Democratic Sentinel, Volume 16, Number 10, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 25 March 1892 — Sunday Newspapers. [ARTICLE]

Sunday Newspapers.

Bbotheb Joseph Cook intimates that Sunday newspapers are published to make money. “Well,” rejoins the Boston Herald, “what is a Monday lectureship for, anyhow?” Joseph Cook complains that Sunday newspapers are published to make money. Horse and horse! That is whal the high and mighty Joseph lectures on Monday for.—Kansas City Journal. iHE Rev. Joseph Cook has enunciated the belief that Sunday papers are published to make money. He is to lecture in St. Paul in a few weeks, and there is' no intimation that he will refuse to be paid. In fact, it is suspected that he lectures to make money.—St. Paul Globe. Mb. Joseph Cook should straightway submit a bill to the General Court, making it a finable offense for a man oi woman to be seen with a Sunday newspaper in hand, with a proviso, of course, for the imprisonment of publishers and newsvenders who dare to imagine thal the Puritanic Sabbath of old church and state times long since passed into innocuous desuetude. —Boston Globe. The clergymen made quite a demonstration against the Sunday newspapers up at the State House y sterday; but the Sunday newspapers will not reciprocate in kind. On the contrary, they welcome the aid of the ministers of the gospel in the work of enlightening and regenerating mankind. The Sunday newspapers will continue to do theii share of labor in the vineyard, and they beseech the pulpit to lend its valuable co-operation as hitherto.—Boston Herald.