Emily Howland
To Board of Excise at Scipio Center in the bar room
May 4, 1874
 

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Gentlemen,

We bring a petition signed by 222 voters and 465 of non voters, asking you to grant no license to the sale of intoxicating liquors in this town. 

We do not present so large a no. of names as we intended because the inclement weather and bad roads prevented the circulation of the petition. 

If you are inclined to think names that have not the weight of the ballot attached to them are not worth considering, we beg you to remember that some of the names of those non-voters have a deeper significance than perhaps the whole of the voters together, for they are the names of women and children whose husbands and fathers are in the thralls of liquor, which blights and blasts their own lives and those of their families. I was told by the neighbors of one woman, who gave her name to this paper with a joy and faith, that I hope you will not disappoint that they thought her in peril of her life and they expected any night to be roused from sleep to rescue her and her children from the violence of their drink-infuriated father and husband. 

Another woman walked through some miles of mud to sign her name to this paper hoping it might help save her husband. Another, who at first refused to sign because she said she worked at the tavern and should lose her means of living, after I left the house called me back and said that she must sign the paper if it would do any good. 

It is needless for me to tell you what liquor does. Only the other day, a woman came from a neighboring town to tell her woes. She said that she returned to her home from a day’s work and found her husband in a raving state. He thrust her outdoors, knocked her down and kicked her, so that she was not able to work for a fortnight (he is a peaceable man when he is sober, she remarked). She had requested the landlord months before not to sell him liquor. She had been advised to sue the landlord for her loss of time, but she said, “I don’t want a fuss. I only want him not to sell my husband any more liquor, cider, beer or anything that makes a fiend of him.” 

Now Gentlemen this is just what we want, & we come this day to ask these two questions:

Will you give the sanction of law to the making such human homes and such human lives all over our town, as this incident gives us a glimpse? 

Or will you act for what is eternally right?