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11501 American Sentinel, vol. 4 February 20, 1889, page 36 paragraph 8
… that running of mail trains, and the keeping open of post-offices practically nullified all their efforts to have Sunday strictly observed. With this objection …
11502 American Sentinel, vol. 4 March 6, 1889, page 50 paragraph 5
… long run I fear we should be more injured than benefited. Unless States are different from individuals, the policy of helping them to do what, even with great …
11503 American Sentinel, vol. 4 March 20, 1889, page 68 paragraph 3
… was run at the request of ministers and church people. In Our Day, January, 1889, there is an article by Prof. W. G. Ballantine, of Oberlin, Ohio, which is wholly devoted …
11504 American Sentinel, vol. 4 April 3, 1889, page 83 paragraph 12
… in running the convention to suit themselves. But even after such a convention each State would attend to its own educational affairs, and in those States …
11505 American Sentinel, vol. 4 May 22, 1889, page 129 paragraph 2
… everything runs riot on Sunday?”
11506 American Sentinel, vol. 4 May 22, 1889, page 131 paragraph 3
… over-run the hopes of religious freedom in the world, one step from the principles upon which our institutions were founded.
11507 American Sentinel, vol. 4 June 5, 1889, page 146 paragraph 5
… to run in order to foster it, should consign it to oblivion. But people love to be humbugged.
11508 American Sentinel, vol. 4 June 19, 1889, page 163 paragraph 8
… -balls run for fear the workingmen wouldn’t get exercise enough, an’ now them freedom-lovin’ folks want us to give up our Sunday. Pretty soon they’ll come sneaking …
11509 American Sentinel, vol. 4 June 19, 1889, page 163 paragraph 14
… from running riot even in the house of worship?
11510 American Sentinel, vol. 4 July 17, 1889, page 194 paragraph 4
… will run after it, and that to keep them to anything like an observance of Sunday, every possibility to break it must be taken out of the way, so that it will be …
11511 American Sentinel, vol. 4 July 17, 1889, page 194 paragraph 13
… be run and is run in many cases all through church hours, as the rival and competitor and antagonist of the churches.” “A law forbidding the opening of the United …
11512 American Sentinel, vol. 4 October 30, 1889, page 313 paragraph 14
… to run at large so long as he is quiet; but as soon as his mania takes an aggressive form, he is shut up. Dr. Edwards regards the keeping of the seventh day as evidence …
11513 American Sentinel, vol. 4 November 20, 1889, page 341 paragraph 2
… religion run deep or shallow according as the banks of the Sabbath are kept up or neglected.’”
11514 American Sentinel, vol. 4 December 25, 1889, page 380 paragraph 8
… to run no risk of making a mistake in number, and so put down the whole number, thus deliberately perpetrating a base fraud. It may well be said that no attempt …
11515 American Sentinel, vol. 5 January 16, 1890, page 19 paragraph 1
… history runs back nearly two years. In the spring of 1888, Dr. Josiah Strong, of this city, secretary of the Evangelical Alliance of the United States, visited …
11516 American Sentinel, vol. 5 January 16, 1890, page 22 paragraph 11
… of running Sunday excursions, were driven into bankruptcy by the Lord. A new management cut off the Sunday traffic as far as possible, and now their finances …
11517 American Sentinel, vol. 5 January 16, 1890, page 22 paragraph 12
… are run, and have been all the time, both on the West Shore and the New York Central.
11518 American Sentinel, vol. 5 March 13, 1890, page 88 paragraph 3
… are running the Sunday-law business will discover that it would be better to be honest and state the truth as it is. See page 86 of this paper.
11519 American Sentinel, vol. 5 March 20, 1890, page 96 paragraph 18
The attempt to shut all places on Sunday except those which are run in the interests of religion and the Church, has led an enterprising proprietor in Boston to label his dime museum on Sunday as follows:-
11520 The Blair Sunday-Rest Bill, p. 9.1 (Ellet Joseph Waggoner)
… be running on that day, thus diverting the revenue of that department into another channel, and sinking the establishment into a state of pusillanimity …