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56761 American Sentinel, vol. 3 June 1888, page 44 paragraph 3
… any more favor upon these detestable vices in the one than in the other.”
56762 American Sentinel, vol. 3 June 1888, page 44 paragraph 14
… not more readily, enforce it upon others than they would enforce secret prayer or devout meditations.
56763 American Sentinel, vol. 3 June 1888, page 45 paragraph 3
… be more respected than those of the other; unless it be admitted that the consciences of the minority are less sacred than those of the majority.
56764 American Sentinel, vol. 3 June 1888, page 45 paragraph 6
… , as more expeditious than the mail. The stage proprietors will themselves often furnish the travelers with those means of conveyance; so that the effect …
56765 American Sentinel, vol. 3 June 1888, page 45 paragraph 8
… infinitely more to advance the true interests of religion, than any measure which they may call on Congress to enact. The petitioners do not complain of any …
56766 American Sentinel, vol. 3 June 1888, page 47 paragraph 12
… wants more than any other imaginable thing. Besides this, the Pope knows that Catholic Ireland is forever secure to the Papacy whatever he may do, and therefore …
56767 American Sentinel, vol. 3 July 1888, page 49 paragraph 8
… Christians more strongly than from any other people. We have so often set forth the principles which condemn such legislation, and those principles are …
56768 American Sentinel, vol. 3 July 1888, page 51 paragraph 1
… less than ten nor more than one thousand dollars, and no service performed in the prosecution of such prohibited commerce shall be lawful, nor shall any compensation …
56769 American Sentinel, vol. 3 July 1888, page 55 paragraph 4
… duties more faith-fully than the majority of the men in their sphere in life do, where is the reason or expediency of the extension.
56770 American Sentinel, vol. 3 July 1888, page 55 paragraph 6
… no more for the prayer than does the average Congress, or State Legislature; and for all the influence Bishop Granberry’s prayer had upon the Convention …
56771 American Sentinel, vol. 3 July 1888, page 56 paragraph 16
… yet more loudly than ever asserts all the infallibility that he ever claimed. Any sovereign, fallible or infallible, can issue consistent decrees; but no …
56772 American Sentinel, vol. 3 August 1888, page 57 paragraph 1
… on more than one occasion in the past, if she should take a leading part in the National Reform movement. Twenty-seven years ago last spring the South started …
56773 American Sentinel, vol. 3 August 1888, page 57 paragraph 3
… any more than that one did.
56774 American Sentinel, vol. 3 August 1888, page 58 paragraph 4
… the more because the President calls upon them to return thanks to him? Not a particle. He cannot make the people one iota more grateful than they would be if …
56775 American Sentinel, vol. 3 August 1888, page 58 paragraph 7
… denomination more than another.” Thus they make an arbitrary definition of Church and State union, and then say that they are opposed to that. The Professor’s …
56776 American Sentinel, vol. 3 August 1888, page 59 paragraph 1
… is more susceptible to religious influences than we are, but we care more for deeds than for words. The actions of those who reign, and of the common people, are …
56777 American Sentinel, vol. 3 September 1888, page 68 paragraph 3
… . A more correct statement would be that the Woman’s Christian Temperance Union has adopted the National Reform Association, and is nursing its principles …
56778 American Sentinel, vol. 3 September 1888, page 69 paragraph 2
… deal more influence can be secured for it, with much less trouble. The matter is to be presented, not to individuals, but to churches, and a vote taken on it. If the …
56779 American Sentinel, vol. 3 October 1888, page 73 paragraph 5
“We have laws to punish the man who steals our property; but we have no law to prevent people from working on Sunday. It is right that the thief be punished; but I have more sympathy for that man than I have for him that works on that day.”
56780 American Sentinel, vol. 3 October 1888, page 73 paragraph 7
… , in more senses than one. We have referred to it in our columns before; but as the legislation itself is the first step taken in an endless controversy, this is …