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56881 American Sentinel, vol. 5 January 9, 1890, page 12 paragraph 7

… any more deserving of reproached for criticism than the ministers of other cities. We mentioned Des Moines because it is the nearest example of what we have …

56882 American Sentinel, vol. 5 January 9, 1890, page 13 paragraph 3

… be more progress-very much more, too-before men learn to respect those who differ from them in religious matters, and to refrain from damnatory criticism …

56883 American Sentinel, vol. 5 January 9, 1890, page 14 paragraph 5

… nothing more tangible than does the “baseless fabric of a dream.”

56884 American Sentinel, vol. 5 January 16, 1890, page 19 paragraph 1

… of more than passing interest to the people. It reveals some of the spirit that inheres in this Sunday-law movement all over the nation. That ironclad agreement …

56885 American Sentinel, vol. 5 January 16, 1890, page 22 paragraph 14

… something more than simply refraining from work on Sunday is required to make people pious, or even to insure their attendance at church. Evidently that …

56886 American Sentinel, vol. 5 January 16, 1890, page 22 paragraph 15

… any more than on any other day. No one pretends that the playing of a game of base-ball is uncivil in any sense. It cannot be shown that it is in any way uncivil on …

56887 American Sentinel, vol. 5 January 16, 1890, page 22 paragraph 16

… be more than anything else an organization to maintain American Protestant institutions as against Catholic institutions. Like most of the attempts …

56888 American Sentinel, vol. 5 January 23, 1890, page 32 paragraph 4

… appropriates more than twice that amount every week, for the prevention of the heathenizing of America by such Sabbath reform as is represented by the American …

56889 American Sentinel, vol. 5 January 23, 1890, page 32 paragraph 11

… much more difficult matter to convict for maintaining a nuisance than to convict for Sabbath-breaking. The indictment should have been for Sabbath-breaking …

56890 American Sentinel, vol. 5 January 30, 1890, page 33 paragraph 3

… by more than ten million adults. “To contain ten million signatures,” says Mr. Morton, “would require at least 166, 667 sheets, making more than 347 reams, which, at …

56891 American Sentinel, vol. 5 February 7, 1890, page 46 paragraph 1

… number more millions than the Africans who were emancipated by the civil war and the Constitution of the United States.” Why don’t the Pearl of Days make a …

56892 American Sentinel, vol. 5 February 14, 1890, page 49 paragraph 3

… of more importance than she suspected. It seemed to be a very light thing at the time of the National Convention in November last, but now there seems to be some …

56893 American Sentinel, vol. 5 February 14, 1890, page 56 paragraph 5

2. Congress does not declare that if anybody works more than eight hours for a day he shall be fined one hundred or a thousand dollars, as it is asked to do in the enactment of a Sunday law.

56894 American Sentinel, vol. 5 February 14, 1890, page 56 paragraph 14

We should say to the opposition there, if it requires more fortitude than your young men have to refuse to play ball on Sunday the best thing you can do is to cultivate in them sufficient fortitude to enable them to refuse.

56895 American Sentinel, vol. 5 February 14, 1890, page 56 paragraph 16

… less than a continuous political campaign. We hope that by some means the Union may be enabled to discover this, and turn once more to its proper, legitimate …

56896 American Sentinel, vol. 5 February 21, 1890, page 58 paragraph 8

… neither more nor less than a bit of popular legend. If we mean by the phrase “religious liberty” a state of things in which opposite or contradictory opinions …

56897 American Sentinel, vol. 5 February 21, 1890, page 59 paragraph 1

… no more room for heretics than there was in Rome or Madrid. This was the idea which drew Winthrop and his followers from England at a time when-as events were …

56898 American Sentinel, vol. 5 February 21, 1890, page 64 paragraph 18

… any more than on every other clock and every other bell or bells? The answer, of course is, that these are for a church. Then upon what principle is it that this …

56899 American Sentinel, vol. 5 February 27, 1890, page 67 paragraph 2

… nothing more accurately than a government which attempts to do just what Senator Blair says this government ought to do. Therefore, everyone who believes …

56900 American Sentinel, vol. 5 February 27, 1890, page 67 paragraph 3

… no more to the moral law than civil government can enforce. The result would be the universal prevalence of immorality, and immorality of the worst kind, inasmuch …