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NEW YORK fERALD, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 6, 18683—TRIPLS SHEET. 3 =~ a ee me | AS EYMOUR, |Sterpen gee. | othe be ores the the ana | for the attendance then the Demo- | matatain the front rank in the ; cease Gon ef present, aes | eke eee J, coatenh ot Bit aneers- year "0, most of which had been forced bana by ch appealed and ferret of (Ihie’s t City brass) of the ‘The assemblage was sul ily addressed On @ vote of a little over Gfty thousand democratic. People of that city bv Biv t ‘administration nae of ia as marched on the amid the cheera | Mesars. Buckland, Mullaley and others. votes they had a majority of” yen thousand, (An in- Ww; 4 our prending officer, General Wm. F. wien s0 asin the national government, Last y 4 STAND NO. 2 over one hundred thousand majority. In Vernone athe G: Tammany Campaign Tarly wn a8 Baldy Smith. (Cheer ” sembly reduced the taxes two millions of dol'ars, . and Maine the result had not been auch as to de- J reat REMARKS OF GENERAL BA" ‘SMITH. ‘and this year, when they would have the Assembly the democracy or to elate so much the b- General SuirH, coming * wane Fellow | 224.8 de Governor, they can succeed. in re- ican party. No one had any right to expect a great Demonstration. citizens apd Ww ACU ete T 2h any == the | ducing still further; but it would Togaire an: Speeches by Captain Rynders, Mr. L. Cozans, | resuit from New this year except welcome Ve 80Coried to me and L accept it as other year before the democracy got the and McClellan and Others. Connecticut, (Three cheers for Connecticut.) oreemertenncn Sr gcesta winch sm GSineg ued | nin era banner ane op the cpl stand Ro 2 was oocapiea y the Empire cab, Coy | fas aie “aataaman Hora Seymour—{Cher = ‘am welcomed as the humbie rey auea ed this State, and with the same old glorious er tain Isaiah Rynders presiding; vice presidents, W. | gman in every way capable of maintaining the Immense Turnout of the Rea Muang thousand s0ldieny ught di ‘the war | Mizh on the Capitol at Washington, we can be as- ©. Gover, Terence Smith, George Caulfield and Hugh | honor, the faith and lgnity of the government, and honeeey gt earneatly to preserve the Cala, ‘and I ee ne. will be free and the country O’Brien. ~~ would elect to su; him that able = bril- Hot Demoeracy. eres 8 ay in the ; in of cals country, of WENRY ©. MURPHY'S REMARKS, ‘The decorations were simple, consisting altogether zen, “jonn T. Homaan, should he be carried trt this our i ‘Mr. MURPHY was next introduced and on coming of Union flags, handsomely draped in front and at | umphantly into the Gubernatorial chair. He con- Fae Services which were given dur- ‘ tng the war have been fost to us and to the country, | forward sald it was unnecessary for him to detain the sides. ‘Two transparencies, bearing the inscrip- | ‘lwded by saying it s the duty of every man to use a Sens ramon oF elec Dn OHUROE had aug’ discussed the. questions or'the aay. The tions “The constitution above the sword,” “No mil- | (Applause) Ar anteg a Grand Council of Sachems in| wr. savoronp &. Cuunom was introduced ana | Vast assemblage which he was addressing was an itary rale in timeof peace,” “We'll tmpeach the im- REMARKS OF JAMES B, OLNEY, said that when he looked upon the assemblage of | CVidence of feeling which pervaded peachers,” were displayed in front. of Catakill, Mr. Olney was then brought forward by the Wigwam. intelligent meu, adorned by the presence of several | 02 the topics of the day. The people now felt that the chairman and presented, and proceeded to ealo- a hundred he was for | these postions involved their nce The crowds collected in front shortly after eight | gize the action of the party that had placed in the success of Josette nye ‘when he that of tl form: of govern unscrapulous o'clock, and swayed to and fro between the stand omsteasion that great statesman, Horatio ir, looked upon the tens of thousands of people tn the Pp carta ge Ay em Aa A , i‘ and the south face of Union square, cheering in this | {26 gallant soldier, Frank P. Blair, and New York's BRILLIANT TORCHLIGHT PROCESSION, | doubt ‘tnat'sns patnore Sours crrtuee gouqec | constitution and assumed powers, Outside ofthat in fatners refused to guartay and that tnd Ong On a tne Tensions Sar | mused arousing majority trom ‘Greene, trom Ulster * | people which he witnessea that ni ‘would | Strument under the guise of restoring the Union, papt. We have now to meet ot - and their sister counties in this State for the demo- # cratic ticket in November. He was proud to see this similar ques- jum lights, Overspread the land but in reality for the purpose of jons ;40 meet similar questions with to z noticed tat epee camlgn wad conducted Chowsaivas tu por suey, Rad | fasion tour fthers in nd to eae he | qohpary see ats pseu v by the ple, and at ee ‘were to suc- vernments on ¢ Sonthern’ States | bondholdes have invested largely in the bonds upon | anog of the ‘assembly here. that ‘dem- wopalie were 80 fully alive ¢ issues of the hour, IMMENSE ENTHUSIASM. | cet this nii‘no ay OF pantisna | Without thelr consent and had set a precedent which | which theyclaim they have no right to pay taxes for | Scratio. party i not, dead, and, what is more, | S20, {Hat they had resolved that victory shoaid again leaders, bat’ by nt Frenne tected by the people would result in the eu. | elther Stay or federal governments, They claim by Dak UO, pnd re, | perish upon the standard of the democratic party. : i i unbought action and | tire subversion and ruin of the government. The they have wD right to pay for the support of schools a 6 intend £0 die; pad | can tell y on nore: | He felt fully satisfied that the people were now fully pronened tolunow teat oe we int torward by the epublican party waa that | orfor te apport of the government. They clalm constitutional liberty | appreciative of the perils which beset the country insta eanpor tbe arses uke | Wuohenved oa, wnoe ua enes ieee | thea orientyta ozmnne a @ RUM | davon a ns ate gurertimanandgne are | asd ag admiration o erica pr whicl fapoleon when he e tax, ind even to ou ministration of the republi ty, Calcium Lights, Fireworks, Chinese Lanterns, | Ho pronounced the lenders of the radical party a.set | Tobhed the’ Prench people of thelr republla. ‘They | sb. thoir apesaments you will Gnd that they are | ive Unger a deuserane Garemionent se teacr'a milk | Witch was fast dragging the country to. consolida: ies, Musi¢, Red, White and Bluo Fir to overturn every principle uj y acre conspiring | claimed that the South was conquered territory and | ready to svear that thelr expenses are more than | tory despotism. This Feet oe aneer oie | tom. The country was formed asa government ot Speeches, Music, Red, White and Bluo Fire. | Country was tongdede we wed | therefore they had a right to reconstruct it as they | thelr incoves and therefore they pay no taxes at all. | fo Jeoide in this contest. “We are here to decide | Sovereign confederacies; it was the doctrine of selt- . Country was tounded. The oltizens of this State and | thougnt best in thelr own judgment, But that was | The poor pople of the eountry—the poor laborers | wether we live under the government our fathers | government, that the people should | main. ; than their proportion of the taxes of the connvry. A | 82.error. There was no auch thing as conquered | and toiler;have im) on them the great burden | Mngetorusor wheter we liveunders despotism con, | ain the ment of the country in their own disproportionate amount of ta: r ia territory within the meaning of the constitution. | of the tamtion of the country. On the other hand | trojea Soom | war. thisevil of governmental consolidation Tthas been said by the opponents of the democ- | tne'city und State of New Fee ecote aah sina | The reconstruction acts of Congress were unconsti- | the men vho own these securities are wealthy men, | with by: bey hee] ie he Fonthers. States. It rests | was one of the very evils which the emigrant popu- racy that ithad gone to sleep; that anticipating a | sie,cl'y nnd State of New York to that of theasmall | tutional, and if the democratic party should be put | Men whoiave a surplus of capital wolch they put | Orend nogro. or that of your own raos and. olor | /8ti0n of this great country came here to avold. ‘This sound thrashing in the prize mng of the Union in | hundred miluions of doll: a for the last | 12 Power these acts would be declared void, legally | into thesegovernment bonds, because it is the best | ‘gn, : 7 and color } tnion was originally formed for mutual defence and ollars and over for the ani peaceably and'in no other way. ‘Th States | investmel they can make. ‘These bondholders aud | Shall be imposed upon ten millions of our brethren. | protection, Its.constitution was framed and teated November, it had thrown up the gloves, refused to tae cutter ey of conan cies ee ee, of | nad accepted the fourteenth ‘amendinent £0 the con- | these friexis of the radical party tell us we must not | jotwithstanding the of the whiskey rings that | Pho 'Soversign rights of the people in the citizens, go into training, and that all it really cared for in | one-quarter of that amount, making one ork pal | stitution, and when these acts of Congress were de- | impose wy tax upon these bonds because they Ee ore ee <0 ont ja gy ong yi rk, that | Under democratic auspices our government, carried this State was to make John T. Hoffman Governor and | mililons of dollars. Our population is about clared void these States wouldg be reconstructed. | those wid lent the, money in time of war acted | fn in the Unton, T | ont on the principles of its construction, flourished ond 1 2 Birger one- | ‘Then will we have peace, and not till then, Let | the of pattiota and for. the good | !nBk the people will decide that the statesman is | ike q green bay tree until from the original thirteen keep Horatio Seymour on his Deerfleld farm, in re ne rae eee Ker a and 8¢- | them look at the reports in the dally papers of the | of tht country in the timo of its great What they want to rule them and not the military | States tt comayised @ union of thirty-seven. sove- Oneiga county, at asafe distance from all harm. | {lon the Seopie ct ahs pate aan’ 10 pay Oneninth | SMafchy and violence in the South. Why was that? ut Tsay that the soldiers who fought and | Commander. I, do not desire to say. aught | reign and equal States under one central power. ‘This; 4 may be repeated, was the very comfortable | of the taxes of th try. The pro} f New | it was the party in power wanted to estab- | bled inthe war and brought it toa great and giori- | «wp, ”) ey ora | The speaker then compared the rise and progress of etioe ry pr Ba ane ob lish negro supremacy in the South and to disfran- | ouscorflusion are the ho'deserve best of the | ,nurrah for Grant”) | The time for the soldiers | tho country di he fife eding the war talk of the republicans among themselves up to | York State of the four hundred miilions of taxes y an n= lon are the men w! rve has passed away, We have had enough of war. We 6 country during the fifty years preceding the wa would be only fifty-five millions of dollars, so that it | Clise the white men, Then there was no use in the | countrjand yet they pay taxes according to the | have had enough of ruin, fratricide and desolatt with the ‘terrible extravagance, corruption and eight o'clock last evening,|when, as if aroused by an | paid by the action of the radical Congress’ forty-five | Tadicals crying peace. There would be no peace | little thiy are worth, ‘and therefore I would ask why Pa yet the oudlbala say'the syisit of war still pres | tyranny which had characterized the domination of eartiiquake-ike electrical snocx, they rubbed. their | Jalliiod dollars more than Iroweue ooene Tne clty | Until the reconstruction acts of Congress were de- | should fie bondholders be exempted from the, tax | Yalldin these sad, stricken and subdued Southern | !erepublican party since the outbreak of the late sharply to find that of New York pald about one-third of ail rhe taxes of | clared unconstitutional, revolutionary and void. that thdbrave soldiers have to pay. (Cheers.) Take | territories, Now look at these Dlicam banners | War, the issues feuding to which were forced upon eyes ry hat the grand old gladiator | the State, pepe hig city paid fifteen millions of dol- | _ It was unnecessary for him to say anything of the | the Govsrnment five-twenties. Pike holders bought | Sirover the city and what do you eee? You see the | tle country by that party. who had. fought in so many arenas 4nd | lars ear to the general government more than candidates before them. They were identified with | them {% 1863. when id was $250, A man | word, Let ayy nd M hcpodhag Wout th a ae 8 At the close of thls gentleman’s remarks brief ad- tn few beaten, was not only wide swake | she ong do, Again, the radical policy Kept from (Se hess interoata.of the odaniry aad were Lonorable, | then boweus e thousand dolar bond: paige | wae tiade in 186k acai aves Grosses Were minte Uy Thecaae Color Se raes a ten, miilt ny democrat not vote for s. For this, acco resent calcul im ‘ames B, McClellan, W, 3. Wolf, of Indiana, and other Dut ee-woll trained, as sinewy, 48 confident of vic- ty ten, millions of inhabltants of this country | fom 'commitead'a crime not Only against his party, | fon, bspuld $400 only in gold.» Now, 1808 has ar- | gfe CePtain, turning round—Whtch was it, 1864 oF | Gentiomen, the speaking continuing until’ midnight. came | evidence to-night that he people of this great me- w who were its natural customers and who were “ bod: form. tory asever. Ina werd, while the republicans—hav- | desirous to the million: but against his country. rived and multiplying interest of six per 865, som: ing become convinced that there would be no fight | dollars an ‘eurioh the poly ae aopare SPEECH OF MAYOR HOFFMAN. gent for five y you find he has made 1808, McmAneN to pealn, oe whats eecndt We | ment of business. The policy of the radical Mayor JoHN T. HOFFMAN was the next speaker tt gold upon his thousand dollar bond. bas papi STAND NO. 6. worth figuring upon—were themselves really asleep policy 1e mngress dnd an army of t-baggers devouring, like the i had been to elevate the negro race above the white | $2d on coming forward expressed himself grateful ithy bondholders now escape the tax. And | iocusts of Egypt, the fat and the substance of a cot ~~ at their posts in their “tanneries,” getting thelr | men of the South, so that they were unable to de. | for the welcome and knew of no words adequate to | these nien want the governmentto pay them princ’- | quered and itn ished people. (A voice—“Where | Speeches of Recorder Hackett aud R. H. akins thoroughly steeped in the astringent waters of | velop their States and enable them to raise cotton, | ¢Xpress his thanks. It was unnecessary for him to | pal andintorestin gold, and the pai f thelr £ Butler 1”) 1 do not know where he is, but I know iP peal shoal tobacco and which th make more than a few informal remarks, as he had | platform say that country must be ler to rs the political vat, their opponents were quietly but hoe oA wept Moo addressed them so often. A week A te spoke in ay this interest and principal in gold. Seymour he = & S.geoneman’s Pichon. ip Here Osieans Situate in s prominent position in Irving place this Reartily and unitedly at work preparing themselves | North. The radicals established iota of the | Philadelphia, when his voloe could hardiy” reach | wants di the bondholders to be paidin currency and | quriti, (he Tar aamortne tes Spoons, parsing ont rah for the inevitable contest which, and they have their | reau, at an expense of ten millions of dollars a year, | the assembled thousands there. That vast assemblage | in no other way, while the radical party say they | ter) “Ho was somewhere near Richmond a stand attracted large numbers from the immense ‘Way, would on the 4th of March, 1960, inaugurate a to take care of the negroes and to see that they vote | WS an encouragement to the democrats of Pennsvl- shall b¢ paid in gold and at the same time exempt | pottied up like @ weak dose of sarsaparill: throng in Fourteenth street. The meeting was called ol “| ? the radical ticket, to see that the white men of | Vania, who were straggling to overcome the party | from the payment of all taxes—that they shall not .d at Fort Fisher he lay flat on his face at ig | to order by Mr. Dunlop, who appointed Recorder Policy that 1s diametrically opposed to that which | the South are kept under and the negro kept | Who wore trying to rain the country. He had gone be. sasgued for the support of school houses—not | {n'foar othe rebela. as soany naval captains Bel ad i Beare their opponents in, the development of the national | on the top. They paid at least fifty millions | throughs great part of Pennsylvania and the men for the education of the children of the tA Volar thao tory Mo ie ene, | ee policy avow. ° of Mgrs a eae for @ standing army to = gamers i rome dee Co es ofthe poeple nae rs) sexed acer 10. Pog tary what ia the condition of affairs at present? ‘There SPEECH OF RECORDER HACKETT. ms rotect and su] e Freedmen’ iscuased, e em that on nel o . Wee Putting speculation and metaphor aside,'it cannot | Provéct,sud support the Freedmen’s Bureau, making | “ay, discussed, and be told them thet on Tuesday | taee dire is noting in the law wile declares that | S¢,4ve Wandred thousand niggersin the South that | | Recorder Hackes on coming Kor w ant ee oor ‘De denied that the grand democratic demonstration | York paid one quarter of that, wnich was fifteen le were rising and had their hands on the | the bondholder shall be paid in any way different | ang these neopie are placed above the Intatigoaes | CMY received. He said:—I thank you most cor- of last night, which also was a county ratification | Millions of ‘aoliars, and the city of New | throats of tae party that had impoverished them 4 from tle other creditors of the government, (Loud | anq worth of that arent ‘section of the Ta Tt | @lally for the honor conferred upon me in being iy ation | York one-third of ‘that, which was five mil- | 82d who now sought to corrupt t! with their ill nie Our platform says that we go for the same | tg now posed by the radicals to Sanat ate 'd make | called to preside over this meeting. We are met to- tarn out of the people in favor of Horatio Seymour } tions of dollars; so that the citizens of this city tten plunder. The radicals had assembled some j kind of payment, and the same kind of currency for Late ‘this Robb msi ‘and. unboly.. despotiam. i for President, Frank P. Blair for Vice President, ana | were compelled 'to pay five millions of dollars for | time since in this city to commemorate the Lattle of | the government and the people allke—for the bond. Wortantaxpecl tecporeings tr ene ind cr arnt, | cr oe pons Ob Pan mate homitnahipng John T. Hoffman for Governor, surpassed in numbe! keeping ten millions of people, who were their cus- | Atietam, but they never mentioned the name of | holder and for the pensioner. I say the democratic | ment the man who has had at couteapin from the | Made by the democratic party for President, Vice- “ bp umbers | tomers, away from them. The radicals had alo | the generat who won that great battle. They | party believe that no man is entitled to the name of | government, and who expects if this radical policy is | President and for the Govornorship of this State, and enthusiasm any public affair of like kind since | destroyed ‘the. euinping Interest. “Formeriy shine | claimed the victories of the war as the victories of | democmt unless he endorses the democratio plat- | E2%neq out to get more far contracts, buL we expect 4 October, 1859, when the Douglas, Breckinridge and } Were built here, but now that business was done their party; Althongh as many democrats went to | form through, in and out. And those democrats | ffs ‘honest mer of the country will turn over and | 7a the nominations which have been made by the Bell democracy fused in opposition to the radical | & Very large extent by foreign ships. That was not | Aht battles of their country as republicans and | who are c ming that these five-twenties should be support the party of connomny, ANd, ‘of constitutional | 28sembled wisdom of the democratic party has met the worst of it. They had robbed them of their | 88 Many democrats went to lead them as repubii- | Payable in gold are not our friends, but are government. This government should be a govern- with {ts approbation needs no further assurance Tepublican nominations of Abraham Lincoln and | political power. ‘State of New York | cans. Now when they had deprived the Supreme | Wolves|in sheep’s clothing—men who are rolling than the present magnificent, overwhelming demon- Hannibal Hamblin. was entitied to. nine Senators in the Senate | Court of the power to sit in judgment Tipone trem fn wealth and luxury while we are living by the Healt Of eae tas Alls reguecls me ponder stration in point of nambers and ih enthusiasm. 1 of the United States; Massachusetts would be | 8nd tied the of President Johnson 80 as he | sweat of our brows and earning our bread by the | hoidg no bonds, There should be no distinctions in | Propose, fellow citizens, but briefly to en That, perhaps, was the grandest demonstation xf entitled to two and Rhode Island to 43 1-1000 of could not remove them without the consent of a | labor md toll of our hands, (Cheers.) Now, my our attention, as others are to follow ever made by the democratic party in New Yori, | Senator or about 1-25 of one Senator. They £26 | radical Congress, they charged that Andrew Jonson | friends,1 say to you all in conclusion, rally to the | Gf'spbiause from an adjacent. stand rere earane | Whom the. discussion of the pending Issacs and the turnout of last night was only second to it in urped the rights of the State—rights which were | Was responsible for the frauds committed by the | polls onthe a fovember next, and nothing is more | speaker, who leaned forward and said, “I think that | 4F¢ better committed and to whose remarks I espe- bDeilitancy and character. There were those who pro- | BEver conferred upon the eral government. | Tadical officeholders on Sthe cumauy. Having | certain than that the cause of the people, the cause | crowd can outshout us, I’m Inclined to believe there | cially invite your earnest attention. Weare on the . pI ‘They had taken the business of banking ‘away from | Fobbed the people, now when they were | of democracy, the cause of the constitution and | is more fun over there.” Saying which the Captain | eve of an important election—more important and ‘mounced it quite up to that of the fusion parade ‘of 1359; | the States and had substituted in its place an im- | brought to an account they rendered fraudulent | good government will triumph through your votes. | retired, amid applause, in the meantime introduci vital to the life of the republic than any that has oc- Dut in this they certainly err, for it should be remem. | Mense, odious national swindle. They had taxed | Statements of the manner in which the people's | (Cheers) Mr. LUKE CozANS, who said that he thought it | cUrred since its formation. Political speakers have Dered that the members of theparty without excep- | {héDanking syste meets Lookers Aen wet pang money aad thea bacvicea te bee tain the Ui fonand panen r er was then introduced in the | woud be unnecessary for him to utter much on such Deane een tT apoeal, 10 Yom, PI arpa aguas was utterly w joni void. maint ¢ Union ani 5 e , ¥en participated in it, while on last evening there | They had commenced taking the insurance business | the constitution, and having. pent it they now A- O- DAWIG—REMARKS. Whatine Weems A ae issues | if within your memory any greater occasion has / were many avowed partisans of Tammany who, not | 8Way from these States and had already o1 zed | rendered false accounts of its expendifure. The Mr. Davis on coming forward was loudly cheered. | of the hour had taken deep hold of the arisen than the present to excite your patriotism or approving of the nominations of Mi Se an immense national insurance a e next ker, having reviewed the ction acts of | He said that the struggle to-night was between the | popniar heart and that the principles of the demo- to awaken apprehension as tothe future. We have lessrs. Seymour plece of legislation would be like the banking gress, which he declared unconstitutional and | bondhoMers and the people. I believe, however, that | cratic party were endorsed the vor i, He | but recently em from an internecine war 80 nd Biair, Kept themwelves out of the ranks, and if | legisiation for the purpose of taxing the State | vold, next presented the picture of peace which | the caute af the poopie is jast-and What God wi eos. Knew the young men of the country were interested | mizantic in proportions, so destructive in its, effects ted at all it .. | insurance companies out of existence. The radicals | Kentucky presented under democratic ruie, with its r the right. 1 believe that after all this land ia yet . . | that the world has stood aghast and speculated they participa’ was simply in the char. | Warren tae patron ‘of the government, whieh .| D oueeee fe ek eats ee eed Eercoutiane aap. e inntaeen ie ‘e — cepa yey —— of — a tax- | Thon the fatal. overthrow of all republics. pee Of the spectator, and a poabcerencontte oe nes to the Exesutive and the Senate of the | at par in the New York meyer n, contrast ‘with | free meee per scperlocny wpece sicees Sere home be Sd, aan 10 rhino ny Hp lespae 4 mast mic of a lene curatian, 80 shock. ,#t that. There were others ept aw: nited States, and they were now agitating the pro- | Tennessee under radical. rule, with its deeds | equal bonds and eq berties. (Chel rise ore nearl: manity, effec seals of maki oureas eon radical: rule, with its dally deeds | equ peter the day of radical triumph is past, For | Cp live SOG rise ney, eer nore oracerent which this overtaxed community must bear the Deoause they go not care to give in thelradhesion to | Jct ing an educations! a and of of violence an , asession of the internal improvements of the coun- | W88 useless to call for peace wf the | seventy years the lemocratic party gave equal laws . | burthen for years, was with as North onty in- Ahe fortunes of Mr. Hoffman. But notwithstanding | Pott ‘wound. then be en "eaay ne aot the coun. | Tey of neeationsl frejadice aka’ Chate, wers | aod equal rights to all, ‘The republic was loved and | ek? encokies on" industry. and. ‘cuterprise which | auRurated for the Bornose, of putting down a rebel ‘¢Rese Gesertions, if they can be called such,’ the | judicial power of the country. democratic party | fanned. No ent could be bound together | honored at home and and feared abroad— | qemocratic rule alone could give. Mr. John Mul- | lon against what joyal republicans claim to be grand ratification gathering was a complete suc. | Stood Lf ‘eontract that the general government | by any other bonds than those of love. When the | (cheers)—and all men oppressed at home sought here | jaiy and Captain McClellan made brief addresses, | the greatest, wisest and best Da meme on earth. should have certain specified limited powers, and as | States that had been in rebellion laid down their | and found @ safe and secure asylum. arene But | ana were followed by ex-Coroner Gover, who went | We fought for the integrity of the national domain, ‘cepa And worthy of the democracy. to the exercise of tho7e they sald each State | arms under the promise of protection under the con- | since.s few years back another the con- to hold in one indissoluble Union the States whose . See Are at ay aren romans | stitution they were not promised a Prectman’s bu: | trol of the country “and we are th Telusiape: | Onin doheace ot Gott ae Bee ton ee ee origin was conceived. In hatred. to tyranny and op- ‘HE MEETING IN TAMMANY BALL. which were never conferred upon the general gov- | Teau with universal negro suffrage and white dis- into a condition like that of the people of Ireland akers followed. after which the audience gradu- | pression, and for that and that alone did we appeal i ernment they were never given up, and the democ- | franchisement. He concluded by passing a high | or Poland, Who among you have not sighed over the | ally dispersed to enjoy the exhibition of torchligh to arms. Of the chances and eventful res of racy fea inst having the power of the | eulogium on Horatio Seymour. wrongs of Poland when crushed beneath the tyran- cee enjoy the ox jon of torchlights. | tat war it 1s useless for me to s} but I simply Letter of General McClellan—Specches of | People diluted by the taking away ‘of thre reserved SPEECH OF ALLAN C. BEACH. nical power of Russia; who has not sym, ized seek to fix upon your mind the fact that General “Baldy” 8: Mi Sandt rights of the ites. The radicals had also taken ‘The democratic candidate for Lieutenant Governor | with the sufferings of Ireland and of Huhgary? Very NO. 3—GRAND STAND. the war was not waged for the extinction mith, Messrs. Sandford | away the right of sui as to the ten Southern | of the State of New York; Mr. ALLAN C. Bracn, was | few here whos ehearts have not beat responsive to the of slavery, for reconstruction or aught else B, Church, Marphy, Hoffman, Beach, O’Gor- | States, and they intended and threatened to exercise | next introduced. He asked why it was that the peo- | call of the Irish people for aid in thelr sufferings and Mt! PRL OR. PS save to put down an unholy rebellion. man and Others. it 4 to all the Northern ee When the radicals | ple ers iuoirens, of the z ro party, who had | for — eee a ats struggle wish Saale Seeetl ‘This stand was erected at the south end of Union | The agitation ‘Of theslavery question practically eom- took new powers never conferred upon the general | con' ie government for seven years, | tary 5 eers. me pu juestion 7 menced in the House of Re tatives when Johi ‘The interior of Tammany Hall presented a brilliant Sairauat on the’citizens of New York ‘obt four- | why it .was that the Union was to-day Taree to you my friends:—Suppose the Irish? people poppers vt rrr de ratory heart Quincy Adams, then ‘a member from Massachusetts, sppearance, the numerous gaslights at the sides of | fold of the power which they Posseasel, ‘while the | tically dissolved and ten States were to-day | had an opportunity of asserting their manhood pl brea jose erected | pattied right manfully against an almost overwhelm- ‘he hall and the splendid chandelier suspended from wer of the State of Rhode Island was increased | refused representation in Congress; why it was they | at the ballot box, would they vote to tax themselves | for speakers. It was constructed in the form of a | ing opposition to put down the right of petition for wo hundred and twenty-five fold and the | were sabjected to a military ; why the | for the purpose of enabling the English aristocracy | canopied quadrangle, and was handsomely festooned | ‘ts practical abolition. From that moment up to the the centre of the ceiling throwing @ flood of light | state of Massachusetts four times the amount | constitution was overtnrned and a radical Congress | to wallow in wealth, profusion and luxury of every time when President Lincoln, by his t prociam: . a- Giver the densely crowded meeting chamber. From | wiven it. had’ before. Therefore it was to the | had overridden the constitution,. the Bxecutive and | kind—would they ‘tax themselves to support a | With the national fag. On the south face, near the | tion, declared itextinct throughout the land, the sub- an early hour in the evening gentlemen, attenaed by | interest of the State of New York and of all the the judicial departments of the government? The | standing army, to build up Church and to support a | apex of the roof, was displayed a portrait of Sey- | ject never ceased to be agitated. That proclamation in %, other great States of the Union to stand by the | radical y ‘said there was a rebellion, but the | ministry and a creed they abhorred? Ce gay ad Mour; on the western front an oval likeness of | Was fulminated only as an incident of thé war, as ladies, were dropping in and taking up their places | Gemocratic party in this election and thereby to pro- | answer to that was that the rebellion was crushed | If this question was open to the Irish people to de- | piair and on the eastern front a portrait of Hoft- | ®_ Military necessity, to do what any’ combating fm the seats reserved for them at each side of the | tect their own power and interests, more than three years ago, and therefore the state of | cide, would they vote to pay tribute to the bond. P por " | party mignt do in case of war—to cripple an ene- Yeom. At seven o’clock the rush of many feet up the ‘The radical party for the last three years had put | anarchy produced oe, ‘the war should cease. Were | holders of England and to continue astanding army | man. Across the front was a bandeau, having in- | my. No person can at this time doubt the wisdom, into their hands over fifteen hundred millions of | the radicals afraid of the Southern people? If they | for the purpose of oppression Inst themselves ? | scribed on It the words:. the policy of that great act; but it is not true as sairways proclaimed the advent of the sterner sex, | dollars, which was taken from the labor and the in- | were the Union soldier was not afraid of them and | We are not yet in the position of those people; wo sasedropbecnoedtecrecstevesstscersr-resordacsvorty | argon ky the republican party that, tha dewocrare ‘as they rushed en masse on the opening of | dustry of the country. The democratic party called | they now desired to reap the benefit of their services ve yet the ballot box left to us, and it is at the polls REDUCE TAXATION BEFORE TAXATION 3 | Were at any time in favor of the institutyg): all that fe main doors to obtain favorable po- | Upon them to account for what they had done with | in @ restored Union and in the peace and prosperit in'November next the tug of war is to be REDUCES US. 3 | can properly be laid at their door is Wat they in- the. money. For the first four weeks of the cam- | of the country, Was there no such wo between the people the bondholder, between rrcorcsocsooororerstnerocscor@y | Sisted that the its of the Southerners in that in- sitions im the body of the hall. Grafulia’s the radical newspapers and orators had not a | as “forgiveness” in the radical creed? There was, | democracy and radical republicanism. Let ua then stitution should be respected to the extent of con- ‘The corners of the structure ded b; Beventh regiment band was stationed on the | word to say upon the subject of the finances. The | but tt was for those who joined their party. They | meet at the polls in November and then reassert the lure were surrounded Dy | gtitutional protection. And now it ig claimed by Daloony and discoursed martial music during the people, ‘clamored for an answer and the reply for a | had forgiveness for Southerners whose swords had | principles of our revolutionary fathers who fought | Union shields and the whole was artistically illumi- | our adversaries, that we are at peace; that the war f ng time was only “copperhead and rebel;” but | drank blood of Union men, for those who had | and to bequeath us the inheritance of the Union, | nated with gas jets, with globe reflectors. has heen @ success, and that the only impedi- evening. The ornamentation of the hall was con- | that was played out a long time ago. They said | declared they would take no Yankee prisoners: one and tndivisible, which we nave 80 long enjoyed | “7, malas in the vietiity of thie etahd ment in the way of the prosperity of the whole fined to the stationary decorations, comprising the | Frank Blair wanted to fight. In 1861 he did want to | then these men had since joined the radical and which a reactionary and a radical Congress 16 assemblage iy of ind was | is the iclous counsels of the democratic party, ‘arms of the various States of the Union surrounded fa +, Fe a coeeceee seat a ene —_ Roe cond cee a for those tae not. would lege per ros oe It is sherase eas: renee yg hy ous by Son pale Plog violence Meh yapyor % the ni ani through the war eight hundred thousand negroes a against us jon—that we are ys propriate re- | Sou! w success wi toa second re- by gracefully festooned flags; while the statue of | the side of the bravest and ie bees ane ia the « ‘erm. in the Southern States. An inferior and the repeal of Fepoalation, I say that is faise; | marks, introduced to the audience as their chair. | bellion and the dismemberment of our Union. Let u 5 Washington, stern in its marble dignity, looked | But the democratic y, the radi race had that right in order that they might we ate: nothing but abolitionism—(cheers)— | mang James Moncrief, who Popa “three cheers | us reflect for a moment. The country is now bur- from ita lofty pedestal on the eager, anxious, en- | Southern people wey don’t want | manipulated by political demagogues so and it is good religion to diate that. We have | for the democratic ticket,” which were given with | dened with a taxation of between two and three $ to fight, and if nobody else it. Frank Blair | control the election of twenty United states | not repudiated the tution, we have not | rare unction and vocal energy. thousand millions of fae gi mry nn in every form ‘usiastic crowd which filled every available spot on | wanted to fight, let him fight it out. (Applause | Senators, fifty members of the House of | repndiated the law or the principles on which our | to repletion by attired and shape besets us, the has inci uring the floor and galleries. and eo) ‘When Seymour was siecken (oud tatives and seventy electors for Presi- ernment is founded. We will not even repudiate | of the committee and tn gu Graful the past year some sixty millions, and we feel the REMAUKS OF MR. A. OAKRY BALL. cheers) ‘would fly into ten thousand | dent. ‘The radicals would also pay the bondholder | the government debt; but when Seymour is Presi- | band discoursed a number of favorite patriotic and re of taxation in its most odious forms— es and one half of the party would swear that | gold, while the soldier's widow should receive her | dent we will our hands on the Freedmen’s Bu- | local airs. he poor man scarcely able to live from the Mr. A. Oargy HALL, on coming forward, said:— y never belonged to it. The would on in greenbacks, and in addition to her own | reau and tear it to pieces. Cheers.) Your destiny, ADDRESS OF THOMAS C. FIELD. advanced rate of ti necessities of iif, PsLow Crrizexs—It is my honerable and pleas- | go to their holes and peace and prosperity would ea pay part of the taxes of her bondholdi my friends, jsin your own hands. Be true to your- Mr, FIRLD was introduced as the first speaker, and | and the man of moderate means crippled from the rable duty as chairman of the Committee of Ar. reign in the land. At iast, in answer to the clamors | neighbora. But now the people were aroused and | selves and r country, and on the 3d of November | when the enthusiasm had abated proceeded to con- | same causes. We were promised economy in ny. * | of the People respecting the expenditure of the | they were determined not to vote the bread out of | next with Seymoar’s tion to the Presidency we | gratulate the large crowd Dope rhe ea committee | lic expenditures, the reduction of the war debt, the vangements to call this vast assemblage to order. | fifteen mill of dollars, Mr. Atkinson, of Boston, mouths, the clothes off their backs, and to put | will return to the old order of things, when you and | under whose this triumphant demonstra- | removal me pena tl our taxers under the éxac- The committee of this great metropohs and | came out with an auswer, which the entire radical | chains on their necks. ‘The country was rising and | I shall share in equal ita_and privileges with the | tion had been up. He had been it at | tion of wi we were pane but have these fhe great democratic party of the Union ons and a adopted. Mr. Atkinson in de- | in November next there would be such a fority | richest nabobs and holders of the land. | nearly every great popular demonstration in this city ee eee I no answer. The said t e discovered a debt of eight hun- | rolled up for the democratic ag would make | (Cheers). since 1840, but on no occasion had he witnessed | democrats are c! with having Oy this jad expected that circamstances would have | dred millions of dollars that was never thought of, | the radi ’ knees amite r, (A Voice— Music by the band. such an ovation as that presented here it. ‘To | debt. Let us see asto arraignment; the origi- ‘allowed General McCiellan—{cheers)—to have pre- | Which disposed of one half of the amount. He (the | ‘90,000 in this city.” Cheers.) REMARKS BY GREEN CLAY SMITH, OF MONTANA. | look upon such an assemblage would the | nated with the war, that war was inaugurated by a + but I for your we have | Speaker) asked any fair radical if he would support Mr. RICHARD O’GoRMAN next spoke, and chose for Green CLay SMITH, of Montana, was the next | people of the United States that the le of this blican President and was carried on by him and mided; pelied to J tnat peo Lt honor. | & party who nad got the finances into such a confa- | his opening topic the prowess of the Sixty-ninth | speaker. He said if he had come blindfolded to what Co resolved upon a change. ey were | & republican Congress. ‘The expenditures that —— ‘will forego —— which sion they could not teil within eight hundred | regiment in the late war, from which he st; to | he might have been told was a small meeting he red of extravagance, the corrupt and extreme | were made were so made by republicans: the —_ We ne Gk cmnae an A eiuich.| millions of dollars how much debt they pald. | the siege of Limerick by Ginkle, and concluded by | might have th it that the day of resurrection Jegisiation and the doctrines of the republican party. | contracts that were made for war appliances were a ve at your 1 will None of the i -) officers of the govern- | enl Seymour and Blair. During Mr. O’Gor- | come. New York must give five hundred thousand ir candidate wasa soldier, but it was not | made by republican oMceholders, and were given to "y letter should recei your hands ment had imed that more than two | mi the hall became nearly empty, the | majority or the small South would put New ive him their suffrages. The | whom—not democrats, but to republican favorites. = ‘Hat the sub- hundred millions of the debt had been ‘Mr. At- | audience being coaxed away by the music and | York tothe blush. He ‘would speak of reconstruc- | democrat had shown their capacity | What democrat within your knowledge was a con- g LI, amid . profound silence, read jul kinson’s statement was @ false, deceptive cheat, for | cheers of the passil tion. Many men before him had fought in the war | to govern the country did not now require a | tractor? Look around youand reflect who, in this joined letter:— By he said that they paid the expenses of the War De. Mr. De Wrrr 4 . Daccett Hunt next ad- | for the resi of the Union, and baving done | great mill man to govern it, but rather a great | creat city, made money by the war. Was it demo- LETTER OF GENERAL MCLELLAN. ‘ment for fit months out of the taxes, while | addressed the meeting. this @ radical broke iL. statesman. taxes and expenditures under the } crats, or was it republicans, like George Opdyke, Mar- Zerncn, Chetrees, es ‘ae. SCAT Bellowea tor od Sean gy By te oe mec om ited inc cheers meer, vas. eh but on the Path “or November Brome of the oicers of the Trean a iepeeenee bed ‘ao ook at thelr San ; oF ieee Ne ‘st < ne sa 40 . rrow' e government |. | and the m wi Tor our, clase. irreturns of incoines since the A olen in mee ees ores ths’ demcersile man For the quarter ending on the 1st of October, 1865, | Blair, Hofman % nga i ymour and Biair would them back. | lately shown to the people, that year, notwith- | war and learn what it was before the war. Mark the there was about one thousand millions of dollars invitation fonday next. Taoemine the enormous revenue, there would be a | change. Who does not know that the most mon- ‘since ‘ined to abstain from further parti. | which was borrowed by the government, which It is be- virginia, people not determ| radical rule, was kicked out of the Union. deficit of one hundred and fifty mill of dollars. | strous swindies were perpetrated u; the govern- litical life, and therefore find myself compelled | Atkinson falsely stated was out of the tax cause Virginia would not let the blacks have their | If the republican party had done its duty it was the | ment by those who were emplo; ed. by & republic to decline the honot you profer me. I should, b f bala out of tniliions Ma the degradation of the whites, the white | duty of the to continue them in office. “if not | administration! ‘Por cignt years, the govern igi thelr rights. na 1 jowever, be ‘Attend the meeting asa private cilizen, did poten. | DHere Was id out of the " ns own six handred millions before the 1st of July, 1865, and men of ia have been deprived of it was due to ves and to ions to come | ment has been administered b; iblicans, and cana domestic nature, rendered imperative by m; ha dd Speeches by A. J. Rogers, A. C. Davis, Green mos ot Viegiais Bureau was Bronded te contrel the after them to vote for ana clet the democratic | whatever frauds have been oom ied, whatever ula y my oe from the country, detain me from the city upon | there* could not have been paid more hun- question. jilions: ; fence y Smith ers. ballots of the poor blacks; it was right enough to take | ticket. The ability and capacity of the democra debts incurred, ican party is alon ‘avail myself of this MS ge ye to express my ee on “ coy Cty eH erent to the hemo! bay ae care of thet but the sndical party tusde these men of this country hy been amply demonstrated ri 4 ‘onal bmg - iced ny, srmpaty wi a Though frst on the list of numerals of stands No. 1 | Door piack constitution makers, aud no one can take | former years; it had carried the country through | ex that power. I to say, gentlemen, cheers) — 1 my ardent wishes for the success of | Conia commit was to be guilty of a breach of trust. was the last to show anything like & goodly number in the administration the government or | four successful wars. Since 1865 to January, | that I cannot claim for the democratic party what is any by re tee I He proposed to carry tl fo wat into Africa—that was | of auditors or a fair tation of the orators se: ws of the Southern States who wili not acknowl- | 1868, during three years of peace, it has cost | always claimed by republicans—entire honesty, in- - hasiperesen ita of the blacks, The radicai lawmakers | an ” equal amount for the administration of tegriy and truly loyal to the best government ‘under ent by the 3. Beparated ns — i ‘thos am from the distinguished soldi ho hi into husetts, (Laughter.) Not only had Mr. edge the ™ der of “our opponenta, tute what had been J lected to speak in favor of the democratie ticket and | fake it incumbent, on. the People of the Soutn to | the government wo what it had coat during | the celestial canopy: but tne T do claim: that the democratic cause— | ground. The highest crime that @ public servant the len of our — opponer inson failed to # been di wi J know that you will agree with mein the highest Feapect for Sy whe was actually received by the raat. Platform. The few curious spectators that for a con- | associate with the negroes land. This isa | the seventy-two years of ite previous history. | within the t eight years if any money par tes age, he has rendered our country ; pul it ie my convic- 1 cals, but he (the speaker) asked him to tell the | siderable time patiently awaited the appearance of degradation that the whites of the South will not | Every man could ioox into these figures for himself | has been len from the government or the measures of the party which has placed him in | American people how much they had th a th Ae in | submit to, The country is looking to New York. | and ascertain whether they were exaggerated. | the rights of the whole people abused, it is " Ad ¢ President and those who were to support him In | we away ont beyond the Mountains call upon | Every man was a contributor to the maintenance of | properly chargeable apon the republican patty, the ve br ey — reached th ’ lore peace oF couetitutional supremacy, atid thua complete | that Nad never eee as godfather co the Taine and des | the proceedings of the evening, were at last almost | you to stand by the Union, and do not because Grant | this government, and they, had contributed one- | men to whoin the destinies of the country have been Cua wekiiciesereoume | amare Teport ba Mr. Atkinson, stated in a report to | all drawn off to the neighborhood of the grand | Was # eral ees fie as aren Es py th tae Oy ee ee taxes of the impropery — We are here to-night for the been be ty in! you lect Seymo' kne urpose of nominations. ra ite Gay inte te Tanner ae | stand on hearing the first notes of the | vember you will never have an Grelect: | well Before the wat, tas tey paid mx dollars per | Reymour, our standard bearer, 1 need not allude. : soldier Gente cient ‘which tuey | taxes never found its way into the Treasury—an opportunity ee cas tha roles wore nat in tee le amount equal to two hundred and fifty or three hun- | band stationed thereon, Stand No, 1 looked | in er President, mark my words for it, "The | barrel for their four ind about one-quarter of what | His name and reputation as a great and good man A Ui f States and hearts; an invigorated con- | dred millions of dollars. He desired to ask | south, and embraced within the view from ical wilt ve you of the it to vote | they now pay for their beef and mutton. By the | need no tribute at my hands, No better nomination stitution, to be firmly and pee, ; the main- | Mr, Atkinson how it was that two doliars a gal- ne | and declare you unfit for the exer of the | maladministration of the republican party alone they | could have been and truly as the san shail Se eee ee in er ane inaceteecatTest | lon was put upon high wines, and the law did the platform a very fine coup darth | ballot. The country if Ina state of revolution. Her | were now compelled to pay these enormous prices. | riso and set on the 3d of November next, will receive tr@e harmony and ‘aati oa snihese ae the objet tor not apply to the quantity on hand? Every man knew | transparencies presenting on the right hand in their people are mourning—heaven itself mourns—for | He would admit that the expenses of maintaining | the entire unanimous vote of the demo- which every oltiten should how sirives and believing these to | that members of Congress and radical politicians | glittering array and tp their artistic arrangement two | [he liberties about to be torn from us if we do not | the government consequent upon the late civil war | cratic party. And now a word as to the reat in the success of the democratic cause, by the election of | bought largely of high wines before that tax was put | peantifally illuminated half circles of crescents, Instat our rights. I call upon {une men, boys | had greatly increased, but they were fraudulently | republican nominee, General Grant. I have known ‘the eminent statesmen selected to represent the party, itis | on and pocketed the two dollars @ gallon. It would and middie aged men, old men children—I call | and extrav: tly augmented, According to the | him for about eighteen years, and can but speak Sa eee eevee Cat onene ate private citizen. (Re | not take a great many barrels of high wines to make | Chinese lanterns, edged off with similar variegated | upon you to remember what your fathers did before | statement of Director Delmar there would be this } well of him asa man. Nothing could induce me at ok renset that you will convey to the gentlemen ot | #,man rich at that price. He desired to ask Mr. At- | lights down the streets running lateral from the | you, and maintain and preserve the freedom the old = adeficit of nearly $20,000,000, and it would be | any time, upon any occasion, to speak of a political the ‘and my sther friends for whom fou act, ‘my | Xinson what had become of the hundred millions of | square, The space in front of the stand was lighted men of republic a ues to (Cheers.) | found by looking at the Treasury statement that the | antagonist except in terms of respect, and the man sincere thanks for the compliment they have paid me, dollars a ‘which was collected on whiskey, not ‘Speak out for liom, for the constitution, for the | administration will expend 000,000 this year | who descends to personal abuse and low scurrility in Tam, most 4 ZoUrt, if a dollar of which ever reached the Treasury? Did it | °D ®# clear as noonday by a very fine calcium light | jaws; stand by the law and the constitution, by the | for the suj of the national government. It was | speaking of another whose only fault may be thai he EORGE B. MCCLELLAN. | not go to enrich the pockets of radical Congressmen | shining from over the portico of the Metropolitan | government and the Union—(cheers)—and.by the fag | now for the spoople to say whether they would con. | is in political antagonisin deserves and has my pro- After reading General MoCiel'an’s letter Mr. Hail | and politicians all over the country? While men had | Democratic Club house on Fourteenth street, almost | Of your country. | (heers.) Unue this party in power. That party had claimed | found contempt. I truly thiak that General Grains eontinued:—But Iam instructed by the committee | been laboring £0 a4 port their families those rascals | at the limit of the view from the stand. The ground jusic by the band. i credit’ for the manner in which they | deserves the approbation of every right-mindedt ry form the next agreeable orf to the one [ | had been fliching their op fa the public Treas- | thus lighted up was wnceasingly promenaded REMARKS BY ALGRNON 8. SULLIVAN. jad conducted =the vernment dui the | man for the fact alone that it was under ed of General McClellan, and | ury. Mr. Atkinson said in his speech that the asso- | by crowds of people who passed to and Mr. ALGERNON 8, SULLIVAN Was the next speaker. | war, bat it would not do for times of » Aman | his guidance as Commander-in-Chief that the that fs to nominate as your presiding oficer his | ciation with which he was connected had several | fro enjoying themselves and making moat He calied upon all democrats to stand together firm | who, some eight years ago, cor put $10,000 | rebels finally laid down their arms. Various bosom his counsellor, his fate—a man | millions of dollars against the government on the | of the occasion and the citcametances that had | at the coming election. ‘There was now no Butler at | into government securities, now holds twenty-eight | criticisms by mili men and others are ai in the annals of that Army of the | ist of April, 1865, and that that amount was after- | drawn them together, and feeling as if the. gaudily | (he Hoffman louse to terrify them. It was only in | thousand dollars—off government promises to pay— volunteered to show that General Grant is not de- Potomac which sowed the seed of the crop of glori- | wards received in seven-thirty bonds; that those | decorated stands, the brilliant Nights, the inspiriting | the past that the determination and patriotism of | the interest and principle both payable in gold. Was | serving of the mii reputation with which he is ous successes which others reaped and gave no | bonds were exchanged for five-twenty bonds, and musto, the rockets bursting in air, the firing of can- Gene of Manhattan prevented them from wit- | it right that the government should pay him this | generally accredited, Of such matters | am unabie credit to the sowers for—one who also served as a | then complained because the democratic party | non anti the excitement generally had been got M4 nessing thefestablishtnent of marshal law in this city. | enormous sum, together with interest? It was | to judges but I would not take from him one laurel and would not pay him gold for the five-twenties. That | for their special behoof and enjoyment. The stand, because that in ‘and principal comes | which | think he has justly earned; for, under his was sanctifies| shoddy. He (Mr. Atkinson) made a | with the exception of the indispensable Chinese jan- from the labor of the workingmen. (Cheers.) While | sway, peace followed a ‘and’ dubious strife, terns, the festoons of flags and a small banner of the these workt contributed their taxes and | But, with this imperfect trii to the tness of « contract to furnish the government go with cloth, and their lives to war and sacrificed everything to | General Grant asa military chief I would ask what Preserve the government, the bondholder merely | there is about him, pertaining 9 his character, ante- it was very likely shoddy, and he was mad atthe | Democratic Union Cinb, to whom the stand be democratic because won't him a |i ted no other ornament, motto or de- 2 profit of forty per cent. He wanted in curren vice. ‘was a large force of police in attend. made a fortune and enriched himeelf at the expense | cedents and educa’ which should entitie him to seven millions of dollars for his five mil- | ance upon and around the stand, who for of the people. Any one could observe the re- | your votes? Ifhe has fought and has he not Mons—and he took that mere! ‘way of l- | & weal A of time had lete charge iy presses and orators claimed that the result Been rewarded ? privace life he atte lustration—which, added 3 See! aed of the |» having no One else to in in Maine Was indicative of the ‘The | into the ranks, and as he became for In ep = a he agreed ae pL Ls gi the pm ell issues this fall and last fall s his valor and success preferment attended him, aud morn hich said their H ‘anxious imeelf Last there were local whic! " — morting are “hat "roan tthe aleeity at | of ais opesdh ani tm commence the proceedings be- entered’ “largely” into’ the” canvass Of a OCONTINURD ON TENTH PAGE