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56901 American Sentinel, vol. 5 February 27, 1890, page 70 paragraph 5
… in more favorable localities. It means much more than a mass meetings and strings of resolutions.
56902 American Sentinel, vol. 5 February 27, 1890, page 72 paragraph 2
The Church needs more power rather than more machinery. It is a malign paradox of ecclesiastical history that as power declines machinery increases.
56903 American Sentinel, vol. 5 February 27, 1890, page 72 paragraph 5
… no more weight than is any act of the legislature.
56904 American Sentinel, vol. 5 February 27, 1890, page 72 paragraph 12
… vastly more owing to Mr. Depew’s Sunday work than to Mr. Shepard’s Sunday rest.
56905 American Sentinel, vol. 5 February 27, 1890, page 72 paragraph 15
… , any more than the property of everybody else? What is the particular benefit of the Sisters of the Holy Cross, over everybody else, to the nation, the city, and …
56906 American Sentinel, vol. 5 March 13, 1890, page 88 paragraph 4
… makes more than 658,000 bona fide signatures that have been presented to the Senate in opposition to these measures. Let the good work go on.
56907 American Sentinel, vol. 5 March 27, 1890, page 97 paragraph 5
“If Christianity cannot stand without a State prop it is not the religion we take it to be. As a matter of fact, every effort to give it State support has had a reactionary effect that wrought more injury than benefit.”
56908 American Sentinel, vol. 5 March 27, 1890, page 103 paragraph 1
… dangerous than saloon intemperance. These women ought to have been more both womanly and more temperate. They should not have allowed their zeal to get the …
56909 American Sentinel, vol. 5 March 27, 1890, page 104 paragraph 13
… was more diligently employed in pushing the claims of New York, than was the Sabbath. On the evening of that day, a dinner was given by Representative Flower …
56910 American Sentinel, vol. 5 April 3, 1890, page 105 paragraph 5
… something more than good wishes to endow a university, and while Uncle Sam has millions of surplus stored away in his great money vaults, it is not an easy matter …
56911 American Sentinel, vol. 5 April 3, 1890, page 112 paragraph 12
… has more than once been publicly stated in Sunday-law meetings and conventions that the greatest evil of the Sunday paper is not the work which it causes …
56912 American Sentinel, vol. 5 April 10, 1890, page 115 paragraph 2
… -books. More than that, many ardent defenders of the Sabbath, justify them on that ground. They say, God has enjoined the observance of the Sabbath, and the State …
56913 American Sentinel, vol. 5 April 10, 1890, page 115 paragraph 11
… man more good than resting upon the seventh. Of course it will be said that the seventh day is not the day that the law recognizes; that the great body of Christians …
56914 American Sentinel, vol. 5 April 10, 1890, page 116 paragraph 16
… or more than one credible witness, or upon view had of the said offense by the justice himself, shall for every offense be fined a sum not exceeding fifty dollars …
56915 American Sentinel, vol. 5 April 10, 1890, page 116 paragraph 20
… no more religious in Canada than are similar measures in this country. And the motive underlying the demand for such legislation is a spirit of intolerance …
56916 American Sentinel, vol. 5 April 10, 1890, page 120 paragraph 4
… greater than in any other civilized country. This shows that something more than civil law is required to make people moral.
56917 American Sentinel, vol. 5 April 10, 1890, page 120 paragraph 16
… is more in the fact that Protestants are adopting Romish methods than in the aggressions of the Roman Catholic Church itself. Rome has ever appealed to the …
56918 American Sentinel, vol. 5 April 10, 1890, page 120 paragraph 21
… , which more than all else holds the future.
56919 American Sentinel, vol. 5 April 17, 1890, page 121 paragraph 3
… little more liberal than the decisions of some of the southern courts. In Tennessee and several other southern States quiet, inoffensive men have been fined …
56920 American Sentinel, vol. 5 May 8, 1890, page 152 paragraph 6
… world? More than this, the Church will not stop at that. When once the State has assumed the task of carrying on and supporting the work of the Church, the next …