U U i . t - . . A. 2 Ecuotcu ta politics, literature, grintlturc, Science, iHoraliin, nub (Sencral intelligence- VOL. 27, STROUDSBURG, MONROE COUNTY, PA., SEPTEMBER 21, ISGS. NO. 2C. Published by Theodore Schoch. i'l2tlT?To dollars a year in advance and if not TjaiU binethe end ofthe year, two dollars and filly Hiti. wi'ihe rharppil. No paperdisconthuied until all.irrcaingrsarc paid, ccx?p: at the option ofthe Editor. IE? d verlisc incuts o f one f qua re of (cigl.t 1 me?) or fHToncor three insertions l 50. Each additional ':hertion, 50 cents. Longer ones in proportion. JOB PRINTING, OF ALT. KINDS, Executed in the lushest style of the Ail, and onthe most rcasorrtble terms. HI. 1. COOr,RAUGII, Sip and Ornamental Painter, SHOP ON MAIN STREET, Opposite Woolen Mills, STHOUDSIJUKG, PA., Respectfully announces to the citizens of Stroudsburg and vicinity that he is prepared to attend to all who may favor him with their patronage, in a prompt and workman like manner. CHAIRS, FURNITURE, &cn painted and repaired. PICTURE FRAMES of all kinds con stantly on hand or supplied to order. Jun II, 1868. ly. Drs. JACKSON & BIDLACK, PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS. DRS. JACKSON & BIDLACK, are prepared to attend promptly to all calls of a Professional character. OJice Op posite the Stroudsburg Bank. April 23, 1807.-tf. C.W. SEIP, M. D.f Physician and Surgeon, srnoUDsnrna, pa. Office at his residence, on Slain Street, nearly opposite Marsh's Hotel. All calls promptly attended to. Charges j reasonable. Stroudsburg, April 11, l07.-tf. mi. i. i. smith, Surgeon Dentist, Otlice on Main Street, opposite Judge Stokes' resilience, Stbovdshcrg, Pa. Or Teeth extracted without pain. August 1, 1-G7. A Card. Dr. A. REEVES JACKSOX, Physician and Surgeon, BEGS TO ANNOUNCE THAT II A V- j ing returned from Europe, he is now j prepared to resume the active duties of his ; profession. In order to prevent disappoint- : mcnt to persons living nt a distance who '. mar wish to consult him, ho will be found j at his office every THURSDAY and SAT- : URDAY for consultation and the perform ance of Surgical operations. Dec. 12, 1G7.-1 yr. ' WX. W. PAIL. J. D. HOAR. CHARLES T7. DEAN, . WITH WM. W. PAUL & CO. Manufacturers and Wholesale Dealers in BOOTS & SHOES. WAREHOUSE, C23 Harlict St., & 614 Commerce St above Sixth, North side, PHILADELPHIA. March 19, 1663. tf. Itch.! Xtcli! Itch! SCRATCH! SCRATCH! SCRATCH! USE IIOLLlNSnEAD'S ITCH & SALT RHEl'M OINTMENT. No Family should be without this valua ble medicine, for on the firpt appearance of the disorder on the wrists, betwecu the fin g era, &.C., a slight application ofthe Oint ment will jrc ir, and prevent its' bring ta ken by QliiJ??s. Warranted to give aatUfaction or money Pfrparci and fold, wholesale and retail, fcf W. HOLLINSHEAD, kroud!burg, Oct. 31, '07. Druggist. J. IViVrtt, DENTIST. r Z Ilajs permanently located Jiim- if v. i . .i his office next doot to Dr. S. Walton, where he is fully prepared to treat the natural teeth, and also to insert incorrup tible artificial teeth on pivot and plate, in tue latest and most improved mannor. : Most persons know the danger and folly of trust ing their work to the ignorant as well as he traveling dentist. It matters not how nuch experience a person may have, he is aiable to have sonic failures out of a number f cases, and if the dentist lives at a distance jit is frequently put off until it is too late to aave the tooth or teeth as it mav bo, other wise the inconvenience and trouble of going eo far. Hence the necessity of obtaining the services of a dentist near home. All work '.warranted. ' Stroudsburg, March 27, 1802. REV. EDWARD A. WILSON'S (of Wil liamsburgh, N. Y.) Recipe for CON SUMPTION and ASTHMA carefully com pounded at HOLLINSHEAD'S DRUG STORE. OT"" Medicines Fresh and Pure. Nov. 21, 1G7.J W. HOLLINSUEAD. CAN VOLT TJGrX WHY IT is that when any one comes to Strouds btirg to buy Furniture, they alwoy sinquirc for McCarty'a Furniture Store? Sept. 20. DO.VT FOS&Girr lh:tf when you want any hing in tlie Furniture or Ornamental line ilat McCarty, in the MJl C..1l...,' Tl.1l ir . .. J'. vuu-ivi.vtts iuii, .-via in street, Stroud Wg, I 'j.., u h-3 p!a to get it. Sept. 20. LYNN'S GREAT GERMAN HOOT AND HERB STOMACH BITTERS! MASCFACTIRED AND SOLD BT .A:. EC. LYjSTjST, SOUTH BETHLEHEM, PA. These Bitters are a certain remedy for Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Headache, Nerv ousness, Loss of Appetite, and is a positive preventive of all DISORDERS OF THE STOMACH. The German Herb Stomach Bitters has a restoring influence upon the system, csp cially upon the Digestive Organs, and is recommended to all persons in delicate health. It is an excellent remedy for Sum mer Complaint, and no family should La without it. A. II. LYNN has secured the services of a man who has had m.my years experience in the manufacture of Bitters, in the well known German Bitters Manufactory of Schimmel &. Co., Leipsig, Germany, and has made arrangements with them for Ger man herbs, roots, &c, necessary for the manufacture of the Bitters. THE GERMAN HERB STOMACH BITTERS U now ready to be sent anywhere. All or ders with which I may be favored will be delivered nt short notice. A trial of the Bitters is respectfully asked. A. II. LYNN. Manufacturer, South Bethlehem, Penn. Sold by C. S. Detrick & Co., Wholesale and Retail Druggists, Stroudsburg, Pa. June 4, 186.-lyr. LOOK THIS WAY, ALL WHO WANT Carriage Work or Blacksmithiirg DONE IN A SUPERIOR MANNER! - THE Subscriber begs leave to in- Tiurm inc puuuc mat ne is iuuy pre- pared, at his establishment, at tho corner 01 bimpson and fcarah streotu, in the borough of Stroudsburg to make to order, every style of Carriage, Wagon, anu, in fact, everything in his line of bu siness, at the shortest possible notice, and on the most reasonable terms. Carriages repaired, trimmeil and paint ed in the best style of the art. Having first-class material always on hand, and none but first-class workmen engaged, the public are assured that none but first-class work will be turned out at his shop. In connection with his Carriage Shop he has also a Hlacksmith Shop, where superior woiknien will always be found ready to attend to the orders of customers The public are invited to call and ex amine his stock before purchasing else where. . VALENTINE KAUTZ. September 10, 18G7.-tf. Trial List Sept. T. 1868. Ingersoll &. Miller vs. William D. Bclliaam Jarnes S. Belli-'. Jesse R. Smith is. Reuben Detrick. Samuel Storm vs. Jacob Stoufier. Hamilton Ti?p. vs. Thomas Ross. same Silas K. Kotz. Philip Kresge r Peter Merwine. Mary M. Ruff, Executrix, rs. Jos. S. Leiben- guth and wife. Hannah Christ man rs Cornelius Hawk and wife. Use of A. Reeves Jackson vs. Augustus Car mer. Use of Ezra Marvin r. Lawrence and Ilen- ry McCluskey, A. Reeves Jackson vs. William S, Rcrs.- William Hollinshead vs. School District of Middle Smithficld. TUG. M. McILIlANEY, Pro'lhy. September 17, 18G3. Argument List Sep't. Term 1868. .... Exception to Auditors Report on John II. ' . Stillwcll's property. Exceptions to the appraisement of property retained by widow of William Davis, deceased. Exceptions to the appraisement of property retained by widow of Geo. C. Tomp kins, deceased. Exceptions to Auditors Report on Adam Huffsmith'a estate. Commonwealth vs. Peter Hufismiib, Jr. Orersccrs of Pdbr of Stroudsburg vs. The Overseers of Paradise township. . THO. M. McILIlANEY, Pro'ty. September 17, 19G8. , District Court ofthe United States, EASTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYL VANIA. WILLIAM F. RUSH, of Stroudsburg, Bankrupt, having petitioned for hia discharge, a meeting of Creditors will be held on the 2nd day of October, A. D., 18G8, at 2 o'clock, p. rn before W. E. DOSTER. Register, at his office, at Knecht's Hotel, Stroudsburg, that the examination of the Baukrupt may be finished, and any business of meeting required by Sections 27 and 2"3 ot the Act oi Congress transacted. The Register will certify whether the Bankrupt has conformed l his duty. . A hearing will alsole haJ on Wednesday, the 14th day of October, A. D lh08, before the Court at Philadelphia, at 10 o'clock, a m., when parties interested may shew cause a gainst tho dcj-xhargc. , Wrj-KKss tiic Hon. JOHN CAD L.S. i WALADER, Judge, and Seal the 11th day of September, A. I)., 18G8. G. R. FOX, Clerk. A-rTEiT. W, E. DOSTER, llrgistcr. September 17, lbGd. 13. Letter from Peter Cooper to Horatio Seymour. ' : New-York; August 13th, 18G8. To the Hon. Horatio Seymour: Mi Dear Sir, In the last letter I had ther honor to address to you, I had the pleasure to thank you for the prompt an swer to a former letter, and for the assuranco I received that "we agreed in the end to be realized, namely, the restoration of the Union and the preservation of the Con stitution." You will recollect that I then stated that I was so deeply impressed with the absolute necessity of maintaining the Union and the Constitution that I desired to sec all powers that God and nature had given to us brought into requisition to save our country from being dcsscvcrcd and made the sport of foreign and domes tic Saracens. I feared than, as I fear now, the dan ger of our being drawn into error by men who have no faith in a real democratic from of Government. In that letter I stated that I was' then, and I have still continued, to the 78th year of my age,fo he a firm believer in a truly democratic republican form of Government I mean a government founded an those eternal principles of truth and justice which our father declared were self-evident, namely: "That all men arc created equal ; that they are endowed by their Creator with certain inalienable rights; that among these are life, liberty, and the -pursuit of happi ness ; that to secure these rights, govern ments are instituted among men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed." In the very first words of tho Constitu tion; formed by our fathers, it i3 declared that "We, the people of the United States, in order to form a more perfect union estab lish justice, insure domestic tranquillity, provide for the common defence, promote the general welfare, and secure the bles sings of liberty to ourselves and our pos terity, do ordain and est ablishc this Con stitution fur the United States of Ameri ca." Our fathers, in forming for us this Constitution, believed that they had em bodied in the forms of law, the highest wisdom, virtue, and intcilijcnceof a tcholc people. They meant to make the wisdom, the virtue, and the intelligence of the people the means to insure all the bless sing required to make us a nation with all the powers necessary "to establish justice,"- and "to promote the general welfare." -- To enable the people, to do this in the most convenient manner, they declared, in the first article of . the Constitution, that "All legislative powers herein gran ted shall -be vested in a Congress of the United States, which shall consist of a Senate and House of Representatives." They then describe the mode and man ner by which the people's representatives shall be cho?en, who are to make all laws which shall be necessary and proper for carrying into execution the powers of Congress, and all other powers vested by the Constitution in the Government of the United States, or in any Department thereof. Among these powers there is nothing plainer than the intention of the framcrs of the Constitution to vest in the people's representatives the right to suspend the writ of habeas corjius whenever in their judgment "the public safety may require it." to suppress rebellion or repel invas ion. I have been led to address this letter to you, as standing at the head of the Democratic party a party which I con tinued to act so long as I believed it was laboring to promote the greatest good of our common country; but when I became convinced that the Democratic party, with which I had been so long connected, was lending its power and influence to sustain men and measures that had so far perverted the Constitution of our country as to deny the rights of manhood to 4,000,000 of human beings and when I was that I wasacting with a party which was lending its influence to men and measures that were raising up in our country the vilest from of an aristocracy an aristoc racy that claimed it ns a right that "pro perty should own labor," and. claimed the right to mix their blood t with the black race, and then sell their children to be enslaved with their posterity, ;thcn I consider it my duty to my country to abandon a party that had abandonn tho great principles of truth and justice. What tongue can describe the horrors of a system that allowed a father to sell his child, who may have had seven eighths of white blood in his veins, to a brutal master, who had the power to con fine him on a plantation, under a more brutal overseer; perhaps a Northern man, with his conscience callous to every hu man feeling, and whose principal recom mendation might be that ho could whip out of the unprotected slave tho greatest of labor ! f ..... ; . , .... Thomas Jefferson might well say, in view of such a state of things, "I tremble for my country when I remember that God is just." . John Wesley has well declared that such a system contains within Itself the sum of all , villainy. The enormity of human slavery will appear from tho fol lowing advertisement, copied from The Georgia Messenger: "llun Away; My man, Fountaiuc ; has holes in his cars, a scar on tho right side of his forehead, has been shot in the hind parts of his legs, is marked on his back with the whip. Ap ply to Robert Ueasly, Macon." We Uiijht well Lave caid, iu view of a system that allowed such cruelty, as God is just that the time must come when those great principles of our Declaration of Independence that declares "that all men arc created equal, that they arc en dowed by their Creator with certain inalienable rights, that among these arc life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness," must be vindicated in our own country. Allow me to repeat what I said iu my last letter, namely : that I, who served my country in perspn and by substitute from the commencement ofthe war with England to its close, feel that I have a right to plead with my countrymen of every shade of political opinion, and to beseech them by every consideration that can move our manhood to consider care fully the dangers that threaten us as a nation. . . - It has been to me, for years, a source of profound regret to find so many of those, whom 1 nave esteemed and honored as friends, taking part with and forming all kind of excuses for men who have done all that was possible to destroy our Union of States; and now I regret to find those very friends calling themselves Democrats : and, at the same time, unit ing with those who were leaders in the Rebellion, and striving to aid them to build up what they are pleased to call "a White Man's Government." by which they mean to hold 4,000,000 of human beings under a ban or disqualification that will prove as destructive to their happiness as the slavery from which they have been delivered. I have been at a loss to sec how a mind so elevated as yours could for a moment consider it possible for a democratic government to enact a course of class legislation that would make one law for the white man and another for the black man. John Stuart Mills has said with great propriety that "There is no true demo cracy where large classes of a community are denied equality of political rights." lie further declares that "Every Gov ernment which permanently divides the people into a governing part1 and a gov erned part , u an aristocratic Government, by ichalcvcr name it may be called. I find that the very men who profess bo much concern for the preservation of the Constitution, are now most laboring to make proselytes for a white man's gov ernment, which can only be had by leg islating for class, thereby adopting a principle that is at war with the very let ter and spirit of the Constitution which they profess so much to revere. Such a course is as inconsistent as the profession and the practice of President Johnson. He declared at one time that "treason against the Government is the highest crime that can be committed, and that those engaged in it "should suffer all its penalties." "Treason," he said, "must be made odious, and traitors must be pun ished and impoverished." He went so far as to say, "Thoy must not only be punished, but their social power must be destroyed : if not, they maintain an ascendency, and may again become numerous enough for treason to become respectable." lie said, "After making treason odious, every Union man should be remunerated out of the pockets of those who have iuflictcd the great suf fering on our country." lie than said, ',1 hold it a solemn ob ligation, in every one of theso States, where the Rebel armies have been beaten back or expelled, I care not how small the number of Union men may be, if enough to man the ship of State, I hold it to be a high duty to protect and secure to them a republican form of government until they gain strength. They must not be smothered by inches." ' In reference to a Convention to restore the States, he asked : "Who shall re store them ? Shall the men who gave all their influence and means to destroy the Government? Arc they to participate in tho great work of re organizing the Government, who brought this misery on (he States I . If this be so, then it is said in truth that all the precious blood of our bravo soldiers and officers will have been lost, aud all our battle-fields .will have been made memorable in vaiu." . He then asked, "Why all this carnage?' and said "it was that treason might be put down and traitors punished." . lie said "traitors should take a back scat in the work of restoration." Ho said "the traitor has ceased to bo a citizen, and ,in forming , rebellion -has become a public enemy, and has lost his right to vote with loyal men," He said that the great plantations of the traitors "must be seized and divided into small farms and sold to honest, in dustrious men ;" also, "The day for pro tecting the lands and negroes of theso au thors of rebellion is past." , To cap the climax of inconsistency with all that he has since . done and tried to accomplished, he t-aid that, ho had been deeply pained by some things that had come undqr his observation, lie paid, "We get men in command who, uuder the influence of flattery, fawning and caressing, grant protcctiou to rich trai tors, while the. poor Union man stands out in the cold." t IIo went on and paid that "traitors can get lucrative employ ment while loyal men are pushed aside." He said, in relation to reconstructing the Southern States, that "We must not be in too much of a hurry. It is better to let them reconstruct themselves, than to force theni into it." Hut as soon as he beeaiuo President, we find hini hur rying Reconstruction on a jdati or policy ol Lio own, aud rcsLtia;;, "with ul the ! power ho possessed, the mild measures ! 3 i. n i . i i 'enable the Rebel States to reconstruct , themselves with the least possible dif (ficulty or delay. It is difficult for one to imagine how any honest, intelligent man can join with j President Johnson, and charge the ma jority of Congress with being a c.lass of .'radicals and traitors, "hanging onthe 1 skirts ota Government which they arc trying to destroy." It has been equally difficult for me to form an apology for such unreasonable charges as I find in your speeches and in the speeches of others claiming to be Democrats against an administration that has had to contend with every form of difficulty and misrepresentation that j the ingenuity of those who were in rebel - jlion against the Government, and of all who were inj?ympathy with them, could invent. I regret to find in several of your speeches that you make no allowance for the cxtradinary and trying circumstances through which the Government has been compelled to pass circumstances that would have made it wise and proper to have raised money by forced loans, if no other means could have been found to save the nation's life. You have said truly in your late speech that the Rcpulican party "denounces all forms of repudiation as a national crime." You then try to throw on that party the od ium of a deliberate design to repu diate the national debt. The repudiation of the national debt is one of the last acts that tho Republican party will ever tolerate or allow. I have been pained to find in your several speeches a course of reasoning that is tending to revive the rebellious spirit throughout our Southern States a course of reasoning that has already won for you the enthusiastic support of those who were most prominent in the Rebellion, and of all who are in sympathy with thcci throughout our country. I am sory to see in your speeches an effort to prejudice the laboring popula tion with the statement that the Govern ment is introducing a system of unjust and unequal taxation. It is certain that our Government could never stand in the presence of such laws as prevailed throughout the Southern States before the Rebellion; laws that made it a crime to "unbind the heavy burden, and let the captive go free ;" laws that made it a crime to teach a poor helpless slave to read and write, fearing that a knowledge of the Declaration of Independence, that declares the untenable right of every man to his life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness, would make him unwilling longer to remain a slave. To talk of such a system and such laws as have prevailed at the South being de mocratic, is to talk of a living body with out an animating spirit. The Cincinnati Catholic Telegraph, the official organ of the Cathoic Church in the West, has said, with great pro priety, that "the interest of humanity and the welfare of white labor, in particular, arc involved in the question of Slavery more than in any other, and it is the duty of men to prepare their minds con scientiously that they may, as far as pos sible, maintain what is best for the peo ple. Every .one acknowledges that Sla very is an evil. No man who is free would ever consent to be a slave. It is abhorrcut to his. nature. No one can al lege any right to reduce a human being to that miserable condition. It is detest able to mind and heart. And moreover he who reduces a free man to Slavery is excommuuicatcd by the Catholic Church. Slavery was the cause of our national trou bles. It was for Slavery that the war was commcuccd, and the blood of the brave men who have fallen on both sides has been shed by this insatiate monster. The hope of its restoration is not aband oned. There arc multitudes of men who would love to see it in the ascendant as it was before." Never were truer words said than that "Slavery was the cause of our national troubles." Notwithstanding all the misery that Slavery and the war has brought on our couutry, let us assure all who took part in the Rebellion that we intend to do them all the good we can. We intend to secure for them and for ourselves the con stitutional guaranty of a republican form of government, which is the greatest earthly blessing oar nation can posses. : It has been , with more than ordinary sorrow that I find among tho errors of your lato ppcech other grave charges against tho Republican party. You say it has adopted "a policy of hate, of waste, and of military despotism," in all of which you are as much in error as you arc when you state that the Re publican party has expended 8500,000, 000 of the taxes drawn from the people of this country "to uphold a despotic mil itary authority, aud to crush out the life of tho States." The facts, as shown by Mr. Rhino, in Congress, arc that only a very small part of tho amount you name was expended in maiutaining tho authority of tho Government over the Rebel States. Let us unite to.frown down that spirit of rebellion that found encouragement in the Democratic Convention that met in Chicago, when it virtually recognized tho principle of Secession and Disunion as an established fact, by proposing "a cessa tion of hostilities," and a call for a con vention of all tho States to meet in their sovereign rapacity and deliberate with men who .VQio thea in. active rebellion, uuiuj 'forth all their efforts to overthrow the Gov crmcnt by force. You charge the Republican party with " proposing to deprive the people cf the South of their right to vote for presiden tial Electors." You then say that "the first bold steps are taken to destroy the rights of suffrage." This reasoning is unaccountable in riew of the fact that the Republican party bay been constantly making efforts to extend the elective franchise on a principle of equal rights to every man without regard to country, caste or color Nothing could be more unfair than your charge that the Republican party intend that "there shall be no peace or order at the South save that which is made by arbitrary power." I will close this Ionsr letter by saying that I believe it would j he the proudest day of your life if I could . persuade you to unite with all who are I laboring to secure a purely Democratic Republican admininistration of our State and General Government. For one, I desire to do what I can to secure peace and prosperity to a country which in tho course of nature I must soon leave, but with an ardent desire that it may forever remain a glorious Union of States, where goodness and greatness shall be the motto and inspiration of the peoples. I remain, very respectfully, PETER COOPERL. Who Arc Democrats ? The President, Vice President, and every member of the rebel govcrment wasj a Democrat. Every soldier who, after being educa ted at the expense of the Government, cbasely took up arms against it was a Dcm--orat. Every member of both branches of tho rebel Cong'rcss was a Democrat. Every cut-throat who starved defence less Union prisoners cf war was a Dem-c crat. Every man in the North who sympa thized with traitors and treason in tho South during the late civil war was a Dcm ocrat. Every general, colonel, and ofHcer in? the Confederate army was a Democrat. Every person who rejoiced at the as sassination of Abraham Lincoln was a. Democrat. Every draft-rioter, sneak and bounty jumper was a Democrat. Every person who wrote letters to the army encouraging soldiers to desert their comrades was a Democrat. Every person who was sad when the Union armies triumphed was a Democrat- Every person who assailed the "lawful money of the country" and the national credit was a Democrat. Every person engaged in the massacre of Union soldiers at Fort Pillow was a Democrat. Every person who murdered an enroll ing officer was a Democrat. Every person engaged in the Sons of Liberty conspiracy to murder the Execu tive and overthrow the Government was a Democrat. Every person in the North who opposed conferring suffrage on the Union soldiers in the field was a Democrat. Every person who encouraged and pro tected deserters was a Democrat. Every person who refused to contribute to the relief of sick aud wounded soldiers was a Democrat. Every person who declared that ho "would like to see all Democrats unite in a bold and open resistance to all attempts to keep ours a united people" was a Dem ocrat. Every person who was in favor of "twer republics and a united South" was a Democrat. Every person who was anxious to know whether "the South had resources enough to keep the Union army at bay" was a. Democrat. Every person who denied the authority of the General Government to enforce its laws was a Democrat. Every person who recognized the rebel lion "legitimate, legal, and just" was a Democrat. . j Every man who shouted "not another man nor another dollar to carry on a civil war" was a Democrat. Every man who insulted the loyal armies of the Union by declaring "tho war a failure" was a Democrat. Have the soldiers, who put the rebel lion down, forgotten how they felt when,, while in the field, they heard from the Copperheads at home ? Do they remember the fire in the rear from Valhndighanx and Pendleton and Seymour? Can thcy forgct how they pledged themselves to remember and honor those, who aided and encouraged tho Union causo by their influence at home, and how they swore to visit a just retribution upon those other traitors who wero striving tu defeat them ? The time has como now foe these thiugs to be remembered. If you don't want to lose your vote. don't bet. If you don't want to lose your money,, dou't bet it on Seymour and Rhir. A Democrat pole went up )oo day last week. The Democratic party will "go up" ono diy iu October, and another in Nov ember. "Let her went." Ex-Gov. Rradford, of Maryland, and a large number of Maryland " conservat ives" who opposed tho Republican party Siiuv 1Sk, inteu l to support the Chicago ajiiaatioa.1 n n