Newspaper Page Text
GAINED 25^ POUNDS
Krook^ville, Miff.. Feb. 23d. 1884.
Drab Hra—Plr wo find encIpfM P. O Order for
jo Do*cu b'JROFULA 8YK?JP-8MiTH’8. I
have a young in .in with ms who hoe been crippled
with RncumttUnn—could not walk. After ttklnc
IK Bottle* t* well—able to ro to work. Hie eMncd
pound* In weight. Yours truly, H. 8HUL&
or sale S8 Wall 8L, Atlanta-
o ^ ltJ — — _ v;
THE CONSTITUTION:
REAL ESTATE LOANS.
FIVE YEAR LOANS
ON PLANTATIONS IN
MIDDLE AND NORTHERN GEORGIA
On Iielt^r lermi thsn are nflVrM In Atlanta
Negotiated by FK.sNCIS FONTAINE.
Fittin Bdhjmno,
ATLANTA n>.
VOLUME XVI.
TUESDAY MOKNXNG, APEIL 29, 1884—TWELVE PAGES.
PRICE 5 CENTS
A COMPLETE PAPER.
The Constitution Internal* all Classes
and Appeals to all Tastes.
The leading topics of this week's Issue sre:
Tkavm. and Adtintoss—'"Hunting the Hippo
poiatmn," “Falsv Prophets," "The Altmo,"
"A Modern Putnam.” "A (lowboy In a Siam'
rede," "A Wild Bun on me Bail,” "Kissing a
Benoriia,” "A Florida BuCIan,’’ “A Jtpsnete
Funeral." "Au Improvement on the Rarenr,"
TALMAGE'S SERMON
•■UPIBITUALHH.”
Abound tub Camp Fiaz-"Stories ol Pickett’
Men.”
Oub ncxoBora WBrrBBS-nncle Bonus, "Brer
Rabbit snd Mr. Wildcat:" Betsy Hamilton,
"Betsy SickBill Arp, "Nasby."
Niwsofuie Wxzk—“All Through Dixie,” “The
Week in Congress," "New* by Wire," "Short
News Notes," "Points About People," "Across
tho Water," “During the Week,” "Georgia
News," "The Political Field."
Xhx Constitution Dipabtnknts—"The Woman’s
Kingdom,” "Our Young People,” "Answer* to
Correspondents," "Farms and Farmers,” "The
Anti-Liquor Fight,"
KDiToaiAis—'"Notes on Current Topics," "Lob
ters From Our Headers," and many other
things ot interest.
Something to pleaso CTery member ol the family.
Only #1.33 a Tear. InCInba of Flee, 81
Each. Wnbacrlbo at Ones,
THE GEORGIA BAPTISTS.
THE STATE CONVBNTION ASSEM
BLBS AT THS SECOND CHURCH.
J3raX«n ( the V«n«rabi9 Prcsid nt of theOonvntUQ,
D«:ir«r« »h- Op ining 8 rona-Dr. Orr Deilveia
oBmcoU on Public Softool:-A OmtonnUi
M il Healing—Lilt of Dd lotor.
The state Baptist convention convened
Thorsday at 10 o’clock In the Second Baptist
church.
The venerable P. U. Hall, president of the
convention, and chancellor of the state uni
versity at Athens, delivered the opening dis
course. He read from the twelfth chapter of
Paul’s drat tspiatle to tha Corinthians,begin
ning with the passage, "Concerning spiritual
gifts, brethren, I would not have you igno
rant."
DZLEOITXS rCSSSNT.
Appainchre association—H R Btrnard. B A
Blakey, IIN Rainey, J K Nunnally, T J dwanrou
3 C llutson.
B.prlsi rain,ton—J A J Bmilhi W M Cowart, O W
CSe«er, J W Smith, J c Brnwton.
Biubol association—Wm n Cooper, D A Vason,
W W Flaming
Carro lron-W WiMerrill, TJ Spurlock, W W Fills
H B Bartlett, W C New, W W Boop, J U Wood,
John (ioorgo.
central—D K Butler. A J Beck, R N Lamar, S A
Burney, E R Carswell. V A Jordan.
Second Georgia—C C While, W H Arnold.
Clarksville—H WCannon.
ColumbuR—C C Willis, Jt A Ivey, James Moore,
B C Kendrlok, A B Campbell, S M Provence, S
Webster, J H Campbell. .
Cave Sprine—O A Nunnally, W H Lane, J W
Pullen. J W Bi-hop, D T Espy, J 0 .Camp. L D
Woot-en. W r Worn, J Hlllyer
Coast—It tMankeon, X C Tucker, L N Brock, J
W Shaw, eSplr.ra.
* TH Ivey, Thos Hooka.
ItneDtass—B H Ivey, Thos Hooks.
A U dsailh
Flint Biver-J H Dovolie, O R McCall, E M
Hooieu. K J Willingham, Marcus Beck. T J Wil
lingham, 8 -W Bloodworm, W 0 McSllchaol, J O
Kimble, 8 J O Kimble, Jr. • • .
Friendship—U w Weekly, Wm Wells, B W Davis.
A J llam-jfw Wells, J C Loiley. ,
Georgia—P tl Mell, J A Sb.uk, J H Portion, J R
Youns. J F Chaney. J 8CalUway, W P SloAhortcr.
JH Kilpatrick, W A Overton, AAFluker.BO
Hlllyer, 1’ M Bryant, T J Pitcher, B R Garrison, T
3 Hepb!tbsh-WL Kilpatrick, J J Davis, J W Ell
ington, W J Rogers, V» M Verdery, Lauiiug Bur
rows, H U Hickman, F R Boiton. . .
Merecr—Thos t Tlilar, E L McTyre, Joshua Car-
roll.
Middle—H J Amett, John H Cooper, A8CauslL
Miuolc Cnerokec-J G Rjala, W M BiMm, J A
McMurray, J J B Callnway, A Y Sheets, W M James.
M H Otlnath, G A Lotion, J £ Edwards, R B
Jtoadi-n, O 8 Tumlln.
Mt Vernon-W J Joftior, ALBranUy, HPBmllh,
P J ripiin.
Noouday—J R Lloyd, J M Springer, 8 E Earle, J
II litrrli, 41 R Lton.
Ontanaula—CE Wrieht. W J King, DAB Allen.
Piedmont—J tt 1'au.m _ , . . _
Rehoboth—B F Tharp, E W Warren, A J Chev-s,
AJ Battle, 8 Boykin, U 8 Cheat, —Hollins
""drone MounUln-J W Brittain, n F Buchanan
DWGwln, H 0Hornady, U H Tucker, J M Da-
fore, g R Moore. F M Daniel, D Shaver, J B Law
ton. H McDonald, T A Gibbr, J T Carley, T C
Boykin, V <1 Norcrosa W L dbinton, R H Handle,
fieri f'*—W B J Hardeman, W C Howard, L W
*l*?lapoo!i£-wl°na’m Coolson, John M Huey,
U 11 miainaon. u n joeae. j u
Brown, A Van Hoee, E Culpepper.
cuoacaia and mhaion societies.
FHlh baptist church, Atianta—T J Buchanan,
J 8 Wilson.
Social Ctide-E B Gibbs,
Camilla—<1M Irwin. _ „ ,
Mluedgevlito—B T Denton, C W Ennis,
Barnesville—0 W Brown,
Carroll ton—E B Barrett.
Orimu—C 8 Westbrook, C F Newton.
La&range—Henry Banks, Jr., C.C Cox.
Savannah ebursh—J E L Holrai a, A M Wot*.
Central church, Atlanta—E Z t Golden, Dr J D
Turner,
Milner church-J L Duncan,
Maulson church—J II Holland.
Eaton church-s) B Ki-csfl.
Haim on 7 church—E N Al.lMon.
Romo church—R B Headden.
Athena church-J u M Edwards, 8 M Herring-
^Augusta First enureh—N L Willett, T J Ber
nard.
~ ala rutin’ll V 74 Kr«iill»T.
Peacock, William
8ecMuf , church‘ (Atlanta)—H H Tucker, A D
Adair, J T Pendleton.
Newnan church—A B Cotes, J P Milner.
GrfMn church—NB Drewry. . . „
Woman’s mtotlonary society, Flrstchnrch, Maeon,
Gi«~S Boylton.
Mercer nniv-rsity missionary soctety-J E PowelL
Martha (Spirt.) missionary society—D B Hamit-
to".
Wc
(.Lurch—E B Cariw.il
raavaNiNT orncaaa iuctcd.
The election of officers waa ihe next In
order, »
Toe following tellers were appointed: J if
Britiian, J R Young, J A McMniray.
The committee of tellen reported the fol
lowing officers unanimously elected:
P. H. Mell, moderator.
George R. McCall, clerk.
E. R. Carswell, aaiistant clerk.
Oo motion of Ur J. H. Kilpatrick, of White
Plains, the order of business waa then
adopted, being lha same as heretofore with an
Immaterial variation.
meet* cxnmstTT.
The report of tha trustees of Mercer uni
versity was read. The anivarsity was.reported
in excellent working order with fresh Inter
est aroused in its behalf. During the past
year 100 students have been admitted into
the university and 17 Into the preparatory
department, makings total of 117. Of that
number 25 have tns ministry in view. Mr
T A Branham is at the bead of the prepara
tory department. MrJG Ryals has hesn
elected professor of theology. The total
amount of invested facds was reported at
*122.800.
The following committee was appointed to
report in rtfereoce to the Georgia associa
tion's centennial: RJ Headden, R H Jack-
son, A D Freeman, J J Davis and J H Hall.
Mr. Vason said that Dr. G. J. Orr was pres
ent and had some Interesting things to say
lo the convention.
Dr. Orr said he bad only a few words to
say. He said there were fifteen or
.sixteen million children between six
and eighteen years of nge. In tweDty years
those children would be In charge of rim dr.-
times of the oountry. It waa btcvasiry that
they should be edneated. The work of edu
cation boro a close relation to tho work of
tbo churches. The work of the church conid
not be successful!; carried on unless the peo
pie were taught to read. There, are he said,
128,000 while people in the state of Georgia
over ten years of age who caonot write. He
said there are over 380,000 colored citizens In
the state over ten years old who cannot write
Georgia, hessld, was the banner slate for il
literacy and if the Blair bill was passed the
state would get the largest sum of any atate
in the .union. The first year
Georgia would get abont six hundred
thousand dollars, the secoad year about eight
hundred thousand and tho third year we
would get a million two bnndred thousand.
He said be eould answer tho chsrge that the
public sohnols were
BRXAKixn ur nix eaiVATR scncou.
Ho hud statistics from a hundred counties
showing 1,030 white and 210 colored schools,
running over six mouths in the year by pri
vate patronage. He slid tbs white
people paid forty times as much
tax as the colored people psld, yet the
colored peop’o supported a larger pro
portionate number of schools than were sup
ported by tbs whiles. Dr. Orr said it had
gone abroad that the Blair bill had been so
framed that Georgia would not get any mon
ey, as it provides that ihe slates will have to
lalse as much as the government gives. He
aald that the first year the state would get it
all, the second year it could be gotten by a
slight raise and the noxt year 11 the million
two hundred thousand was not raised an
amount would be allowed the state tqnal to
the amount raised by thesiate.
Dr. Orr slated that under the Diair bill
Georgia would get a larger appropriation than
any state in the nnlon.
A long debate followed on the report of the
committee recommending that tbo conven
tlon indorse tbo proposed slate Baptist cen
tennial and the projected *100.000 gift to
Mercer university.
At the centennial man meeting, Friday
night, interesting addressee were delivered
by Dr. A. J.Battle, Hon. J. D. Stewart and
Dr. Lansing Barrows
Dr. Butler wanted U — -
concerning tho action of the Bapu _
tho norm last year In reference In tbs tranilittou
ol the Bible from tbo original Greek and Hebrew.
Dr. Butler spoke very earnestly lu favor ot Ibi
trinsladon, -eying Be wanted ms plain, unvern
lthed tram and nothing else. If ft Swept away
Baptist aoeulne, why. let It no.
Mr Teaadale favored the adoption ofa resolution
on the subject, but wanted the word "northern"
stricken from the resolution, m the movement bed
intended to bo generel. He sew no return In gtv
lug e correct trunsleilon to Chine and Japan end
yet withholding It from mo people ol this conn
try.
RXFERRED TO A COMMITTEE.
Mr, G, R McCtil moved that mo mat’er be re
ferred to e .pccl-l committee of live. The
motlou prevellni.end the moderator appointed
follnwlnggendemon on thecnmmlttee:8.U.UlUyer,
E Yf SV-ritn. J O McCall, W B Bennett end L H
(iwaltncy. They wlllrenort to-morrow.
Til — MISSION BOAKU
Hr. HoVotle, nucroiary ot me ml.sl >n board, made
a renort He laid there was |FJ UOO contdtmltd
dining the year 10 forelsu missions, and la,Win to
home als.Iuns. 18,235 sermons were preached by
tne mli-lunarUs, and flint n new houses of worship
hidoccu built. There were i.T^ baj^urias,
TALMAGE’S SERMQM.
SPIRITUALISM AND KINDRED IM
POSTURES.
tlL eAuny-~(ltoai«s<l -AUH r.
r ••ru.mn ni 1a-inn” boarfl had uotlfl
’dome mls-lou” board had notified the state boat*
ot lull,tendon to tease Its co-operation with the
education ot colored minuter.. That matter wee
ceded lo the ctpeclat attention at mo body. Tbo
jtoard alio urged tho adoption ol a uniform plani
ot collecting mbelon-ry funds snd suagestcd^ml
the members be urged to put down thctrimmc
stipulated amounts to be paid monthly. He _
that mere were eighty thnu.snd Bap-
I lists In the state who.-e churches do not have
^Hooro then once a mouth. They were
HHmkUcr off for BiplUt lnflaenccs men tho
breiheniln certain quarters.
Thu report was referred to a spretat committee,
W. A. Montgomery, chtlrmeo, with Instructions
Ito report especially la reference to the education
ot colored mluUUtrt end me syalemetlo pirn ol
indslug fui ds. . d
Tee report of tbe treasurer ot the convcntton.1
Mr. hamue. Burney, was reed by him. It showed
the receipts and tllibMmgmm|amH^y
following permanent
ctitloual fund, 115 051 98: permanent mli-lon fundi
toe reporto! the committee on the state of relt
lion waa read, after which me convention ad-
torlcat society was net
‘ tek Is president or toe society, ana sir. o. noy-
I. secretary. Tbe annual audreaa was delta-
ctcd teat ulgnt by H-v. R. B. Headden, uf Rome,
she subject was ’'Fidelity to me Scriptures, Caar-
acieilstlu ol me Bspilsts." Under mat Una they
bed succeeded in me put, end were destined to
succctd to me future The address wee quite In
teresting, end wee listened to with maraud atten
tion by a large oongregatton. He urged me ad
vancement ot Men-er university as one way In
whioh to aid me cause.
INDIAN FIGHTS.
A Sharp JtatUeef Mesh-rer tfetwCee As Whiles sal
who
lha NavsJssa
Dinvib, April 25.—Johnson,
DM » ShjJIII SdJ. sl USllSCVII. TV UhS HIM
ireeent at she recent battle between the
favsjoo and the whites, at Mitchell’s plsce.
on tbe lower Silt Juanetior.1, iu southern
Colorado, arrived at Durango to day John
son says: William Grove, Victor Neff and I
arrived at Mitchell's store on the eveoing of
the 15tb. A party pi a dozen Navajo Indiana
coma to the store end one of them drew a
gun on Edward Mitchell. While the quarrel
wav in progress, another Navajo named Rye
Lily, commenced removing the buckskin
cover from his rifle snd tbe other Indisns
ran fur. their guns, which were standing
against the store. •
Both Indisns and whites begin firing.
After about twenty five shots bad been ex
changed, tbe Indiana retired across the river,
leaviog one dead on the ground. None
of tbe whites were hurt. The whites then
proceeded to throw up fortifications, Tbe
women showed great nerve, carrying mbs of
water in tbe case of a seige. Johnson then
started for Fort Lewis. The commanding
officer immediately started a equal of
mounted cavalry to the relief of the
Mitchells.
Woen they reached Cowen’a Ferry a
Nsv. jo came in and reported that the Utei
had killed all the whites at Mitchell’s place.
So far no other word has been received, and
Johnson fears that all tbe whites have been
massacred. It Is not probable that the
Utee went to the scene to avenge
tbe death of the Navajo. It Is
common for one tribe to lay ito crimes to an
other. The district commander has ordered
Captain 'Ketcham’s company to leave Fort
Wise early tots morning, and the troopi are
also being Drought np from Fort Wiogtte,
New Mexico. It may be several days before
anything definite can be learned.
THE WEEK IN’ CONGRESS.
In tbe senate the bankruptcy bill was
pissed. Tbe bill dividing the northern dis
trict of Alabama into the federal coart dis
tricts was passed. The report was adopted
advising the removal ol Collector Wicker, at
Key West. In the house the Warner pen
sion bill passed. A resolution was adopted
authorizing tbe secretory of war to loan
Cbsrloua, North Carolina, 200 flags for tho
celebration of the Mecklenburg centennial.
Tbe naval appropriation bill passed. Tbe
tariff bill was dizen-ted ail tbe week without
action.
"rhsro Shall Not Bo Found Amtoff You * Censure
With X.mtllor Apt,Its of a Wlotrd, srsNi oro-
soaraer. For tit TOcse Thlncs Aro s»
Abomination of the Lord,** Btn.
Special to Tbe constitution.
Brooklyn, April 27.—Dr. Taimage preach
ed to-day in the Brooklyn Tabernacle on the
subject "Spiritualism an Imposture,” Before
theeermon bo read from tbe scriptures some
of tbe stories of wltebcrafc. The opening
hymn was:
"The morning light Is breaking,
The darkness disappears,
The sous ot man are waking
To penitential tear*”
Text waa from Deuteronomy xvili, 10 and
11; ’There shall not bo found among you a
conanlter with familiar spirits, ora wizard or
a necromancer, for all’hat do these tbings
are an abomination to tho Lord. Following
la Dr. Talmage’s sermon in fall:”
We are surrounded on all sides by mystery.
Before ns, behind ns, to tho right of ns, to
tho left of ns, mystery. There id au uncX'
plored world that scienco I believe will yet
map cut. Strange things that have not been
accounted for. Brands and appearances that
cor. fouuu ail acoustics and all investigation
Approximations to the spectral. Effects that
teem to have no indolent cause. The wall
beneath the material world and the spiritual
I think is very thin. That there is communi
cation between'this world and another world
Is certain. Spirits depart from this to that
and the Bible says ministering spirits come
from that to this. It may be that complete
and constant and unmistakable lines of com
munication between tbeso two worlds may
yet be opened. To unlatch the door between
the present atate and the fntnre state all the
fingers of superstition have been busy. We
have had books written, entitled "Footfalls
on the Boundaries of other Worlds,” "The
Debatable Land between this world and the
next,” "Researches in the Phenomena ot
8plritnalism,"and whole librariea of hocna-po'
cut enough to deceive the very elect. I have
no time to,rehearse the story of Divination
uti'l Delphic tirade anil J’ianclietts and aibyls
and palmistry and whole centuries ot impos
ture. Modern spiritualism comes in pro-
posing to t pen tho door between tills world
and the next and afford ua communication
with the dead. But it has notone resaonabh
credentiaL,There;ts nothing in the intelligence
or moral character of its founders to com
mend it. All the wonderful things done by
it have been shown to be sleight of hand and
rank deception. Doctor Carpenter, Robert
Hondin, Mr. Wall? and others have exposed
the fraud by dramatizing upon the stage in
presence of many auditors alt the mysteries
of spiritualism. “By their fiuits shall ye
know them." aald Christ, and judging this
tree of spiritualism from ito finite, which
bavp been bad and only bad and bad oottn-
' la one of tbe worst
brtreerensaeyt 4M*
set np be
tree ui spirit iikimiu iruui iw iiui
have bf'eo btd aod only bad and b
^IgonoUtde^son^
postoffice which they propose to s<
tween the living and the (lead Is a star route
wstoffice that has never yet delivered one
ette( from the other world to this.
I have five or six tilings to say about spirit-
nalism. First, it is a very old religion. It is
natural that people should want to know the
origin and tbe history of a doctrine which is
so widespread in all the villages, towns anil
cities of the oivilixed • orld, getting new con
verts every day, a doctrine with which many
of yon are already tinged. Spiritualism in
this country was born in 1817 in Hydesvilic,
Wayne county, New York, when one night
there was a loud rap heard against the door
of Michael Weekman; • rap a second time, a
rap a third time; and alt three times when
the door was opened there was nothing found
there, tbe koooklng having been made seem-
Inly by invisible knuckles. In that same
honse there was a young woman who had a
cold band passed over her face and there
eeemiugly no arm attached to it; ghostly sus
picions were excited. After a whl o Mr. Fox
and his family move 1 into that house, and
then every night there wsa a banging at tbo
door; and one night Mr. Foxeaid, "Are you
aaplrit?” Two raps, answering in the tfllr-
mativc. “Are you an injured spirit?" T,vo
raps, answering in the affirmative, and si
they found out, as they say, that it was tbe
ghost or spirit of a peddler who had been
murdered Iu that bouse, many years before,
for hie *500. Whether the ghost of the dead
tiddler had come there to collect his *500 or
ds bones I cannot say, not being a •plrltanl-
ist; but there was a great racket at the door,
so Mr. Weekman declared and Mrs. Week-
man and Ur. Fox and Mr* Fox and ail the
little Foxes. The excitement spread. There
warn universal rumpus. The lion. Judge
Edmonds declared in a book that he bad ac-
tually seen a belt start from tbe top shelf of a
closet, heard it ring over the people that were
standing iu tbs closet; then swung by invis
ible bands it rang over the people in the back
parlor and floated through the folding doors
to tbe front perlor; rang overthe people there
and then dropped on the floor. N. F. Tai
mage, senator ot the United States, afterward
governor of Wisconsin, htd hia head com
pletely turned with spiritualistic demonstra
tions. A msn, as he waa passing along the
road, Slid that be was lifted np bodily and
carried toward bis home through the air at
inch a great apeed he conid not connt the
>oeu on the fence as he passed; and as be
tad a handsaw and a tqnare in his band,
they beat ss he passed through the air most
delightful music. And the tobies tipped and
the stooia tilted and the bedsteads raised and
the chairs npiet and it seemed as,if tbs spirits
every wnere had gone into the furniture busi
ness! Well, tbe people raid, "we have got
thing new in this country; it is a new
on." Oh. no, my friends. Nothing in
tbeipiritnailstic circle of onr days has been
more strange, myateriona and wonderful than
things which have been seen in tbe past cen
turies of the world.
In all tbe ages there have been necroman
cers, those who consult with the spirits of the
departed; charmers, those who put their sub
sets Ins mesmeric stats; eoToervra, those who
>y taking poisonous drags see every thingand
hear everything and tell everything; dream
ers, people who in their sleeping moments
can see the future world and nold consulta
tion with spirits; astrologtre, who conid read
a new dispensation in the I’sri; expert! in
palml'try, who can tell by the lines in the
taint of year hand, yoor origin and yoar bis-
cry. From a ctve on Mount Parnaaaui, we
are told, there was an exhalatioa that intox
icated the sheep and the go its that come any
where near it; and a shepherd approaching
it was thrown by thu exhalation fn'o an ex
citement, in which be conid foretell future
events and bold consultation with tbs spirit
ual world Yea, before Ihe time ot Christ
the Brahmins went through all the table-
moving, til the furniture excitement, which
the spirlu have exploited in onr day; pre
cisely the same thing over and over again,
under tbe manipulations of the Brahmins.
Now, do you sty that spiritualism is difierent
from these? I answer, all these delusions 1
have mentioned belong to the tame family.
They »r» exhumations from Hie unseen
world. What dees God thfok of all these de
lusions? He tldnks so severely of them Hist
he never epesks o( them but with livid thun
ders of indignnlion. He says: “I will he
swift witn-ee acainst tho Bocerer.” Ha aays.
"Thou shalt not aufler a witch to live." And
lest you might make eorne important dis
tinciion between spiritualism andwitaberaft,
God ssjib In so many words: “There shall
not be among you u consulter of familiar
spirits or a wizard or a-necromancer; for all
that do these things aro an abomination unto
the Lord.” Andhesaya again: “The soul
that turrrsth after such as have familiar
spirits ana after wls irds to go a whoring after
tliem, I will even set my face against that
soul and will cut him t IT from among his peo
ple.” TbnjLord Almighty In a score of pis-
simes whii n I have not now time to quote,
utiers hla indignation against.all this great
family of ufelusions. After that be a spirit
ualist if JK.* dare!
Another remark. People are captured by
spiniuaUagt when they are weak or morbid
iron; troutae. You lose a friend, you want
the spirltiml world opened satlmt you may
have communication with bint. In a highly-
wrought nirvoua and diseased slate of mind
you go and put yourself in that communica
tion. That is why I hate spiritualism. It
takes advantage of one in a momeut of weak
neaa wblob may come upon us at any time.
Wo loses Mend. The trial is keen, sharp,
suffocatin&almost maddening. If we could
marshal a Most and storm the eternal world
and recsp'lre onr lored one the host would
soon be minhaled. The house is softovcly.
The world b s* dark. The separation Is so
insuffcrablt. But njiiritiihIism mvn "We
will open the future world and'your loved
one can cope back and talk lo you.” Thungh
we may qot here bla voice we may hear
tbe rap of Bis haud. So clear the table. Set
down, Pat your hands on the
table. Bs very quiet. Five minutes gone.
Nomotson of the table. No
tho future world. Twenty
'hlrty minutes. Nervous excite-
tlme Increasing. Forty minutes,
tvers. Two raps from tbo future
letters of the alphabet are calu d
sported friend's name is John.
At the ptmiuciation of the letter “J" two
rape. At tbe pronunciation of tbe letter "o"
two rape. At the pronunciation of the letter
"h” two rape. At the pronunciation of the
letter "n" two raps. There yon have tbe
whole name sptlled out, J-o-h u, John. Now,
tbe spirit befog present, yon say: "Johu.are
you happy?" Two rape give an affirmaiive
answer. Pretty soon the baud of the medi
um begins to twitch and toss and begins to
write out, after paper and ink are furnished,
a message from the eternal world, What is
remarkable, the departed, spirit, although it
has been amidst tneillumfnutlona of heaven,
cannot spwll as well as it used tot It has lost
all grammatical accuracy and cannut wmc as
distinctly. I received a letter through a me
dium once, [ sent it buck. I said: "Just
plesse to teli tnose ghosts they had better go
to school and get improved in their orthog
raphy!" Now just think of spirits that tho
Bible represents as enthroned in glory com-
mg down to crawl under the table and break
crockery and ring tea belle before supper is
ready end rap Ihe window shutter on a gusty
nigtill la there any consolation in such
poor, miserable work compared with tbe
tnuught that our departed Christian friends,
rid of pain ai'd languishing, are In the radi
ant soeietjr i.f heaven, and that we shall loin
them there-cot in a sllfieil and mysterious
mtoranca-f 'ioh makes the hair Hand on
wnd and-483*01.13 chills creep tfirttnekTIkh
in an unhindered and illimitable delight?
"And none shall innmur and mlsCoibi.
When God’s great sunrlso 11 uds ub out. 1
Yea, my friends, spiritualism comes to
those who are In trouble and aweejss them
Into Its delnsions. The vast majority of those
who have gone to spiritual mediums have
been sent there through their mlifsrtunes
Another remark. Spiritualism is an afislr
uf the darkness. Spiritual mediums fur the
moit part, if not always, perform their ex-
idolis iu the night. The Davenports, tbs
fowlers, the Fixe., the spiritual mediums
of all ages, liavo chosen tjje night or a dark
ened rojrn. Why? Tbe majority of their
wonders have been swindles, and deception
prospers belter in Ihe night. N line of the
|,t if ornmuces of spiritual mediums are not to
bo iisciibed to fraud, but to some occult law
tuat aftcNwhile may be demonstrated - But
I believe now nine hundred and ninety-nine
om of every thousand neliievuiieiils on tne
partof spiritual mediums are arrant and un
mitigated humbugs. Tbe mysterious red let
ters that used to come out on the medium’s
urra were found to have been made by an
iron pencil that went Heavily over the flesh,
not tearing it, but disturbing
the blood so it came up tu
great round letters. The witnesses of tne
seance have locked the door, pat the key in
their pocket, arrested thu uperator, and fuund
out by eearcnlng the room ibat bidden lovers
muvi it the tables The m-a nl lelli-rs that
w.rc mysteriously read withoat opening were
found to liave been cut at tne side and then
afterward slyly put together with gum-arabic;
and the medium who, with a heavy blanket
over his bead, could read a book, has been
found tu have had a bottle of phosphoric oil,
by i!i„ til'll! of which anybody can r.-iiil a
book; nud veuirtloqubm and legerdemain,
and sleight ol hand and optical delusion ac
count for nearly everything. Deception being
the main staple ol spiritualism, no wonder it
chooses the darkness. You have all seen
s range and unaccountable thing! in tbe
night. Almost every man has sometime bad
a touch of hallucination. Indigestion from
a late supper will generally account for it.
It is an outraged physical organirm, and not
n call from tbe future world. 8plriiual:em,
knowing that ic liable to deceive tbe very
elect alt-r sundown, does nearly all ito work
in tbe night. Tbe witch of Endor held her
s-ances at sight; so do all the witches. Away
with this religion of spooks!
Another remark: 8plrituallim to doom
and deaib to its disciples. It ruins tbe body.
Look in upon an audience of spiritualists.
Cadaverous, weak, nervous, exhausted.
Hands clammy and cold. Nothing prdbpers
but long hair—noil mars lire yielding rank
grass. Spiritualism destroys the physical
health. Its disciples are ever hearing start
ling news from the other world. .Strange
beings crowing the room in white. Table
lldgety, wanting to get ito feet loose as if to
dance. Voices eepuichral and ominous. Be
wildered with raps.
I nev.r knew a confirmed spiritnaltot who
had a healthy nervous tyatem. It to Incipi
ent epilepsy and rs’aiepty. Destroy .. .nr
nervous system, and you might as welt bs
dead. I have noticed that people who are
hearing rape from the future world have bnt
littleeirengthleitto bear tbe hard raps of
this world. It to an awful thing >o trifle with
one’s nervous system. It la so delicate. It to
to far reaching, its derangements are so terri
ble. Get the nervous system a-jangie, and
so far as your body and eonl are concerned,
the whole universe to a j tngle. Better in our
ignorance experiment with a chemist’s retort
tnat may smite us dead, or with an engineer's
a earn boiler that may blow os to atoms, than
experiment with tbe nervous system. A
man can live with only one lung, or with no
ryes and be happy as men bare been under
auch affiictiona; but woe bo to tire man whose
nerves are shattered. BpUltuallam smites
first of all and mlgbllly against the nervous
system, and so makes life miserable.
Another remark: Splrilualtorn is a racial
and marital curse. Tne worst deeds of licen
tiousness, and the worst orgies ol obscenity
have been enacted under tu patronage. Tbe
story to too vile for me to telL 1 will not
poilnte my tongue nor your ears with the ro
cltel. Sometimes the civil Jaw has been
evoked >o ttop the outrage. Families itu-
memorable have been broken up by it. It
bus pushed off hundreds of young women
into a life of profligacy. It .talks about
"elective aMoilIes l "and"affioUal relations,"
and "spiritual matches,” and adopts tbo
whole vocabulary of free-lovit-m. In one of
lis public Journals it declares "marriage is
the monitor enrse of civilization,” that "it
is a source of debauchery andintemperance."
If spiritualism could have iu full swing it
would turn this world into a pandemonium
of carnality. Jt is an unclean, adulterous
religion, and tbe sooner it drops Into the
bell from which it rose, tbe better both for
earth and heaven. For tbe sake of man's
liiuiiir unit woman's imrily I say let the vri
tige of it perish forover, I wish I could
gather lui .ill the raps it lias ever heard frimi
spirits blest or damned and gsther them all
on ill* own head in uue thundering rap ot an
nlbllatioD.
Another remark: Spiritualism is tho cause
of much Insanity. There is not an asylum
between Bangor and San Francisco which
lies not the't.iri) and bleeding victims of ttiit
delusion. Go into any asylum, I care nut
wnere It to, the presiding doctor after you
have asked hint "what la the matter with
that man?" will say "spiritualism demented
him,'j or “what is the matter with that
woman?" he will ssy "spiritualism demented
her.” It has taken down some of tho bright
est intellects. It swept off Into mental mid
night judges, senators, governors, ministers
of the gospel, and one time came near cap
turing ono of tbe presidents of the United
Siaies, At Flushing, near this city, a man
became absorbed with it, forsook his family,
took his only *15,000, surrendered them to a
spiritual medium in New York, attempted
toR* times toputan end to ins own life unit
then mi incarcerated In the atate lunatlo
asylum, where he to to-dsy a raving maniac.
Put your hand in the hand of this influence,
und U will lend you on to bottomless perdi-
linn, w lii'ii' il holds its everlasting seance.
Mui.v years ago tbesteamer Atiamlostorted
fruit Eitropo for the United btates. Getting
tuiu-ncesn the machinery broke and she
floundered around day after day and week
after week; and for a whole mouth after she
was due people wondered and finally gave
her up. There was great anguish in the
cities, for there Were many who had friends
aboard that vessel. 8ame;of tiiejwuuien in thetr
distress went lo tbo spiritual mediums nnd
inquire das to the fate of ttist vetsel. The
mediums called up tbe spirits sud the rap.
ungs on tbe table indlcs.cd the steumthip
on with all on board. Women went raving
mad aud were carried to the lunatlo aiylum.
Alter awbtlo.oue day a gun was heard elf
tjuarantlne. The flags went up on the ship
ping, and tho bel * ot tho cuurcbes were
rung. Tne boys ran through the streets cry
ing, "Kilrn! The Atlantic is sale! ' There
wiut the embracing as front the dead when
friends came again to friends; but some of
those passengers went up to find their wives
in the lunstio asylum where this cheat of
infernal spiritualism had put them, a man
in Bellevue hospital, dying from wounds
made by his own hand, was naked wny he
ttsd tried tu oontmlt suicide, and he said,
“The spirlu told me to." Parents have
strangled their children, and when asked
why they did It replied’ "spiritualism de
manded it," ft Is the patromzer and forager
for th* mad-home. Judge Edmunds In the
Broadway Tabernacle, New York, delivering
lecture in behalf of spiritualism, admitted
osuAuauy words: "There to e laacinatlon
IDotfl Tbnsulttffoa with tbe spirits ol the
deed that has a tendency to lead people off
from tltely right judgment, and to Inatll into
them u fanaticism that la revolting to the
uaturalmlud. It not only ruitte lu dlsolplea
but It ruins the mediums also, only give it
time. The Gaderean swine on the hanks of
lire lako iif.Unliice no sooner became spirit
ual mediums tlien down ttrey went in tut
avalanche of pork, to the couaternalion of
all too herdsmen, Tho offico of a medium Is
bad foreman, bad for a woman, bad tor a
beast.
Another remark: Spiritualism rains the
soul Immortal. First, it makes a man a
quarter of an infidel; then It makes him
naif an infidel; then it makes him a whole
lulldel. The entire system, as 1 conceive It,
is founded on the insufficiency of the worn
of God as a revolution. God says tho Bible
is enough for you to know about the future
world. You say it to not enough, nud there
is where you and Hie Lord diltor. You clear
the table, you shove aside Ihe Bible, you
tut your bend ou the Bible and ssy, ‘ Now,
etepirltaol ttto future world come and tell
mu something the Bible has not told me.”
And although the scriptures say, "Add tuou
not unto Hts words lest H* reprove tbee end
tbou he found a liar,” you risk it aud say
"Come buck, spirit of my departed .fath.r,
come back, spirit of my departed mother, of
my companluu, of my little child, and tell
mesomeibtng 1 don't know about you and
about the unseen world." tf God is slapped
square In Hie face it to wlton a spiritual me
dium puts down her baud on tne tanle In
voking apirits departed to make a revelation.
God has told you all you ought to know,and
how dare you bo prying Into that which Is
none of your business? You cannot keep
thu Bible lu one hand aud spiritualism iu tbe
other. One or the other will Blip on of your
grasp, depend upon it. Spiritualism toaverso
to tbe Bible in the fact tbat It lias in these
last days culled from tbe future world Chris
tian men to testify against Curtottoulty. Its
mediums call book Lorenzo Dow, tbe cele
brated evangelist, and Lorenzo Dow testifies
tit>it Christians are ldolators. Spiritualism
calls back Tom Paine, and ho teaifllro that be
is stopping in thu same houie In heaven with
Jobn Bunyan. They call John Wesley und
he testifies against the Christian religion
which he all nis life preached ao gloriously.
Andrew Jackson Davis, tbe greatest of alt
the spiritualists, comes to tbo front snd de
clares that the Now Testament to but "the
dismal echo of a barbaric age," and tbe Bible
only "one of the pen and Ink relics of
Christianity." They attempt to Milmitute
tne writings of Anorew Jackson Davis and
o'hcr religious balderdash in tbs place of
ibis old Bible. I have in my house a book
which was used in this very city in the pub
lic service of spiritualism. It is well worn
with much service. 1 open the book end it
•ays: “What Is our baptism? Answer—
Freqmnt ablutions of water. Waat is our
inspiration? Plenty of fresh air and sun
light. What is our prayer? Abundant
physical exercise. What to our love-feast?
A dear conscience and aonnd sleep." And
1 fitd from the same book that the chief
Item in their public worship to caitothenlci;
and tbat whenever they want to rouse up
their souls to a very high pitch of devotion,
they sing, page 65, “The night has gathered
up tier moonlit fringes,” or, page 10, ‘•Come
to the wooda, helgb ho!" "You ssy you are
not such a fool as that, bat you will be il
you keep on in tbe track in which you have
started. . ........
"Bur," says eorne one, "wouIdB t It be of
advantage to hear from the future werid?
Don’tyou think it would a'reDgtben Christo
Ians? There are a great ntiny materialists
who do net believe mere are souls; but it
spirits from the future world should knock
and talk over to us we would ell be per
auaded.” To tbat I answer In the ringing
words of tbe Son of God: "If they believe
n»t Mooes snd the prophets, neither will
they be penuaded, though one rose from tne
dead.”
Now, I believe noder God tbat this sermon
Will save many from disease, insanity and
perdition. I believe these are the days of
which the apostle spake when he ssid, "In
the latter times some shall depart from the
f-tuh, giving heed to seducing spirits." I
think my audience, os well as other audien
ces in this day need to havo reiterated iu
hearing the passage, "There shall not be
among you a oonaultor of familiar spirits
or a wlzird of a necromancer; for they that
do these things are an abomination unto the
Lord;’’ "and tho soul that turnethafter such
os familiar spirits aud after wizards, I will
even set my face against that soul, and will
cut him off among his people."
But I will invite you this morning to a
Cnristian seance, a noonday seance. This
congregation is only one great family. Here
is thaebarch table—come around the church
table—Like yourselves for this great Chris-
Han semce; put your Bible on the table; put
your han-to on tbe top of the Bible, end then
listen and bear if there are any voices corn*
ing from the eternal world. X tbiok there
are. Listen I "Secret things belong unto
tbe Lord onr God, but thoee things which
are revealed belong unto us and to onr chil
dren.” Surely that is a voice from the spirit
world. But before you rise from this Chris
tian seance I want you to promise me you
will be satisfied with the Divine revelation
until the light of the eternal throne breaks
upon your vision. Do not sit down at table
rapping, either in sport or in dead earnest.
Have yon a table so well made and their lege
eo even that they will not tip or rattle. It
the table mast move letit be under tbe offices
of lndostrions housewifery. Teach your
children there are no ghosts to he aten or
heard in tills world save those which walk on
two feet or four, human or bestial. Remem
ber that iplritualteui at the best to a useless
thing; for if it telle what the Bible reveato it
is a supoifiulty, and If It tells what the Bible
does not reveal it is n He. Instead of going
out to get other people to tell your forum-
tell your own fortune bv putting yon
trust in God aud doing the beet
you can. ^ I will tell your fortune.
“AH things work together for good to them
who love God,” Insult not your departed
friends by asking them to cut up capers in a
a closet or to come down and scramble under
an extension table. Remember tbat there to
only onespirlt whose dictation you have a
right to invoke and tbat is Hie holy, blessed
nnd omnipotent spirit of God. Hearkl He
Is rapping now, not only on a table or the
tl jor, nut rapping on the door of your heart,
and every np to an invitation to Christ and
a warulng of judgement to come. Oh,
Rtievohlm not away I (jaench him not. He
lies been all arounuyou this morning; He
woe all around you last night; He has been
all around you all your lives. Hark! There
comes a voice dropping through tbe roof,
breaking through the window, Ailing all this
honse from door to door, and from floor to
ceiling with tender and overmuterlDg into
nation, saying, "My spirit shall not always
strive.”
GEORGIA SPECIALS.
Mokboi. April 23.—At eleven o’clock to-day, six
mlloscsstot Monroe, In this county, Jesse Genu
killed hts father, Willis Gann, with a pistol. The
father was a widower, and father and son were
both attached to the same young lady. The son
sun-ceded In marrying her Jnit twoweehiafo.
Tho father wrote him a letter to be on hie guard as
oomlug to bill him. A little child eaw him
slipping up lo the houee and ran and toldJeeee
, who got hts pistol aud tired Just u the
father was taking sight at hint with a double
barrelled shot guu. Tire ball.took (fleet Jut over
lbs eye killing him tnsUnuy. The young man
oamo to town at once and gavohtmaelf up to the
eherlir. The Gunns came to talk oounty from Mora
gait county. The eld man wu a very elder man
when free from llqnor. The corouor le preparing
lo bold an Inquest.
LimrKiN, April 28. -nrmlitead Goar, a farmer
living near Richland, in this oounty, committed
•Illdilo by taking 19 groins morpblno. He
waa about 50 years old, had a large family and
was a prudent, boacet and sincere men. Ho wu a
member of the llaptlst qhttreh.
Tno revival at the M.» church cloeed wltbau
accession ur thirty-three new tacmbeis.
( livin'.ton, April 21 —The Isrmcia In this Mellon
wilt plant largo crops of sorghum cauo this year,
n> It ptovi-s to be ono ol our best psjlug crop*, and
It will bo oipcclally profits Me this yotr, as the
planters :* ribbon canseouth of Macon lost their
seed cane by frost tut fall, hones the demand for
sorghum products will be much greater this year
and at better prices than ever before.
He MX April 22.—Tho question of building a levee
In somo portion ot city to prevent overflow, is be
ing dbcusted by tholeadlng dilscns. It Is expected
treat ill IlM'.ii aclioll will roon be Uten anil tbat
lire cost of tbo levee will not exceed $30,COO.
A c t rent a r l.sucd by tbo slgust ofllco relating to
the destruction by tornadoes In tbe southern
elates ou tho loth ot February, says "properly rai
ned at from throo to four mllltou of dollar! was
des'xoyed, about one thousand persons loll their
lives, double that* number were wounded, and
betwoeti fifteen and twenty thousand persons were
left destitute."
I’KixzN, Georgia, April 21—Tno i eopie are get
ting up funds for the erection of a church. Dr. O.
W. Path* r may be addressed as secretary.
Warisaseoao, AprU 21 —Recent heavy ratos here
has rendered It impossible far the farmers to pro
ceed with thetr work and plowing. Oats aro look
ing beautiful. Very Uttlo wheat Is planted lu
llutke.
Bomi, April 21 —Mr. Sanders, a citizen of this
county, wblto hauling a toad of logs to town yes*
terday afternoon, fell from bis wagou and a heavy
log r-illi-il mi him, l-.lllcllngterrible lnjurlee, from
which he dlod las: night.
Ilev. Dr. Banting will be Installed at pastor of the
Presbyterian church hereon Ute second Sunday In
June.
Uonyrrs, April 25.—Rev. W. D. Win burn, of. this
piece, has a very fine butter cow. A few daye lines,
from a milking of between three and four gallons,
then was churned two pounds aed fourteen ounces
of better. Who cm beat that?
Oamiaviu.c, April 25.—A religious tidal wave
his struck this plsce, and much good has already
resulted and the future Is bright with promises of
great good. The Bapilat church has services twice
a day, and the Methodist from two lo three times.
ATttZNs, April 25.—Mr. J L. Chaadlcr and hts
wile, near Ilstmony Grove, were burled In the
lime cofit2. Tney died from pneumonia.
Judge Carswell, who sentenced Allred G. Inman,
tho wife murderer,lo life Imprisonment Instead of
to death, explains hts action, says the Louisville
N-w., by saying tbat he had thought about the
case a greet deal, and tbat he foil It hla duty to
Imp-se tbe penaUyut Imprisonment tor life.
much ss the erldeoce In the case was clrcum-
•lantta), and the law gives him a discretion In
tuch cases,
KatTHilt, April 25.—In the matter of tho Geor
gia latid and lumber company vs. Bleeper, Hal!
and Briggs- et at. representing the heirs of Chase,
Cylbyand Crocker, iarotrtng titles to three ban*
dred thousend acres ot laud, mention ot which has
heretofore made In the paptrt, proceedings
have been Instituted la the Uoltet .Sates court by
blit for Injunction, A temporary restraining orier
has been granted aud aub,un*< Issued, celling
upon O.n. Briggs et *1, and all to whom they
have sol d or teased lanile, to appear at the Untied
Males court In Mason Mey 7th, and chow cause
why Injunction should not tesn9 et prayed f>r, en
joining them from set ting, leasing, entering upon
or In erfertng with eny ot tho leads set out In the
bltles owned by the Georgia toad aud lumber
company.