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JProhibition Notes.
In a recent notable sermon on “Why the Masses in New York are Poor,”
Dr. Madison C. Peters said: “It is estimated that New’ York spends $1,000,000
a day for liquor, most of it bad, which amounts to more than half as much
as the amount required to run the entire government of the United States.
The annual drink bill of New York is more than the entire amount received
tor tariff. The interest on the city’s annual drink bill at 4 per cent is nearly
equal to the income of all the universities and colleges in the United States.”
A Louisville tobacconist said that the strongest argument he could ad
vance for the Sunday closing of saloons was that on the Mondays following
the two Sundays that the lid was on in the Falls City twenty-five per cent
more of his men were at work, and in a better condition than on any previous
Monday. He is heartily in favor of the Sunday closing law, and says if the
saloons do not observe it he will vote for prohibition every chance he gets in
the future.—“ The Kentucky Issue.”
A Demonstration.
A fresh emphasis has been given the doctrine of prohibition, or the
legal suppression of the liquor traffic, both as to effectiveness and results, by
the authorities of San Francisco. Immediately following the earthquake
disaster all liquor licenses were revoked. The mayor testifies that the
good order and absence of crime in the city is due to the fact that the sale
of liquors has been rigidly prevented. The former saloon keepers have been
notified that the number of saloons in the city will be greatly reduced, and
that such of them that rebuild their places will do so at their own risk. This
shows (1) that the absence of licensed saloons contributes to good order;
(2) that prohibition is effective in a large city, even, when the law officers
want it to be; (3) that the right to grant license to sell liquor involves the
right to cancel such license, or not grant license at all.
This case illustrates, in the best possible way, all that has been claimed
by the advocates of the legal suppression of the liquor traffic, for beverage
purposes. The doctrine is sound, the practical results of it beneficial, and
nobody deprived of “personal liberty” by its rigid application No better,
more convincing, testimony to the wisdom of a public policy has ever been
furnished the country than this.
The Standard commends this, case to those people and papers that doubt
the wisdom of prohibition and say it can not be enforced in large cities. To
all such, who are candid, the ease must be instructive and convincing. Os
course there are people who will never admit that they have been mistaken,
no matter how overwhelming the demonstration of their error may be. To
such The Standard makes no appeal whatever, because it is a waste of space
and time to do so; they do not want to be convinced.
A Letter to a Little Daughter.
By JUNIUS W. MILLARD.
My dear little Elizabeth:
The other day I was sitting at the desk in my “den,” when the maid
brought something and placed it on the desk beside me, but I was busy writing
at the time and didn’t look up immediately, when I heard a voice saying:
“Dear me! I certainly am glad to get out .of that stuffy place. I never
was so hot and dusty in my life!”
Looking up suddenly, what do you suppose I saw? Your little bead
purse, with the chain to it. I was greatly surprised, more at what I heard
than what I saw, and I said:
“Well, where have you been, that you were so tired, hot, and dusty?”
“Why, under that large rug out there in the hall, that’s where. I’ve
been there for weeks and weeks, it does seem to me, and I thought nobody
never was going to see me there, and take me up.”
This purse, I think, had been associating with the somebody that doesn’t
always speak correctly, for this sentence was not quite right, but I was not
disposed to talk to a purse about not talking correctly, and, besides, I was
too much interested in what it was saying, so I asked it:
“Who put you there?”
“Why, that little girl that plays with me.”
“Do you mean Elizabeth?” I asked.
“Yes, that’s who I mean. She was playing with me one day when I
heard her say that she was going to hide me from her brother, so she put
me under one corner of the big rug, and I was greatly pleased, because I
thought they were playing hide and seek, and I thought, of course, that her
brother would look for me, and then we would have fun when he found me,
but, bless you, I kept waiting and waiting, and nobody came to look for me
and I grew tired, and after a while I went to sleep. I don’t know how long
I slept, but when I waked up, I listened to see if I could hear the little
girl, but I could not, and I have not seen or heard anything of her since.
Can you tell me where she is?”
“Yes,” I said, “she is in Kentucky. A day or so after she put you un
der the rug, she and her mother and her brother went away to Kentucky
to spend the summer, and she must have forgotten where she placed you,
and so went off without you.”
“She’s a sly little thing,” said the purse, “but this time her trick didn’t
work well, and was played upon herself.”
The Golden Age for July 19, 1906.
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WAR ON LIQUOR AND TOBACCO.
The Kansas Anti-Liquor Society has adopted
a new plan to fight the liquor traffic. It is dis
tributing free to all who write and enclose a
stamp, a recepe for the cure of the liquor habit.
It can be given secretly in coffee or food. Also
one for the tobacco habit that can be given se
cretly. The only request they make is that you
do not sell the recipes, but give free copies to
your friends. Their address js Room 68 Grant
Bldg., Kansas City, Mo.
How to Make Money.
You should make money and make it fast by
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Agents are making from $2.50 to $5.00 a day sell
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You cannot break or chip dishes in this Dish
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