Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 22, Number 35, Jasper, Dubois County, 20 August 1880 — Page 3

Marshall Jewell baa bhgun wem. He iwepoaes to run the campaign with bis jaw. -. CWmfflnweit. A Venaost ofilaebmdor recently aid: " I know we shall baT a Twr Vitfr9H SaNMga iM VtNTHMMlt; the s& of my aweoaniMit telU nwtbat." ThU to the kind (d political barometer that ciTttbokler bare cau to under-j4amd-toM SfwVsnawi. The Repatbliea. speakers are all settling down to the conviction that the war w Hot over;" that the rebfUki was nevr seproed. and that k march iar on iTuladelphia. The

poor flowS .eernu, be terribly trewt a&oai arc3c. Getter) GarheM U ia owe repeet the ot ufrtMite of t-amlidates. Of all the ot senoiK chances tHitit rrt!o:al aMOsiatei. hte nwm eoatitM k'w fm-H eoartitMty f ried6. Bem trl. i replr to fiiV-j, aau ah uwu wn a inqu shirts man in WahijrtoB.ha

writien attother letter to iii m a- hs coaniry oat oc tae t secnoaa . v,., uiw ckj, Hnl KeHitlteMa eapg whopper ruts, and put our polities upon a higher to protect, refused to reeogaiae tb:t ht5 oace male Geaeral Haneoek ' idaae. They are with llaacock in tki H,m' forced the vote oa the previous ban! (he rtae; at hk heaxluarten caaipaia fur the mm reaoa that they rtoa- The Troy Times, aa able aad lwfore he would mBt to diae with were with him at Gettr?burg aad other! y KejmWseaa ptper, referred to this him. Iteaurerar4 a4iati!4 the tWds where be earned hbt immortal "otonoifc Mil aad Mr. GariiefcTs eoarhar as a caluaHtv." which kplaia- fame because ther are sure that the tioa with its pa&Me, in its tue of ly tojstroaa word for such kliocr. future of our cxintry will be happier, i February 23, 1373, ta the following General Shema ms he haa no ! TTJIZ Jf ITfC ...

recoMVttioa id ew WeHriex aajthiar : frota (; rl llaacock about taking or- "

ilers I run-. I JC mm, or aa ihmr like the . imooteatare sach n- fortr-ea siitM which have been tHtblhel , &7..1i are in Mebn re riwt l tM Huwe, Mr Gmw about kk eoneso(lefcee with Gearal ' . dicharg of a gallaat aM wlfei up tae Chi! .Vwropriitkm niU lKLiit 'rVirR7.,.VJ KHer like Captain liamtia froeTa de- Jt mwmWi wcemiljtc)iK. liie story waa iv. 'puwieaia v ... , i . - . . inrthe Urie ot aubUe oiaer. Tai far-

i . ' - i ... :. titleti to mu.'h attention; but it h a kmI time to observe that General 2deras mmiorvH regarded as good. ivmnti Enquirer.

.net ImttOH. of the Kepabia , but this oaly afgrarate the onriaal Campaign C6aHiiltee, .ys that "the b4ae. Catata Hamlin spurned their ouUisrtry hopeful' Mc t Hoer -wit itblcoatempt thTk his (Xi toas of campaign doevmeau by the whole coaatry. btartclor to the l'oatmaters, anU he As persccatioa is the seed of the fondiyk-Ikve tlnwill lo the Wiefcurch. so th sort of pro-criptioa, n-sA. Tite roter. however, anj look-. which is beiar tried ia not hwa thaa injratthe HepuUicm eamlidatej aad three of lk7denmet will Init juW the nrttea record of the party tbej rep-1 to the tide it h iateaded to check. The recent, aad the are the rwuLs soWiers irffi raMr to the Hiacock eolwhich will slaughter the RejmWicaa uwn. They will rote for the jcreat party ' the nielaucholv dais of o- Geaeral who foarht to the end o? the

r.- - The RcoWicas hired a maa the other day to put ia a claim for a pension at the Pension office ia H"a.h-1 iatr'on, reprsentin that be wasaCoa- ' federate oblier who had beea wouaded I aad was eatitled to a jekn irvw the rait'ed ScateiGureraaant. Thkraaae! U too thia. but it shon the desperate nalu (A the "v"s l. ,1? 7c -iT Vl macros MH-t, and that they will not beai-,

uue to commit aav aci cm penury or -.. . . iorserr or to utter aar falsehood to i re erideat. from day to day. that .i i -.i. to aiMfr aaj iaieawtt w tW TJ Ut, tI-' 4 . I "belp the iwrty.' tae are completely satwfactory to the . - . . n . . .'tMMiyaad imiwegaable to hostile criti-. Ia the optntoa of oe Garfield ' -. xi bright miU which U-

paper, iper.it Hot y inqT mto the j tail of his "flP1" career, om " it k br takiae- the iSeroe view of field that peon will rsn coandeoce in hh caaracter. anu win ot mjpireu with enthusiasm ia the Repabltcaa cafapaigB. The roter muat weij;h the caadKlate by hi life." If the KepubKcan rotors do tint Garnoh will be crtteaed aader the load of DeGolyecs pareawnt bkck and Oakes ABg, memoraadaatB. Ihriford Timet. Speaking of E. V. Barber's conversion to JUeaaocracy the Xew York M rit savs, rerr pertinently: "It m now in order for the stalwart mnerai to I show eoBclusirelv that General mrber ws a cofperhoaJ. ukI that a writ of , exeommuakatioat fnmi the raad old j and irned and wwiW bare beea scrreil 11 1 -T. . It -t oa him next moraine at ata-up if he hadn't displayed the wie diecretioa of the dog that weat down iir whea he saw hk master put on his boots." We do wish that our esteemed Kepubiicaa eontermporanes aad fneadj woohl (lrof the practice of saying "The United State h? a Nation." Tbei may say, if they pteaee. "The United State is a Hotel," or TUe United States h a Steamboat," aad aotofead: agaiaat tk rnlm f grammar and the teaehlag ot the fathers, but if they go oa tHtatra plural nomiaatlre with a Hafuhw verb they will foo gt to saTing Garfield are a weak candidal e. and the like. The line otdd he draws at the Conatitotion. Let the law of the htatnace, ov ream, w isr;ci. -. rr n . The attempt to check the naoremeat of soldiers to the support of Maaeock ay roeriptioH m the department will not succeed. All over the country the mtia who fought the battle of the Uaka, who aided, llaacock ia stamping the life oat of the rebellion, who followed the cbaajriag fortunes of war 4 h rough alternating peril nil of light aad uarkaes, until the Mtfremacy of the Government was admitted and the old a was reieetd on every foot of oar KatioaaJ Iomahi -tht men, ereowhere, are sbowiag a strong inclination to rally under the baaar of the galbtnt sold er who bears the Democratic standard in thU cantnalgn. Ami tbouMaas of them in erery Not thera State are breaking away from the KefHtblican party in obedience to the same high ?ne of public duty that impelled them to take tan arms against the rebellion and fbht It, as Ha-ock did, until it wa dead. They are patriotie ettiaen. Their creed U that their iOald be maeh a will foes pro'Heth fMibliu welfare. Thev went into the war heenn they felt that the hjc -e f the Cnniederacy wmiW he 1 -o destruction the hM GnrerMnent

Una of Um Uafcm. 1 any wilt rkIw. SS J'SL' "SSSi ""ft to believe, that the object for which co HHjr of tbear eoatrxdn died, wm "rIiSt , . t , They Where the Unto i restored. They are coumleat thai Gemra! Gnu told the truth wbeu li hI. ia hU Umr up the (iidtppi, tbit be bad .eea, ia erery S4at of the defunct Confederaer, the mo eoarincing proof thit tint mia of the Sooth were as loval to the Union, sad a devoted to the old Ma at the jHook of aay Northern State. They hare seen enough of sectional

WoTrtTatit fh:? hate, kare beard the howling of the are siefc j tf it; kare wituc-I the nUrietrtM of the radical leaders to faa the embers W expiring maiiceiato ftaies until their very souk loathe the old shibboleths These men recoaixe, in the cheerful alaerky with wkkh the S-xttk cowss to : the -ijHrt of soldier like Uaaeoek, the ben poibie erMeaeeof a desire oa the part of the Sombera people to ret 1 - . he would juiHort Haaeoek. True, the! he would support Iiaaeoek. True, the saeaks who discharged him waated him ... icTuiirc mm piitce wjmm wte iwiw that he was a reatlemaa of taflueace 'and wnuU tit tk rimn t. Illia to resume aw nlaee waea ther found ,w,r. ami who record k tle, rather thaa for the .-mailer Geaeral who left them ia the middt of the terrible coaflict to take a etril office far to the rear. WaMnjton IM, m The Field aad Its Reaper?. , . Deaaocratje ramnaa of im) opeaea mot aa4pKrKMlr. bererai wwl-i bar tiM ili v.it Heki T eiapt since tue attoaal lum.l the faeeJ of rood Democrats, f wk .htt tfi-v ..l hare girea war to aa ei predion off a taaa umt a ml aUoavuI 1 - - So7-aloai;I wttdTIwrfii I r triumph, aad adetermiaatio. which mean that aoUt'tagshaU be left undone ! to aWrre k. ti m L.km the ticket. It ia manae aad dea. All I lStlS(J ?il Eat. the rreat Middle States, the Sooth aad the Wet hare echoed eoagratttlatoas apoa it. one to aaotaer. iiaa cock's character, hfe briliiaat aad nat. riotic militarr achiereateats aad his statesmaalfke atteraace.whea demand-1 ed by roper occaioas. combine to rntebed Preatdeatial eaadidatea that the I 1 tMsotde hare ever bad aa opportunitr to rote for; while his aeoeaue oa the . tteket, Mr. Eaglisa, a geattemaa well known, both ia public and private life, as ot strict iategritr aad a high order et aoian. vn saca caauaaaMS tae Democrats of the coaatry may well be proud. They hare made a selection, from autoag many honored aame. which does credit to thomaclrea and I -L 1. .1- . 1. . . ww appwu BHKHj pamm aad sound judgment of the people i at larre Ia nra-ieathMr the nimm of I at large, aa pcereauat; tae aanwrn Hancock and Eagfth as their National ueaet, taej aav gaaramceia not obit to Democrats, but to thiakiag men of all parties, that it is their purpose to put the admiaHtnitioa of public asaira into the hands of well-known men of the highest character, and the meet thorough patriotism. They hare deserved success hr their sagaeky and public spirit, ami their propped of winning it are of the bak. The dkKmguihed represeatattves whom they hare pat forward will steadily attract to their support during the coming campaign a huge dam of the community, which belie vas ia honoring remarkable public set-rice wbererer it is found, aad fat treating well-tried men. When to this strength, fairly earned, is added that of the great party which ia '7 carried erery State now necessary to an election, rietory is almost certain; defeat hardly poiWe. This rear, however, we moat aot be satisfied with a mere rietory. It most be verwheinMBfr- It mart be a decisive as Hancock's work at Gettysburg. The Democratie party he k ia its power, by continuing to mak- judicious ; mmSiuibiiM b Mnintmtiir ' them with hanl work, to come into I power rntrt of the coHJitnr for mar ear?, t Goad anniiuatiumi for 0MNrres and the j iae omces are an mat are rranve to manre thts fall measure of TKrtory.

wut sncn a maontr m nota ; rcet u

HonM of CJingreM 4 Will enaWe It to f rmattae Tone Trmmt. reorwaryza, w..i fully support the Admmastratioa .k-S aSJ I'reh rit Iiaaeoek. mvl be the l-Hnr Ala1

Ii remains Jttr tb I)nerisof the dffmu ts to aJc tomiSSiJl that malt tliuniii tint MtkuJua . . - The Back-Salary Steal. The fepabtieaa ppw denounce as epn falehood-i the charge nmiI f? dast Mr. Garfield by his opponent. torget thai RhbH own evidence ' the eridenee of other Republican eonrieto him of betay a party to l Credn-MobUier infamr. ami then t !' hout his connection w ith it under OMk- Ty alio forget that it id hi

' nr" aa the lttter of Mr. Crit- ' ww one oi iu tateretea . Pii in the De G!yer pavmcvM- - eoariet kiw of taking 5t0O0 "rtual aribe-moaer. 'Iter forret lht w the reeonl of the Hotwe nml " declare that he oppotl .the Sa ary Grb erery sUge. Oa the other kd. he ica a active particiiMat in l proceedings by whieh the Back-l'ay smi w"-s ejsummate!. aad oa one irolwr en for two or three imy iw tmi I BIMti'lM Will 1 1.- kMij iwua oMKtuakrtnauMcekfaiiMiMefulrn:tkMi whhh wm 4efttMe4 th oikT ikty. If 1I m trr aim aad Garfteil. Kilid II. KwberM twrtu aim aad GarftelL. II. Koberts v,nJr 4irffrf to )xtp-e action. Ht Jtaeawreeaary fHs oa Uks So r. wao a! ur pw!er tfce (Jnitt Statet, iaocce.t aim f""- J1wjvm-. the p:)n tf rTr ZllTr jtacoeveJetetveri tciVT, o tafreitao 1 SffJJJrjJ tST2S2 leav fclwamubVta t mideeiwors w bey tae w rcitHl fewf n"v t rrort ma. Pertwr "B-nWr ks rwi"' kt wJ kiw to k tk r.n!irt k uKia JH" n rKOTI',e STSf L, YZZ -.ZV.i:Z .7ZZl CTL ' feet iajr it Eijrht dars after, br a series of skillful parliamentary tactics, Mr Garaeld sneceedel ia carrvins the shataefal measure through by a rote of IU- afratat .nr. uarheia, aceordiag to the n-eord, rotinz "yea." Afterward, whea he founl what a storm of dLsrat aad aarer ihm Salarr Grab bad ;r. i - . . i : . rateeU ia the to neu m iik couBirv, aatt inat. u was bard with aar man who -j . . - . w , ?,V , f r V 1PZ deotfy repented, aad put the 3,000 . . - . Treaaarr doobtlea 5V.. " Af , , chuckhag at the effect this display of woe W have the country. "c rewiott us w ie nero wao teu a cronies to a hk ton-patch, where they all helped thefcselre, when he happeaed to thiak that the owaer had r1", to T,hXTkB ZjFJSlSSZZ rade to get over their aeke th com . t I . know the oonW rpoaible. for the Back-Salary Jame A. Garbill, as without hag active aad earnest ageacy it would not hare pawod. .V. 1. Msprtm. Caaaemaed by KehnMlcaa Testimear. The foUowiag will show the Kepubiicaa idea of Geaeral Garfield's eoaaecttoa wkh the Credit-Mobilfer matter aa tenor to hk nomination. Out of their own mouth m he condemned Tron Mt4 Own 9rnt TeKtatony feeTore the PafcM4 CiMaaaatee. JaatMrr It, W3: T hgogt aMntft, rwiwii" cchjprvMl faf rww Any jfJ CnM-M.VyaWr - tf the Um faWaaarf, arawe eafctenia fitfttM utit Trom Jwfae Pt4aad9 Report. Pehruarr M. OarneU's TextaMmr Perjared: 1e faM ia reeant to Mr. UaraeUL aa found br the mmtmHtve. an taut a aerei wttk Mr. Aaae to take tea unareaot Credtt-MeMHer afl.lHK 4M Mt Mr for iIwmm Mr Aaaea nwefverf the exMy per eeat. 4tTMe4 M M tkeai for mhwny-evtn per aMt rw4re4 tke Mxtr per Ht eirieend. watch, toeetker whkih-price of ae attek and intern, left a Imhiaco f ana, Tkfe nw mm paM ever te Mr. urM kf a cheek on tke ? r gciuitiat-Araw. ami Mr. UawaeM taea kmaVnawt tM mm mh tte feattmte f4tnmSt after panfr the etetc Tram tke Xew York Ttmm FebOMkry N. W3: Meaars. Kehejr mm4 GaraeM prent a mo Matt acure. Taetr participation m tke Cremt MoktKw aCalr to compiioatad by tke kmc uafortuaate coatntdtctteoa of twttaMMj. FriMB t Xew York Tim, February M, M7t: Tae caaracter of tke Croht-Mofetlier waa no feereC Tke source of Ms pronta waa very well Known at tke time Cwttiwn kouM K. Tkotifk Oakea Abmc awy kave auoceeilwl in eonpeahac kta own wotire. wkick wm te brM-e wa not on that account Maoeent. Tke makoaor of tke at. aa a pattieipation ia aa ekvloua f ran. Hilt reaaaina. oaieof tkeaa kare Itl?rI m teatbaoay wjtk reference the aaatier wkiefe kaa keen C"0SiTMIC?t OlMllnalttWNC aSaOffpf fafyaal nam cammnmannmv my iCrVllii fy nM ftmrTpmummT, mn tmm oalyae aMtea lac grmuut tW a U mlrtte. Jlamnf aaaniJ taaKiHbwu aaaaam aaana4P aakmV aW antkMamW Mwmmmf awaww cw wKwwwwwwTT j"mnT; n nnnai cananra n ?nosT enunm It taike enwT eatyof ONHrreaa to vfak wHk auat-kiaiiiit alt wko took Cmm-MoWtter Mock Proaa tke Xew York TrSwvr,FerHKT ,Ma. wvfr fNhfci aV4lmr: mive4 l-f. wtHivmftr iaM" 'SMipMntlHMI l&fJfaHaV IMS Wm4l naHX4HM ; kaee ojamucwit aa a kMN from Mr. Ualtoa Aa to Maasetf. Writ. tk wMuiIbbmi of aH of K r that tkeae men ketrayetl the truat of the poop-'-, eeret ve4 civ cTjfvnwoAta aiwt ay e, mwm ami ,apjtr kxi4 conforwl tke tranaacttoaa to he w-ea Mm. rma he CmetanMt 0mmt,Jme7 vm. Tke aaoat e MttfaiDtlWd tMnar rkua far ot not a reeo te r oa (or rneMcnt. Kaa4

Arthur and

One of the moot amuolng dneumeats of the season is the letter of acceptance of Cheater A. Arthur- We bars no doubt that Mr. Arthur laughed immoderately over every sentence which he wrote, kajwing. aahe did, that every atatemeut be mado was fake, and that as to eiril-errice reform he himaelf had been kicked out of a Federal olftee only laot 3 ear for gross corruption, dishonesty and incapacity, lhat the Kepubiicaa iarty should have nominated Huch a man to the Vice-l'reidener aad should applawl uch a letter of acceptance hi :; confes'tion of that party's own corruption, and of its entire Haworthiaess to control a great Govern went. The ciril-serviee reform fiortion of Mr. Arthur's letter ia a pitiable exhibition of hypocrisy, and erery Republican leader kaoA3 it. Mr. Arthur's true character caa be presented in no clearer light thaa by oomiring his language oa cirilserviee reform with iseeretary Sherman's letter to Hayes oa Arthur, written in January, 1879: sncaarAar snkkkax fhoh akthux's lktto haym. ran or ACCKPTIf, to avcure tke; removal of aa ofteer.' "Tim iw4tkt r!tL???,rjr f rr tn pufebe atrir"'rl proofa Itn 1 .il in a pnivaj. Surely no eourt of Jim le?, then m m kfoM he tke ri amuoat Cotlector Ar-tke dtl of wkick v 7 - mat am mh taaij z uuuiuuuv tn am iihiiil wr H Ih-HI to be eon- ia ;kiR0aodelusive, wHhout refer- ity or integrity which the pubiic rt-oori- and tkKi of sooh oflke daaitioe and tke Seoate, -TkH aentinent Bet if it ia to he hW wool.l.oottbtIe.Bieet that, to procu'e theironeral eauiecefie, removal of Collector out opini'm haa beea Arthur, it u wWeietK. wioXy aUvidl upon Hah Ik it ynms atmC4 or ticiiblUty of TOKonawy, tai a wmem. oat praetko vr(lom aad praeJoiaMntfcMi hactwii rcfor wdto rv iicaMutr or rae van. cmlimml ami lnetatfd chemea whieh hare cluriatf hi incumbent jtfi mkgft&l, aai that many person certain propod have been n-ru!arir rvrolaltniu cuverniax pot' I on hit roiH whrappoSniment to Mie rendered little or aioitoce. Tho e!Sckcy service ih.it the ex-of suck retrulatkHM Peaa of his office k4 been diatrifted bnva increased, while mainly because they eoliectlona have beea havo fem-tt to exxtt diminish Inr that BM-'re edoouional artil ttrUtti, r tfrMmHk in abHract teta above the nature of Itrilrw, srvm?ral buainH eaphave bt!n wjetved by cly, and even foecial his aobordfeutca inlitn-aa, for tke imrseveral branchest of licuiar work in In kuul the Custom -kouw It eeema to inn that that efforts to eoriect the rul which ehouhl thee dlxiMM have aot be applied to the manmet bks support, anil M(etfMat of the pubiie that he ha not irtvea (fcrviec may properly to the dutifa of theeonf wm in the mnin the roqul-He to uch aa rcflulate the d itreoee and attest-eoodoct itf SHwsafal tton. then H k mib-privste bustnea. mitted that tke e!e hUririntlpp-i meats mawe out. TkU fo m tkouM be bwe4 ap m of proof the Depart- ascertamed tttn-e. meat ia prvparvd to The trauro of omce submit." jouW be taWo: poaltiorw or re(oati)iiity hmkt. o far as or ietletbtc, be hlied bj-1 he promotion or wortny IwhI cAcicet oncers. (The iave4tWratiun of all coidaiata and the poatoament or an ociat mie:totA!Kui4 m mtnt avn miujr fee prompt and thor - OMKh. ThtTMl rtrr. lahwA iec lme hefct, fffMt-tMu declared. Laamaum swaJaaUa? - S -v aaCTm (fjnaaai ra Mrt, I f!Hl embolied in tae resoiutton, wateh, of eoawe, I approve.2 We hope our Republican contempora ries will explain these statements. jona Sherman oeinr a uemtirod tn their estimation, they caa hardly say be Ked whea he wrote to Haves about Arthur. Lmigviih GMtrkr-JimrMl. The Political ny-Gebbler. During the Presidential ca repair". the political Hy-gobbler abounds. He has existed from the earliest dars of the Republic, and has multiplied considera bly since he fed oa the slanders promulgated against Thomas Jefferson aad Andrew Jackson. Ia 1810 he took hk sustenance from the "gold spoons"' of Martin Van liu- .... ren aad was aonrtsHeu uy the naig promises ot " w-W a uay ana roast Ia I860 he overloaded his stomach by greedily devouring the report of CoKTIIVlo roue s investigating committee. Ia 1M8 be swallowed an immense fiction about Horatio Seymour's sympathy with the New York draft riots, and was not apparently discommoded by the feat. Ia later years he has gulped down with wonderful aridity huge dishes of Kti-hJux romance, ami m IS 16 was re galed on a hash compounded of TiWen's supposed intentions ia regard to the rebel debt aad the blood-curdling deeds of the imaginary "bulldozer." Now his wide-open yaws are pleasantly titillated br the radical press with all sorts of malignant but iafalsehoods about Geaeral Hancock. The political fly-gobbler lores the unreal and imaginative. He has no taste for facts or figure. He has a positive aversion to history, aad detests matters of record. Things proved hare no allurements for him; onlr things insinuated or alleged without proof attract him. The political fiy-gobbler believes that the Southern people are Sends Incarnate, and Republican office hold erj and Government contractors angels of light. If his favorite journal were to assure him that It is belter to ko to Hell as a Republican than to Heaven as a Demo crat he would believe the statement without hesitation. Indeed, hk mouth is open at this very mtmtent with a prodigious appetite tor just taat sort ot pabulum. Look around you aad ob serve tae teiiow hum ine yawning; ehneut in his countenance, his eyas ready to start from their sockets and hbt hands aerroufdr clutched on a eooy of his fnrorite political journal. Urrmmrg rntrm The New York .r ealk Gen eral Arthur's letter of weentance, "a comical allnskm to civil aervk-e.'"

The hssOnaal r. The JtaMnnnl l'aadt

James JL Garfield is oaaatlitlato fiar tJae rroaitl lyiaf 0 aVo aaaFOBaaiwcaja wa aaaraw jp aaawaaaaarj n. a naaaaaj Uaitod fitatea. Wiamdd Seet Haw 00 ok k the National oaudidate, the Uaioa candidate. Uarnehi is the eamildate of the spirit of sectional Whh, first, by rvasoa of the seotional spirit, and habit, and pnrpaoc, aad sustenance of the Keoublioaa party, which wis in the beginning, is now, ami e?ar shall be. a sectional party. W will not now discuss the proposition, whether or not, in the Providence of God, ia the days of slavery, such a party, though sectional, was Bunded. We will aot now debate the question wLetber or not it was humane seotioaaliam, in that earlier hour, upon which the Republican party was buik. We will not now argue the itvue whether er not the humaneness of the idea upon whieh the Republican party was founded was more beautiful than its sectionalism was deformed. That the deformity waa loot sight of by many wis and good men in the contemplation of iu humane ramose Is unifontuJiut liul nihdrilat t k va mau rMavery waa ahouaueti hail a ran. eration ago, and the Republican party still lectionnL Admitlinc that it 1 was pardonable sectionalism in the be- ! ginning:, it is uauardoaable now. Ad- . w . .. - . . . . nutting taat it was beauuiat ana panor- Admittinr that such sectionalism was necessary then, it is a crime now. nao rni'iiumij wco, una ran mn . For long years the Republican party has retained power oaly bv the hideous . . t 1 . - r t. . . . . ,. . 1 m e I methods of keeping altre the fires of sf.tkiaal bat wbirh dictat4riMtsl iw fv-1 . sl u . ; . MK" MniTiBm pmtnousm wouKi nave naatenou to put out. Its oalr hone of retautiaaT twwar Um ,1 s -. 1 'mi. JrUi.U s feraal ingenuity with whkh the Repnhliean manipulators and office- holders not the Republican maes eould employ to keep sectional hate beraiag. This has been the narrow foundation, the shameful glory of the Republican managers for more thaa a decade. Tl.ee are still the hope and the impulses of the men who manage the party affairs; aad Garfield is the candidate of these methods. Iueviublv, br his nositinn. he is tb ntorcwMtaUttve attbia ' . . . ... moment of this narrow, hatful. septhe aratire idea Union. ia the polities of No only by reason of his position as the candidate ot such methods and sneh partr tendencies is Garfield a sectional candidate, but Gariield him-elf has been among the most active and prominent of tbo-te who hare kept the Republican Km sectional. And Nathan sad unto vhI: " Thou art the man." From the middle of the civil war till this hour, more than seventeen years, this has been a part of Garfield's business. He has in all this time breathed net the pure atmosphere of Union, but the . - ,a 1 pooneu atmosnnere ot tecuonaimm. , On the floor of the Houe. aad m afl of the intervening political campaigns, in each of which he has taken an energetic part, hk constant employment has bean to keep the sectional spirit alive. The platform on which be is nominated bears the dark colors of sectionalism. Garfield's letter of acceptance does not repudiate tb.s; but, on the contrary, emphasizes it. Therefore we say that General Garfield, in his repreaentatire character, ia his political personality, aad by the inevitable results of hk training for eighteen years, is the sectional candidate for the Praideaey of the United States. If he could be elected, his Administration would be one of pronounced sectionalism. Apart from other considerations that enter into this campaign, this is a commanding one; and we are that the people of this country art tired of sectionalism, and desire peace and union. WinSekl Scott Hancock is the Union candidate for the Presidency. He is the National candidate. His entire life has beea spent ia the atmosphere of the Union and aot of p-tinablp. He vohtitUtT&L ia boyhood in the the Union, where be has steadily re mained. When the Union was hi peril he voinntred to leave a idaee of ease aad safety for one of danger. He has known nothing but service to our country. Not more than three or four men, living or dead, bare rendered services to the Union as conspicuous and splen did as his have been. And they bare been voluntary no man more so. Garftekl roiuateerea. for a rear: ae volunteered for life. He has not been, embroiled in any of the petty strifes of partisan shin. His ca reer has shown no narrowaea. He has loved the Union in battle, and has lered civil liberty ia peace. He will give to the country a broad. National Adminis tration in the true spirit of Union. His election will mean peace. It wiM mean the extingutimed ambers of eetional bitterness. It will take that banefal feat are altogether out of our poKtk. It will be impossible for the RopubMeaa managers to again make this passion a political issue. This will be a rreat gain to an ind net rial, peaceful RenubKe, Donenconoe to all the the neome oc all sections of the country. It will cure that pacification whkh even the Kepubiicaa manipulators profoss to de sire, aad which the Kenubltean maasea sincerely do desire. Are the American people prepared to beat back these) priceless token of peace? dames A. ttaritoM is the sectional candidate for the Frsoideaer of the United State. Win Held Scott Han cock k the Natkmal candidate, the Union candidate. (Xttemmti Knfmnr. What has besoms of that fear some otteial proof that General Han000k sontemnhned "heading a revolt for TlWen?11 Awful "revek." Has it gat lost wkh Cardinal McClekey's lettwr? Or has ft goa up the spent with al tkat afil tamk1 vt nn vtarwa ns, mnwarnpanm aaa waaajra wm amnraa