Page:Randolph, Paschal Beverly; Eulis! the history of love.djvu/243

Rh not a word or line or suggestion in it, or in the third Revelation, that favors anything that could make an angel blush, yet they go to the very foot of the subject. Said a celebrated agitator, on hearing a portion of them read: "What do you charge for that astonishing writing?" alluding to about one-fifth of the whole. "Five dollars; as it is hard work to write it out." "Five dollars! Why, it is worth $500 to any one on earth with an ounce of brains, or a thrill of Man or Womanhood left in them!" Well, I looked up the Oriental MSS., and copies can be had of me, and if the mighty things therein—things not even dreamed of in these cold, practical lands—are not found to be worth ten times the sum, then the sublimest secrets the world ever held must wait another century for appreciative souls.

To those whose orders hereafter reach $5 at one time, a fine likeness of the author, by Poole, of Nashville, Tenn., will be sent as a premium, and the Ansairetic Mystery will be given gratis, and without any charge whatever, but only when requested in letter of remittance with return stamps.

Address this Publishing House, Toledo, Ohio.

Part I. The Bright Side. What the People say.

Part II. The Ordeal. The Accusation. His Experience. Behind the Bars. He loses all he has made in a Life-time!

Part III. The Charge and Trial! The Witnesses. Curious Testimony. Speeches of the Attorney against Randolph, and Selden's, the Free-Love Champion.—A Caution to Masons, Odd-Fellows, and other Secret Societies. (See Part 3.) Randolph's Defence, and Address to the Jury. He makes a Clean Expose of the Whole Thing! These three masterly efforts are undoubtedly the strongest and ablest ever delivered for and against Free Love.

The Verdict! Startling Disclosures! "The Mysteries and