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Delegations from All Parts of Spoches by Mayor Metichae, enerals Bar _ Mum, Kilpatrick, Burnside and Others. Av Imposixy Display An- tleipated To-Day. —_ PHILADELPHIA, Oct. 1, 1868. train last) evening eame heavily freighted delegations to the Soldiers and Sailors’ Con- largo numbers of enthusiastic repub- who 8 spectators of what is deemed to the Glsplay that has yet been made in ania. To-day was devoted chiefly to ar Fanging the disposition of the delegates in hotels and ‘oarding houges, A portion of the afternoon and ‘evening was occupied in hearing an address of wel- ame from Mayor McMichael anda the speeches of @evera! prominent republican soldiers. To-morrow the grand procession comeseoff, in which it .is ex- pected ome twehty thousand men will participate. el ffy lil | tions, thongh they jostle each other in the streets @aily. In fact, with the exception of a slight scrim- ‘Mage near the Press office a few nights ago, matters @ay when two of the rival clubs passed each other eon Chestnut street. The democrats took off their ‘hate to the republicans and the latter observed the fame polite token of recognition. But there is a ‘Wery wide spread excitement as tothe result of the @anvass here. The chances are exceedingly close, ‘and if anything in favor of thé democrats, To-day Independence Hall was the great centre of attrac- , ‘lon, The country people thronged in-and around it through the whole fore and afternoon. Chestnut @reet was alive with all conditions of People” Flags waved @rom every elevated building and the newspaper offices of the republican stripe were literally 8 mass of bunting. Forney’s Press office was so bedaubed with old faded bannera @fevery known and unknown nationality that it Aboat five thousand persons sil told were assem- Died when the speaking began, No great enthasiuam ‘was manifested, as the occasion seemed to be a little premature—to-morrow being the priucipal day—tor any overwhelming outburst. MAYOR M’MICHABL’S WELCOME. A little after three o’clock Mayor McMichael ac- ‘vanced to the front of the platform and, silence being vestored, spoke as follows:— we that” announced arri were music that enli our progress; Sloquent emblems that sparkied with Merit; in masses of sympathizing men and omen that surged along thé streets over which you passed; in radiant smiles that were showered upon you and loud resounding huzzas that still Cy nd, ‘m comparison with these, any might utter would seem tame and La Happily, however, even apart from these usiastic demonstrations, words are not needed of the pleasure uae settee purpose we ve you 0D itertainmen! i fapioe im an unogual degree blue” on their march; to pro- and healthfal comforts; attentions when sick, and die here, away i jumph that ‘we rejoice in your coming and thanks and courtesy and service. who sought to dampen your ener- pele peed your a nimnaee field; they who need the holy war in which you were engaged as z, and in the period of its high- it @ failure; they who in the toils and sacrifices mocked at and re- hirelings and rufians; they who would starve in squalid prisons, and al- comrades to rot unburied whero ithheld from their widows and or- guilty. tery, 1 scorn Taim with waich you have been greeted, Tet te acc which you have n ted, let ie slowing ‘testimonials admiration and respect ‘which have been tuis to you, let the Govern- ors and ex-Governors States who unite in this celebration, let the delegations of eminent civilians who have come from distant places to do gen. Benes, and above all let your own mutilated ud your scarred visages and your own swell- Ang bosoms in which imperishable memories of suf- fering and success in the tt are mingled with sen- ‘timents of just in in the present, and pur- poses of stern retripution in the future, be au all- Suilicient answer. Sokhers and tue ty of my ielisw-sitiosen f say fo yon Dont notwithstan ing jescri| we Seo to 3 Eee i jestroy the by your lives for it pro- insane fury of defeated as it = at $33 i E i i FF i i : E a ‘ f nage i : £ l i [ i E t I i i BE Fe i 3 u : i i j had i z £ : 3 H 2 fl 53 iy 32 53 38 aE = a aa f H 52 memorials of | i EE seaeeeee i ; He g fj H i FG Be i i i ig i] aE lk 4 e in the rout of our political foes. Gird on your armor, the! my comrades. To the 1 ‘Gloss Gp your tanks! ‘The spirits of your three hundred thousand slain and matmed comrades look spprovingly down upon you, and as you now again feel the magic elbow-touch remember the invocation of our martyr President, spoken on Gettysburg’s fleld:— “We here rightly resolve that these honored dead shall not have died in vain; that this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom, and the gov- ernment of the people by the le amd for the people shall not perish from the 9? SP) of remember those proud and happy days when the heroes of Georgia and the Carolinas had joined the bors blue around Grant below the Potomac, and with colors flying and drums beating all came marching home across thejhilis and valleys of Vir- ginia, Seontna sty to the sweet music of the Union, and we thought when marching down Penngylvania avenue, down before the future residence of Ulysses S. Grant—(sheers)—when we had received the - ing of ten thousand of our feilow-citizens and had returned to our homes the war had ceasedi, but ‘en. The same foe, with the same leaders North and South, is now arrayed against os, and the quesuon now ‘Will you, fellow citizens, eave eet a Seperal Fea for your Presi (Cries rant.) ou have the stars off anouitte of Biair—(hisses)—were here to-day. With this crowd alone we would balance against them treason. « Governor CuntTIN was called for, but he said, “I will not speak to you, my fellow-citizens, because this is a soldiers’ meeting. I was not a soldier.” The assemblage then took @ recess. unti! balf-past } seven o'clock in the evening. THE EVENING DEMONSTRATIONS. PHILADELPHIA, Oct. 1, 1868. The meeting reassembled this evening in Inde- pendence square, which blazed with gaslights and presented @ magnificent spectacle. Among the mot- toes spanning the avenue is “Grant Us Peace.® REMARKS OF GENERAL BURNSIDE. ‘The meeting at Independence square was presided over by General Burnaide® He returned thanks for the honor which had been paid him, considering it the greatest that had ever been conferred upon him, At the close of the war it was his intention to retire from public life and engage in business. Up to the time of thig political eampaign he had given his attention to it. He now found it his duty, as a friend of his country and as a patriot, to give all the necessary attention to it. All his most energetic efforts were directed interests his services in the war he had occasion to take cognisance of certain line pada which were going on while quartered at Cincinnati. He discovered that treason was ripe, a ey a bet eo at from ten ~d Ls purpose ol cena e soldiers from Ing the cause of if ¢ of the heads of this movem Some people had charac as cruel; yet he released some ms who had been in- luced to commit treasonable acts, influenced by treasonable speec' tion in that case; but Mr. Vallandigham was one of the chief aposties of the democratic pote Sat vol Mr. at the late convention in New York. ‘that tn er concluded by observing in enced lng the haouves which guilt this cam he was infu- him 4 the ‘war. He was with the multitude heart and soul in this movement, and he hoy and certainly be- lieved that Grant and would be elected, (Cheers.) ia PRIZE eae eee te @ Secretary ational Commit stated that the Executive Committee to the soldiers and satiors cam| ype largest republican vot general or I elec- tion; also # shinilar banner to, the founth in an: State of the United States which could show the largest per ceut of increase upon similar terms. SPRECH OF GENRRAL BARNUM. The followit was made by General UM in ehalt of oh in pues all Grateful to Almighty for being permitted to Assemble in this sacred the represent ertaiihone of Union soldices ged sailors who Saiee ‘treason in the recent war, reverently renew our ol srl ray oly emmy een ty, conan: aibering bare ii ret a Siete ger and loyalty in, the darkest hours ot do not come as par- duties devolved upon 08 ina new crisis more than the confict from which we have Teteraed, our late comrades 5 We meet. to prepare, to discharge new con. the Piemmneat ue nln om every eX‘scute the con- insult He nomination been ‘States; resent- nowle ah our te the for sanit benevolence; dead; for ‘from taxation; for the pensions : Tne appeal inating our candidate for 4 inven of these hostile for a new rebellion, with pro- found sense of our obligations to our country and to the republican , We call upon every citizen who wore the Union blue, whether on land or sea, to cast his vote in the coming election for the Union State tickets and for Grant and Colfax. And further to mark alike the sincerity and etciency of our solemn declaration, we invoke our late com- rades in arms to. set apart the election day as a of unremit exertion and Enoane And we formally announce on. the 13th day of , inthe of Pennsylva- nia, Ohio and Nebraska, there shall be observed among our comrades a general holiday. And we call upon all employers, manufacturers and business men generally to relieve their workmen that day who have served in the Union army, and thus im compl thie patriotic purpose. ‘The on the October will be Sheridan’s victory Five Forks, marshalling the way to Grant’s tran- = t triumph on the Appomattox in No» evening @ large number of speeches ‘were made it stands. The meeting adjourned at an early hour to proceed to the Union League House, where a serenade was given and several addresses were made. The throngs of stran- injured but the aa 1c jured; ey finally suc- the ‘ronghs out of the car, when one of the latter fell between the cars and was prob- ably killed. Fifteen roughs from Baltimore have Dees who assaulted the boys in blue on the CITY POLITICS. Democratic Union General Committee. A meeting of the Democratic Union General Com- mittee was held last evening, which was fully at- tended—Smith Ely, Jr., in the chair. The proceedings were marked by a very warm exhibition of feeling on the part of members as to the standing of some of those taking part therein. It appeared that a similarity of names of persons present claiming to be members of the organization with members of the Tammany General Committee led to frequent mistakes and to some charges ag to the impropriety of those par- ties being present at tne proceedings of an opposing organization. The mistakes were humorously laughed off, however, and the work of the committee was har- moniously brought to a close. The first business in order was the report of the Committee on Contested Seats. The report of the committee was adopted. The next business wag the reception of a report on appointment of a permanent executive com- ittee. From the various Assembly districta recom- mendations were sent in in favor of the person hay the majority of votes in the district for election to the Executive Committee, and in this way the committee was ap) 80 far as the several recomm: were in order, but some informalities eye districts were not pro- Theat of the. persuanent ‘executive. Committee wan e executive m0 was not comp! No farther business being betore the the meeting adjourned. Ninth Congressional District. At a meeting of the delegates of the German voters of the Twelfth, Nineteenth and Twenty-second wards, heid last night at Watschel’s Hall, 342 West Forty-second street, after some debate, General Wil- liam 8. Hillyer was unanimously nominated for Con- Gress. Resolutions were adopted pi ig the un- vided support of the Germans of district to General Hillyer, and to hold three meetings, ‘one in each of the three wards com the dis- trict. A committee was appointed to wait upon Tammany Hall and ask the endorsement of their nominee, Meeting of the ‘Republican General Com- mittee. " The regular monthly meeting of this organization ‘was held last night, at the corner of Broadway and Twenty-econd street, the second Vice President, Andrew J. Leggett, presiding. After the transaction of the usual routine business ® communication was received from the Twenty. third street organization asking the committee to recommend the several conventions emanating from it to appoint conforence committees to meet like committees authorized by them, in order to consider the approachi county, judiciary and Assemb! nominations, my that but one ticket should be md oe oh eters of this city in the coming Mr. Sinclair Tousey moved that the Secretary be instructed to acknowl the receipt of the com- munication, and aiso that the General Committee re- commend to the different nominating conventions to be held under its direction that they receive ail communications addressed to them by any and all organizations in favor of the principles and cani!- dates of the party, and to give such communications careful and respectful consideration, Mr. A. J. Duganne moved the following amend- ‘ment to the resolution:— That the submitted to this Gommittesge-night be accepted and its recommendations @uopted r After considerable discussion, in which Messrs. John Cochrane, John ga bree eg Spencer, 1c Flan J. R. Russell an hardson took part, Mr. ine’s amendment was rejected and Mr. Tousey’s motion The Irish Rights Associasion. A meeting of the Irish Rights Association, a soci- ety which numbers in its ranks a number of promi- neht Irish-American citizens and is rapidly extend- ing, met last night at 11 East Broadway. Mr. Jonh Segrew, in the absence of the President, occupied the chair, The meeting was called for the purpose of eliciting from the ladics and members of the society an expression of opinion on ie duty of Irish- ig. americans in it SS After Or of a ‘ion, which was con- the relative merits 7 saipeet FE age cH Hu ‘witnessed in Weatern New York took place here to- | feature of the reception is a torchlight procession NASHVILLE, Tenn., Sept. 26, 1868, Bight. It was @ torehlight in honor of | this evening and serenade to the General atthe | At present political excitement is running very Hon. John A. Grigwold and A. B. Cornell, the re- | Fith Avenue Hotel. General J. H. Hobart Ward, | high in all parts of the State, and the efforts of the publican candidates for Governor and Lieutenant | who isto be the chief marshal, and who, with sev- fireworks along ite of the procession. For half & mile the ide “trees were | liveraily. tam Dat sna ropanlican cal te for | torchlight displays that has ever been witnessed in | ercising his freedom of choice s from this speach, sadronned anos Nan eas this city, iesaeaeinane nnd Gone eas Sateen te stroggla The conservatives are well aware ‘usual republican argument and,helr remarks elicited | jz.cie,;bropession ‘organisations in this ft iy Brook, the greatest enthusiaam. The affair altogether is lyn, Williamsburg, Jersey City, Newark, N. J., and Claimed by the republicans as one of the most suc- | several towns in Connecticut, Each organization cessful in the Une ever witnessed in this | wini be accompanied by a band of m and Dear'e torchilght. A number the organ will be in uniform, but o' the short Imposaiole fora ee ae ctaseds No potitioal bane being to avoid gi Serna forthe | at all times and in all places revolvers or other fire- arms, The result, has been what was expected. ‘Not a Degro procession marches in the street but is ‘% Republican Demonstration at Troy. Troy, N. Y., Oct. 1, 1868, A republican torchlight procession and banner Taising took piace here to-night, Thére were about Ami a mainlacare monitor, illustration of this truth. The procession, which Beltey., createnthasiasm ‘was the direct cause of it, was headed by one of the Police Commissioners, named Sparling, who did bis beat a few nights previous at the head of a gang of ruffianly blacks, to break up @ rival political. Brey et fant ‘There were in the procession fully one thousand colored men, nearly every one of whom had been so it plentifully supplied with whiskey that he could day. i nue The headed by Gra- | hardly tell which was the lighted end of his torch. Hon, Fernando Wood, who yesterday DOK at | eee ads wil have ime bare | They marched by twos through the principal streets, Waverly, Pa., and Senator Cragin, both put up at will play some of its most select music, and atthe | @nd amused themselves by yelling and screech- the Wyoming House in this city last night, where | close Little Mac will be Ly luced and, | ing as tibugh every man’s existence depended Senator Cragin was serenaded by the tanners and | {18 ¢Xpected, make a formal speech. naircarecte, | upom the result, Wherever @ colored man 2 meme eet, spirkedly defending, New | o'clock, Direct the serenade the procession | was met who. was known to be adverse from af ai made by Mr. Wood in hi ath street and Broadway to the radicals, and who was unfortunate enough to ny will march back to on Tuesday night last, when he is all to | and disperse have sald that two & arses God had General McClellan remained indoors nearly all day | D¢ Without friendly protection, he was at once pelted on the Solng out with hie wit and calldres ‘with burnt-out torches and made to fy tor his very » Wi 1 ther EaigHiny Fethoea, at Piymouth Wock.” tere han of the 7 the 100n, whom he took a drive through ‘The. rats subsequently serenaded Mr. Wood, | the Park. During the rh «Kaibfewsck, life, They seized upon one colored man whom they who made an elaborate rejoinder to Senator Craigin’s forenoon Mayor Kalprciscy:. | met in Vine street on horseback, and on the mere remarks. of | supposition that he was a conservative threw torches The ‘erai | 12 is face and placed several under the horse, all the medium of | the time endeavoring to pull him from his seat, pro- Se oH he roarette’. bably to execute the threat that was made by many revented com) r thelr request, but he hoped before long to sol om ‘number, who cried out to “hang the damnea The sidewalks along the largest thoroughfares and seo rose ni them, in case he should Were densely thronged by motley crowds of negro men and women, the men being of those who do not’ aMlate with the radicals. The processionists while passing through these crowds did not attempt any violence, but contented themselves with yelling and Our townsman, General George B. McClellan, has | screaming out death to every “nigger” who didn’ returned from Europe, and to no man does the ee the gospel as laid down by the Parso long: country Owe a more cordial welcome. There is a nal reparation due to McClellan, The com- | private house he route: nearly “enn Ringuished “ana ions on the transp: the tne Motto, “Griswold was all SORANTON, Oct. 1, 1868, Senator Cragin and General Van Wyck addressed @ large republican mass meeting at Moscow yester- street, through thence to Waverl lace, through Waverl to Fifth avenue pA Fifth avenue E : Senator Déolittle at Reading, Pa. come, McClellan’s Military Career. Democratic Mass Meeting at Selma, Ala. oa The Philadelphia age (democratic) publishes the tieg in Middle Alabama were represented, most of was closed, ie lg! the shutters fastened. These the of the citizens to do col to preserve order in- who considered the whole thing by the radical clique, who then seized the direction 4 a turned na, asa downright insult offered to them b; yal, oq apos- | of the war, and in their orance trophe to the national flag, which was more loudly | to a lo it ‘The torehiight pro- a" event of the war proved, &.vindic Inferior cheered than any other remark. e torel i But every later event of the war pro’ s he te he cession to-night-was @ magnificent affair. The streets | tion of McClellan. It was not little army, depleted Le pares ae en peemnegg ye Wom ore are filled with le. city are illumi nated. clabs in the procession. POLITICAL NOTES All the principal places in the | at will by politicians, ordering away whole divisions There rey colored | of it at ti hair pleasure, which finally prevailed in the = aces, It was the mighty force of the North, with the sole command vested, by an act of Con- gress, in a leutenant-general that did at last roll down upon and crush the South. Contrast this with sth AERO. ull the case of McClellan, > tbbeuling in vain to, Stanton for even ten usand men—answered Wi 101 The following is the democratic ticket of Saratoga that aii reeruiting ‘wan stopped by “preasure” from county, N. Y.:—For District Attorney, Wm. T. Odell, | potiticians in Washington ! of Ballston; for Superintendent of the Poor, Henry | the 1.05 AEM ln without reerforceanein Ostrom, of Chariton; for Justice of Sessions, George | he had fought the glorious battles of Williamsport, Washburn, of Northumberland; for Coroners, Chas. | Fair Oaks and the “seven days” that ended in vic- H. Grant, of Saratoga Springs; Cyrus’ Sumner, of | tory on Malvern Hill. Tardy McClellan he was Edinburg; Benjamin F, Chadsey, of Clifton Park. fit to be safely handled it was flung against the sides of the buildings or against the windows, and 1m some instances Roman candies were aimed at tie roofs, drunken rabble yelling and screech- ing in the most fearful manner every timo the torches or bails thrown struck the houses, Once or twice it seemed as though the shingles of two or three buildings would take fire from the amount of burning material that was eq | thrown upon them; and as little flickering fames in to apy here and there a syout of triumph would rend the air as thor rh it werg meant a4 agreet- ing to some favorite date. In each instance a slight wind that prevailed extinguished the fiames, much to the disaj tment of the processtonistsy called, because in four months he had not taken many of whom could be heard loudly awe: how,’ itcomb, of Waterford, is the candidate for | sumed and renewed in @ campaign that lasted not beg oipsape only “all sutnmer,” but all autumn, all winter and capital preceesa a by ror eo ogee the spring of the next year before ‘the flag of the | baFwuche smoking aclgar and Wwith tis. feet slack Arrangements are being made for a meeting of noes gat Tag me ninett French, Irish, Germans and Americans generally, to ee en To reeridontst WY peerae ee: Gere: turbance occurring; an z iday night. [a - t | and the head of the Ine debouched into the Market bated eae ats renter patna mag yg him. In the very last | squaro the crowds on the sidewalks grew more and cession tn Cohoes, recently postponed, 6 now an- | actually saye Washington from capture! lore dense and the yells of the processionista and nounced for Monday evening next. E. D. Cutver, | |, We Loy Sg tov sop a heen pei qaore and more of Brooklyn, and Hon. J. H. Porter, member of bay brn a ep crazed with liquor, who was Richmond. Buta yreat army was afterwards con- | tno “damned town ought to be burned Assembig in the First district. United States was planted in Richmond. up over t but as it crossed Cherry street; The republican mass meeting and torchlight pro- | months of the war McClellan's fortifications did hose of the opposition bay cy along the curbs anced leafening. In the midst of the gene- ail the cavils of his enemies. The glories of Sout Congress from Richmond, are announced to speak. | Mountain and Antietam, where he rolled back inva mtn S-Bahn Fg ae Paes The Albany County Demoeratic Convention was | */¢n from the North, were aboveall cavil. > Ser seen the disection of the procession, as the held on the 29th ult., and the following ticket was | the representative of their idea of prosecutin; ball struck the side of a house behind the man who me fired the shot. In asecond shot alter shot, in quick succession, was fired from the ranks of the proces- sion; but nearly every one, as could be seen by the blaze from the pistols, was dacharged In the air, the n evidently being so frightened that they never thougtit of their aun in any particu- lar direction. Several shots, however, were sent directly tuto the crowd on. the sidewalks, aud these were immediately responded to by a volley from the nominated:—For District Attorney, Rufus W. Peck- ham, Jr.; for County Clerk, John McEwen; for Coroners, Edward H. Crawford and William Toohey. war to restore the Union, and to assert the legit r of the federal ernment. This was the joctrine proclaimed at the begin of the war in the Crittenden and Jotinson resolutions. In adher- ‘The New Orleans Times observes:—“Butler said, ing te 1% McClellan provoked the hatred of the radi- , and retained ali his favor with the democrats. 4m a recent conservation with a H®RALD reporter, Their t fe that he ‘would have been assassinated while in | ju's henrty welcome to hin tune New Orleans but for one thing—the people would a me on the curba. have had Phelps over them, and that would have @EW JERSEY STATE FAIR. In the meantime, while tne firing was at its height,’ been jumping out of the fryingpan into the fire.’ oaotaantabp the utmost confusion ensued. From the moment the Rn qe ier to the preserver of his life.” Good Trotting. veral fell in ti ur others gen } The Pittsburg Commerciat (radio), September 30, | ‘The Waverley Fair grounds yesterday presented an | fed, Tt over them uni’ cera, rot 4 is suggestive, thus:—‘‘There is no longer any doubt | unusually brilliant and deeply interesting appear- | about and yelling “murder” at the top of taerpeleee that the democrats are colonizing extensively from | ance, not aloue from the immense number of people The pene fomee Lage tree sheng Loca dy lene Maryland, New York and even Kentucky. Yester- | in attendance, variously estimated at from ten to ‘2 Reg ht they broke ——— day © number of carpet-baggers were assessed in | tWelve thousand persons, but from additional at- | Thents as though a regiment of cavalry were at thelr this et No doubt the is tractions, not the least of which was the fine trotting | neeia, As they ran down streets and alleys they pdbemny ecllcharttry ee ce Whic’ took place in the afternoon, continued to discharge thelr revolvers at rando being extensively carried on. Our friends should be Scarcely had the gates been thrown open in the | gome in the ‘air, others against the houses they on the alert, Examine the tists and prepare to | early part of the forenoon when the cine an among the crowds fleeing before them, wi sent home, he appears to have been very ungrateful to arrest the first carpet-pagger who attempts to vote.” fokn. ‘a mech ‘umber in pre- tege geth co " foams ap eledl fre the awn- General Sheridan appears to take quite an interest | suming turnouts, but by far the a. Theat 200 of the most desperate and drunken in the present political campaign, to judge from the | Portion cantered in at @ brisk pace on ka’ | the proceessionista, after the “scare” had some’ mare. | in the forenoon the chief attraction | gudsided, rallied round one of their leaders and made following telegram:— on the advent of the Second iment, N.J.8.B.C., | @ cI into @ saloon where several per- Fort HARKER, Kan., Sept, 30, 1 under command of Colonel J h We which | sons had fled for safety. The doors were barred To General OnARLES H. T. COLLIS, Philadelphia : had marched down from the armory in Newark. As against them, and itway the windows were Say to the boys in blue that it is as essential to | the regiment, eae Semper of veterans, filed in | broken in with stones, and volley after volley was have a political victory this fall as it was to have an | through the gates, tly after eleven o'clock, loud in through the broken panes, while thove Appomattox in 1865, and that every man who loves | cicers were sent up by in attendance. Enter- ym within on the ground fivor and others who had his country should vote for Grant. ing the fine space of ground between the inner rails | taken refuge in the upper stories returned the fire PHIL H. SHERIDAN, of the track the command speedily formed for regi- | with interest. The police, to their credit be it said. Major General United States Army. mental parade and was then turned over by the com- | exerted themselves to their utmost to repress the Here ts n radical despatch about General Blatr;pub- | Pany officers to Colonel Plume. After exercising for | agnt; but they were buts handful in the midst of Biss & short period in the mau regiment formed | the a does, and several of them were severely livhed in the Philadelphia ton into r position and passed by the reviewing Gealt win + wank quiet was restored, MEADVILLE, Sept 28, 468. odicer Major General Alexander, and his consist. Just as the rioters were on the General Blair, democratic candidate for Vice Pres- of General N. N. Halsted, General J. Irick, | the saloon en masse two companies of United States ‘dent, spoke here on Friday evening and disgasted Colones R. S. Swords, and Surgeon General Lewis Oak- were body. He is doing good service to the republi- | ley. The revie Tete himself delighted Sen tauee, and if Saye only induce him to can- Wis, Taonoldtorty Rearing of man ema paten heme _ er NGae inane aan ~ wehe vass the whole State you will not need any other aid. | merited compliment to the commandant, Colonel | Pouid gna shelter, all of them: however, cont The Cincinnati Cnrronicle, radical, says:—P, w. | Plume, ree Lang Raper n= By se gem ey Cx- | to tire off thelr pistols through every street th: ~4 Strader, democratic eandidate for Congress, has no pte EL Sedan and anemnioe Genes | * 7 om phan? ce Shaler said, in addition, that it was seldom his good fortune to see a it exhibit such ey in the minute of itary details as the one just personal strength. He*is the instrument selected, however@to do the work of others and represents the following interests:—The whiskey ring, the Cin- | reviewed. After the review General Shaler and tf ht several bands of cinnatl, Louisville, Mompnis and St. Louis transfer | several other distinguished invited dined with } nad'boen In the. procession roamed About the town, companies, railroad corporations, short span bridge, | Ceneral Pd, Se Navetey Tease, —- threatening to burn the elty to the ground, bat they bondholders and the Ku Kiux assassiuating revolu- | response to a call eau iee Tose and begged Jae Madly 7 luring ‘the wag — tionary democracy. ee eee eee peibeieeed tan Doonan mans | neeros 8 , bias since died of the wounds Judge Wm. Strong, one of the associate judges of | Tt sa copperhead, tmade a happyiitue speech, | Re Tecetved on the occasion. ko mnie man was en wl the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, has sent his re. signation to Governor Geary. Oause—Not pay enough. confining if to an exhibition of ‘The New Bedford (Mass.) Mercury, radical, states | movements of loadil that if Mr. Richard H. Dana, Jr., is nominated as a handsome compliment candidate for Congress in the Fifth district by the republicans of Essex, who are opposed to the elec- tion of General Butler, the vote for Grant may be in- creased, but Mr. Dana will take nothing by the mo- tion. General Butler's election is # foregone con- clusion, thousand eyes, ‘the ment on that of the yf was opened with a ronning race, half mile and re- single heat, 57 any con! entered by Jo forris, Fawn, entered 5 Fawn, WWSPECTION OF THE SEVENTY-FlAST REGIMENT. The Seventy-first regiment, N. G. 8. N. ¥., whieh lately adopted a uew full dress aniform, assembied LOCAL INTELLIGENCE. ACCIDENTS.—A child named Ann Elish, aged ten years, residing at No. 50 East Broadway, was ron in Cathirine strect and chentiy taken to her home by an a "a wagon ey, Injurea She was ofticer of Seventh precinct, BOARD OF ALDBRMEN.—A meeting of this Board was held yeaterday afternoon pursuant to adjourn- went, Alderman Coman in the chair. 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