\. R(7publ'Cav> c laVa^^v - •^■■H- Class E &7 4^ SHALL CAPITAL OWN LABOR? THE fl[B[[ OiOCii:! Tlt[ IMt M W PM. SEYMOUR aud BLAIR'S lYOMIMTIOiY MEAA'S REVOLUTION. REPUDIATION AND SLAVERY! PUBLISHED BY THE UNION REPUBLICAN CONGRESSIONAL COMMITTEE, V/ASH!NGTOT. ff.'C/ Keep our Designs Secret till after Election! 5;^^PrJVA TE AD VICES FROM UR MOS T S TRENUO US FRIENDS Afr THE NORTHREQUEST THAT WE SHOULD PROTEST AGAINST THE IMPRUDENT EXPRESSIONS THAT HAVE ESCAPED SOME SOUTHERN SPEAKERS SINCE THE ADJOURNMENT OF THE NA TIONAL DEMOGRA TIC CONVENTION— Charleslon Mercury. Who began the War. " Iivill tell you another fact, ivJiich is enough for. this lime, that t/.s iJie laic tear WAS PRODUCED BY THE DEFEATED DEMOCRATIC PARTY IN 18 GO, SO tve shall never have peace till it is restored to power in 18GS.^>— Ex-United States and ex- Confederate Stales Senator Toombs' speech at Atlanta, Ga., July S, 1S6S. What they begun it for. "The new (Confederate) Constitution has put at rest forever all the agitating questions relating to our jyeculiar institutions — African Slavery — as it exists amongst us, the proper status of the negro in our form of civilization. Tins %VAS TUE IMMEDIATE CAUSE OP THE LATE RUPTURE AND PRESENT REVOLUTION. =:= * * Our new government is founded upon exactly the opposite idea — (the idea ox Mr. Jefferson that 'the cuslavcmcnt of the Afncan teas in violation of the laics of nature, and wrong in principle, socially, morally and politically:) Its foundations arc laid — its corner stone rests ltpon the great truth =^= * ■"■ THAT SLAVERY Subordination to the superior race is iiis {the negro's) natu- ral AND NORMAL CONDITION !" — Confederate Vice-President A. H. Stephens' speech at Savannah, Ga., 3Iarch 21, 18G1. What Justification they had for it. "IVhat right has the North assailed? What interest of the South has been invaded ? What justice has been denied ? Or what claim founded in justice and right has been withheld ? CAN EITHER OF YOU TO-DAY NAME ONE GOVERMENTAL ACT OF WRONG DELIBERATELY AND PUR- POSELY DONE BY THE GOVERNMENT AT WASHINGTON CfF WHICH THE SOUTH HAS A RIGHT TO COMPLAIN ? I challenge the answer While, on the other hand, let me show the facts which now stand as records in the history of our country. "When ice of the Soulh demanded the slave-trade, did they not yield the right for tiuenty years ? When ue asjccd and demanded a three fifths representation in Congress for our slaves, icas it not granted'} Wien we asked and demanded the return of any fugitive from justice, or the return of those persons oioing labor or allegiance, vmsit not incorporated in the Constitution, and again ratified and strengthened in the Fugitive-slave Law of 1850? " But do you reply, that in many instances they bare violated tins compact, and have not been faithful to their obligations ? As individuals and local com- munities, they may have done so ; hut not by the sanction of the government : for that has always been true to Southern interests. "And I must declare here, as I have often done before, and which has been repeated bv the .i^rcatest and Avisest statesmen and patriots in this and other lands, THAT IT IS THE BEST AND FREEST GOYERXMEXT, THE MOST EQUAL IX ITS RIGHTS, THE MOST JUST IX ITS DE- CISIOXS, THE MOST LEXIEXT IX ITS MEASURES, AND THE MOST IXSPIRIXGIX ITS PRIXCIPLE;S TO ELEVATE THE RACE OF MAX, THAT THE SUX OF IIEAYEX EVER 8H0XE UPOX\ " Xow, for you to attempt to ovoihroio such a government as this is the height o/ MADNESS, FOLLY. AND WICKEDNESS, to which I can neither lend my sanction nor my vote." — .1. JL Stephens' address in ihc Georgia Convention, Jan., 1861. Blair on the Democracy. "The Democratic party of the pre38ut day is Democratic in u irae, aad notbiui? else. The old Jeffersou and Jackson prin- ciples have been abandoned. THE MA.N WHO DID NOT ESCA.PE THE ROPE BY THREE II0UR3 IS THE AUTHOR OF ALL TO WHICH THE DEMO- CRA.TIC PA-RTY OF THE PRESENT DAY SUBSCRIBES. It has not one scintilla of true Democracy to animate its carcass." — F. P. Blair. Southern Hatred for Labor. In 183G, in the House of Representatives, Mr. Pickens, of South Carolina, (afterward Governor of that State when, in 18G0, she attempted to secede,) said that there never wa3asociety"!o7iereONECLA.S3 WOULD NOT PRICTICALLY AND SUBSTAN- TIALLY OWN A^fOTHER CLASS IN SOME SHAPE OR FORM) •• " All society settles down into capitalists and laborers. THE FORMER WILL OWN THE LATTER, EITHER COLLECT- IVELY THR.OUGH THE GOVERN- MENT.OR INDIVIDUALLY THROUGH A STATE OF DOMESTIC SERVITUDE, AS EXISTS IN THE SOUTHERN STATES. THE ONLY CONTEST IN THE WORLD IS BETWEEN THE TWO SYSTEMS." Laborers should bo slaves. Kciit, of Soutli Carolina, a Democratic Representative in Congress, and a rebel soldier daring the war, declared " free so- ciety a failur.5." "The ordinanceofGod," he said, "CONDEMNS MANKIND TO LABOR, AND CERTAIN MENIAL OC- CUPATIONS ARE INCOMPATIBLE WITH MENTAL CULTIVATION" Slavery, according to him, produced a su- perior class of genUemen, who were "SUB- STITUTES FOR AN ORDER OF NO- BILITY." Ruffin, of Virginia, author of "The Politi- cal Economy of Slavery," tired the first gun in the recent war, and the last also, for after the surrender of the rebel armies he blew his own brains out with a rebel musket- ball. RUFFIN PROPOSED IN THE BOOK REFERRED TO TO REFORM THE "HIRELING LABOR SOCIETY" OF THE NORTH. HE WANTED TO REDUCE THE LABORING CLASS TO "DOMESTIC BONDAGE." Slavery the basis of Democracy. '■'■Slavery ii the basis of American De- mocracy; for the subordination of an in- ferior race has secured, and always will secure, the equality of the superior race." New York Day Book, January, 1856. "The South maintains that slavery is RIGHT, NATURxVL, and necessary, and docs not depend on dilTerence ot com- plexion. The laws of the slave States jus- tify the holding of ioJutemen in bondage." Richmond Exarainer, 18oG. Filzhugh. author of " Cannibals All, or Who Shall be Masters," said that a negro male slave would "be worth about $800; a while slave, by reason of his harder work- ing nature, would be worth $1,000." He summed uo his s}''stem in these words: "LIBERTY FOIi THE FEW— SLA- VERY IN EVERY FORM FOR THE MASSES." The Democratic newspapers in the South denounced free society as a "monstrous abortion." "Free society, as at present organized, is radically wrong and rotten to the corf>. * * * SLAVEliY IS ^0T ONLY NAT- URAL OP ORIGIN AND RIGHT, BUT IS ESSENTIAL TO REPUBLICAN- ISM." — Xem Orleans Delta, (^Democratic.) "History, both sacred and profane, SHOWS THAT SLAVERY IS NATU- RAL AND NORMAL: that 'the expe- iieiice, the practice, and the history of mankind vindicate shivery * * AS A NATURAL AND CONSERVATIVE IN- STITUTION.' ''—Richmond {Va.) Exam- ■ aminer, {Democratic.) I "SLAVERY IS THE CORNERSTONE OF OUR REPUBLICAN INSTITU- TIONS—THE GREAT PEACEMAKER BETWEEN CAPITAL AND LABOR." LyncJiburg (Fa.) Republican, {Democrat.) i "Master and slave is a relation in society j as necessary as that of parent and child. I * * * The Northern States will have to I introduce it; SLAVERY IS THE NATU- ' RAL AND NORMAL CONDITION OF THE LABORING MAN, WHETHER WHITE OR BLACK. - * * The great evil of Northern free society is, that it is burdened with a servile class of me- clianics and laborers, unfit for self-govern- inent, yet clothed with all (he attributes and powers of citizens." — Charleston {S. C.) ifercuri/, (Democratic.) "Slaveryisamoral, religious, and natural institution. - * * THE LAWS OF ALL THE SOUTHERN STxlTES JUS H- FIED THE HOLDING OF WHITE MEN IN SLAVERY. - * * THE PRINCIPLE OF SLAVERY IS IN IT- SELF RIGHT, AND DOES NOT DE- PEND ON DIFFERENCE OF COM- PLEXION, * - * and that is the doc- trine maintained by the whole Southern y>ves5.'"— Richmond Enquirer, (DemocratiG.) A Glorious Aristocracy. Hammond, of South Carolina, who later in life denounced Northern meclianics as the "mudsills of society," at the beginning of his Democratic career declared, in the same Thirty-Fourth Congress, ' Hhat siaceri/ teas the greatest of all blessings which a land Providence had bestowed tqwn the South'' and its '■'glorious aristocracy/." Governor McDuffie, of South Carolina, declared in the House of Representatives. in 1856, that when the masses stapped out of bondage "they branclicd into four re- curring subdivisions— THE HIRELING THE BEGGAR, THE THIEF. AND THE PROSTITUTE-WHICH HAVE NO GENERAL EXISTENCE UNLESS THERE HAVE BEEN A COMMENCE- MENT OF EMANCIPATION." In less, John C. Calhoun, the Demo- cratic apostle of disunionism, declared that the protection of slavery was a "HIGHER LAW" THAN THE CONSTITUTION AND "THE LAWS OF THE GENERAL GOVERNMENT." Hammond, of South Carolina, declared, that the difference then between the white slave (i. e., our workingmen,) and the negro was that ''the negro is hired for life and well compensated," and the "WHITE SLAVE IS HIRED BY THE DAY, NOT CARED FOR, AND SCANTILY COM- PENSATED." Senator Mason, of Virginia, declared publicly that "the so-called free States" would be more properly styled "the servile States. ' ' Ko Union With the North. The Richmond Dispatch of the 10th of January, 1863, used this language : "We warn the Democrats and Conserva- tives of the North to dismiss from their minds at once- the miserable delusion t/iat the South can ever consent to enter again, upon any terms, the old Union . If the JS'orth will allow us to write the Constitution our- selves, a7id give us every guarantee we would ash, we toould sooner be under the govern- ment of England or France tJtan zcnder a Union with 7»en who have shown that they cannot act in good failh, and are the most barbarous and inhuman, as loell as the most treacherous, of mankind." Governor Z'jbulon B. Vance, of North Carolina, made an elaborate speech at Wilkesboro', in tliat State, in the fall of 1864, in which he declared that — " There teas no more possibilily of recon- structing the old Unio7i, and reconstructing things as they were four years ago, than exists for you to gather up the scattered bones of your sons who have fallen in this struggle from one end of tbe country to the other, reclothe them with flesh, (ill their veins with the blood they hive so generously shed, &c." What they said during the War. On the 17th of August following. Robert Toombs, of Georgia, said, in a letter dated Washington, Georgia: "I canconceive of no extremity to which my country could be reduced IN WHICH I WOULD, FOR A SINGLE MOMENT. ENTERTAIN AMY PROPOSITION FOR ANY UNION WITH THE NORTH ON ANY TERMS WHATEVEU. When all else is lost, I propose to unite with the thousands of my own countrymen WHO HAVE FOUND IIONOrtABLE DEATHS, IP Nor GRAVES, ON THE BAl'TLE FIELD." In January, 186:3, Jcfil-rson Davis said, in a speech at Richmond, a? reported in the Eiclimoncl Enquirer of January 7, of that year: " Yoa fijht the offscourings of the earth. If the question were proposed to you whether j'ou would combiae with hijcnas or Yankees, I trust every Virginian would say, ^ give me the hyena.'' ^^ [Cries of "good," "good,'' and applause j I'Totice to tlic Democracy. The New Hampshire Democrats having proposed that ''if the South v.-ill come back into the Union the Democracy of the North will do all in their power to gain for them (the Southern States) such guaran- tees as will secure their safety," the Rich- mond Senfinel nt Wic siinie time declared: "DO THE NEW HAMPSHIRE DEM- OCRATS REASON FOR ONE MO- MENT THAT WE WOULD SO MUCH AS THINK OF REUNION WITH SUCH A PEOPLE ? RATHER TELL 0NE:T0 be wedded to a CORPSE. T.ATE-EIi JOIN HANDS WITH A FIEND FROM THE PFIV' A. H. Stephens declared, July 23, 1883, in a speech at Charleston, S. C, after the battles of Gettysburg and Yicksburg: "As for reconstruction, such a thing Avas impossible — such an idea must not be tole- rated for a moment. THE ONLY TERMS ON WHICH WE CAN OBTAIN PER- MANENT PEACE IS FINAL AND COMPLETE SEPARATION FROM TBE NORTH. Rather than submit to anything short of that, let us all resolve to die like men worthy of freedom." Proclaiming Civil War. The treasonable letter of Frank Blair Avas endorsed by the New York rebel Con- vention, and is the key-note of the cam- paign. It is dated June SO, and contains this threat of civil war : "If the President elected by the Democ- racy enforces, or permits others to enforce, these reconstruction acts, the Radicals, by the accession of twenty spurious Senators and fifty Representatives, will control both branches of Congress, and his administra- tion will be as powerless as the present one of 3Ir. Johnson. "There is but one way to restore the Government and the Constitution, and that i.s for TDK Prrsidknt klkct TO DE- CLARE THESE ACTS NULL AND VOID, COMPEL THE ARMYTO UNDO ITS USURPATIONS AT THE SOUTH, DISPERSE THE CARPET-BAG STATE GOVERNJMENTS, allow the white I'EOl'UE TO HIC01JGANIZ13 TlllilU OWN OOV- KKN.MKNTS, AND KLKCT SeNATOUS AND Re- PIIESKKTATIVKS "Wc must restnro the Constitution be- fore we can restore the fmnnces, and to do this we muu have a President wlio will execute the will of the people r.Y tuamp- I-mo INTO DUST THK USUnPATIONS OF CON- GRESS, KNOAVN AS THE nECO'^^STRUCTION ACTS." Approved by the Convention. The New York copperhead Convention, which did not contain a loyal delegate from the South, nor one who had not taken an ac- tive part ag^iiust the Government, "Resolved— THAT WE REGARD THE RECONSTRUCTION ACTS (so called) OF CONGRESS AS USURPATIONS AND UNCONSTITUTIONAL, REVO- LUnONARY, AoSD VOID." V/hat the Author Says. Here is General Hampton's own con- struction of the meaning of this resolution, delivered at a mass-meeting of the Cop- perhead and rebel Democracy before he lefo New York: " I7c can have no relief until the Dcmo- cratic party will come out and pledge itself that the while people of the South shall vote. I leant all to register an oath that, when they do vote, their votes shall he counted. AND IF THERE IS A MAJORITY OF WHITE VOTES, THAT YofJ WILL PLVCE SEYMOUR AND BLAIR IN THE WHITE HOUSE ItT SPITE OF ALL THE BAYOJ^ETS THAT SHALL BE BROUGHT AGAINST THEM." The President to begin the V/ar. The President, after expressing his opin- ion that the rebel States were legally "or- ganized and restored" under his "policy," prior to March 4, 1867, says, in his elec- toral college veto: "The only legitimate authority under which the election for President and Vice President can be held therein must be de- rived from the governments instituted before tint period. It clearly follows that the State governments organized in those States, under act of Congress for that purpose, as under militarv control, ARE ILLEGITIMATE AND OF NO VALID- ITY WHATEVER; and, in that view, the votes cast in those States for President and Vice President, in pursuance of acts passed since the 4th of March, 1807, and in obe- dience to the so-called acts of Congress, cannot be legally received and counted; while the only votes in those States that can be legally cast and counted will be those cast in pursuunce of the laws in force in the several States prior to the legislation by Congress upon the subject of reconstruc- tion." Hampton's Definition of the Plat- form. General Wade Hampton said in his speech at the first ratification meeting he attended at Charleston: ^^ I yield to none in devotion to thaf'Loff Cause'' for which we fought. NEVER SHALL I ADMIT THAT THE CAUSE ITSELF FAILEO, AND THAT TEIK PRINCIPLES WHICH GAVE IT LIFE WERE THEREFORE WRONG. NEVER SHALL I BRAND THE MEN WHO UPHELD IT SO NOBLY AS 'REBELS' OR 'TRAITORS.' Never skall I iguo- miniously sccksalcty or base promotion by a, clastrtrcily denial or treacherous betrayal ofit." "Agree among yourselves, and act firmly on this ogreement, that you icill not employ any one xolio vioUs the Jiadical ticket. Use (ill the means that are placed in your Jiands to control this element by which the Radical party seek to degrade us while they secure success, and we can turn their batteries against tli-emselves." Rebel Faith in Seymour. "From first to last — from the so-called ;;uti-slavery amendment of the Constitution to the flood of t>ash for all parposes, mili- tary, civil, financial and commercial — all the ■reconstruction laws of the xohole pence period fall to pieces IF THE DEMOCRACY SUCCEED IN ELliCTING ^XX. SEY- MOUR AS THEIR STANDARD- BEARER. We can take part in such a conflict. W"e believe from the depths of our understanding that these Congres- sional misdoings are all, one like the otber, perfectly void." — Yi'est and South. A Pair of NortJiern Traitors. "On the 3d of November next the Ameri- can people will endeavor to restore those States to their constitutional rights. Should this by a possibility fail, the white popula- tion of those States may succeed in placing themselves in possession of their govern- ments; OTHERWISE AS SURE AS THE ANGLO-SAXON BLOOD RUNS IN THE VEINS OF SOUTHERN MEN, THERE WILL BE AN UPHEAVAL OF CIVIL WAR, and then, should Congress sustain the blacks, ashes icill cover the ruins of the ■whole Rf public.'''' — General Tom. Ewing''s Speech in Washington. "When the Democratic party has elected the next President, it will be manifest to everybody that tVe negro governments can- not be permanent. If the Senate and the Southern negroes shall then yield to the will of the country we shall have immediate tranquillity. But if tbey choose to make a fnctioua opposition, TQE SOUTHERN WIHTES VVILL PROBABLY CUT THE GOHOTAN KNOT WITUOUT WAIT- ING FOR A CHANGE IN THE SEN- nTETOHAVE IT UNITED."-:^/'. Y. '\Vorld. The Lost Cause Hegained. The following is an extract from the si)eech of General Ramsey at the Demo- cratic State Convention of Georgia: "We have aroused in our might once more, under the leadership of Seymour ;iod Blair, to raise the Constitution from the dust. Georcia has passed through a fiery ordeal. Wo have seen our soldiers fall, our cities in fl imes, our citizens torn from their peaceful homes. We looked upon it unmoved and unblanched. But we can bear it no loniier. WE W'ILL NOW, AT ALL HAZARDS, RECOVER OUR LOST LIBERTIES and restore the State. Vie are in the midst of a great revo liilion, ichich may erid peacefully at the bul- lot-bo.r; but if not, then the true men of the South will rally once more around their now folded banner, and icill try the issue at the cartridge-box. THERE aRE MEN IN THE NORTH WHO ARIO NOW TRULY WITH YOU, AND WHO WILL IN SUCH A CONFLICT, IF NECES- SARY, LEAD YOUR BATTALIONS. We did not make the other war; it was forced upon us." "Gov. Swaun, of Maryland, declared in a recent speech to a Democratic meeting in York, Pennsylvania : 'Just as sure as \0V LIVE, WHEN YOU MOVE THE NEGKO FiiOM TnR rnoTECTioN OF THE Freed- MEJi's Bureau atsd the military arm W^HICH KOW PROTECTS HIM, DIS SUN WILT. GO DOWX IN DARKNESS AND OPPRESSION."' — Gov. Swann^at York, Penna. "Now, for the first time, we have a plat- form of principles and leaders around whom we could ralW. For the first time we have a platform we can adhere to. We have a work to do which can bo accomplished. We have leaders to represent those principles who will carry us outof the 'slough of de- spond." PEACE HAS ITS VICTORIES AS W^ELL AS W^AR; THOSE GREAT PRINCIPLES FOR W^HICH WE FOUGHT, AND WHICH WE FEARED WERE LOST, :MAY YET BE ACHIEVED.— G'e/iera^ A. i?. Lawton, Sa- vannah. "New Orleans, September 9, 1868." " T. L. Tullock, Secretary National Union Committee : "Jly home in St. Fraucisville was mob- bed by armed Democrats on the 29th of August. They said they wanted to wash their hands in m}' blood and would have my life. They leveled their guns at my wife, and threw burning torches upon my gallery. I was not in the house at the time. "J. P. Newsham, M. C." Kentucky's Loyalty. The LouisvSk^ Journal^^xs: "HAMPTON, FORREST, AND LEE ARE ACCESSIONS TO THE DEMO CRATIC PARTY. THEY ARE LIKE 3IILE-POST3 ALONG THE DEMO- CRATIC HIGHWAY THAT LEADS THROUGH THE SOUTH, denoting the di- rection and distances to a state of rcil peace and union. We are proud of them ; and we present them with coufideuee to the people of the North, and v.-e s:)y, 'Here are our trophies.' THEY ARE WORTH ALL THE BUREAUS AND CARPET- BAGS AND NEGRO MILITIA AND -TOLLECTOR^ AND PETTY MILI- TARY TYRANTS AND GREASY CON- TRA.CTORS AND FAT BOND- HOLDERS THAT A CORRUPT CON- GRESS CAN MANUFACTURE BE- TWEENTHIS AND DOOMSDAY." Congress Must be Destr'oyed. "The great Democratic party -will rise in ils might and majesty and pulverize and j)urge the Congress, just as Cromwell purged the long Parliament. THE SIGNS OF THE TIMES ARE PREGNANT WITH RESISTANCE TO RADICAL TYRANNY, AND THE DAGGER OF BRUTUS MAY AID IN ACCOMPLISH- ING OUR REDEMPTION FROM RADI- CAL RULE, RUIN, AND USURPA- TIO'^.— Mobile Tribune.'' "I love the American flag as dearly as any other man SO LONG AS IT REPJRE- SENTS A GOVERNMENT IN THE HANDS OF THE DEMOCRATIC PARTY, AND NO LONGER."— CVy^tom Taaiali Rijnders^ More Blood-letting Demanded. "We know there are many Democrats at the North, including some distinguished soldiers, who believe that the political at- mosphere, poisoned by the long reign of Radical despotism, will not be so purified that liberty may flourish on it, until a just rliasiisement is infictcd xipon the daring men toho have conapired against the freedom of the nation. In other words, that the counter- r.evoluiion will not be complete icithout more Mood-letting. " — Mobile liegistcr. On Saturday, the 5th instant, the rebel General J. T. L. Sueed, in a speech before the Central Democratic Club of Memphis, declared : " I am for peace — I want peace — again, and if a single outrage is committed like that of young Urnvvn, Imnfor uiterl// destroying and wiping out everi/ member of 111' Ttadical parly in this State.'''' Exterminate the Negro. "Willi the skull and cross-bones of the 'lost cause' before us, we will swear that this is ii white nvin's government. WE MUST MAKE TIIR NEGRO UNDER- STAND WK Atni THE MEN WE WERE WHEN WE HELD IIIM IN Ali- .lECT BONDAGE, and to make him feel ihat when forbearance ceases to be a virtue lie has aroused a power that will control hini or destroy him."— J/t'/v^i't/i {Miss) Mercuri/. "The nigger and the white man are no*^ likely to agree, unless the nigger yields to the white ■maiL's views, which he c4:ers, and thieves, we may occasionally be jostled against them, or,"lbrsooth, be forced to figUt with un- manly weapons. But we shall not shrink from the unwholesome task, and only ask our friends to bear vvilh us, as the end sought will justify the means. We must destroy the unseemly beast and bury his filthy carcass out of sight. That to ill be the toor'lc of the summer and fall campmgn. — JAlVeJloc.k {Ark.) Gazette. Seymour With ttto Rebels "Do you not create revolution wlien you say that ourpersons may be righ'fally seized, your property confiscated, your homes en- tered? Are you not exposing yourselves, your own interest.-', to as great a peril as that with wliich you threaten us? Remem- ber this: THAT THE BLOODY AND TREASONABLE AND REVOLUTION- ARY DOCTRINE OP PUBLIC NE CEBSITY CAN BE PROCLAIMED BY A MOB AS WELL AS BY A GOV- ERNMENT."— >S'ci^?«c?«''s speech to the New York rioters. "IIIAVEREAD THE CONFEDER- ATE CONSTITUTION AND IT IS BET TERTHiNOURS; TIIl^N WHY NOT OBVIATE ALL DIFFICULTY BY SIMPLY ADOPTING THAT CONSTI TUTION V— Seymour to Andy. Buggies. The Debt Must bo Repudiated. Lamdin P. Milligau,th2 unhung "Sonof Liberty," who escaped the gallo??s by the mercy ot Abraham Lincoln, has been making a speech near Logansport, Indi- ana, in which he said: "I HOLD THAT IT IS A VILLAIN- OUS DEBT, every dollar of it, from ii:s very inception. NEVER A DOLLAR OF THAT DEBT WAS CONTRACTED FOR YOUR LIBERTY AND WELFARE; yet, under the Constitution, this v/as the onl}' justification for coutrading it. The war was waged in theiaterestsof the monetar}' and manufacturing interests of the countrj', and not to restore the Union. I t^ld theai so in 1882, inl8G;J, and again in 1861. Tiiea they stopped mo. ' ' Negroes to bo Re-cnslavcd j "The peaple are per.suaded that th3 war is still in existence, so f.ir as rebels can con- tinue it; TH^T THE TRIUMPH OF SEYMOUR AND BLAIR WOULD RE- ENSLAVE THE NEGRO AND RE- ESTABLISH SOUTHERN DOMINA- TION." — Memphis Appeal, August. The State Central Democratic Committee of Louisiana have issued a circular, signed officially by the President and several mem- bers of the committee, advising the rebel Democrats to concentrate all "resentment" upon white Republicans, and "to withdraw from them all countenance, association, and patronage, and to thwart every effort they may make to maintain a position and sociO' foothold among you.'''' . Gen. BLA.IR at the head of the mili- tia AVILIi BE A MATCE FOR GeN. GrAKT AT THE HEAD OF THE KEGULAR AIIJIT. — [Gcn. Ewing, Jr. Secession is not dead; it is more alive today than ever. I support Blair because be promises a revolution. — [Gov. Wise, Richmond. : If WE AKESUCCESSFULIN THE APPROACH- ING CONTEST WE SHALL GAIN ALL THAT WE HWE LOST IN THE " LOST PAUSE." — [Mo- bile Tribune. Chronicle Print. 1 LIBRARY OF CONGRESS V— ^.^Y" If