Of course, the keeping open of dram-shops on Sunday where intoxicating liquors are sold is not regarded as a business of necessity, and it may be doubtful whether such business is a work of necessity on any day of the week. Under a statute forbidding the opening of any tippling house or place on Sunday, it is not necessary that the house should be kept open in all respects, its doors and windows open as on week days, to complete the offense.104 If the proprietor of a saloon or dram-shop enters his place of business on Sunday and permits or invites others to go in and drink intoxicating liquors while there, he breaks the law.105 Restaurants or other places connected with a bar-room in which intoxicating liquors are served, are regarded as a part of the bar-room and are within the terms of the Sunday law.106 Social clubs furnishing intoxicating liquors on Sunday to its members to be drank on the premises where sold is a violation of the Sunday law.107

97 Hughes' Cr. Law, Sec. 1350;

Com. vs. Waldman, 140 Pa. St., 89; Com. vs. Dextra, 143 Mass., 28; Ungericht vs. State, 119 Ind., 379; See People vs. State, 149 N. Y., 195; State vs. Grauneman, 132 Mo., 326.

98 Eden vs. People, 161 Ill., 309;

Hughes' Cr. Law, Sec, 1352.

99 Reg. vs. Howarth, 33 U. C. Q. B., 537.

100 Com. vs. Goldsmith, 176 Mass., 104; Hughes' Cr. Law, Sec. 1353.

101 Wilkinson vs. State, 59 Ind., 416;

Mueller vs. State, 76 Ind., 310; Com. vs. Moore, 145 Mass., 244.

102 State vs. Jacques, 69 N. H., 220.

103 Com. vs. Matthews, 152 Pa. St., 166.