Search for: argument
7301 The American Sentinel 4 June 12, 1889, page 155 paragraph 7
… an argument? Do these men not know that if the State is not allowed to make the convicts support themselves, they will have to be supported by taxation? And if …
7302 The American Sentinel 4 June 19, 1889, page 162 paragraph 5
… for argument’s sake that that phrase in the commandment is indefinite, it must be admitted that the Lord when he wrote it intentionally made it indefinite …
7303 The American Sentinel 4 July 10, 1889, page 185 paragraph 1
… his argument before the Senate Committee in favor of the Blair Amendment to the Constitution, putting the principles of the Christian religion in the public …
7304 The American Sentinel 4 July 10, 1889, page 185 paragraph 1
… his argument before the Senate Committee in behalf of the amendment establishing religion in the public schools, February 15, 1889, Doctor Morris drew the …
7305 The American Sentinel 4 July 17, 1889, page 195 paragraph 3
The argument of James M. King, D. D., who represented the Evangelical Alliance, was aimed directly at “Jesuit attempts to misrepresent and blacken the schools …
7306 The American Sentinel 4 July 17, 1889, page 195 paragraph 5
… single argument presented by any one of the men who spoke in favor of the amendment, that was not aimed directly at the Roman Catholic Church and its doctrines …
7307 The American Sentinel 4 July 17, 1889, page 195 paragraph 6
… the arguments of those men before the Committee on Education and Labor were wholly disingenuous, if not hypocritical.
7308 The American Sentinel 4 August 7, 1889, page 217 paragraph 5
… following argument:—
7309 The American Sentinel 4 August 7, 1889, page 218 paragraph 4
… best argument and the strongest defense against blasphemy, both as defined by the Scriptures and by the civil statutes.
7310 The American Sentinel 4 August 28, 1889, page 241
“Some ‘Constitutional’ Arguments for a National Sunday Law” The American Sentinel 4, 31, pp. 241, 242.
7311 The American Sentinel 4 August 28, 1889, page 241 paragraph 1
… the argument. He attempts to prove, and to his own satisfaction proves, that Sunday laws are strictly constitutional. The first step in his argument is that …
7312 The American Sentinel 4 August 28, 1889, page 241 paragraph 2
… the argument was a piece of deliberate sophistry or whether the gentleman supposed it actually to be the truth. The field secretary of the American Sabbath …
7313 The American Sentinel 4 August 28, 1889, page 241 paragraph 4
… his argument is that it would be constitutional because the Constitution already contains a Sunday law in itself in the phrase, “Sundays excepted” in the …
7314 The American Sentinel 4 August 28, 1889, page 241 paragraph 8
… next argument is that Sunday work and the carrying of Sunday mails “is an infringement of the first amendment to the Constitution” which prohibits Congress …
7315 The American Sentinel 4 August 28, 1889, page 244 paragraph 2
… appellant’s argument, then, is reduced to this: That because he conscientiously believes he is permitted by the law of God to labor on Sunday, he may violate …
7316 The American Sentinel 4 August 28, 1889, page 245 paragraph 1
… theological arguments. It is very evident that the system now in force, savoring as it does very much of religious persecution, is a relic of the Middle Ages …
7317 The American Sentinel 4 September 5, 1889, page 250 paragraph 6
… negative argument; but I have only one night unengaged—the one named—until later in the season. I hope we may have the debate over again at some other point with …
7318 The American Sentinel 4 September 5, 1889, page 251 paragraph 2
… your argument as far as you consider it pertinent.
7319 The American Sentinel 4 September 5, 1889, page 253 paragraph 5
… this argument, commit the crime. It is not those who voluntarily choose to work at their own calling, those who are free, and not subject to anybody in the way …
7320 The American Sentinel 4 September 5, 1889, page 253 paragraph 6
… this argument is utterly sophisticated, as is proved by his own words in his speech in the evening of that same day. He said he did “not defend any man for working …