INC-EESQLL!S Great Speech at India napolis. A SUPERB SM3PLE OF POLITI CAL INVECTIVE. Wit, Sarcasm, Eloquence, and Reason Combined. The following is a verbatim report of Colonel E. 6- Iiigersoii's address before the "Boys iu Blue" fathering at Indiauatv.i'iis : LiDlEJ AXI GESTLXililN, FiXLOW -CITIZENS, asoLiTiztx Soldilks: 1 am opnofnl to the De3A)crt;c party ; ted I will teii you why. Lvery State that seceded troui tlie United t.tee was a Democratic State. Every ordi nance of secession that was arawn drawn .v Democrat. Every man tha' endeavored to tr.r the old tisr tram the heaven that it cinches was a Democrat. A Voice "Give it to tbeui.'J Every man that tried to destroy taj na"ton was a Democrat. Every enemy this r-rat Republic his had lor twenty years Iiai been a Democrat. Every man that shot l iiioa told'.crs was a Democrat. Cheers That's to.' Every man that starved L'niou soldiers and refused them in the r:;trcuilty oi death a crust was a Democrat. Keuewtd chetriu.r. llveiy man that loved slavery better tbau liberty wis a Democrat. 'Ihe rr.au that a-sa.-siii:ited Au.-aharo Lincjln was a Democrat. Every man that vrii.tiiizl with tfcr a.-asm every n.ati g.ad U.ai the noblest Pndeut ever elected was ss-assluated w Democrat : every n;au who waited the privilege of whipping another niaa to make him work for ii.ui 1-ir nothing and pay him with lashes on hi naked lack was a Democrat cbes: every tnan that raited bloouliOUnds tc pursue human beings a? a Democrat; every man that el-.iteh.ed notn shrieking, shuddering, croucliir.; Rio'-itcr?, tt-es trom their breasts aut: sotd tlKtiu into slavery waa a Democrat. Che-rs. Every can that impaired the credit of the United fines ; every man that swore we would never p-y the bonds ; every man lh.it ha' ore v. e wvuld never redeem the trreeuticka; every maiigner ot his country" credit; ever- calumniator of hi country's hotior, was. a Democrat. Cheers. Everyman that resisted the diait : every man -I'll hid in the bushes and shot si I Lion men simply becausa ti.ey were cirjcavotiiit; to en force the lavvs oi' their country, was a J icinoeral. Cheers. Every mac thai ;,! overthe corpse f slavery was a Deiuocrnr. Every man that cursed Lincoln because be issued the reclama tion of Emancipation The grandest paper sine? the ieeiaiation of indcr-ei.dertce a-cery one of them was a Democrat. Cheers. Kvtry man tnat denounced the soldiers that bard their bj4txis in tha storms o! shot and. shell for the houi r of America and or the nnl rights of iaa was a Dcmoc.-ai. lCbcer.j Everyman that wauted au UTiri.-iiii; m tl:e North that wanted to release the reuj prixniiya that they iiht bum down the homtt d' Velon oldier a've Uie hfad. of i::ir uives ami children, while th brave hibird.'-. the heroic father, were in the fiont thtin lor the ht-nor of the ola fa: every oi.c oi them waa a Demo crat. Cheers I aia not through yet. Laui'h-U-r and cheni. Every mac that l.eiicvbd this glorious nation of ours u a conieiinracy, every laaa that oelieved the old l!!i:er lan jtd l y our lathers through the KevoMttou, through the War of eariicd by oar oroilicra over th eids of the retciiion, flitrly stood lor a coa tract. aim(-iy stocd tor as agreement, was a Democrat. Cheei. Every uu.n who believed teat any state could go out of the Union at Us pleasure, every nan that believed that the irand fabric of the Articricau Government couid be made to cruciMe o.taLt.v into dust at the touch of treason, was a Democrat. Cheers. Every man that hihrl to hum orhau afeyiunu. in the cur of New l'ori v;aa a De-nocrat; every n.au that tried to nre the cite ,f New jtil, although he knew that Un aiud.-. would iMrish, aud knaw that the LTeat rer;i.t of Same laah. from builuir.ja would clutch c.'.hdrec from their mother arms every Tvretch that did it wasa Icmot rat. Checrt Kx.iUect It ! Every man that tiled to .thread smtll-rwr aud veilow J-ver in the North athe iiiNtruuicii tai:t:e of civilised war, was a Democrat. Sol ier. every scar you have pot on yur heroic iwjOiea viaa civea to you by a Dthiocrat CLeeia. Every acar, every arm that i Uck ui. every limb that is aore, every scar it- a sou venir of a Democrat. Cheer. Iwan-vouto recolle-jt it. A voice "WeiX' Er try nan that a. is the e'lrmj of hun;au liberty in this country was a Democrat. Everv man that W2tit sd the Iruit ol all tit iitroisia ol ail the aire to turn to anes i:jon the lips every one was a Demociat. Checr. I tan a Reuulixan. Laurhter and, cheer. I will u-il ;ou why : Tti. : the i.nly tree, cov etsuienl in li e world, li e eul;Koii party maUi it to. The i'.e;u!..i.'.n jay to; the th:u iro:a 4.'"oo.0'-,i of peo;:.?. Tha R:iulii in party, with t:: v ana ol p.c jress touched the aucttn bio. k, irid it tecituie a stth'ol fcuuse. I Cheers. Tha U.pL.hlicaa wi.-Jy pat dewn the rcLeii-'on. tavcj the uat.oiu Lent the old tanner aiioat in the nir, and declared tait slavery of every kltiu aouid 1e etir tuted from the laceoi tliie eLitueiil. Cheers. Wtiatmorej 1 am a llrpuoiican because it i ihe cnty free Jiaity thai ever exited. It u a party that has a pia'iorm ca iucd a., hu Uiaaity a piatiorm aa broad a 3iie Lunn race a rty that ays you Khali have ail the truit of the labor of your ha..i a ji irty that says no chains for tha hanit uo fetteit; lor the soul. A voice "Aiutnl" ChHC.-i.j lata a Kepublicau t'feause tl K-uhltran party say thh? country is a nation a c-i not a coiiledeiacy. lain herein Etai&ua to frrwak, acd i have a ood a ri'it to s;eak heie in Indiana as t.aoui;b 1 hud L-vu Lorn on this s a.:d not because, the t?a of tii1 tate h. iiaiia waves over me. 1 wouid not knoar it 11 I should ee it. You haw the fame ritrLt U sH-ak in liiir.oi ; nt fecaii'-e the c-UJ e il-na o.r ihiaois waves over you, b't be au- ...at tan ner, rendered cacred by me blood o af. the hc r.'a, waves over me and you. Chrr. i am m favor oi this beiitq; a nat'ou. Taui.iC il'a man r ratifying bte entile amoition iu the sitate of Rho-Ja Inland. Lauj;hter. We v j.t u.u to be a cation, and yuu eati't hi i c it t Tat. crand, s; '.'ud d people without having a p-at, iiaad, 'leudd country. The treat jwts. tSi f--b.inie mountaii.s. Die rrett. ruhier, rf-aiins rivers, chores lahed by tv oceaii;. and the prand anthem of Niarara. rrrintrle aitd etiti r u it were in the ehaiacler ol every AutrcaTi citi xru, and make hint, or t ..l to tiiaX' hit.i, a ftruat and pand ihnrartr. 1 am lor the Ha-puhik-an party because it kivs the i''ertiinent ha as much rich t, as Much p-.ver to protect It citizens t hunie as alsrntii. The luliican party d in t ey that u have to ac.ay trom home to et the j-r.tctoii of tne Guv 'rLiiieut. The Di'4"K r-'.ic party a the (iwvemment can't tisvreh it trops into the Smith to protect tha rights of the citizens. It i a he. Great wheels. Tlie Government eliuis the riiht, atwl it is conceded that the liovemuient hat ht richt to co to your house, while you are sittir? by your iirMc ith your i!e and chihlren about you, and tLe old lady aa.tuny aud the cat playuiE wiin t?ie yam. aud tvcrvUdy happy and sweet the iArai:vt ilaim the rwui ts po w your fireside and to ue you by frc and put you into the army : tateyou down to the valley of the shadow of he:l ; set you by the rtiddi , roarin? runs, ard mike ou hj,ht 'lbr your flj-sr. i f'hi-ers. Now, taat Un,; so, when the war is, over and your vuntry is victorious a nd yoti eol aci; mi your home, and a lot of Democrats want to trample tij-ji. your richts, I want to know if the Uovem aetit ttt took you from vour Tires ii and made Jou f.sriit lor it", I want "to fciow if tt is not Uiund toBjf'.it for youf Caeers. The Sae that wiil not protect its protectors is a dirty rae ttiat contamiiiates the air in which it waves, lit government that will not defciii its defrr.d- 1 a dJafTaca to tat katias of tha world. of JOlieretige made Annie A voice. : " Amen !" I am a Republican be. cause the Kepublican party saw: "We will protect the rights of American citizens at home, and. If nacessary, we will march an annv into any State to protect the rights of the humblest American citizen In that State." Cheers. lam a Kepublican. Lauchter. I am a Kepublican because that party allows me to be Irec allows me to do my own thinking; iu my own way. Cheers. I am a Republican be cause it is a party crand enough and splendid enough and sublime enough to invite every hu-ma-i beinsr in favor of liberty and jro Cn ss to tiu'ht shoulder to shoulder for the adwncentcnt of mankind. Cheers. It io vite the M. thoi!it : it invites the Catholic ; it invites the Presbyterian, and every kind of sec tarian ; it invites the frur-thiuke.-; tt Invites the ! irtidf I. provided he is lu favor of pvin; to every otiicr numan u-iue every ctiaucc aud evenr nirht tliat he claims for himself. Cheeni. I am a Kepublican, I tell you. Laughter. There is room in the Republican air for every winz; there is room on the Republican sea for every tail. Republicanism says to every man, " Let your soul ! like an esrle ; fly out in the creat dome of thought, end iUestion the stars lor yourself. Chi ers "That's so." But the D.-in.H-rattc party says: be blind, owls; sit on the dry limb of a dead tree, aud only hoot when Tiiden A Co. tell you to." Lauphter. In the Republican party there are no followers. We are all leaders. Cheer. There is not a party chain. There is not a party lash. Any man that does not love tiiis country; any man t hat does not love liocrty ; any uiau that is not in i.ivor of human progress ; that is not in fa v.ir oi pvit: to otners all he chiins for him self we don't sk hitn to vote the Republican ticket. Cheers. You can vote it if you please, au.l if there is any Democrat within hcai'lnir who evpecu to ttie hctore another election we are willing that he should Tote one llepublicau ticket simply as a consolation upou his death-tied. Great laughter. What more I am a Republican, because that party lelieves in five labor. It believes that free labor will j;ive us wealth. It believes in free llioutri't, because it believes that tree thought ' will r.ve us truth. A voice 'That's sol" lou don't know what a grand party you ne lon to. I never want any holier or grander title to nobility than that 1 belong to the Re publican party and have foueht for the lib erty of man. Cheers. The Republican party, I say, believes in free labor. The K-pubiican party also believes lu slavery. hat kind of slavery t In enslaving the forces of nature. We believa that free ' labor, that tree thought, have enslaved the forces OI nature and made them work lor man. We make old Attraction and Gravitation work for us; we make the light ning do our errands ; we make steam-hammers and fashioti what we need. The forcess of nature are the slaves of the Republican party. Cheers. They have jrot uo backs to be Hiii.ied; they have cot no hearts to bs torn uo hearts to te broken ; they cauuot be separated from their wives: they cannot be draped from the bosoms of their husbands ; they work niirht and day, and they never tire. Yoj cannot whip theiu, you cannot starve them, at.d a Democrat even can be trusted wl:n one of them. Laughter. I tell you I am a Kenublicau. Lamrnter. I believe, as Hid you. that free labor would ive us these, slaves. Free la!or will produce ail these things, and everything you have ft to-day has been pr xluced ty lree labor, nothing by slave labor. Ma very never Invented but one machine, and that was a Giresnini; machine in the shape of a whip. Laughter. j Free labor has Invented all the machiiite. We want to some down to the philosophy of these thimrs. The problem of free labor, wh.-n a man works for the wife be loves, when he works for the little children be auoi cs the problem is to do the most work in tha shortest space of time. The problem of slavery Is to do the least work in the longest space of lime. That is the difference. Free la-1-or, love, affection they have invented every thing of use to the world. Cheers. lama Republican. I t?il you, my friends, this world is getting better every day. and the Democratic party is getting smaller every day. See the ad vancement w e have made iu a few years; jea what we have done. We have covered this ca tion with wealth and glory, and with liberty. Tiiis is the first ire Government in the world. The Kepublican party is the first party that was not founded on some compromise with the devil. Lau-ht-r. It is the first party of pure, tnuare, honest principles ; the tirsi one. And we have Co4- the arst free country that ever existed. And r.rrht here I want to thank every soldier that fought to make It free cries of "cood"' ''good!" and cheers ; every one, Irving and dead. I thank you strain and a?ain and sarain. Von made the first free government in the world cneerc, and we must not forget the dead he roes. If they were here they would vote the Republican ticket, every oue of them. I tell you we must not fonrct them. Ihe past, as It were, rises before me like a dream. A cam we are in the ;rreat stnu.-gle for uational lite. Wo hear the sounds of prepara tion the mus-ic of the boisterous drums the stiver voices of heroic bugles. We see thousands of assemblages, and hear the appeals of orators ; we &ce the a!e cheeks of women, and the Gushed faces of uieu, aud in those assemblages ne sere all the dead whose dust we have covered with Cowers. We lose sik'ht of theta no more. We are with til em when wa enlist in the great army of freedom. We see them part with those they love. Some are walking for the last time in quiet woody places with the maidens they adore. We hear the whisperings and the sweet vo'vs of etern-il love as they hngerlngly part lort ver. Others are bending over cradies, Liss i nir bahes that are asleep. 6otua are receiving the ble, !i:3 of old n.cii. toci are parting with mothers who hold them and press them to their h-an again aud strain, aud say nothinc; and some air talking with wives, and endeavor it. T with brave words striken In the old tones to drive from their hearts the awful iitsr. Wc soe them part. We see the aiie standing in the door with the babe in her arms standing in the sunlight sobbing at i.he turn of the road a hand waves she answers hv holding h'ga in her loving hand the child, lie is gone, and forever. Wc see theiu all as they march proudly away under the flauntint: flasrs, keepin-r time to the wild grand music of war marching down the streets of the great cities through the towns and across the prairies down to the fields of .1 tv, to do. and to die lor the eternal rktht. V jo muh Ineia on and all. We are by th-ir ai.le oi all the gory fields in all the bo- j pitaist.f ptiin on ail the weary marches. W ' stat.d fruard with them in the wild stnrm and cader the qui-t stars. We are with them in j it) vines running with blood In the furrows of j old lie'ds. We are w ith them between coutend I in-; hosts, usable to move, wild with thirst, the lie- ehhintr slowly away among the withered icnves. We see them pierced by bails and torn with thi'l! in ths trenches by forts, and in the v. (itrlwiud of the charge, where mea become iron, with nerve of steel. Wears with them in the prisons of hatred and famine; but human speech can never tell vvli.it they endured. V are at honie when the news emea that they are dead. W see the maiden In the shadow of her first sorrow. We see the sil vered head of the old man bowed with the last ri.-r. TXe past rises before lis, and we see four mil lions ol human bcintrs governed by the lash we seetii?:u bound band and foot we hear the auokrs of cruel whips we ace the hounds Uackiii women ihrousb tangled swamps. We tec 1 a'jca sold from the breasts of mothers. Cruelty unspeakable 1 Outrage infinite 1 Four million bodies in chains four million souls iti fetters ! All the sacred relations of wile, mother, lather, aud child trampled be ncuh the brutal feet of mltrht. And all this v i s done under our beautiful banner of the Tiee. The pist rises before us. We bear the roar and shriek of the bursting shell. The broken fetters fall. These heroes Bed. We look ; in stead of siavei, we see men and women and children. The wand of progress touches the auction block, the slave pen, the w hlppiug-post, aud we see homes aud ti resides and school hooscs and books, and where all was want and crime and cruelty and fear, we sec the faces of the free. Tbcsa heroes are dead. They died for liberty tuey died for us. They are at rest. They sleep iu the land they made free, under the flag they rendered stainless ; under the solemn piues, the sad keutuocxs, the tearful willows, and the msraeiuf vtaaa. Tin sisen baaaaU the . A ouup . .- thecrimson Appealed the lawyer. shadows of the rjondss careless alike of sunshine, or of storm, each in "The windowleas palace of re st. Earth may run red with other wars Uiey are at peace. In the midst of battle, in the roar of conflict, they found the serenity of d aith. A voice. Glory.'' I have one sentiment for the soldiers, livirg and dead cheers for the living aud tears lbr the dead. There are three, qtarstions now submitted1 to the American people. The nrst Is, Shall -the people that saved tlds country rule it ! Crifcs of " Yes, ves."J Shall tbe nieu that saved trie old flajrholditl Cries f " Yes. yes." Shall the men who saved the !iip of State sail it f Cries of Yes. yes, yes," or shall the rebels wal k her quart er-deck, give tht- orders and sink it I ICrics of -'No, no." Thai is the question. 8 hall a SAilid South, a u tilled South, united by assa sana tion and murder, atSouth solidilied by the shot gun shall a united tkuth with the aid of a divided North, shall they control this grerft and splendid country 1 sJries of " Never, iirner." Well, then, the Nurt t must wake up. C rics of We will, wewilt" tf. are right back (t here we were in l-Wl. Tiiis Is simply a prolongation of the war. This is the war of the idea; tlie other was the war of tlie mtlsket. The other was the war of tbe cannon ; this la the war of thought, and we have got to beat them in this war of thought ; recollect that. The question is. Shall the men that endeavored to destroy this country ml e it ( Cries of "Never, never." Shall the men mm said this is not a Nation, have charge of thia Nation I Cries of ' Never, never "' The next question, 8 hull we pay our debts! Cries of " Y'ca ! yes ! aial every cent !") We bad to borrow some moury to -ay for shot aud shell to shoot Je in oc rats with. We louud that we could get along with, a lew less Democrats laughter. Ism not with any less country, and so we borrosrl the money, and the question now is. Will we pay it! And which party is the most apt to pay it, tlie Kepublican party, that made the debt ths; party that swore it was constitutional, or the party that said it was unconstitutional I Whenever a Democrat sees a greenback the greenback says to tbe Democrat, I am the one that whipped you." Laughter. 1 Whenever a Kepublican sees a greenback, the greenback says to hiin, " You and I put down the rebellion and saved the country." Laughter. Now, my friends, y ou have heard a great deal abtsut finances. Nearly everybody that talks about it get as dry just "as if they had been its the final borne of the Democratic party for forty years. Great laugiiter.l I will give you uiy ideas about finances. A voice. Let's hear thorn." In the first place the Government don't sup iort the people; the people support the Government- A voice. "That's it." Tbe Gov ernment passesv around the hat, the Gov ernment passes arou-ad the alms-dish. True enough, it has a musket behind it, but it is a perpetual -chronic pauper. It prases. I told you, the aluis-disii, and we all throw lu our shine except Tildcu. (.treat laughter. This Government, is a perpetual consumer. You understand me the Govern ment dou't plou h ground, the Uovemmt-nt don't raise corn ai td heat : tlie Uovernmeut is simply a perpetual consumer. We support the Government. "That's rigbt." Now, the idea that the Government cau make money for you and me to liv t on mhy, & is tbe same as thuujrh my hired tnan should issue certuicates of my indebtedm tss to him tor me to live on. Lautrhter and applause. tome people tell me that a government can impress its sov-er-ignty ou a piece of paper, and that is money. Well, if it is, w hat is the use of w asUn- it in making $i bills ! It Qikea no more ink and no more paper whv not make $1,000 bills I Why not make Sl,00o!o.ilJ0 bills, and all be billion aires! Great laughter. If the Government cau make money w halt on earth dors it collect taxes from you. auc. me for Why don't it make what niomry It "wants, take the taxes out, and give the balance to us ! Laughter. Mr. Greenbackcr, suppos- the Government issued tl00,(JU,0iJ0 to-inorn w ; how would vou get any of it A voice--" Steal it." I was not speaking to the Dema. -rats. Laughter. Y'ou would not get it uni ess you had something to exchange for it. The- Government would not TO around and giva you your average. You have to have scui .-orn, or wheat, or pork to cive for it. How do "you get money ! By work. here from f Y'ou have to dig it out of the proa nd. That is where it conies from. In old times there were sc mat men who thought they could get some wa. f to turn the baser metals iuto gold, and old, gmy-haired men, trembling, tottering on the ver pe of the grave, were hunting for something to tern ordinary metals into gold ; they were st archie g for the fountain of eternal youth ; but they i Ud not find it. No human ear has ever beard the silver gargle of the spring of immorta 1 youth. There used to be mechanics that tr. td to make perpetual motion by combinations of wheels, shifting weights, and rolling balls;; but somehow the machine would never quit run. A per-ietunl tbnntain of greenbacks, of "wealth without labor, is just as loolish as a focntain of eternal youth. The idea that you can iroduce money without labor is just as foolish at tbe idea of perpetual motion. They are old lolli under new names. Let me tell you another ti ling. The Democrats seem to think that you c an fall to keep a promise so long that It is as jood as though you had kept it. They say you can stamp the sovereignty of the Government non pa-.r. Tbe other day I saw a piece of silt er beartiz the sovereum stamp of Julius Casar. Julius Ciesar has been dust about two thouM aid year, but that piece of sil ver was worth ju st a mlich as though Julius Cesar was at th I head of the Roman legions. Was it hi soven lecty that made it valuable ! Suppose he had tut it upon a piece of paper it would have tx len of no more value than a Democratic prom ire. Anotlter thing, uiy friends ; this debt will be laid ; yon need not worry about that. Tbe Dim acrata ou rht to pay it. Thry loot ths suit and thaw our Jit to pay tlie costs. Laughter and ilpplvose.) ' But we are willing to pay our share., it will be paid. Tbe hold ers of the debt "save got a mortgage on con tinent. They ha.ve a mortgage ou the honor of the Republican psaty, and it Is on record. Every blade of grass "that grows upon the con. tinent is a guaranUe that the debt will be paid; every field of bannered corn in the creat, glorious Weal is a guarantee that the debt will e pi id: all the coal put away In tha ground millions of years ago br that old murr, tlve sun, is a guarantee that every dollar of tht tt debt will be paid; all tlie cattle on the praii iea. pastures and plains, every one of them is a guarantee that this debt will be paid ; every 1-m standing in the sombre forests of tbe North, wt siting for the woodman's axe, is a guarantee thsf ". this debt w ill lie paid ; all the gold and silver! ud tn th Sierra Nevadas waiting for the miner's pick is a guarantee that the debt will be paid ; every locomotive, with its muscle of Iron aisj i breath of flame, and all tbe boys and girls bes ding over their books at schoolj every uimplftd child in the cradle, every good man and every good woman, and every man that votes the fCe publican ticket, is a guar antee that the dVbt wlJ be paid. Applause. What is the tvvxt question ! The next ques tion is. Will we protest the I'nlou men in the South! Voic " tea, yes." I tell you the white Union me t titer have suffered enoturb. It is a crime in t.ie Southern State to be a Re publican. It is a crime in every Southern State to love this country, to believe in th sacred rights of men. I tell you the colored people have suffered en atirb. They have been owned by Democrats lor2ii0 years. Worse than that; they have been forced to keep the company of their owners. J-aughter. It is a terrible thing to live with, a man that ateals from you. They have snffen d enough. For 'MO years they were branded h k rattle. Yes, for 2u0 years everv human tie was torn asunder by the cruel hand of avarice find greed. For 200 years chil dren were sold from their mothers, husbands from their wives, lirotbers from brothers, sisters from sisters. Tt. rre w as not, during tbe whole rebellion, a slnclei negro who was not our friend. We are willing to l e reconciled to oar Southern brethren when t key will treat our friends as men. When tbe. r will be Just to tbe friends of this country ; wh ;n they are In favor of allowing every American c ttizea tn have bis right then we are their lri tnds. We are willing to trust them with tbe na '.ion when they are friends of tbe nation. We . ire willing to trust them with liberty wben th iy believe la liberty. We are willing to trust tl tern with the black man wben they cease riding : o the darkness of night those masked wretches- -to the but of the freedman, and notwithstand ing the prayers and supplica tions of his family , shoot him down ; when they eeaae to consider t tie massacre of Hamburg a a Dtaowatto Man (tib-osa!, I ssvi w vfil CVV-rts. sv a -e - - ,..t..r i, their friends and not before. A voice'' That is the idea. Now, my friends, thousands of the Southern people and thousands of the Northern Democrats are afraid that the negroes are going to pass them in the race of Hie. And, Mr. Democrat, be will do it ut li-ss you attend to your business. The simple fact that you are white casnnot save you always. You have got to be industrious, honest, and cultivate a sense of justice. If you don't, the colored race will pass you as sure as, you live. I anTlor giving every man a chance. Anvbodv thut ran pass me is welcome. A voice, " These can't many do it-" I believe, my friends, tiiat the intellectual domain of the future, like the land used to be in the State of Illinois, is open to pre-emptiou. The fellow that gets a tact first, that is his ; that gets an idea first, that is bis. Every round in the ladder ot fame, lrom the one that touches the ground to the last one than leans against the shining sum mit of human ambition bclonirs to the foot that gets upon It first. Applause. Mr. Democrat ( I point down bocause they are nearly all on the first round of the ladder), If you can't climb, stand on one sid f and let t he deserving negro pass. I must tell you oue thing. I have told it so much, and you bave all heard it, I have no doubt, fifty times from others, but I am going to tell it again because I like it : Suppose there a great horse-race here to day, free to every horse in the world, and to all the mules, and all the scrubs, and all tbe donkeys. At the tap of the drum they come to the line, and the jmlire say, " Is it a go!'' Let me ask you. what does the blooded horse, rushing ahead, with nostrils disteuded, drinking in the breath of his own swiftness, with his mane flying like a banner of victory, with" his veins standing out all over him as if a net of life had been cast around dim with hU thin neck, bis hu.'h withers, his tremulous flanks what does he care how many mules and donkeys run on that track. Prolonged and deafening laughter. But the Democratic scrub, with bis chuckle- head and lop ears, with hi tail full of cockle burs, jumping high and short, and digging in the ground a hen be feels the breath of tho coming mule on his cockle-bur tail, be is tbe chap that jumps the track and says : " I am down on mule equality." Renewed and up roarious laughter My friends, the Kepublican party is tbe blooded horse in the race. A voice "Anything may follow that wants to." Lautfhter.j I stood ai little while ago in the city of Paris where stood the blast ile, where now stands the Column ol' July, surmounted by the figure of Liberty. In its right band Is a broken chain. In its left hand, a banner ; upon its forehead a glittering star and as I looked upon it I said, such I tbe Ke-i publican party of my country. The other day going along the road t came to the place where the road had bueu chamrcdr but the guide-board was as they bad put It twenty years before. It pointed diligently in the direction of a desolate field. Now, that, guide-post has been there for twenty years.. Thousands of people passed but nobody beeded the band ou the guide-post, and it stuck there through storm and shine, aud It pointed as hard as ever as if the road was. through the desolate field, and I said to my. self, ' Such is the Democrauo party of the United States." Laughter and applause. The other day I came to a river where there had been a mill ; a part of it was there yet. An old sign said, " Cash for wheat." Laugh ter. The old water-wheel was broken ; it had been warped by the sun, cracked and split by many winds and storms. There hadn't been a. (Train of wheat ground there lor twenty years. There was uothiur in good order but the dam : it was as good a dam as I ever saw, and I said, to myself, "Such is the Democratic party." Renewed laughter. I was going along the road the other day, when I came to where there had once been a. hotel. But the hotel and barn bad burned, down ; nothing remained there but the two chimneys, monuments of the disaster. In the road there was an old sign, upon which there were these words : " Entertainment for man and beast." The word "man" was nearly burned out, There hadn't been a hotel there for thirty year. That sign had swung and creaked in the wind ; tbe show had fallen upon it In the winter, the birds bad sung upon It in the summer. Nobody ever stopped at that hotel ; but the sign stuck to it, aud kept swearing to it, " Entertainment fbr man and beast;" and I said to myself, "Such is the Democratic party of the United States." Laughter. And I further said!, " One chim ney ought to he called XTldea and the other Hendricks." Renewed and continued cheer ing and laughter. Now, my friends, both) of these parties bave candidates. The Deru-jcratic party trots out Samuel J. Tllden. Who is he! II is a man that advertises his brine-sty and reform, the sam as people advertise quack medicines. In every Democratic pafjar in the United States he bas advertisements i his honesty and reform. Samuel J. Ttlden'ts an attorney a legal spider that weaves webs d.r technicalities, and catches In its meshes honej t Incorporated flies. He ha stood on the short s of bankruptcy and clutched the drowning by'Jie throat. Samuel J. Tllden is a demurrer tit it the Confederate Congress has filed acainst the amendments to the Constitu tion of the Uuited States. Samuel J. Tiiden Is an old bacbeloi . Iu a country depending upon the increase of its population for its glory and honor cheers and laughter, to elect au eld bachelor is suicidal policy. Renewed and proloured laughter). Think of a Iran sur rounded by Ijeautifui womn, dimpled cheeks, coral lips, pi arty teeth, shining eyes 1 think of a man throi ing them all away for the embrace of the Deny -cratie psrty. Laughter. Such a man dues n ot know the ivalu of time. Laugh ter Samuel J. THJen belongs to the Democratic party of the city of New York. That party never halt but two objects grand and petit larceny. Laughter. They rarely elect a man to office except for crime committed. They defn't elect on a crime credit ; it must be a crime taccom pllshed . They bave stolen every, thing t' ley could lay their hand on, and, my God, wf iat hands I When they had stolen ail the people could pay the Interest on they clappe1 th tar enormous hands upon their spa cious pockets and shouted lor honesty and re form. Saniael J. Tiiden bas been pupil in that school. H has been a teacher in that school. Ha was reared in Tammany Hall, which bears lb same relation to a penitentiary s tha Suudsr school to a church. Applause. More than t lis, wben tbe rebellion began they called a meeting at Union Square, in the city of New York. It was of great Importance bow the city of New Y-rk shouid go. No man refused to sitm that peUtlou in the city of New York but one, and that man was Samuel J. Tiiden. A man that will not lend his name to save his country never should be the President of that country. Y'ou peered tosavs your lives, and he would not give bis ln.rairwjus name. Now, ray friends, I want you to vote the Re publican ticket. A voice, " We will do it." I want you to swear you will not vote for a man who opposed putting down the rebellion. I want you to swear you will not vote for a man opposed to the proclamation of emancipation. I want you; to swear that you will not vote for a man opposed to the utter abolition of slavery. I want v olt to swear that you will never vote for a man wins called the soldieis iu the fluid Lin coln hircitatars. I want yots to swear that you will not vote for a man who denounced Lincoln as a tyrant. I want yoti to swear that you will not vote tor any enemy of human progress. Go acd talk too every Dema-rat that you can see ; get him hj) tbe coat-collar ; talk to blm ; bold him, like Coleridge' Ancient Mariner, with your glitteriuc eye; bold hitn ; tell him all the mean things his party ever did ; toll hiin kindly; tell blm In a Christian spirit, aa I do, but tell him. Applause aud laughter. Recollect there never waa a more important election than the one you are going to bold in Indiana. I want you every one to swear that you will vote for glorious Ben. Harrison. Tremendous ap plause. 1 tell you we must stand by the coun try. It is a glorious country. It permit you and tn to be free. It is th only country in the world where labor is respected. Let us support it. It is the only country iu the world where the useful nan is the only aristocrat. The man that works fbr a dollar a day goes borne at night, to his little ones, take hi little boy on his; knee, aud be thiuks that boy can achieve any thing that the son of th wealthy man can achieve. Tbe free schools are open to him ; hei may be the richest, the greatest, and grandest ". and that thought sweetens every drop ef sweat, that roll dawn th honest tac f tak (As ps as. Tel to sv tha amamtfj. r fever, he cante '.J Mn. force that she lost her balance and fell DEMOCRATIC OPINIONS OF SAMUEL J. TUDENj Expressed Prior to tlie St Loui3 Convention. The True Character of the Vlan as Portrayed by his own Partisans. ... TROM THE CINCINNATI EXtjriEElt. "There are a few facts eoncexniiii Sam Til Jen whie owe trust will sink into the minds of West ern rand Southern Democrats : L He caunot carry his own State In No- ber. "3. ITe cannot carry any Nortliern State. "3. He is a hypocrite, a political swiudW. has lor g been a public pi unden-r. said is really the ou.y disreputable candidate prone tientiy named on the Democratic side. "4. He has sought this high office by methods unprecedentedly shameless and di-rei'Ut; ble V oat it would lie an everlasting stigma upon a I Jeinucratic convention to uonduate him, and a 'reproach upon the American peopia to elect him IT nominated. " Should ' God's providence, seeming es'ran- ' ged,' permit his nomination, by whom and what j would he be nominated ! By the servile, con scienceless tools that money can purchase: by the most corrupt influences that ever entered into a Presidential nomination; ty the system ou which all other quack medicines are sold ! advertising and even respectabbt medicai ass." ciatious read out of tbe prolessiou doctor that will advertise. It would seem that the Detr.o cratic party should have as hi;h a rect tor the good catueol the party aud the Goverunwut as tlie vendors of pills have for their cralt. It could not but be that a man educated ia cun ning, hypocrisy, and iniquity, nominated in cor ruption aud shamlesa ellroiuei y , even thou! b his millions could elect bim, would give us the most corrupt administration the country bas ever known. Neither imperial dignities nor tue gloom of solitude, says Tacitus, could save Ti berius from himself, and Tildeu could not rise above himscli, or above the source of his power. " There are many reasons why Governor Tll den should not be nominated, an! why. if no minated, he will be defeated. He has'lieeu too closely identilled, socially aud politically, and legally we will not say financially with the Tweed ti,h of New Y'ork. When Tweed escad from the custody of the Sheriff of New York, many mouth sgo, tlie Boss wan nut only a prnit." utiary eonviet, who had not fuuuieil one-film of his term, but was being tried on a civil suit to recover $3.0(10.000 but a porti.m of the amount he had stolen from the e.'ty. There was everv likelihood of maluisg Tweed distrorgis, but the sheriff's officers were lirilnd, no doubt, and the Buss went on his way rejoicing. Tiideus tbe next day, with a flourish (if trumpets, ii rlared that the Sheriff, who w is under Initios, was liable fur Tweed's escspeV and further, more, to pay over to the city "St.UoO.iM), for which Tweed wa held, and vt'hii h suit, as a matter of course, must iro by driault. Neariy ten months have since elapsod. Tweed has cot been cauzht. The Sheriff of New York (Con ner) still holds hi post, and his bail bond and property, and all effort to eapt ure and bring liai-fc the Boss has been abandoned. The peo lt of New York city bold Tiiden it?sponstble for retaining tn office a Sheriff who le- s lly the grettt thieves of the Ring who nearly bsvikrutted tlie city. Another objection to Tiiden is lus aristo cratic proclivities. The common j Conle of New York do not like him. His money ne'.ped to elect blm two years ago. lie is a bachelor, with an ample fortune of four or i2ie millions, and spent it freely, or let his frieivis spend it freely for him. In the campaign of tSTV-. Until his election for Governor he was hsnlly known outside of New York. Tiiden and Jiii fri-cls bamboozled the poor wcrkin? ra m of New Tork by telling them they rould have z b nty of work, at good wages, if they would "vote for him for Governor. 'They did so. Trxsiy there are more idle men In New York city tha u when Dix was Governor. Besides, wages ha'.e been cut down." FKOM THE ALBANY "EVENI-Vta TIS ES." " Supreme seltishness, and a cold, sni crapu lous, cunning nature, are his ciarlstd I harac teristlcs. Toe intensity of his sel'Jkba - has never been relaxed eveii by the soiniiu; influ ences of married life, and he seejiis u be as destitute of mainietism or emotiou us a ma mmy. Having devoted tbe earlier portion of hi', I lie to the study of the art of moiiey-tnr.kinv. bt prac ticed tt with a success which, withit a lew ear, by one means and another, put ntoti li his purse. When be felt assured that ti:do-. ufuil of hi former Tammany asaociaj s Was tl '.ci table, he hastened to promote that rs uit. Having possessed himself of the par,y ir.sd iin ery, be used it to secure the noiiiuatif a lor Governor, aud succeeded on accr unt or tie want of any organized opposition, ar.d tiie de termined declination of the tnafi whom the party really desired to nominate. Uavinir -come Governor, every act has 1st en periorit ii with an eye siugie to the lust ttrp. Aud.iV that to attack corruption and fr lud wss lar, and that the public mind wi . susptci-.Hi any against whom charges were made, Ise fis ! tated not to promote attacks u;on those in every respect his superior. ' but whom V" thought were possible impedutil nt in his patltv, that, as Governor, be succert led in a s.ugte year in reducing the Democrat it majority oviw thirty-nv thousand votes, nott 'iihla;iliutr the unquestionably popular attack upon the renal frauds and mismunagrnient, I s conclusive evi dence of his want either of ca pacity or tact to successfully lead the Deinoca itic party of the Empire State. That he is an ' inefficient, hesita ting, and unreliable public -4 Brer, is palpuble. He is neither prompt, nor f tt jik, nor generou. nor agreeable, nor popular. To say that the Democrary of the Uuiou rej y seek such a can didate is to say that they a r unlltud to suiect a resident." Yet gain th Tsrau ray-rt: "There Is a great :rs put upon the ser vices of TiHcn in 'brenkb r up the Tw eed Rinit-' Tiiden was a co-worker ' ml Tweed for years, aud did not open his mo nth aguintt him until Jimmy O'Brien and the Ne lurk 7 (- had furnished many of the le tiling fsets to the public. When It was disci ivered that an out raged eompiunity cou ld ni longer stand the frauds of iiie Rings, I lut w ere determined to break theta up, then 1 1 occu rred to our great railroad tfaenmer that the opportune moment had arrlYVd for bim to. make capital out of the facts of fraud with w Aich let years he had been familiars Had the public rn-t-aiued indifferent to tbe Sauds of Twi ed, the-v Is no reason' to doubt lat Mr. Til Jen would ltave besn as mum as a m use up to tliiw v-v d.V VIOM THE Kt'C VORli EXPRFS3," "While New York Drmoerats have not chanf ed their position? Governor Tiiden ha chanr.-ed his. II is no bmger lor S-ymnur, cor for Church, nor for any man In the hind bat Sara ud J. Tiiden I The Tn'.-i wan:s to I now the reason of vppoition Ui tlrct'ouutry to Governor Tildtn. If it wOl read the ad dresses made at Albany it wCl tzt.d iu oiiestion answered. If it will read the duztepuiatile re cord of public opbiion, marrulact una! ad circulated through a large advertising tstrcuiy in this city, it will find an ttnswer. It it kn.tv, st; we know, of the appliances used all over fhr State to elect and defeat delegates fur t!tr L tx a Convention It would asjk for no other answer but, beyond this, thete are auaie rea.jcv There are better men. There are more po;uak men ; men just as true aa reforiarrs. just an honest, just a true to principles and to tbit country, more faith fed to friends, of qckiri perception, of better Judgment, of more exeeia tive ability, les cell sb, less atnlrSous. ami: wholly incapable of making the bad record which has stirred o many thousszid in thil State either to a preference tor some other mas. or to a more direst opposition to Goverma Tllden. We might tadd many other reason), bat we forbear fwr to- day at least.' Again, June 22, it my : "Abu who has d -sit so largely in raflrolav sv) gialut s Utj f fc7 lata, via m to 'pedes' come ncas, r t t- trusted as a candidate. Tbe Irweea have he too fritrhtful upon the one hand, and th pri vate gains too enormous on the other, to make any man, identified, as Mr. Tiiden Is. with rail road', the ntper candidate tor tbe President of the United States. We seek simply to avoid thf defeat of the Democratic party in November next by n-iuir all lair ami honorable mean tu prevent an unwise nomination at St. Louis." I' BOM THE CH I'-AGO "TIMES." "Tiiden and Hendricks combiued would be a guarantee of the success of the Hayes party, even in Indiana. Instead of a struntr ticket. Tiiden aud Hendricks would probably be found the weakest ticket that could be made. Tllden. without Heuci ricks, might carry New York, were it nut that Tildcn's nomination, would inevitably give Indiana to the Hayes part".' in October. U'eiidricks, without Tiiden, mitrh: possibly (but not probably) carry Indiana, bns certainly not New York, Connecticut, or New Jersey. But Tiiden and lle'idriek combined wotid be a trade-mark of political dishonesty that all honest citizens would spurn, it would not get an electoral vote north of the Ohio river. For lild n to swallow Hendricks and survive is an Imaginable possibility. For Hendricks ti wallow Tiiden aud survive is an imagtnab e Xtssibility. But for Tiiden and licndrka to swNal low etich other and survive Is plainly it wit illu the bounds of things possible." FSS-iM THE PHILADELPHIA "TIMES." " Wi'.iout de-aline with the question, wheth ;r or n. Tildcu deserves to be elected over Hayi , we turn to tbe practical and Vital lact that lie would oe defeated by tha largest popular ! joritv ever cast against any candidate, excej t iu; Mr. Greeley. He would he pitted seat t the same Mr. liayes who owes his election v r Allen la 17j, and thereby bis nomination in !7il, to tbe ojn defection of Mr. TUdet ' frit-uds and their defiant assaults upon their os'u arry acd its candidates, and tbe October elo t.s.nv iu Ohio and Indiana would be swept by t-snsofthotisaniH for Hayes, with New Yot s, Pen:i)lvar.:i. New Jersey nd Connecticut ;i tain to k'lovr in November by majorities seccr.d only to Graiit's in 1372.-'' FKoM TilE CADIZ OUIO "SENTINEL." " Pates Jc Locke, advertising attiu, of X -w Yoti, seed us socio pud of that old bit 11 heaucd isuiliouist. Sam Tllden, which they want inserted as reading matter, aud for which tli.y ofl-r Ut pay us in ' rag money.' We do not i o sort vajverti-euient ainaiur reading matter, sLd llierelore decline their offer. The propriett of sugar coated' pills, who advertise in the .Vhf jr!, nave to assume the pressure aud br.n, bug tue ptopie by saouiderjij; the respoit'. i'iLity ai the regular adverutiu column. Bt Vis Tiiih-u matter has another objection. Tli i.fc.3 of Obio lorbid tew s;ai t r sdvertLti-g uik'i Con goods." klAjil THS PETEnSltrr.O tVA "INDSie irriAt." " 'What we urge is that the public should be enlU.itcned as to the depth and origin of this la'-cl.t-uoyU clamor for Tiiden. It is mer tn cious mud mechanical ; as soon aa his noicitia tion is mtlt'e the people will fall off from the ticket tn dVigut. Now pause and iaqtiire. wliiie tlsj-re I. yet time, about the truth of the matter. Kteclab!e journals like the Mrni phl AvA'"utit. tue Savannah .Vnr, the Au gusta tV.iwti.1, testify to having been a;. proached "with ramey in the interest of tl.i New Y'ork i-andS ate. ani there Is indisputable and undisputed evidence that an advert:.-ir ; agency in New i'ck is running oil' Mr. Tiltl 'n's uauie as ilelmbold V wont 10 do his bnohu. Is ttie streniriu so biied a safe one on whit h to build the Deuiocraii canvass! If so. goon; wash our hands oft he responsibility." KUUMTHF. NEW HAVEN -rSMN." " Governor Tildeu nkctt with admirabit sue. cess lu capturing Democratic convention iu State where the party has virtually no exist ence. The sure lienacratie State are all bit terly opposed to Tiiden, so far as public senti ment is" concerned, but Tilden's money has a perceptible influence on the delegates. It would not surprise us In the least should Tiiden pull through. He is utterly unscrupulous, and by his lavisii expenditure of money now, he is raising hope ia the breast of lmpt-tulous strikers that money will flow like water If h becomes the standard-bearer." PROMINENT DEM0CRAT9 DENOUNCE HIM. HON. ACGl'STCS SCH ELL. " I ant decidedly and unalterably opposed to Governor Tiiden as a Presidential candidate. He is bittsvly opposed by some of the best known and moit ioiiueutia! Democrats In the State, n the metrop-lif. and ail through the Interior, it ia idle to talk of his ability to carry New 1 ork." COLC. EL ISAAC R. EATON. " If Tiiden is nominated, the Greenback mea will ortnize and nominate a candidate on a Greenback platform in less than thirty day frora the adjO'iminenl of the convention. The Kan sas Democrat Will utterly refuse to t.jioit Tildeu." CENEEAL JAMES B. STEADMA M " Under no clrcumstam e that cocid be imiirined would we accept Tiiden. If Tiiden shouid unforiunaiety receive' the noraixatioti, liaves would test hlrn In Ohio by GO.C'U to To,. tW niajority. and In Indiana he would be beaien by from 2d.0(i0 tolSo.ObO. If anyotberman that has becu uatudd sloiild be nouiiujted on a plat, form declaring tn favor of au immediate repeal of the resumption sot, we can carry Ol.io by .0uy majority. We would not even tccept Tiiden on a platform with that plank tn it, be cause the man and the piatiorm would neutralize each other. It the city of Toledo, in which 1 live, is to be taken aa at all a test of the State, he would be r-st-?i ntter'v by Haves." HON. AfutJl BEL-VKlNT. Of NEW YORK. " Thoe wlai riaim that Tildeu Is unassailable do cot know i:iui,oril"thf y do, thtmhey are quit as dishonest as he Is. lie has been counsel for til tbe broken-down corporations with which N ew V orli has been aidcied for a long term of Teats, aia out of them be has not com with cVau nanus." GENEXAL EW1NO, OF OHIO. " rm very much surprised at one thing. Tbe a Vocacy of Ttldcn comes either from Stat -a thit aitianatuly Democratic or hopelessly Re pubHcanswhilc'two treat States whose v.. te tLe index -to the final resuK of the fight -e ar raved ster viv auiust him. It Is also a curious thine tlinr liaiiuing. editor of the Albany pane r regarded Tilden's special organ, ttoD.d, in an interview to St. Louis, make the stale.net t thst GovercorVTiulen looking for the receipt of the votes ot a large number of RepuUicau in Ntw York." HON. ECROE W. HOrH, delegate to the sA- Louis Convention from Ohio, savs : The nartv can aurvive a Presidential defeat. as It has already sitrvived three since liO, Inau gurated under the tame auspices and leadership a the present, but cannot survive the sacri fice of the great ptiiidple of fidelity to the rhrhtsof th-pi' b-which If was organized to maintain. He Tiiden has used bus fortune w Ith a lavish hand to promote bis ! o litiial as piration. He is the first aspirant lor Presideniial houor- in the history of the eiut trv ho has ulil.zeU the provincial press by ad vertising bis cic.altr.sr; ions as extensively ami as successfully as I'eluiNold advertised his buthb. Such a ciin, feilow-Jtuens. w ho reiits uron such instrumentalities, and who seeks by ti. di rection to compass hi personal aivancenu.nl, is not tbe man to lead tie Democratic party u victory in tui CenXeuxnai year of tha ha public." OIVERAX BIOCTM severely castirated fsieo before a crowd of delegated at fct. Louis. aud said : "The greater part of the State is oJKiosed to Tiiden now ; a lare part of the New nork delegation was dis posed to bim ; and it meant something, this Op position, for the'cppojineyaction comprised ao, or nearly ail, th brains ol the delegation. Wilis Tiiden it wa impossible to carrr Indian and Ohio ia October, and if theywere not carried ftr the Democratic party, there would be no cause lor roicl&2 In November. DAS TOOBHEES. "lam not surprised at all these thing coin ing out on Tildcu. I knew they were ail there and were bound to appear. And," he added ugsettively, " I am expecting, every uay,son thiug slili worse to be developed." DE WITT C. LXTTLEJOHN. I am utterly ooposed to the aomlnsttoa af Mr. Tiiden- I do not think ha has the area qualification to sake a good PrssMeat. Ha s net 1 MlHBs, a pssutant i IwoVgaTnst h'-other ; but this was J man, because the, 1 -s nf a ti-V I habits, this clinsrs I xe to ut
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