Rensselaer Union, Volume 6, Number 36, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 28 May 1874 — Page 3 Advertisements Column 5 [ADVERTISEMENT]

THE IItTER-OCEAg. ' IM7H. - 1874 r THE LARGEST CIRCULATION IN THE NORTHWEST. IF'OXI. 1874. EsUiblbbod Inn than two years since o* a Repubitean jmper, pledged to r maiatuin ttnd d fend lh<* ptijriplee and or- ■ gauizalion of the great National Republica.i j party, the Intm-Oolmii has otrained u c’tmul»tio;i and iuilueuce with the nnssee ol its I voters everywhere to entitle It to approach i t)ie commcncHmeut of a new calendar year ' audio prepare for the preliminary work of 1 the next campa’gn, t' e shadow of which is 1 already casting itself upon the county, in the confident belief that it* Irlends will need no oilier specific pledge for the r uture than ' has been given in its columns from day te ' day during tb* past eighteen mor,ths Sitici 1 !|s first publication it has maintained the position cf THE LEADING REPUBLICAN NEWSPAPER IN THE NORTH A EST. to which it- was assigned by universal assent, in the excited canvass which resulted in tho second and triunipliaut election of President Grant. ; THE ENEMIES OFTHE COUNTRY I ore vigilantly at work. Despite the over- ! whelming rebuke admiulitered to them in 1872, the opposiliou are skillfully massfug their forces for a more determined onslaught upon the Republican organization at the next Rials Md-N«l*on«4‘eiectfon s. Encoeraged by the apathy of Republicdns in the “offyear,” seizing the unprecedented financial stringency as a pretext, and using as a hood wink the deep feeling amoug.the agricultural classes for het'er and cheaper modes of triusportatiou 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 SOUTH . . the old D. mocracy of Secession and Rebellion is being warmed into, life by theapparent reverses Rvpublicuuism has suffered in the North. The election of Allen in Ohio, the triumph of Tammany iu New York, and tho few desultory successes which have come to Anti-Republican tickets in various portions of ths West and Northwest, liave inspired •he rebels of IBH with the hope that the day is dawning when the Lost Canae is lo be voted into a victory They Railed to achieve b.y means of the bullet and bayo eU Already R. M. T. Hunter, a former Seni-tpr from V'‘iTgiuia, a ar.d’ a member of the Cabinet of Jeff Davis, lias publish d bis scheme for the virtual payment of Four Hundred Millions of Dollars for the Emancipated Slaves of the South. The Richmond tVa.) IVAiy and Governor Gilbert Wulkrr are urging ltrs plan with all pertinacity j and there can belit tie dou fit that a large party of Southeru Reptesemative* in the Foity-tlilid Congress will be prepareq to advocate lhe payment of this money by tho General Govoruiaent. past history of the Democratic party gives no warrant that It will oppose this infamous robbery of lhe people ol the North for tbebeuefitof traitors: but if the party is true to itself _and its instincts the South will find it and itsrepressututiies a subservient ally. THE PAYMENT OF THE REBEL DEBT is another scheme that is broadly hinted at in many parts of the South, and is, without doubt, one of the projects to which the leading Democrats of that section would address themselves, if th? time should ever come wheu a majority of lhe Northern States and the General Government should be in the bauds ol the party which helped the rebels in their work of destroying the Union. These are not fanciful issues. They are real dangers, either to be inst lace to face, or else to be squelched in their inceptiou by the continued successes of that organization which crushed the rebellion, gave freedom to the slaves, acd destroyed the slave-holding Confederacy. ' THE FARMERS know that the Intkk-Oc*an was their earliest, as it has been (heir staunchest and warmest, friend. It is emphatically the oiguu of the people in the best sense of the term, believing in the fullest protection of the rights of the manv against lhe encroachments of the few. It believes that all chartered corporations should be held to be subservient to the power that created them, aud without am infringement <,f tho just rights of others it insists, and will continue to insist, that all corporations enjoying special privileges voted to them by thepeople •shall servo the people fairly uud justly, al a compensation allowing a reasouable profit upon the actual capital employed. THE FAMILY. The Intkb-Ocean makes special efforts to render itself acceptable to lhe families of ,its patrons. To tlits eiid everything is rigorous y. excluded that could possibly offend The n li- ious and moral character is guarded with especial care, and its aim is “to encourage the true, the beautilul, and the good." THE INTER-OCEAN - „ Is the paper for THi UEPt'BLICAN, THE F.IHMEH, THE FAMILY, THE MERCHANT, THBtPKOFESSIOXAL MAN, THE MECHANIC. In Literature, General News, Foreign and Domestic Correspondence. Local Reports, aui all that goes to make a first-class Commercial ami Family Newspaper, It is not excelled by any publioatiod' iu tho couutrv. THE COMMERCIAL DEPARTMENT is conducted with.great care.anq everything possible is done to make the M ARRET REFORTS such as the FARMERS and BUSINESS MEN of the North wist can RELY Upon. THE AGRICULTURAL DEPARTMENT is carefully editrd' by gentlemen of ability and experience. 7 he INTER-OCEAN hat by far lhe largest circulation of any newspaper published »n the Northwest. It is sent to more than 5,01X1 PoUoffices, distributed in ecery Stale and Territory in the Lulled States, in ail the British Provinces, and in numerous Foreign Stales and dmntris*. Subscriptions are solicited froui atl parts of lhe world. While the l.xTta-Oatxx especially represents the great interests ol the Ncrthwest, it is a NATIONAL NEWSPAPER, one that will be found interesting and usafyll :to Americans iu every part of the globe. It i treats upou all subjects, aqd in editorial dirI missions aims to be candid, dignified uml above personal abuse. - . TER MS'OF SUBSCRIPTIONDAILY; 3y mail .payable in advauoe .per y«K tISOG By mail ■ payable in advance >, b menths 6.00 By mail payable in advance;, per quarter A.OO Daily every othar day (three timea per week) per year'---Paper tor Sunday, per year .—.. . tSQP extra. WEEKLY: Single copy, one year • MO Fonr copies, me year 500 Ten copies, one year. —•-o-.-. 4200 Twenty copies,one year 20 00 Special arrangements made with cvuntrf publishars for clubbing with their publications. Sample Copies Free. Money cun be soul by dralt, money Older, express, or registered elter,al our risk. Address INTEK.OCEAN, tia Lake st., thicuge.