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L .----7- _ i.1, - . - - ",ymet t ...„ . ...,,...,,4,:.-,..„ : ,,,, -,---,oi.v_c_____.,o" , ~,q r e:..e ‘,. ,- . .. . . t-i- -----,--_------...._, - -- - - - -L-- , - - ---- 7- - - -'- ---- -- ---.- - -- 4 .1.,..--. -- - ----t , --7-:- - -------- -----..:-.-------, _ ...,.. ~.- - -.. r :'. -. ,\ tt,,,ej•\4„ ._., f ---_______., ..--,- —7• 4 '....zw - -,-- „—„. - ---- , • VOLUME tXXXIII ECM £lllllOl. they have set up the cry of - distress tram the National arm; ; to dispense with the those desolated regions, fritiaishing women Freedmen's Bursae; to curtail the entre - and children have appealed to the Christian mous extraisea ee of the Government . _ philanthropy of the North and of the world will enable the country to pay off a portion --------.-----_____e- "'THE DEMOCRATIC DEMONSTRATION to relieve them. Yet, my fellow-citizens, of this debt eacti t year. The saving thus VOITES o , cl.oclit. A. 3X. there are people in our midst, aye, even - made will causes tch credit and confidence ________ - LAST NIGHT. among those who prase] the gospel ofpeace, as to restore the lawful currency to the __ e __ ____e________. , k. . ____ THE CAPITAL • • • . • whose ears have been shut, and whose equilibrium of go .d, and thus save the hon . - hearts have been closed to the cret of famine or of the Nation pay its public debt, re The Speech that . Gen. F. P. Blair . DID Make, which came up frona the South. Instead lieve the people taxation and restore' the .. . - of yielding to this touching appeal, which country to prosperity, bringing with it the The Alabama Commission --Tax and NOTlthe On Furnished to Reporters would almost melt a heart 'of stone, they blessings of peace and fraternal love. on Tobacco--Berenue Appoint- Yesterday Alterman. have employed themselves in keeping alive [ cheers.] . • , the animosities of that fiesolate country. Well, no • myfellOw-citizens I have • menu—Aldermanic Imbroglio ._• • They have fought over the battles of the ben charged'll ' • c eby the orators of hie Radical They . Ended--leff. Davis' Trial-Pat- [SPEECH TAKEN IN PHONOGRAPHY BY rebellion, raised up the bones of the dead, paraded the skeletons of Anders.onyille, in twee- largo and small, of every grade, Sen einits--Sle of 'Arms Suspended. GEORGE W. DITHRIDGE, ESQ.] order to inflame the people of the South a -i tori;ex-Senators, and ex-Secretaries of the 1 Departinents, I have been charged with be- Gen. Frank. P. Blair, the Democratic can- and maintain themselves in place and polit ray Telegraph to the Pittsburgh Ga.zette.l - keit' power. .(Interruption by music and ing capable of renewing the lion, -with WASHINGTON,. Sept. 28,,1868. ditia' te for the second office within the gift being a that I have a wordTo w si l ay heering.,)• Now, my fellow-citieens, • TH .ALABAMA COMISSION. :._ of the people. delivered his long promised cul sa upon that subject. The allegation to which ndet such circumstances would people I I allude, my friends, made by the Radicals, papsto see the restoration of peace and The Alabama delegation, in company Pittsburgh , ration at the St. Charles Hotel., a - and to which I claim. your attention, has With Governor Smith, called On the Presi- last night.. The attendance waslarge, large, com- , prosperitr?-1 arisen from a letter,Written b me enterior dent toolsy, to whom they were introduced pletely. closine Weed and Third streets for Among the most astounding things, in- 1 exnlicable to me, is the fiat that here, in to the meeting of te New York Y C"'onven . by Senator Fowler. State' Senator Hays considerable distance, "-and the enthusiasm this goodly is goodly city of Pittsburgh. which, in tion, in which I aeclared that the recon _ struetion acts passed - by the fragment the read to the President the resolutions of the prosperity ot the South, •of - the Democratic portion of the crowd the old days of " Congress at Washington, . eater Legislatiire.• The interview, which was was wilder than good judgment or hearty when every steamboat and every railroad ' exclusion Of • one-third of the States , car which left the city was freighted .with out of the tr i tium, are unconsntutional,ull private, continued several hours, duringrespect for the distinguished gentleman your products bound for that region, there and . void, and that their acts have been so Which the entire 'situat ton of affairs was hug ' •ht have warranted, kir there seemed a are yet a number among you who so little decided by' the Supreme Court of the • freely discussed. The delegation express 'disposition on their part to choke. him off I understand not only the interests of the South but their own interests as to be will- . United States I wrote that letter with a themselves perfectly satisfied with the in the middle of every sentence with cheers full consciousness of its meaning. I rafter la•esident3s assistance of military aid incase .ing to destroy the prosperity of those States, to see the bold, dash and music. Curiosity ate it now, that those acts are not only null of necessity. They are to have another in- • • which contributed to the wealth, and the and void; that they have been eo decided terview 'with the President,' and also the ing soldier who seeks to plunge our coon- welfare, and the prosperity of your awn by the Supreme Court of the United States; Secretary . of Wee, to-morrow. , try into another horrible war, to incite the city, and your own Commonwealth. You hut it . is also in my opinion the duty of the The. Committee will" , probably leave South into a new rebellion midi, encour- need not flatter yourselves, nip friends,. or President of the President of the United . Washington on their return Tuesday - even; ' eand drive ago . a party of the Norm .. those Radicals who hold these feelings in e • . • - -•- • - a etre, in conformity with his p reen of office, Ing. They expect to-morrow, in accordance their hearts against the people of the South to maintain the Constitution; it is his duty, into .lawless resistance to established with the assurance of the President, that need not flatter themselv, s that these eo- after such a decision by the. Supreme Court, authority, led many Republicans to • an order will be issued to General Meade ple can be keptmisery, distress Pand to see that the laws are not allowed to he the meeting last night, who-. helped to take elle necetsaary precautionary • bankruptcy without reactiume and re-react- executed. The President would violate his to swell :he crowd. The various Jackson measures to prevent disturbances at the ee- to upon mho people of the North and or oath of office if he shetild exert the author- Association clubsof the unterritied minor- fining election by a proper distributien of yourselves especially. (Here occurred er - 1 I ' ' ity of the Presidential oflice for the execu , troops now in Alabama, and of those which ityabearing t reams, were out in respectable other interruption occ rsioned b they arri- tion of laws decided to be unconstitio numbers and preceded by brass bands i . •'' .. I may in addition be furnished.. Members of t va ofa delegation.) tional by the Supreme Court and the Alabama Legislature not connected made an appearance somewhat creditable You must not forget, my friends, that this people of the United to the party. The Tort building and St. I r taing of keeping tiM entire people of a see- I also by 'iha with the Committee are now here. Stetes. Put, my fellow-citizens, those Charles Hotel were both handsomely deco - Governor Smith's vet m of the bill author- tion of our country under the foot of des- rated in honor of the occasion, pes was also You havea ' of us that hold these opinions are izing the election of Presidential Electors potism is 'a costly thing. • denouncedas revolutionists, because we Xi r. N. P. Sawyer's establishment on Wood . - by the Legislature has not yet • boe - n eon army of over fifty thousand men, and their l Congress cannot Overthrow time aidered by that body. It will mobably* be street. These were all, the displays we occ :nation at this hour is to keep the white sa ' Y that Constitution, because we tay that the j tide could find, a fact which goes to illustrate , austainde, but • the • popular election •to people of the South in subordination - to the • !tient of the ! Supreme Court ought t ohe exe that the Dertiocracy are dispirited after the sehetse members of the Electoral College black men there.' [Cheers.] And, my fel- rimed : Lecause IVO hold that the President b invent demonstrations their Republican requires addi•io legislation. about which loweatizene, that army cots the people of of the o f t States onela to conip:y with there is doubt. _ pal or of the Legislative friends made last week, and could not the North one hundred and fifty millione his oath / ilive, and support the Constitti- Coinmittee new in Washington are renree rouse themselves to pay any spatial mark .af 'lefties every year: Do you se . 1 litlosee 3 0 Lion of mire I t sited se. rev,• 1 3 , ..A ant, because we seated as. opposed to • any election .beine of respect to the procession.held in honor you believe that that will contribute to the ' of the 'man they hope to Meet as Vice Pres- prosperity a ". , t , , , , ~ , . ~.. : say, fellow m, itizens, th it the will of the peo ' apprehensive of bloody results, unless the t t. p i ts, .. m a pt. opmem.immereu 1,1, lam an , , 1 h. of the United states might and sled! • Republicans allow it to ..io by default. . T e e , iderit of the nation, enormoue'debt t [Cries of 00, .110.1 be exoeinesi. The whole eount, y says that Alter a few clans gathered and lxmfore Governor, however, and a e inority of the Besides this. a ~r eat, sum of inOnev is e‘i- these men have violatell the Constitution in Committee, and possibly of the old Legis- some Others had arrived, the meeting was - pended in order to give this unedneate..i. . these reeensf motion 'rte. Time Constite - later°, do not eat. rta n those h ears, - and are • (Oro inized by calliug Alexander Kiug to • semi -barbarous black - purple at the S ,nth - Cassino non re ,he [`cited Stetes provides that the • favorable to taking the sense of the people preside. Tue has eto introduce (leer:rat the ascendancy over the people of the white military authority shall alw.tys bL, suno at all hazards. • • Blair was out of alt taste, as he v. as put for- race. i Again, stiv fellow-ehizens this +oli- minute toislii eivil authority, and yet, in de ward to speak when the crowd was form- cy reciter:et that millions of dollars e i vrr • ' THn TAX ON TOBACCO. - li ince oi 111;•• Is 1 el. "of the y .. m . i e.. araeon ._ m e , bands playing as though the county year should be ex omtled in the SI ' ofr iepart Constitution, tine Rump cenerese has sun ' COrranis.sioner Rolliris, in reply to a to-. depended th ' ' d 'd l " ' on ter wine, alit, eemeeetaons,of what ' known .• - 1 ' . I. is . as mime Freedmen's Bureau. t (-reel meter goveruniems in i2ter et mtes and bIiCOO.-ftral in, LYnChburge says all their clubs arrivine Amidst the greatest coultu- itieis.tarliittit:itit:n and t.vliirti,i.th.,...lh.lae:i I, 4 • 1 ! - - rdipplant.d tlietii with military despotisms tobacco and snuff which is branded tax siert, which kept Was up during the otiti!re free, having. been manufactured prior te - ti me occupi e d e a waki ng his bocci:fa Grhn. l e i " supported•a .! t 1 7?"-:•-r .. t! 1 ," , " , l'o! I'" Is that Cons!itutional or te.l? Is that not e.. power, m 0., er o maim,/ t r i the Ladieal a subversion of the Constitiolen. when the 1862, while the remainder is branded froth Blair •-pok.e, and Mr. Dithrideo secured the pre tierans M Lilo asee . ticiani•y. 1 N , Vill it cop- r.m , titution rrhuires that the inilit;try t 1: fifty to sixty cents per pound,' which shall following verbatim report of his relparks: tri heti,- to the prorTerity .if the e » - ,1 ‘l' it t l ' .!o 0.. sus ordinate to the elvti antheri,lo.? not be disposed of prior to the first of Jana •' DORPSsoF GEN 111 Ailt. " • North to ii..lFr! this enormous sum !: - .t - ted in 1; u; a K em p congt.,,,, h.t, , .; set it:: into 3 try next, all which they may purchase tare • -A ' . ' ' 'OFI Ftbor of the •on Iry : My Fnuorns 'ow F;Bl , how-erriztr.Ns t _T tux" ul the . , ,-;` ~ t. L" "rder Goverii-ment [he t!,%1.1,,,L IIA . z1,:• , ;-,; of : ;1, paid but not stamped according to law, and . do not as • note, my friends, that part of this to hat tqloa l,l harcei mill n vil". m'r 4lll ' , " Po- ._4;;mh. D.; -,-; , e ntedn to -. :I. th;,.. the d \ ; • ha v 6 on hand, will have to be repacked and ov.:tion is intended. to honor Inc as an init--• Ihioal t•••=trm'A at the Senn Is? i ins of ihe seer., 0 ceert arid the mcl of stamped, after this date. - ' vitl eat- I khuw that you are here gathered • ely felletv erazens. the polies of this. tine 0t,., „•o , le „ a . to !,,, „ t „ et ., ! „,,,, a m t n t ItalemsUZ APPOHTTIIRNTS. to manifest your devotion to a great and party require, that the hank;, the riatimal ttierou -re - ee t t item ir # ;•- 'yt -, , ,-•. ranks,' shoirld recolve - : some eighteen or • 5 ,,,,..., -.. -• '7. •, 1 f ' - :•%''-''''. '' "` ' '''' "nr- The following' were .appeinted to-day: glorlues cause.' :My friends, the multitude 1 Ntorekeepers-.lag. E. Buckee, Keokuk, that is now gathered here attest the dop ""t:vi 1 millions sif rioliare mine:Jay tie '11: i tt t l t i ,'',.: 4 ":"‘" . 1 7,t"h",'l" the inuna"ll4 the Goeernment for the pritaii:ge of mie l e re . I , ' - i t t c l ; 1. ' , -. ' , 4.. L ... , "'" E " ( ' ..!: 1•1 • 1 "` (..."1 l's Iowa; Wm. Motwe, Cassida, Iowa; •W H. 1 and abicii• g interest of oar peopie in the Ftniatio W. Harker, Cl:adage; Henry issue ,of the pending canvass, and, indeed, itiog cCr ll3 ho booths of theirs 10 ilia s it's ie r' ! ' , ' ••i". .i.oe i -:n ' 'l l -I. ' " "v" . 1 2'.r.-- ' 6:. t 1.3- he -Wacker, Covington.. Gawers-Levi t ie tho.3,' issues are. moment o us, and at a , keePing of the t,;overn me ni, of the Union, .e.t, ' l 'a; i . ' Willey, Fifteenth Pennsylvania: District; , time in our history, since tois !redone:m*l.- i whilst they are permitted to eiroolate the •• • - d'Y 1: '. ' ( 'll''' ' 1 t, :1 . 2 :Oly tl.:!rlority to Oppo3 1 , .: OH, loy fellow cl'..i - Z , 11,, thi , - Cori:it Fll - aOlolltit of their own eurreney on . • John Parsiiel_ 1 and .JOhn Filbert], Seraind I inenced its existence, have there been is ile,..e ; e a , ~.t h ,r m ~2 „ ,,m , ,t i, ;Iv c ,_ tmo guar.‘hz. e-: to cvt ry i t lid i , bbtal, hi- h Missouri District. - • i sues or queetionsonore nuportant to be de- ,which : .r, „ ' '7 - . -'„''; • • • or -low in tWslm I Ire . 0d- ;'• ,••I - CABE OP MUDD AND OTHER ASSAsIs/NATION 1 eided by the people at the pulls. I shall not, cut- My terioty eitizens, 4/IC3lli ell l'llltlLlS : ./ ~ . 14 ~ti . ),_, 11(,, .I"U.. I -y „ lid .r. tore,.. forum} • ~rt ,lISO,With Willell !lt., III. 11,: is,- "eel-Aire re.s . or tip, I io,-erpriii-rit. CoIUBPIRAToRg. - • therefore, my fellew.eitizenss, attetep,t any ~,, ~..i ,n, ,„,„ ~„„.,,,,,,,. i ~.,, , Qn ~,i, ehar„;ed, anti yet Coo vitas, 7 his It i.i!•!,il preliminary toh,ervittions, but address my- 3" Radicals" - - '`-',' at' ' ' . `'''''"' s'' "' ' ceiterces /VIVO reetim inert t m i• • ~ p ... , . strike . f . daw n The opinion ofJudgo Bovnten of Florida. preliminary ms neereetery to key}; tne. 'WM , / oil a .., ' • self to those great *and vital and living L die. gllaraMee of liberty, ,his shield of the in denying the writ of hablras co ' rpu.s for the' - war fcoting to keep in eumeetion Goat:eel h equestions waien now engross the atter/Lieu ,„. _ , , • 4 diminish- • - • , a 1 AS 1,1(., as (11 ,41`:.., ( 1,1,(41 o 0 in •it release of Mudd and other conspirators, has i ire lettere debt instead oi being I of the Amereman people. declared, has the rieht of trial by jury in all of the- , been received. The grounds on • Which the eti, has inereased sinee peace was . m ~ , , , .., 1 Accord . ing to• my Judgment the great -application rested we're that the Court and lion- could it be otherwise, with this 1 •"" s ' l "tcs• ..hsww if. b° hal“'" awas questionwhich interests t iepeople now, is Which tried them had' no jurisdietion and • • : army of fifty thousandstill in et 0 1 i from the people of the Southern States • it . 1. .Mt tl Hie .e i ~ Ifrat there should be a restoration of peacme i• taken f the I - • ' can em away from e peep e_of o„her that the proclamation of last July included to keep en subjugation the neople of the -that there should be.a resorration of the States; it ran he taken away fromthe pen them 'for pardon. The Judge found that South, and to be p dd. from the labor of the Prosperity of this country. [Three the rs • ph, of all the States. I say that there is Lime the offence was .a Military one, and .proper- mere given f Horatio Seymour.] I Of the. North. With the eatrava weee ere or beymourd I , , ; . , me ri dit to subvert the ly,trie i by -a military tribunal, and that the game and "vaatetulnese in every depart- sa ie • Constitution fur believe, my ' friends, that this country ene portioe of our country as for another; proclamation pardons treason, but; does nbt went of.'etovernment which hits character waets peace and a restoration of its pros pardon assassins, northose guilty, of tar-• lied the Radicals' since they have been in and yet my fellow citizens, Groom of us who . . perky, and that policy which will restore • deetre the restoration of ties great right are barons treatment of prisoners. ' " Power, there can be no hope of a dimititi : Peaces, avhich will give us back our prosper- • P revolutionists. Who, I aek, are the revoIu nOMPLIatENTARY lIREAZFAST. icy," is the one which the people of the tion Pemba debt- no hope for the return of tionists ? Those of us that are for the res- Gen. Blair, after his speech, was honored Uniad States will adopt -in the coming prosety to our country. • toration of all the rights and privileges with a complimentary breakfast at' the res- election, and they will not be led astray by Now, What Is it that the Imernoceats pro. gusranteed to Us -by the Constitution, or idence of our spirited - Democratic" fellow- men and•names however illustrious, how- pose if they obtain the power ? They pro- is the It government that has over citizen, Joan A. Strain,' Esq., Diamond ! over great the Services they may have per- pose the" iaistorittion of peace by giving thrown this social right made up of revoot etreist. Many of our prominent ilmitizense formed to the nation: They will judge not back the government of the Southern Republicans and Democrats, were present of the merits or demerits of particular fa- States into the 11,11)!IS of men of our Own ti " :B r ts ? as guests. General good cheer ' prevailed, mulles, but of the policy put forth and re- - race, that created those Governments, at right of habeas eorpus has been ,tts ' and speeches of a national rather than po- preeented by therm• Now, ray friends, will [Cheers.] They propose the restoration of g re !mended in these same 'reconstruction acts, Utica' character marked occasion. a. the poLey advocated by our opponents prosperity and the diminution of taxation 1 i - bring us' peace? [Cries of no, no.] Will it by reducing the army only necessary to In tale sauna way, my fellow-citizens, that a tholigh 'tile Constiortion in so many •• • CrOk It ISSIONERS APPOINTED. II words decaires that it shall only be euspend- Gem fi. i restore our rimy "T [No, never.] The hold the peotile of . the SOuth in Hetet", ed in Hume of Ii 1 •• • • . " • ' . t tticy t ro t esoic in , urrat tion. And Jessie L. -Williams, of Indiana, ofproscription and persecution and Cron to the negro. They propose the extir- G. Wright lend J. Iffickenederfer- pulley . but not only violated the Con ' - ' Jr.,' ecmfiscation of arbitrary, despotic govern. nation of the Preeilmen's "Bureau. They' -:,"? Mutton, they have individualiy, in de af Ohio, haye . been appointed COmtnission- 1 I meat have never produced peaceor brought: nropose to substitute greenbacks in piece '-• - fiance of that instrument, passed laws by era to examine under instructions by the ' eurrenco, and thus roSperit to any nition in the tide of time Of the National bank - ' - ' . - Secretaty:of the Interior the road end tel vain, we searchistory to find save the Government of the United States , " Vam .• look Y in ' h' •• . which whole eommunities South anti whole egraph li 'es of the Pfeifle Railroad Corn- where proscription and persecution have ei thteen millions of dollars ant i. !I • States, have been disfrimehised, condemn pany, and to t he to the Secretary of the s • "lt a .1.3 ed and puni , bed without any triali. brought peace. Let us look, my follow- [cheers,] and will other sutras saved from I Interior. ' ' citizans, to examples familiar to us all. the extravagance anti :Wastefulness of tv them, any jury, and upon ex post fact° laws, passed after the , offence was al- For centuries and centuries the people of these Radicals, amounting in all to - legect to have been committed. Under those ' Ireland have been proscribed and parse- one hundred and tiny !to two bun- laws, my fellow-citizens whole communi cuted, their property confiscated, them- deed mi lions of dollars annually. They ties and States have been deprived of the selves subjected to every species of wrong propose with thiii large sum of money to rights f ; • • ' hit» , mud those rights Olken and outrage' by the British Governnient. begin to pay off the national debt, to reduce ( l' aalr ' Pria from them have been copferred upon And taw) -these centuries yet produced tint interest. They propose to pay that debt ;Tether alien race of people, tile SWIM bar ! peace and Prosperity in Ireland ? (Cries of bonajkle, every dollar, in the same kind of JEFF DAVLS.. . bayous black people, and in violation of that - ... I no, no.) Theta* are other and many other money with which it was created. hist, I provision of the Constitution which gives examples, because it seems tostre a natural my fellovecitizenta on the same currency, to eadh State the right to designate who instinct in the heart of man who holds in the very identical currency in which the shall enjoy the suffrage within its limits. power in his hands to use it to prosecute ,holders of the United Sates bonds obtained Not Only that, my fellow-citizens, but they and persecute those who differ in opinion them at tho ti me. They propose to pay in have stricken down the Executive authori from him.. Look at :the example of Po- the lawful money of the United States. ty; taken away the jurisdiction or the Su lam], of Hungary. Have the proscriptions They troeose to pay in the Hanle money prtime Court of the United States, thus and proaecutions, the violations of iudivia-. with which they .paid the soldiers striking two co-equal :MCI co.ordinate ual right, the ostracism, the exile of these who saved time Governnient and kept branches ' - of the government, erected bv people, . brought prosperity to either of the Union from being tore to fragments. the Constitution in order to be a check to those distracted and desolate countries. No. We propose to pay in thee, kind of money the supremacy of any one, and those of us my fellow citizens, this is not the road to now twice as valuable as it wart When the who oppose these unconstitutionol mons peace. And yet our Radical fellow citi- debt was created, and thee, my fellow cid- urea 'are denounced as revolntionists. I zens, prominent in this goveenment for' Miss, the bondholders whe contributed to fling it back in their teeth. They are the the last eight years, now ' that the save the Government will make fortunes by revolutionists: they are the ' men who pee wee has ceased-and it has ceased now the appreciation of the Lumley In which we vented our government, and they will bo nearly fouryears-have practiced through- will pay off the 'bonds. Why, my fellow held to a strict accountability by the people out the Southern _States the same citizens, should th.-et not take the same of this country In the next election. Now, species of oroseription, of persecution and .money with which we paid our soldiers ? for what purpose hate all these measures every imaginable indignity tr ee they could Is th it debt ank more sacred or obligator been passed by this Congress? How aro inflict on the people or the Southern States than that which we now pay in pensions tiT -a people overthrown' by their arms,' sub- our maimed and disabled soldiers who lost they justified? Why you never hear a man on the part of the bei ng cepted quietly tolwhatsover they thought their limbs and health in 'the ser- attemot to ustify their measures as being proper to impose, yielding because thciyac, vice of their country ? Is the debt ' constitutional; he merely retorts when his cepted the situation in good faith-after the we owe the bondholders any more sacred end of the war the 'Radical Congress has and obl ging than that which we pay en- party ]s charged with an indef -nsible,un exerted its utmost ingenuity, has racked along to the widows and orphans of our constitutional act, he msrely retorts by itself in vain to ' find means iby eoldiers who gave their lives to their saying, "You are a Copperhead," 't hin rye which they could humiliate and Ae- country? Yes, iny fellow citizens, when a rebel," "you are a rebol sympathizer." grade those people. They have, My the Democratic party comes in power it - That is, his sole argument, and they justify fellow citizens, gone far beyond anything will be characterized by the instant meas- • themselves, also, by Alleging that the ne that British ingenuity could devise to perie. ures it will take to save the money now froem of the South are the only loyal men cute and degrade the Irish. [Cheers and squandered on the army, On the 1 0 d rev - n the South, and that the whole white population there are disloyal, Now, my oomiderable interruption from passing del- men's Bureau and In other extravagances. egations.] The Radical Congress has ex- .If the Radical party is moult'- fellow citizens, I take this occasion to say a t intain in this that neither of, these accusations are true; seeded the ingenuity of Old Kngland In the country its standing armic tyrannies which they have devised to hn- -pureaus, and other wastefu s i O3 Z, Freed men's that the great body of the white people of - iniliate and .degrade the people of the together with the Rum n , u ravagances,. the Sauth were loyal at the beginning of South. ToMake the humiliation deeper to int!`test upon the Nationeacieglittil: pry the the war; that they at first v ted down the which they have degraded the South, they will b\exactly what the result h e result ordinances of secession, with the exception have put the people of that whole section of since tha,,wir,-thst instead or adi I been of South Carolina, and what hen the peo- Country u, people the feet of an al;eis and genii- ofour dee't will be added te. Ever at nution' vo ted a Soutlathe oval men oft he South, t _ 3 3 monthly voted against these ordinances at the very barbarous black people. [Here again fol. financial statement has show lowed a disturbance from passing bands, rather than . tho diminution f the Natrona [ moment ,of tirne the Guy, rnment of the .. National United StatesWer e arming the conspirators which lasts I fully ten minutes.] 1 debt. The same policy wit produce the of the South-the Knlatta of the Golden - The people of the entire South are at this same reselt, and',wo shall go on moment its a cendition of far deeper distreet"at our National debe, and whilst our Radicia cc ; l out of the public arsenale, with which- to increasing C de Ira and furnishing them with arms - than everexperlenced aathe moment when friends proclaim the payment fno he our - armies Were ravaging their housea. dole and interest;in go.d, their picy pr h i - put down th- loyal Men of the South who t att 1 steed up for the Government. What, 1 'Every year Sires peltee Was reestablished; Inevitably he the ibankruot.iy of th e ' el * a ion say, were they to do? I say that this was this people, afflicted by the proscription of • and repudiation of the debt. o f . the done i , v the American Government, their Radical persecutors, have been almost The DemocratlcrlicY•nn . be other hand-, under Mr. Liacoln's a.s erhe upon. the point of starvatiOn. Each year as I have said, wkilch ProPmee to reduce former administration. howo asis these ALDERMANIQ DIFFICULTY SETTLED. The difficulties of the Aldermen of this city have_ been settled by the Democratic and Republican claimants to the Presiden cy of that body resigning and . the election of Alderman Grinder to that office. It is believed in official quarters that Jett Davis will not be tried at the October term of the , United States Courtin Virginia. • - SALE OP ARMS SUSPENDED. The Secretary of War has issued an order .snapending, for the present, the sale of all government,arrns, ammunition, etc. PATEN TS ISSUED. For the week ending October Stb,' two hundred and fifty-five patents will be issued from the Patent ()lbw. REBELLION IN . TEXAS,' Armed Bands Roaming the Country—Army Wagons with supplies Captured—Gar risen at Sulphur spillage lu Danger of Slaughter. (By Telegraph the Pittßnareb Gazette., NEW Yortic, Sept. 28.—Advicei through army sources ` from Marshall, * Texas, state the country in that neighborhood is over run by_rohbers. All the roads are entirely unsafe, except for a fonsiderable armed body. A band of - free-hooters, numbering one hundred and ten men, well armed and mounted, are roaming through the coun try. About the.6th inst. they captured f rly government wagons, loaded with sup plies. S The commanding officer at ',Sulphur tine commanding TeXas, which is garrisoned by a small company of the Twenty-Sixth Infan . try, had sent an exprese to Gen. Hayden, commanding at Marshall, stating that if riot reinter ed, his garri-on, which was sur rounded, would be slaughtered. A compa ny of the Fifteenth Infantry, and fifty picked men besides, had started to rein !foreetim. • Nomination of Gen. Butler. (By Telegraph to the Pittsburgh thszette..) BOSTON', Bert. 28.—The Ropublioans of the Fifth Massachusotts District. iu Con vention to- ay, nominated Benj. Butler for Qingress. He r ceived 175 votes. Four were scattering. The Convention Balm quendy made the. nomination umtatmoui. THE CAIIPAIGN. PITTSBURGH, - TUES DA Y, SEPTEAIBER 29, 1868 men at the South, when their adversaries were armed, stand uu and resist them without the aid and assistance of the general governnient, which was bound as much to assist them as the citizens of the cities of the South are bound in allegiance to the Government. Protection on the part of the Government is reciprocal with the debt of allegiance on the the part of the citizen, and when the government aban doned the Union men of the Senile and left them:a prey to the army of conspirators, they had nn .right to claim from them the debt of allegiance. And on the other hand, my fellow citi zens, I deny the truth of the statement that the negroes were loyal to this government throughout the war, from the beginning to the end. From the first to the last the ne groes supplied all the meat, raised all the breadstuff's with which the army of the Confederacy were maintained from the be ginning to the end. They not only did that. my fellow-citizens, but they dug. the fortifications; they built the parapets at Petersburg, at Richmond and Vicksburg and at Atlanta and tha other fort fled places upon which the blond of our brave soldiers was spilled during the war. They were loyal, my fellow eiti— zens, to none but their own masters, and those of them who were caught and Inrced to put on our uniform and fed at the ex pense of our government wore put in forts, where, according to the phraseology of the Radicals, they "fought nobly." I think 'they made war upon the rations furnished by the government, and that is about the extent oetheir services. As you all know, or many of you do, I never was in 'Tavor of slavery, although I lived in a slaveholdin,g State, and I eman cipated what slaves I hold long anterior to the war, and when the white livered and white faced Radicals did not dare to lisp a word in favor of emancipation; but I never saw the day, and I never will see the dav, when I would be willing to sacrifice the white race, my own blood and kindred, in order to secure the supremary of the black race. I now stand for the emancipation of the white people of the South who have been enslaved and put under the blacks. I know that they never have established, and that they are incapable of establishing or maintaining any government for themselves. The Radicals and every body else kilo a' it. Every man in this community, any Radical whom you will ask will tell you that that be knows full well that these people have not the intelligence to maintain a re-. to in o 1 government. They never ha% e sustained any government, for they can sustain none. They are now, as they were when they wer. , first known to histo ry in Africa, idle, lazy, thriftless and bar- h a e a us, and, my fellow citizens, to put in tin it hands the reditical powerof ten StAtES of thi , Union. and to subject to them the while race, the enlightened pe6ple of our own 1:14,:s1, is an atrocious crime not only against civil government. but Hezainst civil- ; eaaffee, atrainst religion itself. I tell ; you, Inv friends, it is :hese who talk nArty being founded on moral idea., and an nit their dOVOtiClil to ald hnimicity. who are devoted i , , this espe thing fir twilling except the maintenanc • .Le the rehala in the possession of power. Thu /ware Las been enfranchised simply becati , e he would be an instrument in their hands to maintain them in power against the will of the majority of the people of the North. I ries! re to speak with r fereece to the namiratien of General (rant. I do net m. tend to say anythin.; derogatory to that distingiii , ,hed gentleman. I would be in cap,dac of sit 3 ing anything deroga_tory to his character or services. I am willing to admit everywhere his great services to the country and to man. But I have a right, now that he is a public man, ask ng the fa- ; vor of the people of this count v to advance him tei a high position, to criticise his pub- lie acts, known to every one, not down in a ; corner; And now, my fellow-eitizens, sav, that General Grant, who now holds the ; position at the head of the Radical ticket,- that he gave his cordial support, his unqualified support to the policy of Andrew Johnson. • for restoring those States to the Union at the be ginning of his administration. I know this by his own declaration, nut his decla ration to me, but his public declaration. I know it by the testimony given by him be fore a Congressional Committee, in which he deceived that Andrew Johnson's policy was identical with the policy which had been determined upon by Abraham Lin amln before his death and assented to by Edwin M. Stanton. (Cheers.) The Radi ce pretend to lament the death of Mr. Lincoln. If he had lived he would have taken the same position that Mr. John son teak wnen ho became President at Mr. Lincoln's assassination, and we know this by the testimony of Mr. Stanton and Gen. Grant. Mr. Stanton tes. dried that he drew up that famous North Carodne proclamation under the instruc tion of President Lincoln, and others tes tiged that they heard it read in the Cabi net of_Mr. - Lincoln, and a cry member of the Cab net gave his a sent to it. General Grant stated that he Id mself gave his assent to it as the beat plan by which to cement the Union. This, my fellow-citizens, is the view Gen. Grant than held, according to his own declaration. subs quently he went to the South, after the war concluded, and made -a report to Mr. Johnson, the President of the United States, in which be declared that the people of the South accepted the situation in good faith and sineer 07, and that he hoped that they would soon be ad mitted and meet the representat yes of the North in the Senate a d House of Rep resentatives. Now, my fe low citizen-, what reason has since occurred—for this was after the close of the war—what rea son has since occurred to make the General. in-Chief of our armies change hie mind on this subject • and adopt the vindic tive policy of proscription and persecu tion inaugurated by the Radical Congress? None whatever. But there is a principle o be found in the instincts, the military in stincts of men who have had a mint ry education, and who stand at the head • f the army. They well unders and that if this government is made a governmeut of despotism, as has been inaugurated by the Radicals, such a government must not rest upon force ; and if it rest upon force, it 'must give sustenance to those who are the leaders of that force and the controllers of the army. Hence It was, my fellow citiz-ns, that the Commander.in- Chief of the army, or rather the General , - n etit,n, r o Chief of the army, imbued with em accepted the nomination upon the Ifhtic)m of the Radicals and which he, ha. a ,und2 gel but two months before condemns against which h' had piressecia o u be in those who postion, a d were standing aip° in P i rwm ie favor t of areatos of our country, and which hehimself, ce led. Now, my fellow. citizens , this my ex planation of the course taken by General Grant, and without attempting to derogate from the high services he has performed, I do not believe that in consequence of those -eople .thisoonntry are high services the preparrol to surrender their liberties to him or any.one else. My follow-citizens, I will not detain yon any loriger ,this evening . ' [Cries of -"go 0 ,, "go on."] In the presence of this' vast assemblage of the'Dernocnw or Pitts. burgh I feel how utterly impossible it is to speak and how utterly impossible it is for any one adequately . to express the senti ments that are burning in his heart. Gen tlemen, before retiring, I thank you from the bottom of my heart .for this evidence of your attachment to the Government made by your fathers and the Constitution, end to draw from it an augury of the great triumph which awaits the Democracy at the election which is approaching. Good night. When the speaker concluded three cheers were given for im with consider able will by tiv. Democrats who bad the patience to hear him through. The meet ing then adjourned. ; SPEECH BY G . E7. BUTLER. • ity Telegraph to the I'lltsburgh Gazette.) e m•:31, Mass., Soptertiber 2 8.--General Butler made a speech to the Republican Convention to day .accept i ng the nomina tion for Congress. He ferred to those who had -pposed his nomination, classing them with Lee, Beauregard Forrest and Booth, and charging them with raising for ty Iheusand dollars to defeat his nomina tion, which he considered equivalent to election. He recommends these malcon tent; to send their money into some doubtful dietr ct, in some doubtful State, if such could be found. He condemner] those who now oppose him as the regular nominee as -a Re publiCaryand said a party can be carried on as an army is governed—welcome recruits and shoot deserters. He continued on this, subject at length, and in response to alleg ed rumors 'hat Grant does not favor his (Butler's) election, said he was too much a friend of Grant not to brand such rumors as unauthorized, and offered to r. sign the nomination if a letter. could be produced from Grant or Colfax desiring the Republi cans of his district not to vote for him. On the finance question be claimed to stand with Senators Sherman and Morton, and on the only test question in the House he vo ted with sixty-one Republicans. On that ' subject. ho said he fully concurred in • the portion of the Chicago platform requiring the payment of the public debt in the utmost good faith, not only accord ing to the letter but spirit of the la*: It was trite he had said the letter of the law, permitted the payment of bonds in the same legal tender n-tes authorized to be issued at the same time with them, but he had nowhere said or thought the govern ment shou d not pay those logal tenders in gold as soon as the prosperity of the coun- H try will permt with financiA e predicted i a brilliant out futurerfdr the codistren try under the prosperity consequent upon Ili - publican rule, closing by saying. "God ' Speed - the time when greeameks .and gold slung be convertible and reconverti hle." - He thPzi offered a series of, r solutions, en dorsing the Chicago platform awl Con gressional -re •onstruction, which were unanimously adopted. The Convention then adjourned. IL NEW YORK CITY. , 7 3y Telegrapft N,r reh Gazette .1 IsiiaY Your:, Sept. 25.1, ISGS. Several cigar peddler, have been arrest Ed and their unsta:nped ci,ars clan tisnated in the suburbs by revenue officers during the pa-t week. Since the passage of the bankruptcy act eighteen hundred eases have been a: j tb eated in this city. Chas. Reade, the English playwrig,ht,bas sent ten pounds sterling for the benett of the t, o persons lat ly shot at the Bread way theatre by the Sheriff's roughs. 'ln the internal revenue conspiracy case to-day the Government concluded with its witnesses, when the opposite counsel de manded that Mr. Binekly be called, but the pros-cution declined to do so. A procession o'f five hundred shoemakers to day paraded and banquetted in honor of St. Crispin. Only four members of the Chamber of Commerce assembled to day on a call fora mee ing to devise means for the relief of .the South American sufferers, and it was stated the subject would be considered at' the next regular monthly meeting. John Radigan, a member of the Brooklyn volunteer fire department, is on trial for a ealing at fires. Judge Gilbert of the Supreme Court, to day declined granting an injunction pre venting the building of quarantine build ings on Long Island. The dwelling of Mr. Shunfield, at Smith town, Long Island, was burned Saturday • night with some $3,000 in bonds. Loss on dwelling. The sixth annual carnival of the New York Swabean Society .way .held at Jones' wood. Over eight thousand p9rsonswere----- present. T -morrow they have a proces sion of several hundred dressed in the peasantry costume of 1517. . - THE MAINE ELECTION acri f ( yy r n rh o e Ay aag i oi n m lu alf . eGtoalesuelffietlgsri vote, a c e . : t oai i e AP a t ti, h il in e , ae t s 7 ; n: cb i l a t :h e 3i n h t ; 1 e d :2 , ,bo P itownsS2t e ; t Pillsbury furnished h bt c Il e . oif2ai following , ilby. the i Gazette.; obew T trt h ui e t g, State, i4l 155 r r:e e s: t s n i u mue e t t a r ltga n ta r : : : 1 jority 20 172. It is the opinion at the Secretary's office that with the correction of the returns by official figures and the addition of a few plantations not yet-count-ed, the majority for Chamberlain will be increases two to three hundred. The Mll e al vote last you . %Vas Chamberlain, 57,332; Pillsbury, 41,990; Chamberlain's ma jority, 11,343. The 'Republicans' in creased vote 18,295. and the D •mocrats 9.465. The largest vote over thrown in Maine before this year was in 18i0, when the Republican vote was 70,030 and the Democratic 53.085. The Republicans have exceeded their lirgest pro ions vote by 5,597 and Democrats their largest previous vote by 1,390. No furthe • or more accurate report than the above can be obtained until the votes are counted and officially declared by the Legislature. RICHMOND. Double Murder, Arson and Robbery... Railroad Accident (By Telegraph to the Pittsburgh Gazette.; Rionmcian, Sept. 28.—0 n Satuaday night . Mrs. Stewart, widow, residing In Rent county, was murdered and her body burned together with the dwelling. John Baker, her farm manager, was also murdered and robbed of $5,000 in gold. Four houses have recently been burned in the same neighbor hood. The militar will be sent there. The train on the y Central railroad with two hundred of the 29th Infantrnon board, bound from Washington to Tennessee, ran off the track this afternoon near Gordons ville, killing four and wounding a large number. Four cars ran off the track. Three • companies of the same regiment left to-day for Texas. Death of an Ex-Congressmikn Telegrsuh to the Pittsburgh Ussette.ll Mg.LEWISTOWN, September 28.- T. I) A. Fel:tendon, formerly a ineml Congress, dieki this morning. F Feseendeb la a brother of the deoer Ron. ber of ,nator