Democratic Sentinel, Volume 3, Number 7, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 28 March 1879 — IREMOVAL! [ARTICLE]

IREMOVAL!

By uniting with the Radical party th® ineancßt rebel becomes a patriot? Rwttcal Kansas is ordering the colored people of the South to stay away. ®eeaH!SWHBSHHHSSBS» The consul will soon be a subordinate and subject to the orders of the late reocl General Key! God bless his loyal soul.

After this wceW the SrtNTtotFX will occupy rooms ores "Leopold's Store, where we shall be pleased to greet old and new friends and patrons. Two ladies, Mrs. Hamilton and Miss Evans, were candidstee for School Directors, at the recent election in Cass township, <Hnnt.ington eounty, Fa., but failed a few votes of election. A bill has passed the lower house of tne Indiana Legislature providing, as a penalty for the? crime of rape, im prisonment in the penitentiary not less than twenty one nor more than twentv-five years. Not much of a margin there for the jury. ■snaßmassßEnar Now if Jaff Davis had only turned over te the Radical party, he would to-day bens handsomely rewarded by the Fraud, as was the rebel guerilla Mose by, Longstreet, P. M. Gen. Key, Agness Jenks. Eliza Pinkston, and hundreds vs ike ilk.

The Republican employes of the U. S. Senate, who have held their bsitbs for eig iteeu years, are Inexpressibly shocked at the desire of the Democrats to take them. They can’t understand such greed for office. It surprises and mortifies them.

Zach. Chandler told with great gusto, recently, how he had s< iv® I four years in the United Staves Senate with Jeff. Davis, but alas! tha it should bo that so stalwart a warrior for the party couldn’t say that he had served with him in the Mexican war. or agMnst him in t e war of the rebellion. Zach was at the firs" Bull Run but wholly in the capacity of a a looker-on, and history is not quite certain whether, after the defeat, it was the London Times man or the the great Michigander who was the .first to reach Washington.

Senator Grubbs, who originated a «<!>•! bill with a view to prevent the unearthing and exposure of rascality of radicalism, has deela ed that if "the Democrats and Nationals would unite only one district would go Republican,” and his followers all over the State have set up a howl, and refuse to be comforted. NjW let him explain the probable result in case the Democrats and Nationals should not unite, or in . the event of a coalition between the Radicals and Nationals, and ease up the harrowed fears of his friend:?.

Radical papers are copying articles »a d to have originated in a paper tnUled the Southern Stu es, claimed tube published at Okalona, Miss.— Of courae it is only necessary to add that any paper in the South, or elsewhere, furnishng capital for the use of radicals, rnayjsafely be presumed to be in the interest and pay of that party. But that kin;! of game is "played” It gave aid and impetus in the organization and building up of tue radii al party, fosteiing of sectionalism and producing civil war, but the delusive trick has served its time, and is too base und bare to succeed again. They are too transparent to mislead the peoole any more.

Republican exchanges are coming to band wiih supplements containing maps of the new congressional districts,. tog< thep with the editorial remarks of the Indianapolis Journal.— In referring to this apportionment, Miss Laura Ream, the lively Indianapolis correspondent of the Cincinnati Commercial,, says of the Republican gerrymander which the present bill supercedes: “For instance, in the new gerrymander there is no cruciform district like the old Eleventh.— Nor is there such a pyramidal stairway of a combination as the old Eighth, tho district gerrymandered to beat Mi. Voorhees. And there was another nondescript Republican district constructed especially to beat Mr. Holman—namely,.the Sixth, extending 200 miles in length, from the banKS of the Mississineway on the north to the waters of the Ohio-on the south, and never more- than one county in width. In connection with the peculiarities of the old gerrymander Representative Saint said his district always reminded him of a pair of old saddlebags. Our republican friends can ffud no such unshapely districts in the new bill. The truth is, that the bill can nut possibly be called a ’’jerry ruander” in any true sense. In only three of the districts have the Democrats a clear majority.*