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THE EIGUTn CHAPTER OF

VATICANISM UNMASKED;

OR

ROMANISM IN THE UNITED STATES.

BY

A PURITAN OF THE NINETEENTH CENTURY,

<

CAMBRIDGEPORT, MASS: PUBLISHED BY THE PRI^X1PIA CLUB.

1878.

^3^

NOTICE.

VATICANISM UNMASKED, ii8 pages, 25 cents.

THE SOUTHERN POLICY, 158 pages, 50 "

FINANCE, RELIGION AND POLITICS, 5 "

ALL THE ABOVE, 8 CHAPTERS, FOR 75 ''

(sent by mail, postage prepaid.)

ADDRESS, WITH PRICE ENCLOSED,

''The JP-rincijpicL Clzzb,

Cambridgeport, Mass."

N.B.— The two tracts, "The Political Trinity of Despotism" and "Despotism vs. Republicanism," 16 pages each, are bound in "Vaticanism Unmasked," paper covers.

FINANCES, POLITICS AND RELIGION.

ADMITTED PROPOSITIONS.

The Pulpit and the Press of this Protestant Republic are the educators of the people, but the people are the govern- ors of the pulpit and the press. Each of these powers has its special work to do. The duties of the pulpit pertain to the ethics of religion, while those of the press have more to do with the science of politics. Under a republican form of government like our own, these two powers are not wholly confined to their special work. While the pulpit in- structs its pews in the ethics of religion, it should also in- struct them in their duties as citizens, and while the press educates its constituency in the science of politics, it should also educate them in the sacred use of the elective franchise. But the people, who are "the powers that be," elect govern- ments which ''are ordained of God," and are superior polit- ically to both pulpit and press. "While, therefore, the ministry is of Divine origin, the occupants of our pulpits are elected by the people. So are the occupants of the editorial chairs generally and in one sense universallj^, for our newspapers of private enterprise are as much dependent on public sen- timent or the money power for patronage, as incorporated companies.

These are general propositions which cannot be successfully controverted. We now propose to apply them to the present state of society in thia Republic, and point out, if we can, the causes which are at the foundation of our unsettled and disturbed finances.

Five years ago a little cloud arose in the financial horizon, not bigger than a man's hand at first, but which soon expand- ded into a panic which covered tins country, and the money marts of Europe as well. The cause or causes of "the panic" have been discussed b}' the press, the pulpit, the rostrum, and in the halls of legislation by men who "darkened coun- sel by words without knowledge." This national upas tree has been boldly enough clipped in its branches, while its roots have been left unmolested.

The Irist six years of commercial distress, financial ruin, and shrinkage of values, have causes back of them which

must be called by their right names, looked fully in the face, and met with appropriate remeilies. We do not propose now and here to go into the difference between a silver dollar and a gold one, or the difference between tweedledum and tweedledee or how many greenbacks shall be issued or how man}' legal tenders cancelled, for we now have more money in the coimtry than can be legitimately used until the causps of our distress and danger are removed. The lo3'al people then must take this matter in hand (for the dislo^^al will not) and demand of the pulpit and the press a recognition of the fact that the great struggle between the elements of despotism and republicanism in this republic must be met by the latter with more powder and ball or something more conciliating with rebels, than the coun- terfeit'' conciliation" of which we have had quite enough during the present administration. It is more than a blun- der, it is a crime for a majorit}' of the pulpits or the press, or the governments, both state and national, who " derive their just powers from the governed," the people, to con- done crime, to cover up with soft words and common-place phrases the elements now combined for the destruction of this republic, and, of course, our republican liberties. A few pulpits and a few newpapers, to their honor be it written, are out-spoken on these matters, but alas ! what are they among so many ? The conspiracy of the said elements to substitute a sJiam republic for a real one, can no longer be covered up and concealed by fictitious names without condoning crime, and the loyal people at least should at once withdraw their patronage and cease to support the newspapers that do these things, by protecting criminals.

The Indianapolis Journal thus answers the question, '' What is killing business?" that it is not caused, as is frequently charged, by a contraction of the currency, for there is more Government currency in circulation now than there was before the panic in 1873, and the money centres of the country are glutted with unemployed funds, but it is the growth of communism, the agitation of the inflation- ists, and the threatening attitude of the Democrats in Con- gress. What manufacturer, it asks, would be fool enough to enlarge his operations, what capitalist would be idiot

enough to invest his money in active enterprises, or who that has money to lend would care to lend it when the com- munists are threateuiur^ to rise in a dozen cities ; when the inflationists are clamorin^i for an unlimited issue of green- backs ; when the nationals are holding state conventions to denounce "credit-mongers" and demand an issue of *' legal-teader fiat money," and when the Democrats in Congress are pushing forward a scheme to Mexicanize the Government? "

It is about time that the Democratic part}' was laid bare and dissected so that " the wayfaring man though a fool may not err " in regard to it. We propose to do our part of it, as that party, as now constituted, is not a democracy in its true sense but a Triune Despotism, to be abandoned.

Take from it the papal element and the rebel element, and what would be left of it would constitute a factor not worth mentioning. Let us look at some of the preliminary movements for a new rebellion, a revolution or a coup d' etat, or whatever it ma}- be called.

The XLVth Congress is a disgrace to the country. Never in an}^ previous congress have we had so few states- men, so many members below mediocity, so many notorious drunkards, and so many bogus members whose constituent majorities liave been unconstitutionally disfranchished. Of such material is the Democratic majority which is now run- ning the nation to ruin with railroad speed.

THE PRINCIPAL FACTORS IN THE CONSPIRACY.

Tlie cunning, crafty, corrupt papal priesthood constitutes the pi-iiicii)al factor in the couspiiacy against republicanism in this country. This power stands between the Vatican at Rome to whom it owes supreme allegiance, and the masses of Romanists over whom the priests in their turn exercise supreme authority. No army of the United States ever executed the orders of its commander-in-chief with more alacrity and abject obedience, tlmn do the Romanists in this country their priests. These pious frauds make their vic- tims believe in the infallil)ility of the church and the Pope, and moreover that they aie sent here by God and in his stead with power to loose and unloose to bind and unbind

6

to release and absolve whom they choose from every command of the decalogue. In the sixteenth century Mar- tin Luther and his coadjutors were more than a match, under God, for this power, but the protestant churclies of the nineteenth century have followed the newspaper press until both have degenerated into a reiuge of oppression for crime and criminals. Not that they deliberately purpose eitlier to condone crime or sanctify criminals, but the effect of the let alone and reticent policy of both pulpit and press, we affirm, without fear of successful contradiction, is just that and nothing else.

The next factor in the political trinity is the rebel slave power, largely composed of Romanists and other white trash. These two factors, working in and through the dem- ocratic party, constitute the danger to the Republic, and the peril to our liberties, and unless this conspiracy is broken in pieces speedily our liberties are gone. This can never be done by ignoring these facts and adopting the let alove policy as has been and is being done by a majority of our pulpits and newspaper presses ; nor by suppressing the most impor- tant facts, or worse still, by misrepresenting them. To show that we are not writing at random, we will give a few speci- mens to elucidate our meaning, both from the pulpit, the press, and then the legitimate fruits of the reticent policy.

Rev. James Freeman Clarke, D. D., in his Fast-day sermon made some reckless statements which were reported in the Traveller as follows : '* First, that the colored peo- ple of the South have more political rights now than under Republican rule ; second, that the white authorities as a rule punish the crime of killing negroes ; third, that the Demo- cratic authorities have a habit of appointing colored men to oflSce ; and fourth, more reckless than all, that ' we have the astounding fact of men going to the legislature, or to Congress, poor men, and in a few years becoming posses- sors of colossal fortunes.' " Every newspaper reader, ex- cept the policy-organ readers, know that every line and sentence of the above quotation is the direct opposite of the truth.

Dr. Clarke, like multitudes of others, who glean their news from such papers as the Boston Journal, is woefi^ly

misled. We do not believe he intended to lie about it, but he is so dazed with the southern policy and its organs that he does not seek information from the most reliable sources, and consequently, like many other public men whose inten- tions are good, appears ludicrous in the eyes of better in- formed people.

If any one doubts that our obsequious policy organs sup- press the most revolutionary and rebel utterances of the leaders of southern public sentiment, let him read the pro- ceedings of the late memorial da}' at Macon, Ga. The bell- wether devil of the slaye holders' rebellion we beg pardon— " President Davis " " our ex-President " as they called him was not there but sent a letter more revolutionary and rebell- ious in its utterances than anything we remember to have seen before the first rebellion. The more disloyal, rebell- ious and revolutionary the utterances, the louder and more uprorious the applause. But the northern policy organs fooled their readers by giving a few of the tamest sentences or none at all, and thus it has been in regard to the southern policy all through. Our northern doughfaces face but one way and that souths while the south faces both ways, north and south. They pursue the anle-Bellum policy of two sets of letters and speeches, one for northern, the other for southern ears. Such sentences as the following, in the letter of Mr. Davis, were not intended for northern ears but to fire the eouthern hearts for another rebellion. He tells the Georgians what their monument to the dead heroes of the *' lost cause " was raised for, and his statement, says a Traveller correspondent, " was cheered to the echo by every Georgian who heard it."

This is what the unhung traitor to his country says : *' Let posterity learn by this monument that you com- memorate men who died in a defensive war ; that they did not, as has been idly stated, submit to the arbitrament of arms the questious at issue questions which involved the inalienable rights inherited from iheir ancestors, and held in trust for their posterity ; but that the}' strove to maintain the State sovereignty which their fathers left them, and which it was their duty, if possible, to transmit to their child- ren." There you see the assertion is boldly and badly

8

made, not only that the south was right, but that the war did not destroy the principle of State sovereignt}* for which it fought. And if any one doubts that the hope ofa new and more successful trial of the cause is looked for by the south, let him mark well the next sentence in this remarkable letter : " Away then with such feeble excuse for the aban- donment of principles, which may be crushed for a while, but which possessing the eternal vitality of truth, must in its own g^ood time prevail over perishable error." There you see Mr. Davis, and assembled Georgia that cheered him as one man, assert plainly' that '^ in its own good time" the great truths of the Rebellion must prevail over " the perishable error" of the Union cause. The closing para- graph of the let^ter concentrates all that has gone before in a fervent peroration, so unique alike in its phraseology and spirit, that I will quote it in its entirety :

*'Let this monument teach that heroism derives its lustre from the justice of the cause in which it is displayed, and let it mark the difference between a war waged for the robber- like purpose of conquest, and one to repel invasion, to defend a people's hearths and altars, and to maintain their laws and liberties. Such was the war in which our heroes fell, and theirs is the crown which sparkles with the gems of patriotism and righteousness, with a glory undimmed by any motive of aggrandizement or intent to inflict ruin on Others. We present them to posterity as examples to be followed, and wait securely for the verdict of mankind, when knowledge shall have dispelled misrepresentation and delu- sion. Is it unreasonable to hope that mature reflection and a closer study of the political history of the Union, may yet restore the rights prostrated by the passions developed in our long and bloody war?"

In California, the political trinity has recently appeared with the workingmen's flag. In San Francisco they have held several meetings. "The Bernal Heights Club" is com- posed of Irish hoodlums, French communists and German socialists, which are the same elements that in New York are called slums. At one of their meetings they inaugurated rebel- lion of the boldest and most defiant kind. Their leader, Dennis Kearney, threatened ''to burn the city to ashes, and drive

9

every chinaman and pale-faced yankee into the sea." These rebels cowed the civil power and the press into the *'let alone policy," by which they were encouraged to go on with their meetings.

Id the American Missionary for May, we have an account of the next meeting of this Bernal Heights Club. These papal foreigners call to account in true Vatican style, the Rev. W. C. Pond, whose church is located in the vicinity of Bernal Heights, and who is guilty of educating the Chinese in the protestant religion. In the resolutions adopted at that meeting, we have the papal rendering of our Saviour's com- mand to his disciples " Go ye therefore and teach all nations ; baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost." We will quote from the resolution itself the very language of these pious frauds. They say '' we do not object to your following the com- mands of our Divine Master. When He enjoins you to go out to all the world and teach and preach, he did not command the whole world to come to you. He said, go out to the world and preach. Therefore, if you must preach and teach Chinamen, go to China, and you will there find an opportunit}' to unburden your full load of Christianity for the heathen lepers." They then go on to tell the protest- ant church that " we shall and will handle this question without gloves " and sundry other great things they are go- ing to do, ?/they can. The San Francisco correspondent of the New York Mail of March 29th, informs us that the Chi- namen " are well armed and will fight like devils," but that the pale-faced yankees are leaving for the east as fast as they can settle up their affairs and do so.

Further on in the resolutions above alluded to, those pinks of papal piety say " we tell you you must stop this Chinese business." Be it remembered that this language is addressed to the proies/a??^ church, by the papal hoodlums of San Francisco. Mark the language *' you MUST stop " etc. Stop what? why your missionary efforts to convert the Chinese to Christianity ! first b}* teaching them the Eng- lish language.

This foreign anti-republican element in San Francisco, who have been naturalized and enfranchished have taken

10

timely care that the Chinamen should not be permitted, like themselves, to enjoy the privileges of citizensliip and the ballot. After the southern pattern they control the elections and no man is elected to office, municipal, state or national who is not craven enough to pledge himself be- forehand to use his political power against the Chinese. The consequence is that the 150,000 of the latter have been denied, by Act of Congress, tlie privilege of being natural- ized which carries the right to vote with it, and thus puts them in the political power of the hoodkmis, bound hand and foot. This was done by the assistance of the governor of the vState of California and the Mayor of the city of San Francisco by the most barefaced falsification of the truth, and downright lying, which ought to shame the " father'of lies" himself. These political demagogues in league with the Irish Catholics and hoodlums, have not yet succeeded in getting the Burlingame Treaty between China and the United States abrogated in form, while they have utterly disregarded it in practice.

In July 1876, Congress appointed a Joint Special Com- mittee with power to visit the Pacitic Coast, and investigate the character of the Chinese and report at the next session of Congress. The Committee attended to the duties assigned them, and summoned some twenty- five or more of the first citizens of San Francisco, "composed of judges, bankers, merchants, farmers, railroad officers, manufac- turers, physicians, clergymen, secretaries, ex-foreign min- isters and consuls, missionaries, insurance agents, editors and lawyers, nearly all of whom are pioneers." The testi- mony of these witnesses was uniformly in favor of the Chinese character, and marked a striking contrast between them and the Irish catholics who have disgraced their citi- zenship, and also between a pagan and christian country.

In Chicago the same elements are at work, but in that locality they are called ^'communists." "'The hair is PZseau's but the voice is Jacob's." Says a despatch to the Boston Herald of April 28, they " threaten a grand massacre and a grand conflagration." But the civil authorities of Chicago took a very different course from those in San Francisco. Instead of taking off their hats and bowing obsequiously ta

\

11

these unhung rebels, they gave them to understand that this time there would be no fooling with blank cartridges that that mode of dealing with rebels was played out last summer, during the raih-oad riots. They lost no time in reorganizing the military, providing arms for the citizens and other precautiooary measures, on the basis of meeting ''fifteen to twenty thousand thugs, reckless, rumsoaked vaga- bonds, who would regard neither life nor property as sacred."

These combined elements of despotism are the sources of our weakness, the antipodes of republicanism, the destroyers of confidence among the capitalists and business men of the countr}', the cause of the panic and its long train of disasters. They are the slave power of the south and the papal power of the north working in and through the dem- ocratic party, and constituting the triune despotism of the country, which the bogus republican administration has tried to "conciliate" b}' surrendering the republican party, shorn of its strength, into their power and keeping.

This system ot intimidation, by fire and murder and rapine and plunder, has succeeded so well in the south, that it is en- couraged to spread devastation over the north and west, just as fast as it can awe the civil authorities into " the let alone policy." When state authorities become so weak and cowardly as to surrender to mob violence, they are too weak and cowardl}' to call on the national government for assist- ance to suppress it. These state authorities know full well that the national government has shut itself up in the tomb of home rule and state rights, and has itself set the example of yielding to armed rebellion. The infamous doctrine of supreme slate authority over national, to a degree that the latter has no riglit to cross the boundaries of the former to protect its citizens and punish criminals, is a disgrace to civilization, and unworthy even of a cabinet of grandmams, with ever so " good intentions."

" Sedcum ita sint." Since things are so, we shall have no 2^ermanent improvement in business matters (for the very good reason that like causes produce like results), until we have a radical change in the causes which have produced, and will continue to produce impaired confidence, shrinkage in values, dull business, hard times and financial ruin. We

12

have had enough of all these things already, and now the question is a pertinent one, '• what are we going to do ahout it ? " Tlie tirst thing to be done is to break in pieces and grind to powder, politicall}', the powerful combination against republicanism, by whatever names its elements may be called. We won't stop to quarrel with Webster's dic- tionary about definitions. The cunning and crafty devils engaged in that work will, as heretofore, assume different and fictitious names, as we have seen, according to locali- ties and circumstances, but they will all bring up under a counterfeit democracy, in opposition to republicanism.

The republican party, then, must arise in her strength, and put on her beautiful garments, with the democratic patches, which have been pasted on in the name of " con- ciliation," left otf. Tliese are a source of weakness, like rotten timbers in a frame building, or like a union of bank- rupts to make a strong firm financially. The republican party has no need of such materials. It is the onl}' party on which the country can rely to preserve its liberties, but it must be renovated and purified, and so far reorganized. It must not sacrifice principles to expediency, in order to catch a few votes from the liquor interest, or either of the hree factors of the combination we have named.

RELIGION AND POLITICS.

The union of church and state in this comparatively young republic does not exist in the sense that it does in many of the countries of the old world. In what we have before said to the capitalists and business men of Boston, we have indicated what we believe to be some of the real causes of their present commercial distress and embarrass- ments. In this country, with a republican form of govern- ment, onr finances^ our religion and our politics have so much to do with each other, that it is ditficult to separate them. Our preaching and our practice, our professions and our per- formances are so critically compared by the world around us, with the Bible standard which we profess, that it becomes the occupants of the pulpits to take an occasional sounding to ascertain, if possible, whither the ecclesiastical ship is drifting. This is done to some extent, but a great majority

13

who are placed as sentinels on the watch-towers of Zion, **see the storm coming and do not blow the trumpet to wara the people of their danger." The watchmen are busy, here and there with their parish duties, and leave the more impor- tant duties of warning their people of approaching danger un- til too late. This was true when the slave power inaugurated the last war, and it is equally true now, with the papal power united with it, and both working through the democratic party to seize tiie reins of the national government. When this shall have been accomplished, as it surely will l)e, unless the pulpit and the press lead the people in the opposite direction, you gentlemen of the protestaut pulpits will receive your orders from the Vatican at Rome, through its hierarchy and corrupt priesthood. The papal church is a unit against protestant- ism the world over, while the protestant church is divided into sects, and if ever the democratic party comes into power it will be by papal votes, and the rudder of its ship of state will be guided by papal hands, whose supreme allegiance is due to the Vatican at Rome. The papal church has a dual character of religion and politics. Its priests instruct its voters from the pulpit, what candidates they may and may not vote for. A majority of the protestant pulpits ignore politics and leave their hearers to vote for slavery, rum, and the devil himself if he were in nomination for office They have no advice to give. It is eas}^ to see that while the united papal party continues its aggressive policy in the political direction, and while the protestaut forces, with the white feather flying, ignore politics and flee before the enemy, we repeat, it is easy to see whicn will be the most likely to succeed, unless one or the other changes its policy. The new pope, Leo XIII, renews the audacious claim of civil supremacy over the world, which is certainly no change in that direction, and as to the abrogation of the law of celibacy, so far as the said contract between the Vatican and the 3,000,000 Episcopals of England is concerned, that law was practically a dead letter before. This was recently demonstrated in Boston, where a large sum of money was paid to shield an adulterous priest from the penalty of the civil law. His crime consisted in violating the civil not th« canon law.

14

The following statement of the above ease was offered for publication to a Boston Daily, and refused. Simihir state- ments have been offered to other papers and also refused.

FRUITS OF THE PAPAL SYSTEM.

CRIME CONDONED AND SANCTIFIED.

There are at least two laws which are practically a dead letter in the papal church viz. the seventh commandment of the Divine code, and the law of celibacy in the papal code. While the Roman hierarchy claim that tlieir priests are holy men of God and can commit no sin, and while their poor de- luded dupes believe it as much as they believe their own ex- istence, facts are more or less frequently brought to lii^ht, which prove the contrary. One of these facts was alluded to in the last annual report of the Principia Club of Cam- bridge and Boston, in March last.

The vicar general the holy Father not 1,000 miles from Boston was sued for adultery put under 85,000. bonds, ( an Archbishop being one of his bondsmen ) the damages placed at ^25,000. and the papers filed in the Supreme Court the writ returnable at the April term of said court.

The evidence of the plaintiff's wife was of the most posi- tive kind, showing that the paternity of her four children was divided between her husband and their libidinous priest. The case for the plaintiff was streugthened by corroborative testimony, and the evidence of the crime was so overwhelm- ing, that the defendant and his condoaers and sanctifiers dare not let the case go to trial in our courts. The only al- ternative left for the defendant and his backers was to pay the damages and costs, and let the clerical libertine look up the next victim. This they did, in consideration of which the suit was withdrawn, and the papers delivered up to the defendants' attorneys tor destruction. A portion of the money thus paid was placed in the hands of trustees, for the support of the illegitimate children, and, within a few days of the settlement, the father of these children was summoned to the bar of God, to answer for the violation of the seventh commandment, from which the Roman hier-

15

archy had absolved him. It does not yet appear whether he was removed by divine Providence or otherwise.

A system that ignores the ten commandments, and ex- pects the law of celibac\' to be observed among its priests, is a sad failure ; and more especially so, since the auricular confessional was invented for the undoubted purpose of operating as a substitute for that law, and giving free rein to a currupt priesthood. The papal system claims infalli- bility for the church, and holiness for its priesthood When a priest enters the confessional, he officiates as God (or in his stead), not as man, and consequently the seventh com- mandment has no binding force on him nor his victim, be- cause he professes to absolve her from the crime of adultery. In a majority of cases this may be satisfactory, but iu the above case the lawful husband did not quite relish support- ing another man's children. Hence the action for damages, and the consequent provision for the support of the children. It may be claimed that the '* hoi}' Father" violated none of the canons of his church, but be it remembered that the laws of God are yet unrepealed, and the statute laws of Massachusetts, based upon them, are quite likely to be exe- cuted, at least until the papal power gains the ascendency for which it is striving, which, God grant, may never be.

PURITAN.

Above we have an instance, in which the press was more to blame perhaps, than the pulpit. After the death of the Vicar-general, the ''Holy Father," the daily press of Boston, published columns of wiiitewash and laudation all of which was the direct opposite of the truth, but refused a plain state- ment of the real facts in the case showing that they had been lauding to the skies, not a saiut. but a siuner of the worst type. Tin's shows the alarming extent to which the protes- tant press is ali-eady subject to the papal power.

The following perversion of history aud falsification of facts, was published by a Boston daily, without a correction or protest, or any hint even, that it was not in perfect harmon}' with the truth of history. Our newspaper editors had better read ** Vaticanism Unmasked," and leani some- thing of the character of the papal priesthood. It might save them a great deal of trouble hereafter. The priests

16

now seem to liioio that any thing they may write will be swallowed b}' the press as law and gospel, and published without note or comment, but that an}- thiug against them will find no favor with the stupid ignorance that prevails in the editorial rooms of man}' of the newspapers of the country. It may not all be charged to the account of ignorance to be sure, for the counting-rooms may control the editorial rooms, as in case of the life insurance companies whose briberies, Id the shape of a large advertising patronage, have com- pletely subsidized the press, so that the best writers on life insurance have not been able to expose their perversion of trust funds to illegitimate, base and dishonest purposes, through the newspaper press, but have been obliged to do it in pamphlet form at their own expense. Criminals seem to hold the fort in pulpit and press. The perversions of history and falsification of facts, are as follows :

THE CATHOLIC CHURCH AND THE BIBLE.

The Eev. Thomas A. Shaw, C. M., of the Catholic Col- lege, Suspension Bridge, N. Y., delivered a lecture before a considerable audience in Music Hall, last evening, in aid of the Carney hospital. His subject was "The Catholic Church in Relation to the Sacred Scriptures The Old Church and the Old Book." He laid down the proposition, to begin with, that the Catholic church is the guardian of the Bible, and he divided this proposition into three parts : first, that the church has proved herself the guardian of the Bible by preserving its existence at the risk of all that was valuable to her ; second, by multiplying versions and copies of the Scripture, and spreading a knowledge of it among the people ; third, by exerting her authority to prevent any perversion or misrepresentation of its sense. In discussing the second point he criticised the indiscriminate distribution of the Bible, and endeavored to show that copies given by missionaries are generally put to sacrilegious uses. On the third point he said that the church was willing and desirous that her children should study the sacred Scripture, but that the version must be one approved by the church. He would not dwell on the history ot private interpretation, nor attempt to enumerate its evils. From it sprung sects as numeroua

it

as the stars about the moon, as worthless as the dead leaves falling from the trees. The children of the church -were to believe that the Scripture was inspired solely because the church paid it was inspired. The church gave the Bible to the world, and lived and conquered before it was written. Even without the Bible, which was the church's written law and rule of faith, the church would live as it had lived before the Bible was written ; but without the church all would be disorder and spiritual ruin.

"We cut the above from the Boston Daily Advertiser, of Oct. 1st, 1877. ''We seldom or never saw so many falsehoods in so few lines. If the propositions of the lecturer are cor- rectly reported, the facts of history are sadly perverted. The special pleading of the priest will appear more con- spicuous when we remember that the papal church was the same kind of '' guardian to the Bible," that the wolf is to the lamb, viz., that no other beast shall devour it but himself. All through the dark ages "the Bible," was buried under the debris of the monasteries, until Martin Luther in the sixteenth century accidentally discovered an old moth-eaten copy, at the University of Erfurth, which he translated from Greek and Latin, into German, for distribution among the people, and which he nor they had ever before seen. It is true that a translation had before been made by the Roman hierarchy, to prep up and fit their system^ which had been growing up for several centuries previous, but on compari- son with the original, Luther found it was a gross fraud, only intended for the priests, and not for the peojjJe at all.

Consequently when he had mastered the Hebrew and Greek languages, he made a true translation, and scattered it in parts like leaves of the forest, among the people of Germany. But as there were no traces in Luther's bible of the hierarchal system, the papal power ordered every copy of it to be collected and burned. This is the way the church of Rome guarded "the Bible." That is to say, the true translations from the original Hebrew and Greek, and especially the latter, (the new Testament,) the "Catholic church " made bonfires of, while it palmed off the fraud upon the world, as "the Bible." For a more particular ac- count see "Vaticanism Unmasked," chap. I, pp. 21-25.

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When a papist talks about "the Bible," he means the papaU not the protestant^ ''the version approved by the church,** the one that "was inspired, solely because the churcli said it was inspired." We are glad to have this testimony from a satellite of Rome in the nineteenth century, that their bible includiug of course the Douay testament, is inspired by man, not God.

Again we have some faint idea that our Bible was writ- ten in part some 4,000 3^ears B. C, and so along down through the first century of the Christian era, and yet this pious fraud would have us believe that the papal church *' lived and conquered before it was written." Whereas that church was never heard of as an organization until hundreds of years after Christ's advent, and the organiza- tion of the Apostolic Churches.

But what were these churches organized for? Christ bade them " go teach all nations" etc. Teach what? Why of course Christianity. But here comes anti-Christ in the nineteenth century teaching another doctrine, and our pul- pits are silent. Our newspaper press publish their dogma- tics as if they were the pure Christianity of Christ and his Church !

Moreover they frequently publish columns of laudation of the most corrupt and dangerous iuslitution the world ever saw called the papal system or church, and when the moral putre- faction of any of its heirarchs or its priests, is uncovered by a protestant, they not only refuse to publish the truth, but both pulpit and press are as silent as the tomb in regard to the wrongdoing and the wrongdoers. Of course the church- going and the reading public are left to infer that, accord- ing to the testimony of the pulpit and the press, the Roman Catholic Church is all right and ought to succeed. It is true we may look into history and learn the reverse of all this wrong teaching, but no thanks to the pulpit or the press. But this is not all nor the worst of it. In the mat- ter of the most important institutions in society (next to the true church), we mean the life insurance companies and the savings-banks, our advertising-subsidized presses not only refuse to publish the wrongdoing, when exposed by the most competent authorities, and have no word of censure

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for the wrongdoers, but they turn square around on their more righteous informants and abuse them like so many pick-pockets. The freedom of speech and the independ- ence of tlje press shows a wonderful elasticity in this direc- tion because it waxes fat and kicks on stolen money. Is there no diflierence between independence on the wrong side and the riglit? Are the leading newspapers of our most populous cities to be bribed by advertisements paid for out of the trust funds of the life insurance companies, equit- ably belonging to poor \Yidows and orphans, lapsed policy- holders and their heirs, we repeat are they to be thus bribed into condoning crime and protecting criminals? Are there no editors independent enough of their counting-rooms to approve the rigiit and condemn the wrong? Two bribing life insurance presidents are now in state's prison. Ought not the bribed editors to be with them? The bellwether criminals are yet under editorial protection. Trust funds have been and are being spent by hundreds of thousands if not millions to protect them in their crimes and keep them from hammering stone for the benefit of the state, as justice requires they should be.

But we have another instance of wrongdoing by whole- sale, by enacting iniquity into laws, and then shielding our- selves behind those laws. We mean the

CRIMINALITY OF LIQUOR LICENSES.

Selling licenses in the new world and indulgences in the old, is on precisely the same principle. In both systems the ten commandments are, to all intents and purposes, abrogated.

The papal hierarchy of the old world authorized the vio- lations of the ten commandments by the sale of indulgences, fixing the price of each commandment according to the enorrait}' of its violation, in a regular scale of prices.

The civil power of this protestant country has copied the exact plan of the papal system of the old world, but instead of calling them indulgences, we call them licences. The principle adopted is one and the same. One of the worst features of it in this country is that ihe civil authorities dragoon our Church members into their support, until they

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are elected to power, and then as seon as they are warm in their seats proceed to selling licenses to rumsellers, to make drunkards, in spite of the protests and remonstrances of the best part of the community. Take the city of Cambridge for an illustration. The state license law leaves it optional wiih municipal and town authorities to license the liquor traffic or not, as they choose. If the present municipality of Cambridge follow in the foot-steps of their illustrious predecessors they will disregard the remonstrances and pe- titions of the churches and the temperance organizations of both sexes, and proceed to the sale of licenses to sell liquor or intoxicating drinks. And what is a liquor license? In plain Saxon English it is just this. It is a contract be- tween the city (representing the tax-payers of course) and the rumseller, by which the city agrees for a given amount of money paid into the treasury, to allow the vendors of in- toxicating drinks to make as many drunkards, to ruin as many families, and manufacture as many paupers for the tax-payers to support as he can in a given time, say one year. In selling this indulgence the city further binds itself to protect the liquor seller in his nefariou-s business while every one knows that every dollar paid in to the tieasury for license takes out five to ten for pauperism and crime. This is not a very good financial operation, to say nothing of the infamous train of crimes which are the legitimate fruits of it. How long, then, we ask in sorrow, are we to be fooled and humbugged bj' the law-makers and execut )rs of the law we create by our votes? How long shall the political power we delegate to them by the sacred ballot be prostituted to such base purposes as crime licensing, liquor poisoning, pauper making and the like?

We answer, until the press, the pulpit and the pews demand in thunder-tones that these things shall be placed on the catalogue of crimes, with thefts, adultery, murder and the like. If one is to be protected by law, and to that extent made respectable, why not all of them?

The license system has been tried for hundreds of years, why not try prohibition. Generation after generation has been dazed with the idea that regulating drunkenness would Qur^ it, until the idea hj^. bec<W3Qe an exploded humbug.

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But politicians will never see it until we make prohibition a paramount question at the polls. It was done in Maine and proved a success, and should be done here and every- where.

Does any one suppose that if prohibition had been made a paramount question at the polls, the selectmen of Saxon- ville, Mass., would have licensed six criminals just after being convicted and fined for selling liquor without license, as was done a few days since?

Will an}' one tell us that the selectmen of Saxonville, who sold those six indulgences to as many criminals for making drunkenness, ought not to be treated also as crimi- nals ? But it ma}' be said there is no law to convict them. That is just the point. I^Iake one that will put the crimi- nals also in the same boat and send them to the peniten- tiary or Botaney Bay or same other safe place. Begin with the Legislature ; make Prohibition the paramount question at the polls. Send men to Beacon Hill who will make a strong Prohibitory law, which will embrace in the catalogue of criminals, both parties to a license contract those who sell indulgences as well as those who buy them, with equally severe pains and penalties, holding both parties re- sponsible, both morally and pecuniarily for all the damage done to society and also to individuals, by the drunkards they make.

Is it not about time for us to stop fooling with the license system, and treat the crime of liquor selling, for beverage, as we do other murders ?

With such facts before us, which are only specimens of jDultitudes of others we might quote if we had room for them, we see mob-rule and rebellion, revolution and des- potism staring the nation in the face. We see a majority of the protestant pulpits, and a majority of the newspaper presses of the country fast becoming accessories before the fact or abettors of the above crimes by giving their countenance and aid, or becoming involved in them, either before or after tbe deed is committed, by their silence and let alone policy. Many of them look on in silence with apparent ignorance and innocence. The monster of rebellion, revolution and despotism rears its hydra-head and assumes to govern the

22

nation, bnt these occupants of responsible positions have no warnings to give the people, no alarms to sound in tlie ears of a nation in peril no responsibility in the matter beyond publishing telegrams of crimes as they are committed in detail, as items of news. Let us apply this principle on a smaller scale and nearer home. A man is put in possession of information that his neighbor's house, on a given night, is to be burned, and the family to be murdered and robbed. But the man is boiling over with " conciliation" towards murderers and robbers and incendiaries and therefore does not warn his neighbor of his danger. lie adopts the reti- cent-let-alone policy so popular now-a-days, and though he sees the criminal at the appointed time approaching the house to apply the torch he looks the other wa}^ and affects to know nothing of it at all. As if that would wash his hands in iunocency or cleanse his soul from the blood of those whose death he consented unto, as did Saul of Tarsus to that of Stephen. And yet that is just what the watch- men do on the towers of Zion who see or might see the sword coming, if they would look the right way, and yet fail to warn the people of their danger. It is also just what the conductors of the press do who receive their telegrams from all parts of the country informing them of the progress of the second rebellion and probable revolution, and yet shut their eyes to the facts and cry "peace" when there is no peace, and "conciliation" when they ought to blow the trumpet and arouse the nation to a sense of their danger. Oh ! the guilt of the pulpit or the press the statesmen or politicians who have sung the lullaby song of" conciliation" the last year, and who are still trying to persuade them- selves that the southern policy is a success for republican- ism, while on the other hand it is an exploded humbug, or if a success at all, it is for bulldozing democracy, which is worse.

The practice of the newspaper press in lionizing criminals, has become so common, that the best part of newspaper readers are getting tired of it. The Boston press gave us a specimen of it a few days since in the case of a clerical libertine, an account of which we have already given in these pages. Since then the Chicago papers have loaded

23

their columns with the prison lives in detail, of two notori- ous murderers, who have expiated their crimes on theg^allows. They could thus pander to the morbid curiosity of the lower classes of society, while the mob elements were gathering to capture their railroad trains, but a few hours from them. But neither Chicago nor St. Louis dare warn the people of their danger, for fear it might affect their trade. The sta- tions between these two great rival cities of the west, were fast filling up with the mob elements. East St. Louis, Mo. is said, by private letters, to be swarming with them. God- frey, 111., June 15th, had 150 of them, and on the 16th, 200 more. Alton had 400 on the 17th, but the daily press of the two great rival cities, in their race for mammon, let the gathering mobs, which threatened their nei<;hbors. severely alone by which we infer, that the commercial Christianity of those cities does not require them to blow the trumpet in Zion, to warn the people of their danger, and consequently mob-rule holds the fort instead of home-rule.

We see that the political trinity of dej^potism now called the democratic party means rebellion and revolution. It means payment of southern claims by the yankees, amount- ing to thousands of millions or billions, in which are in- cluded payment for emancipated slaves the rebel war- debt the pensioning of rebel soldiers and their heirs, and a thousand other bogus claims already before Congress. It means the destruction of Hayes' title to the presidency, and the accumulation of political capital for future elections and as soon as democratic despotism rules the nation, the southern claims will be allowed, aud what the revenues of the country fall short of payment, will be put into Ameri- can consols for future generations to redeem or repudiate.

One of the " other bogus claims " alluded to above is one of $189,000,000 only, brought before Congress early in June, by a representative from Alabama, for the purpose of some corrupt bargain between northern and southern demo- crats who will vote for Potter rascalities or anything else, provided northern doughfaces will vote for soutliern claims. The avotoed purpose of the appropriation is to repair old dilapidated canals, but the probable purpose is to repair dilapidated fortunes, of the governing race of women-whip- Dere.

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Bat thank heaven the obituary of the first session of the XLVth Congress can now be written.

As we go to press we have the thrice welcome announce- ment from Washington, that the rebel congress has ad- journed sijie die. It is the best thing for the country that the XLVth Congress has done, except possibly, one or two. One is the passage of the act to ameud the constitution, for- biding the payment of all rebel claims. But will it do this? "We now have the fourteenth, fifteenth and sixteenth amend- ments of the constitution unrepealed, but yet nullified, trampled under foot, made of non-effect, and for all practi- cal purposes rendered a dead letter by the rebels. "What guarantee have we that the seventeenth, even if approved by the requisite number of states, may not share the same fate? We maybe sure that the southern rebels never per- mitted their northern allies to go for such a measure with- out an equivalent, of course under a fictitious guise, such as the ^189,000,000 proposition for an appropriation to repair absolete canals iu the rebel states, which every man of ordinary intelligence knows, simply means "spoils for the victors,'* not including " the niggers." Another one of the best things the forty-fifth congress has done, was to strike out the appropriation of $6,000 to pay the six com- missioners, who were sent south to give away two republi- can states to the armed and defiant rebels, that Mr. Hayes might occupy the white house in peace. As there was no authority in law or precedent for the outrage, and as the said individuals were all rewarded with fat oflBces, it was a good thing to stop the leak, not so much on account of the paltry sum of money, as placing the seal of condemnation on so bad a precedent.

We may not have given the rebel congress credit for all its good deeds, nor have we charged to its account a tithe of the bad ones.

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