07 Dec




















or teacher, priest or layman or even a newspaper man, who is neglect of any law leads to a demoralization of all laws. speech at Lexington, has this among other comment : The St. Louis Times, in discussing Watterson's to insist that his neighbor, who is intemperate in the last army. "Fanaticism," says Mr. Woodson, "is often tyran- temperate Temperance," in which this passage occurs: pure." The introduction of beer in America has done more 110 where wine is cheap," though he should have added "and One-day Morality. methods, proscriptive in its spirit and mistaken in its ends. such a loose theory is. * * * The constant violation or ticular except, perhaps, the use of intoxicating liquors, has prohibition laws combined. The result of the anti-canteen reputations and whose daily delight is to set his neighbors To the decision of a question so momentous should be for temperance than all the temperance societies and all the more than is given us to see. A North Dakota paper publishes an editorial on "In- We believe with Jefferson that "No nation is drunken legislation is playing havoc with the private soldier of the unduly contentious, a traducer of character, a destroyer of particular alone, is more in need of reformation than he, is What license any man, no matter whether he be preacher nical in its methods." Fanaticism is always tyrannical in its "by the ears," and who is, in short, intemperate in every par-

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