The Intellectual Torch: Developing an Original Economical and Expeditious Plan for the Universal Dissemination of Knowledge and Virtue; by Means of Free Public Libraries. Including Essays on the Use of Distilled Spiritsauthor, J. Comstock, Printer, 1817 - 36 sider |
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Side 9
... Common Council of the city , who was the chairman of a committe , ap . pointed by the society , on public schools . He inform ed me that the committee considered the idea new and valuable , and had instructed him to introduce it in his ...
... Common Council of the city , who was the chairman of a committe , ap . pointed by the society , on public schools . He inform ed me that the committee considered the idea new and valuable , and had instructed him to introduce it in his ...
Side 14
... common sense . Therefore exert yourselves without delay , to secure the means of enlightening your understandings with in- struction . For this purpose form yourselves into socie- ties in your respective neighborhoods , and establish ...
... common sense . Therefore exert yourselves without delay , to secure the means of enlightening your understandings with in- struction . For this purpose form yourselves into socie- ties in your respective neighborhoods , and establish ...
Side 30
... common schools , and free circulating libraries , in the respective districts in which the taxes shall be , levied and collected and the duties on imported li- quors to be applied to the same purpose , in such manner and place as the ...
... common schools , and free circulating libraries , in the respective districts in which the taxes shall be , levied and collected and the duties on imported li- quors to be applied to the same purpose , in such manner and place as the ...
Side 31
... common schools , free circulating libraries ; Alms houses , Asylums and Infirmaries for the benefit of indi- gent victims of intemperance ; houses of employment ; and to such other purposes as may be found expedient . It is the more ...
... common schools , free circulating libraries ; Alms houses , Asylums and Infirmaries for the benefit of indi- gent victims of intemperance ; houses of employment ; and to such other purposes as may be found expedient . It is the more ...
Side 33
... common juice or sap of plants and trees , while gum is confined chiefly to the bark , root , or heart , and fecula and oil , to the seeds and nuts . Oil is still farther refined , containing 77.243 carbon , 13.36 hydrogen , and only ...
... common juice or sap of plants and trees , while gum is confined chiefly to the bark , root , or heart , and fecula and oil , to the seeds and nuts . Oil is still farther refined , containing 77.243 carbon , 13.36 hydrogen , and only ...
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The Intellectual Torch: Developing an Original, Economical and Expeditious ... Jesse Torrey Ingen forhåndsvisning tilgjengelig - 2018 |
The Intellectual Torch: Developing an Original Economical and Expeditious ... Jesse Torrey Ingen forhåndsvisning tilgjengelig - 2020 |
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
age of 12 alcohol amongst ance ardent spirits authorise Bacchus cents charity citizens committee Confucius Constitution Creator destroys diffusion of knowledge disease dollars dram drinking duty effects endeavors essays establishment of free evil exerted fact Fecula felicity free circulating libraries FREE LIBRARIES gill of distilled habitual hydrogen ignorance implore and request inhabitants instruction Intellectual Flambeau intemperance ISAAC BRIGGS JESSE TORREY Juvenile Society knowledge and virtue labor laws Lebanon liberty LIBRA Librarian lives Lover of Rum mankind means meeting ment mental improvement millions mind misery moral N. B. BOILEAU neighbor New-Lebanon oxygen perpetual persons POISON political despotism possession printing press promote quantity RARY USE DEC red brethren Samuel Adams SAMUEL L Seneca SIMON SNYDER slavery Socie spirituous liquors subscribed temperate tion tures tween United universal dissemination University of California vegetable vice Whence whiskey wisdom yourselves youth
Populære avsnitt
Side 6 - Promote, then, as an object of primary importance, institutions for the general diffusion of knowledge. In proportion as the structure of a government gives force to public opinion, it is essential that public opinion should be enlightened.
Side 21 - ... this whiskey is deposited, the white man who sells it, tells them to take a little drink; some of them will say 'no, I do not want it;' they go on till they come to another house, where they find more of the same kind of drink; it is there offered again; they refuse; and again the third time.
Side 14 - Take fast hold of instruction; let her not go; keep her, for she is thy life.
Side 20 - ... country. We tell them, brethren, fetch us useful things; bring goods, that will clothe us, our women, and our children ; and not this evil liquor, that destroys our reason, that destroys our health, that destroys our lives.
Side 21 - I do not want it ; they go on till they come to another house, where they find more of the same kind of drink ; it is there offered again ; they refuse ; and again the third time; but finally, the fourth or fifth time, one accepts of it, and takes a drink; and getting one, he wants another; and then a third, and fourth, till his senses have left him. After his reason comes back again to him ; when he gets up, and finds where he is, he asks for his peltry.
Side 21 - ... one accepts of it, and takes a drink; and getting one, he wants another; and then a third, and fourth, till his senses have left him. After his reason comes back again to him ; when he gets up, and finds where he is, he asks for his peltry. The answer is, 'You have drank them.' Where is my gun? 'It is gone.
Side 21 - Brothers, figure to yourselves what condition this man must be in. He has a family at home, a wife and children who stand in need of the profits of his hunting. What must be their wants, when he himself is even without a shirt ?
Side 20 - I rejoice to find that you agree in opinion with us, and express an anxiety to be, if possible, of service to us in removing this great evil out of our country ; an evil which has had so much room in it, and has destroyed so many of our lives, that it causes our young men to say, " we had better be at war with the white people, this liquor which they introduce into our country, is more to be feared than the gun and the tomahawk.
Side 21 - ... we had better be at war with the white people.' This liquor, which they introduce into our country, is more to be feared than the gun and the tomahawk. There are more of us dead, since the treaty of Greenville, than we lost by the six years war before. It is all owing to the introduction of this liquor amongst us.
Side 14 - ... and certainly it is worth the while to purchase that good which brings all others along with it. A good man is happy within himself, and independent upon fortune, kind to his friend, temperate to his enemy, religiously just, indefatigably laborious, and he discharges all duties with a constancy and congruity of actions.