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Grappling with the Monster - The Curse and the Cure of Strong Drink by T. S. (Timothy Shay) Arthur
page 245 of 250 (98%)
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In much the larger part of Maine, in all the rural districts, in
the villages and smaller towns, the liquor traffic is absolutely
unknown; no such thing as a liquor-shop exists there, either open
or secret. The traffic lingers secretly only in the larger towns
and cities, where it leads a precarious and troubled life--only
among the lowest and vilest part of our foreign population. Nowhere
in the State is there any visible sign of this horrible trade. The
penalties of the law, as they now stand, are sufficient to
extinguish the traffic in all the small towns, and to drive it into
dens and dark corners in the larger towns. The people of Maine now
regard this trade as living, where it exists at all, only on the
misery and wretchedness of the community. They speak of it
everywhere, in the press, on the platform, and in legislative
halls, as the gigantic crime of crimes, and we mean to treat it as
such by the law.

For some years after the enactment of the law, it entered largely
into the politics of the State. Candidates were nominated by one
party or the other with reference to their proclivities for rum or
their hostility to it, and the people were determined in their
votes, one way or the other, by this consideration.

Now, the policy of prohibition, with penalties stringent enough to
be effective, has become as firmly settled in this State as that of
universal education or the vote by ballot. The Republican party, in
its annual conventions, during all these years, has affirmed,
unanimously, its "adhesion to prohibition and the vigorous
enforcement of laws to that end;" and the Democratic party, in its
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