The Countryman (Lyons, New York) (7 September 1830).
Th
The Countryman (Lyons, New York) (7 September 1830).
The Palmyra Sentinel makes high pretensions to purity. It professes to have a great
aversion to all kinds of disrespectful publications; and feigns to be one of the most immaculate
journals of the day! But in order to show its hypocrisy, it is necessary only to state, that. “The
Reflector,” a sarcastical, obscene little paper, the character of which is so well known in this
quarter, that comment from us, respecting it, would be useless, is issued weekly from that office;
as also was the infamous, catch-penny work, entitled the “Book of Mormon,” or, as it is generally
called, the “Golden Bible.” These two publications have cast a lasting reproach upon the
Sentinel–a reproach which years of penance would not wipe away. This is all right; for when a
printer becomes so abandoned, and lost to all sense of decency, as to allow such nuisances to be
published in his office, he should be branded with infamy and disgrace. Public indignation
cannot be wrought to too high a degree against such a printer. He should be pointed out to the
world as an object of scorn and contempt. And this is the case with the printer of the Sentinel and
his coadjutors.
The Sentinel is controlled by a few unprincipled masonic demagogues of Palmyra; and
has become prostituted to their base purposes. It is filled weekly with a tirade of abuse and insult
against all who have too much regard for their reputation, to join the crusade which these
individuals have commenced. Their names do not appear as editors of that paper; and they
therefore imagine that they can indulge in scurrility and abuse without being generally known to
the public. Like the institution they support, they “strike the blow, but conceal the hand.”
We have no inclination to check the mad career of the conductors of the Sentinel. We are
perfectly willing that they should revel in their abominations. They can be of no possible injury
to anti-masonry; nor advantage to free-masonry. So, gentlemen, push on with your un-envied
task defamation–you shall meet with no opposition at our hand!