| ADDRESS ON THE CIVIL RIGHTS ACT. 
Introduction by Frederick Douglass("Abou Ben Adhem")—Decision
            of
 the United States Supreme Court pronouncing the Civil Rights
            Act
 Unconstitutional—Limitations of Judges—Illusion
            Destroyed by the
 Decision in the Dred Scott Case—Mistake
            of Our Fathers in adopting
 the Common Law of England—The
            13th Amendment to the Constitution
 Quoted—The Clause of
            the Constitution upholding Slavery—Effect of
 this Clause—Definitions
            of a State by Justice Wilson and Chief Justice
 Chase—Effect
            of the Thirteenth Amendment—Justice Field on Involuntary
 Servitude—Civil Rights Act Quoted—Definition of the Word
            Servitude by
 the Supreme Court—Obvious Purpose of the
            Amendment—Justice Miller
 on the 14th Amendment—Citizens
            Created by this Amendment—Opinion
 of Justice Field—Rights
            and Immunities guaranteed by the
 Constitution—Opinion
            delivered by Chief-Justice Waite—Further Opinions
 of
            Courts on the question of Citizenship—Effect of the 13th, 14th
            and
 15th Amendments—"Corrective" Legislation by Congress—Denial
            of equal
 "Social" Privileges—Is a State responsible for
            the Action of its Agent
 when acting contrary to Law?—The
            Word "State" must include the People
 of the State as well as
            the Officers of the State—The Louisiana Civil
 Rights Law,
            and a Case tried under it—Uniformity of Duties essential to
 the Carrier—Congress left Powerless to protect Rights
            conferred by the
 Constitution—Definition of "Appropriate
            Legislation"—Propositions laid
 down regarding the
            Sovereignty of the State, the powers of the General
 Government,
            etc.—A Tribute to Justice Harlan—A Denial that Property
 exists by Virtue of Law—Civil Rights not a Question of Social
 Equality—Considerations upon which Social Equality depends—Liberty
            not
 a Question of Social Equality—The Superior Man—Inconsistencies
            of the
 Past—No Reason why we should Hate the Colored
            People—The Issues that
 are upon Us.
 
 | 
| TRIAL OF C. B. REYNOLDS FOR BLASPHEMY. 
ADDRESS TO THE JURY.
 Report of the Case from the New York
            Times (note)—The Right to express
 Opinions—Attempts
            to Rule the Minds of Men by Force—Liberty the
 Greatest
            Good—Intellectual Hospitality Defined—When the Catholic
 Church had Power—Advent of the Protestants—The Puritans,
            Quakers.
 Unitarians, Universalists—What is Blasphemy?—Why
            this Trial should not
 have Taken Place—Argument cannot be
            put in Jail—The Constitution of
 New Jersey—A higher
            Law than Men can Make—The Blasphemy Statute
 Quoted and
            Discussed—Is the Statute Constitutional?—The Harm done
 by Blasphemy Laws—The Meaning of this Persecution—Religions
            are
 Ephemeral—Let us judge each other by our Actions—Men
            who have braved
 Public Opinion should be Honored—The
            Blasphemy Law if enforced would
 rob the World of the Results of
            Scientific Research—It declares the
 Great Men of to-day
            to be Criminals—The Indictment Read and Commented
 upon—Laws
            that go to Sleep—Obsolete Dogmas the Denial of which was
 once punished by Death—Blasphemy Characterized—On the
            Argument
 that Blasphemy Endangers the Public Peace—A
            Definition of real
 Blasphemy—Trials for Blasphemy in
            England—The case of Abner
 Kneeland—True Worship,
            Prayer, and Religion—What is Holy and
 Sacred—What
            is Claimed in this Case—For the Honor of the State—The
 word Liberty—Result of the Trial (note).
 
 | 
| GOD IN THE CONSTITUTION. 
The Feudal System—Office and Purpose of our Constitution—Which
            God
 shall we Select?—The Existence of any God a Matter of
            Opinion—What is
 entailed by a Recognition of a God in the
            Constitution—Can the Infinite
 be Flattered with a
            Constitutional Amendment?—This government is
 Secular—The
            Government of God a Failure—The Difference between the
 Theological and the Secular Spirit—A Nation neither Christian
            nor
 Infidel—The Priest no longer a Necessity—Progress
            of Science and the
 Development of the Mind.
 
 | 
| A REPLY TO BISHOP SPALDING. 
On God in the Constitution—Why the Constitutional
            Convention ignored
 the Question of Religion—The Fathers
            Misrepresented—Reasons why the
 Attributes of God should
            not form an Organic Part of the Law of the
 Land—The
            Effect of a Clause Recognizing God.
 
 | 
| CRIMES AGAINST CRIMINALS. 
The Three Pests of a Community—I. Forms of Punishment
            and Torture—More
 Crimes Committed than Prevented by
            Governments—II. Are not Vices
 transmitted by Nature?—111.
            Is it Possible for all People to be
 Honest?—Children of
            Vice as the natural Product of Society—Statistics:
 the
            Relation between Insanity, Pauperism, and Crime—IV. The
            Martyrs of
 Vice—Franklin's Interest in the Treatment of
            Prisoners—V. Kindness
 as a Remedy—Condition of the
            Discharged Prisoner—VI. Compensation
 for Convicts—VII.
            Professional Criminals—Shall the Nation take
 Life?—Influence
            of Public Executions on the Spectators—Lynchers
 for the
            Most Part Criminals at Heart—VIII. The Poverty of the Many a
 perpetual Menace—Limitations of Land-holding.—IX.
            Defective Education
 by our Schools—Hands should be
            educated as well as Head—Conduct
 improved by a clearer
            Perception of Consequences—X. The Discipline of
 the
            average Prison Hardening and Degrading—While Society cringes
            before
 Great Thieves there will be Little Ones to fill the
            Jails—XI. Our
 Ignorance Should make us Hesitate.
 
 | 
| A WOODEN GOD. 
On Christian and Chinese worship—Report of the Select
            Committee
 on Chinese Immigration—The only true God as
            contrasted with
 Joss—Sacrifices to the "Living God"—Messrs.
            Wright, Dickey, O'Connor
 and Murch on the "Religious System" of
            the American Union—How to prove
 that Christians are
            better than Heathens—Injustice in the Name of
 God—An
            honest Merchant the best Missionary—A Few Extracts from
 Confucius—The Report proves that the Wise Men of China who
            predicted
 that Christians could not be Trusted were not only
            Philosophers but
 Prophets.
 
 | 
| SOME INTERROGATION POINTS. 
A New Party and its Purpose—The Classes that Exist in
            every
 Country—Effect of Education on the Common People—Wants
            Increased by
 Intelligence—The Dream of 1776—The
            Monopolist and the Competitor—The
 War between the Gould
            and Mackay Cables—Competition between
 Monopolies—All
            Advance in Legislation made by Repealing Laws—Wages
 and
            Values not to be fixed by Law—Men and Machines—The
            Specific of
 the Capitalist: Economy—The poor Man and
            Woman devoured by
 their Fellow-men—Socialism one of the
            Worst Possible forms of
 Slavery—Liberty not to be
            exchanged for Comfort—Will the Workers
 always give their
            Earnings for the Useless?—Priests, Successful Frauds,
 and
            Robed Impostors.
 
 | 
| ART AND MORALITY. 
The Origin of Man's Thoughts—The imaginative Man—"Medicinal
            View" of
 Poetry—Rhyme and Religion—The theological
            Poets and their Purpose in
 Writing—Moral Poets and their
            "Unwelcome Truths"—The really Passionate
 are the Virtuous—Difference
            between the Nude and the Naked—Morality
 the Melody of
            Conduct—The inculcation of Moral Lessons not contemplated
 by Artists or great Novelists—Mistaken Reformers—Art not
            a
 Sermon—Language a Multitude of Pictures—Great
            Pictures and Great
 Statues painted and chiseled with Words—Mediocrity
            moral from a
 Necessity which it calls Virtue—Why Art
            Civilizes—The Nude—The Venus
 de Milo—This is
            Art.
 
 | 
| THE DIVIDED HOUSEHOLD OF FAITH. 
The Way in which Theological Seminaries were Endowed—Religious
 Guide-boards—Vast Interests interwoven with Creeds—Pretensions
            of
 Christianity—Kepler's Discovery of his Three Great
            Laws—Equivocations
 and Evasions of the Church—Nature's
            Testimony against the
 Bible—The Age of Man on the Earth—"Inspired"
            Morality of the
 Bible—Miracles—Christian Dogmas—What
            the church has been Compelled to
 Abandon—The Appeal to
            Epithets, Hatred and Punishment—"Spirituality"
 the last
            Resource of the Orthodox—What is it to be Spiritual?—Two
 Questions for the Defenders of Orthodox Creeds.
 
 | 
| WHY AM I AN AGNOSTIC? 
Part I. Inharmony of Nature and the Lot of Man with the
            Goodness and
 Wisdom of a supposed Deity—Why a Creator is
            Imagined—Difficulty of the
 Act of Creation—Belief
            in Supernatural Beings—Belief and Worship among
 Savages—Questions
            of Origin and Destiny—Progress impossible without
 Change
            of Belief—Circumstances Determining Belief—How may the
 True Religion be Ascertained?—Prosperity of Nations nor Virtue
 of Individuals Dependent on Religions or Gods—Uninspired Books
 Superior—Part II. The Christian Religion—Credulity—Miracles
            cannot
 be Established—Effect of Testimony—Miraculous
            Qualities of all
 Religions—Theists and Naturalists—The
            Miracle of Inspiration—How
 can the alleged Fact of
            Inspiration be Established?—God's work and
 Man's—Rewards
            for Falsehood offered by the Church.
 
 | 
| HUXLEY AND AGNOSTICISM. 
Statement by the Principal of King's College—On the
            Irrelevancy of a
 Lack of Scientific Knowledge—Difference
            between the Agnostic and
 the Christian not in Knowledge but in
            Credulity—The real name of
 an Agnostic said to be
            "Infidel"—What an Infidel is—"Unpleasant"
 significance of the Word—Belief in Christ—"Our Lord and
            his Apostles"
 possibly Honest Men—Their Character not
            Invoked—Possession by evil
 spirits—Professor
            Huxley's Candor and Clearness—The splendid Dream
 of
            Auguste Comte—Statement of the Positive Philosophy—Huxley
            and
 Harrison.
 
 | 
| ERNEST RENAN. 
His Rearing and his Anticipated Biography—The complex
            Character of the
 Christ of the Gospels—Regarded as a Man
            by Renan—The Sin against the
 Holy Ghost—Renan on
            the Gospels—No Evidence that they were written
 by the Men
            whose Names they Bear—Written long after the Events they
 Describe—Metaphysics of the Church found in the Gospel of John—Not
 Apparent why Four Gospels should have been Written—Regarded as
 legendary Biographies—In "flagrant contradiction one with
            another"—The
 Divine Origin of Christ an After-growth—Improbable
            that he intended to
 form a Church—Renan's Limitations—Hebrew
            Scholarship—His "People of
 Israel"—His Banter and
            Blasphemy.
 TOLSTOY AND "THE KREUTZER SONATA."
 Tolstoy's
            Belief and Philosophy—His Asceticism—His View of Human
 Love—Purpose of "The Kreutzer Sonata"—Profound
            Difference between the
 Love of Men and that of Women—Tolstoy
            cannot now found a Religion, but
 may create the Necessity for
            another Asylum—The Emotions—The Curious
 Opinion
            Dried Apples have of Fruit upon the Tree—Impracticability of
 selling All and giving to the Poor—Love and Obedience—Unhappiness
            in
 the Marriage Relation not the fault of Marriage.
 
 | 
| THOMAS PAINE. 
Life by Moncure D. Conway—Early Advocacy of Reforms
            against Dueling
 and Cruelty to Animals—The First to write
            "The United States of
 America"—Washington's Sentiment
            against Separation from Great
 Britain—Paine's Thoughts in
            the Declaration of Independence—Author of
 the first
            Proclamation of Emancipation in America—Establishment of a
 Fund for the Relief of the Army—H's "Farewell Address"—The
            "Rights of
 Man"—Elected to the French Convention—Efforts
            to save the Life of the
 King—His Thoughts on Religion—Arrested—The
            "Age of Reason" and the
 Weapons it has furnished "Advanced
            Theologians"—Neglect by Gouverneur
 Morris and Washington—James
            Monroe's letter to Paine and to the
 Committee of General Safety—The
            vaunted Religious Liberty of
 Colonial Maryland—Orthodox
            Christianity at the Beginning of the 19th
 Century—New
            Definitions of God—The Funeral of Paine.
 
 | 
| THE THREE PHILANTHROPISTS. 
I. Mr. A., the Professional Philanthropist, who established a
            Colony
 for the Enslavement of the Poor who could not take care
            of themselves,
 amassed a large Fortune thereby, built several
            churches, and earned
 the Epitaph, "He was the Providence of the
            Poor"—II. Mr. B.,
 the Manufacturer, who enriched himself
            by taking advantage of the
 Necessities of the Poor, paid the
            lowest Rate of Wages, considered
 himself one of God's Stewards,
            endowed the "B Asylum" and the "B
 College," never lost a
            Dollar, and of whom it was recorded, "He Lived
 for Others."
            III. Mr. C., who divided his Profits with the People who had
 earned it, established no Public Institutions, suppressed Nobody;
            and
 those who have worked for him said, "He allowed Others to
            live for
 Themselves."
 
 | 
| SHOULD THE CHINESE BE EXCLUDED? 
            SHOULD THE CHINESE BE EXCLUDED?Trampling on the Rights of
            Inferiors—Rise of the Irish and Germans
 to Power—The
            Burlingame Treaty—Character of Chinese Laborers—Their
 Enemies in the Pacific States—Violation of Treaties—The
            Geary Law—The
 Chinese Hated for their Virtues—More
            Piety than Principle among the
 People's Representatives—Shall
            we go back to Barbarism?
 
 | 
| A WORD ABOUT EDUCATION. 
What the Educated Man Knows—Necessity of finding out the
            Facts
 of Nature—"Scholars" not always Educated Men; from
            necessaries to
 luxuries; who may be called educated; mental
            misers; the first duty of
 man; university education not
            necessary to usefulness, no advantage in
 learning useless
            facts.
 
 | 
| WHAT I WANT FOR CHRISTMAS. 
Would have the Kings and Emperors resign, the Nobility drop
            their
 Titles, the Professors agree to teach only What they
            Know, the
 Politicians changed to Statesmen, the Editors print
            only the
 Truth—Would like to see Drunkenness and
            Prohibition abolished,
 Corporal Punishment done away with, and
            the whole World free.
 
 | 
| FOOL FRIENDS. 
The Fool Friend believes every Story against you, never denies
            a Lie
 unless it is in your Favor, regards your Reputation as
            Common Prey,
 forgets his Principles to gratify your Enemies,
            and is so friendly that
 you cannot Kick him.
 
 | 
| INSPIRATION. 
Nature tells a different Story to all Eyes and Ears—Horace
            Greeley and
 the Big Trees—The Man who "always did like
            rolling land"—What the
 Snow looked like to the German—Shakespeare's
            different Story for each
 Reader—As with Nature so with
            the Bible.
 
 | 
| THE TRUTH OF HISTORY. 
People who live by Lying—A Case in point—H. Hodson
            Rugg's Account of
 the Conversion of Ingersoll and 5,000 of his
            Followers—The "Identity of
 Lost Israel with the British
            Nation"—Old Falsehoods about Infidels—The
 New York
            Observer and Thomas Paine—A Rascally English Editor—The
 Charge that Ingersoll's Son had been Converted—The Fecundity
            of
 Falsehood.
 
 | 
| HOW TO EDIT A LIBERAL PAPER. 
The Editor should not narrow his Horizon so that he can see
            only
 One Thing—To know the Defects of the Bible is but
            the Beginning of
 Wisdom—The Liberal Paper should not
            discuss Theological Questions
 Alone—A Column for Children—Candor
            and Kindness—Nothing should be
 Asserted that is not Known—Above
            All, teach the Absolute Freedom of the
 Mind.
 
 | 
| SECULARISM. 
The religion of Humanity; what it Embraces and what it
            Advocates—A
 Protest against Ecclesiastical Tyranny—Believes
            in Building a Home
 here—Means Food and Fireside—The
            Right to express your Thought—Its
 advice to every Human
            Being—A Religion without Mysteries, Miracles, or
 Persecutions.
 
 | 
| CRITICISM OF "ROBERT ELSMERE," "JOHN WARD, PREACHER," AND "AN AFRICAN
          FARM." 
Religion unsoftened by Infidelity—The Orthodox Minister
            whose Wife has
 a Heart—Honesty of Opinion not a
            Mitigating Circumstance—Repulsiveness
 of an Orthodox Life—John
            Ward an Object of Pity—Lyndall of the
 "African Farm"—The
            Story of the Hunter—Death of Waldo—Women the
 Caryatides of the Church—Attitude of Christianity toward other
 Religions—Egotism of the ancient Jews.
 
 | 
| THE LIBEL LAWS. 
All Articles appearing in a newspaper should be Signed by the
 Writer—The Law if changed should throw greater Safeguards
            around the
 Reputation of the Citizen—Pains should be
            taken to give Prominence to
 Retractions—The Libel Laws
            like a Bayonet in War.
 
 | 
| REV. DR. NEWTON'S SERMON ON A NEW RELIGION. 
            REV. DR. NEWTON'S SERMON ON A NEW RELIGION.Mr. Newton not
            Regarded as a Sceptic—New Meanings given to Old
 Words—The
            vanishing Picture of Hell—The Atonement—Confidence being
 Lost in the Morality of the Gospel—Exclusiveness of the
            Churches—The
 Hope of Immortality and Belief in God have
            Nothing to do with Real
 Religion—Special Providence a
            Mistake.
 
 | 
| AN ESSAY ON CHRISTMAS. 
The Day regarded as a Holiday—A Festival far older
 than Christianity—Relics of Sun-worship in Christian
 Ceremonies—Christianity furnished new Steam for an old Engine—Pagan
 Festivals correspond to Ours—Why Holidays are Popular—They
            must be for
 the Benefit of the People.
 
 | 
| HAS FREETHOUGHT A CONSTRUCTIVE SIDE? 
The Object of Freethought—what the Religionist calls
            "Affirmative
 and Positive"—The Positive Side of
            Freethought—Constructive Work of
 Christianity.
 
 | 
| THE IMPROVED MAN. 
He will be in Favor of universal Liberty, neither Master nor
            Slave; of
 Equality and Education; will develop in the Direction
            of the Beautiful;
 will believe only in the Religion of this
            World—His Motto—Will not
 endeavor to change the
            Mind of the "Infinite"—Will have no Bells or
 Censers—Will
            be satisfied that the Supernatural does not exist—Will be
 Self-poised, Independent, Candid and Free.
 
 | 
| EIGHT HOURS MUST COME. 
The Working People should be protected by Law—Life of no
            particular
 Importance to the Man who gets up before Daylight
            and works till
 after Dark—A Revolution probable in the
            Relations between Labor and
 Capital—Working People
            becoming Educated and more Independent—The
 Government can
            Aid by means of Good Laws—Women the worst Paid—There
 should be no Resort to Force by either Labor or Capital.
 
 | 
| THE JEWS. 
Much like People of other Religions—Teaching given
            Christian Children
 about those who die in the Faith of Abraham—Dr.
            John Hall on
 the Persecution of the Jews in Russia as the
            Fulfillment of
 Prophecy—Hostility of Orthodox early
            Christians excited by Jewish
 Witnesses against the Faith—An
            infamous Chapter of History—Good
 and bad Men of every
            Faith—Jews should outgrow their own
 Superstitions—What
            the intelligent Jew Knows.
 
 | 
| CRUMBLING CREEDS. 
            CRUMBLING CREEDS.The Common People called upon to Decide as
            between the Universities and
 the Synods—Modern Medicine,
            Law, Literature and Pictures as against the
 Old—Creeds
            agree with the Sciences of their Day—Apology the Prelude
 to Retreat—The Presbyterian Creed Infamous, but no worse than
 the Catholic—Progress begins when Expression of Opinion is
 Allowed—Examining the Religions of other Countries—The
            Pulpit's
 Position Lost—The Dogma of Eternal Pain the
            Cause of the orthodox
 Creeds losing Popularity—Every
            Church teaching this Infinite Lie must
 Fall.
 
 | 
| OUR SCHOOLS. 
            OUR SCHOOLS.Education the only Lever capable of raising
            Mankind—The
 School-house more Important than the Church—Criticism
            of New York's
 School-Buildings—The Kindergarten System
            Recommended—Poor Pay of
 Teachers—The great Danger
            to the Republic is Ignorance.
 
 | 
| VIVISECTION. 
The Hell of Science—Brutal Curiosity of Vivisectors—The
            Pretence that
 they are working for the Good of Man—Have
            these scientific Assassins
 added to useful Knowledge?—No
            Good to the Race to be Accomplished by
 Torture—The
            Tendency to produce a Race of intelligent Wild Beasts.
 
 | 
| THE CENSUS ENUMERATOR'S OFFICIAL CATECHISM. 
Right of the Government to ask Questions and of the Citizen to
            refuse
 to answer them—Matters which the Government has no
            Right to pry
 into—Exposing the Debtor's financial
            Condition—A Man might decline to
 tell whether he has a
            Chronic Disease or not.
 
 | 
| THE AGNOSTIC CHRISTMAS. 
Natural Phenomena and Myths celebrated—The great Day of
            the first
 Religion, Sun-worship—A God that Knew no Hatred
            nor Sought Revenge—The
 Festival of Light.
 
 | 
| SPIRITUALITY. 
A much-abused Word—The Early Christians too Spiritual to
            be
 Civilized—Calvin and Knox—Paine, Voltaire and
            Humboldt not
 Spiritual—Darwin also Lacking—What it
            is to be really Spiritual—No
 connection with
            Superstition.
 
 | 
| SUMTER'S GUN. 
What were thereby blown into Rags and Ravelings—The
            Birth of a
 new Epoch announced—Lincoln made the most
            commanding Figure of the
 Century—Story of its Echoes.
 
 | 
| WHAT INFIDELS HAVE DONE. 
What might have been Asked of a Christian 100 years after
 Christ—Hospitals and Asylums not all built for Charity—Girard
 College—Lick Observatory—Carnegie not an Orthodox
            Christian—Christian
 Colleges—Give us Time.
 
 | 
| CRUELTY IN THE ELMIRA REFORMATORY. 
Brockway a Savage—The Lash will neither develop the
            Brain nor cultivate
 the Heart—Brutality a Failure—Bishop
            Potter's apostolical Remark.
 
 | 
| LAW'S DELAY. 
The Object of a Trial—Justice can afford to Wait—The
            right of
 Appeal—Case of Mrs. Maybrick—Life
            Imprisonment for Murderers—American
 Courts better than
            the English.
 BIGOTRY OF COLLEGES.
 Universities naturally
            Conservative—Kansas State University's
 Objection to
            Ingersoll as a commencement Orator—Comment by Mr. Depew
 (note)—Action of Cornell and the University of Missouri.
 
 | 
| A YOUNG MAN'S CHANCES TO-DAY. 
The Chances a few Years ago—Capital now Required—Increasing
 competition in Civilized Life—Independence the first Object—If
            he has
 something to say, there will be plenty to listen.
 
 | 
| SCIENCE AND SENTIMENT. 
Science goes hand in hand with Imagination—Artistic and
            Ethical
 Development—Science destroys Superstition, not
            true Religion—Education
 preferable to Legislation—Our
            Obligation to our Children.
 "SOWING AND REAPING."
 Moody's
            Belief accounted for—A dishonest and corrupting Doctrine—A
 want of Philosophy and Sense—Have Souls in Heaven no Regrets?—Mr.
 Moody should read some useful Books.
 
 | 
| SHOULD INFIDELS SEND THEIR CHILDREN TO SUNDAY SCHOOL? 
Teachings of orthodox Sunday Schools—The ferocious God
            of the
 Bible—Miracles—A Christian in Constantinople
            would not send his
 Child to a Mosque—Advice to all
            Agnostics—Strangle the Serpent of
 Superstition.
 
 | 
| WHAT WOULD YOU SUBSTITUTE FOR THE BIBLE AS A MORAL GUIDE? 
Character of the Bible—Men and Women not virtuous
            because of any
 Book—The Commandments both Good and Bad—Books
            that do not help
 Morality—Jehovah not a moral God—What
            is Morality?—Intelligence the
 only moral guide.
 
 | 
| GOVERNOR ROLLINS' FAST-DAY PROCLAMATION. 
Decline of the Christian Religion in New Hampshire—Outgrown
 Beliefs—Present-day Views of Christ and the Holy Ghost—Abandoned
 Notions about the Atonement—Salvation for Credulity—The
            Miracles
 of the New Testament—The Bible "not true but
            inspired"—The "Higher
 Critics" riding two Horses—Infidelity
            in the Pulpit—The "restraining
 Influences of Religion" as
            illustrated by Spain and Portugal—Thinking,
 Working and
            Praying—The kind of Faith that has Departed.
 
 | 
| A LOOK BACKWARD AND A PROPHECY. 
The Truth Seeker congratulated on its Twenty-fifth
            Birthday—Teachings
 of Twenty-five Years ago—Dodging
            and evading—The Clerical Assault
 on Darwin—Draper,
            Buckle, Hegel, Spencer, Emerson—Comparison
 of Prejudices—Vanished
            Belief in the Devil—Matter and
 Force—Contradictions
            Dwelling in Unity—Substitutes for Jehovah—A
 Prophecy.
 
 | 
| POLITICAL MORALITY. 
Argument in the contested Election Case of Strobach against
            Herbert—The
 Importance of Honest Elections—Poisoning
            the Source of Justice—The
 Fraudulent Voter a Traitor to
            his Sovereign, the Will of the
 People—Political Morality
            Imperative.
 
 | 
| A FEW REASONS FOR DOUBTING THE INSPIRATION OF THE BIBLE. 
            Date and Manner of Composing the Old Testament—Other Books not
            now inExistence, and Disagreements about the Canon—Composite
            Character of
 certain Books—Various Versions—Why was
            God's message given to the Jews
 alone?—The Story of the
            Creation, of the Flood, of the Tower, and
 of Lot's wife—Moses
            and Aaron and the Plagues of Egypt—Laws of
 Slavery—Instructions
            by Jehovah Calculated to excite Astonishment and
 Mirth—Sacrifices
            and the Scapegoat—Passages showing that the Laws of
 Moses
            were made after the Jews had left the Desert—Jehovah's
            dealings
 with his People—The Sabbath Law—Prodigies—Joshua's
            Miracle—Damned
 Ignorance and Infamy—Jephthah's
            Sacrifice—Incredible Stories—The
 Woman of Endor and
            the Temptation of David—Elijah and Elisha—Loss of
 the Pentateuch from Moses to Josiah—The Jews before and after
            being
 Abandoned by Jehovah—Wealth of Solomon and other
            Marvels.
 
 |