Our College Times . n institution against which Heavens decree hasbeen pronounced. Woe to him thatputteth the bottle to his neighborslips. The liquor traffic was once re-garded as an honorable business, butnow it is quite generally looked upon asthe worst traffic that still enjoys thelicense and the sanction of the it are associated the dance hall,the card table, the brothel, and thebilliard table. Common senses teach-es that all these are detrimental to thenation. Can Heaven, therefore, placeher approval upon them? She can notand will not. The law forbids me toshoot down a man in col


Our College Times . n institution against which Heavens decree hasbeen pronounced. Woe to him thatputteth the bottle to his neighborslips. The liquor traffic was once re-garded as an honorable business, butnow it is quite generally looked upon asthe worst traffic that still enjoys thelicense and the sanction of the it are associated the dance hall,the card table, the brothel, and thebilliard table. Common senses teach-es that all these are detrimental to thenation. Can Heaven, therefore, placeher approval upon them? She can notand will not. The law forbids me toshoot down a man in cold blood; whyshould it empower a man to sell liquorin view of its damning effects? Whatis the product of the saloon? not the saloon send more mento perdition than are killed at thehands of assassins? Yes. Why thenlegalize the sale of intoxicants? Ameri-cans, will you not rise up against thisdemon? Heavens decree is againstthe monster, and Heavens favor willrest upon you. if you hurl him fromyour fair EDITORIAL BOARDJACOB S. HARLEY, Editor-in-Chief ASSOCIATE EDITORS Grace Moyer ) Mary G. Hershey .... I Sch°o1 Notes Rhoda Miller HDomerian Notes Naomi Longenecker, K. L. S. Notes Calvin J. Rose Gertrude Miller Alumni Notes Isaac J. Kreider Exchanges Virgil Holsinger Business Manager Daisy P. Reider Art Editor Athletics Our College Times is published monthly durin? the Academic year by Elizabethtown paper will be sent continuously to old subscribers, so as not to break their liles, and arrearages charged, unless notice to discontinue has been received at any change of address to the Business Manager. Subscription rates:—Fifty cents per year; ten cents per copy; five years for ? as second-class matter April 19, 1909, at the Elizabethtown Postoffice. Science and LiteratureThis time of the year when manythousands of the youths of our landhave returned to drink deep in thefountains of wisdom and knowledgewe cannot help being


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