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10681 The American Sentinel 10 December 19, 1895, page 393 paragraph 8

… will run itself. Republican government is, as Lincoln defines it, government “by the people” as well as for them. It is not a scheme for controlling the individual …

10682 The American Sentinel 11 January 2, 1896, page 1 paragraph 7

… , has run about the same course. Here, as in Basel, it was carried on under color of the Factory Act; and, as appears from the statement which we take from the Daily …

10683 The American Sentinel 11 January 2, 1896, page 2 paragraph 4

… ’ Fair, runs as follows: “ Resolved, That we do hereby pledge ourselves and each other, that we will from this time henceforth refuse to vote for, or support for any …

10684 The American Sentinel 11 January 23, 1896, page 27 paragraph 14

… current running in the direction if not of union at least of a confederacy of churches for the accomplishment of certain purposes; and we are sorry to say …

10685 The American Sentinel 11 February 20, 1896, page 58 paragraph 14

… shall run to and fro, and knowledge shall be increased.” Daniel 12:1-4 .

10686 The American Sentinel 11 March 5, 1896, page 74 paragraph 2

… word running and contending alone on the field of battle, then he is troubled, and his knees knock together; he shudders and faints with fear.” D’Aubigne’s “History …

10687 The American Sentinel 11 March 19, 1896, page 91 paragraph 10

… , to run after the various public shows, it so happened that when these spectacles fell on the same days which had been consecrated by the church to some religious …

10688 The American Sentinel 11 April 16, 1896, page 128 paragraph 1

AMS sophistical a National Reform argument (though not so designed), as we have seen recently, runs thus:—

10689 The American Sentinel 11 June 18, 1896, page 197 paragraph 1

… the running of freight trains in that State on Sunday, except under certain conditions and circumstances.

10690 The American Sentinel 11 June 18, 1896, page 197 paragraph 5

… the running in Georgia of railroad freight trains, on the sabbath day, had been expressly limited to trains laden with domestic freight, it could not be regarded …

10691 The American Sentinel 11 June 18, 1896, page 197 paragraph 7

The court then cites the act against the running of freight trains on Sunday, described in the act as “the sabbath day,” and then continues:—

10692 The American Sentinel 11 June 18, 1896, page 197 paragraph 9

… the running of freight trains is prohibited is kept by many under a sense of religious duty. The legislature having, as will not be disputed, power to enact …

10693 The American Sentinel 11 June 18, 1896, page 197 paragraph 15

… the running on the sabbath day of railroad cars, laden with interstate freight, is committed exclusively to the control and supervision of the National …

10694 The American Sentinel 11 June 18, 1896, page 198 paragraph 8

… the running of freight trains but the whole Georgia Sunday “law” as well as the Sunday “laws” of all the States.

10695 The American Sentinel 11 June 18, 1896, page 198 paragraph 9

… the running of freight trains on Friday, does anyone suppose for a moment that seven out of nine of our learned Supreme Court Justices would have sustained …

10696 The American Sentinel 11 December 17, 1896, page 400 paragraph 1

… and “run” the Government, nobody can be more opposed than are we. These views of religion are as political as those of the veriest National Reformer that has …

10697 The American Sentinel 12 February 25, 1897, page 115 paragraph 3

… to run the world as though they yet belonged to it? The proper thing for us to do, who are separated from this world, is so to present the transcendent glories …

10698 The American Sentinel 12 April 15, 1897, page 227 paragraph 4

… are “run” by corrupt “rings” or political organizations or political “bosses.” New York City, for example, is largely subject to the unrighteous sway of “Tammany …

10699 The American Sentinel 12 May 13, 1897, page 292 paragraph 5

… which runs riots in “the blazing light of the nineteenth century” as freely as it did in the ages before it. And that “perverse spirit” is the spirit of opposition …

10700 The American Sentinel 12 May 20, 1897, page 306 paragraph 3

… Shinar runs thus: “To [the god] Ninridu, his King, for the preservation of Idadu, viceroy of Ridu, the servant, the delight of Ninridu.” Another: “To [the god] Ninip the …