The New York Herald Newspaper, October 6, 1868, Page 10

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: 10 NEW YORK ‘dERALD, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1868—TRIPLE a the immense proceaston last night, Aeon a MISCE*” syEOUS POLITICAL MATTERS. witch.” Yes—and » cartioad of Hecate’s infernak roe show was made by the Fifth ward, bat the fam- Fs was ular and the of tt involved great nal | sive but no honest supporters at the South | been virtually ignored by the speakers on both sides a “Bloody Mblxen? took the palm from the lower | ZOLITICAL INTELLIGENCE. Bacrilces? for his staunch apd sturdy defence ‘of fuchive and no constituency in america. during the pending campaign? 1 it a two-edgea $s E © | Maras, "Tey had an engine Gompany and plenty Unite states Duties Attorney for the Massachuseus district | 4,2p¢ South asks nothing bat what the North prom | ay, oray : wagons and commen ae ies sho’ en} democratic sentir” CITY POLITICS. asks Some of the Western papers are describing CONTINUED FROM THIED PAGE. The Seventh and evento Wards made “ge best agaiae abe na fax’ speech at Lafayette, In. 9 Dis “20% gun of . In the former wi Tronsidi ‘turned € Mino! A ms : Areas tion, General-in-Chief of the | OUt fully 3,000 strong. Here, too, “cas 2 aul, the Republican Nominating Convention, bg Len a Yah Fao peg unis to resides shone, en ‘Soncede fi cakes te camanign: 4 AL pan peee h.. sg behold at aa'pay of about twenty, thousand dollars | Dest midnight the Procession wing. ‘The Republican Nominating Convention assembled | and republican liberty, have yruere, For iheen | cording to the Chicago platform San Sal) ts out for Grant, w & year—an olico for life, without drudgery, and | , ott can = ¥.a8 still moving. last evening at their headquarters, corner of Broad- | te, Jrlends of | freedom everywhere. | Ror, tft With a pledge to carry out the platform, without vador, is out for Grant, W'iich means a fure being held in honor by ail men. Now, gentlemen, | wart turnouts could be way and Twenty-second street, and organized by | Hititonal Cunvestionin Massachusetts be represented the | oven an allusion fo the constitution either in the | ther lease of his omee, grate he people of this country do not reawite 8 Mitsad. | were returning U: ands, appointing J. D. Otterwell chairman, and Meqsrs. P. | {2ncrehie and undompromiaing exponent of “republican | PLA“Gne rignte aiid the heedon ot poor ioe mately bgt! Monsoux cournat, referring to Dana's toming. faire are. uot at war, and wnat ihe com | Jordan and Jobn G. O'Brien secretaries, Mr. Ssauc | principles and would ‘be most conitally by there | to confer am empty houor on ‘ony iuan: ho in Ben Butler's district, says Dana is & “mere wa. Tt tor years been, iB publ '% and bond | big od democrats of this city and heeng 4 2. Oliver having been nominate se oiice of piste smelze op the soorengaisiirg tle dieet 2} reat Papen un if B. Hi, HILL.” | respectable man than Butler; but a8 far as politics y mY justly feel proud at the splendia appeare rer “and Patrick H. Jo! therefore. no‘ fain Ska ss . be awapping the devil Sor & Theereat interests of this Fepublio his niuinbers as wel aa ip ou i they presented at ape biuncl Tamaey ine aa gle a | inn ait g0 his election would be swapp the roll of fe and made Mt not require a statesman {1 09 of to direct the nation at this me, tg he HERA‘o oY elevates ae 7 “ atter a | United States, : TASS! f debt and. tue’ HRRALo OF yesterday, they had intended their | somewhat excited debate ib wa? arranged read! jutions was frequently in- we cauldrons thrown in. Bouter states rowing out of tae as unhappy ‘einen oa uindependent ata Pele cere Peon ete. Om ae room and | terruptet be appluise ad When the name cf 2. | Auother Sharp Letter from General Butler. | General Forrest has just returned to Memphis after 7 . $ 4 that Ql ment jonvel tod up sn: . py Grant Wik ho a Re eae most | different "route for their march from that | called. This treasure was carried Out amid the ut, teteriy and core Haroun of loud avd Pica | Torus Eprtons ov Tie Bosrox Daty Apvznriser:— | 9 practical reconstruction campaign on the line of As you have inserted in your paper a letter to the | the proposed Memphis and Selma}Railroad—a project “ Editors of the Traveller, trom . Edward Atkin- oe meeting — success, son seems @ little ashamed of the inti yy with Sam The doubie harness team of Governor Baker and Ward aon is disclosed by the telegram. Such } senator Hendricks have finished their spouting Poetical messages only between intimates— gene! nancies, To hveak the force of the | Match against time in Indiana. shame of the exposure, Mr, Atkinson cries out: “A Judge W. Y. Gholson, of Ohio, delivered @ long rivate telegram! Where did you et my private 7 aadress on financial issues in Avondale on the 2a Larying and diout tion to o of the Tammany ar ment, and it was alxo | most disorder and confusion, and the remainder of | cheers. A committee, of which General’ Schouler Is becauwe he was educated af Weer Pome nie be, | stated that this was for the purpose of proving to | the evening was passed in Mllbustering andcougten, | ee anc tesapely" waited ugok hn ake eause ve was once a tanner? fait because he has heen | ‘Me leaders of Tammany that the German demo- | filibustering between the party headed by C. S. | ina few moments he entered the hall. His presence afarmer? In what has he shown himself great, except | CTats. not withstanding radical intriguing, have not | Spencer and that of Waldo Hutchins, which was | was the signal for another burst of enthusiasm, 482 Imiiitary many And Yecause he has achieved | “!tinished in number, but are even more deter- | under the direction of Mesars. Gridley and Tousey. | and when it had euded Mr. Dana was in military success 18 that, and that alone, sufticient | ™!Ned and larger as a than ever, and are en- | Considerable feelmg was displayed on both sides, | troduced and, in accepting the nomination Feagon to make him President? Tam free to confess | Htled to full recognition in the Tammany church in | and ai one time it seemed highly probable that the | for Congress, spoke at considerable length, review- ‘that if the Musiness of the President of the United | thé distribution of offices, This was the intention, | Convention would break up ina iree ight. Finding | ing the position assumed by General Butler on the Btates for the next four years was to be conlined and so far as the arrangements were concerned and | it lunpossible to restore suilicient harmony to allow | financial question, and stigmatizing hin as the si Y legram ?? and being a@ thorough “financier,” brib- Jusion that the sinply to fighting G ycan- | t@ mass of people forming the procession, | the business of the evening being proceéded with, | Ishmael of the republican party. It 1s claimed by inst, He came to the conclusion principal ane, oat Taulior che condition of pene, ani | it was fully realizea, though an unfortunate | the Conveotion was iinally ‘adjouraed unt Monday | Butler that he ia'the regular candidate, and there eelved tho telegram in a letter, of which, though | of all the bonds constituting the funded oF perma- roceeded to dis ‘Ue rect cl follow. he Re denounced eigen pelea brunet ibap passed in réview before Mayor Hoffman, in front of | Conservative Republican County Convention. | been fought, not by the regulars, but by the volun- | Name 4 the Poscnan A = SM mr a commonly called the five-twenties, is payable in coin. separate wider the alr cady too much divided people the Clarendon Hotel. One thing should be said in ‘The defégates from the conservative branch of the | teers and the mili of the Ss * praise of the Germans on this occasion—that they i . ty tests he (Dang) cast bis lot, (Great applause.) He ap lauded eee pe was trequently | Were punctual almost to aminute at the principal | TePublicans for the purpose of selecting candidates | Continued with some criticlams upon: the caucus @ other speaks to have spoken | Te2dezvous, and started from thence precisely at the | for Supervisor and Register met last evening at | management, which he declared the weakest point from this stand’ rey ne en the platform a consid: | 4pPolnted Hour, which cannot be said ot the other | headquarters, corner of Broadway and Twenty-thira | i our political system, and waid that this, in counec- stranger to me, A grand democratic mass meeting is to take place Hon. B. F. Bornan,— VA8#*970% D. C., Sept. 28, 1868 | at Lebanon, Ohio, on the 7th inst. Senators Doo- ere ycorpet bow biarty, your pamninetion fs op- | little, General Thomas Ewing, Hon. ©. L. Vale vi some w Bosley Yor the acl jon of your district con! ntione It isalways | landigham and General Thomas Powell are an: erable time, but ay there appeared to be uo oppor. | Sah Wo Were, some of them, nearly an our be- | ser, a committee from the radical branch waited | #0 With the rigid party disotpline of the democratic | anxiety for the act'on of your district convention, It always | TNUgil as the speakers, wnity of deliver th Ives before the hind time. ‘ “ . | party which General Butler now proposes to engratt | belo ‘of a tele, t a Roura of the mors tae they tod thet den wee § ‘Taere were seven dlyisions in all, each sub-divided oe se ConWenHOn shortly Stiantis. Pe Dee or upon the republican organization, was the reason ufhby your friend Base Ward, firabercnhe (aly, core tall The Cincinnati Enquirer says General Kilpatrick ae a a eared aren, of which it was Soerpowed. fley represented, A committee of conference was | Of, 2at degradation of the democratic party which | than what you do, General, why Sam don't want you back | 45 going to Kill Grant, STAND No. 8 by the Chute oe en eat and represented | Appointed and authorized to act for the Convention | “eNeral Butler 60 much deplores, « ‘7A, follows telegram ‘ « pe pe the whole was Major William Seebach, as- | 10 agreeing to give one of the offices to each faction. - n the impeachment trial you stirred Sam up a good deal, OPENING OF THE EVENING SCHOOLS. } POE ISS sisted by a number of adjutants and aids, Some | After a title speechmaking and mutual admiration | HON. Be H. MILL ON THE POLITICAL SITUAe | and he has boon very bitter against you ever since. - You only — Speeches by A, R. Lawrence, Colenel Babcock | trouble and great confusion were caused yesterday | @XPressed among the members present the Conver TION. got hold of a very small amount of ‘his rascality in collusion | The evening schools throughout the city were peu onang morning by by intelligence received by Major Sec. | ton Adjourned to meet at the eal of the conference F - Sie ee ih — howerg, . . ° = it opened last evening for the regular fall and winter sting 9, bach that the arrangements made by him for assem- | 01! B. TALES penne A) ¥ As for the tele; herein no one knows better your- yh school on The meetin ; at stand No, 8 was presided over by | pling the several diisions-and the soute. of march 3 ; - ‘To raw Eprror oF THR HERALD:— seit how to use i or show up the ridiculous side of ft Z parine a fo evening Die a mp al oes z ua bpran Dhs- aepepae natn 9 atopted y Marshal ge Soe yee a TAG APO PTL. BOVE Ea the Sa ALD Cr Sle iceeraeee snare enaet Boning le ogy od geount from your dletiet whan the ing Schools of the Board of Education occupied the or 0} Be een, The entire. mme had to be changed. in Se Ap IRME AR Ta CS “Southern Democratic Leaders in New york,” and | election comes vf, fam, General, vary truly yours, | platiorm and formally opened the institution. ‘There SPEECH 0) ? COLONEL BABCOCK, OF CONNECTICUT. the course of the forenoon, and it was only after | Mase Convention in the Fifth Massachi among the number my own name is mentioned. ‘were present almost a thousand puj Tanging nt, CORY, of the poetical despatch had not been | er ee te or age, papi, Fang santngion I never should. have seen iss and intelligent looking assemblage it would be difi< adopting the style of Brick Pomeroy in their | “dresses, brief and appropriae, ele meet communications with each other, without the cour- Hoene, she eirolen’ Orr of Bees board, At ats age with which Le displays We ar, Atkinson’s ques- | Missioners Warren, Merrill and others.’ ‘The com~ tions but one; i.e, What excuse “have you to give mittee also visited others of the schools and found for printing’ the telegram? None whatever. It each well attended, my constituents for ahieoeee notlee of either the telegram, its Billings- CASUALTIES AND ASSAULTS.—Demies Kisard, a boy oo sender Cae at thie Miksa tata tin residing at No. 8 Broadway, was last night run over- supposed the republicans comes enough to ow how the gold speculators by cart No. 6,397, Broadway, on the corner of Beaver. of Washi m and th brokers and the | street and Broadway, and slightly wounded. He was corporation deoirey vs lon rine peonceer taken to htshome, Henry Kometz, aged forty, re~ eee ee nee aeaue, | siding at No.6 West Eleventh street, was taken to again, 1am now pigs rigs the facts of how a | the New York Hospital last night suffering from a prominent candidate of boltere has been making | fit, A woman named Ann Sogent, living at No. mba overtures to the democracy of the district not to | Lewis street, while standing on a escape ae ie make any nomination, go that the democratic yote | above pees, was precipitated from eke sees might be concentrated on himseif, and should be | story to the sidewalk and was seriously inju oe ready to publish them save my duty tothe republi- | drew O’#rien, of No. 94 Front street, while lo; : can party carries me to Pennsylvania and Ohio to | machinery last evening at pier No. 17 East are take part in the campaign there, Sorting! quite safe | his foot badly crush and was taken fos leva, to leave my own case in the hands of the true and | Hospital, Emil Balibuch, nine years, liv! staunch republicans of the district. No. 511 East Sixteent! street, ae G. I propose on my return to expose all the secret | night run over by acoal cart and slighth injured. meetings, all the arrangements and ments, bar- | He was taken to his residence. Daniel lar ins, subscriptions, corruptions and conspiracies f living in Greenwich street, near Watts street, w oa fy which the rebels and their sympathizers pro) work yesterday in a sugar houga, No. = io to break down the republican party in the n- | street, was caught in the machinery an mY essional district, so far as they may come to ra right arm cut from his . He was taken to ~ Enowledge. And I hereby offer a reward of $: City Hospital in a criti condition. Last pieh for any competent evidence, written or oral, which | Cornelius Anderson was run over by car Wee will prove the guilt and complicity of persons | of the Sixth avenue line at the corner of ch engaged in the enterprise of defrauding the people and Carkson streets and was seriously injured. of the Feng the free exercise uss Li a el rere Soe Men eae ye ‘01 | eres Ce rc sli age up at the Twenty-eighth precinct station Men of Y ew York—We meet to-night in earnest | great labor and pains and much vexation that the setts District—Butler Denounced by Promi- Allow me, first of all, to say I am no party leader; Counsel to consider the duties and obligations we | Changed programme could bo communicated tothe | nent Republicans—Richard H. Dana, Jr., | never have been, paren oeteee to be, Se : owe to ov r common country. Who are more inter- procession moved precisely at nine o’clock from the Nominated by the Anti-Butler Radicals. Allow me, in the next place, to eay I did not come rested 0 an you in the results of the great contest in | corner of Second street and First avenue up to SALEM, Oct. 6, 1868. to New York to ‘drink wine or eat fine dinners,” and which ¥ @ are now engaged? Here is the centre of ioc We Givisions falling in as the | he anti-Butler movement in the Fifth Con- | have not been so engaged. capital, of commerce and of every branch of in- follows:—Platoon of police from the Seven- | gressional {district of Massachusetts has at length Icame North to ascertain, if I could, the exact dustry. Here art and science find their best | teenth eaneepe under command of Captain | culminated in the assembling of a large number of ‘temper, views and purposes of the Northern people patror is and their widest development; and you, ore Major Brae, rere ne ied | the representatives of the opponents of the Datch | and the probable result of the polltical contest now men of the great Empire State, have given us| pand of the same regiment; Grand Marshal | Gap hero and the actual selection of an opposition | being waged. To one who has studied and learned for our national standard-bearer your own fellow | Seebach, accompanied by his atds and adjutants on | candidate. The chosen rival is Richard 4H, | to admire the j D i system of American government, citi en, Horatio Seymour, one of the wisest, tne | eee ret ttre of a reheat | Dana, Jr, of Manchester, whose name in con- | federal and State, limited and resered with harmont. bur 28st and most experienced statesmen in all the Captain Lindenstrut! Pais Marshal; Second ward, | nection with the movement to defeat Butler | ous boundaries fixed for each by plainly writtencon: jam 1. You are catled upon by all your memories of | Captain B. Meyer; ‘Third ward, Charles Bender; | nas already been mentioned in the HERALD. | titution: ¢ ; 5 s 88, the examination has not been encouraging. the past, by all your hopes of the future, by your Coe ar ag epaane ood ae we General Schouler, formerly Adjutant General ot | Shaken to its foundations by a criminal war occa- Sta te pride, by your love of liberty and free govern- Marshal, and adjutants; Fifth ward, G. Rauch and | Massachusetts and removed by Governor Bullock, | .sloned by a fanatical discussion about the rights and + ™me€ ns and by your veneration for the constitution | H. Muellermann; Eighth ward, M.'Puerst; Ninth at the dictation of Butler, was the cholce of the op- | capacities of some savages imported as chattels for 3 eave nothing undone which you ought to do ward, Valentine Becker, and Fifteenth ward, Henry positition until about a week since, when Mr. Dana | speculation from the jungles of Africa, the question bd Pon ad = Miser gam ha <i Kos tants; Seventh mara, Ca tain Sperber; Thirteenth was waited upon and invited to become a candidate. | now is, whether these savages, being now confess- W ave faith in the providence of tod, faithefa the me eae An a tee re . atin He declined at first, but on Saturday was persuaded | edly free ana certainly greatly improved by Southern @ 004 sense and patriotism of the American people 3 | Honorary escort, Colonel Budke, marae ‘and adju- to allow the use of his name, whereupon General | masters, this great system of government can again 4 sud I therefore believe that they will rise in their tants; many trade companies on horseback, such as | Schouler gracefully withdrew from the contest and | be made harmoniously stable and the freedom of the 7 faieecanns forever tgrostrata; the faction body pol. | BAKers grocers, butchers, Then followed ‘a splen- | became an active worker for Dana, white race maintained and of all races perpetuated ? tic. Ido not say that this faction is the whole re- Pr gi ee mgt iety Of \gase ia ‘The gathering to-day was more properly a mass I find the republicans meeting this great question apy shee belle Ma ieee asd ppoteipa pany blue,” German mariners who had served in the | rather than a delegate convention, and nearly every | by proposing to ‘maintain and perpetuate” mea- among them a fanatical aud destructive element ee ae —— om carrnne Q | own in the district was represented. Among those | sures which are “outside of the constitution.’ which that niust be crushed out of power, or it will crush | fong oF ae meet caie Dr Deautifully Gnlamented | Composing it were such men as Benjamin H. Silsbee, | avowedly seek to disfranchise and degrade white Si i pation. 4 auontion’ S8Y | “chariot of triumph,” on which sat enthroned a | Darwin E. Ware, A. A, Abbott, Eben 8. Poor, Wil- | peovle for no reason but that of @ vindictive ment and the abolition leaders. Guided = handsome maiden representing Columbia, and | jiam Endicott, William Sutton aud some four or five | hatred of section against section, and which their passions of hate and revenge, they Sec eames Be Nhe Oe yd hundred others of the wealthy and reputable men | Pretend, in the most unnatural way, to 01 Ysten to no appeal to re: fi ing ue ‘| elevate’ the negro by lexding him, 1g- Mele Sock ae oan ae ie autye and of attraction in this division was the Citizen | of Essex. Caleb Foote, of Salem, called the | norant and credulous, promisingiy to equality, but Mat every man feel his own distinct, personal respon- | HoMman Clu, with its President, Mr. Jacob Cohen. | pody to order, and Benjamin H. Stisbee | really to ruin, as the butcuer tempts with his bundle “ strong, in open who are aii of hay deluded to the sh ti wn dressed in dark clothes, weari s.bility, and say from the depths of his heart:— carries was chosen temporary chairman. Subsequently | of luded sheep he slaughter peu, Mr. Atkinson further complains that I omitted to | An unknown man, 4 wWisiere: being fate any eountry df crain against Grant -Cavury-and artery” closed | Allred A. abbott of Peabody, waa tuen chosen per. | yqiind te democrats mest tnls inost palpable Nee aera ot 4i9;000 Ta gold ie Misono | Sovfag atrec, last nigut in an insensible” coi Shail o'er each thought predominate, this division. The Fifth division, Major Sauer, a f o t avings. ou o a ee o 4 the head infileted i Ana throug’ cock pulse unceasing uri, Marshal and adjutants; Eleventh ward, rend manent presiding officer of the convention, and | powers upon a cent per cent argument about bonds, capacity as treasurer of a corporation ag therein set | from a dangerous wound in My pray an ' upon being conducted to the platform indulged in a | #0ld and greenbacks. I tind the capitalists, inore in- Bball be 1 Aberle; Seventeenth ’ ward, Colonel’ Simon P sane than 1 we eer ee Levy, | and Eighteenth ward, Adam Stock. | few preliminary remarks, after which he called se paichan hme ade sad kee iattatiy specdine - Sixth division, Colonel A, F, Wutschel, Marshal and - | their to maintain a t Metropolitan Democratic Club. aida; Sixteenth war her?" Sent: upon a clergyman to offer prayer. Before proceed. their means to main‘ and perpetuate measures A ittle off University place, in Fourteenth street, | tieth ward, Ngueeian” raion caliestventi ing directly to business Mr. Abbott sald he would damier Assia Gl seer a comers ih teak “the Metropolitan Democratic Club assembled and | Ward, Andreas lleidt. The last was the Seventh di- | like to say a few words concerning the purpose for | tne government stable and {ts resources ample to ‘were addressed by Mr. 0. C. Warfield and Mr. P. C. po LC agg Pra Rta Mere or eng ‘which they had assembled. He said they had met | pay their bonds. Ministers of religion are executing Wright. The crowd in the vicinity was very larze, | grancis Kohler, and Twenty-irst. ward, August | tere as republicans. ‘They were not traitors or | thelr noble commissions as peacemakers by abau- poe lrg leery Nipdinctenrter anager hepa Besa oT ie division ‘marched ‘alsa | rebels, and still leas did they fraternize with pscudo- ee ner t mcnetecwinee oat Sean Of euihasin e-tammeramn tismrenimele te meray or German chat, trom eauue ter county, | repubitcans who “stole the livery of heaven to serve | frults inthe past have been ui whose nly ruts ~ a evi ¥ 7 m the ure lots, that ane 5 Sropt. sented in the First and Kings aud Queens coun- | the devil in,” and who, eight years ago, attempted | WAXY’ ai this Babel discord, of political mone forth and not for bis individual benef, I beg his | is not known by whom. The wounded man was pardon it was an oversight, * i. id taken to Bellevue Hospital by an officer of the Four« J ought to have called attention to tne questioi teenth precinct after his wounds had been dressed if Mr. Atkinson would take such a cruel slice out of | by Dr. Armstrong, of the Central Office. county in Behalf of a” corporation ot whichhewas |" 'imiscannaNgous, coun! alf of & CO! ion whicl ie Wi only a sunall stockholder, what would he do for hlm- | ———— MIO CRLL ANODE. self? In justice, therefore, to Mr. Atkinson I insert ae MT ae ores the besoep i here. He ae an igen Fr me . a Wear Serearione corporation I was compel notes in a, 3 iawrul money? Is not gold law money—wiy hot PAIN CURED IN AN INSTANT. ry nt Duck corporation go! auumanee dha tedel ax: Orics equivalent from the bank.” Hes not Mr. Atkin: | oriole” the freat, grand principle of stop rt auch da ts as chloroform, opium, morphine, aconite —_—“~ p ties in the Fisth division, | The whole nuin- | to nominate Jett Davis for Presideut. ‘They sup- | confusion of the Northern people, 1 tind but few who | Sot over and over argued that there can be no law- | gerous, agents na = 4 THE PROCESSIONS. ber marching in the procession was variously | ported the platform of Chicago, and with the leading | Seem to remember that there is a written constitu. | (Wedaone oie p previven ee eet Erecnbacks are only: + Se WSRADWAY'S READY RELIEF, pry sper Batra ye Rg i caps eome dee blicans of the country were ready to heart iiy | WOW, and that those who are chosen to administer it | Waraqemayeh ee ee ee Thie remedy accompllahed this wonderful ‘and deltghtfut put itat about 17,000 or 15,000," As the procession | Pepublicans o: i dace y to heartily | must be sworn “to upport, protect and defend it.” desideratum In all cases of external and internal, pain. | In' A determination had been expressed to get up a | marched over from First to Fourth avenue the sight | support Ciafin and Tucker and Grant and Colfax. It | It is most significant that IN the whole Chicago plat- Sorchiight procession commensurate in the scale of | Was aot a peeeeincet ee oo baste ave- | was because of their devotion to the republican | form ye the oye oe Sneprante from the a Of , nue and Seventeen! street unexpec occur nees thereon iis constitution is not mentio, nor magnificence with the other features of this grandest | rence happened of which mention 18 made above. bor beg _ ae era a oe hed even ailuded to. 10s builders remembered there was @emocratic display of the present campaign. | By constant marching and counter-marching of the | fould nat recom nite tn i i et he contest | a negro, but forgot there was a cousuitation. I have As busy preparations have been making to | clubs forming the Tammany aisplay the first two | for ep heard and read iong speeches from notorious (called % BC % of Essex county that they had assembled. They be- m “ 7 earry out successfully this determination as Fo pag modi gery ume separated | Teved in national honest), Which General Butler had | “sttoguished) political leaders, who, | do believe, a have never 80 much as read the coastitucion,; and im preparingythe programme of the oratorical dem- | had to bait ‘and the whole line was cut in Tran te Coane Coen bin portions poe Pome fie | Most certainly have not read its history nor under- stration at Tammany Hall and Union square. For goa 4 bee fg Cp Perce oy dcp nad believed General Grant would uive the country | 820d its meaning. ‘ 7 cratic 2c! ig a : “gh s a on aot Statesmen have abandoned the constit tion: cler- Gays past every democratic Organization in the city | Hotel, None of the other five divisions, being the | Peace, and that thas the great republic would enter | pymen have abandoned the Bible, and the peop:e are been laying In its necessary stock of music, ri . | Upon a new and glorious life. General Butler, he ei ‘ Janterns, transparencies ef id omne genus, for the eRiAEICn Qull tise’ Genet ertaiedaadannaanta* wan tore to rsonally or in his views upon public polic; Tn all | nat developments—siands ‘out #0 prominentiy to oceasion, and some have even gone through the pre- | fim. ‘The whole ive Was reformed on Fifth avenue | 1S public speeches or correspon t view as this startling truth. Lmlnary exercise of marching to acquire & becoming | and Fourteenth street, from which point the pro- | look in vain for a Heclaration of Is (Genera ttuy | _ Hf the Union can be cordially restored and the re- show a political turn out, which not only in num- | Houston’ streeis, at hair-pust ecven P.M, where | dictated ‘by & vearuing for personal supremacy. | Event threo times as, grea ys reportnn fais bers but in the style and manner of its turn out | they were dismissed. ‘There were no speectics made | When a candidate for public | ollice so for- | contingency there need be no debate as to whether 4 ets the devencies of life as to call honest men : “ * should cast far into the shade all prior similar dis. | im German on the occasion. Gaichrs, te was tine toes they can the debt sliali be paid in currency or gold, for then it never occurred to me that it made any difference | an instant {t afforded relief; the moment it was applied to vo the savings’ banks whether they lost this gold | the parts of the bod; fiammation or pain ex! , parcuae, Mr. Atkinson’s acis as treasurer or as an be individual. He has asked me several questions which I have | *nsation of ease and comfort. Inftu-! answered. 1 now propose to ask him one, which I onan, pe Throens Nereoie, Headscher Tootsnabe: Patan tal do not care whether he answers or not, a8 I know | the Chest, Side, Lungs, Stomach, Bowel et go pbone the sean Leder payee of _ oe. Legs, Arms, Feet, one application was suthcient to and exterminat . ing the poor needy depositors of that savings bank ot e es: ae fu ited, woul $10,000 of their hard-earned gold, the devil gets hold ps of this treasurer of the Tent Duck corporation, whai ee ther ea ton and {alg | he will happen to Edward Atkinson and Sam Ward? | fies’ Dyscnient Cad ortee pain tik seat Pema ia Respectially, BENJ. F. BUTLER. of man, woman or child, This was Radway's Ready Relief - of 1847,/and itis Radway's Ready Relief, greatly improved, ‘ Loga: D. : Colfax in mapert, Ind. ‘We then started {t in its mission of relieving the infirm,’ Governor Harriman, of New Hampshire; Horace | pain-stricken, sick, distressed and gy Of all bore | 7 une: ; throughout the world, and now to-day i Maynard, of Tennessee; Paul Strobach, of Alabama, | ee rere ase honuchald wovenelty hi and Speaker Coifax addressed some 15,000 republi- | tans, Emperors, Kaimos, Kin; cans if Logansport, Ind.,on the 2d inst. This is Mr, | A#,13,the cottasés of the ‘labor Colfax’s Congressional district (Ninth), He made the following remarks, which for personal modesty have —— is 2 to plain words figs here, ‘There is no gainaaying the fast that the | | | Union Sqnare—Ostside Soenes, | aud tise the truth is told. he op an eee Gurrenoy will be ceual ogee eres 89 | not been excelled during the campaign:— A],-°%7 AGAIN, OX, WEDNESDAY, MORNING? ” nec c he cent of attraction—! mt Wappui, 90 to at is 1G ee . 0 © or uy C3 “a u waow ot tie democrauc voters of ihe metropoin | Speak—of the congregated thonsunds from ‘eight | General Grant or his pernicious. poiltical optulons, resources of ane anor be cordially restored and the | Mn. CuamuaN—I was about to say Mr. Congress. the greatest family story paper in Amorion, under the dazzling light of torches in a nocturual | Until twelve o'clock last night was Union square, the | but upon the following grounds, witich the speaker | Geveoued the existe cons wil nee nays man, for I suppose it is about the ee ene | re areguni en eee ht oe procession Was never seen here belore. ea. Cerne Teer Ta ee | ena eet Eten trae ee, | ee ten celts on the doliar, for in that event the te wos Colonel Prue ¢ of Loguaapert cadliate for Gon, ee vay OF iaeaatior of the “Mysterious Huntey."* z= lighted up and festooned with nese Jan- | strong, domineering, of violent ‘temper ani er H > - | rHE LOTTERY OF LiF’ The March and Route. , : ; his | Sources o: the country will be consumed in # pro- ), and have no doubt I shall’ see you there dur- ie terns lighted in a fashion that was at | hatred, intractable, implacable, unconciliatory; Dis | Coes of subverting the government, and some other | ing the session of the Forty-first éo 3 for, | A FLASH OF LIGHTNING, by John Brougham. government which did not contract the debt will take its place either in thesform of red republican =, or fhm Bp eel tife w can the Union cordially restored? By re- 3 qualities, but ia public life knowing uo | gyrtny i ig to the constitution. How will the govern- ples; of great abilities; not troubied with mou- | ment be subverted? By the Atnerican people deck. At twenty minutes past nine o’clock the grand | once original and pleasing. At the extreme KOVerning passion seems to be either to rule ox ruin procession began, The Chief Marshal gave the order | northern end of the square—on the corner | a friend if you submit, an enemy if you resist. He is tw te Lieventi ward turnout, Which Was nearest | of Fourth avenue and Seventeenth street, | persisting, unyielding, bold, upon his own way Tammany Hall, to head the moving coluinn, and tt | and Seventeenth and Broadway, were placed cal- rds; artful, adroit, in private life not witli- rouptiy responded obedient to te ord Svon | cham lights that with their steady, unmitigated ¢ Whole line was in motion, Such a compact, cou- | glare threw a broad sheen over the southern half though 1 suppose | shall not be Speaker of that Con- by Augustin Daly, Texpect to be there or thereabouts and have | THE ITALIAN NESTLE, ny . Stibn, ¢ pleasure of seeing my distinguished and life long ‘Phe ‘mace, dibleaeelliied seittead of. Gre phon 4 art al friend tak: part in the proceedings of Cor le ‘About the name thine Colokel Pratt iesworn i wsa, | concibute to the RE gS ws M4 names as funvous line of moving men, such a brilliant array | of tne square and the avenues that skirt it on either | esty, devoid of moral sensibilities; of keen wit, but oe ” < member of Congress I expect to be sworn in at the John Bro W. Gilmore Simms, A’ in Daly, Lucy. of torehiighis and Chisese lanterns tnd tranapareu- | side, At the corner of University place and West | abusive and violent in speech aud diction, with ms | 1340 CET, Perpettate ene Bolicy outside | the other end of the Capliol, (Prolonged cheering.) § Randall Comfort, Captain Mayne ited Hale Hatotuly Corry cles, (suc display of magniticeut banners, such | Fourteenth street Was another, walle alittle further | faculties all sharpened and acute. Such, Ke sald, | Union, ‘freedom, increased ‘prosperity, restored | oon? WbelMues ANd gontlemen—oh, no, that is too Y O'Lanue, Captain Carieton, Dr. Jupiter Pron, ae. 4c. Marlety of emblazoned | inotioes, | such clanging | westward at the rooms of the Metropolitan Demo- | was the man in whom the r-pubtican leaders all | croait'and bonds payable, Outgide of the consuitu- | Colca term to address aj me sey sy Gear oF eae oy IEORGE MUNRO, 118 William street, N.Y. are hee yg Mandy, Sweulug Iuuste | cratic Club was another, the reflector of which was | over the country do not confide; such was the man | {on Union, freedom, prosperity’and credit will per. | Oldqrriends of the Ninth district—since the iast ses. | __GBONS * - of bands, stich striking aud Unusual features of in- | tured upon tie square, Several of the grand stands | in whow they, as Independent cleciors of the Fifth | {sn together, r eee oF Comerons coone im July E have bees wit my FFICTAL DRAWINGS OF THE SHELBY COL- Secrest eliciting attention and admiration at intervals | were aise provided with this light so that | discrict, would not and could not confide. 4 y and friends in the far distant mountain re- B Lottery, of Kentucky :— ‘The reconstraction policy of Congress has cost fons of our Western country to seek relaxation and SHELNY COLLEGR—RXTRA CLASS 475, ocronnn, 5, 1868, ai) along the line; in short, s0 many in atorehligut | with the numerous calctum burners and A committee having been appointed to draft a se- Droces#iou, so many to look ou it as it passed, so | toe lighted lanterns strung from Fourteenth | ries of resolutions and repor the name of weaudi- | prmmcuyos of the south ang hundrad Mille este hy te gy ne Ee PR ORE NS much enthusiasm and altogetuer such @ splen- | street, some twoor three hunded yards to the west- | date to the Convention subsequently reported as year of ita existence. it has depreciated the value a Sod thas vs beeen Aga nh a foto pone 65, 29, 49, 4, 64, 73, 6, a @id success as a political demonstration of | ward of Union square, in continuous lines along the | 1ollows:— ‘ . Of Southern property to one-fourth its value in'1860. | national: Inheritaneee I have ‘chimbad eventos FRANCE, SurTit #00" the character this Was has never before | southerly side of the street until they had passed to | rhe republicans of the Fifth Congressional district of Mas | Tt will cost the federal government hundreds of mit: onsend 7} sag Sova or tare at bee KENTUCKY—EXTRA CLABS S21, OCTOBER 6, been withessed in this city. | Know Nothingism in | the easterly mide of Fourth avenue, there was not | auchusets who have met in Convention in pursuance ot ® | Hons more to “tuaintais and. perpetuate’ this, vas, | tou cor theyrent sou Tcvekd panes |S SS Se, 1 OS, a oT the paliiest period of its processional pageants fur. | only all-suMiclent iNumination ‘but the effect | cai! sued the 4ih day of September last, to conalier what | sured success,” this wyglesale destruction. it win | (cok Over more of thegreat country I could call my aa it a NaS mish no parallel to the grandly magnificent scene | was most imposing. To add to the attrac- | action they shall take fo regard to the election of Veneral Sth h own beloved land. But 10 al this lend, mack ae 1 BM OINTIRE MGHRIEN s' OOF, Moacds this presented. The unceasing fring of rockets as | tious of this » part of the city, on | Butler to the ofice of Representative in Congreas, for which | lessen the productions of the South more than one | loved the people of the whole country, there Was NO | yor circulars od MENGE REN & L . 7 + he bas announced himself 4 candidate in a letier to the editor | hundred millions per annum, and, wickedly enticing | place that seemed so much like home as this old Es arty « the line kept moving added to the brilliancy of | the easterly side a pyrotechnic Gigplay | of the Pravealy Pre ished in the Salem vaste of tbe | the poor negroes from the tlelds of plenty into loyal | Go 1 district, re ee dhe scene, an unintermittent tract of briliant | was continually in force, while on the westerly there | jy of Adgustiast declare the folowing revelations leagues of hate and into armed companies of death, mgressional district. sid Covington,’ Ky. byhts in the air keeping pace with the | were mounted three large pieces of fireworks that Resolved, We cordially adopt and earnestly sup] the will for years Gesoiate the South. Card from Hon. Lewis D. Campbell, OFFICIAL DRAWINGS OF THE STATE a moving columns, below. | The route of march | when burned were received with cheers from myriads | aecaratior of privcipies made tn convention at Cuseago by | Wyyyrry Jaime nusalate te Bouin, ‘4 sdiiatper are See oe eh — march was from Third avenue in review past Jam- | of throats as ch«f @euvres of the art. These pieces | the national republican party of thy United Staces; and our reatore good Will, stimulate philanthropy, modiry HAMILTON, Oct. 1, 1868, GLAND CONSOLIDATHOCBETRA CLASS 11 oor. 5, 1868. many Hall, up and around Union square, and | represented. frst, ® porsralt—and a most faithfully | Cvason"of the clear: imention with which thatdeciaration | Southern temper, restrain “rebel outrages” and pay | TO,THE Epirors or rite ENQUIRER: — . ah ty "8, ‘through Fourteenth street to Fifth avenue; up Fifth | executed one—of Horatio Seymour, under which, in | $ “thas been accepted by the repuniteans of Mes- | the bonda by rmalntaining and perpetesting” suc A gallant ex-soldier of my old regiment has just GRAND CONSOLIVATED—CLASS 11d, oof. 6, avenue past Fifth Avenue Hotel to Broadway; up large letters of fire, were “President Hora- their Convention at Worcester and by all who | 4 policy? But I am told that the victorious orn ts | Called my Pept AN ee oe in the Enquirer 16, 49, 4, &, 18, $4, Hy oh iy 24, 0, Broadway to ‘fwenty-seventh street; through | tio Seymour.” The second was@a representa- | adopt in unqualified terms, Pendy to fight avain and tuillions of “boys im bine? | °f the grand demonstration of the democracy of Cin- oa on apeeeens onthe ea ke OR, Twenty-seventh street to Fifth avenue again; up| tion of the emblems of the Union: over- Resolved. The republican party of Massachusetts and of y a ys cinnati on Monday evening last. It is said that “in bal af OS? —BXT3A Chase, oor, By the centre of the column was the torn and tattered erate oF epuvoue’—crase tie ‘ocr’ or thek” 3 5's, 13 Ba, ase. battle flag of the Sixty-ninth Ohio Volunteer in- M4, by I 5s, fantry,” 4c. Your re a no doubt, in- wi p, ED! YY « CO., Manayors. e as to the Cnet — ( 7 ill march under their great leader, General (then Fifth aveuue to Thirty-fourth street; through Thirty- | head was an arch of stars, immediately underneath | the country is pledged to the honest payment of the public | WHl ; a é fourth street to Third avenue; down Third avenue to | which were a lange eagle and two flags: to whieh wt | eu ol the United Staten in oid and ilver colny and of the | President) Grant, and “make the conquered rebels iu bl a bi same, ” , Astor place; throng Astor place to Broadway: up | the foot was added the word “Constitution.” ‘The | which sbail ben visiation of the outtact ender whieh'l'S | Will? Beate, eee et ) Broadway to Fourteenth street, turning down Uni- | third piece was like the first, except that it had a rable. 1 advertently made a mis number of the at —" sar 5 vernity piace to Washington square for dismissal, at | portrait of the nominee of the democracy for Vice | Xesolved, The repudiation of the primary obligations of Dowde Ila bo okye tor chee, gugnand pay the | regiment. When the Sixty-ninth veterantzed A. -OPEICIAL DRAWINGS MISSOURI AND KEN. @iacretion of Ward marsuais. dent, with his name and the oflice to which he | the government wouid iniict a blow upon tue national ¢ i rod be Nae iu 1864 they came home on furlough. New o tucky teries: 04 that might prove fatal to the national iffe, The national | after &@ long, hard struggle, to conquer one poorly | auq eb t flags were then presentea to MISKOURI—EXTEA C1.ASS 625, OCTODAR 5, 1868, Description of the Procession. aspires, These beautiful pieces of pyrotectny were (tintpart of th das | Cquipped and then boast about it and call that on un , 5 18 4, Om 77, 19, 95, 44 Be 40, 70. 4 burned at half-past ten o'clock. ee eee tae cateasen ee at United Sieken: Sue a8.) CGuDpe e | them, and Colonel Moore, commanding, pre- + 5 ebont—orass'ese octourh & tabs, It were an unending task to describe in detail this . such is one of ecus Gf the | nion. withont it armies | @ coward, and 80 magnanimous to crush that one | sented the old “tattered and’ torn battle flags” to 4 Ki 28. § monster procession. Including occasional halts it The Square at Eleven oClock. “~ Micteie raceiomeannorve | 2nd force him to accept an equality with the negro | Mra, Campbell for preservation, by whom. they KENTCOKY—BXtnA OLAS ts, boron m8 18, took three hours nearly for it to pass a given point. | At eleven o'clock the square presented an ami- i, the revels who aim | Whlch the Northern States repudiate for them- | have been kept with great care. ‘When Lorganized | 2%, 10, 63, 44, 23, 67, 75, 6, (9, 13, 46, 7. At the lowest estimate 40,000 people participated | mated, a grand appearance. it was filed with the te y the renewal of strife | S¢lves. Stop all this new form: of treason, bh 1668. that regiment in 1861 it comprised republicans and KENTUCKY—oL age 574, ocronER or to linpair and destroy the national redity and patriots | ad stop the miserable policy of reconstruction | Gemoctat in about equal nembers (the latter, per- | fatetmction ‘pitch at Ut’ ative hing "alee Repel tlovace $n the procession. And yet, though from tie a eee With ships, emblems of tue vari- jes, boats, mature of the case, all tle ‘ward organizations | ous , Wagons tastefully decorated, in | must labor to maintain and tmprove tt. Which is its fruit. The South wants peace, She | haps, predominating), and it would be an impro- yun a good deal alike, each had its special and | which were placed Ittte gitls attired in white, as re- gdignolved, The position jakas aud persistently advocated by | Isimpoverished and needs it. She was promised it | Deets "in my judgment, to permit these relles oF the | Ustet o 9 No a0 Broad aarked characteristics, It Would be impossible at | presentatives of the States in the Union; and while | Ge! ; ie contract” the avewenty | On,terms of equality if she would surrender and is | War tg be used now uy either alde for party _ iris and by the justice of the “ hg A tilied to it, See has kept her Appomattox bond i the late hour at which the last of the procession | those and a thousand other “inventions” to please | joncs of the United States are payable i valves, ie | elitities kept ppomattox bond in passed Tammany Hall, our standpoint of observa- | the eye and the’ ear and instruct the ation of the contract according to tie understanting | TOOd faith, and every Northern okiier. 1s, in honor, ‘Won, Lo describe these special features minutely, and | mind = were going over the prescribed route | which both parties to the contract bad at the time itwas | her endorser while she keeps that bond. Will they iN #o we hurry through them. After theeleventh ward | the air was led «swith = fire-baila §=from | made aod a form of repudiation; and bis claim that the | jon and will their chief lead the politicians in this a - = ™ No person has ever requested such use of beak: ancl BSOLUTE DIVORCES LEGALLY OBTAINED IN were I sufficiently “enthused” to grant such a de- 2A different States; desertion, non-sty fire [ am sure I could not accomplish it without a | ¢uustine Publicity no change galt and Beach.” On pon such interest by the general | able reconstruction policy which sends us the first 0 cto roatiio! - 4 “fuss in the family.” This error may seem @ matter ane A > “Banner, ou wuich was inscribed the public choice, | Roman candies, while thousands of torches, as the farm pu i i} a Sects ke corer rie South and the | of itue moment, and the correction is sought oniy APSOLUTE DIVORCES LEGALLY OBTAINED 1% ‘cannon, mwhich they afer cx inteeoae “neatly , an the thongnt of s vast son 'brea ing up into golden, po hn mmo fh ge el Conger oa | and send ug the laborers, farmers, machinists and fomeat Vie the bao akon gg etacen eke Foe No publicity, no chores’ ull dinars ob m eh they eK e vi en, he levy o! x of on the fn on J J t v’ sol regi 10 ony, ivoree this band bore Chinese lanterns, tnseribed “Hoffman | flery waves. And while these passed to and fro, | the public debt, being a apecial tax of ve per cent. above the | Capitalists of the North by taking ‘away this miser- J Sa be tain f hither and thither, seemingly without organization | amount that Is imposed w are republicans, that the old banners under which mali 4 as) ous transparencies amoi Counsellor at Law, 261 Broadway. they fought and their comrades died have been per- emocrac fl Income tax, WaA an Attempt at repudiatio ther form, 4 keeps away the last. We have peaceful, fertile, ¥ ms ane ae , s 0 terest below the rai ntrac e 5 9 A ‘ am — rm -riggers;” “We Wi - | lool ne exc , fm a8 & Dational crime.” 9 wuck the Freedmen’s Bureau.” after a from hundreds of magic instruments, filing the heart, Resolved, We have faith in the honor and integrity of the | theearth, But we have no place for a white carpet POLITICAL NOTES. French, English and American couple of wagons filled with good democratic | while at inter the ear was startled, as the proces- | American peopl and are ourselves of that class described by | bagger who comes to take control of the negro and st Manufacture, vaters and profusely decorated with dage came au | sion moved and moved, winding and ‘waving like a | General Huties as “hose wh that the publie consctence | breed hate'and strife to get office. yg et French China, Casenete, Breten Clocks, organization of boilermakers and 4 full rigged «ip. | serpent that was of infinite length, with loud voice Goutrine approve by General by Phage im Shim 4 Among four hundreds of thousands of readers a1 Was it not a little singular that the grand demon- Sliver Ware, Fine Platea Ware, A xual cannon brought up the rear. ‘The First ward this countly that “the public. couscience 1s he 4 | bankers, brokers, miliionnaires, merchants, skilful | stration of the bi biue tm Philadelphia should Cutlery and Faney Goods. fed off with a company of pioneers, bearing axes in |. Mahe Procession Pr cchenes fees whley ‘tae. puctie hee cepnen vo.sam accountants and’ learned gentlemen, Can’ you in. | OT ae dan ‘hee nek Seana eevee Sev. HACGHWOUT & 00, ‘ ry 4 » Fay ne “ * Wen grow lly rf . | be held on the last day for the registration of voters? Brom 3 4 their hands; then followed a wagon of voters, drawn Altogether the procession and its adjuncts—which | Sdvantage,”’ as grossly un, q 4o a people who, duce them to consider and solve the following pro- y regi age, bette Broadway, corner Broome street pa: Pn CI e be have made h sacrifices at the « { honor and dui blema? Vaors, but those of the more gentdel stripes Oring | the hundred thousand spectators that patiently | fereestabiuhed their government on the igneous peincinies | © How effectually can the Union under the constitu: hrst banner appeared the declaration, The Pirss ated, snd Leb me ee arctinn Watt poll panity and justice. Such a doctrine adopted | tion be restored by measures outside of the constitu- ward never gives up.” A feature of this ward was | Dry mate vot unk A ate cae 1a 8 aeeene aship drawn by men in red shirts. On the bow of | That Gucn an expression. of public feeling, - of the ship was old Neptune, bearing his trident in his | Opinions can “RP aed even in s'thia | erote virtves and If half the reports of democratic frauds alleged by | — — the radicals be true, the democrats will cary not J O° MORE MEDICINE. . a, PI 2 » Liver and only Pennsylvania, but sweep Ohio and Indiana like Rervout Booey chred by Be ony tae ‘i REVALENTA ARAMIGA FOO! @ whirlwind. It seems according to radical authority | wir eaves 60 times ite cont In teotioiowe Tine, 1 1b., @9 60; that these gigantic frauds consist in nataralizing | 241s, 835, to the wter disregard | tony {pul ataetine {| Low long will tt take to pay the pubite debt by ex- ements of General | pending Hundreds of miilions to destroy the indus- joa | “ ve pe ts the profoundgst senti- | | of the country, and in maintaining by the + York. aga ge an | "a0. e te ne” ba tropolis, which, all know, is altogether | ments of gratitude, such as are excited only by the ames Of bayonet # policy, oursite of the constitution, which | foreigners illegally and in colonizing Pennsylvania PU DARRY i CO., 163 Willer stree pl La wea. Following this was a wagon containing | fy ation meetizig ? ie thane will 4 pay ay vlna galice to this wentiment | the bayonet, negroes and false courts alone estab- | with Maryland democratic voters, who can be readily Fi ghiiaiau & Soh, way. the. “ Vy i ij 0. road’ ry B. mneepy emblematic, Sane pace wae country that in December the metropolis of the y.and tee Jona will tt take to Improve the temper of the | #Pared from their State, and doing the same in Ohio | and att erocers at chemdte i ae country. ion of wonert ok 4 corriage Miled with ladles en oe Will cast an overwhelming Mee gd Southern ed aod by continuing that ope | which | and Indiana with Kentucky voters, who can Sra wee aa a’ ILERS WIN; OR and children succeeded, the connecting link between | Was ae nd Hofman. The evidence of this by @ bitter personal eninity towards Ge alone has disturbed that temper since the surrender. | readily be spared from the 100,000 ptunging | PUBLISHED THIS Day.—HOw GAMB i Was geen in the demonstration which kept hundreds | aj Grant from being « hearty supporter bis adintniatration. I fs of thousands awake until a late hour this morning. and which every day keeps their persons, their pro: ai Butler ae a toe | perty and thelr families in danger of pillage, rape, whom and the democracy was equally unintelligibie the Secrets of roy Playing Exposed. Being » com- the prehension. eclly in the rear democratic majority in that State. On | plete and scientific expose manner of plaving all o Resolved, We are unab! - 1 , various ad es of Poker, All- oe Sre 8 bauner inecrit iilitary power Ketuen of the Clubs Homeward Bou tenn party. Me | tnd burning? ; the otter hand Governor Boutwoll stated | Vinulvin Wlat¢Cubaqet aes at precunt by proteei the tyrant’s hope,” and ly afer an The return home of the torclight bearers pre- | the credit and highest Interests of Of what value 1a It to the North to force, upon the | few days ago at a meeting in Ohio that whatever | gamblers on the uninitined, ther with a briet analysis South governments which will enable deluded jongehoremen and one of bo tere tt r , negroes to select for South Carolina and Georgia sented a lively scene and made the welkin ring | Which are condemned by the republic ogitimate play. By m retited professional. along Broadway and through all the adjoining | {belt essential character, originated tn nin the canvass of the State would show before the eicc- | cover incense, Bound in boards with cloth back 50 cent members of the latter organization . d [ ver a B eee yg a ails oa ineir shoulders. They also had two bonts on | streets, heer after cheer west uriut tntemute wn a a ny He Rothe To cub aa een unre: | Governors and Kepresentatives from Vermont and | tion tt would afterwards be found that the republi- | ,,jitwlder Hones) Book of Rtump, Speechet and Burlesaue two trucks neatiy dressed with Arnerican fags, and | caused the entire) lower portion of the town south | Brive alike the pubic creditor and the freedman of their rights, | Massachusetts? can vote would be largely increased and the demo- Dialogues, Plantation Boones, Negro Farces and Bu each manned by boys. Some blackemiths -beating | of Union aquare to wear the most animated and We are therefore compelled b p sense of our ‘duty to You say General Grant will be elected, Poasib; La and Comic Reecitations, in 0 “ le Interl so, I cannot Hx a limit to fanatical infatuation, {f | Fatic correspondingly reduced. So thete i “no | [usin tte wench and. Yankeo Stories, e e: draw on ® Wagon, ala appearauce it has put on at th }@ republican party and to the country to insist that General | flea agget, a" negro.” With h | St midinght fOr Many Fears Notwithetee ee oe | Bauer term of eertice ae the repreeehiative of tie: wetter | he shall be elected, and Shall adminisver the const. | telling who will be Governor til aftor election.” But An edad by John F- Rect. 18m0. 168 pp. paper huge earperbag: a wagon Mile with children, | vast assemblage from all parts of this city, Jersey | shall cease on the éth of March next, and to nominate ution according to his oath he will have no more | » city radical paper admits the possibility of a loss | SMe « Bud im bone, Nn set. oe ee ere and will be ts, vrankin —fiose, "and a veaulufa! young | City and Brooklyn, no accident occurred to distaro | “yelanctnercanaidats a be nariccemor 1 4... | cordial supporters than the Southern people. If he of two Congreasmen in Ohio. tent ny mall any. aaare tren postage pan Be Jady representing ihe Goddess of 11 . ‘The | the harmony ant good order of the great democratic | guished, eficient interested services in thetanti-alavery | Shall administer the Chicago platform, as he stands ty eH ‘t geipt of the rice, Send aij Orders to DICK BI Yourth ward ped two shiva, wilh clang! 4 | patona) campaign demonstrauon, Gave for (wenty YCare, bewmoou ata tine when that cane | pledged contrary to his oath, he may Ond submis Mow is it that the sadject of impeachment has | Publishers, New York

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