Rensselaer Union, Volume 6, Number 28, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 2 April 1874 — Page 3 Advertisements Column 3 [ADVERTISEMENT]
THE ’.INTEH-OCEA*. 1878. _ 1874. THE LARGEST CIRCULATION IN THE NORTHWEST. riIKI\TKM(KA* fob 1874 Established leas than two yearn since as* » representative Republican paper, pledged to maintain and defend the prinriplae and .organization of the great National Republican party, the Intkr-Ocian has attqlued a circa-' Is lion and influence with the masses ol its, voters everywhere to entitle it to approach the commencement of a new calendar year and tOrepafe for the preliminary .work of the campaign/tKe'rtiadlow tfltfeh IF already.essfiitg Itself'tipbh lif the confident belief thitt ft! friends will tife<( no other specific pledge for the f dtarb IfiatE;’ has been given In its colomtu from day Id day during the past eighteen months Sines its first publication it has maintained the position of THE LEADING REEUBLICAN NEWSPAPER IN THE NORTHWEST, to which It was assigned by universal ament. In the excited canvass which resulted in the second and triumphant election of President Graut. THE EN EMIES OF THE COUNTRY are vigilantly at work. tfle overt whelming rebuke administered yet, them Id: 1873, tbe opposition are skillfully massing their forces for a more determined onslaught upon the Republican organization lit the jievi SiatO and Natloual elections. Encouraged by the upstby Of Republicans in the “offyear,” setting the unprecedented fititfnciif stringency as a pretext, and using ad a Hood ; wiuk the deep feeliug atliong the agricultural, classes for better aud cheaper inodes <tf irmsportatiou than now exist, THE DEMOCRACY, under as many names as there are hungry Demagogues eager for office, is getting Itself into readiness to become once more the Ruling Party of the nation. IN THE 80UTH the. old D, moentcy of Secession and ftebel {.’ ion is being warmed iuto life by the apparent reverses Rspubiicaniam has suffered in the' North. Tne election of Allen ia Ohio the triumph of Tammany in New York, and the few desultory successes which have come to/ A rtl-Republican tickets in various portions, of the W.-st and Northwest, have inspired the rebels of lßfl with the hope that the day/ is dawning when tbe Lost Cause is to be foted Into a victory they failed to achieve by meaufl of the bullet and bayonet. Already R. M, T. Huuter, a former Seneior from a member of the Cabinet of Jeff Davis, has publish'd his scheme for the virtual payment of
Four Hundred Million* of Dollars for the Emancipated Slave* of the Bonth, The Richmond <Va.) Whig and Governor. Gilbert Walker are urging this.plan with all pertinacity! dud there can be little doubt that a large party of SoUlberu Representative) in the Forty-third Congress will be prepare? Iff advocate the payment of this money by the Geuerai Government. The past history of We Democratic party gives no warrant thst it will oppose this iufamous robbery of the ; people ol the North for the benefitof traitors: , but If the party is true to Itself aud Its instincts the South will find it and Usrepresenlati\es a subservient ally,, , THE PAYMENT OF fUE REBEL' DEBT ■'= ' is another scheme that is brtfadly hinted at in many parts of the South; and ia; wlthoot doubt, one of the projects to which the tench lug Democrats of that section would address themselves if ths time should ever eofiwf ; when a majority of tbo Northern States anti 1 ’ I tlie General Government should ho in the ! hands of the party which helped the rebels in i their work of destroying the Union. These are not fanciful issues. They are real dangers, either to be met face to face, or else to be squelched in their inception by the continued »accesaes~of that organization which crushed the rebellion, gave freedom 5 tbo slaves, and destroyed the slave-holdtdjf Confederacy. THE FARMERS know that tbo Itrrn-OcixN was tbeir earliest, as it has been their staunchest and warmest, friend. It is emphatically the organ of the people in the best seuse of the term, believing iu the fullest protection of the rights of the rnauv agaiust the encroachments of the few. It believes that all chartered corporation* should be held to be subservient to the power that created them, and without an infringement of tbe just rights of others it Insists, and will coutluue to insist, that all corporations enjoying special privileges voted to them by the people shall serve the people fairly aud justly, at a compensation allowing a reasonable profit upon the actual capital employed) THE FAMILY. The Inttr-Ocexn makes special efforts 16 render itself acceptable to tbe families of its patrous. To. liii* end everything it rigorously excludes that could possibly offend The religious aud moral character is guarded with especial care, and its aim is “to encourage the true, the beautiful, aud the good.” THE INTER-OCEAN la the paper for TUB REPUBLICAN, THEFARMEU, THE FtHILT, THE n£RCHANT, THE PROFESSIONAL MAN, THE .MECHANIC. Ia Literature, General News, Foreign and Domestic Correspondence. Local Reports, and all that goes to make a rIaST-CLad* Commercial and Family NeWspaptf, It ia not excelled by quy publication ia the countrv. THE COMMERCIAL DEPARTMENT ia conducted with great dare. and rverj thing possible is done to make the MARKET REPORTS such as the FARMERS and BUSINESS MEN of the Northwest can RELY UPON. THE AGRICULTURAL DEPARTMENT is carefully edited! by genii*meu _of ability aud exjierience. 7 he INTER-OCEAN hat by far the target circulation of auy newspaper published ia tht Northwest. It is uni to more than 5.000 Postoffices. distributed ia every State and Territory in the United Stolen, in oil the British Prooiuces, and ia numerous Foreign States and Countries. Subscriptions are solicited from all parts of the world. Whit* the I.tTM-OdLa especially represents tbo great interesta of the Northwest.ij.lsa NATIONAL NEWSPAPER, one that Will be found interesting and aaaftft to Americana in every part o$ the globe, I treats upon ail subjects, and in editor!* cuesioos buds to bo candid, dignifie above personal abuse. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. VAit/V: gassSMs-iras.' By mail«payable in advaaee), par quarter *OO Daily every other day ahreatiiaes per week i per year...... *OO Paper for Sunday, per year *BOO extra. WKUU: SiagUoopy, one year tU# Tour copies, one year *OO Ten eopfea/ine year itQ* Twenty oqd**,m*year..MW Special arrangements made tenth csnntry pub j Haters far dubbing »Uh their publications. Samo a Copied Free. Money can be seat by draft, money order, express, or registered etter.at oar rtek. Address i ! »NTBB^M)EAN,
