. Christian herald and signs of our times . LOUlV, ALBERT -BANKb. D-D. as her hand trembled, and [as she wantedto implicate the saloon- keeper as muchas possible, she requested him to pourit out for her. remarking that she feltrather badly. So he poured it out for herand she asked the price, and he said adime, which she laid down and picking upthe glass, walked out On the Tuesday evening following thatSunday morning Mother Stewart, spoke inthe church opposite the saloon, to an au-dience that packed it to the doors and tak-ing her glass of wine she exhibited it to theaudience and told the story


. Christian herald and signs of our times . LOUlV, ALBERT -BANKb. D-D. as her hand trembled, and [as she wantedto implicate the saloon- keeper as muchas possible, she requested him to pourit out for her. remarking that she feltrather badly. So he poured it out for herand she asked the price, and he said adime, which she laid down and picking upthe glass, walked out On the Tuesday evening following thatSunday morning Mother Stewart, spoke inthe church opposite the saloon, to an au-dience that packed it to the doors and tak-ing her glass of wine she exhibited it to theaudience and told the story. How Ibought my first glass of liquor. That was the beginning of the Temper-ance Crusade in the city of Springfield,which reached large proportions and dida great amount of good. It was the editorof the Journal of Dayton. O., who namedthe new movement. He wrote: One woman in Springfield is disturb-ing the whole city—not an unusual thingfor a woman to do. however, as they havein times past changed the course of wholeempires. The lady to


Size: 1398px × 1788px
Photo credit: © Reading Room 2020 / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, bookidchristianher, bookyear1896