The Huntingdon journal. (Huntingdon, Pa.) 1871-1904, August 11, 1876, Image 1

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    VOL, -10.
The Huntingdon Journal
J. R. DFRBORROW, -
PUBLISHERS AND PROPRIETORS.
Ogee is new JOURNAL Building, Fifth Street
THE 11UNTI:siGDON JOURNAL is published every
Friday l y J. R. Drunotirtow and J. A. NASH, under
ilo• firm flame Of J. R. DURHORROW Co., at $2,00 per
. 1 ,1.11,n Is snvkNCE, or $2.50 if not paid for in nix niontlie
fr , nd dAie of Aul.Acriptiou, and if not paid within the
N. pap, di continued, unles9 at the option of the pub
lial erg, al i arrearages are paid.
No paper, 11,.wev.r, will la. sent out of the State unlees
ni,,iltitely paid for in advance.
. . . .
- ,
Transient,d‘ertisonients will be inserted at TWELVE
AND A-HALF cmrs per line for the first insertion, SEVEN
AND 1-HALF CEN rs for the second and FIVE CENTO per line
lor all snlisequent insertions. .
itee . nlal quarterly and yearly businew advertieenient
e ill I, ina..rted at the following rates:
lu 6in 9.11 Iyr
4 r.,9! 5 .19, ti 1 , .W4e0!1 9 0011$ 001t27ii-36
•
0. 10 0 , • 1 ,4(.0118 00136 001 50 6.1
11, 10 ,MI 14 o.i 10 00Nco1;34 00:50 00', 65 80
00.20 00.18 000. c01!36 0060 00! 80 100
AU Ites, , lntione of associations, Communications of
or interest, all party announcements,
ai::: io:ticoe of Marriagem and Deaths, exceeding five lines,
will Ia charged TEN BENTS per line.
Legal and other notices will be charged to the party
havoi4 them inserted.
. _ . .
Adjertising Agents iuthst find their commimion7ontside
of th.se figure&
All advertising accounts ore rho and collectable
when the advertisement is once inserted.
JOB PIYINTING of every kind, Plain and Fancy Colors,
done with neatness and dispatch. Maud-bills, Blanks,
Cards, Pamphlets, tic., of .very variety and style, printed
at the shorte,t notice, and everything in the Printing
lint Will Is , executed in the most artistic manner anti at
the lowest rates.
Professional Cards
fICALDWELL, Attorney-at-Law, No. 111, 3rd street.
. Office formerly occupied I.y Messrs. Wo.uls St Wil.
Il l:. A. B. 8R1,7318.11J0T1, offers his profession services
11 to the numunity. Office, N 0.523 Washington street,
otie door caat of the Catholic Parsonage. [jan4,7l
e. STOCKTON, Surgeon Dentist. 011ie° in Leister's
U. building, in the room formerly occupied by Dr. K
J. Greene, Huntingdon, Pa. laP l2B . '76.
EO. B. ORLADY, Attorney-at-Law, 405 Penn Street ;
Huntingdon, P. u0v17,'75
("1 L. ROBB, Dentist, office in S. T. Brovere4 new building,
No. 5'20, Penn Street, Iluntingdon, Pa. [apl2.ll
jj W. BUCHANAN, Surgeon Dentist, No. 228, Penn
I 7
Street, Huntingdon, Pa. [tuchl7,7s
Ti C. MADDEN, Attorney-at-Law. Office, No. —, Pe*n
II • Street, Iluutmgdon, Pa. [apl9,ll
J FRANKLIN SCHOCK, Attorney-at-Law, footing
t? don, Pa. Prompt attention given to all legal bnsi
ne,:s. Office, 229 Peun Street, corner of Court House
Square. k1ec4,12
JT SYLVANUS BLAIR, Attorney-at-Law, Huntingdon,
• Pa. Office, Penn Street, three doors west of 3rd
Street. f jart4,'7l
IV . . t
g A d t , t n o , riez-a s t o -L l r ers a c nil ai tne ig ra a l in C ,4 la t i i m ie
Geveconiunt fur back-pay, bounty, widows' and invalid
pensions attended to with great care and promptness. Of
fice on Penn Street. Dan4,7l
TR. DLRBORRO W, Attorney-at-Law, Huntingdon, Pa.,
. will practice in the aevera: Courts of Huntingdon
comity. Particular attention given to the settlement of
estates of decedents. Office in the JOURNAL building.
LT S. GEISSINGER, Att. rriey-at-Law 81111 Notary Public,
. Huntingdon, Pa. Office, No. 2:10 Penn Street, oppo
site Court House. ffebs,7l
A. O o ti r ce ßlV l N l;en A n tt s o t n r i e e e y t, -a li t-tr t i, ,,g P d a o te n Obtained.iEnysi,7
Q E. FLEMING, Attorney' -at-Law•, Huntingdon, Pa.,
office in Monitor building, Penn Street. Prompt
and careful attention given to all legal business.
[augs,'74-6mos
lITILLIAM A. FLEMING, Attorney-at-Law, Hunting-
Vl' don, Pa. Special attention given to collections,
and all other legal busineas attended to with care and
promptness. Ottice, No. 22J, Penn Street. fapl9,'7l
Miscellaneous.
HEALTH AND ITS PLEASURES,
- OR -
DISEASE AND ITS AGONIES:
CHOOSE BETWEEN THEM
HOLLOWAY'S PILLS.
NERVOUS DISORDERS.
What is more fearful than a breaking down of the ner
vous system? To be excitable or nervous in a small de
gree is most tie4tressing, for where can a remedy be found ,
There is one:—drink but little wine, beer, cr spirits, or
far better. none; take no coffee,—wesk tea being prefera
ble; get all the froeb !air you can ; take three or four
Pills every night eat plenty of solids, avoiding the use of
slops; and if these golden ruins are followed, you will be
happy in Jain,' and strong in body, and forget you have
any nerves.
MOTHERS AND DAUGHTERS.
if there, 114 one thing more than another for which these
Pill., are so famous, it ie their purifying properties, es
pecially their power of elensing the blood from all int.
puritie,, and removing dangerous and suspended secre
tione. Universally adopted as the one grand remedy for
female complaints, they never fail, never weaken the
.vstetn, and always brings about what is required.
SICK HEADACHES AND WANT OF
APPETITE.
These feelings which so sadden nn, most frequently
artse from annoyances or tronble, from obstructed preapi
ration, or from eating and drinking what is unfit for us,
thus disordering the liver and stomach. nes. organs
must be regulated if you wish to be well. The Pills, if
takea according to the printed instructions, will quickly
restore a healthy action to both liverand stomach, whence
as a natural conselence, a good appetite and a
dear head. In the East and West Indies scarcely any
other inediclue is ever used for these diserdens.
HOW TO BE STRONG.
Nicer let the bowels he confined or unduly acted upon.
It may appear singular that Holloway's Pills should be
recommended for a nin upon the bowels, many persons
supposing that they would increase relaxation. Thin is a
great mistake, however; for thesis Pills will immediately
correct the liver and stop every kind of 1.,0wel complaint.
In warm rlimat,, thousands of lives have been 10,0 by
the use of this medicine, which in all case+, gives tone and
vigor to the whole organic system, however deranged,—
health and strength following as a matter of coarse. The
appetite, too. is wonderfully increased by the use of these
Pills, combined in the use of solid in preference to fluid
diet. Animal food is better than broths and stews. Ity
removing acrid, fermented, or other impure humors from
the liver, stomach, or blood, the cause of dysentery, diar
rhoea, and other ts.owel complaints isexpelled. The result
is, that the disturber ce is arrested, and the action of the
bowels becomes regular. Nothing will stop the relaxa
tion of the bowels so quickly as this tine correcting med.
'rine.
DISORDERS OF THE KIDNEYS
In all diceacce affecting these organs, whether they
o,crete too much or tv., bah; water ;or whether they be
afflicted with stone or gravel, or with ache., and pain.
settled in the loins over the regions of the kidneys, th e re
slionlal be taken according to the printed directions,
and the Ointment, should be Hell rubbed into the small of
tte back at bedtime. This treatment will give almost Im
mediate relief %heti all other means bare failed.
FOR STOMACHS OUT OF ORDER.
No medicine will effectually improve the tone of the
stormtch as there pills; they remove ail acidity, occasioned
either by intemperance or improper dirt. They reach
the liver and reduce it to a healthy action ; they are won•
derfully efficacionn in cared of spasm—in fact they never
fail in curing; all disorders of the liver and stomach.
Ague. !Fever,. of all
A sttins, l kinds,
Bilious I 'Maplaiss is Fits,
Disstehes en the Gout,
Skin, lbeuluelse,
Dowel Complaints, Indigestion,
Cones, Intlamnuiti.n,
Constipation of the Jaundice,
Bowels, Liver Complaints,
Cuss, umptism, humbugs),
Debility, I's les,
Dropsy. ' Rheumatism,
Erys,•nter , 11.,r t nt e ion of
Eryslpelai,
Funinle J rr , git- : Scrofula, or King's
I:allies I Evil,
CA liTioN '—None are genuine unless the signature of
J. Ilaydork, as agent for the United States,eurrounde each
pox of Pills and Ointment. A handsome reward will ho
given to any one rendering such information as may lead
to the detection of any party or parties counterfeiting the
medicines or vending the same, knowing than to be
epnrudia.
Sold at the Mannfd.ctory of Professor HomowAY &
Co. New York, and by all r.pertable Druggists and
Des:lers in Medicine throughout the civilized world, in
boxes at 25 cento , 62 cents, and $1 each.
4ir There is considerable saving by taking the larger
N. 13.—Directionit for the guidance of patients in every
dieonier are affixed to each box.
kir. 28, 187ereow-ly.
WEDDING CARDS !
WEDDING CARDS : :
We have just received the largest assortment of
the latest styles of
WEDDING ENVELOPES, and
WEDDING PAPERS,
ever brought to Huntingdon. We have also bought
new fontes of type, for printing cards, and we
defy competition in this line. Parties wanting
Cards put up will save money by giving us a call.
At least fifty per cent cheaper than Philadelphia
or New York.
api-tf.] J. it. DURBORROW (4 CO.
J. R. DURBORROW, - - - J. A. NASH.
The Huntingdon Journal,
J. A. NASA,
EVERY FRIDAY MORNING,
THE NEW JOURNAL. BUILDING.
HUNTINGDON, PENNSYLVANIA
:ni fm e9ml3r
$2 00 per annum. in advance; $2.50
within six months, and $3.00 if
[apl2,ll
00000000
00000000 SUBSCRIBE. 00000000
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TO ADVERTISERS
Circulation 1800.
ADVERTISING MEDIUM
The JOURNAL is one of the best
printed papers in the Juniata Valley,
and is read by the best citizens in the
county. It finds its way into 1800
homes weekly, and is read by at least
5000 persons, thus making it the BEST
advertising medium in Central Pennsyl-
vania. Those who patronize its columns
are sure of getting a rich return for
their investment. Advertisements, both
local and foreign, solicited, and inserted
at reasonable rates. Give us an order.
guggg;
JOB 1)
Fore Throat'',
zitone and GrAyel,
Secondary Symp-
torus,
Tie-Douloureux,
Tumors,
Clcorx,
Veneral Affections
Worms of all kinds
Weak tit, fro m
any rause, au.
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- COLOR PRINT
Oa — All business letters should be
dressed to
J. R. DURBORROW & CO.,
Huntingdon, Pa
he Tuntingdon Journal.
Printing
PUBLISHED
-IN
No. 212, FIFTH STREET.
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not paid within the year.
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Original Voctq.
The last faint beams of day
Had faded from the distant hills,
And twilight her soft mantle
Threw o'er the silent vale. Ere the ebon form
Of night sat enthroned upon
Their highest peaks, I hied me to my lowly pallet
In Morpheus' arms my sorrows to forget,
Ere that my tired form had long
The triml romfort known. I sank
Voconseious in the drowsy gel's emhrar'•.
_ .
lo'And I drowned that timo's uneett,ing wheel,
liey•rseil, revolved timid the mystic Aet.eti
Which gleam fi.mi history's ponderous page;
Back, hack, until the dial bt. okl
With ling, pointing to the oventful hour
When freedom's first faint lays ills au I
The hearts of Mir Columbia's sons.
When dread oppression stalked in hideous
Form iteross this goodly land, and crushed,
With iron heal, the first uprising
Of her power.
Metlionght I saw,
Convened upon a sunny slope, lighted
By the golden hues transmitted
From the morning sun a patriotic band ;
From out their faces shone the scintillations
of a soul aglow with love of home
And home's endearments. Fierce determination
Sat upon each swarthy brow and ruled
Each lion heart. They spoke of countless insults,
Heaped upon their writhing soul's by Britain's
Haughty King. And at the surging of their quenchless
Wrath, vied with Jove's convulsive thunders,
Methought there rains a rushing as of a mighty wind,
And from the sympathizing Heavens came a mighty
Angel, beating in his Land a banner striped
With varied hues. My trembling soul a draught
Of Joy imbibed, as to the morning breeze
He flung the banner dear that erst o'er fair
Columbia's battlements did proudly float ;
And pointing to its undulating folds
The messenger of God's high favor
Thus its colors did explain :
The red, symbolic
Of toe crimson tide which yet shall love
The valleys of this infant continent,
Preetninence assume on this insuperable
Standard. The white, of purity unsullied,
Speaks, and tells a nation, struggling
In oppression's grasp, that long as she her voice
Shall raise against despotism's power,
The dauntless son of Clod shall lead
Tier army's van.
The blue declare,
That long As true fidelity shall grace the hearts
01 those who battle in her righteous cause,
No power on earth shall ever wrest
This glorious banner from its place upon the dome,
Of freedom's citadel.
No miscreant hand shall dare defile
Its sacred folds. No humid gale,
From death's unfathomable chambers,
Shall ever blur its matehlese tints,
Or hurl it front its regal throne,
To rot amid the misty vapors
Of dark oblivion. And how, this ensign,
Born where life's pure fount unceasing pours
Its waters down the ever-verdant vales,
Giving sustenance to flowers whose fragrance
Fill elysian air with sweet perfumes
Unknown to earth, I thus present to you
Brave defenders of a principle
Fraught with power ; and destined
Ere the earth a thousand revolutions
Make, to hear upon its scarred breast
The nations ef the world.
AR Pied wag true, advanced,
And bowing low,until hit lips
The emerald carpet pressed,
Received the banner from the hand of him
Why bore it from the skies;
And, gathering 'neath its beauteous folds,
They vowed that ere it 'ilex the dust
Their blood, like mountain rivulets,
Should flow. •
E4c ttign of Zara.
SOUTHERN OUTRAGE.
The Duty of the Nation to Protect Equal
Rights in the South,
Sermon by, the Rev. Dr. Biyliss on "As
sassination for Opinion s Sake as
' an Element of Free Government."
From the Indianapolis Journal, July 17.
Trinity M. E. Church was crowded to
repletion last night to hear the sermon of
Dr. Bayliss, suggested by the outrages
upon the family of Senator Twitchell, in
Louisiana, with which this community
have become familiar by reason of the
funeral of Mrs. Helen E. Willis, in this
city, last week. Hundreds went away
from the church because of lack of room.
The discourse was listened to with the
deepest interest, and three times the au
dience broke over the restraints of the time
and place, applauding loudly, when, with
earnest indignation, the reverend gentle
man spoke of the insult heaped upon the
memory of the dead woman by the editor
of the Sentinel, in comparing her funeral
to the funeral of a street car horse. But
the sermon speaks for itself. It was as
follows :
TUE TEXT
Ps. xciv., 1-6 : 0 Lord God, to whom
vengeance belongeth ; 0 God to whom
vengeance belongeth, show thyself.
Lift up thyself, thou judge of the proud.
Lord, how long shall the wicked
triumph ? How long shall they utter and
speak hard things, and all the workers of
iniquity boast themselves ? They break
in pieces thy people, 0 Lord, and afflict
thine heritage.
They slay the widow and the stranger,
and murder the fatherless.
TIIE SERMON
Without knowing or intending it, the
psalmist has here given us a picture of
large proportions of the South, and has
furnished a form of prayer for the stricken
ones.
The troth has been forced upon us, for
we have had among us during the past
week a spectacle which to many of us was
appalling. We have followed to the grave
the remains of a woman who was killed by
Southern cruelty, and we have seen fol
lowing her in his solitary sorrow, a man,
both of whose arms have been destroyed
by bullets from a rifle in the hands of a
Southerner. The woman is at rest. The
angry surges of sectional hate will sweep
over her no more. The crack of the as•
sassin's rifle cannot again disturb her
sleep. She has heard of the murder of
her kindred for the last time. Let us con
gratulate her. The brother is not so.—
lie still lives—lives to remember the
graves of his murdered kindred ; lives to
look at the meagre stumps of his helpless
arms, and to be reminded of them every
day of his life of the malevolent coolness
with which an assassin, in open day, in
the most conspicuously public place in a
Southern village, deliberately fired twenty
one shots at him and his companions, and
then rode unmolested away. Lives also
to think that he has suffered all this in a
country for whose freedom and unity he
had received other wounds in the open
war. Some of us have seen this man sit
ting in the deep shadow of his bereave
ment, and absolutely so helpless that a
friend was compelled to sit by and wipe
for him the tears which ran over his scarred
face as he mourned for his dead. We
have seen him helped into a carriage by
friends who found it difficult to assist him
because he had no arms for them to take
hold of; and yet he could not goalone, be
cause the same assassin had made ghastly
wounds in other parts of his body.
And as we looked some of us wept,
partly for pity for him, partly for shame
for our country that is so stained by those
infamies, and partly in a sort of helpless
indignation or impotent raga that such is
the structure of our government, and such
its relation to society and public senti
ment. that such outrages can be perpetrated
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A Dream.
Dl' J. W. WELCH
I slept
The one, whose heart
HUNTINGDON, PA., Ft
by the thousand, as they have been, and
the guilty parties go free, no arrests made,
no indictments found—a free riot of blood.
This comes home to us. We hear of
such instances often, but they are far
away and distance robs them of their
startling horribleness. Indeed, in the
peacefulness of our Northern society, it
seems to us that the reports must be ex
aggerations. It seems incredible to us
that in civilized society assassins should
prowl about day and night, killing nien
iOr their opinions. The most of us had
read of this case, but we gave little heed
to it. We did not hear the crack of the
rifle, nor see the cool murderer ride away
when his work was done. But the victim
unexpectedly to himself' and us, finds him
self here for a few days, and we can see
him and hear him and help him bury his
dead. Thus the truth comes home to us,
and we arc compelled to believe that po
litical assassination is a verity in America,
as real, as unscrupulous. as bloody, as
awful, as the Secret Council and the Bridge
of Sighs in Venice in the days of despot
ism.
It is a task at once both wicked and
hopeless, to attempt to silence the clamor
abcut these infamies. If they cannot be
punished they must be denounced. If the
conscience of the nation is not dead, it
must speak, and will speak. We cannot
be true to our Declaration of Independence,
to the rights of man, nor to the God of
nations, unless we lift our voices in con
demnation. Our denunciations must he
neither few nor feeble. And the loudest
and fiercest of these denunciations must
conic from the church of Christ. Shall
she see the weak trampled in the dust, and
the helpless crushed, and not speak ?
Shall we content ourselves with hymn
singing and prayers, celebrating a decorous
worship in easy pews, and let great wrong
surge and roar through the nation unre
strained by even a protest from us ? Shall
we sacrifice justice at our very altars, and
then attempt to atone for the sacrifice by
a louder anthem to God
I fancy God wants no such worship.—
He wants His people to be as righteous as
they are devout, and to have as much con
science as they have rapture. More than
Once has God told His people that He was
tired of their new moons and Sabbaths,
and has commanded them to offer less
worship and practice more goodness ; to
put away the evil of their doings, and to
relieve the oppressed. For the church to
be silent about such wrongs as these would
expose her to the taunts of her enemies,
that "she had less justice than truth, and
less goodness than piety."
I am glad to believe that the spirit of
outrage is not universal even in the south.
While I suppose there is general discon
tent at the results of the revolution which
has swept over them, the discontent is not
everywhere a passionate hate. I am as
sured that, in a feeble way, many in the
South protest against these infamies.
. _
Neither is there any political party which
as a whole. indorses thew. None would
dare to do it, as I suppose none desires to
do it, and if any party is in such a rela
tion to them as to feel called upon to apol
ogize for them, or even to silence the
clamor of an outraged conscience concern
ing them, it is a misfortune for that party.
It is also to be conceded that passion
and brutality in the South are not un
natural. Slavery brutalizes owners as well
as slaves, and if either can rise above this
result it is because he is superior to the
logic of his situation. It is a fearful thing
to the master to put him in absolute posses
sion of the bodies and souls of men and
women, and so hedge him about that their
testimony cannot be taken against him
even in a case of murder. Human nature
in its average instances is not strong
enough to resist temptations to violence
and brutality under such conditions.
Besides this, revolution has swept over
them, and it must be galling to men who
have learned to be domineering, arrogant.
and brutal, to find their former chattels
now free and practically masters of the
situation in some localities. I can under
stand, to some extent, the fierce fire of
mingled chagrin, hate, and vengeance
which burns in the bosoms of some of
these men. Others are continually taunted
by the fact that, though once affluent,
they are now almost in want, and it is not
easy for them to feel kindly toward any
thing that contributed to their financial
ruin.
But after all that can be said by way of
extenuation, the awful and inexcusable
fact remains that political assassination is
common in many sections of the South.—
At the midnight hour men are aroused
from their sleep, and hurried, without a
moment's notice, into eternity. 1 Tnarmed
and unprotected men arc shot down like
dogs in open daylight. Some have been
deluded by promises of protection and then
led away to the slaughter, as Judas be
trayed his Master with a kiss.
General Canby and Dr. Thomas went
of their own accord into the Modoc camp,
and then were slain. Bat they had no
promise of protection from the red men ;
they were not lured to destruction as ships
are by the false light of the wrecker. And
yet how our outraged consciences de
manded vengeance upon' the treacherous
murderers. No pursuit of them was swift
enough to please our vengeful feeling ; no
cost of war was deemed extravagant. But
Homer Twitchell and his brothers•in-law
were promised protection. It was said
also that unless they yielded to the sug
gestion they would probably be a massacre
of negroes ; their humanity was appealed
to ; they would save themselves and hun
dreds of others by yielding to the friendly
request of their neighbors. Thus appealed
to they consented, and then were bretrayed
and killed.
Official reports show that these mur
ders amount to thousands. No scenic ef
fects are needed. We may not try to
make the case appalling by drawing upon
our imagination for tragic drapery. It is
a St. Bartholomew in detail; a stream of
blood which makes up in continuity of
flow what it lacks in volume.
Some affect to disbelieve, and I would
that for the honor of humanity, and espec
ially for the fair fame of our own land,
there were some room for doubt. The
fact that we are Americans would. lead us
to desire to doubt. But there is no more
doubt that thousands have been .murder
ed in the South since the war than that
there is to doubt whether the war occur
red. The reign of terror is no mere a
fact in the history of France than is the
reign of terror a fact in large sectiont3 of
the South to day. And there is as little
room to doubt that the vast majority of
them are political assassinations. They
are not the result of sudden passion, bur
of settled bate; they are not the issue of
individual quarrels, but are deliberately
planned for the accomplishment of ulterior
ends.
Sometimes in the north a mob breaks
into a jail and hastens what it calls an cxc
IDAY, AUGUST 11, 187 g.
cution of justice against some gross offen
der, and in very rare instances we almost
feel that there is sonic show of reason for
the madness of the mob. But among the
thousands of victims of Southern diabol
ism almost none have been convicted or
even accused of any grave offense. The
bullet has smitten the innocent, and the
knife has cut the unoffending.
It is not necessary to disguise the tact
that in some cases bad men have been lift
ed into places of power in the Southern
States ; adventurers and fbrtunehunters
from the North, many of whom should he
removed by legal processes from the posi
tions which they hold. But when men
appeal to this fact in vindication of assas
sinations—and massacres their logic be
comes as inhecile as their feelings arc di
abolical. The corruptions of occasional
office holders are no apology for wholesale
murder, and no distortion of logic can
make them so.
A NON-PARTISAN LOOK AT THE SITUA-
TION
Now let us forget that we are either Re
publicans or Democrats, and for a moment
look at this state of things as American
citizens and Christians.
As an element of free government it is
an inconsistency which no words of mine
can fitly characterize. The granite on
which our government rests is the decla
ration that "all men are created free and
equal, and arc endowed with certain ina
lienable rights, among which are life, lib
erty, and the pursuit of happiness." This
is oar boast; we have proudly flaunted it
in the faces of emperors and kings : it is
the weapon with which we have made our
merciless assaults upon the despotisms of
the world ;by it we have indulged the
governments of all history and explained
the mystery of their destruction ; it has
pointed our logic, inspired our oratory,
and inflamed our national pride.
And within the last fifteen years thous
ands upon thousands of persons have been
killed in this country for reasons largely
political or social. There is no other civ
ilized or semi-civilized nation on the globe,
republican, monarchial, or autocratic, in
which one-tenth as many victims have fall
en by assassination for similar reasons in
the same time. Freedom's plague.spot is
the southern section of this Union ; the
strongest argument in favor of centralized
government which the world now furnish
es is that the same section of this country.
Ic would be a relief to fly to despotism
from such democracy.
All nations curse Romish hierarcky for
inquistion, and deservedly so. It thrilled
Europe with terror; it threw over the in
tellect of the nations an almost starless
night of stagnation. It manacled the ages,
and hurled them terror.stricken at the
feet of pontiffs who grew cruel through
excess of security. It brought hell on
earth and cast the nations into it.
But even the inquisition tried men :
it mocked them it is true, but it was in f.a
mal phrases of legal import; they were ar
raigne,a, condemned, and punished under
some form of law. But this proscription
assails men in open day, murders then► as
they sit by their firesides ; calls them to
their doors, and when they answer the
summons shoots them in the very presence
of wives and children ; seizes them and
then carries them to corn-fields and turns
them loose, and shoots them as they run
for their lives, just as brutal sportmen
turn rats out for terriers in rat-pits ; mur
ders teachers who are peacefully engaged
in that work of education which has been
both our necessity and our boast since
1776. And all this in America, where
we, the other day. celebrated our centen
nial Fourth of July when the whole air was
resonant with voices of orators and thun
der of guns, and all for freedom ; where
we made the valleys and hills and moun
tains and the very heavens, luminous with
liberty's beacon fires and flaming rockets.
If dead men know anything of what
transpires on earth what an infinite bur
lesque all this must have seemed to the
men and women who have fallen under
the assassin's hand through these years.
I repeat that as an element of our boast
ed free government this state of things is
an inconsistency which I have no language
to characterize. And it is not necessary ;
it characterizes itself. To sensitive and
unbiased minds it is sufficiently appalling
without tragic accompaniments. Remove
all this from the field of politics and it
would freeze all of us with horror. No
body was killed by that band of robbers in
Missouri the other day, but how the news
shot through the land like a shock from
some huge galvanic battery. Military in
terference has been called for. and large
rewards offered for the arrest of the marau
ders. And this is well. This is as it
should be. But at about the same time
ten colored men were killed in South Car
olina in a conflict which the whites pro
voked and began, and some of the victims
let loose and shot as they ran. How does
that affect 1123 ? Are rewards offered for the
murderers? Does an outraged nation call
for vengeance.
Such a state of things brings popular
government into disrepute. Such a state
of things is not government at all, but an
archy. monarchy. an unlimited caricature
of government. It would make us a jest
among the nations if it were not so mon
strous as to be appalling. It would make
monarchists laugh only that it amazes them
with horror. If Turkey should practice
such proscription through a term of years
it would demand the intervention of Eu
rope, and the monarchies of the old World
would engage in a war for the rights of
men.
The shame which came upon us from
ninety years of slavery has been perpetua
ted through fifteen years of assassination
and terrorism, and unless we can in some
way get deliverance from these woes we
must become a by•word and a hissing
among the nations. This state of things
carries destruction in its right hand. It
palsies business and mildews social life.
Alen who killed their neighbors for politi
cal reasons in that act commit suicide upon
their own interests. The South has a sun
ny climate and a rich soil, but European
immigration shuns its disturbed territory
as men avoid contagion. Men who fly
from the oppressions of monarchy do nut
seek shelter under the terrors of anarchy.
They will not take their children where
they may some day be suddenly made
fatherless by the caprice of a mob. Thus
as a fact immigration enriches and popu
lates the North, and goes only to carefully
selected portions of the South and in small
numbers.
such a state of things is an offense to
God. Egypt afflicted Israel, and the op
pressed bore it all with a long, sad patience
until many a grave witnessed to the proud
Egyptian's cruelty, and God became an
gry. Then a pillar of fire appeared to
guide the bondmen from their captivity.
aid they went out. But they went into
a wilderness, and found their progress
bai-red by an impassable sea. And their
old enemies pressed hard alter them. They
would torture them into a return to their
bondage. Wrong does not readily let ..ro
its grasp upon its victims. and it was
thought that chariots and horsemen might
frighten lsreal into return They had h.••
gun to taste the sweets of freedom. feat it
was evidently supposed that substituting
slaughter for slave-driving. the sword for
the lash, they could be eoereed into return.
They these un will prefer slavery
bebire death. and by threatening them
with death we can secure their servitnde
But God was there, as he has always
been at every seene of wrong. and every
where, and always the friend of the op
pressed. The result you know Men try
in vain to plot against God in their conn
cils, or to fight against him in war. The
pursuers were overwhelmed with flestrue
tion ; they went down under time sea ; the
waves rejoiced over them. And Miriam
took her timbre! and sang a song of victo
ry : "God," said she, "bath triumphed
gloriously : the horse anti his rider barb
he cast into the sea."
A great King walked and soliloquized
amid the splendors of his oriental capital.
It was gorgeous with every invention of
barbaric splendor. And be said : Is this
not great Babylon which I have built'"
He had subdued surrounding nations,
sacked cities. and carried away captives.
His career was as full of outrage as his
heart was of pride. And while he was yet
speaking these arrogant and worked words
he heard a voice from heaven which must
have twilled him like the crash of duuom
And the voice said : "The kingdom is de
parted from thee, and they shall drive
thee from men till thou know that the
Most High ruled' in the kingdom of men
and giveth it to whomsoever he will." It
was God appearing again as the avenger of
public wrong.
Again there was a great feast in Bel
shazzar's festive hall. The song of the
reveller and the shout of the satrap min
gled in chaotic uproar. Laseivioussesu
added to the mad exhilaration of the wine
cup. Despotism bad condescended to a
revel, and courtiers vied with their mas
ters in hilarious sin. But there was in
iquity in that kingdom also. God's people
had also been plundered and enslaved to in
crease the wealth and spiendor of a blas
phemous king. Suddenly a mysterious
hand appeared, and traced strange words
on the illuminated wall. The blasphemy
was hushed, and the revelry was still.
God's prophet came. and the writing on
the wall proved to be God's declaration
that a great empire hail filled np the cup
ofits iniquity. "And on that night was Bel
shazzar slain." and Darius. the Mclean,
took the kingdom.
We read such facts as these to little,
purpose if we tail to see that God is con
cerned in national history, and that he is
always against wrong doers. lie waits in
patience while men approach the cultuina
tion of their crimes. It sometimes simest
seems that Ile who fought fu.
against Egypt. and for Daniel against
Nebuchadnezzar, has grown indifferent
since then, or is weary of the enrile4s strug
gle. This, however. is a great m i stake.
God changes not. lie hates the outragi..
of Coushatta as much as lie did the wrongs
of Babylon. Think you he is so deaf as
not to hear the shrieks that .tartle the
midnight air of the South ? Is He heed
less while orphans pray ? Think you that
the smell of this reeking holocsut
not reach His nostrils! Shall He note the
dying sparrow under the shrub on the
meadow's verge, and not know nor heed
when freemen die by violence for opinion's
sake?
Let us not deceive ourselves concerning
the assumed indifference of God, nor al
low ourselves to be silent about a ziant
wrung because at some points it tonch.-s
the verge of polities. We mu4t end the,e
outrages by righteousness. or there is so
room from history to fear that Gott will
end them by such mean, as lie may see
fit.
WHAT ARE THE REMEDIEI
What shall be done ?
I answer, first we must speak, and speak
in no uncertain way. I very much fear '
that we have been too silent. The whole
subject has been made apolitical question.
and the pulpit has been dumb under this
view of it. It is not pleasant to be made
the target for taunts and criticisms. And
so the accumulating wrongs have gone on
unrebuked even by the pulpit. I never
spoke upon it in public myself until the
scenes of the past week startled me from
my apathy.
And yet I imagine that all the wrongs
committed in this land fur fifteen years
past turn pale in presence of this one. Ev
ery bad passion which flames in an Indian
massacre is more than paralleled here. We
burn with vengeance for Custer and his
brave hand, and yet the dead who have
been slain by these outrages in the Smith
are more than five times the number of
armies which confronted each other on the
plains bef we Custer fell. And so we mast
speak. We cannot be true to our broad
mission of right and charity and be silent.
The church of Christ. with an open Bi
ble beflo-e her, can take but one view .;'the
question. To he indifferent concJrning it
would be to give the lie to all her profes
sions of broad charity and love for the
right. Shall we send millions id money
to heathen lands for the education and sal
vation of foreign nations, and then quietly
sleep on while in our own land the a.-ietws-
We rifle crashes through Ow night, accom
panied by shrieks of women whose lois
bands are murdered and the wail of orphan
children ? Shall we sympathize with the
Servians in their struggles for freedom
against the Turks. and then 4mite and call
it fun, nr scowl and call it polities. while
negroes run through cur own stretts and
fields trying to dodge the bullets of mur
derers ? 11 there were no politics in it. and
I fail to see how her duty is at all differ
ent now. ller Bible. her Saviour. her
God, her martyrs. her heaven, all her
tory and all her hopes pledge her to one
view of the subject. These murders are
"evil, only evil, and that continually,"
and are to be punished and stopped.
The government should handle the ease
with less delicacy. We are so afraid of
military interference in this country that
too often the ways of justice are allowed
to be wholly perverted for lack of it. There
must be somewhere in this nation a power
which can (tuell this dark and dreadful
spirit. If there is not then our boast about
our government is self-deception or hypoc
risy, and the government itself is an object
of pity or contempt. If it cannot protect
its own citizens, it is time for revolution,
either in public opinion or in the structure
of our Constitution and laws. The time
has come for, this sin to cease , and th e
General Government, if the State will not
do it, should be encouraged and empower
ed to put a stop to it.
The ballot-bon meat be rot. eted.
freedmen are freemen now, and the rights
of freemen most be guarantee-1 to them .
The Aot- ,,, iin ar...7nment to I,eter them from
the exerei•els or the franchiAe wart be pr.N.
hibite.i. The government ni: t y tyro , fier tte
to any Min how rnte hnt i• rn-t•t at
all hazarli znarantee him prnteetpm in le
zil wtherit•Ae free iroverstners , ••
at an end. and onr ron•titi.
tion h. .port of mob.
I runitit4 that I tm It the
way In ...Ill.+ -uhjer• t•-...tte.1
to n. 4 •mtn..:h
whorl ime 4ponk4 a w..nlaratast
o f th ese .;I).Gott -i-tin he
an , l cen‘ur...l but the are
m..elte.l at Th.. of Mr. I1:11;..
ha.- been t...inpur.•.l to ;he funeral .r
r 11411,C.
It i. not enone•fi !hit
by vioienre ; that ehe
through i T..ng horror; chit her
last thronzh her •zlalinz eve* wne 'n
on her brothor who hl , l been ren.le
less rind helplese hy
enough ?bat th:4 Ins nte4. retineri wnounn
nonin4t wham nn neenwitom WINO ever
hroufht. in her last .teltriorn
pr i ed t bar nvor.lerer- were. hovering 11..ar
not enough that 4he i. den , ' ; het
of Indianapolis must fro and ?Pls. .peo her
zrave and ontrage her rnemory by tan , 4hing
at her funeral as if it hail ben finerzi
of a horse
She was a ,tralizrr to m e. hgt I .h.o l ad
Is' a.s r,war,ll7 h. who a...molts the 4ead
it' I did not. forzet7ing my own 4hare
the insult. at hvr name r , gent this morlee
to her tortu , ry. In 4 I hatter myneltdiatt
I bye in a rommonity in which the wan
who wrote that itrollt Aantf4 alone in ht•
nnatteraWe roe-Anne.' I wait the world
to know that thi! , to-in 'its! , not 10.311 for
Indian:Tolin, nor 14 any relpeetsbte
zen ~f wh e n hr th , 4
simile
Mit Iro are 31) t o Ipilt belie hiv.
no jwit sense of the enormity )f the.), ..f
-fens.. Taunts mak. n. 3rpf
prejudices make inflifferent It Is •m. 7
for us to -it in 000ir -are snit inter h.se
and furget the wor4 ‘,f- the vornrhi.
It dive' not berom.- me here to
how men lhall rote I mer e ly eg
ease and leave the loicie of it to c a rry Tan
whither it will. Rot F will -ay that r ot un
now, in view of all this, tv no triiine if
fair. Every ballot ham its it weal or "roe
for the imperilled people :4 the Swath Be
fore thi.4 inestirot every other mol , jeet
oar national ry.titie. dwindle into insiztrifi
eance
Shall thts anininios of not and bloo•I be
give n loose rein uatil terrori4tri horo
on the Sonth in a nnirereai ressr.t.
-than the gov!rnmeet hw ,a,w+arizowf an 1
einpovrerf-I to eromh it with 31 Wl'9lll baud
The roestios before as DOW Li not NIP
of Ilieseee, bat of the stghto min Lt
us pray for Rnifian , :.., Joel -;
that wc =hall giro ae..,ant th.a.o.nr. - G•wf
tltrt NlisctlianD.
Fun and Point.
rut: ‘ll .-crr
:5...i.y rt, Ater' •Th.• elp 'hat cheers.
1k that ean kri bri tetairr u. het.?
than he that ciis keep a rarrivice
ktbv twr. ha7g talk,. tii.ctort..y
1 , -;tr .it if Tehixan It isa feasible cafe.,nr..e
Why temp,r-priep intim
'! He ha.; 41,r, f in? ••.
hr
, larke: K y . the
other Eby. i.kef : •• I P..• .iii 'mot
or& keep ' , tamp , 1 antelopes
-•Wh3e4 grin, ~ n **pi wrn
bore rn Ilinnr!mws .lerr,;.l I sm.
the reply. awl he .ry .1
• Join Smith ha. )••n arrr.tesi of
for w. lrtn, i •-lean .ftlrt 1 . if .rtnnuar.y
it Iseiongrd to another mart
Id priyinz whirh ronnta with
the Lord vans+ fa , itvring roar full inert,
so s Tallow *aid an .trimasert rite.. mho,
When s man tries 110 how at mishit to
Lit the key bolo and eel! erases Watts*
yard of it, you may r..-4 Oka!: 1... r
is drink
.1 female jmniee of din przeo in Wr.sa
log had to stop to pin ip her hair while
solemnly sesteseiniz a pnsoner three
months in jail
:4.m that Eimin which is sot brink 'tsar
been 11111CM4111, people who live I.3sti
homp will be abl«to •hr....
safely other people
"Lentrne die now .-typed in otsio
farmer. •• I've *lived to Aee a woman ;it
thirty one yards of ninth into one drew.
and I'm renAy to pull stakes 1.,.
.1 'little trade with Fv.it is better thaw
a great concern it $ toe. $ wesil tire that
warm* Ins i+ better than 4 !stir it !MS
ynn
The •43y in.l 6-4,7! ynnn : ::
not 'lee,' in the. Attreetto with thew r
trimame4 in co.! 4, sa sser et* i m p.
a Inxi-oaw t,► part it in the nestir.e
Sneezing 14 ri.ry aelibtaa bear 4 in prem.,
now. alter the -14 folk• hav r.etr.4. NH
lovers bear in tain4 th. rript frren by
Itroww-S.e.inar4—tbee wroesist Pao el
war be wopp.4 by priewror: tb. app.", r n ,
-- ind act areor4teirty
s'arsr4s SitsvlON —The 6.llownsig
di4eourse by a converted Chinese toe s,.
with reference so the merits (4 Cusfiseisis
14s). Bahlbi4wi ind chriwiinity :4 w rth
pre4ervir.:
man had fen pa.
find lay in its miry h..ttors. imaging awl
utterly usable to usove I "-.nferiss wsik
ed by. ipprssehisz the.!il k ge of be pit.
lad 4;11,1. -Viol , fellow. las very .grry
for you. Why were ylis .wrh i "ti sr to
let in there! Let we jive yin a pt.'e ef
advice ; if you zet ..ut don't set in stmts."
.1 flfsidbisit priest wen mos by. owl
Aaid, -1'..0r fellow. I am very sorb psise4
to tee you there I doltish if yes 'mid
sersishle up two-thirds .4 the my. or ev-ms
halt. I couiil reach you and Kft pees ap
the rest. - Bst the alas Is the pit VIPs
entirely helpless sea carne to rift
Neat the 7 4 S•lOtir came by, and h.-are
the cries, west to the very twist .4 the
pit. stretched down awl had hold .1 de
poor teas, brosszht hiss op opt NIA '4;..
and sin so siore.••
PATRI..I"Ie Soltllo , ll —.l Ott-Issitag
stranger was sitting os taw !Sitio, pindierio
reading a newspaper, hot etrestooot when aw
suillealy let it fall frn his bands mad
burst intn tears •• What is roe geed. is y
dear sir'" hastily asked the simmeinhed
anii sympathetic hystamier. The 'drowsed
man looked up. with eyes Itrivoist
--straapper,'' he gal yea, you knew tbut
there bleat a single es- Presieient olive
L an l again he howed his head and wept
/ Iry •
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