Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 26, Number 50, Jasper, Dubois County, 17 October 1884 — Page 2

XAJtd ON THE STUMP.

Am 8peoh by ttuDaltv mhwaaft to Ilk Mmoklya (X Tf.) Tb Ctewinttt Jtwm fn ka wmra nf a. recent sildraas, to ttn 0MMMfU of llraoklyn. N. Y I Senator Bsjard nude the telling jpgwtyti; A rLg ItiSl'K. Tenliirn of our co ntry presents for pmt v on: lent n w num i' awl politic! isrobirw whichd -mand u wm and regional M go ut ion at our ban Is- fome of them art) as, an I appeal to f rce nut hitherto known tecur Na'tunal politic, I refer to the tact thai e now witne direct appeal by candidate for (be Presidenev. ami the put-tit Mat vppirt toem, to th prejudices an t supposed hgtreu of :ss of our countrymen whoM iitcmM are alleged to be diaiinet and at varuun-c w.th tiiuaa ot othrr classes. To stats th qu-tfoa simply, it is too attempt to create aed tore an issue btwi-ea the laboring eh-, so-called, and too owner of capital wbo employ thcni. Thl i in my junjrment a false. un-Ameri-Mt and wholly uiiadm!ble issue to bo tablet. Thl country undoubtedly wi littea bd to b governed In the interests, ar t of gay c'a. tiut of ail clasars of our population. JlM Intend I tbal non bould have prlvthays denied to others, which simply meant that none were to have m pa rate privLeges, Wti tt wlil be vain t search through any psaMic p-tpvr. In which the welfare of the who-'e people, and nothing iea than the whole pewple. wan acctarvd to o the object of the jaM lean Government. ft t r to roe th it if thli line of argument a f a- followed, and ltis are t" l c rented and lost red tn'twppo the capital and !ab rof tb country, or between diner nt class and jaadoyment of our cittaen. that in itieh atgue-gte vetory mttt ultimate'y he e.-lnN ttttit lone ant disastrous coutttct, in favor nf a or the other: that there is to be at the aider nucha sruglc a viol r and a vanuoashe i fan . Then- l nothing in m 'h a aaetr e that I think Justifiable to the i tea of mat Attic ru-an t.'o irtitution. an I the man who exaMeeitdate I' may b juil.t'rt-ffardei aa thtfoe to lit '-rtr and the American r rm of iior mitaeat. x MAtTKR or numtsmm, Jfoa-. Mr. Blaine in his famous lc:tHr hM down hi pn-t.-n otm, ai d Mr, lJUItie, roai kaoa. i a master of prctenton. He ha W car to claim everythinir4 1 the b'emtmg ot a irae (iu ernmcnt, alt the ad vanOHiMot human in en t ion and InduMrr. the ajrf bmiDtjr oftae aoil. the unlimited terri' torr. thm steamboat and railway, the atone, lbt verjr ran that warm, this brvow ibttt toiis.ihe Min that fructify, and even the MrnraitnereaiHt of p"tuation, not to anak f the a-aited immisrauon or luior-all that tlhpfotlo: nien and wom--n hai ptwltiwl in tbe t ni-1 mate ha laeizfd Ur thl canHftB lor pubtiu honor "and rcp-i't, and bHt up by hla a due to a big protective w tub nurar TABtrr tiitkm. Ob tka ontrry. I nuke bold, in dhrtrt ojv M(noa to the Matcmenta and claim of .Mr. Bhuna, u arer, and call the reco d or hiat'rr a my witne, that a wnw or injtitlet -r jMwi by an oaJuKt tyatcm of laying tariif iMttawlM 4ead mro local Jealou. mom nettjoal feelinr. mora eMrniureroenu betataa our '.xmntrynu-'i than anr other -in -te Maw; that it has rauoed labor to nrymUe B dtacotttfttt for lack r !taly emplnytt.ent and coxniteiiatorv wusr. haj tttlo.i the iar. l vfife VHfime mi threat of violence. Ims rtnrtaedibe rn! of ,a, and prow iaeti bring an me mi nary arm 01 lort.f aa raaart t obra n ordt- r. . . baa emto.deod nnd indueaaV mt9m to appear in our midf. Hut for the acceptance of turn doctrine aa Mr. Maine advocate and hi Mrtjrapprore. in rep?ct to the use of the IjMlliW fawtr. Nit lor the tone of public pactnataad feeuna- itradtiallf aoneratett by a metmary atrlrit atid abu ot a rrt pttWie urusu 1 do not be ieve ich a ptx ta l mmm h wrtaeaw4 ta th rnfted ttatp as in mom. that a candidate who ha fattened iMn etwyibm litatour law conta n. and yet fr4 Mraneiy gon i:nuhippe4 of ihk' iimwe atunttil now be running uv mid down ba taad oTrln btnte f a the pc'i i rk nd t ta MDoruur mn.vnmt arauit eirniotf rely bi t-ll at vast furtuneI tie to of MMMWtpoli which hare nmr .f to hia wealth in cvnieai diwnaard of mt that rtarbt ntindod mi-n value and rcpet; aaTciitinr apecially to wrsat tbe intnrM f laW. and yet eeWing to amv cl of aaeierr again n aaca- o'her. h:utng tlwtrfbr wwt 4f rh awn-rat ruin t feed tat lit grudge aannnat iWwncy and pood order at the ooat of um paWf peae- and we!fr. It at tttisyftem of taxation which, while ftrodueln revenue of mre than aSiU.OUU. agd. iscideataty entalU an eohanea I ent of Mvtag upon the Anwriean laborer and upon a Ann-man iatfncr to tka extent, at wt, ot ftve titnea that amount In addition ta w tt ha,o jrradoal'' aval'td up the producH at manafactarpr within their noine market, rwlrtrtir it hni-rnalble for them pmtltabty to ariat tlm.raroaaet, or vhi, a itwmild aaaat, to aMiWata M pruwm vo!umn. much Iwwta rspaad tbair a lntrt foiaiirn mar' fcawhnvar-prodtiction hag aiutted thg t amtrttEitx ucayrio!. 3Unk for on moment of the cut and aharactrrf man who hare bn author! iei to rprent tb porenintcnt of the t'nion tn the Southern poi e. IMd they rpprwnt tts baaignlty. ita tenaty or Ha Jutice? (in U titrary tb ritn gentrathm of the AautlMrru Ataam. if they meaurtrl their or. armttant by Ka agents, would lm obtived to aajtier isa funattnn wen to ettort unnerary taa b harraaa the taxtai'er. to wad ta PJeUam nf th mov, t hrinir dfeiu&on leawbitcan in.tltutkm. rter naa years or putaic servK aa a of th slenate the conflrmlna- bodv att all eseeutive appointnrMmt--l profess that t have known bat a few cases, so mn rar excandhms. where the san appoint)! to public NSe andan th Kaderal (lovernrwent Id tas Saathsrn Matt woaM have possih y been tea rmr tha same omc ta a Xortjiern Wat. When I have protested agamt thl. taa aaawtr i "What can w do ' Much men ! as thy ar -ant tb bust we can get In ta QMlern aVates In tb ranks of the Neaatblhtaa party." Look also at th kind m laea wWM whom political alllanca-i art fiamatly aataabr ih Itapubllean party In the Laak at the raah fatally In Smilh Csrotipa-rad-ndd m tin lever i aad dfcarsdoe?. the aasM who have ! painted as. tvplcal 1 Sowthern men rufbina In br.adeloth -yet iNisiag Cash aied t!i othsr day hrylag ihe Mmd irreea of the Mat and Its omoi. r. with rHed tta-e Def uiy Marshal's commw!thm .iat hi pocket. Lawk at t. baiawr In Mississippi, gaaettcd far yean hv the tteputdlcaa prrs as Um murawsf colored troops at Fort Pillow. V-t he Is take to the bosom of the Raniibllaan naHv i pan ices as an attorney to prneeittn m tl opponent In the courts orth Citlted aci.tieal flatahjnlL IPMJiWrma Uak at Virginia. O shade of Watblha-toiil O Mcred tomb at Mount Vernon: Witness tasiw tn saeriflc or ftt honor the renn. diatloa of titat oblhmtlons, tho degradation of arwry function of r-tat governmont, the overthrow of every Institution of good awtrmaent,to place a corrupt Jobber andesjjsatr of nearo vote in the enat of th tJahed Stata, and in control of th nntir or to uarvrvment of that tM n, "the Mother of Mates and Statesx Hitter or UMCSTica. fellow e-mntrymen. the war for thnstioretnher f th Cntoi eod-ft In the complete .-vertatowoT ns n;pnncntn warty twenty yasrs age. Whatever reaon may on -e have been thaturhtto estt for sooh a policy and armeta of aataanmlstm snd distrust ml lrfiatlon agaiaat the whit aeome of the aonthsfa States ean aew he no tnnger attagrd. Whan, aa tha isrtM of pnrtr adanawn. w as Aker-

i aad Ky m the CaMnct, and Loiaftrt

Mrf Mntar hi fAMlM mlaa In 111 and

and th and C bmr alt m th close brae ot th Republican !lsr.we may know that th Keeubtlcau party doe trust W IN Moult wi Mb it I l It IBUI wmowi onwe puwi upon Um IttM trustworthy. Ttiarefor. I arraign at the bar of nn honsat and pairiotlo put.Ur opinion the men an i tiiu party who haw derived and continue a policy of InkiM.iv and li -uan kn toward neatly n.ukkaif itui Mint. .it this L nktiL I ehara them here., an I in the full vaw of our coun try, with prort tutwg ana perremag tna great pubiio power of (ioveniawat for low, imutow and Fieotional party end. . t , The proo! arc written on thti pave of n'story. Hur iatut. book cont uu them. Tha dt llon of the Supreme Cnirt deuylntf tb constitutionality of th-e laws attest them. Tb' t'lu book with l lit or incotnpeteut. di!h ne-t and vrrupt omceholder attests tbem. Tb ic rd ot the crim-.nal court attest thfnt. Everywhere a4 on every hand Is emblautned the burning truth that the nur of party spirit ha eauMd the HepubiUan party to fotvet truth. junc' nu t the l'ontitiin in doailug with th ptHp'e of the South, eru Nte since thctiofi of tha war. Th: atone Uatt insue sutttcient for this canvaa: thii alont hould ooutrot the votes of thouukttu , moderate and patriotic citizt-n, aad instruct theui that public we fare. tha perptuation ot the I'ninn. the promotion of civic virtue and tb pun afcintnt of clvio rle dmand a change in the adtiilniatratton of the Kedernl Uovemtneut. Let m deal with our brethren in the Southern state In a high and wise spirit. Let um evoke all that l hurhent and bet in tbtlr nature. Lt u bnag to the front not the miserable tnercenarie of thir own society, or tbo low adventure r who, earpet bag in hand, have been prowling for plunder among them; but let us call to tha front the wiw. tb honored, the able, tb con acicnt ous. Oodfarlng, mun-loving citUeu oramlnencm: such uii n aa are to day the recipient of the confidence and respeet of the private citizen of the North who visit the couth on b'jines or in search of health or on pleasure: the men who are consulted wheu great private intereau are at stake; Mm men whose learning and Integrity cause tha Supreme t ourt of the United State to listen with admiration and reapact to their argument. tnr KurrauCAX caxuidatk. And now, In conclusion, one won) as to tn candidates, i have re I erred to Mr. Mlainc entirely a a public man, and the public record of hisactlon whilst in otne l all that 1 shall criticise. He ha been pictured by a ery I ante body of hi fellow-oltlietm. who, a In Hpendetit, declare their unwillingness ta vote fur blm un-l who kvc the r rem-ons pul llvly and in full. Tney are impressive wit-av-i betMU for the laat twenty-live years they ha v been his party aseiats. and have therefore a longer and more intimate knowl edge than hi life-long opponent the Itemcr(4t c n have. They rive tb reason why they re .Toil rrom pla'n him at the head of the affairs of thr A'atlon. They deplore hfs election as a National calamity and foretell a downward plunge of the National character and the National In t-rea when hi iattuonce nball be allowed to control them. I, a a temocrtt, believe and feel what they Ntr U true, and lor other nnJ additional rea-:-ctlin wouM be a public calamity. I hate nere tn uot-utiieni report. o. i m ina Houeof K')re-cnttive. Forty-fourth t,"on jrrcst snd rtrst lon. H if.ntainn the dep, altioni undt r oath or Jninc Muilan,aclti'.ii( of Itostou, made intou presence of .Mr Hla n; ThU w;tne In not only to thitfdav wholly tiimpo.tched. but Mi veracitr and Integrity have 1?;i ,utalncl unquestionably, Hnrlng fully read theju? depo-dtion I nm unable to sea how any rain can doubt that .Mr. Blaine" ronduct io thu man, obtaining rrum him cvrtnti letter by fal pret'TSc--'. knoe'intr d wn to hi In unmsniy terror, itad fitlllyinir the truth in reirnnl to the transactl n, render Itioi wholly unworiby or tb vote of any honert citiaen for th-J gre.it position of Pre-ldent of Ibe t nltvd Stao.t. If any man doubt let him reai the donoMtmn of Mr. Mulligan jinl Mr. Htaine hinelf In the document referred to and 1 believe hla doubts will and. THE IlEM(rATIO f JimbATg. And now 1 come to th ehairac:rof tha

fiifJ.u.r. rimocnMic candidat. If my mso his tonw Vtil puled to b(ms orr ipt use or intent to u wiulr ihit Pw I-owcr. I never heard It. nor, I tfcjnk.

navayou, ne is not, i nave neara, a onuiant man, nor:i magiut'.c'' one. but be 1 a man of .ouni Judirmcnt. of vigorous Intel lect.and hibits ft laborious perior.nanc of datr. He ha the .industry and canscity t form Indep-'iident opinion, and the coueeienc and the courage ta maintain those opinion. " Ihts has bro -ght him In sharp and poattlva conrtk-i with viorons and abie men, and baa dtpkisad them, tieeoly ogend i them, but among tb-ra all T hnva never hearl an Imputation, oooraatih-l by txteslrbtstwvldeoc upn his no u faith, or hi personal truth, honor or Integrity. There 1 a kind ot evidence known aa Munconiou prtr." It onl-t of th unguarded disc oures of a man a motives and tmpui. male without reiiectloo ail unsccompaiild by any Intent: sudden ray of light in failing upon the more wecret r-ceaes of h; hoart, and giving a better knowkdg ot at nature ttiati any preme Ifclaled act or word. 1 have a letter f 0 rover Cleve.an 1, written in the itnthinkintr confidence of family affection to hi . rot her. on the day or hi lection as Govt rnor of th Mite of New York. It wa an echo from hi heart and true r-l'ex of hi fcottnirs at a time when high Ihhiot ant great reponsibidtieJ had come upon blm. That fetter had the true ring of h' nest manhood, wtta but one p!rtl n, an.1 Hi.it to da his duty. That rantg.ed with thtttaniration camo tno mcnurv of bis dead wotlior. and that her gentle IniliUN e seemed then to re o sMBMTthen b Trc,1 iwriry hi ttwitihTs r,alTei of tb TnvTri,rwho mourned he? at vive ami strengtben and wlil not ! e:i the ymp esn neoob- with the Mn ' aenw tn ta i day of bis renown and pnuuouon anting men ttut thl is the badlng Inltnenee in tb charact r of O rover Cleveland as 1 dlaccra it: not love Ot tnoiiev. not ti achieve succesa nor , aniitt noly admlrat:on. Imt chiefly to perrorm his ditv lu that station of life to which j tt may please tiod to call him. t He has dotw thi i sliHo in tdBces comparaI tlvelr humble a wel' as in tboaoor great dlsI t Inctlon and power, for be ha governed th Kmiilrs Htate ami S.vn.tHH neonm bonorablv. honestly nnd well lor the past two years. A a, son and In-other h has done all duty. a citizen he ha done his duty. A s Snort he has done his duty. A a Mayor of Huffam h has din hla duty. . A(iiveraoror tha Stat ot Xew York he ha done his duty. Aad, Ood willing, a Prmldsnt of the UnKed Stais h will da hi duty. The latest defense of HlaSpa in th) railroad matter is lite Worst ot all. It is urged now that he was an innocent man who fell Into the hamta of tb shhTper, Fihr ami Cahlwell. AsWe from tha tHrect ovitiem that prorg the contrary, this hi sit extremely stttnkl tlefcn. Ittaine ami m friend hate in-t!tetl 90 )mx that sll his transaction with Fisher awl Cllwell were mrf!tly upright ami Honorable that it is too lata to pUvr him lor pigeon. . Tha ,SulwnrtM wh like Conk11rx ar out f jMlitle in Xew York:; haw no ftrmrmOiy with tha oantlhlacr of Blaine. If they thought their appeantitve on tne attimp wa necessary to the defeat of the corrupt Maine poll tttriatt, whi prncUcally fftt down on his knatw to Mititigan to ohiaih the eyfUence of his own dishonor, they would hare no hesitation in making iu Maine' nnsioty to have Fiahor bttrn" that letter Is elesrty explsinetl Ity the tlstement of ht frienda, that It Wat a highly hommtble prodHctlon. lie did not want to run Um risk o barlns .t.. . . . 1. . ... ... '. in pxiuiu- ifsirn now nonotiune se wa

11 was noUrins; but an extsNN st eaty.

IMaaaases tb Taria aad lta

Hard Ylmee aad aa lrJa. dwsa, Kt., Kta. Ctirmai. hhi, Heptemlier 8T. The fallowmg la s full test of ttonatnr I'eudlcton's address at the ifrund mass meeting ut Columbus yesterday; 1 am rejoiced at this great gathering of hw people. I am rejoice I th it the club of the S'ute. honorlua tbi-miwlvex by the names of mr anll litte at the call or the Central flub here, bsve take.t on thenm-lvc the wurk or auxiliary oritamati , aud conie In this tinI iiitu nrruv to rcpori rvm. to take eounsej, to inptre ea. h other wita ."""sh ardir snlcourago, ati l Mill greater conuduueein the struggle which lie la-fore ua. Within a week I huve read two utterance from men deservedly high in the cnuni-il snd contMenee of the Kepuldwan lMtrty of Ohio. Inadthim with rujret. In different p lt Ions, they art laiih active in polil'i-al wsr fare: and In th heat of their dlteinmreJ k, tluy have forgot teu what wa due t!n mSelve, I will not sty to the Uemoeratle party which divides, at lean tviunlly. the vot rof Ohio and the t'nion. One or those gentlemen suld, la a iecch which he thought worthy of publication : "I say to you with entire frankn that I think it. is a misrortune to the country that the Democratic party is entirely unnt to govern It," The other said In an editorial: "The Democratic party of this country aad the Tory party or Ureal Britain, In close aecord and correspondence, ttnt the am.' in nympathie. In purposes and mat hods," and more than iiiftimiatMt a treasonable enllusitMl to sacrifice our country's Interests to Hrltlsh protects. I think I see my honorable friend, the orator, .roll his eye htangulh at the thought that the Democratic pHy t so "totally unlit." He would so lore to abdicate power and position himself, and put you Democrat In his stead if you were only "lit." I csn see my trlend, the editor, rejoicing in great gl that printers' ink Is blnek and can not blush, however monstrou the story it is inadn to tell. I attribute to blind partlanhlp In great arfright, what is beneath contempt a a stataatent of fact, or as an argument. What Is ttic Democratic party which these en o lan lvr'1 It Is the party or the Constitution. It believe the highest duty a the greatest safety I obedience to Its mandate. It believe the power of the Federal Government are all granted, an I thoe not granlc I are reserved to the State and the people. It believe in simplicity, economy, purity of administration. It believe in an indissoluble union of Indestructible States " It believe principle endure, while policies should rhunae with each new phase of vary In con-1 anion, itoeneves s tniinisinuiou is never aertci-t, but can sways Iks Improved, always le reformed. It I ell" ves in tho people, tlHr i!dotn, their honesty their d.votkn to tho oniiiioii weal -greater than that of any one msn uil',1 therere it belk'vc in contant re enrre-teO to tha people, thut pari lo and potlcle and a.ltnltiiitt-atfi)ti tnsy have a new Inspiration of vigor, couraj-o and toitier aim. When Washington retire I frntn the. I'rcstdettcy. and jarty spirit iisinnv'd aetH Ity, the DemtMr.i:u: party, alrcudv orunUo.1, eam into the tlcld. Jcttcrson's inauvdral pr(-cliiliiK-l the creed or the IetuiWracy trlumjihnnt. 'ihe vital truths of tnnt erevd dvatutel ly 'ree ling jitencrKtifHis, efena lurrciilinr vigilance fed the vestal Ires, inspire it life and wt ion to-day, It 1 tho partv of .leffcrson. and Madison, and Monroe, and. larkaon, and Pilk: It gave to tM Louisiana, nnd Kbirl ta. and Texas, and new Mexico, ami iiaiirortua; aiununHi years

go layinir wile kln wraft on the otw al l;, eiu.l tae,lu almost avery caewUtro a duty aad merit conledenttion on the other. It raadr J iststd. this t'oivfitution, anl for sixty year so ad-' Thro rultf. atpl three onlv are necessary mlnltred It that ;u the (lovernnwnt during-: jrul-b In th branch of reform. Htt To all that tune there was no law higher than tho ' re luce the expense of the Federal (ovrn-ftm-tit0tl.ui Itself, It 14 the mi ny wlileU it J men! to the lowet posathlo point consMent storm ant tempests and win rv blast has witbitsfnlradmtnlttratlon. Second To adit wl like Hmmwi rock, unmoved and lat-1 4ut tj-ainn thai evrV dollar cOIUHtt I from

movnb'e, whi'c aroun.J it baw all other putitciti party Included, have surged and swnyed with uneven and fnfons'sat motion. Iik wave whleli obey tab tttful bidding orth nckl -rooon. The sprar may have covered it to the !: tho water m-- have nlKd Ita suinn.P, but every pnusc of the storm ha shown it Hifhf oiiijuertche-.l, pointing otic with ond.'in oho l liiHtorthc rotki of danger and the chntint-i of alety. If bl-'toey of sixty years of glorious admin1st ration, in peace, in war, in prosperity, in ditn In protecting the right of every elf Iaan abroad In carrying nr Hag. and upholdlug its lvnr In every land, in buildUig bp American slilpi dfjr. la di veiopiog American commerce, In fulnittn? every Natkmat protn-h-t the world, atid in every party promts to the people, ha jutltkdU ftm. It h utory ! ttro gloriotl still. Tnrlng twenty-nve year of exclusion fr mi power, by the b'gotry, liiol-r.uiec. hypocrisy f th haKr of th ttenutiicn party, lis members wera excluded frum the r-malhtH share in pie of Is'o.t.r toi l emt'iii lent , yet animated solely by lore, of principle, courageoua tmly lHt-aue of It i mvictltoi In tbo Munllnes of its tiiiinhooil. It ha at uU tim , Akalnt any orfil. in the fncoof any reito. bit forth right. It ha shown itIf wort by or its an iCnt IIimw. worthy of its rreat fo tinders, worthy of that Mill hig'ter d-tftiy which tli near ftitiiro ttatrut to open to It. It ad- ! berenco to principle ha given It perennial youth and unatmted v.'gor with w'jl -h to press tmwartt tor a w;tir oeveiopmeuiot uia uuv-i-rnmetit and admlnidration. And tlii itepdhltcun PrtX what Is itt It la a thing or yi'sw-nisy. It wa born In !. It first drew bmtth in t'io throe of the revolutun. tt letxler thrived on the nnu and , v- ' whkh tlairrant wa tolerated. They I not have it acotiftiintional oirtv;. ror Tery hour of Iff exigence tlieycfttHl a higher , !?T.. rv Ml.t ml . w,v A? Mtn fciic?uMii ir.'"niin. of ctnam-lp-ition. It Is time to atrlo tho mtsk. The Critt moluMon. voted for by every lb-ntib!k-an momtwrof Congresa, doclarttd that not the rmanctpatloB of the slaves, but the preservation of the Union, was the ot'Ject or the war. Mr. Lincoln, half way along In his wlm!nltratton, de tared that war was wag.d to rest on the In ion as It was, ami we know It Was hart slave and part. free. Mr. Lincoln, when the preachers tinrod the proclamation of emanciimthm. rt-idled that it would have no greater legal or physical effect than th rope's hull against the comet, The lemb-r encouraged enmities and hatreds and suspicion among: their frllowcltUensof the North. They prostituted th Kiea an i tb woeus r tovs ana torn tr to count o' by making them syaonymotis with sunitort of their party. They plungetl tit coontry into enormous ntineci-mMiry dtt, disordered the tlnnnclal and economic systems, and Have never ccaed to claim the credit to tbemsHve that the benefactions of heaven aad th tremendous energy of the people, through unparalkdcd suffering, have In twenty vcara restored oele payments and pa I1 off a great portion of the public debt. These nHMiest loaders arrogala to thempelves all th credit for every good which happen to the country durmsr a Republican a IiJhnlntratlon-tlte shining sttn. the falling rain, th abundant crop, th hoallhrul eastm. And my worthy colleague Senator 9hrmani went funhcrth'tn I havo elwwhere noticed. Ho said at Ashland in laudation of the great f(-i I of the Keoohlleso party: "Th e.xces of taxes is so lightly horn that no ttinsidcralila portion of .the people compHIn nf them, nnd no general demand I mnd for tho repo.il C any of thera. Inikt'd, It I a murvelMH reaturr our condition that to repeal taxki I more unpopdlar thnn to retain them, and some of the taxes ar tbemselvoa a mean of prowoitr. aivl hot a burthaa complained ot by any.1 Wonderful, Indeed 1 Listen, y miners In th Hocking! )far' ye men and women who with gitttnl race hang around tho foundries which are closed and the furnaces which are cold. Hoarken, ye epltHta whose unused plants are. yielding ho interest, and arc going to decay tm- attention! e farmar whoso w heat nnd corn scarce liear tranptrtatlons. "Taxes ar a mean of proeerIty and therefore It I more popularpr .m.nr, d'j hearto retain them than to rep al them HI Tkm not. an assertion like that tempt one to say of these leaders, that under their guldanoe "the Republican party, o far a principle is ooneerned, la a reminiseenc. In prao tt It 1 tn organisation for. eMrhmlaar thosa who aandwet its mambtrv. ami J'va'Valj arfflW a""" JrsB J'SBJgggar7a v JrmTvaT

twswty-foar yaar. MwaM it be kayd

laa noWi!" Thu ea peadlture of th 0vtmmat rh nn enonatai sum, I have not lb tisot nguros lafore m -but several hundred million dollar. Notwithstanding this Initaena straragaut outlay, wc lve a system or taxation which gave to the tiovernuunit In Hci a surplus of t;M,iM'.M. i.i 14 a surp ti of S sli.iiiw.iiut, snd tmit year, acrlla to 'Ireury fstiinstes will yiuld a aurplus of loa.un.Uii. Ne.l I ay more tn point out an abusn wi.L.h n,..Ua thiinuttfh reform f It would ' tiettiir. more i-coiioiuieal, more cnMludve to honest adintnistratsm toirrow for a en-) oienov. than t havethlac.u-eeslvr urplu to tempt the lioverntneul io Isvlsh wastotul eiieiitliturcs, tho tttttcera to c rrupt prncth-., theiK-ipktoMess disregard oi National, iKinouile. Thl urpts Is collected by r fr.tntlo roblicry f the people. It will be spent u corruption. The wolt being of tho KepublieletHitdo i thn frugsllty an l honesty of ita liiitnitmtiono The lmlultration muat Uthe reile of the eople. These sturdy qualities of Hvernmnt and people can not ctH xl-t with taxation which la oondsoatlon. ami expenditure which ls nrUlgcy. Thl surplus xtial one-lhlrd of th entire revenue, it i iiiat to tn diulsr n every voter In the land. The Democratic partv la tltKure. lo the- redurtlon of this surplus. F.vi'ry line of it plstftirm. every tradition of lthitory. "'very set and word of its candidates, every depuration of ail Its leading men confirm till pledge. . 1 ee no ui h ule Ige. or promise, or desire on tho part or the Reimbltcaa party Tb Vint form scarcely allude to It. Mr. Jllalu eaw It by in a line. The whole argument I l fsvor nf high tavstlon. Mr. lilalne, frtmt th hour when be m ik MimmlttMA announolnr hU notnlustion, In every public utterance, Tils letter of scoeptanco. hi short sddree. his siawh on the evening of the Maine election, hss it-lulrat-d snd enforce 1 the argument. Kvery Republican of high or low degree In every JMste, at every inwting. down to tb smallest gathering last night In ohm, has vexed the wesry air with the assertion that high tariff tavstlon is the very foundation of prosperity. The timid call It by different uames; they gin tt over with various pretenrea; they kIom it over with high-sounding phrases: Imt from first to last the argument I in favor ot high taxe. Even my atald. Jadicioui collssu avers that no one complains: that high tuxc are a "source i nf proierty, and sn Htpular that the people are greadily oryiwg fMr.U'iiuln In his Vetter to Mr. Smith, of Philadelphia In Novmler. IHM. demands a cont louance of the internal revenue system that the surplus msy Ihi easily collected and ditrlliutel to t be State. Everything, anythina- to increase ant n e.v pend the urplul Nothing lo prevent It socuiniilutlon. and let it n main In the pocket of th people. ...... ... bear much vain lasting tha air on tha subject of tb tariff. Let u clear oft? some rubbish. Th rUno free-trade pnrtr. scan-ely any Individual frf trader in thceountry. There an no enemi. ot American laliir; no enmte of AW' rlcan mittiufacturers. W must bsvo a tariff for revenue, and It should le a laid ns to -lit the mut gad, and the lca hsnn to sll ititpret. Th" pr-!"nt tariff Is the product of the competing snd combining and coin promising selflchne of private interct seeking bou nm that rviiti of file fMii'Vtile. Mr. Jiiirirttn, In hi spvech Wforc tho wool growers' 1 thl Hly, e.t plained the comblnatKm betwff'tt thaod good msnufacturera and tho it riwcr of cheap wol "i tb exten sive gnuina- new ot tae JHtutnwei. u mlarht have uhowrMiliiiilar comblnatltuw, wjtli ; the peotite sbatl go Into tic public Trewurr. Thirrl tiiut in th anuliCatkm of these two and rules care snail be taken as to tlmn cMnavaropraxmexwiin Jalmr 01 ourwuntry. van any saw, onsemen mit vitttnet tai either:' Their aOitlicat ion Will cumpl-tc the work The luprnie Court of the CMtM Jtats ssld "to lay with one hand the power of thetiovermeent on the property of the elln ami with the oth r to btow it on the favored -.ndividuals to aid private enterprls s. to build up prh ate rortiine, ! boo the i-s a mbb ry because It i done under th form of law nd Is ea'l.-d tadtHm. Thl is not Iollatl0n . It 1 a ibcr t tnd-r legislative forma. Nor I It taxation. There ean te .no tax which M not laid for a iutiie purpo, The Democratic party teuohes thus: "The Democracy pledge tt'tf to purtfy the a1mrilt ration from corruption, to restore economy, to revive respec t lor law, and to reduce taxation to the lowet limit onltent with due ev.trd to the preservation of the faith of the Xetien to tt ereditors and penslonei s. . ... Knowing fnll well, however, that JegWatie aff -tiosr the occupation of the people shouki be cautious ami etoiservative In tni-thod, not ill advatioi' of nubile opinion, but repnnslie to tts ietr.sntl. tht Iemoeratlc partv Is pledged to rtv1e the tariff In a spirit of lrnc to all int.rest. .... "Wut In making reduction In tsgej It I not ropoed to Injur any domestic industries, but rather to promote their healthy growth. From the foundation or this ovprmorit tate cotleeteJ at. the Custom House have been the chhf sourt'e of Ft-leral revenue. Such they 3 Hist eiiitlntte to b. Moreover, many innut rles have come to rely Upon hilatlm for ettesrul continuance, so that any change of law must Ins at everv step refardfill of th lalkor and capital thu involved, The process ot reform must be subject in its twectitfon to thl plain dk-tat- of Justice. . "All taxation ball ua llntimlto the reijnlrements of economical government, The neeenry relMtion In taxation ean and must b effei tesl without depriving American laborof the ability to cfMap te suci-essMlly with foreign lulxir, and without lraoslng lower rat of duty than will be ample to cover "r Increased cost of proloctSn which may exlat In eonaequenci of the higher rat of w sires prevailing In thli country. "Holm-tent revenue to pay all the expenses ef the Federal (ioveratnentf economically administered, including pattsmns,, Interest and principal of the public debt, ean he got under onr present system of taxation from Custom House taxea on fewer Imported articles, hearing heaviest on articles of luxury, and bearing lightest on articles ef neceaslty. "W therefore denounce the souse of the exhuing tsrlg, and, auhjeet to the preceding limitations, w demand that Federal taxation snail be telnet vety for pubiw purpose and shall not exceed the needs of the Government economically a-imlnlstered." I read side by side. In a very able newspaper, two strong artlcl. Th one asserted that the business failures, the scarcity of employi.vnt, the suffering ot laborers were due to the low snd falling prices. The other asserted that high protective tariff la a great blessing, because by res -on of home competition, the price of all products fall, Mark the consistency of the two profvesltlons. In proof of the second. It was averred that woolen blankets of the same ttialtty ami make wider a very high protective tariff worn Mild at half the price, ami nt a greater profit, than when the tariff wa hover. It was averred that steel rail which, when tho tariff Was low, told at SHW per ton. sold for 2dMr ton when t ho duty was rained to S3W per ton. Th argument I that the American manufacturer ean not compete with foreign producer ami initke money when the product will rlftg 1 1 iv 1, but esn compete with home producers and make money when their produce will bring only Slav The argument ' that miners ef Iron, miners of coal, makers of steel, forgemcti. fnrnaeemen. laborers of ail kind ore Iwtter paid, better clothed, better fed, their f.MlllM aval Mnm tfrtHtfiUtlit,W. Mttll eatittSl ylpld a large lnt;mt, when tho nrotlnct of iholr laNirla aoWat $M Instead of H. Tell that to the hungry men In the Mocking Valley to-day and t hy will mob y tm. , The Repnbliean party has had alMolttte Isglslatlve power for twenty-four year, with two abort Interval Their tariff ami Rnsitelal measure hax-e been carried according to their own aweet will. Hanks, even National Ranks, are fslllng. Merchants ar lieoomlng bankrupt, foundries are closed, faetorlea are . silent, miners are strthfng. lahorvra are without employment, wtthontuvtng; wage, la the mfclat of abnn east harrestiwen and women and ehttdrSn aeahnagry. Tlw home nmrlsJt dees net kp

M th aft f wliaad. Onsm mils timl ru aTthe farm aadalgltr 2?M t. 1 read in on paper the otoor da, lm lolhtw "la the Mahoning and Chcnsnto IHstrlrta thsre are f rty-ai furtujewsand thirty nln have atopiied maklaa iron. In Ihs Hanging Mrn-k Dlat riot there are twentydght obarciwl turnac. and ouiy cmht will do soy thing at all. cet-tainl) not more than a small fraetima of their capacity. In the Hocking Ysllojr there aw fourteen furnej only one, ami the smallent. I running. In the lotke tSuperlor region th. re are thli1y-eveii stao't. andoaUr nine at work, and these to be is.iuo.vl. In. Pennsylvania, near fit tslntrgh. eight thousand coal miners are out of cuuiloymoiii. At. Johnstown, the Cambria work, employhtgr lite thousand men. ut down the wajro from, tea to twenty er cent.

"It. New York the wholesale oiotnmg ammo of Rindskoir te Co., well known t'H im-tnnitU has rolled for a million. In Inelnnntl th houur Huehmati & Co hi faivd a.nn. "Dun r jM.rt the tniKlncs dlsatteta ten pac cent. greater than lat year," . And yet the coal ttml iron and woolon aoaaa interoHtar protectfl bv eoortnou diitles. Do you e In this evliddta goot rcu m Iw ooutiiiiilng the Itepiiblltan party in weri. An attempt i ma I to group togc-tbr bw nationality our fellow clti.en of foreign birth, and Induce them to go altogether to Um Republican party, Appeal are made to Irishman, to fJcnnane, to baud together and to support en taaaetb Republican candidate. In the name of American citixenhlp I protest again! this wickedness. I would not try in this rahion to brlnsr them to our aid. r scont th Idea that tkero Is reason why they should In thl fawn Ion go from us, ln KH-V when th immediate ancctorsof the present Mepubllesti party wen defaming men of foreign birth snd of certain religious conviction, seeking to enlarge tb term before nsturutlxa'loii. pssslng tho oontmand "rut none on guard to nigm woept Amerlian." "No Irlhmn need apply,"tu Democratic parly the pesnt, becmtiselt la one and the same ami only Ik'mocrat'c party stood firm In welcoming them toour shorea, Una for our liberal naturalisation laws, firm In th equality of naturalised with the native-born citUcn. It who! history baa proven It to be faithful to tho uttemttoH ot the last platform. The Democratic party Insists that H a) the dutv or thl Oovoniment to prntocrt. with cuual tlil lity sua vigilance, the right! or It eitlenn. native ami naturallsceil. at howi and abroa!, and to the end that thl protrrtkm may be assured, I'nltcd MaUs paper of naturallxation, issued 1 courts of competeiu Jurisdiction, niont be respected by tb Rfcutiveand Legislative department or ourtwn Uovernment, and by nil foreltrn powers. It i an Imperative duty of thUdovorrimettt to eftlcientlv protect all the right of pemJHC) and priuicrtv ot trvcry Amoricau ltUB l foielan lands and demand and enforoethw reparation or any invaion thereof. An Atnerl-atictf.n is only reonttle to hi. own I10vcrotne.it for any act don in feta own country, ir under hvr lliijr, snd oadophr be tried tlieretor on her on soil and aeeotdlua to her laws; and no ower crista la lh Government to expatriate, an American tb sen to be tried in any foreign land for a"r such act. AOMIM8TKAT1VK MiroitM CI.KVSIJP A KarORNKK. Moro than anything Ui the country needsemialatrntivn ntornt,ani! the Demitcracie natty i the only iritrilini-iitality It ha bvn btst of power so long that It I rraponslblo for Bono or these abuse, It ha no pet abuse to concealno erring bromT to protect- Aad tt hi a candidate whoa nam I yn nyioa with reform, and whose whole puldki Ills Iish illustration f his devotion to pure adminlat ration. Actively, earnestly onajn-'l la tho duties of his protostlon. ho has held but tare oflloes, and wo have yet to hesr that be did not well perform tho duties of each. In each he. reformed ab-.ic. correctotl wronaja. He ms.le it hi task to study closely the methods by which official dutlt-s were perforin' -d. lndu-orlou. attentive, intfll irt'tit, he awvlo htmseir thoroughly acfttsintcd with tas matin ami machinery by which the trusts eo n-ll to him were i be portormea. n mt -. .,rt -.., and Kmulnd tb same , irtH v fr..m all bl sutwr:tiut. I bars rood with cure ai public net und uttemnee aa Mayor or Buffalo end Uoreruor of ?f w rtlt, and I tlnd them luminous with iatvlligetit ayprceiatl n of duty and courageous lvotbi to its demsnd. "Duty" sects to bs,tN word uppermost in hi thought. ''Ho ei-em to be his sponunnm a-tion. No man can rcail with a fair. Impartial temper, hi message a Mayor and 00 venw -r, hi addnwa on mt y owkwIous, hi speech and lett.-r t aeevptans-e, itlenfl stelng thit deep ien of obligation to the people, pr eoattdent rollanc on tht people, of profottti! ksire to serve well th" people. Is the tuehto)ef hla pub ic cha.a 'ter, atid the iruideof his ndicml flfi. The) are lo-tlnct with lite M-a that pub lic omc s are putaic trtssts, eroatea mm ta 0 adtntni-itcrc'l for the benefit ofth p ple, atd that the sittii fidelity tho chief exhibits in the personal disehargo of hi fiinctlutM re tulres that "the selection and retention Of sulordttiats in iovnmmtit employment -liould depeml !Hn scor-taliH-l titnea and the tattle of their .worhr. and should bo neither expriefed nor almwod to do .Uet tollable art.v ervlee." The mttn who wrote them ha ttitclliwioa to fill any office, power to prform any duty, eursfe to confront and eorreet any wrong. IkMsanv man doubt if? Read frera hla speech of me.dame: "The party and ita repri entatlve. which ask to lie intruded at the ban Is of the p-wte with the keepina of all that concern their welfare and sdetv, should only ask it with the full aptvirciatiow of the sacrcdnesa of the ttust aad with s firm resolve to administer it faithfully nnd well. 1 am a Democrat becnuac I hellev- thtl thlg truth lie at the foundation of true IKmoi'mey. I have kept the faith because I bellevo. If rhrbtly and fairly adtalnlstenul and appliod, Ihmtemtle doctrines and measure will Insure th happiness, contentment and prosperIty of the people, If, in the contest upon whudt ve now enter, we steadfastly hold to the underlying prtnelple or our party en-srwl. and at alt times keet m view the ncople'a gowl, we shall be strong, because we ar true to ourselves and beeause the plain ami lodepmnient -oters of the land will ek by their eugrare to ottmpass their release from party tyranny where there should he submission to the so pals r will, and their protection from nartjf corruption where there should be devotion le the petude's Interest. "These tbMtgnM kmd a aonseerstloe to or cause, and we gi forth, not mt-ndy to gain a partisan advantage, but pe,ge4 to give to those who trust, us the utmost ItcnofR of a pure and honest administration of National affair. So higher purpose or motive com stimulate us lo supreme effort or urge us bf continuous and earnest tabor." m m A tinwt Brants. Richard A. Proctor say that the ag of the earth ii placed by om at MM),OOD.OOO yean, ami still others of inter lime, among them ths Duke of Argyll, place it? at 1(1,000,000 year.. Noon place It lower than 10,000,000, knowing what propesaes have twtm jrone through. The earth mttH have become oltl. fTawton furmigesl, although be otnild frlvn no reason for it, that the earth would st otic time become perfectly dr Since thou it hits been fount! that Xewton was. trorrect. As th earth keeps oooling; it will liocome pontu., ami creat cavities will he formed in the Dilerior which will take in the water. It is estimated thai this urotmss in now in prorre so far that the "star diminishes st the . rate of the thiclcrte of a sheet of writing paper a year. At thin rate in f,000,WK) yean the water will hare sunk a wile, and lit 15,000,000 years every trace of water will ham disappeared from the face ut the flobo. S A recent earthquake opened imrlnf of water where no n of watt or had previously existed in a jpanktn M Lawtr Lake, ul,Sm frmmm Cottj