Rensselaer Standard, Volume 1, Number 15, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 27 September 1879 — Powder and Shot. [ARTICLE]
Powder and Shot.
Condßiation haQiekcd the kehA arefy theliei 1 -puked Amendments, and debar the African from voice or vote in polities. I ter Ms hcwihfer oU Tasssl Tboagh Mrsly Und, nkUsitr ria j (M Mae tbs Dsnsents wbs dm Is bp tbs si* In Srim tssrsi , There ought to be a divorce between the North and the South as high as Heaven, aa deep as Hades and as wide as infinity itself. Conservatism has had its day in Mississippi, and the dilapidated old thing has been sent to the junk-shop. Too much nig-nig-nigger did its his., and disgruntled it forever. -■ Susan B. TAnthont has more brains under her son-bonnet and more money in her purse than all the negroes in Chickasaw county put together and yet the Yankees won’t lot her vote. m The Democratic sueakup of Yankeedom who stood by' the Peaee Party of that section in 1861-5, and who now proclaims that he was a Union man dering the war, is simply a Mean, Blinking, Contemptible, Pusillanimous, Uncircumcised LlAß,—and that is all there is of it» It takes the Radicals ?of Yankeedom to nominate aSedncer for Mayor. (Vide, the case of Kalloch.) It takes the Radicals of Yankeedom to ohooee a Seducer for Chairman of a State convention. (Vide, the case of Conkling. I - •’ .•. . • - - ,i> 'J ‘V‘ 7. The Kemper county trials are on, and there will be no convictions, if the scales of Justice bold their horizontal swing and level. Chisolm was e fiend incarnate, and his innocent community suffered the most shameful crimes at his bloody and thieving hands, for years and years, before it freed itself of Us presence by (me fell end telling blew. Peeee and safety end liberty have held sway in Kemper county since |the white sunlight no longer throws bis baleful shadow athwart the paths of her honest, industrious and enlightened people. If any me is hanged for having helped to rid the world end time of the Ruffian Chisolm, that man wfU be a martyr, whos name will be cherished tin freedom has perished. When Jack Sherman, the B*7 Secretary of the Treasury, went up to Congress, he wes poorer than Job’s traditional turkey seek. When tea went out es Congress he was mors then a millionaire I Yet a paper was recently received at this office teat had tea harfliehcek to call him “Heeest John Sherman”lll How are- yon,—“Honest” t Jade Sherman is simply a “sly—deviHah sly”—rascal, who has lived up to the precepts of Dane Lobkins in the tale of Paul Clifford; tor he “minds Us “kittyism, and never steak, if any he in "Us war, sticks to hit ritivation, apd “talks like a pious ’un; takes more by “inrisivatiod than by Muster, cate they “as swindles gets more and risks less; "than us reha.” No man wQI ever be totally hanged tor fluesanian oh this continent—nbveb. — [Okoloua Sterne. the next*time doST^^mer^y SBii!w3sfi£?“ Bh “Nett timoMf, unfortunately, the neat time should come,” tire bieektoty w in Ml. , M f|. j/thiifl * * a-1. a . .a wm oc nnnmw, ana tae fuaeral w)I 4 diers will he shot down like the doge that they are wherever found. There wUlbeno quarter. it Will he war to the knife and the kfcito through the hearth
You had batter st&j at home j time—if, unfortunately, the next tiam should come,” for "mercy will not be allowed to triumph over jastios.” Mark what we tell you now, you boastful booby. - • ** * As is perfectly natural it fails to represent Mr. Ltooola to the Scotch skull toe other gortioos ofthe reputable m«i of his party.—(Alexandria (< O, no, they never speak of that!” But tee toot ought to be flung in the teeth of the truculent Yankees whenever they mention the Murder-hearted Monster of the Sangamon Swamps. He was a coward, — Cruel as he Was eewmrdly,— Criminal as he was cruel. And, take him all-in-all, he was the most indecent and infamous character that ever played a part before the footlights of history. His carcass ought to have been dragged through dirt, filth and dime to the stake, swung up by the heels, and burned to a wisp. If this performance had taken place in the Year of our Lord, 1861, it would have saved a million lives and untold treasure. There is no use trying to conciliate such scoundrels. As well try to conciliate lurking snakes or infuriated tigers. Mistime for the government and the people of the North to realize what manner of men they (the Miarissippians) are. —lndianapolis (Ind.) Journal. Who wants to conciliate usf We wouldn’t have your friendship and fair speech in your present state of mind. Toss your infernal old otive branch into the consuming fire. Your touch has polluted it forever. There is one way, and one way only to bridge the bloody ohasm. *? This: Go straightway and strangle your Grants, Shermans and Butlers; Then down, down, DOWN, flat on your faces, and beg and pray and implore the forgiveness of our people. This, and only this can secure concilia- . *
a speech for sambo. B««k, Samba fro® the ballot-box! you am not wasted here,— ▲way ante the cotton-fleld, and pick it clean and clear! You were not meant for pabtte Ufa They tried yon at that trade, And blood and theft and rain wm Um record that you made, Until yoor lords and meet era swsra by tbe great God on bigh That they would rale this lovely land, or know the reason why. And by a Helpdirlae. they drove you oat oi • power awl plaoe, ' And proved that Honven itself had mate of - tbent the Heater Knee. The power they bold will he traneferrod from father ante eon, While graaeM prow and hraeees blow and river* eoawasd ma. fv't-' ■ This isalseemyou most learn—we taaeh it plemy asd plain: Term rax m Day or Doom shall cback. An tot will Tom nr vain. Before we will submit again ante year v tnt t -rn horde Tbe torch ebull Mane, tho mnehet ernek, and dash the fearleae sword. oa, hash unto the oottoa Irid 1 Baek, Sambo, to yoor plaoe I The seal and etgnet of Mgh HsOfW mates fyem the flsrvaut Xsasi The fraud, eld Historian es Mlesia sippi, Cot. J. F. H. Claiborne, whose name is known aud honored at every fireside in tea Greet Southwest, sends ns tee following: NatcheZjMlss., Sept 4, 1870. J marches to tbe scaffold to die^for*l^lizsj a’Mafi&Tiaph'ss in a Dosition to cultivate hriTTiani Ohio. 8o was Gen, Charles Clark. Truly, Yours, J. F. iTCLAiBOEJrm Secession is net, never was, and never wiU be teastScHOkolwl HiUEfc or ends about it when tfee time rente,
and the aforesaid editors are doing all la their power to make it eome.-£Chkago Inter-Ocean. In the name oftha Prophet-wool Do yon think, Mr. Inter-Ocean, that we can a broken, barley-straw for your threats! Dayuu think that we am to ha oowered and crowded baric from our high resolve by yate hints of a rape and seaffoldf Doyout ' We toll you, sirrah, that if the South should walk out of the Union to-day, and you should dreg her baric to-mer-row, you wouldn’t dare hang a solitary The South would snap her fingers in your Yankee faoas, precisely as she did in 1806, and defy you to bring her warriors mid statesmen to trial, • And you would sneak out of it again, as you did before, with your heads down, and your tails between your togs. You know Mid we know teat the law and totes are a& on our ride in this matter of Secession, and you know and we know that you can never, aster, NEVER convict men for defending their rights, their alters, their firesides and tee and household gods of their Try itl * L- • Try it, we say, Mid tee.
