Newspaper Page Text
V
roL. >•
j PROCLAMATION.
L« t. rraocK,/
OyTeinor of said States.
ft r-fCnr- <#
I ( , u iAl information hf»R been recdv
. t that E. A. Rhodea. who hap
tl •' ft'oee of horse stealing, *nd
-lituntlary of this State by the
-n keecounty, i« now at large;
r. ro’-'T to t«rtie this, iny TYocla
f . ' t :l<-iing a rewaid of One Tliou-
I .' r tl." njiprenMOn ami delivery of the
,« to tlie Principal Keeper of the
I .. r i-v hand a> <l the g'cat Seal of the
I r.ipitol in Atlanta, tiiis second
I iry, in the year of out* Lord Eigh-
I ;; . i and Seventy-one and of the In
■ <fthe United States of America
TUTUS D. BULLOCK.
I '(Viidi. Cottiko, Rectctaryof State. ,l
■acclamation.
I Governor of said State
if information lias been rcceiv
• nt tliaton the nightof the 18th
. a party of diaßut.-ed men,
-Klux Klan, about thirty in
iv house of lion. Alfrod Ilir.h •
, . i and member elect of the
• r in the town of WatkirißvllW,
and after having effected an en
dow 11 the door of the house with
tor ten of them proceeded up
'■ iiittutea had fled for safety, and
1 lt;ckard»oti commenced tk
'wwnj "Vt‘ni! 1(1Vi 1 rfifn tw
aoi#; and
if the said Richardson, while
dm, calling for help, was s o
- hv some of the party who
outside, all the shots taking
oc window she was standing by;
.0 second attempt to assnstdn
, -on, which has been made
; and
ioritios of the said county of
to ferret out or to secure- the
t.e pcijKitratios of the outrage
tsith-damling one of the mtm
t ■ man named James I’on
1. i.ty was badly wounded
:,'o the county by the other
<i, as is reported, has since
• i without inquest :
rdf r to effect this object, and
dr.oss of human life, I, Rufus
said State, do hereby
. offering a reward of
id.A uS for the apprehension
any one of the parties.cn-*
i of the outrage afore
-1 Dollars each for auy ad
dian one of the Klan ,eu
utrrge above recited,
i-d the great Seal of the 1
w in Atlanta., this
:i t ■ year of out Lord Eigh
-1 and of the Ins
l nited States of America,
RUFUS B. BULLOCK.
Com.vG Secretary of State.
r^'LLOCK,
' v <-in r of said State.
■ of the lClh of January
■ , <*«unty of Clarke, was
H. "'tn or eight disguised
1 "1 focibly entered his
. cm, been taken out-..
B. "'.is whipped in
B -i r.er, inflicting near
B ; , . ; and
‘t no other reason
■ • -r thus treating the
. u l-uMicly c 'lamented
B . masques and cloth'
H -ni?.;uion known ns
'' 1 ‘^coveredby a color-
B ' •'wir., i, < ?° rn shucks on the
B T i «n Viin white
• "arntd by cm..- .
..” '>atiiuent in regard i -n,
■ J '-iek regalia ; and
1 ' >unilar character have
B-.* die unoffending and
B ; ; said county of Clarke,
' •' - th.-, Torts of the good
B -aid county to bring
i '.es ; and
•- ••laer to vindicate the majesty
B ' ,re mil protection to the life
dt leu, TANARUS, Rufus B. Bullock
dohetely Issue this, my
y P y jgf
j proclauiMtish, FIVE THOU
SA N P qrr«*t *uk]
c*onvie*mn-ofabyiOhe.«if//th« sties’ in
Wff&ra.UoP of .the
One Tbpi/stifidTMJart cb'ch'for eV'efyjuJrfitionrtl
number thanyone of.tV^Kra4’’; j WMgaged s in
connutttlngjtUeov»tm^Babov(f. recited.
Given utideHi«ta<r hahd and tbegreat SeM of the
State, at |T)e''ca[Uv)t"ih Atlanta, 'this second
day, of Fedruary, in the year oUmuCVnd
, 'M and!
Independence pi theTTuiUd StateSjoPAffierjca
the N mety-flfth. ,p j X-t>?•
RUFUS B. BULLOCK.
By the Governor:
David CL Cocttng,' Secretary State,
feb 9-38'4t. j.,,' :
Dissolution of : Co-PartiiersHp.
THE Co-Partnet>Jiip heretofore exjs jng between
T. M Allen and J. W. Dennard, under the
firm name arid stylo ofi Alien and.Demwird is this
day dissolved by mupujal consent. The books,
notes and accounts can be found in the bands of
W. J. Dejinard, who alone is authorized tp make
settlements. . Come up and settle at once or the
accounts willL'e placed in tfe hands of an Attor
ney for collection. T. M. ALLEN.
J J, W. DENNARD
i ". i >f“ e—>•••. ■ .
Thankful for the liberal patronage heretofore
bestowed upon t.he fijnvl hope Ly stri<jf|
to bud if ess, nqd ilafr Tleaiiiig to merit k . f cputiriua ri
tion of tbo same, I sliair poufiniip pm pijafaejss at
the old stand of Allen and Dennard, ,
„ ‘ ResDecftilly; *
r s, J.W. BENfIRD.
•• 1 ■ '*■' • i *—■£—-
GEORGIA —Decatur County—On the; fcrst Mon
day in March Next I will apply to the court of
Ordinary of said county, tor leave to sell the real
estate of Joseph Rawls deceased.
Feb 9-td JAMES G. MAXWELL, Adm’r.
(T EoßGlA—DeOatur County*-On trie first Mon-
Jf day in May next I will apply to the Court of
Ordinary of said county for dismission from the
admin st ration on the estate of Joseph Glover, de
ceased and also from the Gu.'mlinrmdiip of John C.
Glover. RACUEAL A. GLQVEII,
Feb 9-td AchuTLiid Guar.
To Consumptives.
The ad vbi'tlser having been permanently cured
of, t-hat dread disease Corisumoticn, by a simple
remedy, is anxious to make known to his fellow
«utiers the means <rf cure. To all who desire it he
will send a copy of the perscriptiou -used ( tree of
charge) with the directions for preparing and
using the same, which they will find’a Sure Cuiie
for Consumption. Asthma, Bronchitis, §{*..
I’a.i ip-a "Mr-'-tr• At***tjioi«wTjUtfotf will pl«asc ad-
Tltesa . -
Rev EDWARD A. WILSON.
105 South Second Street, Williamshugh N. Y.
ERRORS OF YOUTH
A GENT LEM \N who suffered for years from
Nervous Debility, Premature Decay, and all
effects of younthful indiscretion, will, for the sake
of suffering humanity, send free id all who need it
the receipt and directions for making the simple,
rtmeilv by which he was cured, Sufferers wishing
to profit by the advertiser's experience!can do so by
addressing, in perfect-confidence
JOHN B OGDEN.
No. 42 Cedar Street N. Y.
*, :! ■ ;
ET EORGIA—-Decatur County—-On the First
I T Monday ini March next, I will apply to the
Gtiuft of Ordinary for permanent ’•iters of ad
ministration on (the estate of Henry Elkins late of
said county deo46sed. . n
DORATHA ELKINS.
Feb 9-td •- >
y i ■
EORGL-t Dkcatur Corstt. —Whereas J. M.
M Whigliam represents to the Court ire his pes
tition dulv filed that he has fully administered
Wm. Oltnik.it estate. 1 This is therefote to cite- all
persons CO nee, tied, kiiulrO'i ami creditors to show
cause if any they can why said administrator should
not lieylischurged from Uia adyainlStratioti ou the Ist
Monday in ApTii 1871. .s' ,Af
• f.. JOEL JOHNSON, Ord.
— • ■■ . ; *;■l T■■ V
v 1 t tvepfii Hi t i h.ztl't i‘ [( oi \jd.kl:ll/ Jlrtft 3
—JpwiAtijit —RohL
vLTI H. %nigtiam to the Cpiirt in ,hjfe.
petitiondulv filed, that he Has fully admiriistefed
J. M. McNair's- Estate. TKWTS therefore 4o cite
all persons concerned, kindred and credftoVs, to
show excuse if any they can why he should not be
discharged from Jxis admiiustratiou on the first
Monday in April 1071'.
. mil JOEL JOHNSON, Ord.
— : “ '
A DM INJSTIi.VFO R’S SALE.
t~)Y virtue of an driier from the Court Os Ordinary
1) of Decatur- county* will be soM before the
Court House door, between the legal hours of sale,
on the first Tuesday in March next, all ot the rear
estate of George A.,Fa<Mek co„ sls tmg
of (4VfCur acres of land —8 lots—Nos and, *-• *> «.
n 7 8 *, bounded on the North by -College street
“AS" £
Bainbndge, Ga., Ju». 2, 18,1, ....
IS'kfJi‘S s SiSSC
4 0-1 y
Administrator's Sale,
Courthouse doot m ? withi» the legal hours
& ft
theTmh JKsW&/;:, 35’, 374. % >«• g®
57, if, 24. oi, \\ “, 3 ;?n&iir County Ga. Sold
in the 27th 1). strict of by the
as the property of tbe «da pash-purchasers
undersigned .ot di - .
pay tor stamp* j. B ,
* 'iS&SSS® *
An independent Jour a al-Devoted' to tlio Interests of Georgia.
BAINBRIDGE, GA., THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1871.
THE SOUTHERN SUPfe
Puhlslietf Weekly by
J O II N R* H A Y ES.
Proprietor. : -i - -,w
**-.*» i&*Tk£ -. .•
Terms ot Subscription.
one. year,... .X
six mouths..,,.. .1... ....1 60
oq£ Jopy, three months l. £ 00
Advertisements.
_ ill be inserted at one dollar per square for the
Hv insertion. Liberal deductions wll be made on
coi. ■ facts. Obituaries and manages j will be febage
tlm same as other udverlisenients.
Senator Saulsbury’s L.ate Speech-The
Southern People Vindicated.
In the Unnited States Senate, some days
hjvo, when the question of admitting Mr.
Hill, of Georgia, io his seat was UDderdis*.
cussion, Hon. Willard Saulsbury, of Dela
ware, made a noble speech. The follow
ing extract will sink deeply into the hearts
of the Southern people, and embalm his
name in their memory :
It may be that some newspaper scribbler
may say that I am a secessionist because I
am suggesting a legal question to legal
minds. Ido not know, sir, whether yonr
habits of life or habits of thought have led
you to deeply study the principles of law,
tut I known that Mr. Jefferson offered the
Attorney Generalship of the United States
to a man who distinctly and broadly laid
the doctrine in the first treatise that was
ever written upon the constitution of the
United States, that a State had the light to
secede, and that there was no power in the
general Government to coerce it. That
was the recognized" doctiineof this country
for the first twenty yenra of its existence.
Bat the same commentator, when he an
nounced the principles, warned bis country
men against ever attempting the exercise
of such a power, as I, in my humble sphere,
warned my By no act or
word did-I ever oncourag'c the exercise of
such a power, realJor ptesumptive.
Bat, sir, it.Bhows how nice arc the lines
dividing Federal and’State anthority, and it
is for that reason that I cite it. As for
those Southern men who, after their State
had seceded, followed the banner of their
States in to war, I give it as my deliber
ate judgement, hoping nothing, expecting
nothing, that it would require twelve
butchers for a jury and a Jtffreys for a
judge to try them for so doing. Sir, pro
tection and duty are reciprocal : and when
you did not afford proioction to those
Sonlhern people , when they were living
under a government having the power to
compel their obedience and to punish their
disobedience, and you had not the power
to relieve them from the consequences of
disobedience, they were no traitors They
are Dot traitors in God Almighty s chance
ry.. They are no traitors according to the
English law. --They are no traitors
ing to the instinct of human nature. It was
decided by the English courts, and before
yob Were the United States of America ;
ana in less than a year after Pennsylvania
habhdissolved her allegiance to the British
Crown it was decided by the American
courts that thetivan who adhered to Penn
sylvania against the king 110 traitor.
What, hang a man if he does and hang him
if he does not ! There is no such principles
of Law; there is no such principles of mo
ral ethics.
And now, in this the last time, although
it be an impromptu address that I make to
my brother Senators, that I expect to ad
dress them, I beg them, I beg the Ameri
can people, I beg the great engine of pub
lic opinion which controls and governs to a
great extent pubiic sentiment, bauish from
your minds the idea that the men of the
South are traitors. They are traitors no
more than you are, sir. Their Stales went
out. Their States had the power to cora
pci obedience and pnuisli disobedience.
You did not protect them when they were
defenceless. I stand here in the last mo
meats of my Senatorial life, to proclaim
throughout the length aud breadth of this
whole country, North and South, so far as
my feeble utterances cau reach, that those
gallant noble people ate no traitors.
“Such graves as theirs are pilgrim shrine,
Shrines to no cord or creed confined,
The Delphian vales, the Fajettines,
The IJeccas of the mind.
And when your rude 6olliery drive away
the humble votary who brings flowers to
deck the graves of the Confederate soldier
who sleeps side by side with your own
honored dead, the man by whose ord e r
that was done was a traUur agaioat the
promptings which the Almighty h.mseh,
has pat is his heart, and when be stands
before the great and eternal tribunal before
Which we most all stand, will be adjudged
by the eternal God to be a heartless wretch.
W i* living iw>w, when he did* let him
?»c buried in a dung hill, and over it let there
. be inscribefft.be‘Here lies infamy!*’
m ■ .*■ * w
Sir, I do not sqy this because I was in
f favor of secession. There was no man
here root*:pained an( j mor s grieved and
e \ban 1 did. 1
vwrne wrttchctfrfbss and ruin ffitt 60"ce?H
sion was going to tiring, not 6Aly upon the
country but particularly npon the border
States- But, guy when you teU me that
the descendants of the noble.o!d.Virginians
who did more to lay the foundations of this
government deep in the bf con
stitutional liberty, regulated by law, than
all others, are traitors, I protest against it
in behalf of the honored dead, their patri
otic sires. In behalf of their living rela
tives, I pretest against it, ,In the name of
God Almighty’s. eternal tpercy, which is
vouchsafed in exuberant abundance to
mankind, I protest against it.
Sir, not far from this place there is a
cemetery where lie the bones of many of
yonr soldiers ; and did any one who ever
visited that place read the inscription over
the gate through-which he passed? The
very inscription over the gate in the ceme
tery in which you entered, to decorate the
graves of your own dead, was in these
words :
‘•On fame’s eternal camping ground
There silent tents ate spread
And glory guards, with solemn round,
The bivouac of the dead.”
And you marched under that inscription
to decorate your own Federal dead, and de*
nied the right of a poor Southerner to cast
a flower upon the grave of a Confederate ;
and who wrote that inscription ? Was it a
Northern man ? No. It was a Southern
man who wrote it. You use the words of
a Southern man to put an inscription over
the gate of the cemetery through which
you marched to decorate the dead, and
nied the poor Southern soldier the humble
privelege of having his grave decked with
a single flower. I make this remark not to
reflect upon the gallant soldiers of the North
or the gallant Union men of the
thoge who fought, but because all these
questions are pertinent, and are at issue
tn this congest ; they go to the foundation
of your right to exclude Mr. Hill.
Sow Grass Seeds.
This is a very good month in which to
sow grass and forage plants seeds. We
place at the head of the list soiling and hay,
Lucerne. —Nothing else will compare with
it, either as a quantity or* quality of pro-,
dace. Sow 10 pounds of seed to the acre.
Make the land as rich as posible, break as
deep as posible, harrow the surface well
and brush the seed. For manure for! Lu
cerne, we should prefer the superphosphates,
which contain some percentage of ammo
nia. We prefer the chemical manures for
this plant to farm yard manure, because
the former contains r.o seeds of weeds. If
the ground be perfectly clear spw broqdcaa|-
If foul sow in drills nine to twelve inches
apart. Put in an acre or two of Lucerne in
this way and you will never regret it.
Glover succeeds well on rich land sown
this month.
For meadow or bottom laud sow four
quarts timothy, four quarts herds grass,
two quarts white clover, anß? four quarts
red clover.
For upland winter pasture sow one
bushel orchard grass, four quails blue
grass, one bushel meadow 04t gcass, or if
this cannot * I)6“Obtained, One bushel wild
, T c, and four quarts red clover, and two
quarts white clover.
These grasses may be- sowed with or
without oats. It is more economical to
sow with oats, because the oats will pay
for a heavy manuring and your grass is
clear except cost of seeds. But tfieo you
lose a year with the grass as compared with
sowing it alone. If the gronnd be made
rich euoogb, with ordinary seasons failure
need not be feared. When an acre of laud
is well set in Lucerne, or clover and win
ter grasses, no sensible man would be will
ing = to sell it for one’* and red dollars. Even
if his seeds and manure have cost him fifty
dollars ho will have made money by the
operation. It is better to spend this fifty
dollars on the ground than on a lazy hire'
lino- In the one case it is put out at com
pound interest without further trouble, in
the other it is gone without valuable con
sideration in return. —Plantation.
The Courier-Joural thinks if anybody
bad met Christopher Columbus m the mid'
die of the Atlantic and told him that tie
was in the act of discovering a country
that would ultimately fall into the hands
of such an Administration as Present,
he would have gone back home and stayed
* here.
A Touching Obituary.
A disconsolate husband thus bewails the
less of his wife, and apostrophiaes her mem
ory. : h. . • ■
i * .Tima my wdcdujd. No more will those
lovmg hands pull off my boots and part ‘rev
back hair, as only a true wile can. No
w J ug fret, replenish the
coal holTand water .pail. No more will she
arise amid the tempestuos storms of win
t;r, and gaily hie herself awaj' to build,
the fire without disturbing the slumbers of
the man who doted on her so artelessly.
Her memory is embalmed in my heart of
hearts. I wanted to embalm her body, but
I found I could embalm her memory much
cheaper.
I procured of Eli Mitdget a neighbor of
mine, a,very pretty gravestone. His wife
was consumptive, and he had kept it on
hand several years, in anticipation of her
death. But she rallied that spring and his
hopes were blasted. Never shall I forget
the poor man's grief when l ask him to part
with It. “Take it Skinuer,” said he, and
may you never know what it is to have
your soul racked with disappointment as
mine has been!’ and ho burst into a flood
of tears. Ilia spirit was indeed utterly
crushed.
I had the following epistle engraved ops
on her gravestone: “To the memory of Tabs
itha, wife of Moses Skinner, Esq., gentle
manly editor of the Trombone. Terms three
dollars a year* invariably in advance, A
kind mother and exemplary wife Office
over Coleman’s grocery, up two flights of
stairs. Knock hard, ‘We shall miss thee,
mother, we shall miss thee.’Job printing
solicited.’ Thus did my lacerated spirit cry
out in agony, even as ltachel weeping for
her children. But one ray of light penetra
ted the despair of my soul. The under
taker took bis pay in job printing; and the
sexton owed me a little account I should
not Jiave gotten any other way.- Why
should we pine at the misteriours ways of
providence and .vicinity [Nota conundrum.]
* * I here pause to drop a silent tear to
the memory of Tabitha Ripley, that was.
She was an eminently pious woman, and
could fry the best piece of tripe I ever flung
under my vest. Her were
a perfect success, and she always doted on
foreign missions.
Female Journalists.
“Miss Grundy,’ of the World, the youns
gest lady correspondent in Washington, is
Miss Snead, a girl scarcely out of her teems.
She supported herself as a clerk in the lute
ior Department until within a year. On
ieceiving her discharge, she turned to liter'
ary labor to earn her living, and for her
first letter described the ovation in honor
of Prince Arthur. She sent this letter to the
New York Post. It was well received, and
was soon followed by other of a similar
kind, copies of which were afterwards sent
to the World, and ari engagement secured
with that paper on an annual salary of
twelve hundered dollars. Miss Snead’s let
ters are ah undiluted article df fushionable
gossip.
Sweet Potatoes in New Yobk — The Daily
Buletiu says;
It is estimated that over three hundred
thousand barrels of sweet potatoes were
disposed of in our city during last season,
at an average price of three dollars and a
half per barrel. The shipping season be-.
gioß in the latter part ol August; at that
date those received are from the Carolina's;
latter, about the 10th of September, the
crop from Deleware begins to arrive, and
still later those from New Jersey are placed
iu our market. The first arrivals command
from ten to eighteen dollars per barrel, and
the price decreases as the market becomes
more fully supplied. The season is over by
the end of October, and after that period
higher prices begiu to rule. The sweet po*
tato is known by a number of names in the
South, corresponding to the different varie*
ties; for instance those used in that por
tion of the country are invariably baked or
roasted and known as the pumpkin yam,
red yam, whight yam, and numerous oiher
titles; the potato shipped North, seldom
used as an article of food in the South, is
raised solely lor that purpose, the yams
as they are termed being unfit for boil
ing, which is the usual mode of cooking in
tbe Noi them States. This branceh of bus
iness has increased largely of late years in
New York, and there are several firms in
the neighborhood of Washington market
who make this line a speciality.
Now is the time to subscribe for the
Soctherh Smr. Only two dollars andsi r *y
• cents per annum.
"Kuaser.”- V\ e clip the following sensL
blc and well timed article from our excel
lent eotempoaiy ti«o Augusta Constitution*
alist.
At this period of the year, the newspapers,
North and South, teem with article* adeie**
ing planter tounltirate less of cotton and
ctioal emps. Tko plautor reads,
the planter approves, arid the planter goes
on planting, cotton to his own notion, which
may after all be right. We ceased, loaf
to vouchsafe this suit of good ad vies. J|
was worse than wasted, and perhaps it wau
worthy of no better fate. We have oou*
to this Conclusion, that planters know more
about til age than editors, as a general
thing. If not, this is a free county, sosoalled
and every man has a right to go to Old
Scratch in his own way. We daresay the
cotton way is as good as any other and
twice as combosliblc. We, therefore, ins
sist that the planters shall do just as they
please with their crops.
An Enterprising Woman. —A Virginia
paper says: The man who g«ts one of onr
best Rockingham girls for a wif®, doet a
splendid business for himself. No portion
of the country that we have excr seen or
heard of earr furnish more enterprising wo*
men than ours. A widower in Clark coon*
ty, Va., had the good luck to get one of onr
Rockingham girls,'who from her poultry
alone, the past season, made almost enough
to support a small family. This lady raised
fiom five turkey hens, seventy-five turkeys.
In addition to these, she raised between
three hundred and four hundred chickens
*She 6cnt forty-nine of her turkeys to.
Washington the week before Christmas*
and obtained for them 20 cents per poand (
the lot bringing s9l 10. She has sold. sll
10 worth of poultry this fall and winter. In
one month she gathered and sold 52 dozen
of eggs. This lady is a young house-keeper
too and has the care of a growing family
upon her hands.
* ! •
Spurgeon began life as usher in a school
at Newsmarket, delivered sermons at tba
early age of seventeen, and gaiend quite a
reputation as the ”Boy Preacher.* For a
number of months he preached in a barn at
Waterbeach, and drew such crowds that
numbers could not get inside, but stood
under the sky to catch the sound of hia
voice.
Small Farms. —Be content with *
place entirely paid for. If you have not the
money to buy a large farm. Do not allow
that eager and avaricious spirit to‘own all
the land that joins yours’ to ruin you. One
of the curses of our agricultural districts
is the size of our farms. Forty acres paid
for, and tilled, is better, and far more re
munerative than four hundred under a
heavy mortgage, and only half cultivated.
Where one man may sueceod by rashness
jn assuming large respnsibilities, hundreds
fail; and experience and observation will
show that the successful owner of large
tracts of lands, liavo usually begun by
small purchases for cash, and by gradual
additions as they acquired wealth by ins
dustry and ecnomy. -
Cost of Raisixg CottoK’— At the
Oilcans fair last April, the cost to prodneo
a pound of cotton was discussed. The
conclusion reached was, .that on the best al
uvial soils, in a good season and with Ctoee
management, ten cents will make a pound;
but on the average upland, and with tho
average economy the planter loses when he
does not receive 15 cents per pound.
The Test Oath RfcPEALED.-The Washington
Patriot of Saturday says: With yesterday
expired the ten days allowed the President
under the Constitution to return the test
oath bill to Congress with his objection, if
he intended to take that course. It was not
voted, nor was it signed and lienee has be- j
come a law without his formal approval.
We were prepared for this course, and so
announced our conviction, which was conv
tradicted by one of the President’s tools in
the New York Times, and upon bis express
authority, who superadded the assurance
that the law would be “promptly sign
ed.' The President, iu our opinion, would
have used the veto had he had the moral
courage to cary out his own vindictive
purpose. He showed his malice in with*
holding his signature.
The Morning Star, published in New Or
leans last Monday, contains the following
salutatory frou the pen of Rov. Father
j Rj'an: “I have no promises V> make. Bidt
as in the Banner of the South, so ir. tMs
journal, which represents and proclaims the
same principles, religioos and political, l
will be found at my old post, as uncom
promising as ever against religions and
political wrong. Religion and CO«ft*ur--
the truth of one, the honor and rights of Iho
other—it shall be my doty to vindicate.
NO. 40.