The Rule of "Not Too Much/' In the Delaware campaign, women marched bands 151 I am not familiar. those bands went in there and by noise, cat-calls, etc., reasonable" thus to make rowdies of the children, I they seem hardly "sane and reasonable." It was re- and cajoling, praying, crying, kneeling, wringing their perance Movement. The present turn of the year bears more than or- ported that the passage of the prohibition law in Ala- broke up those meetings also. If it is "sane and session of the capitol on the day the final vote was each legislator who was not in favor of the measure, style. Well, when you hear of some of these methods bama was secured by a swarm of women taking pos- finally, when the respectable voters went into halls, dinary significance for the American brewer, and in Centennial of the Beginning of the Organized Tem- must confess that is a system of pedagogics with which ings of the anti-local optionists with their noise, and of children through the streets, broke up open air meet- bill. (January I, 1908.) hands, etc., until the men were coerced to vote for the taken, entering the floor of the chamber, surrounding