fit li,,w-i'r ! " Official Orrn f the United States. Weekly add Tri-WeelUy 1 - BY THE : ; ' ERA PUBLISHING COMPANY. W9I Iff. DROWX, Btulnen nana;er Office In the "Standard" building, Eat nide of '"' Fayettevllle Street. THURSDAY, SEPT. 2GtIi', 1872. NATIONAL REPUBLIC AIT TICKET. rr FOR PRESIDENT: ' Ulysses S.Grant, Or Illinois. -, FOB VICE-PHESIDES'T :' ' ' Henry Wilson, , , v Or lAssAcnusETrs. ' ; V ; 1 ELECTORAL TICICKT.",: .if... - I - FOB THE STATE AT LARGE: JIAIXCTTS tlCTnr, off ZJim combe. ' ' SATUEtr. rillLLIPS, of Wake. '"- i . . i ' ft roli THE COSOKESalCXJtA.L ri3TKICTS: 1 Edward Uansoni, f Tjrrell. , 3. William F. IOftln, of Lenoir, r . 4 Jarae II. Ileoden, of Cliatlinm. ' 5. Henry Walcr, of Davidson. C William S. ttjniun, of Lincoln. , T. Jarae G. Ramtaf, of Ilowan. 8. .Tames 11. Juatlce, of Rntherford. revision or recall, and forever buryinsr all - the i issues growing out of the late ine London joiimafcV&enorally rejoice In the large negro counties of the over the settlement of Oil e loner agitated and I Voef -ffio . . " i jiw, .... """"ftv uvitwc uj. me aw" I itii ine ' issues growing uui ua uitj law? drTwqJC Pelican over the Democratic vote was .war, and to have done with revolution, claims. They .irbpear to think England has ;;v r i -l, , . I . - 1 ui .cheaply in atoning for the T T J- F -"nereis an exflinpieuinrmm, ff 'equalj the -Gxcess of Republican increase! opening of the old issues, while lead . !. ! J. .- X- Xt . . I. . i f , 0. a - o J . ' - ing Greeley organs of two States prof nounce for war; one a oarMof revolts twTtf the other a tear of extermination asrainst the ncsrroes. 'J s . This is If clasping hands " with a ven4 geance. This is the sort of " reconcil- atioh ' the Greeley movement promis es, i This is the peace of Cincinnati and Baltimore-' This threatens the country with a bloody ;reign under the sage of cnappaqua ; : a warning tne people of the whole' country will not be slow ;to ' T1 I-4-n M 1 n - 1 T 4Vrt-WT "T?tl ? nWTA-l themselves,,accojdinglyron ' the first Tuesday of Ncyember. ; 3 a- "Gen Grant never lias been defeat ed, and he never -will be. Ifo&ApE (ItEELEY. "While ham-r tiny the right of every Itepnblicnn to his untrammeled choice of n candidate for next President un til h, nomination Is made, I venture to suggest that Gen. Grant will be far better; qualified for that . momentous trust lu 1J7J titan he was in 1SCS. IIor.ck Orkelky, speech oh 5th January, 187L. . - mil 11 iituM'L m nnr nanrra An iynrinft 1 . : w-av and theaccurins of her own'immnnitv from twmie ana oiacK population is about JBaltimore Convention, demands a re-i uvgivci upon me pan 01 ine united States in the event of being herself involved In wars in the future. - J " BraziaJ is hot more exempt from the inci dents of an election than countries in the northern., hemisphere. -Rio de Janeiro journals teem with descriptions of the riot ous scenes which occurred during the recent elections for members of the Congress. An electoral meeting in one of the churches was broken up by the police, who charged upon the assemblage with their swords and dis persed it. the president of the meeting and several citizens having been wounded. . The Attorney General of the United States has replied to Alexander II. Stephens' peti tion for the pardon of all the'Ku Ivlnx con fined m tho Albany penitentiary. The At torney General denies the allegations of Mr. Stephens that the convictions of 3 the Kb Kiux was . illegal and that their pardon would be an act of justice' and friendliness towards the Sooth, ; and says the pardon of an or them would have no significance vie ted of violating other statutes. ' The State 'Department at Washington has sent to the Treasury Department copies of recent dispatches from our consuls at Peru and Chili, announcing that the small pox is prevailing in epidemic form, and that the deaths at Santiago, with population of two hundred and fifty thousand, are five hundred weekly. Collectors pf customs are therefore instructed to caution the 'health officers of all ports to establish without de lay such quarantine regulations as may be necessary to protect the people of the United States from being further afflicted with the disease is Isevmty-tixne to the county. The great West, which i3 compara-t tively white, gives the gratifying re sult of a'!RepubIican gain' oT ninety to the county, over the Democratic in crease. , Will the contestors please tell n & 5 riAkliAn j-v At. Jt. ft A A 11. most complain, the East the Middler the West ? . ; . . i i . 1, : ;,. Senator Hill, of Georgia, declares . ' for Grant. f Hon.r Joshua Hill, United States Sen ator fromGeorgia, who has been claim ed bv the'Greelevites as svmnathiri'np' " m , . - " X O and acting-with them, says that at rio time nas .he; hesitated to express his preference for the re-election of Presi-: 'fhave seeni too much of mankind to con- it Arousing the Kn Kliix. Were the Ku Klux convicts legally cbn victed is the startlinsr caption td a colurianarid'a half article in' ThBal htm would have no ;more. political sent to become the zealous partizan of any etffh Ktcs of yrtbrday. . . : r cance than the pardon oT ,Uiose eon- T nt aeo1. kim.: tu'I .V r.J scl.,., -!? oiaexsiaiuws. , 5 let whoeVer mav be elected PresldenL A SiilJtlifl ' lUvhAwll sonally it will'- likely be of "small conse-: V'iff ?A;1 -AtWrA VAt t,.ti nuenco to me who shall nrove tTiARunrvvsafni I T: vi ' - . ' . of slaveholders can easily aflbrd . to pay their proportion of the tax, but the burden will be exceedingly oppressive on the poor men who never owned a i slave, and especially on the negro,1 who wii oe compelled us it were to buy xxi Liiia, liiiij uiiy iuu negro will be called upon for his quota of the tax levied upon the people.to raise, the enormous sum oi four, hundred million dollars ' to 'pay1' his owners for his freedom .The Southern soldiers who fought four years to establish the inde pendence of the Confederacy, thousands vyuum are now wiuiout legs auu arms, will be called upon to duplicate tlieir service as soldiers with their quota of tax to compensate slaveholders, for the loss of their property I ;The Nation al Debt will be increased four hundred million . dollars : the reduction , under Grant at the rate of one hundred mil lions per annum will cease ; and the interest on the Debt will be increased twenty millions yearlyl ; w - , This is , nbt an enticing picture to overtaxed people r it is a question that comes, to. the . surface along, with Mr Greeley's i candidature . for President:' and f . . elected,; willthet peseiit .; itself wl VHAOAV7AA. Ai h AAAClll'A it V Ul VyUXILlltTV) quence to me who shall prove the successful. J ,rity7yl andwltto'nt expectation of anv - personal "f lsP?tJ Y - interrupt nisinno- 4W4. uruM,vV; I? - Al Aj At4 AA4 AA j, . " T . w" w3 h ;theiaw vbooks.i by citing A? made up of .Greeleyites, they may rat tiilirwWf iad 4Vmv wrrt Vn'. nnss f a . bill . em'hnrlvi'nop .TV.f i rJrtxoliitrJc pass i a , bill embodying Mr 'Greeley's proposition ! rlf they should do so, does any sane man believe President Gree ley would veto that- bill ? We do not. This is a serious question : and if the advantage from the result, from all I know cent amu36ment," but if his purpose be or the respective candidates and tho condi- arouse amci .re-awaKen ine JK.ii.iUOX country and the. best interests of my. family and gentlemen" that W public opinion people want to keep it out of Congress,1 must be respeced,4',l'!i- t;'-';.'': they shouldnotfail to vote 'against The New Work Tribune has disposed Greeley. V , , 01 the question Tne JSews now attempts impel hie (to the support of Gen. Grant' Southern, women nursed bv "blacks filled w.itti animal passion imbibe it from their nurses, and on arriving at the age of puberty immediately manifest a desire to giatify sensuality." Xew York Tribune. This. infamous and slanderous par agraph1 was brought to light by Col. Blanton Duncan at the Baltimore Con-, vention n July last. Since that. time it ha3 been asserted that it appeared in a pamphlet entitled "Miscegnation," published some years ago. The pam plet has been thoroughly examined by Mr. James Lyon, and two other Vir ginia 'gentlemen, who certify under oath, that no such paragraph can bo found; in; the pamphlet. The Tribune has not denied that it appeared in that paper as editorial and as theproduc tion of Uorace Greeley. If the quota tion did-not appear in that paper, it should "be so stated. If it did, no man who lias any respect for the noble wo men of the South, can think of voting for Greeley. Will The Tribune tell the 1 THE NEWS. 1 Kight hundred and eight Communists condemned to transportation embarked at Krest, on the 18th, for new Caledonia. Thoy are setting up a statute of the late Chief Justice Taney of Dred S-ott fame in front of the State House at Annapolis. ! King Amadeus, in his speech at the open ing of the Spanish Cortes, declared that uba must be subdued at whatever cost. . Auditor Graham, of New Orleurns, has Iwoii pardoned by the Governor of Louis iana for contempt of the Eighth District Court and released from prison. Tho O'Conor and Adams .demwnu-y or Ohio havo called a State Convention to meet at Columbus, October 2nd, for the purpose of nominating an electoral ticket. . ' t - m wi ucuum vy ueuerai opuiner, United States Treasurer, that when a muti- latedtioto has live-eighths of the oritrinsl left ltvtba.U,berel6emoI as Its full face no touowing are tho customs receipts for me week: ending September 7 r New York, $3,52,313 Boston, SG2.301 ' Baltimore, 165,749 - It Is reported that Princess Beatrice, the fifth and only unmarried daughter of Queen Victoria, has been betrothed to the Marquis of StatTord. The Brinccfs is now in her 10th year, and tho Marquis in his J2d. : Congressman D. M . Du Bose, of Georgia, refuses to accept the Democratic nomination for re-election to Congress, if that meana support of Greeley, whom lie opposes. He will accept a Democratic nomination pure and simple. ' Charles Sumner arrived at Liverpool on Saturday. Soon after landing he visited tho American Hub, where he received the first information1 of his nomination for Gover nor of Massachusetts. He announced that he would positively decline the nomination. A fresh Carlist rising is apprehended in .Spain, and 11 Is said that Generals Cathelin rau and TIndale, the latter having served under. Maximilian in Mexico, are to meet at Jiayonne, f ranco, to perfect arrangements lor tue. movement. ; A defalcation has been dijcoveietl in the Sub-Treasury in New Yprkamounting to over $100,1)00, and the defaulter is said to be James I. Johnson, who h id charge of the xtamp department, and has disappeared. DavU''lyun, a notorious countert'eitcr.pf -j jvu. oKAiiuui-, anu miiu accoinpiiccs, with ail their dies, tools, galvanic buttery; chemicals, furna-es, and a quantity of man ufactured coin, have just been captured by i no unitoti ycatos authorities. ... . nie latest advices from Peru and Chill i represent the ravagtHiof the small-pox in tho twd republics!, to be fearful, tho deaths leing200 weekly a Santiago, out of apopu-. i lanon oi o,uw, anu oW weekly at Valpa raiso out of a population of 150,000. , Mait. Morgan; thowelj-known arUst of ,fiHi; Julie's, went to visit a friend in Nassau street on Saturday nixht. The lani tor stupidly mistook him for a burglar and arrcstodhim. Ho was taken to the lieek man street station house and held until Sun-; d;iy morning.'(when he was discharged. Senator Wilson will . deliver eleven speeches In Pennsylvania, and then speak In Cleveland, Cincinnati, , and one other phico not yet nxined 'in Ohio From Ohio he goes to Etansville ; from Indiana to St. Louist, thence to Omaha, and thence to take lart iu the Illinois campaign. , Ut '. r - - " I ine; investigation tnto the alleged nrar dorouf assaults upon patients at Waixl's Is- land 'Uniane "Asylum, New York citv, Is iid to develop, the existence of terrible abuscHin the Tntitutlon.' and the perpetra- tion of gross acts' of cruelty upon the part of me Keeper to wan l the insane umier ins charge. ; ' .j.; Vv . ' Increasing apprehensiou prevail in Ehg ' land respecting the threatened failure of tho potato crop, both "In that country and in Ireland. I At the suggestion of "Prinio Min ister Gladstone, scientific men, in ylew of i he threatened potato famine, give publicly to a method for utilizing the diseased lu-! Lers. .,'.- . ( ' " Th German Goverment has issued a ee- ond cirt-Dlar in still more threatening terms than the orieiual one Rrainst fnii?niiiLs. who, l declares, will be treated as outlaws,' over whom pecial surveillance and. super vision, has been Instituted. Despite the measures of. ;the government, emigration from Germany has lcou'Vtnly slightly af ected:', " The straight-out Democrats of' Indiana, met in Convention at Indianapolis on the 19th. About one hundred Dersons1 were present. Resolutions were adopted indors ing the Louisyille nominations and irecom mendingthem to the Democracy of Indiana. The following nominations were made : For Governor, A. P. Edgerton ; Lieutenant Governor, Green Deerbin; Secretary of State, Alfred Parsons; Auditor, Otto Boet teacher ; Attorney. General, Thomas ;,Bren ham : Treasurer, D. It. Mc'Bride : Consrress- men at large, Major W. C. Morean and Dr. W. F. Sherrod. Presidential electors were also nominated. A full State Central Com mittee was then appointed, and the conven tion adjourn ed-. j Tho Grand Lodge of the Order of Odd Fellows met in Baltimore on Tuesday last, tho 18th. Grand Treasurer Vansant sub mitted his annual report, showing that his entire receipts have been 71,427.45, and total disbursements 43,728.42, leaving a balance in the treasurer's hands of $22,699.- 03. Po grand lodg manic Europe. elected for the ensuing two years : .Right Worthy Deputy Grand Sire C. A. Logan, of Kansas, was elected. M. W. G. S., and Representative :.W. J Durham,' of Ken- tucKy, it. .w. Deputy G. S.; James L. .titions were received for charters for lur. V.riey V "! ine J:noun lodges in BriUsh Columbia and Ger- PUP11C that, no sucii paragraph ever ap- The following officers were P1 u umt paper; or will it De si lent, and thereby acknowledge that Mr. Greeley is the author of a wanton libel .upon the fair daughters of the Sun ny South ? The " Work " article" was bad enough, but the paragraph,1 which Ruiy, oivMarylani was re-elected R. ' -Y""' v "' 'Wmcn to re-open, itnd 'Horace Greeley, whose name flies tor .the mast-head of The Kews. answels, ; "Nobody can say that tiese trials -have not been fairly con ducted." ;7- rr i . . .;. Then artiaes such as ,The News has been presenfing for the past few days can have bul one effect to awaken the Ku Klux lawlessness, and put the Klans agai Greeley as an Oppressor. Horace ureeiey was a prime movei in -the piissage of the Ku Klux laws. Dayafter day he hung around the halls of Congress, urging the passage of a se verer measure against the South uali;thb';icmdcriitic: Party'' Coin- bly attacli to him. ; nut I liiiovi' also mit Political Suicide?; i ! that names must lose thoir latency as r n,K ,r . ' : - intelligertco shall be diffusecl mpro and FromTheN. Y. World J r ; m. QrQ Widely, ' I.know that to bo truly .t'TllO life Of a Political nartv is its xrtrtMir. fa rf mnro Imnrirrnnc I'thnn s: t i -ixri -i. f - . -- i .i -Tw--'"-- ... , . jures these, or consents to. subordinate' nected .ivith the name. Of that De them to views of temporary expedien- niocracy which labors to protect tho fr7,10.?0010,8?0113 or plunder; feeble and uplift the . fallen I wil! cn lt forfeits its self-respect, and ceases to deavor not to be , wholly desti lu to, be respectable. . For what are political while of that which claims a monoi o parties organized ? either for the ?o.r- iy 0f office and 'honors ' as the due re did purpose of gaining the emoluments &rd of its devotion to equality I am ofothce-forsome of their members (a content to be adjudged lacking. : Of base and despicable - motive),- or as -a that Dembcracy'whlcn robs tho cffc'mi of earrymg oUt principles tho't nate Mexican of half his broad do to,be conducive to the public welfare: mains, and regards with a covetous eve rolitics is the most degrading and con- the ias't 0f declining Spain's valuable temptlble. or ' on tho nthpr hnnrl. thp ,kinh nns Jfa 52; fc m electing, of human he nk Gf the abject and powerless pursuits, according? &x thf ahp nr the - - u rf. ii, o..:. otiier or these ends is the predominant v ,t unn t hnmoi n.i desolate Indianmay, (t be written on consideration. than even Congress was willing , to adopt, Mr. Greeley, occupied oneof the rooms auioimnsr the Senate chamber. in morion . This fpll anirif J and when not nersonallv annealinfT tn I - . I r-4 I I -mm, m - is stronger in JNorth Carolina to-day senators, ne was writing editorials lor tnan ic nas ver oeen at any previous xne urioune, oy teiegrapn, to manuiac- period within the history of the Klan. ture a public sentiment that should retary, and Joshua Vansant, of Maryland. was re-elected R. W. W. Grand Treasurer. An application of 39 colored citizens of Ohio was introduced, praying that they bo al lowed to organize a lodge under the juris diction otho Independent Order. After a warm and protracted debate, in which many leading representatives took part, the entire subject was laid on tho table. in the fivfis nf fho iwinlo an A A rU. i"114 1 him from the State, but Greeley is to be elected. President b.ecause he is the author of a slander upon Southern wo men as black as Hell itself. and it only wants the encouragement The Neics k now giving it to again manifest it elf. We had supposed that they could hardly possess the audacity to re-commence their operations in this campaign, out under the influence of such a respectable organ as T7ie Daily Netcs we shkl not be surprised to hear that the Nofth Carolina Ku Klux are waging their peculiar war-fare in this Presidential campaign. The election of Greeley and Brown, we had thono"hf. was a r va.ti cv 1 ns fbo signal -for rtheir -re-organization, but people of the South did not want, and looking to the elections , in Pennsylva- which the. white people abhorred. . Be- and having, as they profess, hope of his influence, on Congress in i behalf of dri ve Congress to the passage of theKu Klux bill. Accomplishing his niission to Con gress, Mr. Greeley returned to New York, leaving the President to execute the laws he found on the statute book ; which, if not "strong enough," Mr. Greeley hoped would be made " strong er and stronger." We next hear of Dr. Greeley, in con junction with Senator Sumner, trying to force Congress to the passage of a pretended Civil Rights bill the colored - . 1 . r fflX was written twenty ' years ago ; ' but it SJmiSS6?1 ara5 IL,beri1 beennoyear sinco; in Avhich Mr. Greo' SfoSS'J??!?1! in BUf??: lW has not a. hundred ; times reiterated proportions as he miffht think piviwii- i mi. u ... ar r .u. i- i intj saiuu views iu u.uc, urwutic. i ent t DUX Of What VA Inn nro nfflnoa nnis. I T .. - i a At m .L.'-j u : "jflZ" . "r.,"."vr. presses jxr. vreeiey-a jong-seuiea con .tSLS f,PnncipIePf victions respecting 'tho fundamental nnnrif S w u difietences between him and the Dcni country tnere: is no ono ifrwppri whom J T dTcmtnhrV'l- ocraxic, party.- 110 rejects .ana -scorns j v w . w mj4 j itj . i wiue anu ueep aguiras Decween iiran its life-lonsr assailaht Horacfi Greelfii ine ainei m ,a . : ."' " n iv. TU.."". w tatce tma. man-vvho. has never re SFSXfnTr P011 1,6 expediency nounced, nor even softened, these opln- r2S ?Sl him, does ?0fc at- al -re' to. lis standard-bearer i The roa- semble the expediency of nominating sons for aU(-lA course ouo-ht fo he vi-rv Chief Justice Chase in lfifwS or tho pv. !?sJ.?,.??!rnna .PU?A'1?. ,c..x pediencyofnominatingCharlFrans t C K'Sffli" t?Ue Ch a? ?tfiff iTaffloning i t" p -inal Democrat : it was notnn nentraliz- si, i s j n. . 7 n . ... . -y j . r : ; uiuna wuu luuorsiiig its . must -viinoiic fSfhSr ? iA fKC?,eS' hvt; St?t0: opponent, theDemocratic party would f Kfif Ct tUie enlisted a-aapst get such a share of the Federal oflla tne pretensions. of. .the- Sniirheriv kIa vrv ! i -- : i a , , -r.i - - r.r., x '- as its liie-iontr oDDoneut miurnt ctiotKo tnewnoie.AJemocraric pmiosoniiv : no a5persc5 the party as. a"" nucleus, wjiicli , difference does not retote totaereK "t'hTsca S drf ffiSi holders. He maintained that the States were entitled to a voice as to the con ditions under which they were boxmd to surrender fugitive slaves, and that the Federal Government had no right to thrust slavery into the Territories in opposition to the local will. Charles to bcstoW in recognition of .Deihocra lie votes... . ; ' ;. ' ' ' But supposing Mr. Greeley should not be elected what then ? Why, not only would the expected oflloes bo losi, but the Democratic party would have sunic ltseir so ucepiy in public con -cfnr.ia A,io.. . r n-jseir so ucepiy in puo.nc con- w?a1h1 )VF f?f :cTV"t0 tempt that It could never l.e revive. I. VrSw1 fV,ceJ What would' become of. the Itepubli- Zs tV:: .v IZll V1V"V I v."" r", .can- party ir it should rights Democrat, has never, that we are aware of, impugned or questioned the ' reserved rights of the States. ;But Mr. Greelev has been, thronn-honf- hi .,. ,.! " v ; , I iu common wiia inu im L""lrTWin acni, outer oppo- beyond the single fact that i"uA.u "nuituiuu pnuosopj y oi universal amnesty? B u u sJiiiuuLTHin' DMrr.v. ne nns nor, nn. j , iu. j. j 1 . i a-" i , inuuur is in 'leiuibn m ;i low iiiou ly opposed its particular measures but sand elderly Southern men from dia "". ' "B i1"! Wi W11V-" bility to hold office, in comparison logical COnseauenr.es. Tn this resneet Mr. Greelev has been entirelv mnsist- ent, and he has never given any symp tom of a change of views. Not todo mm any injustice, we will permit him A . 1 1 1 1 t . rifn Alexander II. Stephens or ltobert Toombs as its candidate for President ? G reeley a a Democratic candidate is not a whit lerw self-stulifying. What has Mr. Greeley in common with the Democratic parly ho favors amnesty? But how trivial 2r, a rKIans A . 11113 C an The news from Maine improves Svith time. The oflicial vote is Perham 7ll- 821, Kimball 54,742. Perham's major ity 17,0S2. A gain of 6,441 over the vote of 1871. The total vote is 126.56G i lammany has left the tax payers " of I New York an annual souvenir of a very touching, character. The amount to be raised by taxation in that city,for tho pres ent year is S30.427.523. which is coual to two cents and nine mills on the dollar of the as sessed valuation of property." Chicago Times. . Since Governor Warmoth , of Louis iana, has cast in his lot with the Gree- leyiles, he is considered by them no longer a carpet-bagger and thief, but a very proper ; man, whose adhesion to the moral-reform-party is the result of principle. -. . . iung to w asmngton Uity, and place it terms, but we submit to The News arid in power by electing Greeley V Presi- its friends that it is rangingitself on the . .u ."euVDtoIiiew x orKUity was side of lawlessness, against its candi- increased over one hundred millions of date for President; and its utteran aoicars py tne Tammany King. This fully justify our construction, and sat burden is now upon the neonle of the isfip.-i the neofile of KrtHii'fhiin - . ' t I - v 1 W JL VAA J A A 11U VA AlATA fir.V And frtV Viot un!'n I 1 m"i. At - ' Thousand nf rWmrvrfa anrl T?orttK i t a m- . . l . . - " l . v.u... -.ASAS I niui VHJHI lnprpacan Of- a Klnirl I iim I f-V. L. T" I IT 1 , icans who favored the Liberal move- rata iinrW tho orir?tofMj lu r . ment ftt l he nem nnlno nnrl rohn of flfof I rn -r ....... . I ; 1 -'5t"rt tt aakj cw uaov i;iiiiinnv r irri i oa ann this w ivim i x . supported Greele, after watching the York. navs nftonnno m . t ... A r conduct of the r-immirn flnri fhf VT- T il. '7 ' --iie iNon-iaveliolclers to he V-i l- 9?lTiP Is?' find5atthe addition to this, there. is the State and 'Taxed to Pay for Slaves I whole thing is in the interest of Grant's eonntv tax. Th w.., J Aaxctl lo; Aaj Mavesr dismissed office holders and thieves, hanHVe . rnTiV; ? and so they cannot stand it. Greeley nf tr Horace Greeley .as the basis of peace, metropolis. The head of the Ring who robbed. New ork is Wnii' M. Tweed. At onej time he was Greeley's parser. TaxS ihave rapidly decreased under Grant's administration ; they will get less and less every, year; but elect Greeley and restore the Tammany fiadjCLreelevi and Sumnfei declarirter in paign. - - ;javor or the Ku Klux, denouncing. the But certain it is that tlie election of President for? executing laws whosa Greeley in November would unloose passage they mainly .procured;; and co these dogs, of .war, and the tale of woe operating with a party of; gentlemen in North Carolina and the South would who insist that one of their leading ob repeat itself through the columns of jects is the disfranchisement of the ne TJie Tribune in this language of Mr. gfo by revolutionary means, and for Greeley t " The black voters, and fill I practically setting all the Ku Klux or- "wounded and hombly persecuted, be- We beg that this people may be 'cause they were usually Republicans, spared further strife, war and Wood land their numbers jeoparded the shed. We have had revolution enough-; "Democratic ascendancy in the State!" war enough ; Ku Klux enough: and we reierto tnis matter, thus, in no we have heard enough of Heennsfme. These; .matters should remain with the great questions which pene trate to tne very roots anu fundamen tal structure of our Government! Mr. Greeley was a zealot for the Ku Klux legislation ; has he renounced hlsopin- to express fifa tofil ta;: AlJ1?? supncuie -. " ;,,r a ' ' ' r . uityoiica eitciion law , wm ne recom- cratlC ideas Of overninent in ms-rm-n h i i.'.x t in, uitjuu me rupeai oi -tnat lmamous law PungenC language: if he is elected President? What meas- , i i-aSfiS JraCtlCay50i ure tbere passed by tho radical Con- llticsofour time nnn eminrrv a rAiiieal I , m... ri... . divereitv of Sfintimnt rnfin VS ? wiMm.ine past nvoycars, against approprate sphere ,of eonml me one nana repuDiican government 18 Deen- tthp vrhpmpnt plnmninn ' ' vv resrarded as the natiiml Friend and bpa-I 2?-. i;1.? .venement cuampion . we vant of the people, whose piop fane-1 SeBh .Scbnncnou" ; tonj3to ighten..theirbardeLttoIn- SMSK.'SSS ; uuvft, Aiii J lylllvjOOa . VH LliniiLHI . 1HIV -A t m ' " ernment, Is VecrArdeH with fnoi;;:, 1D ne -on? question Or amnc ernment is regarded with jealousy and distrust, as an enemv tn he w-Atehed an evil to be restricted within the nar rowest limits. The mottoes of this lat ter school are significant : " The best government is that which' governs least," Laissez faire ("Let us, alone"), etc., etc. Now, these- maxims seem to me unwisely transferred from govern ments directed by -despots to govern ments controlled bv and existing for the people. They are nowhere recog- auestion nf amnestv. wlmt ' subject Is there on which 'Mr. Greelev ' and- the.1 Democrat ie nartv nre riof- in sharp and violent collision ? But so far as aninesty cah be accomplished by Executive action, President Johnson's proclamations leave nothing to bo done. The Presidential power is already ex---hausted.j We, wish somebody would tell us what the Democratic party ' would gain besides a share of tho Fed- era! Offices bv indorsing Mr. HreeTev . In ihd face of this record the people are asKed to transplant the New York unfriendly spirit nor in disrespectful tion, is weaker by, thousands, than at Balti more.-. Grant is stronger. to-day before the American people than ever before. He will get stronger and stronger until tho day of election. , was the following : -j 14 Fourth. The Union to Dav four hundred . M. f settled and be buried out of sight. If Ku KlUxing has stopped the. Ku Klux law is a dead letter, c Let us hope, and thankful, that the dread era has sed, and by re-electing Grant make ossible to revive it. From . the very nature of things the Reconstruction measures and Kii Klux laws ha ve borne hea'vily upwi sOnae, if not an, tne people o the South, and we trust that they may never again be called upon to.pass under a similar dis perisation. We trust they have made up their minds; to recognize existing facts,and, casting aside their prejudices,1 resol ved to support and sustain in power nized bv the Democraev of Fiirnw Mna 11 ne snould' Ue defeated ! after rc Sh plainly SSeffi Wl.onl.l tution of governments more pervasive tne democratic party; 7 and- efficient than! the world has yet ' .. 'r - , . ' known. Free education, insurance by CltKIITMOBlTIKUSLAK DICICS but a part of the ideas of like tendency,1 wiiiun tue European uemocracy sranus ready to realize whenever it shall have the power. Its policy is constructive, creative, and beneficent, while that of our self-styled " defiiocracy '.' is repul sive, chillihsr. nugatory a bundle nf I negations, restrictions and abjurations. jan - mere De a rational doubt as to which of these is the true democracy ? v no uoea not see tnat ine runaamental Letter from Hon. Onks AinVs : t'rom tho Boston Jeunial.) ' ' ; ' To the People of the Second Confrressioyi- al District: n million doliarsin five nornf. Ttnif Rfata those who, having carried the govern c-vT- fntliA Info .,1.. Ci..' 1 1 J I monr CllPPOCOfn ltTS ltu i - ni?jfnKTi :-, I ;i t-t- . ' . . uuwoiui uu"3 luvviiauioiHia-, I it. . iou ana x preicr tne society ana. J udge Merrimon's majority for Governor would havo been over ten thousand if the persons claiming to be .Conservatives had turned out on the day of election. Raleigh Acws. i; i . This is refreshingly cool in the face of your purpose to "contest the election. We thought your, com plaint was that Uald weirs friends voted too much. Now vou sav Merrimon's friends did not vote ;ehough. There is no way of satisfying these Greeley people. They allow their ' elections to go by default. and then propose to contest. Where's the Greeley and Brown club ? 1 s stock tothe la'te, 'slave (States,' .'loyal and se cession alike, to be i apportioned pro raiai sion, thus far can arid will give them according to their slave population respect- that peace, protection, aid, and encour-J ively.by the census of .i860, in compensa- oWmfl,,t oo'An hoc. BA t i' tion for the losses of their loyal citizens by LT and nAfienfl if W r Tie Irish revolt in the Democratic ranks is one of . the most noticeable fea tures of local mid State politics. It is day, and threatens to growing every -i'MrDoolittle, of Wisconsin, the Ex- end in the withdrawal of the Irish vote senatorial cotton dealer we all know him-says Congress must review the - ... - - " . . V AAA A llti LHUiJ. I f : i - ' - - . . i I .A1 T i x r a i a ui lvwuusirucuuu uuu limit, re L it -i i . . .... . ' It is one of the healthy signs of the YorfPr Ateconstruction and limit, re times. The Irish have been too Ions sfr-FrJbridge and take away the bal j ipt irom tne negroes. .. . , l 5 1 I A times. The Irish have been too long the servants of the Democratic party to do its .bidding and el.ect its candi dates. They have rendered such im plicit obedience- to( the party dictates that they have come to be regarded as permanent attachments of the concern. whom it was impossible to insult to the . point of severanCet ' They have been treated with contempt everywhere in the Democratic party within , the past few'years;. although It is a Well known fact that without them there would Have been, no 'Democratic party in" this countfvvsince; 18C0'.v"Thev have scarcely any representation in Congress or in the btate Legislatures. f liocbnstfuction, With all matters per- tairiing thereto, including the enfran- chii lement of the neerro. has heeri set tleci, though contrary to the wishes and opinions of the majority of the white JtFv ine ouutii, mu w ruer oi mis included, and having passed into histo- ry; as tin accomplished fact, the will of the: American people is that it shall re main undisturbed. , s . . ... " - j . j This , great ", Demo-Greeley "party no4 supporting' Mr. Greeley professed at Cincinnati and Baltimore to have adppted the pplicy of Reconstruction py declaring the matter settlel beyond v' Ay lllA lWA y native and loreign-born, informed and ignorant. Doubtless the great mas.s,"6f whatever party, ! sincerely desire the public welfare ; 'doubtless rogues and . . .my. .voiun .Tmg . .aLuiuauy I T : I the abolition of slaverv." and taies will increase, the reduction This proposition was made in July, of the Rational Debt will decrease, and 18W i the battle of Gettysburg had that debt will stow lamer and laraer been fought and won : Vicksburcr had dnrin Mr, Orer.ey'.,..tern, Peop.e falleu;.the coUapse of the ConMoracy. ""?VZ who dtelre-a steady reduction of the Was as certain as anythlns in tho future : " .- . v tWi-Lit SnrH nti.7i;.,,i 7. 5 of taxes, could be ; and in nine months Lee sur- TZ Tr.11 nd eacir composed of rich rendered at Appomattox. Mr. Greeley i 111 "sv V?" ' T ' has not snirl - h wnnlrl v.fn n WIT oil latteF WaS Called to WOrk Order OUt of thorizing the Secretary of the U. S. 1 f' 1X11(3 brin oa of Solution; Treasury to. pay slaveholders four lain- "SAC'S1 . V . ' in; iibertineg are be found in tlxe ranks dred million dollars in compensation for ! "" -,CUJy me ot each of the great parties. But point the loss:6f slave property. Is this the I f' go?d order and brotherhood of wherever you please to an election dis- secret of his popularity at the South.?- j KpWpe; afd ?ho tt? gTvenTn STrtT If Mr. Greeley could make such a prop- uryem mxe been,taught to hate baneherv and vice, whose voters suh- osition when the Confederacy was in j ana rev"e' in-another year reverr sist mainly by keeping policj'-offices, the throes of dissolution, what would prevent him from agreeing to it, if the proposition had the sanction of the Congress ? . If it was right in July, ; 1864, that those who lost slave proper tyTfehould be compensated for the loss and ought to be paid !' ' Fel6w-Citizens : Charges of a sc- - 7 ' . , i aa i:luua ciiarauter, in reierence to tne ui.s- ideas of. our party democracy are as charge of my trust as your RerKn radicalJy hostile to common. -Aehnnla o,. t " Z.aV, ; , r and to tax-sustained common roads, a Ne YorkAun toa protective tariff, a national bank,- Kd. ISm ! to afSnd nou' ' ?fvnSah.J"Pme,1lpr ??.r wh0 kow me so well and Lve bono": Kwii???9r,-1i lt1dafS-.but"-A1- ed me so long with a eeat in Congress, - lots Principles lead ? I trust it is not necessary to refute such 'o. There is ahotherrjointon whieh T ,Amn.va . tti . ' . j ,.., i , a- 1 r : rr, """uiuun litiiiico. ai x aiuuu were crm- S foiSk franW Vand 1 yu "ot- cerned I could not, for tho first time in . to take offense at but earnestly ponder my life, appear in public print to vin- juicaio myseii agamsi ioui anu wickctl . : slander; but these charges involve the good-name and integrity of some of the best men in the nation, v -1 The charges referred to, made against me and some of my associates in Con gress, with others equally false against the company, were first made by Henry AAVVVJUI 111 b Hill Vj 211'iLIIinit I 1 If counsel of. those who walk, so faii as we may judge, in tho; ways of virtue, to that of the reckless, ostentatious ser vitors of vice. You, I am confident, will not stigmatize this preference as aristocratic, nor seek to confound pov erty with vice, ih the paltry hope of making capital out of the natural in- xgnatiou of the former. The great Credit Mobilier, in the State ofPenii-" e.ltv Of m V rpsirienre-ifc! mei hone n f.-tt,.!. i j it . . debt,- and a steady decrease of taxes, should work and vote for Grant. 1 : , ? , ! ! - ; . I6olittle and the Enquirers. UheiJarboro Enquirer proposes to drive the negroes out of the "country Tfy liichmond Enquirer -says that Gree- icjf uicu cictit-u jrieaiutjui, will UI1UO the work of Reconstruction, and with the . aid of the ( Army and Navy deprive ; n". ' a -a ' " : . ' - . we nugruca .oi ine ngni xo vote As for Horace Greeley, he can claim: no merit in the eyes, or favors at the hands of the Southern people, standing as he did their ;ferocious enemy when city of my residence's perhaps, a fair svlvania. for tho'Purnose of ohtafnim w v . i uiiiiicv -wiuiisriuiiir l n im inn mmnonv in numbers, J as every oneof the oflicers and stock- hi nnI I 1 1 l. .if a i noiuers uenevea men ana now; All the executive officers of. the com pany and several of its largest stock holders, I. including myself, have pii swered in said suit long since under oath, that the charges were entirely false, that not u single share of the stock of that company was ever given to any member of Congress, directly or indirectly, by me or any one else-to i i ence and worship him; for the Southern gambling-houses, grog-shops, and dark people have no better friend than Pres- er dens of infamy, and that district will iHnH nmnf ' t . , he found at' nearlv or onite -everv e!ee- my knowledge. ? I now reiterate ident Grant. tion giving a large majority for that which - styles itself the " democratic 'K The fact that Mr. Greeley is a candi date for' the .Presidency, brings this question to the front. Taken in its true sense,' the proposition, if carried out, will tax everybody to pay those who owned slaves for the loss of their prop erty.. In round numbers there are for ty millions of inhabitants in the United States ; about one eighth , of this num ber formerly owned slaves.- , Mr. Grdo- ey proposes to tax thirtyrfive millions of people t who 'never; owned a slave, to pay five million of people four hundred million of '.dollars jar the loss' of four millions'iof slaves.'; The five million Slandering the Ministry. , - " The tool and lackey of Filkins,in The Albany N: Y. Argus, writing up the Summer campaign, thus makes a cler gyman of North Carolina defend and encourage theKu Klux: by justifying spirits active partisans of that jsaufn their outrapw ' " "aemocracy: What is the instinct, T outra?es ; - ? the sympathetic chord, which attaches : A Pressbvterian cleiirvman. of - fri-mit in- f them ;r tinifrTmlt n this noi-fv "wnil , - 0f 1 ' ' CJ . ; j I w - My W V .7 JLA.A fjf ri .1 T JH von rxinsinerr . i - - tvles nartv. Thus the " Fi ve Points ia ihn most VdemocTatlc,,' district of our city ; " The Hook ' . followa not very far be- nma ie, ana so on.;i xaKe an tnenaunts of -debauchery ixi the land, ! and you will find nine-tenths of their master spirits active partisans of that -'same telligence, said v.; " I, .'am aware that gross abuses have been practiced on all sides, but I affirm that the Ku Klux organization has done much' to keep down that lawless ele ment that made it dangerous to life here; not that I would justify any lynch law, but the cases are rare where the. victims did not deserve all they got and more too." t j ; : Is1 it any 'wonder' that we are torn with strife : thus . slandered,' arid the evil-disposett encouraged to crime and lawlessness? you consider ? "Democracy is, I know .full Well, a word of power, I know that it has a . 1 f At m ... - cnarm ior tne nopeiui, the generous, the lowly, and the aspiring, as well as for many darker spirits. I know that he who aspires to influence, nffiee Anri honors, rather, than to usefulness, and an approving conscience, will naturally be led to enlist under its banner, often drugging his moral sense ? with ' the sophistrv that he" who woiihl Ur 'mi mast put himself In positiorvwhere now reiterate and reafll rm t h . 1 statement, with the further declaration : f that I never crave a share of. shVfc- nr . that or any other company, directly or i indirectly, to any member of Congre. a ne sworn answers oi myself and thfs other gentlemen, made and filed in tko same suit, lying sideby sido; Ih tho. same record, could have been publish ed with the ' charges had it suited the 1 political purposes of The Nejc York Mm; I am willing to place the s Worn dee-: larations of any one of these liidivldu'-J als, of the highest' character- and reiui- -tation, against -the ' affidavits of Mr. McCoomb, wherever he is weUknovnv with no fear. of ah adverse lopiiuon on the jnteeritvi of anv one of 'them n ' against him. u.-i;. 'i a ;,: v , 2 , Ihe Ust.of. names given by MpCoomb, ; as. indorsed ont my letter, and published, were, written i bv . himself, as he stated , wnenmnaer oathi at . the hearing in . PennSVlvania.i . Tie . hnrl nn Aiithorifv from me for makimr anv -such state-. . - Perhaps I ouglit to. add that all tho legislation ever asked for In aid of the construction of tho Pacific railroad was ' -J0 W fwl . . m W ' k 1 . a A . II ' . ' IaA. 1 1 wrv1 , t t

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