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Judge, 1884-12-13 · page 11 of 16

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| 1] 1 | \ | | | {| | i | |} i} | | | | THE JUDGE. ul Our Grover. Wno is his party’s pride and joy, Their s. giddy boy, Their own delight without alloyt Our Grover! ious, darli Who was it fired the southern heart, Of Democracy the greater part, And made those horrid Yankees smart? Our Grover! Who was dumbfounded ” when he read Whar good old Mrs, Beecher About the life that he had led? Our Grover! Who had To beat And is fight wi Who will be ruler in the spring When little birds will hop and si And Rebs and Mugwumps bave full swing? Our € over! For whom do r And spreali As he rs flap and crow, s larger grow ut to the veto? For whom do we And on our high hi And towards t Our Grovert yudly prance ook askance? atched hy every one th the sun le they poke fun? Who wit To step ilo} And bow tot) The “Gripper's” Lofty View of the Democratic Victory. Tur. follow orial appeared in Tie Dogtown G ho It mayb al large, by the way, may not special mission of Dogtown a n of our species—the species, | slitor of the Gripper > MACKHOWLY, It is with no one horse emotion (so to speak) that we refer to yesterday's result. After five and twenty years of wandering up and down the Wildern of Sin, we have come in sight of the pre behooves us to ourselves; what is our first duty as Democrats? First and foremost is, of course, the duty of referring to the mysterious ways of Providence. And just here we woul! say—and the readers of the Gripper will bear us ont in the assertion— that, though we have always thought, and still think that Providence has not for some years acted towards us in a manner which the Democratic party can approve, we never did believe that he me over to the Republican party to sta Ilaving given this fall and free kKnowledgement of our indebtedness to a higher power, let us en- sor to control our cmotions and look at future from a strictly business stand ne can donbt that orda will be far-reaching—reaching even to the Democratic lind of spirits. "We appeal to 3 whether in their inmost heart on't hear the immortal ghost of Old ory awearing with delight, and the tears of joy washing out furrows on the venerable cheek of J. B., aud the mancs of all our de- victory pised Jand, and it | CLOTHES MARRIES TIS BELOV FINDS 1T ED POR TER FINE CARRIAGE”—BUY from the ekies (poetically speaking gather inspiration from the thought and u: our victory with such moderetion that bi ness interests shall suffer no disturbance. To this end it will, of course, be impossible, without sacrificing the fundamental prince ples of the party, to tolerate the present | frightful decrease in the public debt—the icidal freedom of the nigger—the per tion of the humble citizen, who, by industry and economy, has acquired two ballots and most good—the despotism which deprives the pious Moonshiner of the society of his | favorite planct by jugging him (so to speak) in a place where the dogs can't hark at him (so to speak)—the flagrant violation of the ballot box’s freedom by plucing the said box in the enstody of judges and inspectors—the heartless discrimination against the down- trodden Irish voter by forbidding him to take part in our election till he has made a dan- gerous voyage of three th miles actually on our shores—the arrest of native ns of Trish birth, guilty only of a philanthropic attempt to clevate English men and thin doing it ina: i too abrupt to suit English prejudice—an an constitntional interference with the game laws of certain states by attempting to con- tine the shooting of negrovs to tho-e days on which no election is held, only some three hundred and sixty-four in. a year—hostile interference with the farming interest by a parted war-horses waving their kerchiefs puts them where he believes they will do | A CORSET. system of high license, which compels thousands to drink nothing Lat water. there- y diminishing the supply of that fluid so ry for agricultural purposes—the en- nent of grinding monopolies so that ploated Jocomutive no longer turns out for the humble pedestrian, and the private bather tries in vain to run down the huge steamship inflated with government sub- | sidies. All such abu s relies of Repub- licun despotism, must, of course be swept ore especially will it be our duty nt an end to the utterly demoralizing Je ofa rich pwerfal ion hke the United States fT its debt, while to rey @ it to the last cent ge auttended to these things and duly al the undying principles of Jefer- son and Jackson, it will be necessary for the Victorious party t i let by \ . Why open up the | question whether the lite Confederate Presi- | dent was or was not arrayed in thi riment | which nor woman need beashamed to w on the his interview with a squad of I “s minions? — Nor can we see the gout of inquiring into the truth of the stery that, at the village of Andersonville, certain visitors from the North were so overwhelmed by the Southern hos- that some of them lost their hives or of attempting to avenge the cre of the hosts of worthy Demo- erats who were butchered m cold blood in | the streets of New York by hireling negroes panse and usghaiimously comicbooks.com