| Show SWEDISH LAWS AGAINST intoxication the laws against against intoxication are enforced with i great rigor in sweden whoever is seen drunk is for the first of fence sa 3 for the leond 7 for the third and fourth a still further sum and is alo alto aio deprived of the right of voting at elections and of being appointed a representative ile he is besides publicly exposed in the parish church on sunday the new york sun says if the same individual indin dual is found commit committing the sa same me offense offence a fifth time lime lie he is shut up in the house of correction and condemned to six months hard bard barbor if he lie is again azain guilty to a year years Os punishment of a similar description llon lion it if the offense offence has been committed in public such as at a fair an auction ac the fine is dod doubled bled bied and if the offender has made his appearance in church chirch the I 1 punishment is still more severe whoever is convicted of having induced another to intoxicate himself is fined 3 which sum is doubled if he the person be a minon an ecclesiastic who falls into loses his benefic benefice e if he is a layman jayman i who occupies any considerable pos this functions are suspended and peili perhaps aps dismissed I 1 I 1 drui drut drunkenness I 1 kenness v n never admitted asan as an excuse fr for i i crime crimp aal an ani 1 whoever dies when drunk is burled buried ay and deprived of prayers of the church it is forbidden to 0 o give and more explicitly to sell an any spirituous spirit ool liquors to students workmen servants apprentices or private soldiers whoever is observed drunk in the streets pr making a noise sn n a tavern is sure to be taken 0 o prison and until sober without however being exempt from the he fines one half i these fines go coto goto to the informer informers who arelener are generally police clr ciR officers cers the other half to the poor if it the he delinquent has no money he is kept until 1 some one pays for tor hm h m or he has worked out his enlargement twice a year veir these oi aidi di nances bances are read aloud from the pulpit by bv the clergy and every tavern keeper is bound under a penalty of a heavy fine to have a copy of i hem them hung I 1 of his honse house ex |