation, and | ronuiitcan party require my defen toe eee oes ' Guences of this election. I shall not, therefore, feel | 128 _ © on in blacks to make them the | and in putting it down the republican party, which | along so well. long before the hour of assembling Lyceum Hall | believe that my services ae not useful to the Sarat myself at liverty to make any preliminary remarks | (0018 and instruments to maintain themselves | cried aloud for retrenchment and reform, butit up an ERIOR. OW TARATION, was filled with Butler’s admirers. Of course the | ican party and the country, and as I should grieve \ the {a power and position against the votes of the | aristocracy known as United States bondholders— You return to your homes and find that tn Dunkirk bel Detar comine.-fe | ine. Gisenanion of theas pe gnamons majority of the people of the Northern free States, as | an aristocracy based on prospective _wealta. | you must ralse fifty thousand dollars to Ray the ex- theme of conversation was the probability or possi- foray has aleeaeanna pe personal considerations with regard to the merits of well as against the whole body of the white race at | It compels the workingman, the young man, | penses of your city government, How this mo- | bility of his re-election, most of the delegates ex- | party far too much at heart to all y personal Any of the candidates can have influence with | the South? And what better force could be found to | the farmer, the laborer, all the men and women | hey raised? By taxation. How do youknowon whom | pressing themselves confident of a triumph, but | aspirations and personal wishes to oppes ir the people in making up their d n as compared | “lutain despotiam than those ignorant black men, | before me ‘here to-day, wio are not rich, who | to levy your taxes? First find out how much every a ment its fullest and most glorious #acee. oe Me j with the principles ‘witich are involved. ‘The real | With no aspirations and no appreciation of liberty in | are not protectea and are not the favored bondhold- | man i8 Worth, I take my books as an assessor and | few declaring that the promised opposition will be | ™T5 ‘ne other pretext of hoe ees question is, how shail we. best restore peace, | Me sense in which we understand it? In my judg- | ers—it compels each and every one of you to come | go into the country. I say:—Here, Mr. Johnson, how | more formidable than the most sanguine of Butler’s | do not agree to Iny “finaneiat og ee ey Conddence tad prosperity to te country aner this | ment the policy embraced ‘by the democratic party, | in vour might to support the” government tomaine | much are you are worth? ie repiles—Twenty-ive | friends antleipate. yleid for two reasons, 'First-t' find menny at ae Jong and exhausten struggle, and which policy is | Which looks to contining all those of the South, as | tain in idleness this aristocracy, to support the | thousand dollars,” What 1s your money Invested in? most prominent among iene pa me many of the ‘ ak caltnustonte promote this ‘end? ‘The people will | Well a8 at the North, to the people ' of | negroes South, and to support a standing army of | “Lumber mill.”” Taxes are very high, I tell him; it | Charles E. Kimball, of Lynn, as chairman of the | Dosea'my election two years cinco’ at iene eee oe decide, with thelr unerring judgment. in favor of | that race who established this government in them- | which we have no necd, and this is why, asa work- | has cost a great deal to pay hack bounties; to pay | District Committee, called the Convention to order, | herhaps more who desired to regcoe east cree and | that olicy which commends itself to thetr ‘and | Selves and their chit'ren and who are educated and | ing man, asa lover of the interests of the children | sheriffs, policemen, education and all of the other | ang Ren Perley Poore, of West Newbur: ‘ two years ago, but whom the dior ag the district Gisormingting senses, without regard to the popu- | @Miightened and have created the civilization that | of America I war upon it and think that it isan in- | expenses. You are worth twenty-five thousand dol- J st D ‘y, Was chosen Be iy nl E riet did not desire; larity of the candidates put forward to represent the exists among us, as the best policy for the restora- | sult to America, that it is wrong for us to declare by | lars; let us see what your share Is, The rate of tax- president. Major Poore, on taking the chair, said ernment which I will not reas ee apaltiat the gov- Gifferent policies provosed. I believe that proscrip- | 08 of peace and prosperity and the maintenance of | legislation that the rich shall be protected at the ex- | ation is three anda half percent. ‘I tell Mr. Johnson | that he had been so much more on the banks of the | therefore, 1 see my views upon finance eyed tion, persecution, disfranchisement or arbitrary des | that form of government which has been transmitted | pense of the poor. There 1s not a working man here | that he owes us seven hundred and fifty dollars. | Potomac than upon the banks of the Merrimack | stalking horse to bear off personal ambitions eee tisin has never-in the history of the world pro- |‘? ¥8 by our ancestors. (Cheers.) fo-day within the sound of my volee whois stnvins | “That aright smart tax.” says Mr. Johnson, “Yes, ‘A errimack | foualill will; and thus tOAPAWAWA ce ee, iced peace. Jt has been tried in the couniries of by virtue of economy to make hishome more beauti- | but it costs us a great deal to support the govera- | that he feared he might be considered a carpet-bag- | SHogiance some good and brave Inen wie ey the Old World, it has been tried since the dawn of ful and happy—there is not a person here to-day but | ment. We have a standing army, a Freedman’s | ger on this occasion. Bemg assured that he was not, | representation and misunderstanding oe mise history, and if it has ever produced peace it has BRICK POMEROY has right across the back of his neck abig welt. | Bureau to support. We have to pay for all] ne said he was giad to be here to take | ton upon the flnances are fearful that chat sco, mever produced prosperity. . Youcan feel it there, workingmen of Dunkirk, and | the outlay which tne democratic party has brought 8 a, ere ‘ake tipe ae einiured. Socondine Phila a elr securt- ‘After alluding to the grievances of Ireland the if you don’t find it by putting your hand there, when | upon the country.” Johnson says:—“Well, I will} Part in this most important Convention, f ae @ mere pre- peed i speaker procecded in forebie language to depict the | His Speech Befere the Democracy in Mase | Jou g0 home to-night, when you gotothe bed of your | sell & shan of norses, I will sell, the butter iny wife | @ gathering which 1s looked upon with eager Poa rrtae iar ig Cue ci pe nae condition of the Southern people, contending that a Meeting Assembled at Dunkirk. oe children whose interests you should care for more } has made and the chickens the children have raised, | 4, the ss ron Jenene ph nia nny muestra than you do, ask your wife to look atthe mack of your | and see that you have your money.” Say [:—"That nen by every true patriot all the way i ec bicars 7 ae ei gre ane Ge tyrannical oppression of the radical party, “Hechar. | _ 0 Tuesday, the 22d inst., the democracy of Chau- | neck and see if there is not a red spot there. I'will | is right. My’ partner is collector. He will be along m the pines of Maine to the sugar plantations in | members of the House of Representatives am ate Soterized ‘the measures of Congress ‘as extravagant | tauque county assembled in full force at Dunkirk to ta roa bow. i apes an a oS over ae pleat ees jwrenis, tie .aiaa iaiahs Louisiana, If they failed to re-nominate General | solute majority—that the taxes on the Incomeof the e expense of the mi ‘olce-~ 4 e Detects nitactind pauithie auton of Bia capa attend @grand rally at which Brick Pomeroy and | «Be jabers, we have.”) It is the casiest thing Inthe | persons having gone out of this world without | Butler, he added, every rebel would rejoice, and he | bonds should be honestly collected, so that the bad men should not escape the t: ey of the republican and democratic parties, de. | ther leading lighte of the democratic party were to | world to wheel barrow. Ihave done it; you have | dying, but we have no instance of one going out | Felled confidently upon the citizens of Essex tore- | Day willingly. Which of these, men will Bo. ‘pelore i nouncing the former as hostile to the interests of the | be present and speak. Chautauque county has the | (one it. All you have to do is to take hold and | Without paying his taxes. ward one who had done so much in bealf of the | the people and oppose my election as the advocate ; fey anh advocate f y wheel it right along. There is scarcely aboy oracrip- | * ‘ihe s “i afte sh etic: rascal a ruling i yr sgl Ae ing aoe eae OA Sabie credit of being the very hotbed of radical republ!- | pied goldier but can do it; but when ne pee Or RCH ere een tee Union, of the Is escaping taxation and defrauding the Y ea Mr. Holden, one of the Salem delegates, then took | "evenue? To those whose sensitiveness to the dan- extravagance on the part of the vern- | C@nism in this State, and it was, therefore, emin- | one ten hours you say it is not funny a bit, I will No doubt many of you came here to see a very bad i: eof eles ment *galculated to eat e the prosperity ently proper that the red hot champion of the demo- | Sit up in my window and laugh at you, it is such fun | looking man. I have been represented as one or the | the floor and said that notwithstanding the nomina- fad respect, reece fait pas prion at hele titetake, of the mason, fiteady burden’ with aa enormous | cracy should take the stump there. About two eee er one Fe Re BAT saves baleaat in man | tion of General sutler was a foregone conclusion, concuring as 1 do in its fullest extent wim the pa more than was necessary to ararhtane the o'clock in the afternoon the meeting was called to | tite. Wheet away! The republican party has de- | Porting the revenue in that way. I am simply a there was still a peculiar feeling among the dele- unciation of the Chicago platform, that the na- government ‘anterior to the war? The debt con- | order, and after the election of achairman the orator | lated be legislation that you must wheel him to the | plain, hard working maa—one wto has battle tional honor required the payment ef the public in- gates, and he hoped that the nomination would not | debted: in the utmost good faith to all backslid- cted for the maintenance of the Union should be . | tune of forty-three million dollars which you pay to | his rights and property. My sympathies are with | be made by acclamation but by ballot. He then | ers at e and abroad, not onl' paid to the last dollar; but in the manner of its pay- othe aay. as hi Toduced. Brick Pomeroy ou com- | support the freemen South and the Freedmen’s bu- | the mosing mon Of my ceey. 2 Bee | eaten fasta in a os letter but the spirit of the law'mider witch ce i Freut' there was a. wide difference to contieas, | ing forward sald:— Teau. You can just as well wheel him as not. You | Was intoxicated in my life and “never intend accordance with his views, which | contracted. Tam not conscious of having altered Detween the two great parties of the country. The | FELLOW CiTizENs, Lapres AND GENTLEMEN—I | TePUblicans like to wheel the negro, and the bigger | to be. I have been called a traitor. As a young | was carried, and the Convention proceeded at once | anything which contravenes it. Thave discussed the ; policy advocated iS the democratic party in this | first ask of you a personal favor, that you will re- | te Negro the bigger the bureau—the more you like | man I thought it was the any. of adh sa i toa ballot. There were 179 votes cast, and of these | provisions of those laws which at last must re was the payment of the ‘cbt ‘according | main as quiet as you can, and give me your attention | t° Wheel them. He fought nobly! He saved the | guard their own Lag bs ery Butler had all but four, the scattering ‘minority con- | bs left to the Supreme Court to construe and decide, the agreement mado at the time the debt without any demonstration of applause while 1 am country ! rights given me under the constitution—that as an | sitsing of one for Perley Poore, one for E. F. Stone, of | and have endeavored to find that method by which ‘ was contracted—payment of the debt in the | speaking. My purpose is to do good, not to create a The republican party tell us that the white soldlers | American citizen I owed allegiance to that consti- | Newburyport; one for J.C. Choate, and one for R. H. | the public debt might soonest be withdrawn from same kind of money which was advanced to | sensation. My firat idea isto speak for the benefit could never have put down the rebellion if it had not | tution and was bound as I grew up to manhood to | Dana. The result of the ballot was received with the arena of politics and made safe and. secure, be- fie goveramone. | Tie payment of the debt | of the workingmen, the lass to whose interests my pe a a CECE S and Cn yore es Pea opuocen | Eteat cheering, and the nomination wassubsequently | cause relieved from all. source of injustice and tne In the same kind of money in. which energies are devoted. 1 expected to be here to . fairness in the minds of th ” { the soldiers were paid; payment of tue debt in winich | adress you at an earlier hour, but the train on | PUtfor the herolc black man, ‘aXe that for what it | to secession. Tald that Staves In the Union could | | While the committee was engaged in counting the | by'a loan at a low rate of interest fellevine the Dont? | We pay all our other debts; payment of the debt in | which I came from New York was delayed. At Hor. | [f..worth—you have got him to wheel. (A voice, | not go out. I did allt, colt to pitt re oO | aie rear, alls for, the inevitable Loring, | ness of the country from the too high rate ofinterest ' the same currency which the pensions were paid to | nellsville we were an hour and forty minutes late, | “Can’t see it.” There are a good many that can’t | Mon, except to go to the front, Tdid not wish to go | Butler’s advance agent; and he responded briefly. | paid by the government, which so inflates the rate of the disabled soldiers, the wid. ws and the orphans | but Conductor Cobb promised me that he would | S2@ ‘t, and a good many that after election will See- | tothe front. I cared nothing for the pry ant hing He incorporated into his remarks some strong words | commercial interest as to cripple the business of the Of those who gave their lives for this country. The | Wake up an hour of this time, and he did it. more. You soldiers who fought didn’t put down the | not eager for the wooden dere. I wal ' Mie 2 for Grant, Colfax, Charles Sumner, Butler, | country, and thus to conform to the Chicago resoiu- bondholder had no higher claim upon this govern- I know that there are a great many republicans ceuellion. You men from the adjoining towns can | lion Lend bs Ga — Br co Ry ag = oes Boutwell and the whote array of Congress- | tions by extending the national debt over a fair ; ment than those men Who saved the country. He | present who have come here from curiosity. I can | Wheel the negro. 2 S287 5 oS % ecemmmiene oom of Mr, Abin, 88 Ls Oe eee | aoe one Massachusetts, and declaimed at | riod for its redemption. I have maintained that it is q had no more sacred demand than the widows and | always tell them by their looks, ‘Of the opposite BRICK ON FALSE PROMISES, deserved criticism. That w LS length azainst Sevmour, Vallandigham, Semmes, | the duty of Congress to reduce the rate of interest orphans of the fallen so dict |. | party present can have the satiaf: I shall be perfectly fair this afternoon. Ishall | What I thought against the interests of the people | Wade Hampton, &c. He also defended Butler's | thereon whenever it can . holders loaned to fan} et eee ag ae hataay speech has been curtailed forty nee make a republican specch of about fiftesn minutes, | the legal tender business, for instance—I denounced. | financial views, and closed with eluquent praise of | 1 have said the piel Legrae euitcoa the pan : worth at the time oue ha'f of their value now. and * * * * * * * 1 see a good many republicans in the crowd. Iehali | I said the time would come when these abuses would | his wisdom. ment of the bonds in the same fegal tender notes a the contract was to pay him in the same money, the Let's see if we have any reasoa to defend the prin- make a republican speech, although I never was a | ruin the country, if they were not corrected, I criti- Shortly after the nomination of Butler, who was | authorized to be issned at the same time with lawful money of the government. If the radical | ciples of our fathers und the interests of our chi- | republican. I may fail. Iffdo you must take the | cized the massacre of soldiers under incompe- | within “a convenient distance” of the hall,acom-| them, but I have nowhere sald or thought ‘ polic was to maintain in this country its | dren. If wehave, then let us press on this war! Let will for the decd. A few yearsago (I am speaking | tent generals. Wherever there was a wroni 1 | mittee called upon and informed him what had that the government shonld not pay those Banding armies, its Freedman’s Bureau and other | U3 press on the campaign; let us urge the democracy as a republican) I came as a republican here to Dun- | thought I had aright to speak Sener it, and I | taken place and requested his presence in the Con- | legal _ tenders in gold a3 soon aa wasterul extravagances, tozether with the sum ne. | to return to democratic principies fil we have won | Kirk and preached to you the necessity of a change | did. | At. last the administration offered me } vention. When ho entered the hall the delegates | the prosperity and growth of the resources of the cessury to pay the interest upon the debt, the result | tie victory. Permit me to re @ little incident | %f the government. 1 said that the power of the | the colonetcy of a Wisconsin caval ry regi men bait stood up and gave a round of nine cheers. When | country will permit without commercial distress, would be exact!y what the resalt has been since the | tiat happened but yesterday in New York. It ts a | S0Vernment depended on the consent of the gov- | would accept it, go to war and agree not to criticize | they had subsided he proceeded to acknowledge the | financial revulsion and the disorganization of the : . i — ent. ‘The; l ity to do | honor conferred as follows:— F . 1 close of the war. Instead of a diminution, i simple li:tle story, but a true one. Like some great | C’Med. I said there was need of a change—that we | the government. ‘They said, “Itis your dui Jabor and business of the conntry. ‘Yhis ouestioy year will add to it, Such policy, he uch, Gack pie g fowe the hablt of someumes telling a story. (A must have retrenchment an‘ reform, and I told you, | this. If you love your country and want the rebel- By this cordial greeting, by your personal kind- | pecomes of less consequence day by day, ons Gin. ‘Would eventuate in the bankruptcy of the country | Volce—Where’s Butler ?’) Mr. President, that the admimstration, that the | lion to be putdown you must sustain the govern- | ness, by the high honor of a nomination as the Tepre- tion of the republican candidates, the conseqnent and entire repud‘ation of the None. ‘Now, onthe Butler is in the spoon business, party which would submit to the robbing of one | ment.” I declined the offer. I said it was my duty | sentative worthy of the support of the republican | pacification of the South, the return there of peace other hand, the democrat: a BRICK AS A STORY TELLER. printing office in America, desc! ; Sees sete imine oar ad leg One day wile passing through the streets T met a | annihilated. I said, axa republican, that the demo- | lican; to defend the right and condemn the wroug. with all unnecessary institutions and enable oor maimed soldier, Who hat been wounded at | T&S were wrong, that they were dishonest. Imade | Because I would not go to war thus they called me ® | poor in thanks ever to repay. I can acknowledge | pring the balance of trade in our favor; the with the country to pay off a poition of its debt each | Cold Harbor. I asked him how he got along now; | SPeeches here an: ‘ged you to take care of your | traitor. When I saw brave men sacrificed by Incom- | the obligation only by renewed efforts in your ser- | drawal and reduction of our armies when civil law year. By the saving thus made credit ana confidence | he said not very well. He had a hand organ that he interests. I made war speeches, I urged the necessity | petent leaders [asked for a oo. hy a read vice in the duties which you have devolved upon | gall resume its sway in the rebellions States under Will be restored, the lawtul currency to the’ equilib- | Was carcying. ‘He was procuring the means of sub- of putting down this aristocracy at the South, I | Steamboat after steamboat come up the Mississippt me for I do not permit myself to doubt that in - | the reconstruction acts of Congress. as they will do rium of gold established, and thus saved, the honor | sisting for hfinself, wife and two children, I waiked | &*Ked you to look out for your interests that America | river Inden with pianos and. the furniture of | sachasets, in Essex district, a nomination so unant- | when they are administered by an honest and com- of the country protecied, enable tie nation to pay | along with him to the front of my ottice, and asked might be greater. I charged you that it was your | Southern homes—entire libraries and the stock of | mousiy made by the delegates of the ben petent Executive; the opening of the great its debt, relieve the peop'e of taxation and restore | lilm to give mea tune. He had been a soldier; he duty to protect your earnings. Then came a war. | Southern farms coming North, the government ae party, chosen by its primary assemblies In every | ratiroads across the continent, pouring the riches of the country to prosperity, bringing with it the bless- | bad fought to save the country; he was a white ‘Then Iwas in my glory, Idid not fight worth a | ing the freight, to fill the houses and farms of loyal | town and city in the district, in tie due course of the | China and the East into the In» of our ing of peace and traternal feeling. (Cheers.) man, and I thought he was a friend of music. He | C2 Asa military genius f never was a success. | men. I demanded a change. When I saw men mak- | usage of our party, isan election. In so believing | | commerce, making our roads the highway of that General blair said he had been denounced by his | dropped the hand-organ on its stick, and I saw on But I could make war speeches. I was blessed with | ing hundreds of thousanas of dollars on some army | am not unmindfal that the names of some one hun- | great trade to furope—each and all will contribute opponents a8 a man willing to renew the reoeliion, | the top of hishand-organ a piece of paper, which more gift of gab than any six auctioneers. I urged | contract I said it was arson: Ages saw demo- dred and filty sons, obtained after the rnost | go to swell our resources of taxation as to render the 88 revolutiontst, an! he would, there‘ore, be par- | read that Charies Smich had paid the United States | FOU Werkinamen, you young men to leave your | crats mobbed and imprisoned f sald it wins a Heip | porsiitent and hired drumming, have appeared | national debt a burden easy to be bore. ‘The next done, hie hoped, ifafe rhivtag eamed nt.cr | ten dollars for the privilege of grinding this organ | Domes. Tsald, follow the destinies of your flag— | ton of power which the peopte would not tolerate, | attached to a, call pabiisbed in a news: | census will show us quite forty millions of people to s to be forever | to criticize administrations, democratic or repub- Pay, ofthe district conferred with such unanimity, | and prosperity, so as to give the productions of those { am made so deeply your debtor as to be even too | States to the’ markets of the world, and thus midst he should Say so-nething in defeuce of the pos:- | onc year from the loth of last May. (Laughter and take the flag and go forth against the rebellion, We | Thus it was I became a traitor, paper asking “all their fellow citizens op- | pay a debt of two thousand millions at that time, or tlon he had here-ofoze taken aud whieh had been | appiiuse.) sen at home will take care of your interests. Oh yes, 1 | * - ‘3 - i te * = | posed to returning Gencral Butler to Congress, | Jess than fift dollars each, and the whole interest of iade the yroundwork of such a serious charge, ‘The asked him ff he had paid that license and he re- | ™24é lots of war speeches. I promised the working- | BRICK ON REPUBLICAN GAINS AND DEMOCRATIC | and who cannot in honor sanction or be responsible | which is less than what might be colleste’, with an occasion which had yiven rise to the outcry and. | plied that he had. man a great deal. I told him, ifyou will fight I will VICTORIES, i , | forthe issues he has himself raised, to meet in this | honest and eificient_adiministration of affairs, from clamor agunst tum, and had been taken up by ail “Did you tent to save your couatry ?”” take care of your wife; I will protect your children; If Tam wrong I shall ask none but the power above | city on Monday next. ‘:f all could come who would | whiskey and tohacco—the most usciess of ali the rades oF nator belonsine to the radical party, aise “ did, sir. I will hoe your farm; 'I will milk your cows: I wili | me for forgiveness, (Applause.) ‘They had an elec- | be eligible and sympathetic under such a call [| iuxuries of life. In view of such a future what true mguished Senator, Governors. ex-Governors’ and “pid you lose your arm in battle?” churn the milk into butter; I will sell the butter | tion = in Maine. There are in New York some par. | should indeed fear the result, notwithstanding your | republican will imperil all the interests of his coun- ex-Secretaries of War, was a letter addressed by “Yes, sir.” and put the money in my pocket if I get a | tics who think Grant is elected because Maine went | hearty and efficient support. Seymour and Blatr, | try, now bound up in the success of the republicna him prior to the meeting of the Democratic Conven- “pid’ you say you were a republican when you chance, I figured up how much you could maka, you repulaea When Kentucky went democratic they | Lee and hs eee ‘ade Hampton and Forrest, } party inthe coming etecuon, by making a division tion—(cheers)—declar.n* that in his Jud ne tin went into the aruiy ?” y men who fealiy loved your country, by going to ustnat did net mean anything. ‘They expected | Wise, Mumford and Booth, all the rebel hosts, living ny the ranks that may lead’ to the success of our FeOvnstyaeehin Apta paenc Sine Camarenereee enace a wan.?? the war. I did not put this question to you on a pa- | It, because Kentucky is @ democratic neighborhood. | and dead, will fraternize with the signers of that | adversaries? Such @ catastrophe wonid set back the stitutional, null poy that aie ‘acts an besa “Are you a republitun now?” triotic basis, I said if you will leave your homes, } ‘They asserted that Kentucky could pot influence the | cal! in the movement to oppose the return of General rosperity and progress of the country a century at bo decided by the Supreme Court of ihe tated | “No, aur.” . your farms your workshops and goforth to put down | general result. We as deinocra's asserted that it | Butler to Congress, and each of them shall lay his | Jonge and thus grasping at the siatlow ne sould lose Biales, a court organ ized wuder the constitu. And he swore. I presume he learned it in the the rebellion we will pay you thirteen dollarsa | did. In the Maine election the republican vote was | hand on the place where lus heart ought to be and | tue substance of his bond. Greenbacks and bonds tion to pass upon the constitutionallty of all | army or of Bea Wade (Laugnter.) month, Besides that we will pay bounties—money | very large—larger than Iexpected. But when they | amirm upon his traitorous honor that he’ cannot,| gre appreciating, not depreciating. They have quite acts of Congress, and the Teadent “Give us a tune and I'l} pay you. for it.” in advance—so you may leave {t with your families: | crow over the Maine victories we tell them we don’t | sanction the tssues Gen. Butler has raised for himse!f | qonnled in vaiue since the bulk of them were issued. Who was swora to maintam and support the He commenced grinding out of that poor and very we, good, Joyal republican fellows, will do tt, and | expect anything but republican majorities trom | during the last seven years that he has been in the | and no one more heartily than fdo can ery God 7 lots of you believed we were honest. Some of you | Maine. Maine don’t elect Grant. They say it helps. | service of nis country. ‘The safcty of the republican | speed the time when the greenback aud gord shall be constitution, and could no! without violating that | dilapidated organ that beautiful tune, “Away down | fought, some of you returned, others sleep on the | They insist on {t that the election in Maine, where | party of the district Lies in the fact that there are too oatil, permit these acts in palpable violation of the | South in Dixie.” I like that tune! {stood and lis. Detherens of the South. What have I hen doing | the 4 ublicans have lost and the democrats have iw men of that mind in Massachusetts, and espe- convertible and reconiversibie, constitution to be executed. teued to it and dropped into his organ what few | meanwhile? I didn’t fight. Fighting was not m: ined, 18 @ help towards Grant’s election. If demo- | cially in Essex, to make a inecting inconvententl hia usaseh Gekeon ithe apeaker then minutely examined the recon- pennies { had, Isaid, “Play it again.” He played | jest hold. I was willlug to eney on this war, n> Sratte gains in'every State augur a republican vic. | large; nor am ¥ forget‘ul of the common rumors that dais tolloiving resolutions en emmgaying ealioenee struction acts, which he firmiy submitted were di- ed RCTS. Idier® matter at what expense of life. ‘I was willing to | tory, then in November Grant will be elected. * * | these fendeluen and their coadjutors have raised | principies of the progressive republican part <a rectly antagonistic and made in open defiance to “yer you say you were a soldier? shed the last drop of blood, and yet somehow | * As surely as I beileve in Heaven, on the strength | forty thousand dollars with which to purchase a de- : a wh Se See, a COONS ee | es san bald 6k vi Icould not get the first drop of my own started. | of the thousands of letters I receive, I believe that | feat of the republican party of this district. ‘The sum eae omer, struction acts had supplanted civil government in | “Have you paid s icenset? I was willing to sacrifice my uncles, my cousins, | that the result in November will be the overwhelm- | is too small, gentlemen, the sum 1s too sinall. berment, the great national ein eradioaree, ten States of the Union and substituted military des- ccwhet w ti vec tates bo sean 8 my nephews—everybody fit to carry @ mns- | ing defeat of the republicans, of the bondholders and | Forty millions cannot swerve the republicans of this pring—the great rebellion crushed ant the insurree- Lge in its place; that they had abolished ‘aay th you : 6 to si nd in front of my office ket. 1 was willing to sacrifice every one of the | the bondholding aristocracy and a glorious triumph | district from their allegiance to their principles or | tionary States reinstated ‘under governments traly republican he right of trial by jury, the right | every inyay Dy fo fing 3 one o'clock till four?’ relatives I had—provided they would leave me their | for the right—for Seymour and Blair. buy them to slaughter a tried public servant because and for the first time framed upon the true basis of of habeas corpus, which, by the laws A iy chat fo oll what dollars per «tay. property. That was what I was after—spoons. I of whose devotion to the cause of his country, his bee pedicle dor ity of of the constitution should never be suspended sad, thal ight. You area soldier. Titke | Thane war speeches to you, You did not want to go strenous advocacy of equality of right and | ,,Retmlved, That equality of right, equality of power and except in times of domestic insurrection, th ugh at | you better because you are a democrat. 1 like you | to the front. I sald that it was necessary to 1 JOHN T. HOFFMAN. equality of power for every man under the law, and | {nheritance f every citizen and the true Teallaation of ‘Ammert present profound peace er that through the | still better vee use you Were @ republican and are | cited the constitution, your interests. 1 said {t was because he first struck the shackles from the | can liberty. reconstruction acts a bill of attainder and ex post | honest enough to oe mag you were wrong. TI will | @ duty you owed your country to fight, and that we SAE eat slave in the war of the rebellion and first Resolved, That the national faith and national honor, wher. Jacto law had been passed against whole States = pike ae “ell be = seated himself upon | would pay you for it. How did I pay you? I didn’t Speech of Mayor Hoffman in Philadelphia. dealt with it as a slaveholders’ rebellion | ¢ver es vot aoe pl peri od full rights = ‘communities, depriving them of their most sacred y office and for ahaif | Due my hand into’ my pocket and Maal ont the Pureapenuta, Sept. 28, 1808, | against human freedom should be deate with, has | Mat reedom which he fought to gain, oF (8 the oppressed of rights of citizenship; that its reconstruction acts | our, while I stood in the office door laughing, | money. ve you be ms ey Ne justly earned the hatred of every aristocrat and d “ Took from the President all prerogative as Comman. | he was grinding “Away Down South in IAxioy || ceasielig baeee oR ienstenoaacte iztre thin thing | Mayor Hofman, of New York, addressed a large LOG, whibs tonred etal. ieay WiDl CATES TE BGM Rinse ereaicer That baahati recite ki ee bank ae der and General of the Army and Navy and placed | It was a very nice little tune. An old gen-| out very nicely. But then came calls for more | democratic mass meeting here to-night. He com- | his hands were thus to be strack down in the house | interest, not only according to the letter but the spirit of the in his stead the equal power of the President in the | tleman came along and says, “When are you troops, The war was lagging. We must have lb: Si t that his voice was in- | Of his friends, As the signers of this call claim to | laws under w' @ contracts were mate, must be inviola- hands of the General of our armtes, the candidate | golng to change that?” He sald, “I don't | more ‘men. ‘The poor pestle snust be raare ine | menced by expressing regre be republicans may We not advise them to send this | bly Kept andatrenuously maintained. designated by the radicals for the Presidency, who | Know; that gentieman has hired me to play tus | terested in their country. because this government | Capable of reaching all of the mass before him. He | jarge sum of money into some doubtfal district. m Sit ad antes meena stands with the whole army at his back and his | one tune.” In the same building that lam the gen- | was established in their interest. Therefore let us, | said he was present because of his ambition to take | some doubtful State, if any there be, where it may | shal receive sur cordial alherence and carele bayonets at the throats of eight millions of | tleman of whom I hire the premises has an orice. gentlemen who can’t fight, republicans who must ost in this State that is certaig to | #4 the cause which with the lip they profess to love, Resolved, That the country carries its Indebt white people in the South, pinning them to | Ina short time, looking out of the window, he saw a | Femain at home to take care of the democrats and | Part in the contest in this § at is certalm to | instead of using It here to thwart the will of the re’ | burden, bul arto” the price she has paid for inestima the earth in order to compel them to sup- | crowd there. He came down stairs and told this protect our soldiers from the fire in the rear, let us | !ead to victory; that the radical party, after being in | publican party as expressed through its duly elected | ble value received in the evidence of the stability of her gow- port him and submit to the domination of an | fellow to ‘move on or you will attract a crowd; you | Yevise means to start the people off to the front. power for eight years, were to be brought to an /ac- Relegates? Nor do 1 mean to deny to any man the | crnment, the strength of hier armies, tho power of her navy, eG ae fe arg a RS BRICK ON BONDS, vovat for the mismavagement of the afaira cf the | Fist to freely choose for himself whiom he will have | (e.o%aiy of her yeople to berty and lew: and that, pence ks. The same ut of a Congress, guilty of these un- | move on. J am lured to stay here.” “Who hired We will pay every poor man, every Irishman, ever: to represent him in Congress or elsewhere. Every | as master and no man anawer aa slave cI ol te . y , - 4 re. constitutio: ts, had invaded the sacred precincts your | ‘This fellow that runs this newspaper here.” | German, eve young man $250, How will we raise fon ny cotering. the poLbe money, Pe ag man, surely, is at liberty to vote for whom he pleases, Resolved, That we have eutire confidence in the ability of of the court of justice and overawed its decisions. 1 don't want you to play here. Youare a nuisance. | the money? se will sign the notes of the county, an, tional powers of the President, depriving | Ut no man who belongs to a Fy, and clating | the American people to develop their industry and to enter Am Ia revolutionist because I advocate the reatora- | Move on.’ i cannot; I will lose my wages.”’ “Play | we will give the bonds of Dunkirk and eell them in | £OD8 al “ey por (so By Ege ~ earnin to act with that party an for its into the markets of the world with their cts insuch & tion of rights provided by the constitution ? and were | some other tune then.” “No, it is in the contract | the market. For a hundred dollars worth of bonds | t¢2 States of representation tn congress, governing | hog “any right to organize Is own views | ™snver that their currency will be raised to a specie basis by nt not as & those usurping men who had degraded it, were they | that I play this one tune.” And he kept playing | we wll roccive e mean them by the bayonet and enforcing negro suffrage | aig “wishes against the properly expressed | the awn of trade; that only the Congressional plan of recon- gully of revolution Fuold my accuser up before | away. ‘fhe gentiewan went ‘up stairs aud in | wit! pay the Money to the poor man and he tan uc. | eo rule white men. Will of that party through its regularly constituted | ftewcenjcan.eecire tha by the protection which Ht olere to e ie! = Re i gered aH ae ES = ke Gaia aad toe be 4 — ae the figiting. The poor man takes the money, leaves Ts sei OF RECONSTRUCTION. eee So A to ae gna i A od oie he we and we beg ged all mye: to Seprociate i ¢ vali trod ° l, it with his wife, goes to ti t becom! , . uts himseif outside the party. ‘Up to this hour any | of the currency of the country as unpatriotic, unwise, Ls appended whe HUMO3S OF RECONSTRU! Boposition to the nomination or elgetion of your re untrue to that spirit of courage which carried the sworn to maintain and have laid biack perjury to | an order for this man to leave.” The clerk replied, | triot. This iaa very nice arrangeme! a van , ent. Therefore an their souls. (Cheers.) “I can't do it, If 1 order him away I lose my | we vote that we will thus aise $10,000 1 1 In the most lacrymal utterances of the melancholy | presentative by any republican was the exercise of | Sty through the war and is ready now to bear the Inquiring the motives that suggested certain mea: | place.”” Do you mean to say that Mr. Pome. | We sign the bonds, Which are, but’ your notes<yoa Jaques there is exquisite humor, but the “Humors | # right notto be questioned, and not @ cause on my | “ene and discharge all the obligations of pence. gures towards the Southern people General Blair tu- | roy has_ hi his fellow to play that tune all | men who own property, who own machine shops, faq 7 a part or yours for a thought save of regret. Butnow The resolutions were unanimously adopted, and ferred that it was for the purpose of familiarizing | day +” ‘Yes, sir, aud every day for & week.” (Laugh- | stores, farms—these notes you must pay at some | Of Reconstruction,” as presented last evening at | the cae is changed. Before it was an oppositién to | the Convention dissolved shortly after with cheers the Northern te to acts of tyranny. | It’ was | ter.) | “Do you think Pomeroy would maintain @ nut. | time,’ We stgned $10,000 worth of your notes. We | Irving Hall, by J. P. Cowardin, of the Richmond | the individual on the part of the siguers of thls call; for the nominee, the military inst of the candidate of the radical | sance ? I don’t know anything about that, but | then take these notes over to the rich man across the Dispatch, was a paipable misnomer. The “Negro as | 2OW it is a contest with you, the republican party of 7A party, the General of the Army and the other leading | if Mr. Pomeroy has told the soldier he will mamtain | way and say:—“ltere are notes which the peopie win | DiSPate att ; the district, who have honored me with your nomi- T.LEGRAPHIC POLITICAL IT. MS, Officers which taught them that theirs was the | him playing Dixie for a week, you may bet your bot- in five years, We will giv a Legislator,” as he portrayed him from lite pictures | nation. I have no longer any interest in the combat 2 arty of despotism and which had brought | tom dollar he wil do it.” (Laugiter.) ‘Tie third time bent intorest on your money. We want to tort | taken from the Virginia Convention that began its | save as your representative, bearing your banner, Speech of General Banks in Boston. i une ah ia" compote perl Chk een eee ng.’ } heart the remucy, | $12,000 on the notes.” ‘The rich man sav:—“No, | session at Richmond, Va., December 3, 1867, under | UPholding your choice, dtoing your will. At the pri- Boston, Sept. 28, 1868, men can’t gee it. It is a it t 4 mury meetings of the people in ever wh the re- Gener a 5 resting upon force is to be established great question with mo diy a ‘aisnen?, ieee: Gees encral Banks delivered a long address to the «1 said to him, “Hold on, { rent half this bi ied sidency of Judge Underwood, was anythin: 4 ves, sir.”’ "Pay ten thousand dollars pa Rowe 4 onay ast south beooeee ib Sauendee Ares Leven ip i ith, & most mournfal rohentor Plroust seu hase tapmemsetentve to be met by the workingmen of Charlestown this evening in the new wield al! power upon which the government stands, cupy | han Pon his haif ts mine?” | i:.°7 But we must have the money. ‘Thoke poor tion of human nature and its infirmities and candidate of the democracy in the penaing canvas;. | Tannery. The structure was completed this after- will - gett a ~ = gente inven ee i eee oot IY lay this tune people won't figitt unless they have some recampense. barbaric. vulgarity as developed in. the | WNOeVer, interferes with that choice deserts the | noon, and will accommodate 3,500 people, It was ance in the country. General Grant, against whom | in front of my haf. Gon't like the tune. Let | ‘The rich man says he will let us have, for a thousand | Sem!-bar' himegagrsd a party. He imay de, anything else. but is 4 | crowded, and two or three thousand peopl 1 have not one eine we to utter, to whom 1 am grate- | lum play some other tune. So, I want that oue | doar note, four hundred dollars in currency, or | untutored native American negro suddenly | longer a republican, He is aiding the democracy. 4 people were ful for the on: he _ ae = Ce tune ss ‘ 7 — oy Mr. Lincoln said i give us perhaps five hundred dollars on the note, the | ojeyated from a field hand on a Southern plantation | ! the party as In the country the will of the collected outsile. General Banks reviewed some of tof tb i Py rya a A rafted, * ion ‘The con- S a right to 5 eak of his pibite acts since he is a pub: | into the “army and ought. ‘He went’ there to Cane 700, The Fh Mee DAs Ave WemarG Gpiiees Prepare to shed them now. Gearuore, ber ary, tus sanding “iene. tonite | employer end etiployé. The time would soon come Itc man asking the favor of the people of this coun- | save the couniry. He lost an arm fighting at Cold | realize as agents, afew dollars for our tron ul ~ a Especially would these lines have bh propriate | principles, roasive in its ideas, radical in its | When the laborer would receive part of the profits try—I know and the country knows that he does not | Harbor. He has returned to his home. He finds his | go forth to fight. What i« the result? Th CO in view of his first introducing to the audience that sitions and steadfast in its purposes, shall control | Of bis employer as his compensation, He held that approve of the radical programme, that he disap- | wife and children in want. He 8 ten dollars @ | man who went to the front and perilied Rte ee memorable convention that in October, 1820, assem- | {he destinies of this country for generations to come, | the national debt must be paid in gold and silver, as Ey it, and that he gave his cordtal support to | year license for the privilege of gri nding this rickety | put down the rebellion return to his poe aaa bled in Richmond in the same baa | and in the | as did the democratic party in generations past. ‘to | Promised when the loans wi created, and if the eee Us oe of his sareinistration = iv organ. mew ou goes 2 make ~ - works year aiter yes, to take up the note which = a Ss Wien os oe oe = = the perfection of ite’ diacipine more than anytht ee this they repudiated their owa in- Inittee anor iis nth that the Treva new measures | holders. (Appiaune.) ‘That aoidicr fought for his | pelt, {or him, sold at fifty cents on the dollar. He | Sate constitntion and the most brilliant statestnen | So'many gears tolding ties Organization with | During the hour and a half which General Banks Were identically those of “Mr. Line lo. = When eet eds having itnow. f want hin to stand Pays interest to the rich ‘men tie pare of the Old Dominton—Madison, Monroe, John Ran- | guch tenacity that when all ite vital issues are dead | *Poke he was frequentiy interrupted by oud and the North Caroilna proclamation, the — first | right here and play tis tune every day this week. I] the entire debt of the nation and the rich | doiph being the leaders—were its honored members. | and its iiving principles ignored, its brains out, its | Prolonged applause. in this country the great chiefs of thejarmy, who aper in which Mr. volnson disclosed his | am going into the country to talk to the working- | money lender pays nothing. 1, as @ rey 1 Asa delineator of negro character Mr. Cowardin | drybones in a Wrong cause give infinite (rouble 10 us " policy, was written ‘by KE. M. Stinton, | men, the democracy, and 1 want him to stay right | indas. los of Toney in the bSan basineas” au | has few equals. In tracing the humor of the late and great danger to the country. Nor will An Address by Senator Conkling. under’ the instractions of President Lincoln, was | here and play every day, and tins saine tune.” “Will | took the contract to fill. the quotn for Dunkirk. 1 | Virginia Convention he abundantly showed that he | you forget, gentienien. that the signers of this call Urica, Sept. 28, 1868, read to Mr, Lincoln's Cabinet and approved by every | not some otier tune do!’ “No, T want this tune to | sold the bond4+—vour bonds—bonds on every foot of | tad made the subject acompicte study. In tone, | did not wait for your deliberations before they pub- | senator Conkling to-night addressed a large aude member of it; and when General Grant himself cor- | remind the workingmea of New York who pass bj land in this county—notes which you, wor manner, and language his personations were per- | jicly opposed your action. Conscious of their weak- * : ‘ os Gially assented to It, why bas he changed? Why | here every day that ‘Away Down South a Dixie’ ate | gust pay-eand with te money plehve Nundre med | fect. ‘Those faimillar with the negro character | ness with the People, potent only for mischief, they ence of Union men and women in Mechanics’ Hall. does he now go back upon his own report, which he | carpet-baggers, lazy niggers and Freedmen’s Mu- | into the artuy and ten por cent of fifty thousand dol- | keenly relished thelr fidelity, and those who have | nave seceded from the party in advance. So did the | Every part of the building was packed to its faliest made to President Johnson after having visited the | reaus, a grcat big standing army—that the working- | jars of if went into my pocket. That was not much | Oly seen the negro as caricatured at halls of Ethi- | repels in is6i—learing chiy what Abraham Lincotn | capacity and hundreds of people went away unabie Southern States subsequent to the war ia which he | men of the North arc laboring day after day to sup- | money for a loyal man to make. | had been talking | OP:4" minstrelsy, found im his imitative speeches | would do—secede from the Union before he had done | to obtain admittance. * The address was one of the declared that the people of the Sonth accepted the | port—at war upon the receipts and interests of | of retrenchment and reform—talking nicely of con. | fat more food for merriment. | Ali his descriptions, | anything. Calling in the ald of your enomtes they | ablest that has been made during the fall campaign. situation iu sincerity and good faith, and that he | the North, as they ate at war upon the husbandry ducting the vi ment with economy. the scenes in the convention hall, inthe galleries and | gook to thwart your resolves. I must leave them to —- hoped soon to see the representatives and the States | of the South. want him to play that it it was a0 insur to the American people to rob oe in the vestibule were as incontestibly rich as they | you, gentlemen, to the republican party of the dis- New York Nomination for Congress. meet in the Senate of the United States? Why does | tune in order that the people of the North may | of its reward. were life-like. It was an evening of huge entertain | trici, to the republican party of the State and of the Rocuester, Sept. 28, 1968, he now accept a diferent policy from that which | Know where their money has gone to, He ix going BRICK ON GOVERNMENT CONTRACTS, ment to the audience, and while entertaining t also | pation, whose usages they spurn and Whose success, eevee dle es Mos he promt to General Lee in his parole? | to play here, and if you molest tim T will mash I went to Washington one day and secured a con- | conveyed an instructive morai—a moral opposed | go far as in them lies, they jeopardize, Judge Noah Davis, of Orleans county, was to-day It 1@ not that General Grant has any affinity with the | yonr head for you.” "(Great laughter.) 1 left the | tract. They wanted ships in which to send soldiers | tO Negro suifrage. An observatton or two farther and they are in your | nominated by the republican convention as a candl+ negro, because I once knew hi:n when he was a pro- | office at five minutes before four yesterday, he | down to New Orleans and bring confiscated goods ” ae hands, The resemblance in their mode of warfare rai * Wiavery democrat, It ie not that he has any hatred | stood there wrindiug “Away Down South in Dixie.” | tack, Thought a’ rotten. old. halk of wreumee ae LACLEDE RACES to that of the rebe's ts strikingly like, ‘The weapons | {Tn'G for Coudron i te Monroe ait Orleg for the soldicrs ‘or the people of the South, be- | 1am going to lire him to grind ali next week. Still | New York. Wishing to beneftt the country in. its — they use are the same--detraction and misrepresen. | Ptising the counties of i Ms 4 cause he asked and obtained amnesty for thowe who | it is not pleasant music fur the bondiolder. 1 | hour of peril I sold this old hulk, which I gave five The Laclede Races at St. Louis, Mo. tation. These were the rebel weapons ever used | "olination was unanimous, were in arms against the government; but tt is be- | know it is not nice, but they have given usa little | thousand dollars for, for one hundred thousand dol- i} : jong against me, Their call asserts that “it is generally com- The cause huis military Instincts teach him that che‘party | trouble, and this is’ one of the ways in which I pro- | jars, [only made ninety-five thousand dollars profit. Sr. Louis, Sept. 28, 1898 | understood that General Butler will be @ candidate, THE ECCLES'ASTICAL TRIAL IN PROVIDENCE, A. I. wiitch have put him forward is tn favor of an abso- | pose to have my share of revenge out of them. [| [ was loyal. | was an honest man noblest work The Laclede races commenced to-day, A large | whether reguiarly nominated or not.” By whom is lute and despotic government, he have no doubt the New York Sun, the paper in | of God. 1 was a man in sympathy with the | number of horses are here, representing Ohio, In- that generally understood ? Which of you, gentie- [From the Providence Journal, Sept. 28.) ruler | which this gentleman ts interested, came out this | pogpie; therefore ninety-five thousand was ‘ men, ever widerstood that tll you saw itin their In the trial of the Rev. John P. Hubbard, Saturday of this country. In my opinion he would | morning and said I was a traitor. Well, like as ne Pa Pwhutede I could hot have made bog ey diana, Mlinois, Missouri and other States, The track | eal? Who has ever heard the word from my lips or | morning, the Kev, Dr. Smith proceeded with the not exchange the office which le now holds to | There are a good many traitors this year, (Ap- | jf [had not been loyal; if I had not had friends in | was quite heavy from the recent rains. saw the line under my hand that! intended to do | closing argument for the respondent, at the conclu- de the constitut.onal President of the United States | plause.) Traitors to the republican party, traitors | Washington—a cousin in C ‘The first race was @ sweepstakes of twenty dollars | that thing? They seek to justify themselves for | sion of which the court took a brief recess, Mr. for four or eight years, and then retire from pubi to thoze who have robbed them of their interests— | man wno shouted, « racy; take care their treason to the party by malignantly and falsely | Charlies 8, Bradley then closed the case with a brief life stiil a young imam. He would prefer his pre: ie there are many of these traitors coming from the | of the peopie.” 1 had also another cousin in the | ©@ch for two-year olds, mile dash, the association | qsserting that | intended to do the thing they are | but able plea for the presenters, Dr. Stith laid be pecta to be made the _ peri Position, ‘It is better suited to his tastes and mili | ranks of the enemy and joining our ranks. Seuate. He was also loyal. Thad to divide profits | adding $200. There were six entries, but only three | doing, so aa to prove that! am no better a repubit- | fore the court a printed copy of the propositions un- lary educadon, and one Which will last during his IOAN PARTY. w.th them both, for it is expensive to be loyal. But | started, The race was won by Alta Vela in 1:55; con than themselves, Again, says the call, “His | dertaken to be established in his argument, and life. Dut he has been tempied by that last infirmity an party because it is | T made fifty thousand or twe: ive thousand dol- - a { well known opposition to General Grant on | Judge Bradley asked and obtatned permiasion to of great minds—ambition—and 1s willing to sve the | wrong, because it is rotten, because it is corrupt, | lors c.ear, and put it inmy pocket. Thad frends in | The second race was a sweepstakes of $25 each for | personal grounts renders him unfit to | prepare a similar statement for his side of the case, liberUes of his country overturown tf by doing 80 he | becuuse it cares not for the interests of the people, | Washington, anu I tell you, my friends, there is noth. | three year olds, inile heats, the association adding | be a supporter of his administration, 1 | The President then said that it only remained for the ean attain for himectf the great prize of permanent | because it has divided the Union, because it vas | tug like having ndsin power. You may talk of | $500, ‘There were nine entries, but only four started, | have been told that in furtherance of this idea | courtto make up its decision in accorcance with and absolute power during his lite, Under sw a ht to wake the poor man and the workingm: having frienas in the West, friends in freland, friends | Ontario won in two straight heata, some Of thoee bolting gentiemen are circulating pri- | section five of canon ten. It ts as follow: cumstances I do not thnk the people of this cx ry er, Leave not whether you are republicans to heaven, even; but they don’t hold a candle to the The third race was an extra contest for $200, | vately the story General Grant does not favor rorton 5. After an impartial investigation of the teat Wil throw away their jiberiies on such @ man, ocrais, [thas sought to make the workingmaa | friend’ you have in the Treasury—those who are | weighted forage. The entries and starters were Jo am too much of a friend of General d hearing of the case the court ehil be called upon General Blair ented upon whas lie con- | the slave of an arsto-racy that never extsied im | witling to haul out and divide With you, Those | Jonnson, Jack Gamble, Nocvester, Vio iol | brand that unauthorized asseriion as it ly to pronounce a verdict of guilty or not guilty fldered the nite th raiical party in | America til the republican party came ince power, | trends wo put their hands in tie Treasury | BK. Lee, Johnson took the first heat, wiih Lee second | ervesg How li tich men understand eve, t@ | "PoH each charge or sp ation in the presentment, Blving to the Diack popujation more poillical power | and which would not and coud not cast if thac party | and who all the while pray, “Oh, Lord, deliver us | and third, Time, 1:50)g, 1:51 g, 153.5. ' miefies of pt We and tae pitriovem of | ‘dhe court was thea dee ared adjour

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