SUPPLEME1TT. 1 SOUTHERN CAMP. . . . I p . ,aV rets TO v isifcvi Arms. fE DSnQGSATSDETESEISSD "to cmsy the state. Peaceably if they can, tut Forcibly if they, Elust Wade Hampton's Ap prenticeship in Mis sissippi. rtrVra of the f tate who t aot a Ka ri-iiat5!. 0l !:e !" thiwdi . ..i cra2n wca'fl !!38g.f!e ttit it i In a "" " "of war l lesei-Tb's a vest armed camp. '"lt(.!7 g., jr.! public square the clang of tj-k-a u be t as paraxiiuff infantry - r.3 fori-" a:ms. Vrotn every old field riuirs -ce!::.'.v t'r.e not of Hie bcrjlc or trie , ".J,"; oft- I:-Id-pit, as cavalry and ar- la-iortn Ilia.1 c.o.u.-'jus. i uu uej.N.n rcru the Serb. The sto"" cannot supply the terrain e for arras nu 8.zimi;r.ii.i'?a, ana every :th In the c-tj" blacksmith in the t - ce et.f is n on ti.e si. eels Witoout a repeater or ia..t a (ny ra.-rj lu town or fcut .'.r,t :le q-ict'iii cattri:ig report of rub j". '.;--! used on tare-' in the ridiiiiy, v !"; a tr!er to M.j.poe thntsskir . " u i,uia ta'.U. a to pre-frcs around T V' v,.r is this t-.l. Ia every part of tae '''( i-.MB.-t aouitcr pacnif poiiti.tal mass BHt.fi followed ly :.t jrs it, or f r- JvU ly proc-catiout c :e c.u. , ts .a.ry, artillery co.-iipaiiit, and t", . . car-hd;; to ib touud or nutrdol nu t -. '"liji: (iia'u.-, teTaria'.'ly uwtu.r fi iriu of . Lo,! t ('jit-, re aad ilever the moj v.-Ii-. tv iillnests, araouiK-iasr be KfubLcan T.;.j;n-.; r-i:on and L Kepuiii'-an piny, Siate tJ. i t4 caiUrc oa thir bwrer to j" in? vi.J-t cueennsr lin'.'s out iu re t '.n-- ' fii w-'" bo no'ec oi the bacaa and j. M ctnnot, anJ the pivpt dip.ne j ;r with war, war lor lb cry r en r. to iii knis. i-'bst bsi ctused this I If the De:noorate are to i-t t.'Uf'.'.j. It ia a grand upritiu;: ot iuteiii r' t" aciiTiut iguoranct, of wfllh aifainst uou u'T iv.tit t.'Cit.-ioa, 4 civtilraiioa and reline rjr.n . baibaiwm aud iloifradalion. Their ti iW!r6 f''!e lu!np;tot ol " The Proktrate t jtt Aronsrd." " FortK-arance hu Ci'axJ to be a Vir.uc." " iJown with the Thieves," ' Home v. a toe Carpel-F.iC'tr," ' fiooeat Govemiaeut iiUii.." it U, i:i"-y say. ri-petttion of the i.-r.nc soenea o: 1".6 ; ut trreiJreiU uprising c! "people acsttcs grtoOictt tntuny ud in u:vm o:fn:.-Mon : watoat ouLraivoui en- t4-.tneut. cn tLtir ;hu ad pmiieires; a atTiJie lur li'-rti or ior u atii ; iu liurt, a accond re.oiiiuua as momentous athaiol ac?utury a. a. Bi.t, ihcy tjiy, it it a vcjiution this time i.cj. a?ti:sie to.-pii,".: dirhiatiou aud rap-ity, hijt ol-m.-t ! '"une ioe; airaiutt the uU jeciki, oi tf.as to e..:?s, ol euiiehuneU property h -.'iH.j Atiilu-Aijcas to a uordu ol Ai'ncan i .ruarsaua tia.br tbe ga'daacc ot" uupriut;iiIcd f-cuudielf lr.-ira th" Vr n. littlT!. aSAtNrt HM:iE!tt.aJX. lour D.m.ti.'f : tti vjjrt ot tltr pmveyard n t-i.d iu Jvnii. t ainu.isa. for the tirst "time t ier.ue warthr to era Voted. The t r'."ti t-nvertir.'! i t i.f the rnv;., t-hauorg h.J ij..l'.vy. Its if ' :t lioxcn..r to ;,rt..-r -i (OTW. An boE't ral.T bad l'?''u 1. uli !ct. j it--n ilf. V'TV n o-:'rr.t of the :s-'..r..vt: o! Outc-iitiT f uarnhcibtn in I'f t a r. 5;W " " a fcl the wd'r of t!ie 1.. .. Ik ;- X ovet t:- -p;i' i: h the eo!d 1. .trui.'v'f: ta nr-tirtiai jiiuiT.'. I'lieuejo vi..i . L'il.aii'ui w-r imvi". It n.o i;vd ; : .u . ,. i.-i r r. or? lit or .c,tu; o.h t-ra t. t;.. i. i.i-'T i.-liiii..if'tuU''!;e v:e n ifnriefiy iL..''.-. t: n.v--t'.-itt n.?j. iu Laii lite i vt,.e jc'iL'.-. l. 'Lui U.itImM.m tf i'u i JQ-Is wn& aitii.-ij)-', . .i i(.r i', pri'hil'it'l liy tJte . i' c:. i-.e p;Oftrta iii:e wa pOr.tae L ..--'-i i fi." uad ' :vL fll'Ul t l;-OdiJ'l. . ; i' u. cii..K-; i). it. C hiintlj'i luia :u 1.1. -. ' t v. 3 ttc g..vKiu., bad v, ri . ...i 1l .L..r c... . o! c:-. lii-:;. lit- ! ,.i. j.'Jv:..r ...iUi.cr.1 ol i--a.n . T iS...;- hiP-. L i' J Oiit.V. Tu t'.:biOi a'.tt .':; a-;.'-.iJ .! rr:-riied vtr.hii jnvj-.t-:i. : l-c : iitfl.'i t.'i' tr i.ir;:u...- and 'i.'.' :t.i of f' ;t;y wire ? c us. a;i. t.n hi jhcrM ia- :nV r i. t:0 U" ' .'-' r:! ar. rj"j uay, cvt-n th: hj v ta t L'''!i' r him mi l eut". t-.sn L. :ii .2'. IX'ni.malie tapir . ...A'lJj : -oci i y a).a d t: rr-eic'-:Kio. 5 ..;it;;l;, tt-. l'-f.-. ib a-nt &tn,. ai'..-' te ;::'. lvtfifi vf the ...!-.. it-:t tie.r .' ii "r t!i i'!a. A:-"; v-iDi'.a ;!i jo:ii !: -aT ot tl"i l.iui' U au p;.1 'i t.'.. . li'- '.--.i- L'l L..d frO I'c..or&''- !.- t!i -i -i .f !,) ii.iu.tral to tue x ; ' t- cry; .i. ; jiu.cl to uio r. bomi. : " : . y ti: t .i-ai. r.iti'-t?. .iH-i;i h -ha C :...:. t..tn.l'oii.t riXiCCUfO to ' ..t.'a i'f O-fi' e. i'-:. .' ... :.ui tor-Uf. thit man ta to-diy L? ...'-.i (:o:n pv.iy l iawra.tc atuirp ia ? '.- us :.n i-c;. -it.rpU-a idveit un-r, v . i.-r, t r.:.ff"!''.rr in is-scs y, a tar : :! t e.: p-.-'n rest. Tlvy have . tl.,. ! v.-ar s"i-w.'! him. -i-!ly, ,.: :.. . ','aiv over i -j.rr't of thefr lrim. j-. '.i-'.:t Oi jr:r;: e-uce i"aiu. four t. -. . ttv.. vvirure-i to preuiet .hit it .u.;o MIO tiiif ? trrarr or cofr.4Tic rrccew. ti.erLor C...: f.av.T'iaam:Bb trnf.cn, thMt. : '.ar iw.J a fcj'a v a the soldtsa or of i ; "i tarjUr. ; t. . Thr cegtc-'Sa were ::-.yu..t.,,tii.t un'iirtu:tnl in th.ir rights, ot tft v, u ?. oir.scii..!tt;i"U':y prouv Lir.uer ai.a Inrh 'ixfs. Bu. tri.v':-i.or - i... :. d tot b-.-n in c er a year wi:vn ' XuV.ii C;:c.r-.c i-;..r..'..tl atVt'ashinr'is. i pre-: U v ave of 1.-1 tent a iar.t ! s. '.n.y t tie Ifsuse of Kpreii. f..'Tv-, a: J p: -,::.'rer-t smori that myjtHt'y v. -ic ni.y e.x-C :.:.-'V,e rfr.e.T.:?. rroia t'ic Very i:io:ar::t it r.i-t 1 ro:icd an onusail nrh er..-!tU.y-!(jcsai5 af.it) Bon ai i.M e 'i i t.i-s-.ti.-tf ariv.ti-r-y of ttta Mato. ir'or :'.: t:r-.r on i i'.' .rj iiad 1hii pom1. o i.i p..-jl , (u? oi o.n e, thiy fca.1 U ta i:ti;; ! to ke- ; l. r '-it- w-nor of t:v,-ir k y a.'.: Ih.j va ;i. frvMUr't-re'l v.-.'e of p-r- Tie is, it ivra, I.al nil Uli'-ii -. 'ii y I a.i .u comillr d . h t." .1.- i .11 i uic .t tir ir ..r.'l in :J to !i...ir i)!-t .'..i;ii ... y l. rly l-.J't-ud tii. t ?; t-u aei-ii ... tj J.-, ...J ca.-s!-i :,.iir wru'iti to ko. p it a.m. i.;.". ;-7c. i...C-wn. i oi. l!i- ::i. . ..y l.f.;: ! o; t.-v -' il it..i-..i!tj Ar.hr.on- .. taJ-I.Mirria U. :: :t. ;:i Coairew. ot tlte Ti.'y ta'.r tvu.i!t.-ntT cin-e :. e ho! .: v. .V;'.-s in the ;ir;sa! .'...i-ii. i . '. h.i:: t-ui tii ir v. . -he;. t'..y J.. ..i r , V.iid thiai; t'l the ; : ".:i v., ru o-i--t l;: i. J. l;;ot:ri;V tv " : ' .'1 t.'..- t! 1 I.-j-.!ana. 1 -c -.i nc i;. d K-'p 11-: t l",n', M-t.rs nri i.is ' t"-. j .-y a;.-:i.- i0.i n. t "!:'":. . ir.-.V'ti., an. 1'..: ,, ar.,! Ir.-a. . !tf t Tt. Th -;i ;;!y i : t! . i , ; .-j-v ;. ..-;;.!. ;. i am!. r,! hal i.'Wt.t ii-to S, '.UK) l)i-ir,'v ra.tc v.i-Jii-i J I : l .i V:? of the a 'jut jrm aud rcvolvtr. It iu true that they had been reliered from -.prcsrion ; that their ornfeed debt their nfortn Governor w ye unpaid, nd that whiie tbev eupported hiiu, aa to tlic p vt. tbore aa no danT of mlsrovenitiitnt. Bat phould they ret ermtenled with this Why not pet the" tipper har-d at home, and then mske a dc j, ritr attempt to cause on tbe reins oi power at WahiU!,-ton i mCI rOVTLtCTI FiUBCKO. Race difficulties became frequent to d?e fieid. At WU in June, tlx negroes, accused of Uie mutdfr of t o whites, were aeiiod by an arrncd baud of white men, evidently well or pinUeJ. aud utioL They were made to taee the force, and every man, at the word of command, rmptiii the eoateut of bi can into their bo d.e. Tlie afiarr etirred op inueb bad blood be twt en the race all over the State The Keuua Lcaiin ii nouaifi it, and the Governor, though he kni;w il to be uwlesa, oil ercd a reward lor ?he apprthoiioii of the iyneiier. Ttie atraiirht. outers mud f.ro-eatoia siied with Uie lynchers. Hut o paeaTieJ had the whiter becoruo under Ctuniierhtiu that many were found to ronrh-um the alieKtitiar aa cruel, unnecessary, and lik.-ly to pio luce trouble. Thia affair is inowa aa the lvucbitur of the Harmon mur b'rera. ' Gouej-al Builer sow resolved oa a bold, de. perate t.ruke. It ae the maswere at Hi nt urp. i. vcrv ou te familiar with that hHTihle talc. I destre t call attenUon to the evident premedi tation of the hole aiiair. A State niilina corn pany eora;oeed of netrroe waa parading on the louith of July. Two youo? aristocrats, one of the;n u Uutler, drove up the ttreet iu a burj-y, and instead of t aniiutr aide demand i that the militia ehouid irive way. After aoiae liietlcc tue protects thi was done. They drove past. Tae eapleiu waa ere Ion; indicted for oiwtruet inp the highway. The younp men and the father ol ore of thein were the prosecutor, licurral il. C. Butler apiieared a their cntiina1!. Hardly lira! tin y r lachtid theotile of the jutice when armed bauds of bit men becan to pour into to a ; Uie captain andtheeomjiany.all retidciita of Uie town, bat!i.v aamblrd at U.cir armory lor consultation. The whitet sor.n made a de ntand on them lor their aiair.: unab:e to onder atandtlie rieht.nl a I and of riouritodisann a lo niliitan couipatiy, an 1 fearful of their treatise-lit f hcuid they turrcti'ler, they rcfuwd. Fire was ojiened on th'-m. Tlii-y returnrd it af'.er a half hour. lhn hiiiidre.i of arroed G orpiana biirriinl over the hriibre ft Jin Augiita. on the opptteite ei le of tbe Savannah river, and joined iu the contest, iina'dy a cannon was bmucht tiom Aup:uMa, atid the romiuiny compelled to abandon the hou-e. Many of them were rap tured. Ol thee, s.ven were i-hot in eold blood, and the rest turned loo5e and fired cn as they departed; and the rioters, after dtspollinir the pio;x-r:y of their tietiun-, broke up aud de parted for home. Busier waa at tbe bot Uai of tlie cr.iu-plracy, which wi'.l fro down iu hii-tory with UJeucaw and Wyoini'npr, con demued to tbe eternal execration of humanity. Tti cowrvrio-f. Butler had calculated well. The affair stirred np tbe pavions of the races. The atraurht-out orr.ma holrtly defended tt. Every firewater de. fended it. They rauirht at the ehane. Country paper 'ere pun'baseil. Every couatv wa? ean va"M d. The par,inn of the Confederate noldiera were anpenl'd to. The younj men were called upon to rally to the anpinrtof Heneral V. C. Hutler, who had itvt a -s in defence of South Cmoline., and won honors in tlie war. Theeditor oi the .Vrws and Covrirr bad, as lar as he dareij, put the ontratreiaitstruelicht. An attempt Was made to throttle him. r.(ral Gary strove to eni:a:re him in a duel. Mr. Rhstt alo tritl to fiVrt upon him an ail'air of honor. Both were thwarted. but at the expense ot much influence to the editor, as a withdrawal from a duel is still rors'dcred cowardly end detrradinc in South Carolina. The organization of Democratic clubs, rifle eompstiie. and momited cornjiaiiies were rapidly bcL'un. Theiirc-eaVrs induced all the younir men to Join them, and send to Coven try thoi who would not. The call on the Presi dent lortr.Kip by the Governor, though abso lutely juMiiicd by Hamburi. waa alM uicd to stir up animosity. The State liemocratin Con Teniinn wascaUed unu-nallvearlyLytheCeEtral Co.Tir.iitiee, eoraised larjely of tire-ea!er, and the election of delesrate alter dep-irate pinlired to s'rni'-oatisra in the comprotaia couu'.ics inilicated the success of thee t reinendous eli'orts. The convention dually met on the Kith of AiiETist. The straight-outs were in tbe ma jority. But vi strou? waa the cmibdcuce of the whiles in Governor Cbaruberii-.io that, notwilh-stum-irur all the exertions that had b en made, this majority was only a few To'ei. But it was Eiuncietit. The convention r'olved to nominate a straitbt-ont BourlKKi Uetnocrstic ticket, and to make a desperate att.nnpt tocarry Uie Stateon the ilissiv ipf plan. The ticket was nominated. F.very nuin on it ig ancx-CotifederKtsoifl.rand besrs wounds reorlved while tiljhtin? against the I'nion. And at the head of it, nominated for Governor, stciids Wade Ha:np!on. the aristocrat of the aristocrats, the tire-enter ( 'be fire-eaters, a fiiinoiis L"enerrl in the Confederate anny, the in. sniation of CalhouniFm, Jr X. Uarisism, anti-Northif-m, ar.d Southern intoleran'-e. A!t"r the measure wa once resolved Uin the dele tritcs acted in eain.'ert. Butler, the beroof lla:n i'lir?. placed liumplnn in nominati'ia Ix'fore the r -nr. ei. lion. The w hites once more n'o!vcl to t-u-t them and tcmndore.i at discretion. The convi ntion irave sent ?ih for o;ien w ar. A iter a un hl.'ht prfion and a mammoth ratiiica tjon tuc: -tine th ddetstes went home with a iiiii nuiers;anjin ol the mcthoda to be em ployed. 4 maw Mnrrrso rs sorTn caunt rTa-. And by S't.F.tiij: tlu itoiW hajfrone ou brave!y. Ni vcr since the p'l.-i-tre of the ordinance of se-''Cs.-ioa have there hec-n such veiics in the State. The a hole whit.:- populatVn is up in arms and driiliair. Wade Ilamptonandhis collnifuesi-re caiivainpr the S.ale. F.very wber; thev gty there are tnasf iueclinc and torchlight. an military f roce-'ous, recahii sthoe of l:ii-iil. A widt s.':ad i-y-u-m of terrorism and Intimidation rcirns supri me. The neiTOe. now s. ionr nn- j nw'.-sted that they line come to look upon i beloma t;te natural or.'er of tl.ir.irs, have I b-en sud.ieniy swakened from their d't liin. i Tii-v m the military uriUin? al! around th-.-m. j I lark fac s -owl at them when they jro abroad. They b' i r of vxn-t met ti:T and catherins-s of t'..:r oid-tbne oivn". Wuiijvritis-s of the i l'jnibutt' bai'thei-y reach th.'in. T.iey brar the wh:t ! ail around them sayinp that tue ix.ttoin r..il has U-cu on t!.e top loap ehoii!,b that I he d. r'.y hastoiVpdown and out lictllamptou nir.st tw-lertcl. In Uarra liieycall a mas im et im of the R- pubUcans for consultation. Their prominent mtu are invited to be present and speak. The time conns. Thousands are pre- ::t. They organize and the apeaklnt; begins. S'.iOdeniy a coti.motk.n crises. Ti.e orat.ir stop. The tap of the drum and the s .und of ihebaj-itare heard down the road. Two Ion criiu.l.u of white Sf'ldtirs, arn e-i to ths tei-th, tn.iut.U'i and on foot, ci.m- Cling arour.J' tac cortier and m.nth to the piatiorra. T icvpush ariue the frisht. ni negroes and select the best f a's. Thitr leaders, rx-Ccuf' derate .oili ere, then no'tr.t tbe platfor.a and d- tc.ind half the tint fir D-.-ti'-oi ratic sp.-sktr(. 1; i.- ti-em'oiin-iy a;cc:di d. A Conied rate trcneral ari-e--, de liver a blood-aid-thuuder ha'aii'ac, telling the n.'rrnes th.'V Lave been foc-'.s 1. i ; cnou,'::, have zj: to d.'.'-ard tb -ir pre.tit I-'.-rs a-.:d come t-i k to their o'.J markers, who totei.d to carry the election, peace! -ly if they car, bur. for'-il ly if they ate r-s:scd. A Ilpul'liean fc ilo vs. He is greeted wish storm of his-'.s aui a da"tiir;c; yell of dtrbiou fro-.i t.ic j military. Ji !iiutt.-ni a 1 v.' words, evry s-n- j ti-uce i-einft Urownrd by the hiotirj. At la.t i a tenement is ut.-rea lotn eitotipn tp m heard.' ForM. with an enred bully steos for ward froto the ranks and pronounces trial a-er-tion a lie. The sjnaker dan s not reei:t the in-u!'. nay. he da;s not noti. e or ailtide 10 if. he t!ks ou lor a while. Hut the insults, jeer.-, inipert.i:e:it tpiettior. , &., come fitner and las', r, and finally, ia ain-:n for his lire, be re. suites hi 6eat. Vv liea the iiissine has sut.-sided atot'itT C'oi.i -derate tke the lnar. lie j over the ehihi' rr-r-a-l.s of the poor K -ptilii- crt;. pron.-ief's each and eve--m.e of ih-tn an j itifatf.o-.ts. maiieio.is, damuaide li". au.l iacf- j i.'ii: n rr.se s-v lh'y aiet:t. T'iie.'ei;.:id j r'i criii-ra Tac Rep'.;b;i ui:, qtiiwinar with IV ir , aurl itiiii.TJsti-Mi. 1 f-sl to W!!.-)W it at fce ! k irtt of ih byv...nt. Tiie ctN-r sp-i'krra on ! Uts side are ir.wtt htVtiaisttar. Tn? rnee'- i 1 in:.- t.re-is up n i ti : hr t:?m- toiee at.il a l-er I ii r I'sn . '..ii ai.d T.id n. An-! n h of the e j rn !...vc not alr-iutv !ti d i,i a a-ia tire lol t h-v-'r a "o 'h ir home. 'wt the j.crs and cur.s of i th? rtSeinrn. ' F tt th'u-1 not r.l!. T-i tir Is fil'ed with re- !. porta oi ouf-ari atid m.i.-.i n whici nev-r e- ; I p'.ir in prtn. No pt uniueut Republican of j ei'hcr .-oiir :.n tafe'v It ave a town. I.ct a lilnt j th:-:. he intends to ride out In the country gtl I wind and he ia sure to be ambuv-adei. But tnore than this. - The whites mriTd a K?.rnibil ean of their color with tenfold tlie triudii tive ness with which th'ty look upon the r.etrro. Ntores of wliibr Repubifcan are hurryisi; iu alarm to the uewapaier oftT-sss to insert cards in w hlch they renoan'f their party and profess conversion to Democracy. If these men ban? back and refuse or neeleet to join tbe precinct club or the nearest military company, their con duct is reported to the township ineetlur;. A cotnmit'ee is appointed to request an explana tion. They call on the suspected man at, their earliest convenience. If he lie seusible he will submit profuse apolnjies-and rejrrets, and hur riedly take up his rihe and follow them tothe drill-room. Three or four white circuit judires have been dratrooned into conformity, aud the crowd of le rllzhre threatens to aheorb every w hite Repiiblxan'in the Ptste except Governor Chamberlain and the United Siau Senators. "one xax kilito." If a white man refii? to join Uie precinct club; if a white manrs loyalty to the party is susia-etcd ; if a whito Republican perei. ts in r(i opinions, he is spctteti, nr-irked, doomed. He ia scowled at if he' walks at-road. If ho passes a crowd of loitering whites at a street corner an ottiinoua fcilence falls on tbem till he Is out of hearinr. No warn-in IT is triven him.- No nijrht viIta are now paid or Knklux nissives despatched. The whiles have found by bitter experience tbst such thlnira arc bonmerautrs, which return with tenfold force to in.ture the thrower. They manage the matter better now. They wait till an obnoxious man whom they have doomed as a victim chances to stand or pass near them, say on the pahlic pus re, at the post oiiii-e, in a bar-room, on the street. A crowd of white desperadoes will cluster near him or follow him. They apintar to bo drunk, and bein to quarrel over some silly matter havinir nothing to do with po'i'ic. Several bystanders ccme up and ta'ie sides. Family biows are erchan;td, pistols drawn, and a rcul.tr Iree f-ht occurs. SiioU are tired by all the. party. Yet. tlnmtre to siy, when or ler is restored, it is foand that not cn of the corahatants is injure.!, whUe the ior Kt publi can haa been struck by s "veral ran.kxa shots and killed. An account of the aib-ay ap;carsiu the prers (the press is almost wholly iiemocraUc) under the hcadim;, street Row Oue Man KilliAl." Not only are tingle men picked or! in this way, but sham fights ar a'rantt-d by white rudians on some non-political prctease, which swell to the proportion f riois, aud in which several Rcpuhii -tn bystanders are killed by chance shots, w hile none of the combatants are hurt. Of course, the authors of these deeds po utipunLheil. In the lira place, it is biipOsihle to tell w ho fired the shot. Then it is unsafe for any one to indict anybody about it, or for the oiU- ials to be too zealous ia tnve"tj;;itiD5 or priecut!at;. But if an a.ajsiu docs get into troutde by imprudence, his comrades, who of course compose motof thehystniiders. are called as witnesses, and swear hiiuout safely by giving to doctored testimoity. THE MlsSI-m-PI TlX. I now find myself carried back to the time of secession. Then no Southerner duel avow Union ren'.linen:. Ta-in lio-ro were thousands of them hi the Sottth, but tney were ruthlessly atibjected to a system of terrori-m, and had to choose betwivn conformity and almost certain death : and with hardly an exception they con formed. To-dav th -re are thousands of whites forced in'o this Confederate revivafaminst their judtnnent and inclination ; but they must con form or take the consequent. They conform, and then, to avoid th? Papulation of Itikcwarai ness, they endeavor to prove their sincerity by outdoing their comrades in violence. The same men head this movement who led the Slate into secession. They have thoroujhly revived the policy of intimidation. Talk of the blacks beins; intimidated ! It is throuirh the In tiniidition of the w i.i tea that thcintimidation of the black is rendered poss pile. The election is to be caniud on the -Mississippi plan ; and a part of the plan, tc it rcmeiohfrod, was the imimida ti"n of tlie whites. Wade llaiiiototi ii as much a Misdssippian as a South Caroliuian. It is true that he is descended from Carolinians famous In the Revolution, that bis anec.nors have al ways lived in this Stale, that he himself is a citbten of this Stall, end that the fa "ily home stead is in the city of Columbia. i!ut besides the immense estate he owned in South Carolina before the war, he had vast demesnes ia Missis sippi and other Southern States. This will not seem snrpjisintr w h-n I meution the fact he pos sessed tsj.is.Hl aerea of land in fee simple, and ow ned 4,iX-0 slaves. Noiv the war took from him the bull: of his property. B it so milch remained alter al! Lis lo-v-a t.'ial he is at this day the wealthiest man lu the soutueru Slates. Most of his property now, however, is in Mississippi, lie has abandoned by far the lurfrer part of his ancestral estates In South Carolina. Thoutrh h's home Is iu Colutnbis. he spends half bis time on his o'antations in Mi-sis-ippi. He has one plantation thee on which H) of his former slaves are employed, so well has he been ablo to keep up this old-piatitation plan while the euiall iann system has b. n iKcoiuiutr well nijrh uni versal." The fact 1 d-ire to cull attention to is this: Hampton was ia Mississippi prior to the laet electioa there, w hich the Democrats carried by the sho'.srnn p'dicy. The s.nii'.aiity of the met hods empiojed by the Ue.nrr.-niis in tbe can vass iroinp on here uow, with Hampton as their leader, forces me to the conclusion that tao ex periment is to be repeated here. TIIE PRFE."T ATI' ITl'DE OF THE UiaMOCliATIU I'AUXY. Frnni a recent pech by il-.n. rilward Mcpherson. What It its present attitude f It is the apoio jrist ot the worst political crimes of the cctiturv, the beuetits m' wbidi it reac hes out ita bunds ea;erl to ciuTch. It is tile protector of the Southern nivtrctnts who iiae jilanned and cxseuled, and are planninj tud exe cut!i: every iutn.ee, even the most shock infr, np.-a whole niises of voters, w hile a- wed as eo.oreci, wuoss oiiiy ollcnee is an un wii;':u.neiis to vote the Democratic, ticket. This eh meat of thit pa'-ty has, by intimidation and violence, wreVte.l S atn siter Sate from the political control preferred by its voters, and is lre;irintr, by p-i'.ic and shaielc's means, to wi id then unitedly for tho election of a l'lesl il'tit. This policy was successfully beiruu in li; In Louisir.ua, when "WiiitJ League Clubs" cbtuhine l to. " rctuse to employ, rent, 1 nd to, or in any other manner give aid, com fort, or credit to anv man, white or black, who vo.es afatnt the white iiiaa'a party." jj.ich is the respect lor the r:i,h of the "lahorinir and iiiaepetidi5.it poor felt by the late slaveliold n r class who ciiif tttiUO tlio South-rn De moe:a?y. f omiiitir.tiona to starve l-.bor wcr foilowcit by com: iiiatn.ai t.i munler it; sn.j have thi a tthor.iy ol otliGtij-uis!.e.I an ouichl as Lieuteiiatil Getieral i'ililip H. therl iau for the fact that from to January, ".5, over three thousoj. I persons hid been killed and wounded in Loiitiin .a '"ou account of their political sentiments." The recent Coticresotul report on the election of last year in Misii sippi ia runSnnatory ot the existence i this d' iiticd said maticiou pu-jo-'e ol the Southern Demo cracy: a. id who cat close hie eyes to the present cuorr.iitie nract .a-d by the same reckless and despera.e ciass in south C:ru'iaa . Iu most ol the late rebel Sutr toe ; Alotn of the c- ilir-t has tiiiis bet a as s j'esiaj.tialiy destioeel (. it ita. dnriiitr the adraini'tr.-.tion ol '-Jefferson I'avis i:i the palmy cms of ti.e rebellion. And the tnea who ar: fcekine with th; 1 looii of prol.'ah.y t?n thou-r.rjd ini:o.-ttt victims are held tip hy tht ir Northtrn coraroerates as cnneatu'.in-; a moilcl party, lit not oi.'y t btir the. catio.i's houor, but to ' reform " iu aui-ujistt-ation 1 First Kurdfrtrs, TJica KDbSc-rs. " TOU aKS a EirilCAl. KIi CEB, AND HAVE OOT 10 VIC." The wri'er of the article from which we make this extract, in support of hi statement that Etter lawlcrsiices prevail' in the South, and that no man's life is secure, be be white or black, who is known as a Kcp'it'ihan, relates the fol .lov.it.; : A? an etr.niple, I may refer to the murder of SImoii Cii r, an hniet'-aud weli-iin-aniti black man --ho r jo.. -itel Bartiwcil eouuty i:i the l.i-yclmiii-... n Tih-m!:.)-, 8-ptiiil'T !'., a rule e in .-.tniii:. ,id'"i l.y C p ain A. 1'. Ba'ler, went ti. t'U.-ntcn :. i tu.di a r is.d train o.i the Port Iviyrl Ka'trriad. wph wbi -h th 'y itrnrredcl to a sti ti iii eal'itl ltl.l.iiw. lien- loey lound Colter nt'ieiiv seati-d ou hi. vr.iiFe and wtiftpijr fir train. Soxe ot them evc'aiined. ' X'lcr. 's th'. Il li ::il tiVser, Coifr.' Cap a n llutltr went up to him. and sa.d, "C liter. I'm tha tilrcT ruicr. a ad you've cot to with ree." 1 hen the itntortanaV mm was surrounded ty Butler's i- jminitt-.d and rirai'trrd iut i etc of the cars of tae woc-l train, which thcu retumed to EDenton. Arriving there, Coker was taken into a Cel l about one hotwired yards from tha road, and Captain Butler said to him : Coker, what's your business f" " I am a Representative from Barnwell county to the South Carolina Legislature," was the replv. . "All the better," said Butler, " Representa tive or no Representative, vou ar a Radical nitrer, and have (rot to die.'' ' For God's sake, give me time to pray," cried the unhappy negro. "Certainly," answered Captain Butler; " pray away, but pray quick." Coker then knelt down and bepan to pray. While he was tu this position Butler stepped 1 atk six or eittht feet and shot at bim twice. He fell forward on his face, bieediuir and dying. Bntlcr then made a sitrn to bis men, and six of them fired tiito the wounded raw. He died. Tlie men who killed him took his watch, money, and pold shirt buttons, and then, leaving the body to rot, returned to Rohbins. These facts are sworn to by three eye-witnesses, w ho state that Coke's only crime was his Republicanism (From th Cincinnati Commercial.) CAMPAIGN LTKICS. Win yoa walk Into my parlor r said th apldsr s tha St." Will yon walk lata my parlor f satd th at a kin a t the nigger. I ademuger to show yoo with a very handsoai a f are: And my brather who at bandits, as Phil 8herMaa would mi, -Will do inuru ia enterUln yoo If you'll stop a walls to-day. Wa have shot-t-aas. rifles, pistols, knives, would, stib a M.ioc brava; Blondbuukis worth a heap of aaoney when yo want to uaek a sivve: R.im to hsi.j a Vsnke schoolmana whaa she won't 91 u. ami irlt Won't jiu wail lata my parlor, Mr. KlrfeTt just a . k"' f We have stories, I assar you, that yoa really night to hear. s Do conic In Sir. Xlefsr, for election day ts near; Anh 1 ibir.k i nttgiti convince jou with my derriofw and thtufs. That this rurs.sl ntggsr votlcf ail onr Southern tro-ahle brings. Or I rclptit, perhaps, persuade yoa with a double- barreiu-d i'a.i. We can du your voiiaf for yea aa oar Interesta are one; Aad I'm sure yoa'U net Insist, with a aerrlnger In - view. That tha cares of holding office are desirable for yoa. I can show by facts and fir ares what destruction to y.mr race Must result, as here at Hamburg, when yoa doa't kesp In rmir place; And that ri..f down at VlrUburg, with a ban- dreJ 1 ei.ulil uantfl. Vail. 4 sil ;hlly lu the ustai'.s, hut Rsultlng Just the sauie ghnw conclusively to niggers that down Bouth they have t' eussa Holdln; offices and voting if they want to live In p.'s.-e. If you"e r!hts to keep we'll keep them, only stay where yua tsMonjf . -rfoeln; suza'r cans and cotton or yoa'U find your .rights are wrong. j i So Just w alk Into my parlor, there la nowhere s se cure. For uy Kaiineota ara-alsadly, and like vermifuge, are sura, Verv sure au.l very classic, as In .tlsop's lions den, M here the irscl.s are all pointed lu wails, hut aot Obe caiae out a-atn. rolilies and Tratlev COW TRET ATCE COXnlXEO laT TFI COLfD SOUTHEUX STATB OF rOCTH CAKOM3A. rltoston Transcript. The ways of Southern politics, In some re spects clear enough, are still past rinding out. South Carolina is a Republican State by a ma jority of many thousands, but the declaration has pone forth "that the Democrats are to take possession after this year, and the small traders end poor laborers have taken the alarm. The adverti'lu? columns of the daily Democratic papers show how the alarm is manifested. The Charleston Jwn-nal of Conwimrre, R. Barnwell Khett, Jr., editor, contains tho follow-in? : A Card Until. Fcrtiikb Noricii I will receive applications from those seeking employ ment, on Monoats, Wednesdays, and Fri pavs, and ord -rs f-om employers for Straight out lVrnot-ratlc Workinginen, on Ttesdats, 'Tafrts-ntT-r; and-Satct.dats. I am prepared to furnish Democrats with Democratic labor at raa'onable wages, to any extent at a moment's notice. To employ Republicans and starve Democrats no lonper pays. It Is a crime, and wbl be held to strict aceountaMlitv. " It. K. TitAms, "75 Broad street." To understand the effect of an aiinoun'-etnent of this kind, it must ! remembered that the creat majority of Republicans era laborers, and the tr.a'ority of Democrats are employers of I.ihor, in some form or other. Such a notice as this is. therefore, on apiw-al to the-teitrs of those who are dcpendeiit on tlieir daily earnings, and would rather chantye their politics than lose them. It is also a threat against those who re fit e to surrender. Here is another notice of th same kind : ' To Orn Mrtrtrn tsTS, Wn snr Owsttrs, aitd TBturMi:x GttxEr.Ai.i.v : The Workingmeu's Democratic Assoeiiitton are cotv prepared to furnish from one hundred to two hundred able bodied men for any kind of work. Apply at, their hnll. la-en street, near meeting, from 9 to 12 JL: '-' to ti. S'ld 7 to 9 P. M." This nioditird form of intimidation Is cr.rrifd into the varions branches of retail trade. Tweniya-ine liutcher.s of Charleston unite in a card, which the -Vnet ami I'wri T prints under the heading : " crTrtiERsi to nrr rrtoM." "WiiEFiR no vou l!rr Yotn Mctrf To thi Dt-rrGcrn'le PMh: Tha tindersiirntd, butchers iu the Charter. on markets, who are earnest sup porters of the cue of IIamptok Attn ooon govci'.n'mcxt. resfa'ctfully solicit the custom of their It-mocratic fcilow-citizers. " HorrK,ir'i-iiS uv cct Tttrtn Meats from Teniosrat.c Hea l lua.-tcr",' Malls Xoa. XI, .17. and M, Lower Market. Also No. 9 aud II), lpir Market. 4 to VI i cents T pound. It is not Democratic money uloue that wc want, but Waoe Hampton and Iiaronv." Paul Tn-scott, a good South Carolina tame, adds tot he number of his .-tidls the Information "S:raight-ot:t Deitnocmt :" and T. It. Tuily, cat:. -er, ' desires to rciuiu l the general public of what Ids old customers all know, that be bis b"cn for years a tiianeh D-'inoe.rat, and Is li6w a supporter ol 1 lainptoTi artd good froveruineut." Sur. iy tire rrd.ng white race, "the natur.d leaders," arc s,l:aajf a pohle example for their less fortunate foil iw-citizsns. If tho tuarkrt tn n and ho-isehoii purveyors oi" any Northern city were to j.lvcrrise their wares :ti this way, toadving to the prejudice tf t" r rich cu- tomers, atid t'ireateninir their rivals with the dc-lructi.u of thtar, business uulcss they chanced th-ir opiiiioi:s, our risorous Northcra climate icouvd sooa be made uncorclortabli for them. The liegr-jes have, indeed, much t i barn and to cnleafit when the superior white race seta them so poor an example. rTrom a'rettent p?p-h tor Carl 3chan.l Tim Dcmoera'.lc Pa'-tr jTorih S-.tuIIottcvI ap iu a Suitil isoti'.ii. It has fre;tteiii.ly been said that no Northern Democrat, a-.er voting 1 r such a uiil, will lie Mi ta cotne before his constituency. Is that true .' Don't we see thiinrs hich, under orui nary circumstances, would be deemed Increrii b.e t 1 ie Svur.h is pow a compact unit again iu the Dstnocra' ic jiarty. At leatt the 1 c:u6cratic party .tnts tojiriit us. and in case of a Demo cratic victory tho South will not ouly t. solidly Deincs rat'i-, nut it wiii a! retmin so for a:i in terniinab's tiin.;. Let mo say to you, I would look up ki that as a great n.t'i inal mi fortune, lcr when, in a reptt'iiic, ;s.i:tieal pnrUcs am dl vi l.sl ly frcogm'iliital nud sectional lines, il will create an unsound atid uuiwt.iotic puhiic senti ment ; and if it vero for that reason alone. I think th -rc w ould be some impulse of patriots, movintt almost eery one to txht a rainst tha Demo -ratic party thi? fall. A'iplatise. But Ulat i not ti:e. point. 1 warn to di.-uitss. I say the Detn-o.-ratlc put-i." wants to units tiie. Sottth on- itiorc a. a solid unit, u;in its sid-. In t'itt fa: the Souliicm iif-ople viil hold the majjriiy of t tie Democratic party, aud il'nx't ito parjiossi?. T int m-'.i ority of votes w iil nc -i"i.ar:iy, aa before the war, rive them the control oi' Uie pviy; thee will tail nl once again into their old ci of porr-r. and holding tlie propoadenitJ'i I'i iufln-.l eue l:i rhe DiniKtratic puiy tbe South will j nw!s,sarily lnsi-t upon dirtatin; the nonir.a- ti.ms lor ti. Irt-sideiKy nnd Vte; Presidency in that oitraniziitkn... V. otSr iron!, ju.,t 'na it , vras !e'ore our g-resl eivU vouSkt) tto Northern:! . . ' ' '.i :''.. i '-. .: ..." Democrat will have the least chance for th V-residency or We rreddency tthlaia he efCoy the decided favor of the Southern Democracy. What will be tho. consequence, of this I .Why, It is evident. Every Northern Congress man who thicks. that there is some Presi dential stuff in him, that a Presidential lUrbtnin may strike him some time, will be very much inclined to do that which will be surest to train him the fa7orot his Southern brethren. So it la evident that not only a few hot a Urge number of Northern Democrats, hnitHed by their ambition, and, I am sorry to ray, also im pelled by one of those impulses tiiat sems to be indigenous to tbe Democratic mind by the influ ence of subserviency to Southern dictation, will vote for just such bills as have been laid before you by Republican speakers. So I believe that a Democratic Administration will, by the very necessities of the ease, he one ol the most ex travagant Administrattous thi country ever had. . There U still anoiher reason why this will be so. She Southern people, being the prepon derating power in the councils of the Dtmo cratie lurry, will also dictate Its financial poli cy. The Southern people stand now, comrared with us. In the josition of p-wr relations. In other words, they, being comparatively poor, an- the North comparatively rich, the North wiil pay the great mass of taxes and the South wiil pay comparatively little. The n-cej-sary consequence is that those who pay very little don't feel the burden of an extravagant Government, and will, therefore, always be. in favor of spending as muc h money as possible. Tou have an illustration of this in the city of New York. A very large number of your voters are non-tax payers, a minority of your voters are wealthy tax payers ; the non-tax payers do not are a snap of their hugera how nmch money is spent by the- city frovernrh.jnt, and, therefore, you Lav always a lavi h. adminis tration. Ia not that so f " Then the seme rela tion will be borne by the South to the North as to onr national councils, and, the-efore, I repeat, it ia by the very necessity of the case that a Democratic Adin!nktrat1on. governed as it must be by Southern influence, w iil be a mast extravagant one. Applause. Rifle Club Intiiuiiiatlon. KB. BCHXIU PCCLABHS M1LUABT TOR CI TBE ONLT KKMEDr tOil TUB SHOT-OCX TOUCT. There is still one other thine I would call yonr attention to, and that ia the question of national peace. 1 00 not mean to repeat w hat I 6aid of my action with regard to the South-un reoplo, and the impulse of generosity which I have always foil owe. I. Oi course 1 did that with the exiectat:on that satislactory response would be elicited from the other side. We gave them back their rights with a lavish hand ; we gave them buck their rii-ht-s so shortly after the lelv Uioa that 1 can only repeat w hat 1 have said before, that the peneros-ty of the American people ha never been e.uatll by any other nation in the world in that respect. We did it with the just expectation, or at i-st the reason able expectation, thut the Southern jople, re ceiving their rights at our hand, miu'ht be counted upon to restwet also tha rights of otieri. 1 am sorry to say that, that expectation has been In a great measure di ap pointed. When you look at the State of South Carolina you will not deny that the sana tion ot things is exceedingly serious. I am the very last man iu thecountry whowo-tld apt rove of the presence of trooj in the neighborhood of the ballot-box, aud I would stand by to the last in the endnavor to secure to every man the right to vote uniuiiueiiced by force of any Kind. But, as things now stand, if the United States troops, ar withdrawn we are pretty sure to have another armed force In Its place, and thut Is the rifle clubs of the South Carolina Reform Democ racy. I believe in reform, gentlemen, but I do not believe in the reform of the rifle and the re volver in the hands of a terrorist. Now, then, they may succeed i0"ibly In subjugating Ro puhlicau majorities, but one thing I look upon as perfectly sure we have come to the settle ment of the questions srowicg out of th war by debating certain Constitutional provisions. These Constitutional provisions msv, for the time being, be overridden iu this or that Slate, but If the attempt is made which I look lor almost as inevitu.de in the event of a Demo cratic victory if the attempt is made to nullity them in tbe whole exteui of tiie Southern country, I am sure that the loyal people of tiie United States of America w IU not submit to it. Arsyiause. If the attempt be mad upon such an Issue between the North and tlie South, the solid South on one side will tind a solid North on the other side ; and liberal and gf ncrous as I may be when the question is be tween a solid North and a solid South, I am on the "Ho of the North all the time. Applause. I am on the ride of the North, not because 1 happen to live here, but because 1 believe that the North contains the intellectual as well as th moral vitality of the American Republic as It is no'V constituted. Now, gentlemen, looking ut the attcmis that are being made in the South, can anybody doubt that Ibey would be rreatly encouraged by a victory of the Democratic party ! lam sorry 1 am obliged to r.y if , but siill that party stat'de in the politics of the country as a ccntiuual tiireat of reaction agaiust the resull: of the war ; and it is ray conviction at the prcs-i;t moment that the candidates of the lb publican unrty are not only the best, but they are the only instru ments by which the true inv rests of tbe Ameri can iople can be promoted. Applause. POOR TILDEX. The Washington CAi'mic' publish les the fol- lowing Itet of lees paid to jarrim-l ISoS, lSt'.'J, and 1S7 by the trie K.U1 pany.: J. Fl. Jr., March to Dremh-r, 1SCS, six itee.is. l.'-ul and ti..-l.l.'itLit Daniel ilrew an.! .!. l.uuM, several i.ei.-.s, . lejcal aivl Incicenial ' V. M. 1 ecd, Kfvc.m:r:.t. W. M. Twee.1, Iiecenibee I, lsss....... W. M. Is .!. Je-iHul-r . l is V. l. Trtist, Jaaiiir- to Jui.e. lt-J. .. W. M. Tweed, l-- ia'"r , JW W. M. Tweed, April , t7 V. M. Tsfil, Jnr.- '., 1ST' Ji7 tiom.l, sevaiaet l-r-3 -. ... Jay it.:!.:, s? 'teia.sr a, lt'i. .......... Jay t.rui t. sv-.re:a'-.;r 'a, l.o V. M. TvrrwJ, etj.anses and coaiuel V. M. Iw-sl, eiinscs and eouafel fees W. M. Tweed, expeoses act counsel f6es PMcn in vay Cotn- $:i7,tno si S.S0 CO a"..as (VI 0...V11 ff.t 4. -s w gr.MI- ;.-.,( 1 -. .- ee un l.:ii,is1 on A'l.W .SJ 44,000 oa sv.ooe 08 75,000 CO ;i,roo oo ' Sl.-X-e, UVJ Sti Not one cent of this was ever rctun.ed for taxation, and the Government was defrauded out of its tax upon it. Betides, these were the receipts from one source the New Tori: and F.rte. Ilii feci frotu other roads were enormously !arp:e, and would swell tha total to several millions. Duriutr the years from IS1. i to 1S73 he paid tave to the United States on but tl" J.C 'ji-or $1.1,t0 a year, wbile actually receivim; njt less, probably, than five millions. - an A Bayonet Cluirw. Tiis Is the wav General E. M. L;e. of Nstv Tork, surrounds" L'i3 audietea whc;c-.er he addresses a I'euit yiyania gathering. It cap tures them every ti.ne t FEti'w.ciTi.ENs: My. tint public appear ance Kgaiitfit the Democratic party was made In the Slat of Pennsylvania, and I have no doult that some of you ere vrcatiiit on that occasion. Itwasn a warm. Sal. liih in duing iu July, ldi;, at Gettysbutv.. Tio Dsiaocnli'5 party at thit time wore a gray uniform. ar.d was com manded by my. iicv:i1cus itatuesaste. Ther, as now, it represented tlie ". solid Soma." Then, as uow, it was descrmint-d either tu rule or rtiin the nation, and its trimuph on. that occasion woul I have Invit no leaa disastrous to the coun try than ita taiumpii in Ui present campaign. JCSTIFVLXii "KJL"KV. A new explanation of the reason why Siam Tihbin refused to help put diwn re'vllion aa 1 pay hhj income tax is riven in the New Toi k Jyu n r At tbe same time, we must say that it would have been much- more creditable to Mr. Tildt-i an a lawyer and atstsmun to hr ve declined to pes-any mcomo ts at, a'l. An ireo:ne tax, lcviit-1 as otiM was. h a clear Intmrtion of tiie Coi stiitit-on of th United S'a'es." . Tni is the opening f an asiroinent to Justify swludtiiig the Govianfinnt.' Mr. Tiiden hi ur.-fortiniafa- in the brefii of his defence which he tends to bis ajivceatea. : Win Til.len want to engagethe telegraph lines 'on theuifrhtof November 7 ! Cltarll.i Baelcalew (l.lile to rrlv? the aged rcforTn'r some vaiuabl aidvice on this ettore. GARLSGHOnZ Upon Southern Claims IT IS ROT A MERE PARTIS!, CRY. -THERE IS tMUCH IU.IT. . The Democratic Party Is Ready to Pay Every Cent , Demanded by tho South. It baa frequently been said by Deraocrats that in the question ot Southern claims there It no thing but a mere partisan cry. Gentlemen, it m my sober conviction t hat there i nmc h in tt, and I wiil tell you why I believe to. 1 ut 3ot-t h ha been impoverished by the war. and in cenvcrsav turn with Southern men myself 1 have found this to be their idea. : Vow of theNoith have coo trolled the Government alone since the war ; you have taken out of the public treasu-y millions of dollars to subsidize teainboa; lines. Ton have praaated away millions of acre lor railroads to establish your l.oes of cotna.ui.ka tioiu You have spnit untold autus of tr-oDcy on internal Improvements, an I w hile you did this we in the South were exposed to ail The ravatra of the w ar, aad out of which we have come in an impoverished condition. Now, thev ay there -a nothing laimr in the world than that we olnui.d have tlte same advantages, so as to getev u. Gentlemen, you converse, with almost every southern man oa this sul ject. and if he does rot tell you this before election, he will b candid eiionch to say so after, if the Democratic csn didate is elected. What does that mean! W have discovered in the course of time that ti e policy of granting railroad grants and subsidis ing this and that private enterprise waa exert 1 liiu'ly costly, without conferring a corresponding punlic beue.'it. Therefor, thai policy ha to a great extent been abandoned ; but I "predict in case of a Democratic victory tliat that policy will Le renewed and carried on to a more extra vagant extent by that party when it become the controlling power. 1 "hat Is oue point. Tha second point is this : While 1 was lu the Senate, aud ever since, a large number of bills were In troducsd there aiming at thi! refunding of the cotton tax. Vou are all aware that duri.ig the war we paid hundreds upon hundreds of mil lions of taxes lor tne purpose of kteping our Government alive and ourarcuesgoing. We did that, having been forced ir. to a war by the ret el Slates, a war that cost 50C.0OO precious lives and thousands of millions of dollars. Durlr-g that whole time the South contributed altacst nothing to the public treasury. There is only one considerable tiem . tf tax t! at was levied uja.a the Southern ptnpie, and that was the cotton tax, some sivtv eitht mililon dollars or o.er. Now they da mind a restitution, of .that taT. as it is pro posed by some, niit to the iildividuaia by whora the tax was paid, but to the southern States as such. I am a man of very generous dispositk n with regard to the Souta. 1 thought that wan the war was clwd the Southern peoplu who had been In rcvo't would again bti-ome peace able and law-ahiiiiiur citizens, and that gearr--ity was not only a duty, but an act of u i.-d. -a and justice. And so 1 have beeu one of the Brst to advocate a policy of general amnesty and of the complete r-moval of all those political v& bi'l'ira which in consequence of the rebi'idjja had been imposed upon a.larve nutib-'r of Southern peopie. In gentra) I ailvc-itTd a r.. Ucy of generosity and reconeilia'iou : I am Will ing to be as generous to them as anybody, but when, after having forced ua into so terrible a war a war that came near destroying the e-y life of this "treat Republic a war that has cove- -1 thelatt l with mourning, and put e'l h teTtih! burdi ni upou om po; le '.t hen, after such a war, having contributed this iitu mite to tlte sustenance ot" thia trrcat fabric of lur icstitu:!. r, t hey demand that w e should refund every cent of ft, I think it is a Utile too much. And yet yon are coolly asked you. the posscssois of tiie ilifh of this coantre to v-v. your baud' :; .o yonr pockets so that ii.S,(Xnj.lj be tiven ba. k I tell you, gentlsiuen, that it i my honest ecn viction, should too Democratic p-.rty come it. to power again, they will Inevitably return to ti e South every cent of iLat money sv'a'eh w.ts cca tributed to the National Treasury ia the cotton interest, with Interest t.x. I ttll yru cacdldiy that 1 fear ths D-mocri.ti': per'y .11Im exceed ingly (cencrcus to their Sou'hem f i-rriila iu tia way of ptutiitg money into their pockets. A rtrroril ?ct a rrospfctat.. Said Colorel Icg"ro:l in bis Crx per lastltut speech : " The Itepur-iieaa party comes to yoa with Its record open, and asK every man, wo. man, and e.i.iM in the broad eomtiy to read its every word. And I sty loycu ti at there, is r.it a line, a paragraph, or a race of that record titat is cot only an honor to tho ilcptibhcac pvrty, but to '.lit-, hitman race, tin every pare of thit record is writ ten s-mw prrtt aad ploriout ac tion, dine either lor the liberty of can or tf.s preservation of our common country. We a'i evcrvhody to read its ev. ry word. Tbe D.-t:.o-eratie. party comes b. fo-e you wi'b its recotl closed, rteor ltng every Hot a;:d iiitir and sta.a, a,:d treason ar.d slr.td r atii iMrgttity, aid iii you not to n ad a fintile word, b-ai to be, kit-.J eno'ig'a to i.ihe its iat'en'ciis pro-rises for the future. Allow me to say bare tht charact'-r, good character. rsts ujon a recoid, and not upon a prospectus.. '' A Democratic organ say-: " It !s rencra'ly conceded that Sam-jU. Tiidt-n hasbscu onie-. r 'hiving for' Tweed." To most, riersonsit lo-j'.s a, i"f Til-lew In I b-en " Jji.it f-r " htm. U v.. left to fob Republican p.-e;if N"w Yi-rfc to ex pse hi crime: and the credit cf hii. c-.rt'ire, acconling to Minister Cu'bir.r, msst be girea to the Reouhlican Admiuistratii-n. Reputlicaa Elocitcral Ticket. STATE ELECTORS. BEN-LilirN HAREIS BREW;TZ3, JOHN W. CHALFANT, - JOHN WELSH, HENF.T DI3ST0N, CEP-ISTIAN J. HOFFMAN, CHARLES T3O?TPS0N JONES EDWIN H. FITLER, JOSEPH W. BARNARD, BENJAMTN SMITH, JACOB KNAB3, JOHN B. WARFEL, J0Sr.Fn THOMAS, ARIO PA2DF.E, LEWIS PUGH, EDWARD S. SILLCIAy, ViILLLVM CALDEB, MILES L. TRACT, S. V, STAF.KWEATHXH, TANIEL J. MORRELL, JEREMIAH LTONS, WILLIAM HAT, WILLIAM CAMERON, J. B. DONLET, DAXIF.L O'NEILL, WILLIAM NLEB, ANDREW B. BEUnFH, SAMUEL M. JACK "-ON, JAMES WEJtTF.liMAN, W. W. WILBUR, aVl.... . .. A.atVaSJtt.A at - .1111 V I
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers