Emily Howland
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“Today, Oct. 30, 1921 is World’s Temperance Sunday. On this day the Sunday Schools of the world will study the same Bible temperance lesson. It is a day of opportunity to further the cause of temperance in all lands. The attention of all is centered on this great moral issue, especially is it laid upon the churches to bring the subject forcefully home to the people. Our own country is blessed in having the prohibition of intoxicating beverages, their manufacture, sale, importation and exportation as a part of the federal constitution and the Volstead enforcement by the Supreme Court of the land.
He who would weaken or nullify the law by anti-prohibition legislation in unpatriotic and giving aid to the liquor forces and he who sells the poisonous stuff knows he is violating the laws of his country and they are learning too that the law can be enforced. The ‘wets’ are making a great noise that prohibition does not prohibit. We see a change for the better all around us. No more do we meet as formerly on the highway young men with blurred eyes and reeling posture, driving recklessly, yelling in drunken speech, making the night hideous.
No more does the saloon stand open, conscienceless keeper sprinkling the streets with liquor to lure the drunkard whose appetite is so strong he cannot resist the temptation if he would and again sending out to catch the tongue man to draw him in by fair or foul means.
Only a little while back and this was true in a nearby town with a licensed saloon. What kind of a citizenship have we that would bring in the old regime? IS it for the good of their neighbor? IS it for the good of their country? Is it compassion for the sick that we must have liquor for medicinal purposes? Or is it that it may enable them to hand out the death-dealing cup for a price?
Think of these things and vote ‘dry’. The patriotic loyal citizens of this nation must stand for law and enforcement. Federal Prohibition Commissioner Haynes says whatever forces are at work in this community to lessen the dignity of the law or undermine authority conferred by the law, strike at the very heart of the nation. The benefits of prohibition are manifest. The government is no longer a partner in the business of debauching its citizens through the licensed saloon. The social aspect of drinking has been abolished, recruiting stations for a new army of drunkards have been closed. It enables families formerly denied the necessities of life to enjoy even the luxuries.
It diverts more than two billion dollars of the liability of the liquor traffic to the assets of legitimate business. The deposits in the savings banks have increased and the man or woman faces the world with new dignity because of it.
Secretary Mellon has put in a disturbing element by ruling that the Eighteenth Amendment does not prohibit liquor for medicinal purposes. The liquor element is jubilant. They see in this an entrance wedge for more license. Reputable physicians in convention assembled declare that they are no in the booze business. Let us not lose faith. The cause is marching. It only means a little clouding of the vision, a little more effort. Climb a little higher and we can look clear-visioned into a saloonless nation. The people have spoken and the liquor traffic is doomed.
It may be delayed by its enemies before we get the full benefit of the greatest moral victory ever achieved by any nation, but it is here to stay. The Women’s Christian Temperance Union has been a great factor in bringing prohibition of the liquor traffic to a successful issue. That great organization was born of prayer, self consecration and mother love and ever since with increasing numbers they have been at work for God and home and every land. A part of the jubilee fund goes for mission temperance work. In more than 30 lands they are working for a sober, pure and peaceful world.
The national president, Miss Anna A. Gordon has been in South America. She finds the field ready for the seed sowing. It is a wonderful story, bright with promise for the future. It is such consecration that brings success. Is there no lesson in this for us? Frances E. Willard with far-reaching vision said we must not be hedged about by artificial boundaries of state or nation, we must utter as women what great and good men long ago declared their motto, “The world is my parish and to do good my religion.”
The whole world is watching and waiting today the outcome of prohibition in America. Shall this banner of righteousness be a beacon light to all nations? It remains with you and me if the trust is betrayed. At the 15th International congress against alcoholism held in Switzerland last September 40 nationalities were represented. The bringing together of so many for world peace and righteousness welding the nations together in a company has been a great force.
These are momentous times, November 11 is Armistice Day when the representatives of the different nations meet in Washington for a peace conference looking to a limitation of armaments or maybe a reduction of armaments. The churches are called to prayer for the success of the cause for which it is convened, petitions are being signed and sent on. The World War took billions of our hard-earned dollars and left a starving suffering humanity, and what is infinitely more took the best young manhood of our country.
Of the human wreckage that floated back to our shores, the asylums and hospitals can tell. It is most pitiable. Think peace, talk peace, work for peace, create a public opinion so that we may never again have war.“











