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THE REPUBLICAN NUMINEES.
LIFE OF ItUTHKHKOUD B HAVES.
Three times elected Governor and twice a
Congressman, Mr. Hayes has never yet carried
either State or District by a heavy majority. A
native of Ohio, Mr. Hayes gained his academical
education within the limits of that State,
commanded an Ohio regiment during the war
and has passed his entire professional life at the
bar of the State. He is now fifty-four years
old, having been born at Delaware, 0., October
4,1822. He graduated at Kenyon College, Gam
bier, o.,and obtained his professional education
at the Cambridge Law School. The practice of
his profession began in Cincinnati in his
thirty-iourth year, when he received his first
official position City Solicitor, which he held
till the War broke out in 1801. Very near its
opening he cnlistened in the Twenty-third Ohio
Volunteers, and served with the regiment till
,he received the command of a brigade in 18G4.
His first appointment was as major, his first pro
motion came within less than a year, and in
September of 1802 he held a commission as iieti
tenant-cononel, and was in command of his
regiment, which he led into the battle of South
Mountain. The Twenty-third regiment formed
at the time a part of General Reno’s division—
its command devolving upon General Cox, who
afterwards preceded General Hayes as Gov
ernor, after the death of General Reno in action
—operating as the right wing of the Army of
the Potomac. During the action Colonel Hayes
received a severs wound in the arm, but remain
ed with his regiment to the last, and was the
first officer whose command established a posi
tion at South Mountain. Two years later he
become Brigadier-General Hayes, when lie re
ceived the Republican nomination in the Second
Ohio District, a part of Hamilton county, and
received, home and annv vote together, 3,098
majority over Jos. G. Butler, the Democratic
candidate. The Ohio delegation to the Thirty
ninth Congress,.in which General Hayes took
his seat December, 1865, was remarkable for its
ability, and included an unusual number of'men
who have since gained marked and unusual dis
tinction in the Republican party. Mr. Robert
0. Schenck, Mr. Columbus Delano, Mr. John A.
Bingham, Mr. James M. Ashley and Mr. Samuel
Shellabarger were all members of this delega
tion, ard the extent and variety of the talent by
which Mr. Hayes was surrounded doubtless had
much to do with the obscurity in which his
term was passed. He served on the Com
mittee on Private Land Claims and on the Libra
ry Committee, and passed through the important
reconstruction legislation of the session with no
greater distinction than a vote given uniformly
and on ail occasions for bis party, and upon the
most liberal measures which was presented in
this Congress by Mr. Stevens—the reso'ution
relating to attorney lest oaths—Mr. Hayes’ vote
was recorded in the negate e. In the Fall of
1800 Mr. Hayes was a second time nominated
for Congress, and, running against Theodore
Cook, was elected by a somewhat smaller ma
jority than two years before. The Fortieth
Congress had, however, held but one session
when Mr. Hayes was nominated as GovernoWby
the republican party, and, accepting the candi
dature, was elected over Allen (s. Thurman by
a majority of 2,983 in a total vote of 483,000, a
close and narrow escape from defeat, wired Mr.
Hayes successfully repeated last Fall. Mr.
Ilayes was a candidate for re-election at the
close of his term of office, but another nominee
was preferred, and it was not till 1860 that ho
was a second time placed at the head of the Re
publican ticket in Ohio Mcaiuvhile he. busied
himself in politics and made friends by
various means—one at least is hinted in a pub
lished letter from Mural Halstead and RJcliurd
Smith, two gentlemen who have not of late
years conducted their correspondence in
partnership, addressed lo Columbus Delano,
then, March 20, 1861), Gonruisiinner ol Internal
Revenue., in which these two representatives of
a Republican press say, “Tho suggestion comes
to us through General Ilayes that we name
certain persons lo occupy and administer the
internal revenue offices in Ibis city," and the
twin editors accordingly nominate lour men,
“neither of us having uny personal feeling in
the matter.” It wasn’t strange that Mr. Ilayes,
with ideas of this diameter in regard lo .the
manipulation of Federal offices, and a highly
serviceable friend like Mr, Debit.o in office,
should have gained the nomination which lie
had previously lost. - lie entered the campaign
with strong odds in liis favor. General Rose
crams was nominated by the Demeratie Conven
tion which met in July of that year, and at
which Mr. I’endlctoti’s name was peremptorily
Withdrawn; the expected candidate refused
the nomination, however, and at a lute date Mr.
Pendleton was induced lo take the Democratic
nomination. Success was scarcely possible un
der the circumstances, and General Hayes car
ried the State by a majoiity of 7,518, or about
one-third o( the year before on the State ticket.
The next appearance of Mr. Ilayes as a candi
date was last Fall. In the bitter and hard
fought canvass which followed, Mr. ilayes was
successful, receiving a majority of 5,544 over
Mr. Allien. The duties of the third term lo
which Mr. Ilayes was thus raised on an anli
lliird-term platform, like the two terms that pre
ceded it, have been o far successfully executed
by Governor Hayes, without affording the slight
cst ground for comment, for observation or lor
reflection, and Mr. Ilayes enters the Presidential
contest the best figure-head which the party could
furnish.
WILLIAM A. WIIEELER.
Mr. Wheeler would bring no load to a heavily
burdened party but the obscurity ol a country
lawyer, and the record of a legislator who has
sat long and done little or nothing. Born June
3, 1819, in Malone, within the county which lie
has since represented in huth branches of bis
State Legislature, in a Constitutional Conven
tion, and in the Lower House at Washington, he
vs now in his fifty-seventh year. His public life
extends over llie past twenty five years, tho
greater portion of which lias been devoted ratti
er to private than public life. 4 common
school and nn academic education in his native
Sown was followed by a short course of a year
or two in the University of Vermont an obscure
college which has iiad a lingering existence of
over halt a century, Mr Wheeler was connected
while in college with Hie class of 1842, and had
lie graduated, be wont 1 have completed Liis
course in 1842. He left, however, altera years
study, and making up in a lawyer’s oflivc the
seven years study then required before admis
sion to the bar, lie began the practice of his pro
fession in Franklin county, lie had been prac
ticing but a lew years w ben lie was elected as a
Democratic candidate to (lie office of District
Attorney in Franklin county, the election being
the first held under the new Constitution. At
tlie close of liis term of office lie was elected t y
the A ssemldy, this lime as a Whig, the county
having cast a tic vote at a piovious Stale elee
tion between tho Whig ami l.oeofoeo candidate:-,
hut having at this time taken its piacc among
the Whig counties of the State. A re-election
to the Assembly followed, and for a time Mr.
Wheelei retired from public life, liis practice
as a lawyer soon ceased to he an engrossing
pursuit, and lie became first tho ca.-liitr of bis
local bank, a position lie held tor fourteen \e.rs,
and at a later date became President of the Og
densbuig and Rouse's Point Railroad, oonlinu
big in the supervision of the road lor eleven
years. With the rest of liis parly he passed out
of Whiggcvy into Republicanism, and Mr
Wheeler reached the Stale Senate in January,
1858, to take hits seat in the first Legislature
fully controlled by the Republican pnrtv,
Robert Campbell, a Kepiibliesm, was at, tlie time
Lieutenant Governor, and the | u-ilion of Presi
dent pro lent . toAvliieli Mr. Wheeler was elected,
was, in cousi'(piptce, a purely honorary position.
Through . thC s< Nsions of 1858 and lssn Mr
Wheeler served in t ic Sena'e, and in llie fail i t
the last named year lie was elected li a seal in
the Thirty-Seventh Congn s, carrying all th e
ol the strung Republican counties (’I in ton, K _
sex and Franklin— of which the Sixteenth Dis
trict was then con po ml. Tlifi ugh the long
ses-ion of this War Congress Mr. Who h r voted
with bis party, and with that c. n tantly recur
ii g duty exhausted liis usefulness in Cotigr s ;
'if the measures which came before this Goiiy r s
and which were of slr’ctly peaceful inline t, lie
act appiopriating public lauds to the Union
Pacific passed the House April 8, 1802. For
this bill Mr. Wheeler voted. With the close of
the Thirty-Seventh Congress another interreg
num of four years in his public lifefollowcd.
In April of 1807 Mr. Wheeler was elected a
member of the Constitutional Convention which
met in the following June. The Republican
party had a majority of tho delegates, and the
Monday before the Convention met a caucus
was held and Mr. Wheeler was nominated as a
caucus candidate for the position of Chairman.
Neither of his competitor,-., Thos. G. Alvord, of
Syracuse, or Charles G. Folger, of Geneva, per
mitted their names to be used in tlie caucus.
The’ chances of tlie former had never been re
markable ; but Mr. Folger was the generally
accepted candidate, and would, so it was under
stood at the time, have received the nomination
but for his independence at the close of the ses
sion of the previous Senate, when he refused to
vote for a party rider to a New York bill, mak
ing changes in the Department of Public Works.
As chairman of tlie Convention, Mr. Wheeler’s
position removed him from the debates on tho
floor, and his record in tins body presented as
few salient points as does his record throughout
liis public life. Ilia opening speech on taking
the chair dealt principally with the question of
negro suffrage, and the committee which he
made up at a later date in the interests of this
alteration in the organic law reported an article
carrying out the change, which the people after
wards refused by a heavy majority to ratify.
The fail alter the adjournment of the Constitu
tional Convention Mr. Wheeler was nominated
■ for Congress in the Seventeenth District, Frank
lin and St. Lawrence counties, and elected to
the Forty-first Congress, in which he took liis
seat in the March following. When the newly
elected Speaker, Mr. Blaine, made out the com
inittees, Mr Wheeler’s name apneared as Chair
. mm of the Committee on tlie Pacific Railroad,
and such prominence as he enjoyed during the
next two years was in connection with the leg
islation onjthis fruitful subject. Mr. Wheeler held
the same position also in the ensuing Congress,
to which he was elected w ith little opposition
in thp autumn of 1870. In'the next, the Forty
third Congress, he was succeeded as Chairman of
this Committee by Mr. Sawyer, of Wisconsin,
and in the present Congress he is on the Com
mittee of Appropriations.
Including the present and still unexpired ses
sion, Mr. Wheeler has therefore had over seven
years’ continuous service in Congress, beginning
March 4, 1809, an unusually long terra of ser
vice. He lias made few speeches in that time,
and such influence as lie has exerted upon cur
rent legislation has boon almost exclusively in
the committees with which he is connected.
His votes have been party votes, but bis meas
ures have often been non-partisan, and it was
due to this fact that he was recently able to take
a long appropriation bill through a House in
which liis party is in the minority. No protest,
however, has been heard from him against the
party legislation which has passed during his
membership ot the House of Representatives,
and as has just, been remarked, his votes have
been consistently recorded for the extreme
measures #f his faction. Subsidy bills from first
to last bo has consistently supported. The
Texas Pacific land grant of 1 o,000.0) acres re
ceived liis vote in the close ot tlie Forty-first
Congress, when a little earnest opposition would
have saved tlie nation from spoliation. Earlier
in the same Congress he voted for the supple
mentary legislation asked by the Norther Pacific,
and when Senator Ramsey’s resolutions with
reference to the Northern Pacific land grant was
before the House, Mr. Wheeler voted for the
.resolutions and consistently voted down amend
ments requiring tho sale of lands only to actual
settlers, and a proviso exempting past grants as
well as one freeing tlie Government troni any
claim that the action then should be held a
guarantee to the bonds. Another amendment
giving llie right to regulate freights on the road
was also voted down, with Mr. Wheeler's help,
and ti e resolution was at last passed rs tlie load
wished it. The extension of the time within
which (tie St. Croix and Bayfield Railroad
was to be constructed asked for in February,
1872, by the North Pacific road, was another
scheme which received Mr. Wheeler's vote and
attention lor tlie bill and again A a 11,'amendments
thereto, down to the last which General Banks
obtained, and which rendered it useless to its
projectors. Upon the question of Civil Service
Reform, Mr. Wheeler has ended the dreary farce
by voting to kill Representative Willard’s bill
m ikin< it a misdemeanor for Congressmen to
solicit office. On the la rift’ Mr. Wheeler has
been in the main a protectionist, although lie
voted ageinst placing tea and coffee on the free
list in 1872. Beyond voting with the majority
ot bis party, Mr. Wheeler’s action on financial
questions calls for little comment.
[X. Y. World.
THE PLATFORM.
The platform sets out with a history of the
party and a statement of its duty to perfect the
rights ot all the people and tlie enforcement of
the amendments ; the permanent pacification of
the Southern section of the Union ; llie complete
protection of all its citizens in tlie free enjoy
ment of all their rights, as the duties to which
the Republican parly is sacredly pledged. [Ap
plause.] The power to provide for the enforce
ment the principles embodied in- the recent
Constitutional amendments is vested by those
amendments in the Congress of the United States,
and we declare it to be llie solemn obligation of
tlie legislative and executive departments of the
Government to put into immediate and vigorous
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exercise all their constitutional power for le-I
moving any just causes ,of discontent on the I
part of any class and securing every American
citizen complete liberty and exact equality in
the exercise of all civil, political nnd public
rights. [Applause.] To this end we impera
tively demand a Congress and Chief Executive
whose courage and fidelity .o these duties shall
not falter umil tlie results are placed beyond
dispute The fourth resolution reads: “In the
first act of Congress signed by President Grant
the National Government assumed to remove
any doubts of a purpose to discharge all just
obligations to the public creditors and soleratfly
pledged its faith to make provision at the earli
est practicable period for the redemption of the
United States notes in coin, [t beers.] Com
mercial prosperity, public interest and the na
tional credit demand that the promise be fulfilled
by a continuous and steady progress to specie
payment.” [Loud and long continued cheers.]
The fifth resolution allude- to civil service re
form. The sixtli refers to tlie public schools
and embodies Blaine’s proposed amendment to
the constitution.
Eighth. The revenue necessary for current
expenditures, and the obligation of the public
debt-must be largely derived from duties on im
portations, which, so tar as possible, should be
adjusted to promote the interest of American
labor and advance tlie prospeiity of the whole
country. Ninth. Opposes further grants ot
lands to’corporations und monopolies. Tenth.
FuT’ors the modification of treaties for the pro
tecion of adopted citizens and legislation to
protect emigrants. Eleventh. It is the imme
diate duty of Congress to fully investigate the
effect the immigration and importation of Mon
golians has on the moral and material interests
of the country. Twelfth. The party recognizes
with approval the advance in securing the rights
of women by State Legislatures. The thir
teenth claims sovereign power over territories
to exclude polygamy. The fourteenth says
pledges to the soldiers and sailors must be fully
fulfilled. The fifteenth says: We sincerely de
precate all sectional feelings and tendencies, we
therefore note with deep, solicitude that the
Democratic party counts as its chief hope ot
success upon the electoral vote of a united South,
secured through the efforts of those who were
recently arrayed against the nation, and we in.
voke the earnest.attention of ihe country to the
grave danger which if achieved would reopen
sectional strife and imperil the national honor
and human rights. Sixteenth. Charges the
Democratic party with being the same in char
acter and spirit as when it sympathized with
treason, and, alluding to the course of the Lower
House, warns the country against a party alike
unworthy, reeieaut and incapable. Seventeeth.
The National Administration merits commenda
tiou for iti honorable work in the management
of domestic and foreign affairs, and President
Grant deserves the continued and hearty grati
tude of the American people for his patriotism
and his immense services in war and peace.
, -<g_>
A Novel Device. —An apparatus for
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A fine shower of water, traveling in the
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its velocity, is projected into the chim
ney, where it mixes with the smoke,
taking up the soluble gases and piecipi
tatiug the impurities carried up with the
smoke by the draught. The foul water
is discharged into a cistern, where it is
collected, and a fine black paint is got
from it.—N. Y. Evening Post.
♦ >
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ness Of the Piano.
Rev. IF A. WILSON,
191 Penn Street, Willinmsburgh, New Work.
THE
NATIONAL HOTEL
ATLANTA, GEOBOIA,
The rates of board A jJAat this |<o; i.lar
Hotel have been re- J U duced to $3.90
per day, For this /j.IJU |'ice we offer
a' eommodations and A U A line unsurpassed
by any $.{.00 or $4.00 / I—wl bouse in tbo
South. ZJ.Uu
Come ..lid ;;i I aa Old \ il'Lpnia welcome.
b'JGE 6l H3GWITT,
l'rtiiuUoie,