07 Dec




















The Rule of "Not Too Much/' 139 I am not fond of using the catchwords that have is felt by the people at whom, individually, the fight defending the comfort, the joy of living to which the lem. If our newspapers were better informed on the campaign of publicity we should not find cartoons the information within easy reach by a comprehensive sociologists, settlement workers, or whatever the form masses are entitled not only in the same, but perhaps been coined in certain quarters, but it does seem that latter have more opportunity for enjoyment anyway. club appear inane and senseless as against the fact subject which they should be if the brewers had put in which they have come into contact with the prob- the masses better than any other institution. Such is the unanimous verdict of all honest investigators, fight of the "classes against the masses." That this of the daily press about the saloon as the poor man's this point that the saloon supplies the social wants of The jests of anti-saloon orators and publishers and man's club. the anti-saloon movement is well characterized as a and funny paragraphs to ridicule the idea of the poor is aimed, is well illustrated by an article reprinted that all students of the liquor problem are agreed on in greater measure than the well-to-do classes, for the

Comments
* The email will not be published on the website.
I BUILT MY SITE FOR FREE USING