"much stronger than the law," as he puts it, to which on the clipping, proper credit could not be given when the breadth of treatment, the writer not being con- What is Needed is More Law but fewer Laws. This is very closely the attitude which the "Growl- zation. portunities he has had for making observations in the (April i, 1907.) interesting phase, which has been developing for the army, and the fact that he was formerly an enemy of he attributes the general advance of temperance. He It is extremely gratifying to find a man of Gen. Cor- The anti-alcoholist movement has entered upon an In the inanity and asininity which makes up by far the letter was reproduced in the January issue. all their habits" with the course of advancing civili- the greater part of all writings on the subject of al- bin's influential position arriving at similar conclu- bition fanaticism on the other hand, but observing the "canteen." coholic drink, Gen. Corbin's paper is remarkable for er" has taken for the last two years in these columns. sions, especially when we consider the exceptional op- the working of forces of a general social character, fined, like most writers on this subject, within the nar- identifies the progress of temperance among men "in row compass of army life, on the one hand, or prohi-