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About Christian herald. (Portland ;) 1882-18?? | View Entire Issue (Jan. 6, 1882)
» s 'ft ♦ o % THE CHRISTIAN HERALD, —To those who thi^k thé What ïlum Will Do. ,—Texas, by local option, has to remove- the curse. Take away day and throws over it the glamour is good for every thing—g< abolished the rum traffic from near of respectability. It is often ad the moral cancers from among us. Some years ago in one of the ly all the leading counties of the they are sick, good when Offiearsaud luoinbers of Temporaneo orgau- This proposition will take it mitted that the whisky traffic is an tatiou, and filanda of Temporaneo generally counties of New York, a worthy Lone Star Stale. It has been a well ; good when they arec<ù), evil, but it is said that it is a ne are invited to contribute to thia D^urrtmeut. away in four years. man was tempted to drink until grand work, and the victory is a when they are hot, etc,, Addreaa, Monmouth, Oregon. We have been trying Legisla cessary evil, and hence it is better diunk. In the delirium of drunk glorious one. The preachers of j mend the following, which > tures ever since we have been a to regulate it by license laws, and enness, he went Rome and murdered the State have been active workers | change furnishes mid which vÿl , Our Temperanco Department. State. License is a failure to put a so have some income from it. his wife in a most ba'-barous man in the temperance cause, and their far more valuable : In answer I say, If we can Only the feeling of a pressingneed stop-to it. It is too great a prob ner. He was carriod to jail, while influence has been very great. How 1. A tea made of chestnut 1 for astrong vigorous effort put forth lem 1o ba solved in that way, judg make it hide and put ’a way nearly drunk, and kept there through the drank in the place of water, long will it be till every preacher all of the temptation out of men’s . to bring public sentiment up to the ing from the past. night. Awaking in the morning on the Pacific coast shall wake up cure the most obstinate The people are crying out, let us way, and especially out of the way « Xpoint of putting the foot of contempt and looking around upon the walls, dropsy in a few days, ^^Jthe neck of the venomous “worm pass upon this question, by a direct of the youths of our land, we take and seeing t^e bars upon the wind to the importance of exerting him k 2. A tea made of |>eacb 1«;’.7 self in the cause of prohibition. A • away any semblance of respectabili ,•> of the still,” has induced us to un-, Vote. ows, he exclaimed : a sure cure for kidney late Texas paper has this call to We, the peoplb, are a power in ty by placing it under ban, and the dertake the large amount of labor “ Is this jail ?” 3. A plaster made of fni7> the preachers of that State : necessary to carry on this depart- this country. The people make longer this continues the better the “ Yes, you are in a jail,” answer ed lime and tar will euro « n Bro. Preachers : The proposition ' ment. Our first impression was and amend Constitutions. Consti effect will be. As to income, were ed some one. 4. A tea made of yell w that has been made for the preach it multiplied a thousand fold it that a separate journal devoted ex- tutions make Legislatures. “ What am I -here for ?” was the ers of tl^e State to meet at some will cure fever and ague Let this question come direct to would not pay the cost of the • elusively to-the temperance work, earnest inquiry. point or points in the interests of those most deeply interested and traffic which necessitates by far the was most desirable ; but after con- “ For murder,” was the answer. prohibition is receiving a favorable —The Douglae In^'vev fering with leading temperance affected—freed from the influence larger per cent, of the criminal pro “ Does my wife know it ?” | response.* One brother says, “The not particularly a friend t< workera and finding them of opinion of this great monopoly traffic, by ceedings in our courts, and could “Your wife know it?” answered preachers once engaged and the ance but wo gain some the income be made equal to the that a good temperance journal com license. some one. “Why, it was your wife victory is half won.” Brothers, the facts from it. In the issue We want all the petitions to be expense, there would still be. left bined with other good reading mat you have murdered." appeal is to you. Will you help I 17th, there are no lew thau ^ix sent to the undersigned so as to be the untold misery, sorrow and ter was more desirable, ■ than one On this announcement he dropped Will you say so ? Let us have no loons advertised in its colurfini 4- devoted to temperance alone, we able to make a correct showing to wretchedness which it causes, and suddenly, as if he had been struck uncertain sound of the trumpet. the little town of Roeebuig.r have settled down to the same the Alliance which meets in Salem these call upon us to stamp the vile, dead. J Let it be remembered that» '.The war is coming, , Let us be in the same number it cowpbj asolila 'teho Vi r\ carried V» him > »V» 4/V - thickest of *k« opinion. Our plea shall be for con the 3rd Wednesday in February thing out forever by the farce!! r the constable to1 ik the the I fight. Write at four robberies in .town ill »1 . stitutional prohibition. No other next. There to take measures to of Prohibition. jail sold him thè liquor which caused once, don’t del^y, the time is short, There it is-4ying, gamblki^ R. H. Moss. remedy is adequate to meet the perfect the plan and make it a his drunkenness ; the justice who the work is great, the victory will murders and every imagk’*'-bf Monmeuth, Jail. 7, 1882. emergency. We expect to hear the success. issued the warrant was one of those be glorious. Heaven and earth will are the legitimate childa'to, of The Alliance is made up of dele cry that “prohibition is a failure ” who signed his license ; tli« sheriff rejoice. Let us be up and doing. drinking saloon. What the first Saloon Cost. from the friends of whisky rings gates from ajl churches, Sunday- Address, C. M c P herson , who hung him also sold liquor, and and salyomkeepers, but we expect schools and temperance societies in We commend the following facts kept a ten-pin alley.— Selected. Waxahachie, Texas. I. O. o. T. to array solid facts, beside tliM the State. Hence it is the work of and figures from the Kansas State Too Mr< h W hisky .—Yesterday all. ’ ' swaggering moans, and let the peo tirami todgt ef Orejroa. Sentinel to the advocates of " license J Brandy in Mince Pies. morning a man named Frank It must be a united work to in ple who think decide tho issue for revenue;’’ . HCMKHSATS MBSCTOar. We aide the friends of temperanit,1 sure success, and I am glad to know “ They all put brandy in them !” Green, who was sufl'ering from “ The first saloon licensed.by the Capital, 8., Salem. C. W. Scriba1. 11 delirium tremens and had just everywhere to aid us in our w-orkl fh#ye are no dissension* so far. But Board of County Commissioners, said one. 17 HUlahoro.B.. H.ltal-oru, W I. Tho officers of the temperance o£i néblo souls of all^k^rches and or nearly nine years ago, paid fifty “ They all don’t 1 My mother has enough sense left to know that*he XI ba Creóte, Tu., Dalla*, Jao. 8. Hilm. eilrert-n. fttrnk "iWri dollars for that privilege. It met a never put a drop of brandy into her ought to be placed in restraint, ap ss ganization, of the state haVe gen er- ders are at work. 39 IU»a, 8.. Moa. P. ft. Wuutev. I expect to see the grandest sled^ bitter opposition from the friends of mince pids since the day Bob said plied at the police station to be W Attoria, Ta-, Astern. J. O. *ously offered to assist in this work. sion of the j^lliance in February temperanco and good order, but the lu> .could . taste the brandy and it taken care of. He was locked up, <.l Mtriuu, &. Hubbard. MU tun > /- With a long pull and a strong rtfm men were alert; and by present 57 Milwaukee, •>, tasted good. Mother said then it and ait he grew wojse during the 71’ Val Font®, a, Zona. Chariot Ph pull and a pull all together, we shall that ha3 ever been in the State. ing a bogus petition for it, the thing dStefrom being deprived oi stimu SB John Day, 8.. Gaayou City. P»»l 1 Gome ope, come all. Work for succeed in the grandest cause now was granted, and fifty dollars are was wrong, and she would never be lants, C'apt. Gritzmacher kindly * tey. all to do. Send in your petitions. guilty ofit again '; afad if my mother before tho American people. M Nouparoil. W Por litad. Mia. supposed to have gone into the gave him- a little liquor. The poor " Du J*. W. W atts , says a thing is -wrong, you tpay be Broooi . i treasury. _ « i Pros. State Tam. Alliance. sure it is wrong, for what iny wretches nerves were so shattered M Lcucltiar. H.. CJatUmao. WM. Temperance W ork. “ A change at once camo over our that he could not pour it into a Ill Br oklyt, F.. H>.i Furila» >, Ja mother knows she knows.” «row. town. Drunken men began to be Prohibition. O regon C ity , O r ., “Blow about mince pies; are you glass. He has snakes in his boot-« lit Iftwrulan, W„ SUridaa, F. L. tea and no mistake, and it will tie some ISC Forai Grv*o. k. Ft* it Urv»i 'Dec 28, 1881. seen upon our streets. Men who sure she knows bow to make a little time before h® is capable ' Bro. Stanley : Wbaltey. had before paid their bills regularly, Chrielian Herald: 159 Dolaran. Tu., duactrou Cìl> *. I notice in the Daily Oregonian now'paid so much for rum that their mince pie good ?” and a laugh went take care of himself. - The beginning of the New Year that Prohibition is called a farce, loa, up from a group of girls gathered Such cases as the above, which 166 Vnton, S , Tamar, E. E. Mc.'Aan will be a splendid time for all who I am glad that you have a temper bills to honest tradesmen had to go over the register of the recitation we take from the daily SUindanl, li* PaciSa, 8., Cottala Grow, W. W. have petitions for theConstitutional ance department so that we can unpaid. room, eating thir lunch. But some and there are hundreds of such in 1M Mi. Plaaaaul, CrotooU. J. P. Cw “ The air of that saloon night and Guidon Gate, 8., bring. L. tf. P< Amendment on the temperance pay come attention to these things' of them winced a little when back Oregon, show^the importance »oi, IMS isti Aatilaad, F.. AaMari, Wa. 1 day, was made black with profanity, question in Oregon to do good-r-to were tossed the words: and examine the ground upon putting strong drink beyond the IH KJaaeaU. Ta., Fi.. ¿Jamara. Ira4 give the people an opportunity to which such statements are made. vulgarity apd rum. Our young “ If she don’t, she knows how to reach of such men, and it can only 212 OteMo. Th., Filnr.Ulo JoaM'i H 213 Her irai. .. Frame C^y. i. ». Il sign the petitions to do awajr with I am suqirised at the reason as men went< there and staid until the makd her boy good, and isn’t a boy 217 Goabeu.8., G n ahea, J. W. Lu 1 be done by putting it out of the the curse of the liquor traffic in signed for this statement : “ A hours of midnight What effect it worth more than a mince pie -■27 Ma..Ln.il, 'li. Mu.nùeil. foil Stato by legal enactmeut. had on them will never be written. burn j this State. - - Temp. World. drummer for a liquor house in £13 Guarani. 8., Albany, R. B. Coa.' I '* A poor, hard-working settler Thousands have already signed Kansas City has testified that he is C hange ra A ppointment .—The 2M Amity, 8.. Amity. Aaaa Palââàt g it and thousands more would sign selling more in Kansas than ever down on the river, who had opened —The McDonald Prizes to scholars following changes in list of appoint 259 GiLou Moontaia, 8.. 8iia'fa B <■ »U Trinapb, M.. ImtepemMM.o. . V. up a farm,and therefrom maintained in the public schools for the best if opportunity was offered to do so. before.'’ I observe ment«, of Col. J. L. Long, grand Wli.iraker, - A his family, began to visit the saloon EaaJ. ort i Will all persons who have them essays on the twin evils of tobacco lecturer of the I. (>. G. T, from list 2M Ptradtee Rgriag., 1. If he is doing that he is a K. D. Prettiuaa. ' be kind enough to exyrt themselves felon, and ought to be in the peni and to neglect bis home. One morn and intemperance, were distributed heretofore published, have been 2tC William. Creek, *., Apple M» -J ing he was found outside with his up to the third or fourth week in tentiary. Liquor selling and drink last Friday evening. Dr. R. H. made for Multnomah county. He . ! .1 January. Obtain all the names ing, under any circumstance, is not head fatally crushed by a drunken Mcdonald was very happy to see so will lecture as follows : PoUonud, 2SJ MeMiaariUe, 8.. XcMla. lite : they can and then send the peti conducive*to truth teiling but companion. A long and tedious large a crowd, and to give to an ob Saturday, Jan. 14; Mt. Tabor, Syn- 291 Noe gers. E-a. Th. Non Era, i M, yd * aeries of trial>followed, coating the tions—all of them, to me at Oregon when it is carried on in violation ject so praiseworthy. Miss Ella day, Jan. 15th ; Hillsboro, Monday, JM Mewlarg. * •. Newberg. J. I ;Ami county over one thousand dollars, McKay took the first prize, and A* Llakrilte, LúArllte, 9. M iggi^' City by February 1st, promptly ? of law, the well understood laws of Jan. 16th; East Portland, Tuesday, 316 Sarnenma, ».. Matrut-ar* - rui‘ » resulting in sending the murderer John Harper, a relative of the New Jan. 17th; Brooklyn, Wednesday, 317 Guiding Mar, Ta.. « rkaw J.L There are O”er a thousand peti evidence will entirely vitiate the to prison for fourteen years, and York Harpers, the second. Rev. tions now in circulation in this testimony or him who does it. Jan. 18th; Portland, Thursday, Jan 331 Monmouth. 8., Mua 332 Paa Creek. 8., Dtaia. M. breaking up his family. E. G. Beckwith and Dr. M. C. 19th; Columbia Chapel, Friday, 331 Waaro, B , Datar, A. J ■State*. Many have been already 2. If he does sell more than éver "The murdered man’s- widow Briggs made, speeches, and -alto Jan 2Wth : Powell’s Valley^dSatur- M. Uiy. To.. ' filled and'iftim^'*>’Tn ?T fn thri-gr.r+ -t efo. -TtoT ; tht provsettn^iffore is male an attempt to keep her family gether, tobacco and whisky got a day, Jan. 21st; Cason Prairie, Sun 3M Albany. 8.. Albany. «. F work Clackamas county takes the sold in the state, and hence war- 3« Good bamantan, W DaT- together on the farm, and to furnish good thrashing. It was a novel and day, Jan. 22d; Portland, Monday, 350 lead so far, Yamhill county next, ; rant the conclusion that prohibi Meaut Hood. M.. Daltea. Polk county third. tion is a farce. Does it not rather them with food, but in two or three effective way of teaching temper Jan. 23d ; "East Portland, Tuesday, 3 <3 Slayton. M., Slaytoa. J. L 353 Orieht. F.. JoMrwn. «. 6 Many persons have done good I prove that not many are willing years she died—no doubt from pri ance. We understand that seven of Jan. 24th; Milwaukie, Wednesday, 341 floral. 8.. Marion. Ada K. vation. A daughter soon followed the children who drew prizes in the Jan. 25th; Portland, Thursday, Jan. 3M Hay. ManhOaM. A. service. Several hard drinkers are i either to go flagrantly violate the 35« Woteome, H„ John IK., in the front ranks hard at work law or to run the risk of conviction her mother from the same cause; McDonald distribution were mem 20th ; Dalles, Friday, Jan 27lb. 359 Monroe, »., Moan«. S. with them. Two saloon keepers and punishment, so that the field is then the ragged children were sent ber of Central Church Sunday- 35S Colombia. F., East to their friends in Ohio, at the ex 3i9 Caton Prairie. I — The Eeangeliet says that the left to one or at most very few that school. A thousand or more child have signed them. Drinkers eay Gitbari. pense of the county. political papers generally approve used to be occupied by many ? It ren studying and writing on these there is hope in this proposition; •’M Erergreea, Mt. Halons. J. “ These facts are given from my monstrous evils must do good. We of prohibition in part. They would •«I Wc.tfort, -, Waatpnri. take away the saloons and they i is also stated that Kansas is losing ' her share of integration by the knowledge of them, and just as they wish it were possible to cure all ad prohibit every one from selling m i’owdar River. would be sober. Walt*. . - - - -The Alliance at its annual meet j operation of- prohibition.. Gov. St. are. Now, let us see how this trans dicted to the twin vices.— Chi ietian iquor who is not able to pay the M3 L’Grimde. lid cocafjei ~ license. They would prohibit the ing last Februyy started this prop ! John (not a^whisky drummer) aaya action paid: | 50 The county got - - -$ j that sho has. received in a year sale to drunkards and to minors. osition in this State. The Good - W b rmer orrr m wit carnert and r Would it not be as well to extend m Hie bw cl^ of ml- Paid tn keep murderer four Templars at their annual meeting' Tnnjino teen years say $200 per solemn protest against the appoint- the matter farther and prohibit endorsed the movement. AU the j giantt. I think it would ba well year - ment j meat of drinking men to places of drunkaid making ? The Tribune for Oregon to lose in the same way Blue Ribbon Clubs are working in Convict murderer, - 75 ¡trust where Imuiw life may be calk the saloons '* drunkard factor and would deem that a very good Send children to Ohio, say - the same line.j,' Industry, for six children, reawi lor voting for Prohibition. jeopardized by their inipradence. ies.’’ An industry of this kind will The Congregational A-*s6ciati<>n7“ lost to the State ten years, , The heavy license law lias only just Men in the habit of drinking intoxi not add te-tho wealth or welfare of |t. E. Annual Conferece, Cumber at $100 per year, - 6,000 cating liquors notoriously drink gone into opeiation in Omaha, but the country. All will admit that land Presbyterian Church ac its last Preebyteiy, Christian Cnurch I is heralded a ; great success and its^.^ expcnB% . $9,925 most when they ought to be most th® lern basiness of this kind done 50 sober. Drinking men should not the better. Then let public senti « at its aninial meeting in Amity, ! benefits are spoken of as accom- Deduct license - be in command of vessels, nor con ment, law and law officers’ co nbine ■ plished facts. 1 couM write up or- • X perhaps others also, that 1 have not Loss by transaction - - iff, »75 ; down any causo Ijileased if allowed ductors,nor engineers, norbrakemcn to check thia businm of the devil. . sp.-,n '.in-if '•■ ■■■ ■ .———- on railroads They ought net to be I «troiig resolutions endorsing this to proceed iu this way, i. e.. to take —The following will bear reprint militar/officers, nor civil officers, the testimony of felops and false The habit of indulging in ar movement. ing: A man who had been drink nor judges, nor jurymen. They are dent spirits by men in office has ¡ statement against the one and de « There w no other proposition id this State that proponent«. rid’so tail the results of the other before ing very freely at the bar, in going just tit for twothings; to-wit,saioon- occasioned more injury to the public out into the stieet fell into the gut keepers and bummers at bars.—i than all other causes, and were I to ciety of this curse, being agitated it ha 1 been tried. now mote among the people. AU -There is one advantage of Pro- ter. A wag seeing him, ran into Californ 'ui Chrietian Advwale. commence my administration again i hibition that is not enough con the public house and said to the' with the experience 1 now hava, are working on this line. —A national total-abstinence the first question 1 would ask, United we stand and succe«8 sidered, and that is, that it make» saloon-keeper, “Sir, your sign has the vile thing hide its head while fallen down.” He went out, anfi to society has just been formed at respecting a candidate, would be’ «. w, »will be ours if all do their part. Rouse up friends and work*. Thft . license of any 'kind (high or low) his astonishment beheld only the Geneva, under the name of the “Does he use irdent, spiritsT— Swisa Temperance .Society. great end sought for and desired is permits it to flaunt itecif in open poor drunkard. Thomae Jeffenon Temperance Department. t