INGERSOLL'S Great Speech at India napolis, A SUPERB SAMPLE OF POLITI CAL INVECTIVE. Wit, Sarcasm, Eloquence, and Reason Combined, The following 1 a verbatim report of Colonel K. Q. Ingersoir address before the " Boys in Blue" gathering at Indianapolis : Ladies and Gknti.emen, Fellow-citizens, and Citizen Poi.niEns: I am opposed to the Democratic party; and I will tell you why. Every State that seceded from the United States was a Democratic State. Every ordt nance of secession that was drawn was drawn by a Democrat. Every man that endeavored to tear the old flag from the heaven that It enriches was a Democrat. A voice" Give It to them." Every man that tried to destroy this nation was a Democrat. Every enemy this great Republic lias had for twenty years has been a Democrat. Every man that shot Union soldiers was a Democrat. Cheers "That's so." Every man that starved Union soldiers and refused them iu the extremity of death a crust was a Democrat. fRencwed cheerintr.l Every man that loved slavery better than liberty was a Democrat. The man that assassinated Abraham Lincoln was a Democrat. Every man that sympathized with the assassin every man glad that the noblest President ever elected was assassinated was a Democrat ; every man who wanted the privilege of whipping another man to make him work for him for nothing and pay him with lashes on bis naked back was a Democrat cheers ; every man that raised bloodhounds to pursue human beings was a Democrat ; every man that clutched from shrieking, shuddering. crouching mothers, babes from their breasts "and sold them luto slavery was a Democrat. Cheers. Every man that impaired the credit of the United States ; every man that swore we would never pay the bonds ; every man that swore we would never redeem the greeubaeks : everv maltrner of his country's credit ; every calumniator of nis country's Honor, was a Democrat. Cheers. Everyman that resisted the draft; every man that hid in the bushes and shot at Union men simply because they were endeavoring to en- joixe me laws 01 meir country, was a Democrat. Cheers. Every man that wept over the corpse of slavery was a Democrat. Every man that cursed Lincoln because he issued the Proclama tion of Emancipation the grandest paper since the Declaration of Independence every one of mem was a uemocrat. iinecrs.j Every man that denounced the soldiers that bared their bosoms to the storm of shot and shell for the honor of America and for the sacred rights of man was a democrat, luiieers.j Everyman that wanted an uprising In the North that wanted to release the rebel prisoners that they might burn down the homes of Union soldiers above the heads of their wives and children, while the brave husbands, the heroic fathers. were in the front fighting- for the honor of me om nag every one or tnem was a Demo crat. Cheers. I am not through yet. Laugh ter and cheers. Every man that believed this glorious nation of ours is a confederacy, every raau that believed the old banner carried by our fathers through the Revolution, through the War of 1812, carried by our brothers over the fields of the rebellion, 6imply stood for a con tract, simply stood for an agreement, was a ueinocrsi. sneers, j Every man who believed that any State could go out of the Union at Its pleasure, every man that believed that the grand fabric of the American Government could be made to crumble instantly Into dust at the touch of treason, was a Democrat. Cheers. Every man that helped to burn orphan asylums in the city of New York was a Democrat; every mau thHt tried to tire the city of New York, although ho knew that thousands would perish, aud knew that the great serpents of ;uimes leaping irom Duuoinge would clutch children froiutheir mother's arms everv wretch that did it was a Democrat. Cheers. Recollect it ! Every man that tried to spread small-pox and yellow fever in the North as the instrumen talities of civilized war, was a Democrat. Sol diers, every scar you have got on your heroic bodies was riven to you by a Democrat. Cheers. Every scar, every arm that is laok ing, every limb that is gone, every scar is a sou venir of a Democrat. Cheers. I want you to recollect it. A voice "We will." Everyman that was the enemy of human liberty in this country was a Democrat. Everyman that want ed the fruit of all the heroism of all the ages to tutn to ashes upon the lips every one was a Democrat. Cheers. I am a Republican. Laughter and cheers. I will tell you why : This is the only free gov ernment in the world. The Republican party made it so. The Republican party took the chains from 4,(100,000 of people. The Republi can party, with the wand of progress, touched the auction block, and It became a school house. Cheers. The Republican party put down the rebellion, saved the nation, kept the old banner afloat in the air, and declared that slavery of every kiud should be extir pated from the face of this continent. Cheers. What more I I am a Republican because it is the only free party that ever existed. It is a party that lias a platform us broad as hu manitya platform as broad as the human race a party that says you shall have all the fruit of the labor of your hands a party that 6ys no rhains for the hands no fetters for the soul. A voice " Amen!" Cheers. am a Republican because the Republican party says this eountry is a nation and not a confederacy. I am here in Indiana to speak, and I have as good a right to speak here in Indiana as though I hud been born ou this siand nut because the flag of the State of Indiana waves over mc. I would not know it if I should tee it. You have the same right to speak in Illinois; not because the State flag of Illinois waves over you, but because that ban ner, rendered sacred by the blood of all the he roes, waves over me and you. Cheers. I am in favor of this being a nation. Think of a mau gratifying his entire ambition iu the State of Khodu Island. I Laughter. We want this to be a nation, and you cau't have a groat, grand, splendid people without having a great, grand, spleudid country. The great plains, the su blime mountains, the great, rushing, roaring i. cm, eu.jics msneu Dy lWo oceans, aud the grand anthem of Niagara, mingle and enter as it were in the character of every American citi zen, and make him, or tend to muke him, a great and graud character. 1 am for the Re publican party because it says the Government has as much right, as much power to protect its citizens at home as abroad. The Republican party don't say that you have to go away lroin home to get the protection of the Gov ernment. The Democratic party says the Government can't march Its troops fiito the South to protect the rights of the citizens. It is a lie. Great cheers. The Government claims the right, and it is conceded that the Government has the right to go to your house, while j'ou are sitting by your fireside with your wife and children about you, and the old lady knitting and the cat playing with the yarn, and everybody happy and sweet the Government claims the ritfhl to go to your fireside and to take you by force and put you into the army ; take you down to the valley of the shadow of hell ; set you by the ruddy, roaring guns, and make you tight for your flag. Cheer. Now, that being so, when the war Is over and your country is victorious, and you go back to your home, and a lot of Democrats want to trample upon your rights, I want to know if the Govern ment that took you from your fireside and made you fight for it, I want to know If it is not bound to fight for you I Cheers. The flag that will not protect its protectors la a dirty rag that contaminates the air in which it wave. The government that will Dot defend Its defend er is a disgrace to the nations of till world. A voice : " Amen I" I am a Republican be cause the Republican party savs ! " We will protect the rights of American citizens at home, and. If necessary, we will march an irmv Into any State to protect the rights of the humblest American citizen In that State." Cheers. a am a nepumican. Laughter. I am a Republican because that party allows me to be free allows me to do my own thinking in my own way. Cheers. I am a Republican be cause it Is a party grand enough and splendid enough and sublime enough to invite every hu man being in favor of liberty and pro gress to fight shoulder to shoulder for the advancement of mankind. Cheers. It in vites the Methodist ; It invites the Catholic ; it invites the Presbyterian, and every kind of sec tarian ; it invites the free-thinker; It invites the innciel, provided he ts in favor of giving to every other human being every chance and every right that he claims for himself. Cheers. I am a Republican, I tell you. Laughter. There Is room In the Republican air for every wing ; there is room on the Republican sea for every can. itcpunncanlsm says to every man, " Let your soul be like an eagle ; fly out in the great dome of thought, and question the stars for yourself. Cheers " That's so." But the Democratic party says : " Be blind, owls ; sit on the dry limb of a dead tree, and only hoot when Tilden A Co. tell you to." Laughter. 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 this country ; any man that does not love libcrtv ; anv man that is not in favor of human progress ; that Is not In fa vor ot giving to others all he claims lor him self we don't ask him to vote the Republican ticket. Cheers. You can vote it if vou please, and If there is anv Democrat within hearing who expects to die before another election we are willing that he should vote one Republican ticket simply as a consolation upon his death-bed. fGreat laughter. 1 What more! I am a Republican, because that party believes in frae labor. It believes that free labor will give us wealth. It believes in free thought, because It believes that free thought, will give us truth. A voice " That's so." You don't know what a grand party you be long to. I never want anv holier or grander title to nobility than that i belong to the Re publican party and have fought for the lib erty of man. Cheers. The Republican party, I say, believes In free labor. The Republican party also believes In slavery Vthat kind of slavery? In enslaving the forces of nature. We believe that free labor, that free thought, have enslaved the forces of nature and made them work for man. We make old Attraction and Gravitation work for us; we make the light ning do our errands ; we make steam-hammers and fashion what we need. The forcess of nature are the slaves of the Republican party Cheers. They have got no backs to be whipped ; they have got no hearts to be torn no hearts to be broken ; they cannot be separated from their wives ; they cannot be dragged from the bosoms of their husbands ; they work night and day, and they never tire. You cannot whip them, you cannot starve them, and a Democrat even can be trusted with one or them. Laughter. J I tell you I am a Republican. Lauehter. I believe, as told you, that free labor would five us these. Blaves. Free lubor will produce all these things, ana everyming you nave got to-day lias been produced bv free labor, nnrhtntr hv lum 11.,. Slavery never Invented but oue machine, and that was a threshing machine in the shape of a wuip. oatignier.i free labor has invented all the machines, we want to come down to the philosophy of these things. The problem of free labor, when a man works for the wife he loves, when he works for the little children he adores the problem is to do the most work In tho shortest space of time. The problem of slavery is 10 ao tne least work in the longest space of time. That is the difference. Free la bor, love, affection they have Invented every thing of use to the world. Cheers. lama Republican. I tell you, my iriends, this world Is getting better every day. and the Democratic party is getting smaller every day. See the ad rancvmeiu we nave maae in a lew vears : jee what we have done. We have covered this na tion with wealth and glory, and with liberty This is the first free Government in the wnrb) The Republican party is the first party that was not founded on sonic compromise with the devil. Laughter. It is the first party of pure, square, honest principles ; the first one. And we have got the first free country that ever existed. And right here I want to thank every soldier that fought to make it free cries of "good!" " good I" aud cheers ; every one, living and dead. I thank you again and again and again. You made the first free irovernmrt'nt In th wnrM cheers, and we must not forget the dead he roes, ii iney were iiere they would vote the Republican ticket, every one of them. I tell you we must not lorgct them. The past, as it ;ere, rises before me like a dream. Again we are in the great struggle for national life. We hear the sounds of prepara tionthe music of the boisterous drums the silver voices of heroic bugles. We see thousands of assemblages, and hear the appeals of orators ; we see the pale cheeks of women, and the nuenea races oi men, and In those assemblages we see all the dead whose dust we have covered with flowers. We lose sight of them no more. We are with them when we enlist in the great army of freedom. We see them part with those they love. Some are walking for the last time In quiet woodv places with the maidens tliv adore. We hear the whisperings and the sweet vows of eternal love as they lingerlngly part forever. Others are bending over cradles, kiss ing babes that are asleep. Some are receiving the blessings of old men. Some are parting with mothers who hold them and press them to meir nearu, again and again, aud say nothing; and some are talking with wives, and endeavor ing with brave words spoken in the old tones to drive from their hearts the awful fear. We see them uart. We see th wife atanding in the door with the babe in ner arms standing in the sunlight sobbing at the turn of the road a hand waves she answers by holding high in her loving hands the child. 1 1 i j iic ib guue, auu lorever. We see them all as they march m-oudlv ivnr under the flaunting flags, keeping time to the wild grand music of war marching down the streets of the treat cities through the. and across the prairies down to the fields of glory, to ao, and to die tor the eternal right. We go with them one and all. We are by their side ou all the gory fields In all the hos pitals of pain on all the wearv marches. W stand guard with them in the wild storm and under the quiet stars. We are with them in ravines running with blood in the furrows of old fields. We are with them between contend ing hosts, unable to move, wild with thirst, the life ebbing slowly awav amoug the withered leaves. We see them pierced by balls and torn with shells In the trenches by forts, and iu the whirlwind of the charge, where men become iron, with nerves of steel. H e are with them in the prisons of hatred and famine ; but human speech can never tell w nat, iney endured. We are at home when the news comes that they are dead. We see the maiden in the shadow of her first sorrow. We see the sil vered head of the old mm bowed with the last grief. The past rises before us, and we see four mil Hons of human beings governed by the lash we 6ee them bound hand and foot we hear the strokes of cruel whips we see the hounds trucking women through tangled swamps. We see babes sold from the breasts of mothers. Cruelty unspeakable ! Outrage iullnite ! Four million bodies in chains four million souls in fetters ! All the sacred relations of wite, mother, father, and child trampled be ueath the brutal feet of might. And all this was done under our beautiful banner of the tree. The past rises before us. We hear the roar aud shriek of the bursting shell. The broken fetters fall. These heroes fled. We look ; in stead of slaves, we see men and women and children. The wand of progress touches the auction block, the slave pen, the whipping-pott, and we see homes aud firesides aud school, houses and books, and where all was want aud crime and cruelty and fear, we see the face of the free. These heroes are dead. They died for liberty they died for us. They are at rest. They sleep iu the laud they made free, undor the lint they rendered stainless ; under the solemn pine, the sad hemlocks, the tearful willows, and the mbraciuf Tine. Tbey deep beneath the shadows of the rlouds, careless alike of sunshine or of storm, each In tho wlndowless palace of rest. Earth may run reuwitn other wars iney are at peace. In the midst of battle, in the roar of conflict, they found the crenlty of death. A voice, " Glory." 1 have one sentiment for the soldiers, living and dead cheers for the living and tears for the dead. There are three questions now subrr Itted to the American people. The first Is, S isll the people that saved this country rule it ? Cries of " Yes, yes." Shall the men that saved the old flag hold It! Cries of "Yes, yes." Shall tho men who saved the ship of 8tate sail it I Cries of " Yes, yes, yes," or shall the rebels walk her quarter-deck, give the. orders and sink It f Crle of "No, no." That Is the question. Shall a solid South, a united South, united by assassina tion and murder, a South solidified by the shot gun shall a united South with the aid of a divided North, shall they control this great and splendid country ? Cries of " Never, never." Well, then, the North must wake up. Cries of ' Wc will, we will." We are right backwhere we were in lRfil. This Is simply a prolongation of the war. This is tho war of the Idea; the other was the war of the musket. The other was the war of the cannon ; this Is 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 rul e It f Cries of "Never, never." Shall tho men that snld this Is not a Nation, have charge of this Nation I Cries of " Never, never !" " The next question, Shall we pay our debts t Cries of " Yes I yes I and every cent I" We had to borrow some money to pay for shot and shell to shoot Democrats with. We found that we could get along with a lew less Democrats laughter, but not with any less country, and so we borrowed the money, and the question now is, Will we pay it J And which party is the most apt to pay it, tho Republican party, that, made the debt the party that swore it was constitutional, or the party that said it was unconstitutional! Whenever a Democrat sees a greenback the greenback says to the Democrat, " I am the one that whipped you." Laughter. Whenever a Republican sees a greenback, the greenback says to him, " You and I put down the rebellion and saved the country." Laughter. Now, my friends, you have heard a great deal about finances. Nearly everybody that talks about it gets as dry just as if they had been in the final home of the Democratic party for forty years. Great laughter. I will give you my ideas about finances. A voice. " Let's hear them." In the first place the Government don't sup port the people ; the people support the Gov ernment. A voice. "That's it." The Gov ernment passes around the hat, the Gov ernment passes around the alms-dish. True enough, it has a musket behind it, but it is a perpetual chronic pauper. It passes, I told you, the alms-dish, and we all throw in our share except Tilden. Great laughter. Tills Government is a perpetual consumer. You understand mo the Govern ment don't plough ground, the Government don't raise corn and wheat ; the Government is simply a perpetual consumer. We support the Government. "That's right." Now, the idea that the Government can make money for you and me to live on why, It is the same as though my hired man should issue certificates of my indebtedness to him for me to live on. Laughter and applause. Some people tell me that a government can impress its sov ereignty on a piece of paper, aud that Is money. Well, if It is, what is the use of wasting it In making SI bills! It takes no more Ink and no more paper why not make $1,000 bills ! Why not make ?1,OUO,000,000 bills, and all be billion aires f Great laughter. If the Government can make money what on earth does It collect taxes from you and mc for I Why don't it make what money it wants, take the taxes out, and give the balance to us ? Laughter. Mr. Greenbacker, suppose the Government issued $100,000,000 to-morrow ; how would you get any of it! A voice "Steal it." I was not speaking to the Democrats. Laughter. You would not get it unless you had something to exchange for it. The Government would not go around and give you your average. You have to have some corn, or wheat, or pork to give for It. How do you get money ! By work. Where from ! Y'ou have to dig it out of the ground. That is where it comes from. In old times there were some men who thought they could get some way to turn the baser metals Into gold, and old, gray-haired men, trembling, tottering on the verge of the grave, were hunting for something to turn ordinary metals Into gold ; they were searching for the fountain of eternal youth ; but they did not find it. No human ear has ever heard the silver gurgle of the spring of immortal youth. There used to be mechanics that tried to make perpetual motion by combinations of wheels, shifting weights, and rolling balls ; but somehow the machine would never quite run. A perpetual fountain of greenbacks, of wealth without labor, Is Just as foolish as a fountain of eternal youth. The idea that you can produce money without labor is just as foolic-h as the idea of perpetual motion. They are old follies under new names. Let me tell you another thing. The Democrats seem to think that you can fail to keep a promise so long that It is as good as though you had kept it. They say you can stamp the sovereignty of the Government upon paper. The other day I saw a piece of silver bearing the sovereign stamp of Julius Casar. Julius Casar has been dust about two thousand years, but that piece of sil ver was worth just as much as though Julius Cesar was at the head of the Roman legions. Was it his. sovereignty that made it valuable? Suppose he had put it upon a piece of paper It vi ould have been of no more value than a Democratic promise. Another thing, my friends ; this debt will be paid ; you need not worry ahout that. The Democrats ought to pay It. They lost the suit and they ought to pay the costs. Laughter and applause. But we are willing to pay our share. It will be jid. The hold ers of the debt have got a mortgage on a con tinent. They have a mortgage on the honor of the Republican party, and it is on record. Every blade of grass that grows upon the con tinent is a guarantee that the debt will be paid; every field of bannered corn in the great, glorious West Is a guarantee that the debt will be paid; all the coal put away in the ground millions of years ago by that old miser, the nun, is a guarantee that every dollar of that debt will be paid ; all the cattle on the prairies, pastures and plains, every one of them is a guarantee that this debt will be paid ; every pine standing in the sombre forests of the North, waiting for the woodman's axe, is a guarantee that this debt will be paid ; all the gold and silver hid in the Sierra Nevadas waiting for the miner's pick is a guarantee that the debt will be paid ; every locomotive, with its muscles of iron and breath of flame, and all the boys and girl beudlng over their hooks at school, every dimpled child In the cradle, every good man nd every good woman, and every man that votes the Republican ticket, is a guar antee that tho debt will be paid. Applause. What is the next question ! The next ques tion is, Will we protect the Union men in the South? Voices " Yes, yes." I tell you the white Union men there have suffered enough. It is a crime in the Southern State to be a Re publican. It is a crime in every Southern 8tate to love this country, to believe in the sacred rights of men. I tell you the colored people have suffered enough. They have been owned by Democrats for 200 years. Worse than that ; they have been forced to keeD the eoinnanv nf their owners. Laughter. It is a terrible thing to live with a man that steals from you. They have suffered enough. For 200 years they were branded like cattle. Yes. for '200 veara every human tie was torn asunder by the cruel hand of avarice and greed. For 200 years chil dren were sold from their mothers,' husbands irora meir wives, brothers trom brothers, sisters from sisters. There was not. duriner the whole rebellion, a single negro who was not our friend. We are willing to be reconciled to our Southern brethren wheu they will treat our friends as men. When they will be Just to the friends of this country ; when thev are iu favor of allowing every American citizen to have his rights then we are their frieuds. We are willing to trust them with the nation when they are friends of me nation. vt e arc. wining to trust them with liberty when they believe in liberty. We are willing to trust them with the black man when they cease riding in the darkness of night those masked wretches to the hut of the frcedmau, and notwithstanding the prayer and supplica tions of his family, shoot him down ; wheu they cease to consider the massacre of Hamburg a a their friends, and not before. tA 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 life. And, Mr. Democrat, he will do It unless you attend to your business. The simple fact that you are white cannot 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 am for giving every man a chance. Anybody that can pass me is welcome. A voice, " There can't many do It." I believe, my friends, that the Intellectual domain of the future, like the land used to be In the State of Illinois, isopen to pre-emption. The fellow that, gets a fact first, that is his ; that gets an Idea first, that is his. Every rotind in the ladder ot fame, from the one that touches the ground to the last one that leans against the shining sum mit of human ambition belongs to the foot that gets upon it first. Applause. Mr. Democrat (I point down because they are nearly all on the first round of the ladder), If you can't climb, stand ononesideandlctthedescrvingncgropass. I must tell you one thing. I have told It so much, and you have all heord 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 dav, free to every horse in the world, and to all the mules, and all the scrubs, and all the donkeys. At the tap of the drum they come to the line, and the judges say, " Is it a go?" Let me ask you, what, does the blooded horse, rushing ahead, with nostrils distended, drinking in the breath of his own swiftness, with his mane living like a banner of victory, with his veins standing out all over hiin as if a net of life had been cast around him with his thin neck, his high withers, his tremulous flunks what does he care how many mules and donkeys run on that track. Prolonged and deafening laughter. But the Democratic, scrub, with his chuckle head and lop ears, with his tail full of cockle burs, jumping high and short, and digging in the ground when he feels the breath" "of "the coming mule on his cockle-bur tail, he is the chap that Jumps the track and says : " I am down on mule equality." Renewed and up roarious laughterj My friends, the Republican party Is the blooded horse In tho race. A voice "Anything may follow that wants to." Lnnrrhter.j I stood a little while ago in the city of iaris whre stood the Bastile, where now stands the Column of July, surmounted by the figure of Liberty. In its right hand is a broken chain, in its left hand a banner; upon Its forehead a glittering stHr and as I looked upon it. I said, such is the Re publican party of my country. The other day going along" the road I came to the place where the road had been changed, but the guide-board wa as they had 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 nobodv heeded the hand on the guide-post, and it stuck there through storm and shiue, and it pointed as hard as ever as if tho road was through the desolate field, and I said to my self, " Such is the Democratic 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 6torms. There hadn't been a grain of wheat ground there for twenty years. There was nothing 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 hud 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 und beast." The word "man" was nearly burned out, There hadn't been a hotel there for thirty years. That sign had swung and creaked in the wind ; the. show had fallen upon it In the winter, the birds had sung upon It in the summer. Nobody ever stopped at that hotel ; but the sign stuck to It, and kept swearing to it, " Entertainment for 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 be called Tilden and the other Hendricks." Renewed aud continued cheer ing and laughter. Now, my friends, both of these parties have candidates. The Democratic party trots out Samuel J. Tilden. Who is he? He Is a man that advertises his honesty and reform, the same as people advertise quack medicines. In every Democratic paper iu the United States he has advertisements of his honesty and reform. Samuel J. Tilden is an attorney alegul spider that weaves webs of technicalities, and catches in Its meshes honest incorporated flies. He has stood on the shores of bankruptcy and clutched the drowning by the throat. Samuel J. Tilden is a demurrer that the Confederate Congress has filed against the amendments to the Constitu tion of the United States. Samuel J. Tilden is an old bachelor. In a country depending upon the increase of its population for its glory and honor cheers and laughter, to elect an old bachelor is a suicidal policy. Renewed and prolonged laughter. Think of a man sur rounded by beautiful women, dimpled checks, coral lips, pearly teeth, shining eyes ! think of a man throwing them all away for the embrace of the Democratic party. Laughter. Such a man docs not know the value of time. Laugh Samuel J. Tilden belongs to the Democratic party of the city of New York. That party never had but two objects grand and etit larceny. Laughter. They rarely elect a man to ofiice except for a crime committed. They don't elect on a crime credit ; it must he a crime accomplished. They have stolen every thing they could lay their hands on, and, my God, yvhat hands I When they had stolen all the people could pay the interest on they clapped their enormous hands upon their spa cious pockets and shouted for honesty and re form. Samuel J. Tilden has been a pupil in that school. He has been a teacher in that school. He was reared iu Tammany Hall, which bears the same relation to a penitentiary s the Sunday school to a church. Applause. More than this, when the rebellion began they called a meeting at Union Square, in the city of New York. It was of great importance how the city of New York should go. No man refused to sign that petition in the city of New York but one, and that man was Samuel J. Tilden. A man that will not lend his name to rave his country never should be the President of that eountry. You offered to save your lives, and he would not give his infamous name. now, my friends, I want you to vote the Re- Fublican ticket. A voice, ' We will do It." want you to wear you will not vote for a man who opposed putting down the rebellion. 1 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 you to swear that you will never vote for a man who called the soldiers iu the field Lin coln hirelings. 1 want vou to swear thnt. vnn will not vote for a man who denounced Lincoln as a tyrant, l want you to swear that you will not vote for any enemy of human progress. Go and talk to every Democrat that vou can ? get him by the coat-collar ; talk to him ; hold him, liko Coleridge's Ancient Mariner, with your glittering eye; hold him ; tell him all the mean inmgs ins party ever did ; tell him kindlv; tell him in a Christian spirit, as 1 do, but tell him. Applause and laughter. Recollect there never was a more important election than the one you are going to hold Iu Indiana. I want you every one to swear that you will vote for glorious Ben. Harrison. Tremendous ap plause. I tell you we must stand by the coun try. It is a glorious eouutry. It permits you and me to be free. It is the only eouutry iu the world whero labor is respected. Let us support it. It is the only eountry iu the world where the useful man is the only aristocrat. The man that work for a dollar a day goes home at ni"ht to his little ones, take his little boy on hi knee, aud he think that boy can aeldeve any thing that the son of the wealthy man euu achieve. The free schools are opeu to him ; he may be the richest, the greatest, aud grandest ; and that thought sweeten every drop of sweat that roi' down the honest fee of toil. Ap pUu.J Vet to v th country. DEMOCRATIC OPINIONS OF , SAMUEL J. TILDEN, Expressed Prior to the St. Louis Convention. Tho True Character of tho Man as Portrayed by his own Partisans. FROM THE CINCINNATI ENQUIRER. "There are a few facts concerning Sam T Men which we trust will sink into the minds of Wcst eru and Southern Democrats : " 1. He cannot carry his own State in No bcr. " !J. lie cannot carry any Northern State. " 3. ITcis a hypocrite, a political swindler, hns long been a public plunderer, and is really the only disreputable candidate prominently named on the Democratic side. " 4. He has sought this high office by methods so nnprecedentedly shameless and disreputrble that It would be an everlasting stigma upon a Democratic convention to nominate him, and a reproach upon the American people to elect him if nominated. " Should ' God's providence, seeming estran ged,' permit his nomination, by whom and what 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; by the system on which all other quack medicines are sold advertising and even respectable medical asso ciations read out of the profession doctors that will advertise. It would seem that the Demo cratic party should have as high a respect for the good name of the party and the Government as tfie vendors of pills have for their craft. It could not but be that a man educated in cun ning, hypocrisy, and Iniquity, nominated in cor ruption and shamless effrontery, even though his millions could elect him, would give us the most corrupt administration the country has ever known. Neither imperial dignities nor the gloom of solitude, says Tacitus, could save Ti berius from himself, and Tilden could not rise above himself, or above tho sources of his power. " There are many reasons why Governor Til den should not be nominated, and why, if no minated, he will be defeated. Ha has' been too closely identified, socially and politically, and legally yve will not say financially with the Tweed regime of New York. When Tweed escaped from the custody of the Sheriff of New York, many months ago, the Boss was not only a penitentiary convict, who had not fulfilled one-fifth of his term, hut was being tried on a civil suit to recover f 3,000,000 but a portion of the amount he had stolen from the city. There was every likelihood of making Tweed disgorge, but the Sheriffs officers were bribed, no doubt, and the Boss went on hie way rejoicing. Tilden, the next day, with a flourish of trumpets, de clared that the Sheriff, yvho was under bonds, was liable for Tweed's escape; and further more, to pay over to the city $'1,000,000, for which Tweed was held, and yvhich suit, as a matter of course, must go by default. Nearly ten mouths have since elapsed. Tweed has not been caught. The Sheriff of New York (Con ner) still holds his post, and his bail bond and property, and nil effort to capture aud bring back the Boss has been abandoned. The people of New York city hold Tilden responsible for retaining in office a Sheriff who lets Hy the great thieves of the Ring who nearly bankrupted the city. Another objection to Tilden is his aristo cratic proclivities. The common people of New York do not like him. His money helped to elect him two years ago. He is a bachelor, w ith an ample fortune of four or five millions, and spent, it freely, or let his friends spend it freely for hiin, in the campaign of 1871. Until his election for Governor he was hardly known outside of Neyv York. Tilden and his friends bamboozled the poor working men of New York by telling them they could have plenty of work, at good wages, if they would vote for him for Governor. They did so. To-day there are more idle men in New York city than when Dix was Governor. Besides, wages have been cut down." FROM THE ALBANY "EVENING TIMES." " Supreme selfishness, and a cold, unscrupu lous, cunning nature, are his marked charac teristics. The intensity of his selfishness has never been relaxed even by the softening influ ences of married life, and he seems to be as destitute of magnetism or emotion as a mummy. Having devoted the earlier portion of his life to the study of the art of money-making, he prac ticed it with a success whirb,'within a few years, by one means and another, put millions 'in his purse. When he. felt assured that the downfall of his former Tammany associates yras Inevi table, he hastened to promote that result. Having possessed himself of the party machin ery, he used it to secure the nomination for Governor, and succeeded on account of the want of any organized opposition, and the de termined declin.-.tion of the man whom the party really desired to nominate. Having be come Governor, every act has been performed with an eye single to tho next ttep. Finding that to attack corruption and fraud was popu lar, and that the public mind was suspicious of uuy against whom charges were made, he hesi tated not to promote attacks upon those in every respect his superiors, but whom ho thought vrcrc possible impediments in his path ; that, as Governor, he succeeded in a single year in rsduoing the Democratic majority over thirty-liva thousand votes, notwithstanding the unquestionably popular attack upon the canal frauds and mismanagement, is conclusive evi dence of his want either of capacity or tact to successfully lead the Democratic party of the Empire State. That he is an inefficient, hesita ting, and unreliable public officer, is palpable. He is neither prompt, nor frank, nor generous, nor agreeable, nor popular. To say that the Democracy of the Union really seek such a can didate is to say that they are unfitted to select a President." Yet again the Timet says : " There is a great stress put upon the ser vices of Tilden in 'breaking up the Tweed Ring. Tilden was a eo-worker with Tweed for years, and did not open his mouth against him until Jimmy O'Brien and the New York Timet had furnished many of the leading facts to th public. When it was discovered that an out raged community could no longer stand the frauds of the Kings, but were determined to break them up, then it occurred to our great railroad financier that the opportune moment had arrived for him to make capital out of the facts of fraud with which for vears he had been familiar. Had the public remained indifferent to the frauds of Tweed, there is no reason to doubt that Mr. Tilden would have been a mum a a mouse np to this very day." FKuM Tift SKW Ylilili EXPRESS." "While New York Democrats have not changed their position Governor Tilden has changed his. He is no longer for Seymour, nor lor Church, nor for any man In the laud but Samuel J. Tilden I Tho Tribunt wants to know the reason of opposition iu the eountry to Governor Tildtn. If it will read the ad dresses made at Albany it will find its question answered. If it will read the disreputable re cord of public opinion, manufactured and circulated through a large, advertising agency in this city, It will find an answer. If it knew, as we kuow, of the appliances used all over the State to elect and defeat delegates for the Utica Convention it would ask lor no other auswer but, beyond this, there are ample reasons. There are better men. There are more popular men ; men just as true as reformers, just a honest, Just u true to principles aud to tha eouutry, more faithful to friends, of quicker perception, of better Judgment, of more execu tive ability, less selfish, less ambitious, and wholly Incapablo of making the bad record which has stirred so many thousands iu this State either to a preference for some other man or to a more direct opixisittou to Governor Tilden. We nili;ht add many other reasous, but we forbear for to-day at least." Again, June 2'.', it says I " A man who ha dealt so largely in railroads, tnd proftud o largely by (htm, will sot b trusted as a candidate. The losses have heft too frightful upon the one hand, and the pri vate gains too enormous on the other, to make any mon, identified, as Mr. Tilden is, with rail roads, the proper candidate for the President of the United 8tates. We seek simply to avoid tho defeat of the Democratic party In November next by using all fair and honorable means to prevent an unwise nomination at St. Louis." FROM THE CHICAGO "TIMES." " Tilden and Hendricks combined wonld be s guarantee of the success of the Hayes party, even in Indiana. Instead of a strong ticket, Tilden and Hendricks would probably be found the weakest ticket that could be made. Tilden, without Hendricks, might carry New York, were it not that Tilden' nomination would inevitably give Indiana to the Hayes party in October. Hendricks, without Tilden, might possibly (but not probably) carry Indiana, but certainly not New York, Connecticut, or New Jersey. But Tilden and Hendricks combined would be a trade-mark of political dishonesty that all honest citizens would spurn. It would not get an electoral vote nortL of the Ohio river. For Tilden to swallow Hendricks and survive is an Imaginable possibility. For Hendricks to swallow Tilden and survive is an imaginable possibility. But for Tilden and Hendricks to swallow each other and survive is plainly not within the bounds of things possible." FROM THE PHILADELPHIA "TIMES." " Without dealing with the question, whether or not Tilden deserves to be elected over Hayes, we turn to the practical and vital fact that he would be defeated by the largest popular ma jority ever east against any candidate, except ing Mr. Greeley. He yvould be pitted against tho same Mr. Hayes who owes his election over Allen In 1875, and thereby his nomination In ISiO, to the open defection of Mr. Tilden'a friends and their defiant assaults upon their own party and its candidates, aud the October elec tions In Ohio and Indiana would be swept by tens of thousands for Hayes, with New York, Pennsylvania, New Jersey .and Connecticut cer tain to follow in November by majorities second only to Grant's in 1873." FROM THE CADIZ (OHIOt "SENTINEL." " Bates ifc Locke, advertising aeents, of New York, send us some puffs of that old bull headed Bulllonist, Sam Tilden, yvhich they want inserted as reading matter, and for which they offer to pay us in ' rag money.' We do not in sert advertisements among reading matter, and therefore decline their offer. The proprietor of 'sugar roated' pills, who advertise In the Sentinel, have to assume the pressure and bum. bug the people hy shouldering the responsi bility in the regular advertising columns. But this Tilden matter has another objection. The laws of Ohio forbid newspaper advertising abortion goods." FROM THE PETEItsnt'RO (VA.) "INDEX API'EAL." " What we urge Is that the public should be enlightened as to the depth and origin of tbi lately-born clamor for Tilden. It is meretri cious and mechanical ; as soon as his nomina tion is made the people will fall off from tha ticket In disgust. Now pause and inquire, while there is yet time, about the truth of tht matter. Respectable journals like the Mem phis Aftlancie, the Savannah Xevet, the Au gusta Chronicle, testify to having been ap proached with money In the interest of th'ia New York candidate, and there is indisputable and undisputed evidence that an advertising agency in New York is running off Mr. Tilden name as Helmbold was wont to do his buchu. Is the strength so based a 6afc one on which to build the Democratic canvass? If so, go on ; we wash our hands of the responsibility." FROM THE NEW HAVEN "UNION." " Governor Tilden meets with admirable suc cess In capturing Democratic conveutions in States where the party has virtually no exist ence. The sure Democratic States are all bit terly opposed to Tilden, so far as public senti ment is concerned, but Tilden's money has a perceptible influence on tho delegates. It would not surprise u in the least should Tilden pull through. He is utterly unscrupulous, and by bis lavish expenditure of money now, he i raising hope in the breasts of impecunious striker that money will flow like water if ha becomes the standard-bearer." PROMINENT DEMOCRATS DENOUNCE HIM. HON. AUGUSTUS SCHELL. " I am decidedly and unalterably opposed to Governor Tilden as a Presidential candidate. He is bit terly opposed by some of the best known and most influential Democrats in the State, in the metropolis, and all through the interior. It is idle to talk of his ability to carry New York." COLONEL ISAAC R. EATON. " If Tliden Is nominated, th Greenback men will organize and nominate a candidate on a Greenback platform in less than thirty days from the adjournment of the convention. The Kan sas Democrats will utterly refuse to support Tilden." vv GENERAL JAMES B. STEADMAN. " Under no circumstances that eould ba ' imagined would we accept Tilden. If Tilden should unfortunately receive the nomination, Hayes would beat him In Ohio by 60,000 to 70, 000 majority, and in Indiana he would be beaten by from 20.000 to 35,000. If any other man that has been named should be nominated on a plat form declaring iu fuvor of au immediate repeal of tho resumption act, we can carry Ohio by 25,000 majority. We yvould not even accept Tilden on a platform with that plank in it, be cause the man and the platform would neutralize each other. If the city of Toledo, in which I live, is to be taken as at all a test of the State, be would be beaten utterly by Hayes." HON. AUGUST BELMONT, OF NEW YORK. " Those who claim that Tilden Is unassailable do not .know him,orifthey do, then they are quite us dii-honest as he is, He has been counsel for all the broken-down corporations with which New York ha been afflicted for a long term of years, and out of them he ha not come with clean hands." GENERAL EWING, OF OHIO. " I am very muc h surprised at one thing. The advocacy of Tilden comes either from State that are innately Democratic or hopelessly Re publican, while two gr.-at States whose vote is the index to the final result of the tight are ar rayed sternly against him. It is also a curioua thing that Manning, editor of the Albany paper regarded as Tilden's special organ, should, in an interview in St. Louis, make the statement that Governor Tilden is looking for the receipt of the votes of a large number of Republican in New York." nON. GEORGE W. HOUK, delegate to the St. Louis Convention from Ohio, says : " The party can survive a Presidential defeat, as it has already survived three since 1864, inau gurated under the same auspices and leadership as the present, but it cannot survive the sacri fice of the great principle of fidelity to tha rights of the people which it was organized to maintain. He Tilden has used hi fortune with a lavish hand to promote his po litical aspirations. He is the first aspirant for Presidential honors in the history of th eoun try who has utilized the provincial press by ad vertising his qualifications as extensively and aa successfully as Helmbold advertised his buchu. Such a man, fellow-citizens, yvho relies upon such instrumentalities, and who seek hy indi rection to com pass hi personal advancement, is not the man to lead the Democratic party to victory in this Centeuulal year of the Re public." GENERAL 6LOCUM everely castigated Tilden before a crowd of delegates at St. Louis, and said : " The greater part of the State Is opposed to Tilden now ; a large part of the New York delegation was op posed to him ; and it meant something, thi op jiosition, for the opposing faction comprised all, or nearly all, the brain of the delegation. With Tilden it was Impossible to carry Indiana and Ohio iu October, and if they were not carried for the Democratic party, there would be no cause for rejoicing in November. DAN VOORHEES. " I am not surprised at all these thing com ing out on Tilden. I knew they were all there and were bound to appear. And," he added uggestively, " I am expecting, every day,om thiug still worse to be developed." IE WITT C. L1TTLEJOHN. " I am utterly opposed to the nomination of Mr. Tilden. I do not think he ha the firs qualification to make a good President. He is ot t iUWlfllo, but I pQUUcal tnc)uW.'