|ftlcltcnvi) ^laiutlcalcv I. VAN SLYKE. Editor sntl Publisher. TtfcHENRY, •• - '<1 ILLINOIS. ILLINOIS NEWS. fazewell comity fair left the as- 4»pciaticn $900 ahead iu its finances. THE Illinois Central Company's ele vator. at. Cairo, will, when finished, cost $225,000. 7" THE students enrolled at the Southern Illinois Normal University last week numbered 192. " WESLEYAN students, at Bloomington, talk of petitioning Gov. Cullom to license students' corps. THERB are ninety-five schools in Kane -county, with 1,111 teachers and officers -and 7*810 scholars. A PKKIN butcher found his wagon jjerched on top of the Rupert warehouse, the other evening, the work of raischiev- -tms boys. THE Ottawa bottle factory commenced operations last week. Running at its full capacity it will give employment to 160 IuuhIB. £ A SANDOVAL girl, about to be married, -committed suicide because her father had siiid if she married she must forever •quit his house. . A PKiGHTFT ii murder took place in Dal ton the other night. Two Irishmen quarreled about a money matter, and a .young man named Dunii shot his uncle, :,named fitzgerald, dead. The murderer is under arrest. MR. MAIEBHOFFER, of Ottawa, was Aerribly injured at his plow works by the breaking of a 1,600-pound grindstone. It was but last week that Philip Gus- weiller was killed in Maierlioffer's works by the bursting of an emery wheel. S. P. BARTLETT, State Fish Commis sioner, is visiting the lowlands along the Sny levee, lately overflowed, in a small steamer, and is rescuing millions •of tisli left iu the ponds by the receding of the river. He will use them to stock the Illinois river. Gov. CULLOM, having received the of ficial certificate of Gen. Walker, the •Superintendent of the Census, stating that the population of Ctxjk county is 607,578, has issued a call for the election of four additional Superior Court Judges of the county, in accordance with the provisions qf the act of 1875. SOME laborers, while recently excavat ing fc r an ice pond on the property of •George Lindsey, in the village of Paw- Paw, Lee county, uncovered the entire skeleton of a mammoth. The excava tion was on the border of what at one time was a large marsh or shallow lake. The remains were found about five feet below the surface, imbedded in a sandy clay. THIS ceremony of the laying of the corner-stone of the new Episcopal •Church of the Redeemer, at Elgin, oc curred last week. Bishop McLaren, of Chicago, ofticiated, and Revs. Arvedson, of Algonquin, and Cleveland of Dundee, assisted the Bishop in the consecration. The foundation is completed, and the edifice will be completed by next spring, at a cost of $4,000. Mr. H. Lee Borden donated the lot, valued at $1,500. Miss ANNA MOORE was married last week at Mendota, to Arthur Merritt, of Melugen Grove. There was present at the nuptials a maternal grandmother of some five or six antecedent generations, nearly twice that of telegraph ; there is a property valuation of at least $3,000,v 000.000; six prosperous States and ninef Territories, growing in wealth and popu lation, now producing in precious metals at least $85,000,000 anuuallv, and also embracing the three largest wheat-grow ing States in the Union. * GEN. WEAVER. Be Write* a Vl«orou« Letter to FrMk •iHfhcc, of Peusjrlvuia-WordN tbai Mr. H«cim Caaaot yrct. Gen. Weaver has written the following letter to Frank Hughes, of Pennsylva nia, in reply to Hughes' letter denounc ing him for opposition to the Fusion electoral ticket in Maine : INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., Sept. 27. To the Hon. Fraak Hughes, Pottsville, Pa.: I find in the Democratic daily of this city a telegram s:gned by yourself, and directed to uie. concerning my opposition to a division of ! ttie electoral ticket with the Democratic party j in Maine. I have not received a copy through the office, bnt the same was received in this city last night by a prominent Democratic poli tician, and. as we would naturally expect such a dispatch to be placed in the hands of our enemies, I am inc lined to think it is genuine. I *rn opposed to a joint electoral ticket with the Democratic party in Maine or with the Republican party in West Virginia, as has been requested in that State, and will prevent such action in any section of the Union if within my power. I am just from West Virginia, and, as the people will lxjar me out, I openly opposed such fusion ill every speech delivered there. I am in favor of an o;x'ii. straight light against the Democratic and .Republican wings of the money power, and have no choice between them. If von had *o take your choice and go where you belong, it is impossible for the Greenback part;- to over throw the old parties by forming an alliance with them to place them in power, nor can an honest man have any respect for a party organization that will do so. You. sir, have the right to differ with mo in opinion, but yon mistake the senti ment of the Greenback voters oi' this nation if you think they arc in favor of dividing our electoral ticket anywhere with either of the old parties. Wo shall see whether Solon Chase and myself have forfeited our claims to the confidence of the people by the course we have taken in Maine, or whether you have forfeited your standing in the Greenback party by elan- derin" the men who are risking health and even life in defense of the right iu building np our organization. As to your insinuation that I am actuated by sinister motives in anything said or done by me during the campaign". I de nounce you as a slanderer and a calumniator. JAMES B. WEAVER. A Circular Letter to the (irrrnbacken. The following is a circular letter ad dressed to the Greenbackei s of the Union by their caudidate for President: ' INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., Sept. 27. 1880. To the Groeuback-Lalxir Men throughout the United States: I earnestly request that von have struck off by the thousand tor circulation in each county full extracts from Mr. Bayard's New York sjx-ech, in which he says that the Demccratic candidate for President and Vice President, and the Democratic part v. are in favor of his bill to destroy the greenbacks, and that they will carry out that policy. Publish the lhiyard resolution, with the full extract from his speech, so that the people may know just what it is that the Democratic partv and its candidates arc pledged to carry out. The issue is now iiiuy made up. Let every Greenbaeker in the Union arouse himself to the real situation and bi-and as an infamous traitor to our holy cause any man, without regard to his former standing in our party, who attempts to transfer our voters to either of the old parties. J. B. WEAVER. (•en. Weaver Sustained fo»" the \ew York, and Philadelphia (ireenback* erw. NEW YORK, Sept. 28. To the Hon. .Tames B. Weaver: The action taken by the representatives of the National Greenback-Labor party at their last convention in Maine finds no favor among the members of that partv here. Since that 6RANT AND C0NKUN& .y* Hero of Appomattox Gives His Eeasons for Being a . Republican. Ia His Characteristic, Clear-cut, Terse, , Forcible and Comprehensive Phrase. They Axe a Masterly Summary W the Facts of the Political Situation (treat Sew York Senator pawn All Him Former Effort Sn ho is 110 years and 9 months old, and ! action was taken I have received commnnica- is remarkably active for a lady of ex treme old age. She gave her opinion as to the most suitable attire for tire bride, liov,- the rooms should be decorated, the tables laid, etc., and entered into the festivities of the occasion iu .a manner that might be considered juvenile and emulative in a person of three score and ten. The lady in question is Mrs. •Catherine Evans, born in Green street, Philadelphia, Jan. 1, 1770. tions from over two-thirds of the counties in this State, every one of which commends your wisdom in opposing fusion everywhere, and Solon Chase patriots in resisting it in that State. The cuuning of the. money power could not be more clearly manifested than it. has Insen in holding out the tempting bait offered our friends in Maine in order to demoralize a nddis* organize our party throughout the entire bal ance of the country. The question now is, shall that device succeed, or shall we pursue i> straightforward course, and demonstrate that the intelligence of the American people lias One of the greatest Republican demonstra tions of the campaign was that at Warren, Ohio, on the 28th ult., at which Gen. Grant presided, and speeches were delivered by Messrs. Grant, Conkling and Logan. Between 25,000 and 30,000 people were in attendance, and the enthusiasm was unbounded. 'Jen. (arant'n AdJwwi j LADIES AND GENTLEMEN : I hope we may be j able to have quiet and order here. It is not important, so far as anything that I will have to say to you is concerned, because I shall not I be able to make many of yon hear ; but: after ; me comes a speaker whom I know yon will all • be glad to hear, and yon can do so bv keeping quiet and orderly. Not being accustomed to speaking publicly, I have drawn off the few words that I will say in advance of the geutle- , man who is to follow me. [Taking a roll of manuscript from liis pocket, the General read.] In view of the well-known character and ability of the speaker who is to address yon to- ; day, and his long public career and association ! with the leading statesmen of the country for the past twenty years, it would not be becoming in me to detain you with many remarks of my . own. But it may be proper for me to account ! to you. on the first occasion of my presiding at a political meeting, for the "faith that is in me." I am a Republican, as the two great political parties are now divided, because the Republican party is n national party seek ing the greatest good of the greatest number of its citizens. There is not a precinct in this vast nation where a Democrat cannot cast his ballot, and have it counted as cast, uo matter what the predominance of the opposite party. He can proclaim his political opinions, even if he is one among a thousand, without tear and without , proscription. There are fourteen States, and localities in some others, where Republicans have not that privilege. This is one reason why I am a Republican, but I am a Republican for many other reasons. The Republican party assures protection to life. projK'rty, public credit, and the payment of the debt.-; of the Government, State, county or municipality, so far as it cr.n control. The Democratic party does not promise this. If it does, it has broken its pronnse to the ex- i tent of hundreds of millions, as many Northern Democrats can testify to their sorrow. I am a Republican as between existing par ties, because it fosters the production of the field and farm, and of manufactories, and it en courages general education of the poor as well as the rich. The Democratic party discourages all these when in absolute power. The Republican party is a party of progress and of liberality toward its opponents. It en courages the poor to strive to better their con dition ; the ignorant lo educate their childreu, to enable them to compete more successfully with their more fortunate associate*, and, in tine, it secures an entire equality before the law of every citizen, no matter what his race, na tionality, or previous condition. It tolerates no privileged class of men. Every one has the : opportunity to make himself all he is capable of. Ladies and gentlemen, do you believe this call be truthfully said in the greater part of fourteen of the States of thus Union to-day wliich the Democratic party control absolutely V The Republican party is a party of principles, the same principles prevailing wherever it has a foothold. The Democratic party is united in but one tiling, and that is in getting control of the Government in all its branches. It is for in ternal improvement at the e\Duisti-*>fr"~T"*~-* it. (n one iwetioii Mwragalntft 4his in an- equalized value is $180,877,230. In other. It favors repudiation ol' solemn obliga tions in one section and honest payment of its debts ia anotlier (where public opinion would not tolerate any other view). It favors fiat monev ill one place and good money m another. Finally, it favors the •' pooling of all issues" not favored by the lb ]>ftblicans, to the end that it may secure the one principle upon which the party"iB a most harmonious unit, namely, gain ing control^ of the Government in all its some part of every the last year. I hospitably received at every place 1 stopped. Mv receptions were not by the Union class alone, fmt by all classes, without distinc tion. I had free talk with many who were Cook county the assessed value, $85,- i partv through which they can ever hope to re- 635,lfi5, was equalized to $100,103,14:3, j bun the confluence and support of the pronto , ' ^ , m, ry ' of ilivt Staff;. \our a<lvico throughout tiu« hv addiiur 17 t>er cent. The Committee 01 , THE State Board of Equalization has j k°Pt Pft?® t,ie cu,"'inS received the report of the Committee of j tlJT^Uime have^ansorl^d 7"l,",nv" Assessment of Town and City Lots. The ' n Vhe accumulations of honest industry ? g^iatelv in'rebeUkin witliTii"tli report shows the number of town and The unanimous opinion of all here is that-to , hosiiitablv received at •citv lots iu the State to be 859,596, with ! touch one or the other of the old parties is to »o*pitabt> rce.v. a an' average value of $201.56. The as- be tainted, and to embrace wilier-is death. I i i ; uitTo osn KQA „ t (i,„ sineereiv hope ti.at our fr.ends m Mann: will sesseu value is ^17o,2b0,o90, ana the K(iriri ,1^-0^1'- the nlot that was laid for them . , . .. . , , , . . - - soon U.S..OVL. uit pioi ' agamst us in the war, and who have been against and hasten tueir return to the fold of the only ^ ltcpi,blicau parly over hj:,ce. They were in all instances reasonable men. judged by what thev said. I believed then, and believe now. by adding 17 per cent. The Committee ] --T .™^nvUi""f ""1 that llic>\ -«u^rely want a breakup in the "sol- on the Assessment of Personal Property ; submitted its report. The figures for ' Cook county are as follows : Assessed ! value of personal property, $22,572,668 ; ; per cent, of addition adopted by the j committee, 25; amount added, #5,04:5,- j 667; equalized value, $27,228,335. I11 ; Du Page county the per cent, of addi- ! tion is 12, and in Lake county 36. This 1 makes the equalized value of personal ' property in those counties S994.859 and ; •$1,115,768 respectively. The total as- : sessed value of personal property in the , State is §165,091,710; the equalized} value is $170,317,509, and the net addi- i tions amount to $5,225,790. | tire campaign, and especially that contained ir. mr.r communication from Indianapolis y, s- Urdny. will meet with a hearty "amen" from ••vorv honest National Greenbaeker and work ing "man in the country, and your answer *o Hughes' impertinent communication should cover all of a like character emanating from any source whatever ; for all such onlv indicate the degree to which their authors have been tainted. Let us avoid being drawn into the snare set for us, bnt c ontinue to educate the people in the great prim ipie of our nartv. regardless of the effor s of the money ; power to divert public attention from them, and bv so doing draw back into our fold all who have unintentionally erred in judgment. Let I 11s look with commiseration at the humiliation I now resting on the eli>queiit \oorhees and the f gallant F.wing. the fiery Brock, the spirited ! Ilright, of Tennessee, and the 1125 other Demo- ! eratic members of Congress who hold seats in ! that bodv through their advocating Green- ! back principles : for surely they are objects of ' pitv when such a man as Belmont again planes I himself at the head of the Democratic i column and proclaims to the world I that it makes no difference whether the Repub lican or the Democratic party wius at the com- Exposed at Last. Dr. Tanner says that his theory that persons can live without much food, and that the imagination and the will are very good substitutes for tangible nourishment, was suggested to him at a ! ing election, for with either the present system churea oyster supper in Michigan. Says ; of robbing the people will be continued, and the Doctor: "An oyster supper was an nounced on Sunday evening from the pulpit, to be given by the Ladies' Home Missionary Society, and, as charity be gins at home, I purchased a ticket for fifty cents. It was a pleasant gathering, -socially, and I noticed that after par taking of the water--excuse me, the oys ter soup -- the ladies and gentlemen .present, seemed contented and full of spirit. That set me to studying, and after attending several such gatherings in different parts of the country I ar rived at the corfihlusion that this matter of gratifying the inner man is governed -a great deal by imagination." Jio hing l.fke Buttermilk. A prominent physician declares there is nothing like buttermilk for hot weather drink. It is both drink and food; sup ports the system and even in fever will •cool the stomach admirably: is a most valuable domestic medium, and will cure all the infamous acts of past legislation in the '• interest of incorporated capital will be carried ; out. While Bayitrd repentedlv. by authority, i informs the* country that both the caiuhdatot* for resident and Vice President on the Demo- ; cratic ticket are pledged to the destruction | of all legal-tender notes, and the perpetua- I tion of tho national-bank system of j monev monopoly snd usury. Surely (ireen- ! back ' Democrats' will no longer talk about i votes cast for Weaver and Chamlw.s ! In ing thrown away when such eminent author ities as Belmont aiid Bayard pledge the Demo cratic partv to hard-money principles. The ; gold-bag* of the Kothsehilds must bo the i future pillow of the Greenback Democrats. The succe-s of either Garfield or Hancock will ; bring 110 comfort to them. Their votes will be | thrown away, whichever wins. Let them, j then, if they will, continue to vote for the in- eon^tvnt and lrrccognizatde doctrine of mod- I mi Democracy, while we pursue our old way, i and march to victory. I E, GEOBOE A. Jo Si*. | Cnairman New York State Committee or the ; National Greenback-Labor party. i PHn.ADEL.PmA, Sept. 29. i 'MM. lanifs Tt. Weaver: We heartily and fully indorse the sentiment* dvsentery as well as, and more quickly, 1 . ontaired in'vour Iudfanapolis letter yesterday, than any other remedy. That's all ' - J l- -- •-- «... right: buttermilk may accomplish all that our learned friend claims for it, but that fact will not change our belief that there are many persons who will, during , the heated weather, cling with remaak- [ •able pertinacity to another kind of drink and believe that even- true Greenbaeker iu the country will sustain you in your opposition to fnjM'.-n." E. M. DAVIS. HEXHY ( 'AREY BAIKD WM. CBOOKS. CHAH. S. KEVHKI:. IN Dueker vs. State, the Oregon Su- --one "that is imbibed through a straw ' preme Court lately heard a case in which and teuds to exhilarate the drinker.-- Troy Times. The Changes of Thirty-one Years. In 1849, when gold was discovered iu -California, there was not l>etweeu the Missouri river and the Pacific ocean, or from Manitoba to Sonora, over 25,000 persons of Caucasian stock, and not 30,- 000 all told speaking in English as the tongue of their nativity. Now there are 3,000,000 persons in the same area; the facts were that A by mistake paid to B a roll of §20 gold pieces, supposing it to be a roll of half dollars. B stibse- 1 quently discovered the mistake, and | knew who was the owner, but neverthe- i less then appropriated the money to his i own use, and refused on demand to \ and id South" political condition. Tl«ey see that it is to their pecuniary interest as well as to their happiness that there should lie harmony'and confidence between all sections. They want to break away from the sl:>v»rv wliich binds them to a party name. They want a metext that enough of them can unite upon to make it re spectable. Once started, the solid Spilth will go as Kuklukism did before, as is BO admirably told by Judge Tourgee iu his " Fool's Errand. ' When the break comes those who start it will lie surpris"d to find how many of their frie*<ds have tx'en iu favor of it for a long time, and have only beeu waiting for some one to take the lead. Tins desirable solution can only be ob tained by the defeat, and continued defeat, of the Democratic party as now constituted. Speech of Senator Conkllnff. MB. CHAIRMAN" AND FELLOW-CITIZENS OF OHIO--not of Ohio alone, because Illinois is here, and Pennsylvania is here: For a wel come so great and so warm I beg yon all to re ceive a stranger's hearty thanks ; and yet not all a stranger, because I find the Western Re serve jKxipied with those whose brothers and whose kindred are neighbors of mine. This is. indeed, a grand meeting. Its presid ing officer is the most illustrious citizen of the repnblic. It is held in a grand Republican Htate, a State which, I trust, will give to the country the ne.xt President ol the United States. I see the woods and even the rafters are full of them. Ohio is the cliild of Virginia. Connec ticut ceded the Western Reserve, but Ohio is the child of Virginia. Ohio is 77 years old this year. Within the memory of men still living the tomahawk and the searing-knife did deeds of savage .cruelty where now temples of religion, temples of education, and temples of industry outglitter each other in the broad sunlight of a wonderful civilization. Wheu Ohio began her jteople were few, and they were strangers in the land. She began with 45,000 , people. To-day she has 3.200.000. Geologists say that your soils, fertile and rich as thev are. m-cding only to lie tickled with a hoe to laugh with a harvest--they say that more than half of them came from far. far distant regions-- ! clays and gravels washed by the surge and the drift of gigantic primeval forests. This is typ ical of the people I see around me. Not only f nun New England, but from Old England, from Inland, from Scotland, from cold Norway and Sweden, from warm, sunny France.from every clime where humaiiitv straggles, came to Ohio men and women willing and eager to eat their bread in the sweat of their brow. What brought these men and women here? What made Ohio the rendezvous and asylum of strug gling humanity in all nationalities? Liberty and free labor. Ohio, the child of Virginia, as she rose from her cradle, turned her back upon the precepts and examples of the mother State, i The people who came here of all nationalities were hound by one common tie : they worshiped one God under different forms, and they IK - i lieved iu the batherhood of God and the broth- , crhood of man. Here, on this soil, parent and child have illustrated two opposing systems , of civilization. Ohio, respecting the digiiity of labor, believing honest labor tho true founda tion and passport to all reai progress like make restitution. The court held that he was guilty of larceny. greatness, has risen meteor THE Irish Royal College of Surgeons has lately severely cautioned its mem bers against having any communications there are 10,000 miles of railroad and I with homeopatliists. into the very zcnitjli. of the great republic. Virginia, believing that labor is degrading, that drudgery is menial and base, that capital shonld own labor, has stagnated and weltered half smothered in the pool of servile labor. One of these systems has prospered exceedingly; the other system has been enervated, has remained prostrate, has cursed and rebelled, and at last drowned itself and slavery in its own blowl. Hand in hand with respect for labor has gone in Ohio what we have learned to call the Amer ican system. That is a system of laving duties 011 imjxirts so as to tax those which come in competition with our domestic industries. What has been the result of tliisV Diversified enterprise. The farmer has found at his own door a market for his productions, and the manufacturer has sold to the farmer, and American labor has found reward, not in the starving wages of the Old World, but in wages which could buy the comforts and the luxuries of life. In the inexorable logic of events twentv years age 011a of the systems triumphed iu the choice of national rulers. By a clear, plain majority the people chose for President Abra ham Lincoln. You may well cheer him. for Lincqln was one of those who darken nations when they die. The Virginia system It fused to abide by the result, and uplifted the bloodv banners of revolt, plunged the country into a red sea of revolution, drenched the"lend with blood, buried it with taxes, and draped it in mourning. Ohio sent 300,00ft of her bravest and her best to tread a path over burning plow shares--for what ? In order that the great re public or human rights might not perish from the earth. The dark eclipse of war could not put out the bright torch of llbcrtv. of freedom and of equal rights for man. 'And Ohio has continued to prosper, until she stands to-dav one of the grandest, one-of the freest, one of the most glorious comnionwealhts in human history. Her sister State of Pennsvlvania and every other State which lias plie<T the plow, the loom, and the hammer; everv other State which before God snd man has believed in hu man equality and in the dignity and the rights of free labor ; which has clung to the system I of protection of home industries, along" with ; her has prospered also. But in the midst of ] all this prosperity a harsh voice rings through the land demanding a change. What change ? I Whence comes this cry for change ? Wuo wants a change V [Voiced, "• Hancock." " No body." and "Jeff Davis wants it"] Well, now, which do you mean ? One says Hancock, and anotlier says nobody. That makes me tiunk of a neighbor of my friend here [pointing to Gen. Grant], who told about his horses, and he said one looked so much like both that he could not tell the other from each. I ask you who wants a change, and what change? Is not the debt melting away ? Has not the interest charge--the grind ing feature, never forget, of all debts--been falling, falling, falling? Has not taxation rapidly disappeared ? Ia not the currency solvent, stable and honest ? What is the trouble ? The South wants a change. Whv ? 1- uie South unfortunate? Why? Mr. Presi dent, Jonah's gourd, according to the good book, grew as the South has grown, if wean- to believe tho wonders of the census. South Caro lina in ten years has increased 43 jx r cent, iu population. They are a wonderful growing people. \'ou know and Jl knew that there is but one way under God in which that census can he tnie, and that is by foreign immi gration. No, sir, it has fcecu a good State to go from. As to immigration iu South Carolina, let me say iu passing that, having taken some pains to ask, 1 am able to soy that m ten years the foreign immigration to South Carolina amounts to exactly 137 persons. I i have read from distinguished sources that this ; census in South Carolina is not impossible. I I say it is, for a great many reasons, one of which I only I am going to give you. Whenever in a State you lind three men where befon* there were only two, ninety men where liefore there 1 were only sixty, you may be sure that the i>ro- ; duction and consumption and the hundred | other tell-tale tests wiil testify to the fact. (Here the sjteaker guve the production of: Nmth J Carol 11a for the past twenty years, showing. ' as in his New York speech, her sad and larnent- I able retrograde during that time. | ("lenient | Vallandigham had once said in Congress that J politics was King. Politics had been too much King in South Carolina. Had there Inen more ' of a disposition after the war to go to work and j pay less attention to politics there would lie an 1 increase, and no such attempt as thi-i to over count the people lor political effects. Well, now : let me say here, I see gentlemen close around i me busy with their pens, Ind I expect to hear | that, even in the few words I have uttered, I have l>een Stirling up the smoldering eml ers of i sectional hate ; that I have been lighting over again the issues of tho war; that! have been 1 making an attack upon Sooth Carolina and the I South. As was said in a recent letter by the illnstri- j ous citizen who presides here to-day. not more i for the sake of the North than for the sake of j the South do I come to-day to lift up my feeble I voioe to you in opposition to that «ron:.;-hcad- i ed organization known as the Democratic party, j Why, the speaker asked, did the South cry out I against tho General Government and tlie ad- ! ministration of national affairs't Had the | South been unkindly treated? No. Let me j say to you that 110 purpowysfnrther from nu>- hcurt." No patriotic ! te.'s£rtr,,rMt,lo 1 West of-our country. <V>uM 1 sit down and j rejoice over the poverty, the distinctions, the I agitation of the South, I should despise lm *lt , as a false soli, false to the interests of that ! great State which nas so honored me. and whose | interests and honor are so dear to me. Bnt • truth is a torch, and the more you shake it the | brighter it burns. i Nowhere in earthly annals was there an in- I stance in which the victors were so generous, so j magnanimous to k vanquished foe. If anybody did not believe it, let him lead the terms w hich Grant preserilied to Robert K. Lee at Apponiat- ' tox. liobert E. Lee, who. educated at the ua- | tion's cost, and presented with the nation's | sword, • drew that sword against the nat'oaX ! life. When in the hour of humiliation and ! prostration he came to surrender, and present- 1 ed the hilt of that sword to the great Captain j at whose feet he had been compiled to lay it, ! the victorious General of the Union i-. id : i " No : put np thy sword : go and sin no more." Uueowed" in their defeat, tliey were told to go home to then- fair fields, and make them blossom as the rose. When Napoleon made his raid 011 Germany and failed, what did ! Germany, with the Emperor and Bisimrck to I dictate "terms, n-quire '< When a Democratic • administration fal-ely declared that war existed i by the act of Mexico, iu order to take, in Texas ' aiid spread the cause of slavery, what tribute I did America take of that feeble and vanquished I people, an empire rich beyond all ttie dreams of avarice? llut when the South was overcome . ! and $1,542 paid for every Southern slave, not i a farthing of tribute was laid, no contribu- 1 tion was levied, not one estate of a I rebel nas c intiscated, though the fathers I had not hesitated after the Revolution to con- j tiseate the estates of Tories. Not one man was j ever bv national authority, after the Southern I States'rf sumed their relations with the t'nion, denied the l i^ht to vote. The oldest citizen in Ohio had been no more free to cast his vote than Jeff Davis in Mississippi. What, then, j was the trouble in the South ? Carpet-baggers ! had gone there ; yes, and most of them with j knapsacks on their backs prepared to stop. ] What of it ? Was the Government a jailer to 1 arrest men for removing from one State to ! anotlier? Ever since peace was established i there had .always been an ever-beginning, ; U"ver-cnding outcry of complaint. | The Democratic party was against every measure bv which the rebellion was crushed. ! against everv measure sinca the war closed i down to the present time. He would thank I any Democrat in the audience to tell him what | the Democratic party was for to-day. |Laugh- 1 ter, snd a voice. " Free trade."] " Is the Dem- ! ocratio partv iu fator of free trade?" asked : Senator Conkling. No, gentlemen ; on the same principle that the Democratic party will I not take a knife and draw it across its own 1 throat from ear to ear, it will never dare to go i through the valleys and 011 the hillsides of Ohio ! and sav it is for fret trade. No, sir. the t sound of the triphammer in Pemisyl- j vania. the hum of machinery, of all the enginery of industry, all over Ohio ' from Liuie Erie to the Soutli, will stifle such a cry. They say they are for a revenue tariff. In all fair ness and common sense, wliat does that mean? 1 In God's name, in the 1 light blaze of this day, : what is the sense of such a position ? H> re is i ft great debt, inflicted by theliebellion, tfttli Its • annual interest to be paid : here is an endless : procession of cripples and mourners : here are i the widows and children of those who marched ! in defense of the t'.ag and never came back again. ' The interest, pension, and expense account i make it necessary annually to lew duties upon I imports. Shall we have a tariff for revenue 1 onlv to be laid -on tea and coffee, while. iit»n, 1 wool and agricultural implements, on which we can undersell England, are to come iti free in i order that even man in the United States may I be put down on a level with the p:tu;>crized la bor of F.urope? N<>. Senator Thurman, of ! whom I sjieak with great respect as a .man of i large aliility, will never go Into Ohio or Penn- ' Bvlvama. unless he wants to defeat his ticket, I and declare that he is against incidental pro- : taction to American industry and in favor of ; the Utopian doctrine of free trade. And now will some one say what the Demo- I crati • partv has favored in the last twenty veain? [A voice. "State rights."] That is true. I It was in favor of State rights twenty years ago, 1 when it scattered vour navies broadcast <>• er the ' sea. aud shipped the Federal arms to Sonth ' Carolina and other States, in order that the na- . WM Secretary of tho Interior under Buchanan. I will not say he was dishonest; I wish to speak of him with the same respect that one colored man spoke of another. " I consider Jake a j strictly honest nigger," said lie, "but if I were a chicken ami Jake was afound I'd roost { high." In the Department of the Interiorwcre , trust fluids belonging <;'t» the Indians, and t Thompson signalized his administration by al- I lowing that money to be plundered for* the South. He came into my room one night, and I told me with his own lips that lie had tele- ! graphed to a man whom he named in South I Carolina that the Star of the West was on her r way loaded with food for the starving garrison I at Fort Moultrie, and he said his object was j that they might know it and train their guna ! ujion her and sink her forever. When I asked j him if he, a Cabinet officer, could telegraph a ' Cabinet secret to a rebel authority in South : Carolina, he said, with an oath I will not repeat, *• I swear I have." The Democratic party were ! for State rights. James Buchanan, then President, declared { that the Government couldn't coerce a sov ereign State. According to Mr. Buchanan, if a 1 State went out of the Union, why, it oughtn't to do it. but if it did. what was to be done about it? Jere Black, his Attorney General, advised him that if a man rebelled lie must not be molested by the troops, biit that a Federal Marshal should be sent out to bring him | in. B'.it about that time the Marshal resigned. f A voice: '• Why did he re sign?"] Why, my friend, that Marshal ! was so busy getting a bayonet ready to punch j into von that he hadn't tune to serve a writ. - • The New York Democratic party, represented | by that eminent statesman who was not nomi- nated the other day 111 Cincinnati, met at Albany 1 and resolved upon the sanctity of Stat*' lights ; y that no sovereign State could be coerced; ! and one of the leaders, more emphatic thai; the ! rest, said that, if the attempt was made by Lin coln and his followers to use foive to put "down the rel Kill ion. the guillotine would be erected on . the soil of New York and blood would stain the : srround of that Commonwealth. Senator Conkling asked his hearers if they ; had ever thought how such talk had stimulated < the Rebellion. The North was powerful in re- rel with yon, the men who carried the starrv banner from the St. Lawrence to the Gulf. The battles which were fouirht, the displav winch was made of the terrible enginerv of war aahstied every people from the rising of the son even nnto the going down of the same that when they would seek a quarrel the reoublic of America was not the nation with whom to geek it The centuries which have gone, the hu manity which struggles and prays for the right of free self-government which' we eujov does not pray that we may exhibit more military prowess but prays that we may have peace T order; that we may pursue as a band of brothers, with common ties and a common nationality, with a civilization broad enough all races, the care of wmph stretches out before us, and which, pur- sucq, will give to America a eaieer of prosper ity, of grandeur, of primacv/of glorv, never approached by any of the empires of the earth. INBERSOLL Scathing Review mt the BallM-Bax Frauds ia the South. [Extract from Col IngersoU's Kockford Speech.] i Of what use is free speech, if frand is to hold in its slimy hand the ballot box of the nation? There is in this country one King; there ia un der our flag one Emperor, one Czar, one su preme power, aud that is the legally-expressed will of a majority of our people. That is the King, and any man who will poison the source j of authority, any man who will put an illegal { Tote in a ballot-box. any man who will count j an illegal vote after it is put in, any man who will throw ont a legal vote after it is pat in, is a traitor to the great principle upon which this | Government is founded, and the time ought, to i corny when we werild hold in supreme dotcsta- I tion. execration and contempt sir- m:>" who | would put in the ballot-box an illegal 1 vote. Every American citizen should keep his hands pure ; every American citizen should for tweutv years. It baa suffered all the ago- nies of official famine. Not a bite for twenir years. The Democratic party to-dav is a vaat ' aggregate official appetite. Who are you gain* ' f to trust ? Will we trust the Southern States to j collect the revenues of the Union? In foor ' years, with the Internal Revenue Department, j we have collected of inte;naltax •f itl UNM.WWai ! a cost of about 3 per cent. This in four yean. 1 During four years we have captured, destroyed, ; and bin-led 3,874 illicit distilleries in Southern • State*. Remember it ; we have captured and indicted 7,084 Democrats in Southern State#, charged with defrauding the revenue of the country. The Southern people, resisting the collectors of the Federal tax, in the last fofcr' 4 years, have shot and killed twenty-five rwr- ; nue officials, and have wounded fifty-tire; and now in the Southern States--that is, in many of them--every Revenue Collector, every ! officer connected with that branch of the GOT- 1 ernment, is provided by the Internal Revenue Department with a breech-loading rifle and m 1 pair of revolvers. Are they the gentlemen to I collect our revenues? Will von dope ad on them I to pay the interest on fl.4(M\000.0()o and the cor- I rent expenses of this Government ? It went do. I neard a storv of a couple of Methodist : minister., who had been holding a camp meet- ins-. and after they had preached a week one said to the other : " L»t\-j take np a subscrip tion.'1 '• Good," said he. So he passed his hat, gave it to a brother, ana he passed it around, and finally came back and handed it to the preacher, and he turned it over 011 the pulpit, and there was a lot of old nails, matches, toothpicks, buttons, and net one solitary cent: and the other preacher said, looking at it: "Let us thank God.' and the owner of the hat said. " What for ?" and the other replied, " Because von got your hat back." If we depend upon the Southern States to col lect the revenues of this country we won't gel ovi iiai back. want item i»ow then, my friends, if yon wan speech, if you want an honest ballot, if raa want the revennesof the coizntry collected, VMB the Republican ticket, ' -9 mm sources and all the means to conquer with, i say, "Iain willing to abide by the decision of BLAME. The reverse was the case with the South. Could 7,000,000 of people, without mechanic arts or the means of supply, in themselves hope to overcome '20,000.000 if they had not relied upon the division and distraction at the North caused by the Northern wing of the Democratic the majority," ana, when we say that, then we will have a repnblic that will endure for count less years. Wo have got to do something iu this country. We are upon t he edge, to-day, of Mexicanixation; wo are upon the edge of . „ T i, . „• 1 chaos. The people are beginning to lose con- • P J ,!011 Rebel lion was gasp- 1 fidence in elections: the people are beginning i I .• «*>\ - Fraud controls, rascality elects." and An Eloquent Speech hjr the 1 jprtMlM* So* of Maine. water their horses iu the Hudson river and feed I their troops oil the money taken from the Bos- : ton banks. Wheu they had fought for three j yesrs, and defeat stared them in the face, they 1 met in National Convention and de- ' elared the war a failure. ThRt resolu- i tion. as a failure, was a success, and as 1 then | a political success it was a complete failure. | form j Pui," having said that, they nominated, j the destruction of human libertv for a hundred I just as they had done now. a Union j years. Every Republican shonld makeup his I General, though the trick, even then, proved mipd to be a perpetual sentinel of the ballot- ' 1?° .H.111' A'V' ^teneral issued _ no order : l>ox; every Re publican should mako up his ' No. 40, putting maimed a,'a helpless , mind thaf. so far as was in his power, an il- \>eople at the mercy of the 1110b. He arrested ! legal vote should never again be cast in this whole Maryland Legislature, however- ' eOrtntrv. We fell into it: it took a longtime, ...i 41 r_ 11 _ 1 I the moment that suspicion is well lodged hi the minds of the people then they will have no re spect for the laws made by men who are elected by fraud. They will have no respect for the decision of Judges when they believe the Jiidees were elected by fraud, and comes the dissolution of our of government: aud then conies the ; something rather vigorous for a Democratic t but we got there. In tho first place, in the M.ijoi General to do : suspended the writ of j eities no man was allowed to vote who-came j habeas corpus, proclaimed martial law, and put in armed troops as supervisors at the polls. A Senator James G. Blaine, of Maine, spoke at 1 Wheeling, W. Va., on the afternoon of the 38th ult., to an audience of nearly 10,000 people. : Senator Blaine said that the present ( ii> the United States is an anomalous one. Ib ; . haracter and many of its aspects are without , precedent. Never before in a free Government | was a party in power, with abnndant prosperity ' all over the land, whose continued supremacy : was ever seriously contested. He exhorted the Republicans to be of good cheer, for the people j of the United States know enongh to stand still when they stand well. When the War of ' the S|Miiish Succession was involving the continental power.- of Euro;*; in difficulties, j George. II. expressed a fear for the safety of the Ministry, but Sir Robert Walpole assured him that Hi* Majesty need have no fears so long as , wheat was 16 shillings a quarter and every man could get a good day's wages for a good day's ' work. The Senator would make the same in- , swer to any man who was afraid of the verdiot of tlie people being unfavorable to the Republi cans in the present campaign. This answer would be conclusive, but that the Democratic party considers that it owns, without any con~ 1 sideratiou of their material interests or thede- ; sires of the constituency, 13S solid electoral votes : " and." the speaker added, "of thislS®"**" West Virgiiuu is drafted on for Virginia, he thought, needed a i»»«ireed from I tion of emancipation. It down. Asking 1 this dead 1 o h that i--fancoek were elected, he 1 what would lii»« result tlie revolution in the gave a*--*im't, brought about to make it sour Sw* the doctrine of State sovereignty. " If yen elect Gen. Hancock you inevitiblv within ; tlie s]>ace of a twelvemonth--lam not sure that i it would not be within the space of ninety day* ; --hand over to tho Democratic )»rty. led by ' Southern men, the control of the Supremo ; Court of the United States, absolutely. Five of I those Judges are to-day beyond 70, or in thai j neighborhood. They may accept retirement at | full pay. If they are reluctant to do so, h I Democratic President, backed by a Democrat!* . , , . , guard has been thrown. That parly has al- | Senate aud House, would swamp that court by . • ,,, . . ^.Wdition* of * wavs lu-en in favor of registration: the Demo- ' superior uumber-t. aud. bv wav of advice to tho pledged themselves anew to iV^K,h was warmed ' era'tie partv has alwavs opposed it. That par- 1 North, let me sav that "a bill is pend- I ^^^-^caHeil secession, the ty-th!< Republican paity has done all it pos- 1 ' ; " , , i ^uAw$n men went out to bruise and , siblv could do to secure an honest expression of I reptile w I^^ieir lu els forever. The Indiana j the'great will of tho people. Each man here, t DemO'™^ however, were professedly in fa- ] who is iu favor of an honest ballot-box, ought Vl>* not of a volume of currency ganged by . (u vote the Republican ticket: even* man here t jflipply and demand, but of one to bo arhitra- 1 in favor of free speech ought to vote the Re nin 11 insured his house because it might burn. Without making any charge* of a want of patriotism against the DeiiuK-rata now, the i-jx>aker advised his hearers in case tliey were in doubt as to what might happen to take out a policy of insurance and let well enough alone, it had been said--he was glad to remember it -- that Democrats fought for the Union in the war. So a great majority of them did. and were deserving of all honor. John A. Logan, of Illinois, was e Democrat Iw-iore the war, but when the Southern wing of that party drew the sword against the Government it took him not the twinkling of an eye to decide which side he was on. and when the war was over Democracy had become to him a faded remembrance of the thing it was. Senator Conkling directed the at tention of his hearers, and particularly those who will vote for the lirst time this fall."to the fact that it was the Republican party which had carried 011 the Government during the war aud maintained the public credit and the nation's from a foreign country until he luid been hero five years. J'hey began allowing them to vote when they had been here four, and if the Dem ocratic party diu, probably the Wiiig party would have done it if the foreigners would have voted the Whig ticket, but they wouldn't. After a while they aliowd them to vote in three years, in two years, and it was not long nntil they met them at Castle Garden and marched from the ship directly to the polls. All over our country we have had a contest with regard to the removal of county-seats, when all the people at one side of the county were for remo.al, and all the people 011 the other side again-t removal, and the North side would hOr that the South side was going to cheat, and the South would hear that the North was going to cheat, and, as a re sult, lx>th eh eat I'd: and thus, day by day, little by little, the sanctity of the ballot-box luwthe destroyed, and that party was car most ille- sinariest party that could get^jr. All that must, gal votes and get. theiu.try cannot endure, and be stopjx'd. or thi* of the Republican party honor both then and now. It was Ohio that j it is tho 3I1d that is another reason •Y'Vt c»nntry a Secretary of the Treasury in j to sfc- nm a Republican. That party has the person of Salmon P. Chase. The Deinoo- jgfown everT gafegu'aM Rronnd Ulc Ulot-l»x racy of Ohio this year, somehow or other, h^ in everv m bUli8 Uuioa where any sule- f&iled to pass any resolutions denounc^pW | mjard has been thrown. That parlv has al- nationnl-banking system. nlv fixed by a Congressional caucus. Sinco j publican ticket. Free speech is the bra.n of Adam's fall "the wit of man never invented a 1 this republic, aud an honest vote is its life- 1 more pestilent heresy than thai the yard stick was to be longer of shorter, more or ; loss, depending upon the changiug schemes of partisan politics. Who invented the banking system which swept away the wild-cat and red- dog banks of the country ? Who passed the : laws in Congress which set tho squadron ill the ' field and kept the Hag flying ? Whose , President was it that said. "Nowhere in all i our liorders shall the sun ever again rise upon j master or set upon slave ?" Who rebuilded tho ' Governments in the South and lifted up the 1 nation's credit in the face of repudiation? j Who had made the paper dollar as good as told? He had read a statement of Speaker : Randall that the Democratic party had economized, actually denied themselves and fairlv gone without the bare necessi ties " of life till they had saved np , enough and squeezed out enough to enable ' the m to resume specie pavmeuts. Their econ- i omv was of the sort which threatened to starve the Government unless the Election laws were ' re pea led. That year thev saved money. It 1 ju>t so happened, however, that a Congres sional election was coming on. But, as pre- , dieted by the Republicans, the saving wan over* come bv the subsequent Deficiency bill, until the total was larger than the year before, as blood." l'hore arc two reasons, then, Why I am a Republican! ^ First, I believe in free speoch. Secondly, I want an honest vote. Can you trust the people of the South with the ballot-box ? Are you willing to let Alabama keep that sacred treasure--Alabama that cast in 187«» alont 10:1,000 votes for Tildon, but only a little while ago oast a Democratic majority of 92,IK)0 ? Alabama to-day is a Republican State if every man was allowed freely to vote his sentiment**; and you know it Mississippi is. to-day a Itepublican State; North Cnroliua is a Republican State : South Carolina in a Republican State ; Florida is a Republican State ; and everybody who kuows anything knows what I say is true. How are thfey kept iu the Democratic ranks ? Are they kept thtre by the meu who are trying to pro tect the ballot-box? They are kept there by the shot-gun, they are kept there by the tissue ballot, they are kept by force and fraud. Masked murderers in the dead of night ride to the cabin of the freudinan and shoot him down regardless of the shriekings of his wife and the tears of bis babes. That iti the way the Southern States aro kept solidly Democratic. Ah, but they say the total thi». vear was larger than the total I to me. " Are you willing thai the black people | tiou might be found naked of defense, bound I hand and foot, so that it might be murdered in j its bed. Thev prostrated the Government credit I aud hawked it in the street UDtil it trailed in ' the mire. Jaoob Thompson, of Mississippi, appropriations of the last Republican year, lie also understood Chairman Randal! to say that good crops had insured sjiecie payments. It so'happened, however, that the country had good«rops before the resumption of specie payments. Without such a law as the Resump tion act. first outlined by Gen. Grant, how could ' paper lie made equal to gold, whatever the character of the crops? What party had done 1 all this? What party had opposed it? He challenged any one to name a single instance hi I which the Democratic party had not carped at and hindered anv and all of these groat mcan- , ures. It was the sad misfortune of this time j that the South was the Democratic party, and I this seemed odd wln n it was remembered that the population of all the latelv-siceded States ' represented only 15 jx.r cent, of the piople of the United States. He had been at- 1 tacked for making this statement by a Democratic paper, which chose to regard it as an outrage. But this was a matter j of business, and the question being to what ; partv the country should l>e turned over. He | claimed the right to inquire into the position,, aims end hopes of the party which now sought the control of the nation. While the South 1 represented but 15 per _ _ i ulation. it represented 7 per cent of the a«- j sessed valuation of the American people. It controlled both houses of Congress, and was ; now endeavoring to make its control complete. I [A voice--" They can't do it"] They would do | it. too, uuless oh the 2d of Noveniiier a consti- - tntional majority say now (A voice--"We are going to.'"J "I hope you will," said Senator Conkling. "But I never consider anything 1 done u:itil it is finished." The Senator substantially repeated that por-, tion of his New York speech bearing on the dis appearance of the Republican vote in tlie South, the control of the Democracy in both houses and the use thev had made and would be liable toimikeof the'power. "And let me tell Gen. Hancock. ' he added, "and those who support , him. tnnt, should he lie chosen, wlienhe become,-. President, he will lie as clay in the hands of the jiotter ; as the sheep before his shearers. He was dumb and opened not his lfloutli. ' In closing Senator Conkling said: "You have nominated as candidates men who have proved their intelligence and litness iu con spicuous spheres of public action. You have • behind these candidates a party which has been ' all the time for twenty years in the public view. ! The fiercest light that ever beat upon a throne i is not brighter than the light in which the Re publican party has continually been S'-"n. You ; have arraved against it a party which ha* been i over and over again weighed in the balance and i is wanted below. Now, fellow-citizens, lam go ing to leave you. I am going to give this easy, 'restful and * comfortable pluco to one better ! able than I to occupy it. Before I go. hovvev- ! er. I remind vou that Napoleon sai I to his sol- ! diers in Egvfit. " From these pyramids forty ! centuries hs>k down upon you." I tell you that I all the centuries look down upon this great re- I public. From the sepulcher of huried epochs, j from the tombs of nationalities that have gone ! down 111 darkness and in blood, from every i clime where limni.u rights are trodden under i fo.it. from the Old World, from distant China ' and Japan, from underneath every sun beneath whose beams humanity struggle^, there comes a prayer and a hope for us. It is not that we mav fight. The world has seen us fight. No nation in Christendom will ever seek a quar- sliould control the South? " If the hi:'ok peo- }• pie are in favor of lioerty, and the white people | are opposed, then I want the black people to I control. If the black people believe that this is I a nation, and the white people there say it is a simple confederacy, then I want tlie black people to control* the South. If the black ; iM'ople are in favor of an honest vote, if the ! black people are in favor of freedom of speech, j if the L-Umk people are in favor of absolutely guarding tho ballot-box from fraud, and if the { white people are on the other side on these qut*tious. then I say let the black people rale that country. I think more of a tilack friend than I do of a white enemy. 1 think moje of a black man who loves liberty than I do of a white man who hates it I tliink more of a black man who upheld our flag iu war than of any white man who has tried to tear it down. That is my doctrine. I think more bf tlie man trampled down than I do of the traiupler. 1 think more of the man stolen from than I do of the thief. There is another thing. Wo have not only got to have free speech, not only got to have an honest ballot, hut we have got to raise a revenue in this country. We owe to-day nt of tho total pop-^ j onc billion nine million dollars,--a Demo- ~ ~ ** crtic dc!)t. Democracy is the greatest luxury we ever afforded. | Applause ana laughter, and cries of "Hit them again.' ] We have got to pay that debt. Why? If we don't we will be eter nally disgraced iu the eyes of the civilized world. When onr 'money is only worth 80 cents on the ] dollar every American falls 20 per cent, below j par. When our money is at par. we I are. Whon we cannot pay our bonds I we feel that we are a dishonest ]>cople, but j when onr bonds bearing only 4 per cent. [ are worth 110 in the market, we feel proud; | and when we go to another country and see I one of those bonds that boud eertities that an • American is an honest man. Who are you go- : ing to trust to pay this debt ? that is the qnes- Whom are you willing to trust with the ing on tlie calendar of the Senate to mako that court consist of twenty members. 'WalL* says my inquiring friend, 'what of that? Suppose the court itself does become Demo cratic ? If you have honest Judges it can make no difference about their politics.' No, bat when you come to that groat class of poliunU cases, iu which are points relative to nphoUUnfc ! the reconstruction of the Soutii' i'u mates, th*» upholding of the constitutional alMMihimiita, ! in which are garnered np and preserved the 1 frnits of the war. all these questions, sach j Judges would be as inevitably and as radically [ wreug a < the men who fought in the ranks of | the rebel army. I beg you to remember that. j the Democrats, after 1S34, bent all their ener gies to building up a Supreme Court that would I uphold the State-rights theory, aud the first ' fruit of it was the Dred Scott decision, of j. 1857, iu which slavery was made naLioual. , Do I not believe for one moment that yon intruat i the Supreme Court to such men, though tncy ait; honest meu. I may say their honesty is j the trouble. They believe in these doctripaa, j and it is this which makes them so powerful i for mischief." Ho said that by fraud and ! violence the white Democrats of the South had ! prevented the black Republicans from voting, • and further, had, by enumerating them in the i basis of representation, made one white man*» 1 vote in the South as good as two in the Novth. j In Mississippi the votes of four men for Han- j cock v.cnt as far toward the choice of l'reauipmt [ as the votes of nine men iu Ohio for Garfi&o. j Ho alluded to the census frauds, and said that j Lincoln was roundly abused twenty years- I ago for saying this country could not be per- I |*»tuat< d half slave and half free. He was i now willing to sav that our republic cannot be | perpetuated with these gigautic aud systematic ! frauds engrafted upon our institution-". It bad ' taken 300 years to educate the Anglo-Saxon I up to a position where they eeuld submit to o majority of one or two. aud it was the only I racv that will do it to-day. We have been ed«r [ CH ted to belmn e ill the doctrine that a majority at j one is just as strong as a majority ot a'miilion ; --and I say there is not enough strength in tho allied armies of Europe, nor wealth enough l» the allied treasuries of the world t o make us sub mit to a fraudulent minority. If that be rads- I cal. make tho most of it. The speaker reviewed ! the record of tho two parties in the past twenty ! yenrs in regard to the tarifT and equal political ' rights : denounced the interference of Enghfln ; clubs and associations in our affairs by sending j free-trade tracts over here for circulation. 6ay- ' ing that he thought President Hayes would bo ' justified in instructing Secretary hvurts to pro- I test against such a liagr.i tit breach of interna^ ' tioual conrtesv. Referring to Slame. hv sata If ! she had not set the country a good example ate ! had given them a terrible warning, lie ascribed i the result there to the lil>eral nse of money m corrupt wavs bv the Pusio?lists, lie w&rnw 1 his hearers "to be on their guard for the ww i conduct of the campaign here. He dewed wrtfc ; a warm eulogy of Gen. Garfieid, and an do> i quent review of the past achievements of , j Itepublican party. s. ETARTS. The SocMarr of State Ureal Caaapaifa Spoocfc York. Tlio gneat hall of the Cooper Union, in Now York citv, was tilled on tho night oi tlie 29th ult, upon the occasion tioil. wuuiii Hie you WUMIIK uu« n . % honor of the United States ? The men who de- ; of tlie Republican mass meeting. Hogfe fended her flag will defend her honor. The e*-8ecretary of the Drafts men who tried to tear her tlag down will trani- . ., . , •, , i -, .. pie America's honor beneath their fect.t Who > urv, presided, and said he Mould HOT is going to pay? The Democrats so^n"»y i haVo been among the mourners if Tildes sworo that we never would pay. In the >ear i four years airo. The tnith ra°B lid' ""^novWwdgef V* vSZJL I change then would have been una ^ -- but a change now would result ill evil t» the countrv. Hayes was no choice of mine, but his administration rivals th» partv in every solitary State. execution of two or three oi the New England States, in which it held a convention. . . • .1 Al.„ Ufdlflf l A»ll l l solemnly resolved that the United States could not resume specie payments. AVell, we did. We did. They resolved that tlie war was a fail- lire, and immediately thereafter we succeeded, and the old ting was carried iu glory over every inch of the I'mted States. Thev have never made a prophecy tliat was fulfilled. Then- prophecies and their promises are exactly ahke. W h o m c a n w o t r u s t t o p a y t h i s d e b t W h o m can we trust to • give us good money i K greenback to-da' is as good as gold. Who made it so? The Democrats in their conven tions solemnly resolved that it would never be best, not excepting lirst, Hon. Win. M. Evarts, Secretary of State, spoke at great length upon tho political situation, and iu the bourse of his argument said: Twenty years ago the people trusted tHO ixmntry io tlie Republican party, born of \mtri- otism "and devoted to liberty. Twenty yean ago they thus intrusted to an Illinois Repubh- eau, Abraham Lincoln, and substantially the people of the country are to answer to their taking tho conscience wh« thcr they rejtn; ^ §ood. Well, "they helped a little. I have no . power from Buchiuau and giving the power to oubt, because evcryl-ody knew that what tliey | Lincoln. Private fault-tinders m these twenty resolved would not be true. Al! jou have to i years have sired private grievances : but, &*UM» do is to copper a Democratic resolution. Now, ; ^reat God-fearing people of these States read in order to pry tlii> debt--aud 1 will come to tho j it, if the Pennsylvania Democrat w restored to monev question, after which we have got to i power it is a verdict that the people are tirwl have revenue--it has got to be collected. Will j patriotism and weary of liberty. In you trust to collect the North or the South, the | twenty years this Democratic party hac Republican or the Democratic party 'i Keeol- | times "asked tor power, aud the peupk: hqf U| lect, the Democratic party has been lasting ! many times answered, "No, never." ' • >? * c