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Igfvr ' . v The Hocking .rv .1 i rmiMiV i No. 30 THURSDAY JANUARY 19, 1905. :-- ',"7 - - .- Sentin Vol. 65. J V i) t V h t- B - &r SPECIALIST F&Oai THE Adrian Medico Surgical Institute WILL S1AKB THEIS TIBST VJSIT TO Logaa, Ohio, January 28th, 1905, OHE DAY OXLT, At Bempel House, 9 a. si. to 7:30 p. st. This Institute in order to introduce their new Medical Discoveries and 2 Kadium System, sends at its own ex pense these eminent specialists to givl to those who call on the above date, consultation, examination, advice and all medicine required to complete a pure, absolutely free, These specialists will diagnose your vase and give you the benefit of their medical knowledge. Their is no ex perimenting or guess work. You trill be told whether you can be cured or sot. If your case is curable, they treat you; if incurable they will give you such advice as may prolong your Ufe. -, Their treatment gives quick relief and positively cures. Being prepared. to suit ea& individual case the human system is thoroughly cleansed of the disease in a natural and direct manner and improvement is noticed at once even the worst cases are treated with out any inconvenience to the patient prthe pursuing of his daily vocation. If you are improving under your f arai Jy physician do not come and take up their valuable time. They wish to give each one plenty of time, but cannot listen to long stories not pertaining to your case. They have discarded the old reme dies used for ages by the medical world and which it would be folly to (lepend upcaranyioiifei luv-ihry fin. The HockiDg Sentinel I OUT IN THE I WITIVRRNESSI LEWTt GItKKN. frunrletur Thursday, January 19, 1905, COLLECTIONS Mr. Fred Nuile is authorized a oollect and receipt for accounts due tlm Seutwfj.. Courtesy extended to him will be appreciated by the Sbxtinel, H. h. h, BOOKING HTBBAHS FOR HERKICK TJie Central Committee Selects Delegates and Instructs for Herrick not cure, as thousands die depending pa. them for relief. deiact that these Specialists have discovered entirely new treatments and natural cures, gives them control,, of the Nervous. System, IJeart, Stom. acb, Lungs, Kidneys, Catarrh, Con mumption, Epilepsy, Deafness, Male and Female 'Weaknesses, Cancers, Tumors, Piles and other Chronic Iis, eases. -, They treat deafness by an- entirely new method and hearing in many cases is restored at once. Catarrh in all its. varied forms cured so it will never re, turn. If you have weak lungs or con sumption do not fail to be examined. All cases treated can and will be cured, no difference who yon have seen pr treated rith heretofore. Thousands, who have given up all hope of being cured, now have an opportunity to com suit specialists of reputation. Dont fail to call as a visit costs yon nothing apd may save your life. If you suspect kidney trouble, bring a two, ounce, bottle of your urine for Chemical and microscopical analysis REMEMBER: Tbe free offer is during this visit only and will not be. given again. Persons commencing any treatment after this trip will bo required to pay, but not one cent will be asked of those commencing treat-, ment during this visit for any medicine, necessary to effect a cure; also a posU jive guarantee to cure will be given, to patients accepted under their system of treatment. Those having long gtartnr and. complicated diseases, who have failed to get cured and bo ' come discouraged, are especially invi ted to call as thousands who havi given up all hopes can testify to per manent cures, qbtained. ' NOTICE: Married Ladies without their Husbands, and Minors, without their Fathers, will, positively not be admitted to consultation. 0uacc.5ours: 9A M.to730P if, About ten day? ago, when in Co lumbus, Mr. John F. White the as. tute leader of the Republican party iu Hocking, in an interview declared that Hocking is decidedly Tor Her rick, anil that an instructed delega tion would be selected, The expected followed. " On last Saturday the central com mittee, on a hnstY call. met an-d 8e lecied the folowiiig delegates JOHN Fi WHITE. ELMER O. PETTiT, HARRY AMBROSE- DR. RANNELLS. MOSES STRAWS, ED RICKETS. CAPT. RYAN. (all of Lnsin) L. W. HULL. (Mine Injector, Ward) W. II. HUDSON. (of Munay City) ED KELLY. ' (Putnianter at Union Fnrnaee) MARION ALLSTADT. (Pit-1 master at 1uirel villr) WILLIAM THRUSH. (Fanner of Wai-hiugtnn) Tin- delegation, of courne, wasin MrtuMod to vote for Herrick, first, lat-t and all the time.. Ami beaold n new King rose up in Hocking t hlch knew not Bumnel Exodus, 8, After a careful examination or the list of the mate deleiate, we fail to see the name or Judge niid ex-Sena tor Bright, a lifelong, active, carn et, influential Republican politician and statesman, but at nearly the top of h& list we find the well known name of our recent, and for many campaigns, chairman of the Demo cratic executive committee, Elmer O. Pettit! What does this- mean? We ask the old Republionn guard, what does this mean for youi Are you out in the wilderness? MOSESS GUIDING THE CHOSEN PEOPLE We are clad to see Col. Mose Strawn on the stale delegation. Our Moses is chief of staff and confiden tial advisor of John F. White, the Joshua of the expedition to the con vention. His especial care will be to train the delegates to the Back Step and Crawfish Movement. Mose will also supply seeral of the del egates, Capt. Ryan, Harry Ambrose, Postmasters Allsledt and Kelly wilb bells on tbelr neck, so that in the event they get strayed off from the path laid dowu.they could be found and tethered and yoked and ltd along with the balance of the gang. THE CHRISTIAN VS PAGAN Eastern Civilization. White Against the Yellow, sars; and Cyril and Methodius! pushed forward the boundaries of J Latin Christianity among the hiavs to the very walls of Moscow. - These are the conquests of the 'old Rome, but. the new Rome was Bussia Against Japan. Western vs -;. -. barlans beyond her borders. The States which afterwards developed into the great empire of Russia owed their civilization to Constan tinople. The chiefs of the Russian tribes took them wives from the palace of the Caesar. Indeed, the title which the Emperor of Russia wears, the Czar, is only a form of Cffisar, and is a claim that he is the successor by descent of the Emper ors of the East and that Constan tinople is his capital. Japan Rejected the GoepeL As Roman civilization was brought to the Celts, the Germans and the Slavs by the ministers of The White Han, the American, the Christian, Should Sympathize with Bussia, Our Friend in Need. DOK'T FOKGETTHE DATE, Saturday Jan. 28th, OR ON? BAT ONLY. Tins rftliefiWl pure- of machine ioik we bae witnessed fr a lung lime. But one niifn IToiu the conn try isieleeted? '-'The "aide 'edit-in, tltoe einneulB of Rr publican cpin ion are ignored Representative Bright and Chairman" Whitcraft, persons to uhom the courtesy of a place on Mate delegatioiU ha 'al ways heretofore been extended, are set aside, snubbed, so to speak, and a lot of politicians, cog in the ma chine wheel of Reformer White, fitted in their previously proposed places,"1 The action of the' committee though is good politics, ana good seine. It places Hocking at tin head of the Herrick proee-si-u and gives Mr. White, who is not only the Party in this county, but state central committeeman ior this die trict, ;i conunamliiig place in the machine puliticb of Ihe slate. Herrick, of course, will be re nominated, most likely without op i:oxiliouvatid Mr. White will have a seat at the right tar of the governor. A CONSCIENTIOUS KEPHESENTATIVE What conscience ulrtac to be dene. Or warn me not u. do. Tills teach me mole than bell to sbun, And more thmi Heaven pureuc. Fred Bright, an excellent young mail, an able rapresentative, attini: as his conscienre dictated, refined to follow machine dictation and vo ted against abolishing spring elec tions, and in this was sustained by Editor Huls and bis btrong Hocking Republican fallowing. Because of tbwk'ck-over-the-iuachiiie-traces," Ho". Fred, our worthy representa tive, in his legislative pulchritude, was turned out of the select herd of politiciaua and sent to waste patches to ''browse oft the breez.es and nib ble pro and cm." Thus, is virtue and honest.tnuaht ( forward politics punished in Hock ing! The great struggles of historyj on it, his own choice and his offi are rare and few, as are the'gener- cial title is New Rome. From the ation that beheld them. Ware ; Borne of the West Roman civiliza there are a-plenty, but, llie the jtion went out to Western Europe, onrfr.i eddies on the sea. they sic-, and in the process of time, oroBS- nify nothing. The content now Ing the Atlantic, reduced all tbis religion, 60 it was brought to the waging in the Far East is a great, ! hemisphere to its rule aye, even J Japanese. In 1519 St. Francis a historical struggle. TbVarniiea -under the Spaniards, crossing thoXavier landed in Japan. In spite are engaged in a war of civilization. '.Pacific from Mexico, captured. ' 0f incredible hostility he preached They are making hiitory for to-'those outposts of Asia, the Philip- the faith and made thousands of day; but, what is more significant,- pine Islands. From the Rorso of converts. It seemed as if all the they are deciding how the course . the East, Roman civilization ppread country would soon be permeated of history shall bo for generations to the Slav tribes xhove the Dan-"-with the leaven of Christianity, yet unborn, I ube and vras in t,,rn arried bJ But the rulere of the nation de- Inevery war, nay, in every fight, "them across the vast continent of cided otherwise. The early part no matter how insignificant, our Asia until they, too, were halted 0f the seventeeth century saw the sympathies incline one way or the J by the Pacific. j horrors of the early persecutions other. The battle of the c ballots, We can well imagine how, in the surpassed. Every cruelty was the campaigns of Cffisar, th'e for- ancient times, the Roman soldier practiced against the Christian tunes of Hannibal, all draw us to might pause in his tramp v.pon the Japanese and tlieir teachers; but oppose or to uphold. For the most battlements that overhung the it is to be gloriously recorded thtn Dart our likes or dislikes are .irra- Frith of Forth and look acroas the those neophytes endured their tor- tional, We- cannot tell how we German Ocean and behold in spirit menta like heroes and died martyrs caught them, found thenyor came ' a brother legionary keeping lonely to the name of Christ. Japan had by them. But there they are, and vigil upon that other great wall been offered the Gospel and she re it is usually some time after vre .that fan between the Main and the fused. Her ports were closed, her have taken sides that we lootxound Danube. The one fortification that gates shut against the West. The for reasons to justify our actions, luy like a vast embankment against only entranee to Japan lay over the In this war between Russia and "the Celtic ocean that ever raged at Crucifix, which the merchant was Japan sympathy haB been dividedt bse. The other hunS threat compelled to trample under foot as and for the most part, men have ening over the dark forests of Ger- sign that he renounced the mercy not 'cared to give any reason for many, from whose gloomy depths ot bis God. their actions beyoud dislike or um -""" ... " -"- uecunu w.u v.c v...... prejudice of their own sweet wills, the sack of Rome. But as they ;0f the West was offered to Japan w m,,,t. nnt out of our minds the ged in spirit they' recognized when in 1854 Commodore Perry thoughts of present victories or Of each Qtb-er n8 brethren and their past defeats. We are seeking a souls leaped with the thought that reason for our sympathy! hi&er they were the sentinels of civiliza tion the inducements of mere uc- tion on the very battlemects of the Tn n, ,lma of the nrinci- ra- & w.e. K''zinB over '"- Successors of the Turks." But though Bajazet did not re alize his ambition, the power of his people grew, and in 1453 New Rome, or Constantinople, fell, and the Cross which from the days of Constantine had looked down in triumph on the Bosphorus, now the Abomination of Desolation stood in the Sanctuary of St. Sophia. Then began a struggle which is not ended yet, Western Europe was divided into warring camps on the question of religion and the spirit of the Crusaders was dead forever. Again and again the Pope called on the Christian prin ces to unite against the infidel, but ambition and self-interest rendered the appeal vain. Spain atone had succeeded in driving the enemy from her borders, and the discov ery of America was in no small way advanoed.by the desire of Co lumbus to obtain, funds to prose cute the Holy Wars. Like the Japanese of to-day, the Turks eagerly seized the material appliances of the Christians. Their artillery was the finest in the world; their fleet held supreme sway in the Mediterranean. It was not until the combined fleets of the Holy See, the Venetians and Phil ip of Spain, under Don Juan of Austrian, met the Turks in the Gulf of Lepanto in 1571 and won the victory by which the empire of the sea was recovered by the Christians. But on land the battle still raged. I The western nations were still oc cupied by their domestic broils, and the burden of the defence fell upon the Slavs of Eastern Europe. FRIDE GOETH BEFORE A FALL WHER WHICH KING BEfcONIAN? President Roosevelt or Gen, GroYcn,ojr I charze th. (). Barley, nine away a,iuUUlonJ Uy i bat sId Ancvls fell. Bow, ihen.caoit ttano.'tne lesser. Hope to be tbe winner by.lt? ces. :.. m.- oaa nn f 1 fnwta rt Vlnd- pie it is not the big battillions, as "v,v u .. w. . .--Napoleoj, sajd of battles, that, jje-, iwatok.or f A"hur, J felUw GosPIb ortnet witn me - ...... , --,- for ceuturies our blood has flown cide. vunniiiahpri than with the victor. audnow.asintbedaysofold.'the apart, we recognize that we are stars in their courses fight against brothers-heirs of the same Thenm. the Goddess of Justice. I spiritual.heritage and soldiers in a , - It is the East Agains th West' THE BILL TILIil'H f 10NI5 DISTANCE. J MCCARTHY BUILDING, L0(M, 0. Office 2nd floor UcCarllir Bull lug. opposite Sostomce. Messages i.iompUy dispat li.es id dellreredi OHAS. H. BECK, 63-34 tf. Manager. Meat Market iryon want the nicest, inheil. clevust ana best Yeul. Jliruon . Purfc. callou George Fox, The President aud tbe Republi can Congre!" are in opposition. The president proposes to call an extra hL'ssioii of cdniirest to "take Home at I timi in readjusting the Tariff rates, and pass law needi'd for the regu lation of inlcrtJte commerce and protect the public from ihediseiyu iuatious and extortions of the rail road"; " " - In ibis purpose the president -is supported by the Democrats and a number of Republican congressmen. Staud'paUerb," at they are called, under tbe leadership f Gen. Gros yeunr, oppose an t-xtra he.Nioti, and ppo-e any change" in the Tariff schedule. Te pipitiou comes home to Hock ing. Tender, which flag will the. Journal Gazelle and the Uockiug Republican wilisi? How doc- Reformer Whito and ihc tate delegates Maud.? How do tbe Republican voters of Hocking fi-d. cm thus iesue? How will the party, the People of the party, not the machine, stand up'.ii this cies tiou: Are you with the president in hi purpose to reform iu the in terests of tbe people, or are you with the machine which proposes, to slamlbv ihe Trust Tatiff, aud all Ouc yonusg friend, Harley Whit oraft, a rising and prquuaing young attorney, a zealous, active young Ke publican and chairinun of the Re publican executive committee, has beeu turned out ou the political stubbles to ruminate upon the con. sequences of an unfortunate ambi tion. As chairman of the campaign committee he assumed to have han dled the hhudepike which preoipw tated the late )olitical land elide, and in this delusion, be became am bitions to gather at once some of the fruits of Republican success. He aspired in supersede Ed Rick etls as Fire Qonvnisaiouer. He aims to be the Republican candidate fur probate judge. He antagonizes, at least refuses allegiance to the John F. White machiue. He plumes aaThe Leader Alas! In an unexpected hour, his cob house tumble and he stands shivering m cold neglect. He is denied a place on the state dekga-. lion, a courtesy always given to tha chairman. Ho wttl not be nomiua ted for probate judge. Hi rate in the lead of politics is run, and he is. left behind. Since I was so $.oo done for,. I wonder w,bat I wiis beg aa lor." Harley is a bright, promising vomiih lawyer, and in tbia. field he bids fair to become a success, anil has our hearty cood wishes. Rut Hu-ley is not a machiiu3.psli- Uician. common cause. Ljp2Q Champbn of die East Between us, however, we behold the spectacle of a powerful empire that would withstand and roll back As, t u fc7V u V 7u -amoag the States of Europe their heads by the- banks of the- "" " Nile, and the ever changing river 1 . . aI . a vl 1 n iiHAhnMrvintt ltn i -j a ai. i, i,.!'PM stands to-day m the Far aee in flooxl tid." and ebb, in tbe . B r, . ,i i. East the woat powerful represen- vears of famine as well as in the """"' - There are certain great facts in human history that dominate the ages even as the Pyramids domi- .... Tn.f TlinrATAiffhfvniaflMB r: ,r:::7:rz :, iT;.Jiti.ecmiuationof the west r"r.:rArrt::;;;zi among the states r Europe aDd UJ tuc jr Awittwirto tinur nA n&tirtn and now aUIWWW w ,- 'another seizes tbe leadership, so 4-:a a.4 ftinao noAnlao ffinf. 'hnVA years of plenty So now foverj continuoU8br r&. twentytve centuries thegrea faof theycivHi2ation Bome. of Roman civilizauon nan aomi- ,. . ...., u !... nf . . 5 Turkey on the Western 'Asia and Japan on flank of the Eastern wu. wnn nt.tnl. Viorl ife Kamnntnif : ...i... h. nn ., ,1-. ADk are the modern guardians of .: .;, -Mu..M v,.,!fe n those vast hordes whose ancestors . . . .' . scouraged Europe on many a battle ..1 n lnw no m.l.fin tta vdIII ftf Tro. ... iV .u Pyrenees, and whose ships ravaged ien prevailed from the mouthB of yu . . . .rf J. L. .. . .. the coasts and sacked the towns of tbe Rhine to tne moutns nt tne x.n- cruel grip squeezes tbe marrow from the bones of the serfs of Tndia and Egypt is woefullv troubled lest the Manchus may become the subjects of tbe Czar. HypocriteJ little she cares for freedom, little she cares for Japan! Her only thought is to advance her own in terests, even at the expense of her allies and friends. Among the nations, as among in dividuals, there is no friend like the old friend, and through thick and thin Rusaia has stood by this government. When England was scouring Europe for mercenaries to put down tbe American Revolution, Catharine of Russia showed her benevolence to the infan$ republie by driving the British recruiting sergeants beyond her borders. It was the same Catharine who insti gated tbe formation of the League of Neutrals, which was no incon siderable factor in forcing England to acknowledge our independence, In the dark days of the sixties, when the existence of the nation hung in the balance, who was our friend? There is no American, no matter whether he hails from the North or South, that will not ack nowledge that the triumph of the principle of secession would have prevented the present marvelous -prosperity of our country. Who, then wished to see our country dismantled? England. Who threw her Influence on the side of ths Union? Russia. America's geeat asd good ranan. In 18S1 England and France, then under the basest of the Napo leons, began a movement for inter vention in favor of the South. &nav tInf4-nMi miifima Sfdro f rATtl phrates We even we of Logaa, y1 . t ., wll.nfn i. u u ! . BrunduBium to the Pillars oi fter- are the heirs of that civilization;, our laws, our language, our cus' toms, our religion,, all bear wore, ox less d.eepy its imprint. In splend d cules. began the process of opening her ports to foreign commerce. Once more the nation was brought in touch with Christendom, but the burnt bramble does no bud again, and the nation still stolidly rejects Christ. The rulers, however. Have been quick to seize on the material adjuncts of Western civilization.. They bave improved tbe machinery of government; they have reorgan ized the army and navy ; they have borrowed our methods of commerce and manufactures ; they even wear, our olothes, and short-sighted phi losophers proclaim that they have entered into the comity of th& Christian nations. But civiliza tion is not an affair of clothes. Civilization belongs to the heart; the Kingdom of God is within you. The Japanese spirit is still un touched by the religious principles that bave entered' the modern world, and though using all our resources they are as alien from our svstem as the day they com pelled the merchants of Holland to trample upon the Cross. The West Against the East Twice in the Christian timea has European civilization been engaged in tbe death grapple with the pow ers of Asia. The Semetic tribes of Arabia had been awakened from their long lethargy by the genius of Mohammed, and in a hundred years had conquered Syria, Persia, Egypt Northern Africa and the One door etst or Kempel Howe, and be no- I ,j i,llqitie8 it implies? commodated. He pays the lilBli.t mnrkei ,c """ i ,niee in c&ib for Be-f Caiiie. hi.uk. Mutton will, ou,t cotemporaries enlighten prime stork for Bale, fctte feUS H.SfV On last Tuesday the sale, of this valuable plant was made to Mesrs Morrison and Pifer of Akron, O. The-e gentlemen have transferred the property to the Ohio. ylay Pro, duct company at the pxice above iiame.l. The business will continue as heretolpre. Mr. Magooa will re main as. manager, and. the present forte, aa needed, wil be given tbelr, usual tmployment. This transaction will biingto our city a number, of new, enterprising ' b'Mwess men, who will be heartily weh-omed to the business and aoeiai I Uj:i"yuWsh djB.Buff their uoijilipiji?, j ehcleB, ot Lpga. A $150,000.00 DEAL! Represses Roman Gvifization. YotiVa in her hi&torv has JaDan -! - "..... I.... - -o i rrU- t.l phrase did Robert Louis Stephen- been offered Roman civilization.; rauusu. ox ojkhu -j ' .. .. i..-.t. .i . i .i. ui.., .n nrtc'France. and tho Franks under son express lubtnougnt as ueguzeu as we uuw uio K.iu .. ..-.- from on the Pacific toast biUtcw wd policy of Rome were spread Charles Martel met them upon the the ocean; 'j. stood there on the not by the sword alone. On cer. plains of Tours and in one battle extreme shore of the West and of tain countries the valor of the le J decided the fate or Europe, The to-day. Seventeen hundred years gions imposed the Roman govern. Arabs retreated behind the Pyren aeo. and seven thousand mies ty ment and the Roman tongue, but nes, and: the tide that had swelled 1 A. I 4...5-H.Ml .n-ta4 M onk11 the east, the legionaries stood, there were many nations ana many. ulHub.j v.. rhere the Roman Eagles inS wave "" v,.. - perhaps, upon tho walls of Adrian countries whe and looked northward toward the never penetrated. the to. dominate the Western World. But the Btruggle waanot yet ended, A more dan- The Celts of, Crescent, was mountains of the Picts. For all Ireland and Scotland, tn.e Germans im ;ntorm1 of time and snace. and the Slavonic tribes never sub- when I looked fronUhe Cliff House, ' miMed to theRoman yoke. It was gerous enemy than the-Semites was on the broad Pacific, was. that only when the dividing walls were to. champion tbe cause of Asia, in man's heir and. analogu-ach of . thrown dow and when they rushed the eleventh century the vanguard us standing on the verge of the 'through the provinces, to the capi- of the Mongolian vibes swept in Roman Empire (or, as we now call tal, eager to divide the spoils, that upon the territories of the Sara, it, Western Civilization), each of they fell captives to the- spell of cens Then it was went up the us gazing onward lata zones un-iRome. Religion succeeded where cry from outraged Europe, God romTnized." arms had failed, and the Pt.pe of wills it, God wilb it." Ihe Pope, o... o..o t; T-nto T?mn T,tered on a wider heritage realising the dangers that threat- bave marched with a quicker Btep. than the- Caesars ever knew. It was , ened, raUied the- ctuvalry of En Roman civilization has reached tbe St. Patrick, a product of Rpnian wipe to the-defence- ot the Holy Pacific from the West, We must civilization and bearing the title of Sepulchre. To the end of he tbir L. ,, u .i . , t?. tjo nnMUrv. that entered Ire- teenth century the struggle went man Empire was divided, into the land and in converting the inhab, on, a.ndthoughthe-Ctusars failed Empire ofnhe West and the Em- itants to. Christianity engrafted in holding Jerusalem tbeybrok pircof the East, it still remained them on the Empire of Rome. .It forever, the power of the Seljuk.an theEmpiraof Bom its citi-' was hfe children who. were Rome's Turks. But fresh horjea were ever zens Roman, When CoWantine most faithful and most successful being engendered m the bowels of saw with the sagacity, of genius instruments in bringing back the Asia By he fourteenth century the the wide extent otthe empire : provinces that the Barbarian inva, the Ottoman Turks. haA gamed a required foritsderenaeamorecen-Uion had laid desolate, St. An- foothold m Europe, and at the end tral capital-than the city by the gustine and Bonifice conquered by of it their progress was such, that Tiber; ha built Constantinople, ' the faith those Germanic tribes BaiazeJ had boasted that he would w AB,a and Eurone meet. Cus-' that had been the haughtiest .an- stable his horse W. St. Peter a at U0Ja;vwaa.tihSLtimmj8ef .bis name.V0Wtft of. ths Rpme. oj th.e CaB.-Rpm . It was then that these Slavonic peoples merited the proud title of the Bulwark, of Christianity An temurale Christianitatis. In 1683, before the walls of Vienna, the great Slavic General, Sobieski, routed the last Turkish army that seriously threatened to overpower Europe. Russia, having delivered herself irom the Mongolian domi nation, began to take tho leading part in the warfare against the Asiatic -powers. Little by .little she forced them out of the, Crimea and beyond the Danube. Were it not 'fot the jealousies of the other tfbMnean Statesr she. would long ago -have recovered New Rome, Her traders,vand explorers made thei'r way through Siberia to- the Pacific and tbe war which we now behold is one phase of the great battle she has been fighting for centuries as a soldier of the Cross. Struggle, of Rival Civilizations. This is what lifts the present contest above the common plane. It is a struggle of rival civiliza tions. On tbe one hand is Japan, the heritors of Saracen and Ghen ges Kahn, Turk and of Tamerlane and Solyman, upholding the an cient war of Asia against Europe, the East against the West, of the Paynim against the Christian. On the other side is Russia, the disci ple of New Rome and the successor of the Crusaders, fighting on the eastern edge of Asia the same bat tles the soldiers of Ctobs fought under the walls of Acre and the ramparts ot Vienna for the honor of God and His Christ and the safety of the Christian name. Fut;her Reasons far Sympathy With Russia. But there is further reason why we in America should look kindly on Russia, not only in this war, f but in every just war in which she maT enrrasre. The enemies of a man are they of his own household, and the success of the Asiatic pow er against Europeans may always be attributed to. domesti treason, As in the- days of the Sxacen3 the Jews always helped them against the Christians, as in the days of the persecutions in Japan the Ijutch traders, because, of their re ligloua bigotry and their jealousy of the Portugue-e, urged on the slaughter, bo now the sole ally of Japan is England, ever ready- to take the side of the Infidel against the Christian and willine to violate the most sacred precepts of relig- ion and humanity to gratify her avexice an4 ambition, XNGV4JS5 DtSIIGATEl THE WAR. The instigator of this waragainst Russia is England, and with the rumninsr which marks her she That movement was stopped by the veto of Russia. In 1802 Gladstone congratulated Jeff Davis that he had created a hew nation, and England sought a second time to get France and Russia to recognize Jhe independence of the Southern States. Again Russia blocked England's game. -In 1864 Eng land's unfriendliness had reached such a pitch, and the damaged one by Confererate sruisers built in English shipyards was so great, that the Cabinet at Washingtoa was fully determined that war waa the lesser of the two evils. At ttiat crises in our history, oneSeps- tember day, one Russian squadron jgailed into New York harbor and another Russian squadron east an chor in the bay-of San Francisco a proclamation to the world that Russia stood shoulder to shoulder with America, and a warning to England that in a war with the States she must reckon with the Colossus of the North. THE YELLOW PERIL A BEALITT The sea no longer divides lands', it brings them together. Califor nia and Oregon aud-Washington are frontier States, on the flanks of Asia, Let Japan win, and imme diately she enters on the hegemony of the Mongolian race- That race lies for centuries, like some sullen and stagnant lake, waiting fop some power to move its waters- In the course of history, as we hava seen, the angel that has stirred its depths has not been an angel of healing but of destruction If Ja pan should triumph now, the five; hundred millions of China stand read; to be drilled for the conquest of the world. The Chinese are not cowards; properly officered, they are the equalsof any soldiers ia tha world. Shall Japan supply the leaders? If she does, we. shall ba the first to feel the strain. Cali fornia and our Paeifia States in many respects resemble Spain, Perhaps the history of Spain may be repeated here. -As the Arabs, favored by the Jews of- that day, swept the Christians into, the moun tains, and for eight hundred years possessed the fair valleys and the rich plains, so may the. Japanese, favored for similar reasons by the Jews and our enemies of our day, pour their straitened millions into this goodly and spaeipus. land. Then, perhaps, in a distant age, the children of your children's: children may look down from soma inaccessible strqnghold of the Sier ras on the waving-fields and popu lous towns of an Orieatial Califor nia and curse the folly and ingrat itude of a people who, ro the days of stress, were untrue to. Russia, would draw America ta her side, their most ancient and most faith- Hence her papers teem- with cal umnies concerning the Russians ard their government. She whose heel ha fp centuries been on the bleeding breast of Ireland weeps her crnekodile tears for the suffer- f ul friend;, ODIOUS, COMPARISONS. Russia is held up to opprobium, for sending the enemieaof her gov ernment to- the mines of Siberia, and applying the knout to her crim- . inal class. We Americans sent sus- intza of Poland and the misfortunes . of the Finns-. She whose fangs rjects, without trial, to starve tc are yefe red with the blood of the death on theDry Tortugas-- onrthe. Transvaal Bounds her hollow battle- order of a military satrap aik crv for the integrity of China or American statesman, an Ohio citfc- thaaujeraiiitiyoM&pwi.. Shewhoapj Concluded oa 4th aga. v-s - 'IS - -31 l , -i K " A n i i n . " V. -- .. - s SkWASb. 3C1 V