Monroe's Legal Tender Issue, Volume 1, Number 6, Columbus, Bartholomew County, 4 October 1876 — Page 2

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.3 us, ir:x. WEDNESDAY, OCT. 4, 187S. Vote the Independent Ticket straight. Yellow fever is raging in the south. Vincennes had an earthquake, too, Sept. 27th. Cary had been there. We are on tha -eve of revolution anarchy and repudiation of all debts. Generel bankruptcy ia inevitable. No power can avert general bankruptcy unless Cooper is elected. Gen. Braxton Bragg fell dead in a street at Galveston Sept. 27th. lie was 61. We have but two great parties in the United states one that pays taxes and one that preys upon taxpayers. We ere a nation of masters and slaves. The impeeuneous masses :sre the slaves of the monied few. And the time may tcome when they will be willing to take silver, or even greenbacks for their bonds. The election will decide whether a taxpayer hasfany rights that a bond holder is bound to respect. To take away the people's money is to reduce the people to slavery. We are slaves to the money power. Itather than become the slaves of a European money oligarchy the American workers will wipe out all debts. Our statesmanship consists in issuing gold bonds and "burning the people's money. The next war will be a war for bread Yon tnay starve people singly, but you can't impoverish and starve whole comraunities. "That "barrel"' has reached Indianapolis. Tlua Sentinel has a new dress. It looks better. It pays to -betray the laborer and work for the bond holder. The Issse is for work and bread. We shall see if men who. are doomed to manual labor are to be kicked out and starved. The public debt must be paid -according to original contract. None but slaves and cowards would ever pay it in Nearer money than was agreed upon. The white workers of this nation are the slaves of Wall street brokers who own and control the money on which all depend for employment and food. After all it may be the money power has tightened the chain a little too fast. It may soap. If we break our chains somebody will have bonis to sell cheap. An organization of the Greenback party of Texas is to be effected at Dallas Oct. 11th. A Cooper and Cary electoral ticket will be .pat in the field. The great work is progressing. The State fair just closed seems, to have been a failure. The receipts were $4,800; expenses and premiums, $13,400. ' Too much election and no4 enough trotting horses in the country.. Reform is needed We wish the election would hurry asd blow over so we will have the Cincinnati Enquirer again with ua belaboring Tilden and the whole pack cf bond holders and gold mongers. The bondholders have overdone the thing. In striving for all the wealth of the nation they will lose all. Mind, with bankruptcy of the people conies bankruptcy of the nation. The men who have all the money and hold mortgages upon most of the property of the country are few in number, but they have put yokes and. chains upon the many. Ths Tilden followers with shot gun umdt revolvers are hunting down and ciurdering the negroes in many parts of Ike south. The reign of terror is tha most "fright f ill the world Las ever t'E-tiCltl, -- James D. Jeans is the supple tool of the gold gamblers 'of Wall street, New York. lie has a heavy stock cf bonds and draws bis gold ' interest with pireat regularity. He pretends to be & farmer, but Jeetnes doesn't belong to the hard pressed, tax-ridden laboring ra&a cf this ration. Yea cjlt t3 f.r tl 3 r 3:r lend Lol3.tr. i'- - c . : ? -J.'.y ccir havir;; to take silver for Lis bsmds. Tut Lira in power entirely. Ha has too much opposition. If tiii greenback baiiaess isn't plopped the hon-3. toiler will bs taxed yet ! He will have to psy a schsol and road tax. Vole for the poor bond holder. Give ike pocr untaxed fcafaJ boWer a chance ! ""ll .4 ijlW T ' .3 , X . ... 'i -1 ( iv 1 A r . .i C -1 s to tl 5 t V

Look o;:l fjr i't s." " There is to be cheating at the pells and on the boards. The practice of pouring tickets out on the table before counting must be "sot down on." Sara Tilden is the champion ballot box stuffer-of America and John Morrissey is the champion card player and gambler, and under them the New York system of carrying elections is to be practiced.. The poor Republicans however they may want to cheat cannot hold a candle to ilorrissey and Tilden. So they had better play honest and sea that honesty is enforced. You may set it down that - Morrissey will get fifteen to twenty thousand fraudulent votes in the ballot boxes in Indiana nest Tnesda'. ;

The -bullion organs tell, us in the spring time that good .crops will bring prosperity. Plant, plant, plow, plow, hoe, hoe, and raise all you can and the good time will come in the fall. But in the fall when the big crops come, but not the good times, they turn round and shout "Over production ! over production ! over production!" What are we to do ? If we produce little they tell us, "you have nothing to sell or you could get money," and if we produce in abundance they shout "over production! over production !" What are we to do under the rule of the bond holders to restore prosperity fo the country? Why, go on selling gold bonds in foreign markets Go on burning up greenbacks. Go on with contraction and legislating the real and personal property of the people out of all value. Go on raising the value of bonds and mortgages and note3. Go on with your demonetization of silver and your exaltation of gold. Go en reducing the farmer's land and stock in value. Go on putting the land out of the hands of the workers and into the hands cf the mouey lords and kings of Wall street and London. Shut up the remainder of the shop3 and Lmines and factories and furnaces and turn the operatives out to beg or steal. Go on with your bond selling and your building up of an untaxed money power and the good times will come. Will they! The bond holder bought his hundred dollar bond for v-iO. He has drawn interest on it 14 years, getting back more than three time3 what he paid for it Now it is worth $126 in gold, which gold is worth 30 per cent, more than the silver in which the bond was payable. Altogether the bond holder gets about $700 for (he $40 lie loaned the government in 1862. This is the nice public cre-ditor that has inaugurated idleness and starvation and slavery to the money power in free America. lie Is the fellow that robs the poor of bread and the people of their homes and farms. : The Tilden bullionites have been busy in circulating the report that Schurz has been withdrawn fiom the Hayes canvass. What they eipect to gain by so silly and notorious a campaign lie is bard to see. Schurz has been speaking day and night, week in and week out, and is st'tl at it, as every man and woman in the country that reads the. papers well knows. The object of this silly "falsehoood that carries its refutation with it in every daily and weekly paper is not apparent. But it shows that the bond holders of the Tilden stripe are afraid of Schurz; The New York Sun is denouncing the government for capturing Tweed. It declares his capture illegal inasmuch as we have no extradition treaty with Spain. The Sun thinks his arrest by the government as highhanded an outrage as the execution of criminals by mob violence. But the secret, of the Sun's trouble over the return of Tweed is that ha has developments that will flatten out what remains of Samuel J. Tilden. Look for something to drop when be gets back. The old subsidiary GaztteofCi n c i n -nati throws off all disguise. It regards the idea that the bondholder could be paid in silver coin absurd enough to consign a man to a mad house 1 Hear this : "The country knew only gold for specie the silver dollar was worth 103J. in gold, ween the hocas were issuea. At that tune TL man whe said the Government could be made to pay its bonds in silver dollars would tava been calls! a lunatic." The poor, bond holding old thing! It v. ill call for diamonds next. Thsy arc having a good deal 'of trouble to prove that Tilden .was ever a Democrat. It appears thaS his only claim to -genuine Democracy lies in tb,3 fact that ha refused to raise a and or to throi in a cent against the 3TC u IIIgu ansd alsirked the payment of tares, in 1 II -3 re; to vote for Gen. He refused to vote for Seymour , ! r: I tj cto izv ey in Its 72. t wc-i II 1 1 i 1 t .1.1 it fot ara n

. reunion Ih'.lly at Seynonr. Lft-t, Monday and Monday night the Republicans swarmed at Symour. Mr. Schurz spoke to an immense crowd en the fair grounds in the afternoon and GovMorton spoke to a crowd in the street at night. Ingerscdl who drew the people out failed (o appear. The crowd at night was disorderly and very noisy. We felt raorti fied at the shabby treatment Gov. Morton received. It was impossible for him to be hoard amidst the shouting and din of the multitude congregated in squads in the vicinity and moving upon the streets. But soma 300 people packed in about Ue

speaker and listened to his pertinent re marks with close attention. The Governor looks as young and vigorous as he did during the war. lie made many strong points against the party that is seeking revenge and reimbursement for their losses in the rebel cause, under Sam Tilden. But. we have no room for a review of hit remarks. Carl Schurz is apparently an earnest man. In his Seymour speech he made some just and, sensible remarks in regard to th'e claims and letters of , Tilden and Hayes. He knows Tilden, and warned the people that reform under him will be impossible. But Mr. Schurz betrayed the fact that he is the hired advocate of the foreign bond holders. He looked as it he bad just stepped out of a national bank parlor. Not a word did he utter against the national bank monopoly. He attributed the hard times and the geiseral distress and universal bankruptcy to the want of a soun,d currency, tie asserted what he knew to be wide of the truth and what everybody else knows to be wide of the truth, that there has been no contraction. We can't see how a man of sense can stand up and say there is as much money in the country now as there was in 1SG5 when we ail know that they are burning greenbacks continually. Mr. Schurz is the paid advocate of the money power.' He represents the national bank barons. He pleads for gold for the bond holders and national grayback paper and demonetized silver for the worker and tax payer. Twenty millions of poor hard working people are trembling to think how'they are to get bread and shelter this winter. But the bond holder must have his gold. He rides in -big fine carriage. lie travels abroad. He has lived at the fashionable watering places the past summer and rolled in dainties and luxuries while women and children the families of honest mechanics out of employ by the tens of thousands have suffered for bread, and the lnd hr.3 swarmed with able-bodied men called tramps, seekiug employ and begging food from door to door. This is the bond holder that has taken the place of the old slave driver. He rules the tax payer. He domineers over the laborer. He applies the party lash to the back of the slave to party and the slave jumps in and votes for him and does his dirty work and helps to rivet the chains upon his own limbs. The bond holder is an American institution. Cherish the bond holder. You will always have him. Cherish him if you hate your family and your country and are a slave, cherish the bond holder. The poor man who works from sun to sun for. GO or 70 cents will come down to 40 or 50 a day if blue jeans is elected. He is for economy. He has always got his farm labor performed for 25 per cent, less than his neighbors pay and paid his hands in trade at a high figure. Old Jimmie got his two or three hundred thousand dollars by grinding the working man. The gold speculators and gamblers have united their forces with the swarm of southern holders of rebel war claims, and are making a furious battle for the United States treasury, under Tilden and Tammany ball Head them off, or- the country or liberty is lost. Only Peter Cooper will do to tie to in these days of fraud and treachery to the workingtnea and" producers. Connecticut held her local elections on Monday, and tha fact was developed by change that the state will go for Hayes beyond doubt. Connecticut and Colorado were both -confi dently claimed for tha Tilden bullion wing. Rut Tilden is going to. run worse than poor Greely. .We cfTer you good me a for cScs From Peter Cooper clown to the township candidates the Independents have good true men for the position? to be rilled. The men are worthy, the cause just. Vote the full ticket and work for its success. Colorado voted on Jlootlar. liepublk in. Three electoral votes for Hayes. It is row plain t L it Tllclen , ui v -t s. ) fct .j c .1 ' !. Ci Lh j 1 it - J 111 IVUCUiKil. Tl i A . t C ! J C' 1 I tl, VI c : i t j '

Polities as they KanMISS I KHITT'S PUH'SOIT Ot KNOWLEDGE DI&Vt FAN OCT. Omaha Republican. Miss' Dimity knows all about it now. She "languished a long time In ignorance, and felt, her situation keenly, but at last she is wiser and sadder. She always wanted to talk politics and belong to some party: but how could she, when she didn't even know the difference" between a Democrat and a Republican? She looked anxiously through all the papers to gain some information ou the subject, but the onlv nlain

at tern ant 8 she found were that the Demecrats are all liars and swindlers and tbn ' rvepnoncans ail t'neves and scoundrels. Finally she asked her papa about it, and he looked at her .over his spectacles and said : "A Democrat, my dear child, is by the way, you left lumps in the heels of my stockings when you darned them last week. Girls nowadays are coad for nnthino-" Then she sked her bin- hmilmr unJ Di, said, "that's easy ; ask me a harder one. A Democrat supports the government as long as tho government will support him, and a Republican lets no; guilty man "escap until he has crammsd all his pockets and the crown of his hat.'" She next ASKED HER 8 WEETHEi KT. But he turned pale, and falhnsr back on his chair, fanned himself furiously while he gasped, "Emeline, my love, 1 hope y0u are not getting strong minded. I could "not think ot marrying a woman who knows more than I than other women." Next she asked a wise and learned man, and he looked pompously at her and said: "Too deep, my dear, too deep: difference in the platforms; very complicated subject ; could never explain it to a woman. In fact ti's so deep that I don't exactly under ah. believe you could understand it." TLen'sh went to an editor. They alwavs k now everything. It is a pnculiaritv of the nros fession. They can get up a theory or explanation of a remedy for anything inside of forty-fire seconds. She asked him. with l Z. k'" "0ran?lla!e.te L ier RecuWican. Ue ". first, stuck his pen into the glue pot, turns bled a pitcher of ice wafer over a pile of exchanges, jerked up his collar and was "himself again." He said, "A Republican has an office, and wants to keep it. He thinks rag money good, hard money better, but either kind good enough. He thinks the country needs reform, salaries are too low, and the r-EOFLr TOO IVQUISTTIVE. He cannot buy a $2,000 team of horses on a salery of $1,500 a year, buf some one most ask impertinent questions. His country is dear to him, but he is dearer to hi3 country. A Democrat has no office, and wants one. He scorns to ask whether the money is hard or soft ; he only grasps How much? He thinks the country needs reform. He wants change in office and change in his pockets, He hold's his country's hor-or above price, and sells his own to the highest bidder. He " but Miss Dimity put her hands over her ears and A w uiiiii c i'n 1 1 r u i

cried: "Please tell me the name of therand private, within the United

otner party to which honest men belonsr Then that editor laughed an inhuman laugh, and said : Long ago they took a lantern when they had wanted to find an honest man ; you had better borrow half a dozet! headlights and a garden rake and go and look for that party. However, if you are a true patriot you will work for the Republicans, for they all have cottages at Long Branch and villages in Washington anil Paris: and are pretty well supplied with funds ; but the Democrats have been out a long time, and their money is all gone, and their villas are mortgaged. It will be a dredfut strain on the treasury, and " Bliss Dimity did not waii for more. And now when they talk politics in her presence she listens with that beningn sad ness that is born of superior wisdom. 'Ilcfom" in Jackson County.Da. Moxboe : The editor of the Brownstown Banner is not happy, judging from an article in his last issue. It appears that in my speeches I have hurt somebody's corns. The Banner says that the county officers are honest and conscientious men, and that the people have confidence in them, and while that is the case no statement from the records is necessary. Now, sir, I have not called on the the county officers for a statement. It was the Democrat did that. But I must beg"leave to differ with the Banner about - the people being satisfied with the management of the county affairs. There i3 a great deal of dissatisfaction and well there may be in view of the following facts and ficnires taken from the records, and the people are of the opinion that some explanation and "reform" are needed. The books and stationery for the county for the years 1863, 1854 and 1SS5, amounted to $3,419,73, and it must be remembered that there has been a reduction of 25 to 30 per cent, on these articles since that time. The bills allowed by the commissioner for! books and, stationery for toe years 1S74, 1375 and 1S7G, amounted to the enormous sum of 58,923.83. I fail to see where tho saving and "reform" the Banner speaks of comes ia, especially when it is remembered that the increase in population is less than the decrease in in prices. In 1803 and '64 and '65 we had two courts besides tha commissioners court, to wit: the circuit and common ntnns rnnrfs with as DiailV weeks of court as we now have, or more. Yet the expense of courts and bailies for those years was only Sl.849.00 against 5,024,73 for 1874, 1875, 1878. Is not a little reform necessary m trsat itera ? Formerly 'tha pstit . jurors were samnoned to appear eti the 1st day of the session of tha court. But now they do not appear until the second week of the court. Yet the expense to the county for jurors for 18G3, 1851 and 1865 was Sl.774,00, agrain&l 0,003.44 in 1S74, 1875 and 187C. Would it not strike an honest "reformer" that reform is necessary la that item of expenditure ? There are many other items of re for::, rectc .iy, v, hie VI will pass o:y i,r tl ' i - t r how the II ..traud th oits icl.h tho be fat "ivl:, ' tl - e utl " r l p. 2 X J. 1 i re! ored ' j c " t r 1 , , 4" ! J ii

Eeraocrstie Reformers. Poineoy's Democrat. We say deliberately to our Democratic friends that there is at present n Dem

ocratic party in the. sense that Jackson it? founder, understood it. Before the Democratic platform was written, Tilden wrote to Manton .Marble, the author of it, "See that you make our platform as nearly like that of the lie-publicans as possible, so that we can expect as mush favor and money as thy from the national banks " And Maible did so. There is a conspicuous analogy in everyt5linS but phraseology btwat n the platforms of the two parties. Farnsworth. an old Abolitionist, and one of the founders of the Republican party, who is cooperating at present with the so-called Democratic or "Tilden 'reform'" party, says that he entertains and cherishes the same principles now that he advocated in the beginning, through the war, and during his whole political lifeIn Wisconsin there has been no Democratic party for four yeai3. They call themselves "Liberal Reformers" in that state.. In Massachusetts that royaltyaping sprig -of American aristocracy, Charles Francis Adams, will not. deign to use the word "Democratic" as an index to the good old party of Jackson, but, in acceptina the nomination offered him at the instigation of Tilden, says: "Gentlemen of the convention!' He as studiously avoids using the name "Democracy" as though he believed that his tongue would cleave to the roof of his mouth in pronouncing it. or his arm paralyzed in writing it. In New York there i? only one Democrat on the state ticket, the Robinsons, Dorsheimers, Ogdens, etc., being Republicans or oxRepublicans, All through the country the so-called Tilden-Ile form-Democratic party have put in nomination for con gress and other ofhees some of the most infamous rascals and persistent oSce holdin bna?Ies that the Republican party ever KicKea out. itiese men reformers! Stupidity intolerable ! Manj of them filled their pockets by doing the thing3 that call for reform. History of the Greenbacks Birth. Buffalo, N. Y. Register. On the 22d of January , 1872, Mr. Eldridge G. Epaulding, of this city, from the Committe of Ways and Means, reported a bill to authorize the issue of United States notes ani for the redemption or funding of the floating debt of the United States. The bill reads as follows in regard to those notes paying debts : "And such notes shall be receivable for all debts and demands due to the United States, and for all salaries, debts-and demands owing by the United States to individuals, corporations and associations within the United States; and shall also be lawful money and a legal ten i 1 V T i r- . der in payment of all debts, public kj III 1 V Oi This bill also granted to the holder of said notes the privilege of exchanging said notes for United States 5.20 six per cent, interest bearing bonds also the privilege of holder of tfuid bonds to exchange them for United States notes at any time. (A full text of the above bill can be found in ?ePherson's Hand Book of Politics for 1874, on pages 148-7.) A slight amendment was niade by Thaddeus Stevens a part of which reads as follows : "And such notes herein authorized shall be receivable in payment of ail taxes, duties, imports, excises, debts and demands' of every kind due to to the United States, iic , ic, as stated above." Had the bill passed in this form, the financial history of this country would have been widely different from what it has been. We should have had no depreciation of the greenbacks and the cost of the war would have been hundreds of millions less than it was. But those who thought their interest lay in an opposite direction took the alarm and found means to secure an amendment requiring the customs dues to be paid in gold In order that the government might be provided with means to pay gold interest on its bonds. This discredited the government money before it was issued. Ifew Jersey Has It Gad. New Haven Union. The Cooper movement ia doing finely 5n New Jersey, much to tke surprise of the bullionists. In soms sections it is strong enough to dictate terms to the Democracy. In the first. Congressional district tie Greenbacker's nominated C. II. Zimmerman for Congress, and the Democrats have endorsed his candidacy, although after a bitter struggle in their convention. The vote for greenbacks stood at seventy one, while the bank ring and - contraction Democrats f o Ins " polled fifty two. The district has hereto fore gone Republican, but so strong is the greenback sentiment, that Mr. Zi miner man's election is confidently looked for. Greenback clubs have been formed in all the townships and a lively campaign is in progress. In other sections of the Etate the cause is making excellent headway, and our friencU there promise a vote that will surprise the champions of monopoly and fraud. . The St. Louis correspondent of the Nashville (Jean.) Independent, writing on the monster mass meeting held ia the former cuv on fceptecnoer m tr:e interest ct -1 Independent Oreen&acfc party, ays la At at least on. e h tine! red thousand people g ft': he-red around the twenty-five stands erected. Of course these were not ail voters, as women girls ani boys Hurnei oat ia Iirge numbers. - Toe correspondent $ay that it seemed as if the whole populruioa of St. Louts had gathered to hear the praises cf the rag baby and honest Peter Cocper Buiiaded. At the time of this meeting- very little was said about it in the canlssn journals, they fearing the e would have upon their re --I e i1 t: old parties control the ted ,1 semination of news, all of tiif Cc 'per ri ova . r " l Is u I'm r 1 . .4. T iry t , - s 1 t d Gen S3 1 i of iir . I v -... 1 - . I t j 1 ca tl . i . 1 t - i

ttltfpjinsj it Ora 1" I in6s. U.'.-y t:,i i.i c: l.'.CO v.-crL"'ij: jc-j jtL..; families are dependent on their daily labor for bread thrown cut cf employment oa the eve of winter. Read the' f'.'.o ;r. r from the New Tork Sun: Reabisg, Pa., Sept. 25. -A a was Intimated recently, 'the coal mining cotu panics of the state have resolved upon a general suspension of operations. At ft meeting cf operators it has been determined to stop work at 8,11 the 'colleries owned or cent rclle 1

by the companies connected with the late combination. The Lehigh and Tf ilkesbarre Ccsl and Iron Company, which if largely controlled by the Central railroad of New Jersey, has ordered a complete, stoppage of work at its extensive mines in the Summit Hill district of Carbon. This movement throws 5.000 miners and laborers out of employment. At the other colleries of the company, in the. Wyoming and Lackawanna regions, the date of uepecsioa will ioon be decided, upon. Within a week' time 12,000 workingmen will be furloughed for an indefinite period. The other coal, and tran'spuVtatiia eorapanies in the middle and northern coal fields are planning to stop work, and before many days the suspension will be general. The number of uaemr loved miners and laborers is now about "20,000 and between 1 5,000 and 20,000 more me u will ba soon added to this army of discouraged wot king-men. In some districts the miners and others are bitterly opposed to the action cf ths companies and troublesome times may eventuate at any moment. Mis Epitaph, "when I am gone," said Lieutenant Ilobbs, huskily, to the chairman cf tha Democratic central committee, "when I am gone" "Goin' fur?" rmeril the chairman. "When I arn gone," eonunuea tne warrior, not noticing the interruption, "place this inscription above my voicelets head." And he handed him this: -Here Lies the Stadkard Bearer of the Party Reform ia an Irredeemable District, 'lie fell a Lingering Victim of Wrecked nnd Blasted Hope?, which was ju?t hia Blasted Luck. Jlorial! Sit at tliis lit tie Mound and study wisdom. When you make up your mind to be a Heformer, see first if you would not niaka a better Fool." Burlington Uawkeye. There is no doubt that the financial theories of the new parties are in almost perfect harmony with those of a great majority of the Democracy of the wet, whilo there are large numbers of our most intelligent Republican fellow citizens who would desert tha present corrupt administration party and join.th Independents if by so doing they could see any hope of bringing success cf the greenback theoiies ot last named organization. As it is a great many Republicans will vote the Independent ticket in preference !o voting for Hayes and Wheeler from conscientious oppositioa. to the resumption policy of their party, although they might not have done so if the question was presented i the" same shape in a Bemocratia'platforia. Lamar (Mo.) Independent. Who will say that the Tilden Democrat of Ohio are not the antipodes of tbe-Tiklen men of New York in point of genuine religious affiliation ? We all know that the latter have a largs sprinkling of shoulder hitters and pimbiers among them, and thev do not try to conceal the far; but TiUen's followers in Ohio are jut the contrary. They shout with a fury and an abandon tngestive of camp meetings ia the dcz days, -Infidel! Irjldel ! Infidel?:" whenever Gab Irgersoli appears ; and though Tilden insulted and slapped them on the right cheek by his officious and aggressive opposition to William Allen last year, they have now turned unto him the left chek also and invite another slapping. That a single friend of William Allen can support Tilden either directly or indirectly, is one cf ll. . t lit... . f- i t i 1 - i . v uje strangest- imngs oi mis strange time, Pomeroy's Democrat Governor Til Jen"? war record seems tar suit them exactly down Siufh. ' In urgfr:.? him upon the Democrats there the Peters. burg Index and Appeal tells the following anecdote: "Ia just after the battltf of the Wilderness, a parry cf gentlemen were assembled in a r6om at ft'illard's and iu the course of an animated conversation one of them used the following language: "Gentlemen, the mistake we made was that we did not turn MeCk-Ilan with h fioe army on Washington and clean cut the whole thing,' meaning the administration of Mr. Lincoln. lie who gave utterance to this patriotic remark was Samuel J. Tilde for wnich in future agss he will ever he held in re?pect and veaeration by the patriots of the country." . How They Tote. Last week, says the B'oomingtoa (111.) Appeal, an excursion of land hunters went cut from this city to Kansas. A vote wa3 taken among these men for President, which resulted in 32 for Hayes and 255 for Cooper. These tasn have been forced . from, their homes and know how to appreciate Eayes and TilJea politic iaus. - " Got i ir Cc ;ey has r :s'gned from 03 Orgaaizcanaot supthe XV; ation. ll e si that port Tild Will TO'tS nev is tr.s "or the residency ft ml I:-Ir. He ar ts an who wsrered 2X0.C0G . ..... i ... J I. ...... u AJitJ.U tOuia n0! i r York. One i jo liar a a ay, ill iu store 300.3, 13 on ths e; j- a a ay s we: Dfrovencata that : t 0 s 3 work at all. The roTerameat en t. teres t, ia gold, ta as that vras rstii iers--the sir ") to 8) ce-sts for wheat. finis the work in 4 f : n at tlt j t4cj. . - f - - "1 tlk. 1 S.O.1