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About Christian herald. (Portland ;) 1882-18?? | View Entire Issue (Sept. 8, 1882)
» OftniSTI TIT^ft At.t). ==-- ----- go to the Uiiseen woild to get out bf Saloons have closed their doors 830,000—all due to the saving of . the first 8100. The merchant, no Commission to slay whomsoever we because they Cotild hot pay the tax. Saving Against Starving. doubt, is now daily made happy by wili ; we have four hundred places The State (s agitated froth oiie ehd the delightful reflection of having in Syractlse armed and equipped to the other ; la w-and-order meet A YOUNG CLERK MADE ftlt'H B y FOLLOWING TÉE saved this mail as well as his family. al? the law directs, to make jmt the ings Ate bfeld all oHr the State-; ÀbVlCE OF AN OLD MERCHANT—THE WAY young P ersons bide to poverty > ' ..^here are flow hundreds of fam i- amount of. drunkenness necessary ministerial conventions ahd pteacli- ------- 1 i es i n t h j a c i t y who areJdghly-gjjlL. tones for the enforcement of" law. When Crowningshield,some years tivated that do not know where the Wall Street monçyecT institu their next meal is coming from. ago, committed murder, he could not The brewers of Cincinnati applied tions, a ppljed* to one of our distin- Could they have lfad the advice of do it until he had taken several to the Secretary of State for an act guislmd ’merchants, who is à direc this old merchant, and followed it, diinks and in a measure paralyzed of incorporation to resist the en tor, and asked him for his inilin nc they would now be in affluence, his human sympathies; yet neither forcement of the I’ohd Act: Attor to get his salary raised. not beggary. Only yesterday a drinks nor Deity saved him' from ney-General Nash replied in stib- The merchant said to him: "How higl4y resj»eetal4e-4adyr-wtth“-thrce' the gallows-Btrtr tifir timesare- stance r IS IKWhi“'is your sâTâry^'noîv?’ “ * The laws of Ohio certainly do Changing how. Our drunkard “ Twelve hundred dollars,” was the young daughters, applied for imme makers can show lawful authorities not authorize the formation of cor diate assistance to buy bread. Her answer. Question.—How much do you husband had recently died after en from the excise commissioners to porations for, the pürpose of pro- joying a salary for some twenty sell intoxicating drinks to whom motingorcariyingonlawsuits. Such save a year ? ■ ' ' ', Answer.—^Not one- dollar ; with years of from 82,503 to 83(K.o, with- they will, tumors excepted, and laws would be against all correct f a wife and two children 1 can only r’™1 having saved anything. Tile Governor Cornell has just com views of public policy. 1 advise practical result of this is that tins muted the sentence of Martin you to refuse to file the articles of - justmake both ends meet.” Q—What! don’t save anything? lady for twenty years, had secured ' Flanagan because he was drunk incorporation of the General Pro every luxury““ within her reach., when he killed John’ Julius; no tective Association.” A.—No, sir; 1 can but exist. “In Cleveland they have n t Q.—I make it a rule to assist no while 1 am indebted fur all I now question of his guilt remaining in kn,own so quiet a Sunday before in . ’'One who does not save something have to the denial of luxuries for the mind of court or governor. Now I ask you, What safety thirty years. ‘Law and order' is A evejr^ year. No matter how small myself and faintly, unfi am now have we.' the people, from such asked to help support her, out 61 the motto all over the State“ and his salary, something should be ruling^? Justice r seems going back my savings such as she would not the battle rages fiercely all along saved. How many cigars do you make for herself. With her present ward. If it is true that the drunk- smoke—and their cost ?______ _ * A.—Well, some three a day ; views of economy she sees how she aid is insane, why not shut up the costing, together about twenty could have-lived on half his salary. mtn who make him insane—the Sunday-Closing. Had she done so, it would now seller of liquor and the commis Cents. ’ | s « 'r “The liquor-setters are very Q—Do you go to the theatre, amount to-sotuc 850,001), the inter sioner who affixes the kcal of . the aud hqw often ; and how many per est of which would have made her law to every drink the murderer reluctant to surrender their Sunday and her children independent for takes ?" traffic.' Sunday is their. ’ harvest sons with you ? * life. Such cases do not warmly •lay ’ where their traffic is un A—1 go some half a dozen times Ohio. restricted. Ohio has recently fnit during the winter with my wife commend themselves to my charity; such pcophr must be taught, by “ The Smith Sunday Law has in operation a stringent Sunday- and sister, costing, including rail natural laws, that they must save road fare, say 830. now been in force a month, and has closing law. It produced a u arked or be liable to starve. been the subject of discussion in effect upon the liquor-sellers Q—Do you drink ardent spirits, Another case occurs to me. A wine, beer, etc. the entire press of the State and in throughout the State,, and was young man, recently married, has a majority of the pulpits. It is re heeded by many at oi . cj . In Cin A.—I generally take two glasses put up his carriage with livery on of whisky daily, and sometimes a spected now in nearly all portions cinnati the law is defied by some . glass of ¿ale with my wife at the a salary of 84,000 a year. One of of the State. In Cincinnati nearly ami respected by others. Follow- three things will soon possibly fol gardens in the evening. one thousand saloons openly viola ing the first Sunday after the law low. The carriage will be laid Q.—Do you say you cannot save ted the law, arrests were made, and took effect a Columbus telegram down, or defalcation will come next, anything, while your unnecessary one notorious offender, Mr. Schu said : * The Sunday-closing law w s and ruin and beggary follow. All expenses yearly for cigars, drinks mann, tried, convicted, and sen strictly observed by saloon mtn, - this reminds me of the old maxim and amusements, by your showing, tenced to pay one hundred dollars and it was the most quiet day of that nineteen persons out of every cannot cost less than 8200 ? Until tine and to be confined in the city the year. The average arrests of ' twenty, who are now respectable, you begin to save, raising your sal workhouse for the period of thirty twenty-five for drunkenness was ary would do you no god. Begin i would not be so if they could get days, the severest penalty of the cut down to three cases.’ This tt Ils t) day to save, if only five cents a ■ the means to make themselves i law. In sentencing him the judge wZty liquor-men oppose Sunday- day. Try saving six months and otherwise.- This man, with his said : closing. In this particular, as in carriage on 84,000 is one of the report to me the result. %• “‘1 think, Mr. Schumann, you most others, what the liquor-nun nineteen. — N. Y. Evenivy Post. At the end of the time the young have had a fair and impaitial trial. do not want it will be well for the man brought the merchant his ex The testimony discloses-that your friends of temperance to endeavor Drunkenness and Murder. pense book, showing a clear saving offense was one in open violation of to attain.”— Temperance Advocate. of $104.20. This induced the “Justice" writes thus to the the law. ‘There was no excuse for merchant to take him cordially by Syracuse Herald-. “The time' I your ignorance. It was committed Mr. Moody’s Temperance Meet- ingsjn Glascow. the hand down to the institution have long been wondering about, by you openly, deliberately, defi and ur^e the President to increase and expecting to come has evidently antly. It is the business of this Some excellent ministers,superin his salary from 81,200 to 81,500. arrived—the time when man may court to uphold the dignity of the tendents and teachers say , there is In another six months his savings kill his neighbor and may get ex law. A judge lias nothing to do no need cf specific temperance in amounted to 8300; the merchaut cused from being hanged because with the making of a law.' struction in the church or Sunday- on this showing said to him: he was drunk. Some murderers “ On the last Sunday all saloons school. They claim that drunken- /’ “ Young man, you are now on the . hope to avoid banging because were closed save a few back doors. ness is a sin, and the Gospel is the road to wealth and position. This backed and persuaded by-the Deity The Pond Tax Law has also sovereign remedy fur every evil un- young man is now worth some to commit crimp, but we r.eed not gone into effect, and a large number , der the sun. This is true, but Mr Temperance Department.