Rensselaer Republican, Volume 12, Number 8, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 6 November 1879 — Glory Enough For One Day. [ARTICLE]

Glory Enough For One Day.

We hire only lime to my before going to preen th»l New York, PenaNylvan Massachusetts Wisconsin, Nehrasks llinaeeote, New . Jersey end- ©ouueotieut, wMeb States ReM elections oo Tuesday, gave strong Republic an majorities. — The legansport Dually Journal favors the nomination of Major John F. Wildman, at the coming Republican Bute convention for State Treasurer. f The - two greatest triumphs of the Republican party were the squelching of the rebellion and putting the credit of (he government ou a gold 4 basis. In thsse Grant generaletf our armies and Sherman managed riimuptioa. When the Democrats fail to blander the opportunity goes begging, and after having gone blindly into tronble they might have avoided they never fail to try to lie out of their diferama. Just read their excuses foV their defeat la Ohio. . I The Republican party is the only one so constituted that baa the sourage and disposition to enfpres the guarantee of rights to all, and we owe it to the people aa well ae to the logic of the lofty principle chat has guided ua to do so. Tliere seems to be a general belief in business circles, that, with the abundant crops and the general reviral of all the different indastree, we are sKont to ace the dawn* ’ng of arnew era of financial, commereial, and industrial prosperity iii every portion of the Uuion. * Thwpeople all over the North are recording their belief that it ta time the treassnablc, man killing, negro-killing, negro-hnnting, woimn murdering party sailing under the name of Democracy was boried oat of sight Indiana will pot a good big majority on tbo corrupt corpse In 1880. .

Our credit is good at bom# and abroad; our taxes are being reduced yearly; our public debt is being paid off; every branch of the Government is being administered in the interest of economy aod honesty. What more can we expect? Surely, the party, that has made these things possible, deserve the earnest support of every honest citizen. } Merchants report an unexpected advance in prices, particularly in articles of ornament and those not classed as strictly standard goods. This shows that the demand for luxuries is keeping pace with the decrease of failures} that confidence is being maintained in tbs permanency of the business improvement. With capital going into new enterprises and busitiess reaping the benefits of regular pay for labor, the people are bound to indulge them- | selves; but this evidence of large demand for articles of iancy and | taste is pressutsd a little too soon after the panic to be pleasant**or beaUUfal. The old scores for necessaries have not been wiped out yet and the deplorable suggestion arises that with.the least prosperity our people oannpt resist the temptation to fly high and live be.ysnd their means. If this temptation is not resisted, a few years of new debts end excess will bring on another panic, worse than the Ust, perhaps, and cut of which the eonntry may not emerge with so little wreck and havoc to capital and misery to labor.

After Sherman 1 * speech at Paterson, New Jersey, General Kilpatrick followed in a short speech. The speaker described the Chishonsi tragedy in a thrilling m.inner, ead #to 1 aimed: “Oh, God ! where were Thy thunderbolts when this horrible deed waa done? I tail you the time ha* come for the Republican party to do itrduty. We need in 1881 a man of iron purpose to lead the Nation. [Shouts of ap plause.] When the waves roll mountain high and the tetnpest rages, then, by Heaven, we need a Jim Blaine, a John Sherman or a 'General Grant; and one of them we’ll have or well know the reason why. [Applause.] Stand by the llepulican party,the only party that dues to be brave, to stand by its principles and to live and die by them.” On Wednesday two colored mew arrived at Washington from this State, en route to North Carolina from Kansas, “whither they were sent by a community,of 200 of their race to examine the country, and, if | wjsaible,secure a settlement in some tonality where they on*id obtain employment. The two men say that taken they reached Indiana tiny received such tempting offers from several parties to furnish employment to the euiire number that they concluded to aooept. They are now reluming to North Carolina to brfaq| tlieir people to their future domiciles. The men, who are tmannuity intelligent, think that Indiana offers many inducements to colored emigrants* and it those who are about to settle there thrive aod prosper, as they probably will, several thousands o£ k people from bath, North and Sbnth Caret km will sarely follow. 1 ' fT I