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'SUNDAY BEE. ING,JULY 6, g ~] i = ©, S > L > - EEN PAGES. NUMBER 18, i 1 1800-SIX'1 % § e e IS LSS — it is a® shame on_ him In e NTTNT | last drop of it thestate of Nebraska would | houseon this lot. And I have been reading | any instrament except the drum or Jews | about Omahia are these: During the vear | fowa to hear from. Now they (0% ou they | PpAI Y v 4 ;\ rL < BI:(]U\ not have lost oue fotaof her actual value, | Tie Owuix BEe, and absorbed Mr. Rose- | harp.’” 1850 tha Omann police mads. %o nrreata; | avo woing 10 do great. thines fok & wracies | IROUBLE IN THE BALKANS, Js AV | [Applause]. water's personal liborty ideas, and softly all | “The magistrate only shall join them in | of these 710 were persons furnished with tem- | I think they ome with the ares 1o A Gt Those engage 1 in the business might suffer | topics at once, and I say, “this is a strange fago, as they o it” with las scandal to lodgings in the station house, whero | the wrong market the wares that, ar P foancial loss, but the total real vales of tho | proceeding” aud T tallc 'about the Fourtlhy of | C risv's chiurch. i ? | had sought shelter, which leay poddiing hore ure ot necdud by eommonwealth would sufferno dec: by | July, and o pluribus unum, and the blood o “Married persons must live together or be s for violation of stite Vo have already got an 1y, foatl dlcal O {n 4% Opentuz of the Great, Brohibition-High Li | tho indanineons. deduction "of tho entive | oue fhrefaihers, and tho stars and ateipes, | tmprisoned n full " (4 voics: ha's | instead of 0 houses of assignation, and Ji | moral, well | belhaseaama i | Indications of & Radioal Change ia the 3 o | product of brewery and distillery. — But this | and the personal liberty of the individual | wood, that's good, first mite."—Laughter and | repute, as charged by the defumers of Omuaba, | commonwealth — and = w T o Pu]'ry of Gp]')“““y. cense Debats at Beatrice traffic, while posstssing no power toereate | citizen, and I say, “things have come to a | applause.] 2 the number of such known to police i3 | hibition in sixty odd cities and towns his wealth, i possessed of a vast_power to ab- | pretty pass if on miy own real cstato T ennnot | 1If wll the married persons had to liv to- | thirty-six, and nearly all of them are liolated | stato toduy, and I will beable to_numt thom e —_— sorb wealth huild any sort of @ house I please.” gother or be imprisoned in jail a great many | in_a separate distric for you next Monday if not sooner, |[Ap. e \ OUNDS THRONGED, | . IU3%n feultul source of poverty, iwives | "Bub T rave s long s 1 will tall | porsons whonow teavl thwngh this stato | Now” thero are asa matter of fact fn tho | plause ] Ve have a stato of facts with lih | THE CLAIMS OF BULGARIA AND RUSSIAM THE CHAUTAUQUA GROUNDS | emplogment, it is true, to o consideruble [ as loudly a8 I care to, I run | and preach prohibition would now boin juil. | city of Omaha 248 liquor dealers at th s time. | license that can notbe paralieled anywhere . number of men, but he who is not profitably | right up hird againsta prohibition that within | [Laughter and applause.] Of that numbe are saloons. The others | under prohibition ! cmployed, and whose labor pr the fire lini agreat oty o frane Wuild- | - Now [ submit irhathat or not, tndividunl | are hotels, wholesao doalers and restaurants, | My fricn here hus said thero is ot nsinl | A Promise Made ofan Early Solution t < Tho: sople L tontivel o | ful 1t i expendin, ing shall be ¢ ] Applaase] iberty has not been broas A since the era | o ar’ as llcensing A he to | man of the high license adve has | 3 “ i i 8ix Thowand People Litton Attantivdly 10 | profiliess tasle, nd Now, when my friends taik, s of the blue laws of the Puritins, But right | sell liquor is concerned, Omaha hus done | over gone and m pmplat to enforee of tie Matter (n Havminy 3 the Opposing Champious, to expend-—had I that amount | likely willabout prohibition interf here let me remark that | am amazed at | nothing more than has heen dono the eity | high license, Isay that 1w one of thos With the Teeaty of L of money —one million dollars in reaving some | the vate rights of the individual eitizen, | the statement of my predecossor that prohi hotel is now owned by | men that did do this. When high licenso Lerli vast mound upon your western prairies, I | they will not be discussing th ; mowe hi\ivy-n does m;xln-im-n Ll» }1..- indiv |1 o [y]x‘n-u]--rfl of the ' United S 0 first ‘imr.m..w in Nebraska it i e might be payingout the m in wages to | ave here to exwmine, Prohibition or the saving of the individual - that itsimply 0s of “shame. | resisted by the saloonkeepers, by the — THEY CHEER THE ANTLLICENSE MEN. | iy ianorces to: thnsmstors. to mechanies to | contomplate the individunl drinking man, | swoeps across the horizen, so speak, of the ‘ say “Slame on him." [A ve Hratware and by tho Yam Howver, 4a miy Siend an artificial mountain several thousand | prohibition does not propose to interfe i ") o with | entire state and imposes Denaltics upon those | the private y citizen. It who dare to dealor trafilc in intoxicants. | what civilized nation or yeana flst n, pro- | broad, comprehensive, statesmanlike view of | Lord MacCauley once Wrote that the Pur class notel exist without some lquor being )eents | the situation. tans were not o much opposed o bear bait- | furnished for its gu [ Hisses.] Seloon Regalation, for the privilego of uat tificial | Prohibition says the saloon isa bad thing; | ing, on nccount of the torture and pain that | No first class hotel without wines and mound, but if I did not the | prohib vs the snloon ¢ v gave to the bear, but on account of the | liquors exists in any on the face of the welfare of my fellosw men, if Ldid not fur- | prohibition says the saloon pletsur It gwe o the lookorson. | klobe outside, possibis, of Constun nople, wish innocent. recreation to the people—but, | ues: prohibition says the And with cqual maligmty, so to spe and I doobt very much if Constantinoplo A QUESTION OF PUBLIC POLICY. | ¢i'the contrary, overy one hundreth man who | people, terrorizes the politic theso people who are now can ever had o flest-class hotel, but you hiss and sedded my nrtificial mountain fell down and | nesses, buys 1 ur ing on this orusade all o malke yourselves appear only ridicilous when is pleased to \istors of Ne- | (Copuriont 1890 by the New York bt Lendorsed it Woman's Chras | BBILIN, July 5. —The s tiun Temperance anion endorsed it | of an imponding storm in the Balkans, The pd them andattendod the ministen) | situation s so grave that tho holiday vicas b the oo g | tious of leading ofteials of the forvign oftice Ty wid ut (o tik of my | Move been stoppod. A momentous chunge i at that time, [Applause.] . | appears to haveoceurred in Germany's policy 1 of pursuing the Al it, and s I 1 foet. in height. Hisses and Gronus for the Advecatesof Liquor | L might Y8, sevantly SHEos vided the people would pay complaint st the Omaha | in the Bulkans, Iust I made cc It against o man the saloos ipla b semi-neutral policy of Prine isi broke Svory five hundredth man in his | down what the best forces of moderm zae | this ® great many of | I tell you the fact that [ wis down in Mount e name of Hornborger, beeause he kepta | 4, mbueuteal yollay of Peince Blamarchy Prof. Dickey Outlines the Case ard I8 | headlong tumble broke his neck -then T ask, | tion would build up: prohibition says, and | them very much put _out when 1on seven o eighit years ago, the place | gambling place, and I made complaint ugainst | 1S emperor has dircted Hore Radowitz to has my £1,00,000, although giving ploy- | proposes to say it here in Nebr a, that the | th enjoying a social glass of | which was the home and residence of George | o man by th name of Richard Curry, and | take the fnitiative in advising the porte how Followed by Mr. Rosewater An- ment to a large number of laboring nmi. has | sal lwll:u‘hl ‘w umh;u:‘ 1..1:1.1.“ -I $ \\]uu. They are \l much put out when \\.‘ shington, and there I saw decante two of those three licenses were refused by | to mect the contending claims of Bulearia that money been profitably expended and | ot the banishment of thesaloon theindivi they tind people having recreation. They | which rum was had, the big jugs inw the board. The other was eventually d Russis structed through Cha L 1 conthibuted th the financial wellare of | drinker shall suffersome curtailment. of h It to bo likb those old-Purit s : [ G g OTRL O wi he must expectthis and “tall flosh is grass, and all sity of the case and circum- | tortured women and burnt them at the ymeunt to labor, yet | stance—an incident and not the objective [ drove men out becas 18 Who ¢ nd on to who vis- Times are wine was had and_in whic were served by George Wi friends and guests and to st ited Mount Veruon, [A voic win hin neellon granted. ap tndowit sromised the porte | B, 0 bieh liconse of 1881 and | COPYIVL Rudowitz lus promised the porte cn o | carly solution of the Bulgarian trouble in me | harmony with the Berlin treaty and also people! And you tell me no. former right Andso Lufivm ihat, while the brewers and | it as the n distillers may wive self Against € harges. is not the high licex v, In 1881, when high license e . N {al Telogram | 1 they produce a of " real | voiut. with them _in thelr religious v cbraska, Omaia tad o fraction over | that an endeavor will bo made to mee Brarnicr, Neb., July5.—(Special Telegram | (% BEC LT ChoN he in- | 'Iho object is the supprossion of the saloon | und pillovied men for doing things | Ho was president of the United sdrod siloons, with: & popnlation’ of | Rassian swar. thdenintty.. Bho. oetsers to T 1 vory seat irthe Chautauqua | yoecywants of the peopie, labor as | system because tho saloon system is tho | that today would be ednsidered honorable; | States and probably just as ool as Today she hus e R I shesis ab ey g el taberuac s occupied hour before the | woll as the raw material is | enemy of the commonwealth's best welfar and I am equally pained $0 sce that my prede- | any man in this house, We have here, it including breweries, wholesalg | Scheme of settlement, according to the ace at d on p i versus high | uterly and forover wasted from the stand- | [Applause] Well, [ heard au the other | cessor lis the audicity, 16 to spoal to re- | secms, a now dvilition. W have arvivyl vetail - dealers, Dotds and | ceptedreport in diplomatic circles, fuvolves e b and folly six thousand people | point of the econouist, Nay, more. This | duy o the cars objct to prohibition because | floct upon n man who had sived morc iudi- | at a stage of morals that aroso exalted wnd <o | rants, und we havé now apopulation | the displacing of Prince ore e e trafiic robs labor both of its justrewards and | he'said you cannot make people good by law, | viduals from the degradation of drunkenness | good that even George Washington dinand and tho substitution ot v listenedto it with rapt attention, of its faie opportunities. s sorely tempted to remind that s and the miser intemporance, | pears to be a very common sinner and | 1 defy any man toname a ¢ L prohi majority were rank prohibitionists I haye ntly s one n that 1o my pe | nowhat cavefully g sonal knowledge he | from the g g which Prince Karl of Sweden as the ruler of o wme Abraham | tion state vory great criminall 1 p hat has a bettel ord for law eral hundred of them had been im fnto tho statistical cos of the o zood and sober for the ficst time in | vies men into dems of infamy | Lincoln would have appeared iw thesame | and order, anda better for enforeing | Bulzaria in bis stead, and also the arvange. Kansas and the surroundi 1 find that the unt of fixed capi s by being placed in the clutehes of | and into jails than all the prohibitionists that | light. -4 Sunday 1s than_ Omalu had for the | mentof the Russian indemnity by capitalize phusize ss much us possible that protibition | ot stands bel e waze worker, and | the Taw and locked upin the Bangor jail. | have ever trod on the sil of Nebraska And that God-man, Josus Christ, came in | Pasttwo years, We have had a geeat st ing the amount throngh the international husize o u 0 it gives profitible omploymont to one manin | [Applause,] [Applause.] this world and he came eating bread and | gle in enforcing high 1'enso becausen 1ow | council of administration which now controls was in the ascendant, the drinic traftic, that same capital, ifiny “Hois going to lecture somewhere tomorrow | That man perhaps did go through the | drinking wine, fermented wine, and not | license was x the favorite thing with | o muekiske 1 iRt e Everyinch of the platform was occupied, | in the manufacture of lumber or constraction | night. [Applause.] Not that it would not | agonies of the same craving, pechiups he did | unformented wine. He cane into this | the saloonkecpor, a an cxample T wil ) kisk loans, The lome sceims ta ‘ andin the front Helen M. Gougarsought the | of furnitur or building of frame »a very greatmisfortune if we were tomalke | suffer and was arrvested down in Bavgor, | world and attended the marviage feast at | cite you the diff between Omaha | have received an impetus from Emperor prominence which sho alwa: s crayes. and | houses and in ~wood work generally, ple good by law, laudable though such an | Me, but why ~has not this —man | and there partieipated with his apos- [ and “some of of the | William's conference with Prince Oscar ab Kei % A RS the swme capital would give profitablé | eifortmight be. but it is to make the condi- | Mr. Dickie, referred to another man who has ey took wine —the wite of joy —the | country that pass for Tho city | Christlana, Though the finacial pros bl e greeted with cheers | S0 ORI and one-half men if in- | tions favorable to gooduess. Asthegreat | published a book knowih us *‘Fifteen Years | same wind of joy that is drank in every Jow Nleveland, in the heart of the weste which she acknowledged with an actress-like s vested in the manufa courtesy. Rev. Sam Small, who was belated | to f o failure to mal: stureof boots and shoes; | Bnglish statesman, Gladstone said: n the miningof coal and iron | the duty of thes al would | possibl tis | in Hell and who is now upheld b, o to muko itns hard ns | hibitiotlsts of Nebraskn(? (M My the | posal has not been formally commuy from which probably a very large por- P ormally nmay Mur s ceiage and has been fo e thousand Ao P Ean sh mar and ha n for three thousand of my audience ‘hails, @ city that | ‘ated to Russia, it is already reported and the other day when the grand | contag men if railioad connections, | and in the iron indu gon to do wrong and as casy as possible | rising in the aisle: ancis of Masons came' to Omaha to liy the | has — been the home of fiell | that De Giers, Russiun, prime minister, has wis received with enthusiasm, My, Rose- | give profitable employment to four and th to doright.”” [Applause.] Murphy, and the statenient that Mr. Dickie one of the city hall they poured upon | and ~ some of ablest 1 bost | reserved an intimation of their nature, with fourths men; and grouping all the indust . Now in the two or three minutes still left | made about me is absolutely false,” [Ap- ,we find | me ©desire to present one water and Mr. Webster were accordedn that stone corn, oil and wine~the corn of | men this produced-—the ¢ity | an exprossion that, th 2 bH 4 ¢ were not satisfactory v Kknown to our people into one N tom of statistical olenty, the ofl 0f peace and the wine of joy, | of Clevel ling to the report Tl & r e somewhat cold reception, thers being an | thit the same capitai that gives employment | information. 1 had occasion this morning to o Lttt SRR W holhia by s | e PO oS e e oL 1Y 16 Tioro 1 iy possrssion, s vor | © Russia, o stating that Russiadid vob evident, disposition on the partof the pro- | to one man in the dritl trafic would on the | look over some g fully prepared statistics | own confession in his own book d¢ alue under i 50,000, want to be concerned in rearranging the Purkish debt and proforred to hold the ports 'd that | ever been still preaching prohibition be- | Hu. 3 v will | 1800 saloons with a population of marked difre G ntto about four and | showing the incr rohibi- o give cmployn hibitionists to mauifest dissent v unfaiv in- | aver: ¢ O ugh the what ons that a o 1880 ® TS Nird men inthe honest industries car- | tion in the state of Kansas ascompared with drunks—that time und time | without the wine being pliced side by side Omiahn. and. Gleveland: dircctly to its SERBHEY H1s. FMpoiks qu. sy ll|~.m&|uu|‘uu'\1\' ‘:l.\ groauife. 1o by our people their increase under high license in the state afier wrestling with all his | \with *he oil. ¥ A s T AT e s Hea s I mong the audicnce i the back end wa ! 1and from the | of Neoraska, and I found this to be true: king the sworn statement of the So I say, from the indust nomic standpoint, we bel means that Russia will not let o her grip on and main to keep sobor in i ks i Turkey’s neck given by the war debt. L have we | population of Omaha and nearly seven times Fri tory of tho | the number of saloons. And then Hartford, X L 1 Ncw the question simply in Maine, in New Hampshire and in | reacl ed. that stago in it ieis Murphy and when Mr., Rosew ¢in the prac- n the course of his spoech, stavted to defend 1l and the complete logal prohibition of the | state’s “uuditors ~in both _cases, that to almost, probibitory and high | world where e ¢ better than | Conn, right in the heart of New A general explosion in the Balkans may oc- in the cour iis speech, started to def I il i 5 3 i | world whe men - ar 3 him aguinst the aspersions cast uponby him | drink trafle. [Applause] 1 cannot take | the state of —Kansss, — durlng =nine that every little while, when he bad [ the law giver who o the ten | land, in the center of an intelligent cur before the pow ave time to consider by Prof. Dickie, who changed that Murphy | me to spealc from the social and tho moral ats of prohibition, has in :d her \t craving, a eraving that is nothing | commandments from Mount Sinai and did | enlightened lo, and the capi Emperor Williun's proposal, Grecco and oy L Dickie, who charged that Murphy | @0nsint “ hese propositions may be dis- | assessed valution 15,000,000 more than ss than an imherited discase, he | not include. the. eloventh commandment: | the state—the capital of the state of Con- | Servia havo added to tho weneral imbroglio b had been recontly incarcerated ina Bangor | oussed later, Now, what are some of theob- | thetotal valuation of the stute of Nebraska. grace, repented and resumed his | “Phou shalt not drink fermented wine,” \SEEnAE Has oons today, five more [ petvi e tide haganerlimbrogliohy, Jail for drunkeness, Mr. Murply croated jections. They are'quite numerous, [Applause. | work. Are wo any better than Christ, who came | siloons than the city of Omaha.' The popn- | C4Ch presentiug notes to the porte to the big sensation by risingin his s and indig- I had thought that the old ¢ 15 dono s the chavge as uttery | liberty, as raised against the p ;.I,I.Iu“l, denouncing tho chargo as uttery | Hhorty, ws nusal agdinst oy f personal Tfind that the state of Kansas has in- 1 honor him for that because I honor every ohibitlon idea | creased her assessed valuation during the | wan who seeks to be a man and uplift_other vernow and | nine years of prohibition at the rate of 1 tothe levelof mawhood. They do then some antiqratian—soraetimes & Rip | £20,000,000 a year, Twant you to hear it— to save the individual, they ~say Each speaker was given forty minutes | Van Winkle -in the journalistic field | Kunsas increasing her values §20,000,000 | dividuals o motbing. What ~ say time and the chairman, L. W. Davidson, | who has been so unwise as to | every year, and I find according to thesame | you, ministers of Nebraska, on that! |, woman at the table is provided | of iiguor we all admit. We know th found it ned al thmes to reprove | readhis own newspaper until he belleves the | report_that the state of Nebraskahas in- | You ai red in every church in this land | with four cups of wine at the pussover | We know that men have made be $ho oudisnce for manitesting dlscoumeay to. | Wing it contalns. [Applausa] . Ho will | oressod her fotal valuation 89,000,000 per | tr to suve the indiwidual, trying to vuise | feast. ~ You scom to think that this | themsel we know that men SRR e L come forward witha proposition, as they | year, sothat Kansas, under prohibition, has | him and bring him to tHe path of virtue, the | iy g great sin, and what right have you to de their graves; and the ntiprobibitionists.cHe exhorted them to | gomiciimes do in Nebraska, in the newspapers | incrcased her values' $1L,000,000 per annum | path of righteousness agd the path of Chris- | fine'sins What right have you to f Is of thousands' of peojle | prorrit 10 €% th & treat all the debaters, no matter what their | that prohibition is an unwarrmnted invasion | moro rapidly than the inerease of values in | tanity. Yo are la diveetly with the | what Christ himself has tolevited a hed. fla sration, Colonel and at the list supper t tha oncession to Bul require similar concessions Sorvian nationals, The S “laves that the absence of law and or in sedonin exposes Servians to continuous outrage and demands instant remedy. An uprising in Bulgaria is Hkely at any moment to give the sign L general cons colaetf, Major Panitza's artook of wine, the | lation of Havtford, Conn., is 53,000, ag paschal wine, which was used in those days by | 132,000 for Omaha, What is the use the Jews and had been for thousands of uded ! s before he came, and is used at this day I'he distressing pictures that were shown orthodox Jewish table? wan | to you of the suffering and misery evian note also that hund HOVC “iows, with fairnes of the personal rights of the individual citi- .\"I'm‘ own state under high license. [Ap- imtl_ it hepe isthe line of demar- | ho has not prohibited? It has been stated “The question is, how will you relieve them, | bother-in-law, who is among the most popu- . b : fasiels, : % cation. at prohibition proposes o hat is the bost remedy vrouoting tem’ | lav oficers in the Bulgarian army, is in Gredtorodit 48 Avo Him! forhis fiststing | 1604 L s e ALIORL L, N i z here that prohibition proposes to rveach | W g , 18 e P m“"““w; 1 unswer, prohibition invades personal I shall later on have considerable more to rue temperance doeg mot mean prohibi- | out and curtail the ileges of the [ perance and Suppose you | Macedonis watehing fora chance to start a libexty only as all civilization invaded per- | S8y along this line, but [ simply pause here to | tion, true temperance means the dealing with | individual for that the debats would | tinued Mond v how W busi luci lividual man or Al th D e R e e R e 1t the debita would be continued Monday | (¢ (ko iati ooy ‘i argue how can business ~ producing no dividual man ni . he pr it has been cited that the diseased meat | you had tricd some particular remedy and & . They morning rom® 610" m, Lat 2 f.,"\'\","t'fb,‘ v probibition interfaros with the | valuble product add to - the values | fossional prohibition ggitors who make a | found in the butehor shop is taken away by | had tricd it for o number of years and found | M. Stambulof, the prime minister, who is 04 p. ., b samo dd boing | B proirteds from shvasery 1o clvilization lops | Of the statet How can u trafie contributing | living out of i’ smnot name me | the police and confiscated. it entirely worthless, would you insist upon | now virtual dictator of Bulgaria, relics upon ~ allowed thirty minutes und the debate to con- | off the individual vights of tho isolated man. to the perpetuation of pauperism, of crime, of | a single man C ol womsn that Iwant to know whather they are going to | W and koop on trying it when | his brother-in-law, Colonel Montkoaroff, who Bt 8 nxd th 2 W persomal liborty, as a great disease, the threatening of human life and | they have nv:z jor sought to | prohibit the sale of meat because there | YOu kuew thatit was worthless ¢ holds tho ehief command in the avmy, to p. tiuue in rotation from beginning to end. many of our Teutonle friends_ tall, of a vast multitude of your popu- | save. T,weg&yuou‘ Wi women ave march- some meat that is discased? | Laughter Why, the effect of prohibition in the states | oo R i a Shban ot sind ARGUMENT OF CUAURMAN DICKIE, about it, exists Howhore ontside of complete can_ such & business, that con- | ing the streets of Cnicago every day i want | Ave they going to have us back in the eivil- | Where * it has ~ boen trodtced, —go [ Venban updsing. Tholetter of Princa Al Samuel Dickie, boing infroluced by the | savugery, and 1 trnst that no man will stand s its entire trafiic on the cconomic princi- | of bread, selling their bolies, and nobody in | jzation of the Astutic counteles, in which meat, | far as the suppression of the liquor trafiic s | ander of Battenberg to Muajor Panitzy's chinivmas, spoke 18 follows! St Al prowounce My doctiine an uy- | Pleof getting somothing for nothing —how | the prohibition erowd raises is little finer | is entirely disused and where the pun concerned, is no greater than if you were to | widow, offering to adopt her child, hus added Toransae nootHio. can that business add to the total values of | orseeks to ve them from an untimely grave 1 Here Todhy to confoss that, fn a | the peopie of the stated And youanswer me, | and from a Mr. Chaivman, ladics and gentlemen: The | Ameri soulation of 400,000,000 live o takoone of the porous pluste that uee ad- | fipe to the discontent with the present ree A R But L« e i shonoraple, shameful life. [Ap- stables! Assuredly not " | vertised i the newspapers so extensively | pime. cav aslogati BT, tine at my command s limited and Tan | SEESEIE RS S N doesin- | it 3% impossible. plause and cries of “Thit’s s0.] | "o havo heen told that very poisonous | aud pastelt across the soles of your oots, | St A Bulkariin delesation artived ab waste none of it. We arenot here for ordi- | Vude the realm of tho complete personal lib- | Well, sometimes these gentlemen on the | Now we ure here today to discuss this | Jiquors are being sold by saloon men and esth yesterduy. They are going to hold a nary speech making but for the discussionof | erty of the individual ¢ n. But,us Guizot | other side are disposed to tell us that prohi- : Hus prohibition, after due trial | thereby the health of the find with Prince Alexander { . i v | bition doe trial in the different st lual is being THE KING tos where | yndermined. Grant it. But wheve has the % =it about a | prohibitionist ever raised his wvoice conference NHASKS. =~ Haone The period of the state of sie, Brilliant Ball at the Ogden Carnival | Leipsic on Tuesd nds with Royal Ce large number of so Utah, July 5—[Specia are returning and t and cvent of disturbed by the police. Herr Licbknecht plondia mns will come to Bevlin in the autumn He has Thitteen thousand people were scated i the | NOW became the sule contor of the revolutions Colisewm, and 200 masked dancers, in an in- | 85y party. The Froisinigo Zeitung asscrte a great question of publi policy. I shall | tells us in his Jadmirable work on the histo not prohibit, that it is nowhere simply outline the case, reserving fora later | 0f civilization, “Cavili ation # charcterized | putinto practical effect. T have no time at n enacted, actually bi iatl by no one thing more clear by the sent (o canvass that question at length. I | better state of morals; has“it decreased the | or introduced a single bill, or sought hour statistical information and testimony | Giuntar ion of the liberties of the re to call your attention to two ch: er- [ amount of drunkenness or the quan- | tg introduce one, to prohibit the adulteration from compotent. part Istand here to de- | individual citizen thut he may enjoy istics surrounding that proposition. Who | tity of liquor consumed; has it | of Jiquors, just as he wants to prohivit and fond the position of legal prohibition of the [ thing richer and better than civil libe; s the statement. Whoailirms that pro- | decreased crime; has it omptied the jails; | should prohibit the introduction of discased drink trafie, organized society.” lxin:lxu.ulnus\nut. prohibit? Peter Tler say: ;nm‘qi has “1‘ rlflul'!l’x)hrlnmml';\lxwfpr meat, ! T have very littie patience and but small re- | prohibition does not. prohibit, but Poter Tler | has it raised up the lowly aud those w P e e Ibelieve the suloon ousght to be prohivited | ¢ WS 9 Grxamont o prohibition | Spends his money y to see that prohi- | quent the dives and dens where the worst irl\li::‘lvgi-u“"d Daitd @ he o in Omaha—-and becauso the saloon, standing us the repre- | based upon the cry of personal lib Why, | bition does not have a chance to prove a fail- | liquor is sold. e apso DA expired in Horr Lichkaecht and a lists who were expelled King part in the fetes une sentative of the whole traffie, possesses no | you and I may suffer cartuilment of our y ure in Nebraska. [Applause. ] Before we get through I will submit | §i00,000 check, not in the least {laughter] [ finite vas of brilliant costumes, whirled | that Xmperor William, ¢ his joure ‘» power to add to the people's wealth, but rep- | Vaterights and huve our personal liberties The national liquor dealers, through | to the candid and fair judginent whether he gets paid or not is another | in the waltz. It had a suggzestion of the mag- | ey from Berlin - to Kiel on the v. It is within theharmony | the publieations of their housc | of every man and woman here that 1 shall | [Loud ' luughter.) He 5 | mificence of the ancient Coliseum at Rome, | bight of June 24, had along interview with " i 3 of the personal liberty of the individual un- | at Louisville, Ky., are telling the peoplo that | prove beyond a peradventure of a doubt what | that if he wants to build that fou 2 )‘ i1 | Prince Bismarck at Schwarzenbach, the stae wealthof the nation, [ stand here todeclire | rogtmined by sociil cousiderations to go | prohibition does not prohibit, but they raised | prohibition has utterly failed to do building in Omsha ho will L e e e S i a0 —and will produce, before we ave through | about the stréets of Beat 4 la Adam be- | 150,000 to to it that prohibition in Ohio | pared on the basis of the state of N sk, to take out a permit. Well, that IS was the clin fon before reaching Frederichsrube. The with this discussion, satisfactory evi- | fore the fall, but let auy man undertuke to do | did not have a chauce to prove a dismal fail- [ And Iam here today, not only upholding the arenot going 1o enact: b law progran statement is doubtful. rosents a vast absorbing power to destroy the | nvaded « interest iu the cat ; ret! ; lo | did ; JHOH onlyipholding th true, but we are n ;40,800 W | couple and thew vetinue were eV TR R R w dence ~that the drink trafle in the | thatsortof thing and "he finds out at once | ure. law which has been in force since 1881, | prohibiting him from owuing propo dndl sy SR X et e e German students’ elub at Pragu ™ State of Nebraskn, from the commencement | that the proprictics and the decencies of | hey are sending out documents from that [ ot only upholding the right of our people to . The permit is simply a regulatic ;.','l:,'.}'.,(l oyalty o | subseribed 1,000 murks to the Bisnarck h modern cvilizition have preser as to [ same publication house telling you on oue | continue inwell doing, but [am herc in the a license measure for the construction | fue. R i o i memorial fund. The local polico ordo of the process of manufacture down to the | whata mun shall wear, and especially as o | and the same page two remarkable thin; uume of Nebraska to uphold her against the | o'y iigings, and we say he could not build dignrienos andly LTIl foris i clubl aiskslved e point of final consumption, has never added | what he shall not wear. [Appliuse Piret, thit Tows Is cursed with vacant bufld. | slanderors and dofamerstwho havo all over | B, 500k S8 Mo N Holse iy Omaha if hodid | fog, Stopped forward anc was unmiskodj) the cub dissolvad uiliss tho members cans one dollar and never contributed one dimo to Why, wo are told by these gent wen, they | 1,0 w g cas Major J. Henry of Now fiave boon driven out, | this land circulated — falsehoods con- iere the suloons ) cellod their subscriptions 4 ) s . ol ods con- | y5ve §100,000, for the reason that a_four sto N aa T RaraE s h e A (G AT ALL b the ngrgrogato values of this great common- | HFEUD their hands i holy horrorand they | and secondly, that thero is more liquorin thd | corning - our = depravity, = concerning | \wooden hiouse would not be allowed under our i Uhes peraon then skl was |, Prineess Dolgorouki has roturned to St. onlth AT askus if we propose to legislate as to what | state of lowa than there ever was before, [ OUF immoralit oon OUr | pegulations. Four story frame houses can | or e e TR e ek 1 Potersburg through Berlin, under permission O LA rpliisa ) 3 b | men shallcat ind it thos shall drinle, wd | {Appiause. | Toverty and convorning gur gonoral cussid- | FOHUIBtONS. Mour suny it Uouses cab | of the company. Hho qusen rove to bo Miss' | SCIRSPUE BONEN Beri wator borisslen ave tha zentleme: 0 |'w e zear, Wel aireotly o iy rhter, 0 ierv jedy, recently o 1508 e czar, She has petitioned the ¢ L mware” that the gt spon the | wane they shall woar.” Wel, ot diveely Andoubtedly tho man who wroto that | 1068: (Loud laughtor.] ] of this discussion may p t to ome farmer five i uto your o out of Beatrice y on Monday morning and he s i me not want to burn up anybody ali But the fact is potent that the building Jeautiful blonde. _ She was re- fine | Lam hero today, also, to defend the fame 2t anpliise; appont hor son, the ezar's half brother, as of Omaha. [Luughter.] I want to say to circular had been practicing his own doct before he sat down to the de en | comes wealtly browers, to men who have g d with 1 b th 5 oicer inthe guards. The czurhas ore 3 e ; I b k and was pr ! i sermit is a license and license is regulation. i el a5 4 Y J enormously rieh i the manufacture of stronge | SORSUILS A0 atfomey, Ho savs 4 had an | thoroushly muddled in the upperstory. Let | Ui audiones, and in the prossuce of the por. let me come to the main_question, is the Rex at S altLake dered the prince to join as u private. E drink, and they may undertalce to deduce the | said . he, s - theve . anythijg that | 106 eMrm—I know affirmation is no'proof— | S WIC VD FIEHERG. LN M et | condition of Nebrasica what it has een, de- M. Ernest Henderson and his wife and ine butin my haste, in my last minutelet me | ey hav ¢ affirm that prohibition in prohibition states | have misquoted the police vecord ny own fam- | (and I will prove it before I am done) is | have misquoted the fucts re In the affairs of the | itror enforced than high license in the state | 0f liquors that they huve misquoted the e Dictod by mmy friond from Michigan, As @ | . DALT Lixe, Util, July foctal icle; Biofossor of astronomy. he the habit | €ram to Tik Bre]—King Rex and retinve of looking at things at some and he | established the Order of Neptune in - Zion to argument that because A, B and C have | stands inmy way of dressing that diseased rown wealthy in the drink trafle, the trat,e | animal and using it for food in my own fan s wealth producing, but the man’ who woes | ily,"and the man, fant davghtor sailed from Bremen for York on \ 5 that they to the salo m- W lnesday. Before leaving Court listanc i ! e MO | Chapluiu Frommel baptized theie daughter, v Koes N 4 . g i th secs things on the planets Mars and Jupiter Their headquirters ave at Garfield > tonigzht and brenks into a bans of the city of .+ tells- him, *No, sir, butasa friend T { F N ke - [Apblatae ] - LA voiee, We | inal statistics, and that they have purposely | 506 LIS O the Dlatets Mol X hele: headqy are at I it ihtar Bheiis Aed s fa wosh Witntescs Buntrico dnd carrios uway $100000, if ho os- | would not advise you to dolt, but s mater | fenow it o bogee ] gy, voleet We | Lli1ea Ui poople, not only fn this stato, but B ot el bsree duDDIRkERERREUO R IR ibenihy STV SRR ot L bvindied BHLIAE CLm TR bt capes the offfcers of e Ly, may bewealthy | of law you have “a perfect vight todoso.” | % 01 ST S in other states: thoy insinuate that Omaba is X % g estimated that 20,000 strange 1 ! vers of 4 yealihyr|loS1ay you o fa boriooh BRI 6080 e s smgle restrictive feature of | 11 O o R i 3 351 He sees n great deal plainer away off | were'in the city today d i due to the altered aspect of fors o ettt one e | marketd +No,” says the lawyer, “we have | ot violited continually right iu the city of | Lol dG lope, - T o o8 to the things of this wo DUTY ON AWERICIN CORN. wonhauscn and thenee o Gastein, where £h it nraluhol ‘an mealihe Tha sio [a prohibitory statute in the state of Ne. | Omaha, that —paradise, that inodel city, a0 I, 4 § and comes in contact with them, What have {appiause] that most reputable abode where | For instance, every citizen of Nebrus ful L b t th i f dis 1 t. wein Nebraska? Have wea very large pop- | The F n TR 1ts Hand Count, Kulnoky, the Austro-Hungary prime cessful pickpocket may acquire vast posses- | braska against the selling of discased meat. | LAPPlauso] thit most b > abod: 3 3 oYy galisen o o braski o We i Vvery 1arge pop o Gy o [ SOLGSER R st Huny slons, bit nolthor tho burglar, the gamblor But,” sa) poscd sellor, “I willad- | 80 large & percentago of her people aro | BUELL 0, fak . solggpEdo tn W ulation of pauperst Huve we a very larc Ahisstare Saonse inister, will also recruit s health, Afiey P the pickpocket is engaged in o wealth | vertise itas'such; the purchaser biy:ic) |-ARRUAY BECOIREL - 3 in - this state twenty-seven years, I | Population of drunkards? Have > B i T L v o cove hicn ploducing industry. In every one of these | With full knowledsze of the fac o, the | Liguor is sold there on Sunday, tquor i | 100 holed build this state, 1 have dono my | Population of criminalst Huve they in the says, Bismar reichstag, If he is driven to oppose the government he would prefer to represent a national-liberal Al holidays, liquor is_sold to A ; State of Maine or in the state of Towa or | band plainly i regard to American ques i ) shave ty-seven years to increase our old tomen in the habit of | Shavein twen ted, Adulterated drinks | PoPulation [loud laughtor] and that ivis a in the state of Kansas—have they in these | tions. Afteralong debate it voted in favor cases that [ have reforred to by way of il- | lawyer tells him, “the knowledge and consent | 80ld there on I lustration the party takes the mouey from | of the purchaser in no way relieves you of | minors, liquor his victim aud gives no valuable thing as | the obligution you have assumed, and y becoming intox ) 4 ou d that ivis @ gppoq gewer criminals, have they in these | of 4 duty A T 1 i consideration. canuol pub: Qlssased moat unon. the mi are sold-mark you, not a single defender of | Kreat deal move than balt” of these prohibi- | syaes um it population o better | oo ment et ool it | constituency, he now beiug more in sympathy v 1 ask, and T sub » the intelii- | and sell it even with the knowledge and con- | high license who will appear on this plat- | HGRISs havo done Tor it educ: ] 8 " W | \with that party than with the consorvatives, Nowl ask, and T submit it to the intolit ; g ¥ I do not believe that half of them | the auty on corn was to be considered only as geut judgment of this great audience, m sentof the purchaser.” form has ever undertaken the fask of en- | K 0 job beeve Kt B 08 heR |y vo ey fn these states a better financiat A o Despite the opposition in the English par- not introducs a fourth te of Omaha or n into the Here our personal liberties arehedged again, | forcing high license in the ci f the massest If any one | & continuation of the polic rd Ame iean cnse ot TEtehiR L Lan Manion wonn | eondition ; nuatiol 0 lisnient, the Anglo-German agroemont tion #nd doclure that the burglar, 2|1 se thap atiful horse passing along | ib the state of Nebraska. — [Applause. | Aiate, Clang " dlspatoh of Muy 23, 1500, | can _ prov this to be tme | pork. The Comtede Ca lavedithat the (303 et Wieiunt taritory. e Godaldosad gambler, tho pickpocket and the salomisecper | the green yondor, sud T have ho doubt TIE ARGUNENT OF HON. . ROSEWAIER, ; \d and T will yield gracefullys | im what one of the prohibition lec has | then T will yic ortation of American pork was only an all take the mor 3 but I propose to pro from their victims | the geatle; nin the carriage b 1ind him to The How o be ubsolutely safe, The ( we get through | ot dward Rosewater then spokeus | said: *The long standing high license o r mode of importing American corn, and man - ambossas and give no valuable thing i retur, [Ap- | put him to the very top of his speed, theve | follows . i i pong standhue bigh licouse ity | with this debate that o evory oue of these | Bench farmers. conld not. mantain them- | 90° at London has tho assurance of plause ¥ would be none to say him_hay, but let him Mr. President and ladies and gentlemen. | which had been delivered in Moline by a lady | points Nebraska i superior” to every prohi- | selves it. The prohibition of pork | Lord Salisbury that the governme it is cause Letme try the simplest sort of mental ex- ame horse down to the city of [ Inthis era of our civilization, on the ap: | whom I will not nawe, who had lectured in | bition state in America. was rig! t to b aintained, and | ing its supporters to kuow it will stand o periment. 1 goto this man before me, who ha, which, under the highlicense regime, | proach of the twentieth century, it will seem | Omaha three weeks before and had ample | There are fewer criminals fn | the duty on corn should also be made prohibi- | fa)l by the compact and has securod & noule smccwmasporhaps spends 0 a vear for his clothing, | arcests one outof ten of all its population the | strange to those who are well ‘read and well | opportunity to inform hetself fully in regavd | the state of Nebraska, proportionate | tive PN PRI A 10 AR 0wy and 1 say t this man, **Keep righton, give | yeararound. [Applause.] informed that any man should appear before | to what she was talking about, havi . to her population, than thereare in the state Molaud ealled attention to the fact that ““,','““"" " your tailor sl oy aturday night, but re I cannot imagine what you are checring for. | as intelligent an “audieace as this and make | sisted in the Nebraska wiwendment campaign | of K the state of Maine or the state of ican pork is proliibited on the ground of The Erench reports of the seeret clause im use toaccept his goods and you will be wiser | T thought you would take out your handker- | the assertion that the libertics of individuals | “were 270 of the finestappointed and most al- ( Towa. There are fewer drunkards in the city Q" unhealthfuln He declures that | the treaty committing England o nuval ine and better for the change * chiefs and weep over that thought. But let | have been continuously more and more cur- | luring saloons she hud over seen licensed at [ of Omaha, in proportion to her population, merely a pretoxt. tervention in the North sea and the Baltic in I say to this ludy, who possibly spends 200 | him go to Mr. Rosewater’s city and go out on *d s civilization has advanced, $1,000 cach, In the rear of each was a house | than the the city of Portland, Me. An article published in Temps, thought to | g co it Sl ; & yesr npon her wardrobe, “Go right on, | the broad street of that growing city and | Itdoesseem to me a paradox in the face | of assignation as @ further attvacti “There are fewer insane people in the state | reflect the views of the government, sug- | 22" © oy 17 Bho ievent madam, bestow your money upon the | speed the animal at the v top ot his | of the fact that the people | These and other dens of v of Nebraska, proportionate to the population, | gests that there might be circumstances under | 0f - war ave incorreet, = although an ¢ goods dealer and tho diessmaker, but | speed and he would not go two blocks before | of New Eugland, who have repealed | were openly licensed, the woman | thau ther uthe state of Towa. The fact | Which it might be desirable to withdraw the | enfeute exists ting' to u concorted Pt no goods and take no services in re- | some policemnan, if he was doing his duty, | somany of the laws that thelr ancestors en- | keepiug tho places being allowed tovun open | is this: The state of lowa hus 157 10licy against k 1 Russia, tura therefor.” And you tellme it would | would have the horse by tho bitsund a. acted in the earlier part of the anth | house. The city has by this means raised | people now in her insane asylum, Kansas has Ihe Re announces the removal ot be wise: that he who gives his money to | other pol an would have the dviver by se, in fact, who have tried pro- | 0,000, which, added to the $7,000 from the | 1,277 insane, while the state of the prohibition weainst the importation of [ 4. the butcher and the buker and receives nith- | the coat coltar and he would lug him up to | hibition in their own grand state of Massa- | saloond, goes' to the support of the free | ouly has 650, und these statistic , g b Dunish pork and bacon sides. The removal V. g inrotur s giving evidenco of a lack of | the police office, his personal liberty invaded. | chusetts, and after trying it faivly vepudiated | schools! =~ Omaha with its mult Thave the original documents in my pos Panis, July Special - Cablegram to | of these : s will afford grounds for practical wisdom; but T go to this other man, | Why! At the b of the public good, it, and have adopted the system of regulative | plidity of vice aud crime, and and letters from the superinteridents | Tue Bre]—A proposition s being agitated | the renewal of Minister Phelps' communicae Who spends what for a drinking man is Sinallpox breaks out in your funily and | local option and high license, unobservance of Sundgy, came neaverre- | of the asylum, and I have them from all parts | among the American artists for the founda- | 108 concerning American trade Yory small sum-$1L00 por year--and Ty | your personal liberty is at ‘uce rostrained, | Manyof you wre not uware, perhaps, that | £ Phore are in the stat o fa miniture Paris than | of the union s man, *You ‘must contribute to the i\..u cannot 2 A 15 the sountrr | of Hansw Tl support of the saloonkeoper and his | down the str tion in New York of a Prix de Rome, similar to the French Prix de Rome, under the con door it of your s as former and upand | the Puritan: Why! Be- | enuctec who came over fyom~ England, WH conviets in the \ sories of laws that would, in the What is heruame?’] What did | penitentiar arcin the penitentiary of | 4 ; ine o Rockviney, Ind,, July b, lo- faintly. 12 you would make 1t possiblo | et your Denonsl right mast givo way bo- | IgHt of tho prosent coutury, semm obuoxiou. | the kow sbous racls ety sad what did | Tow toduy 050 convicts. and i the stais of dittons obovbidh-tens. Artaie who ave el o n il BT s ived for the * salboukeeper to dwell in | forethe demand of a higher good, the preser- | I have liere a concise compendium of those | she know about Omaha fmmorally ¢ Nebraska there ave 883 [(Applause.] What | 9 here by l«vm;"v‘llf\ rtistic uullhunluw 4 LA A A a house more superb than you can afford to | vation of the public health. and will read you two or three of them: | If what she charged were true, if there wi is o fact. . Rpo SeRkeY earda Hamg to dompisre tliata | inerd Rerstiy give, Selai ob /ia HIIDRES ow If you must contribute to the saloon I will go some of these days downto | o food or lodging shall be offcred a | 277 bad houses in Owaha, licensed and pa Let me give you another little bit of infor- | studics in ax i [!-4"1-n lic expense. The | Murs, John N. Wright, Ame n Presbyterian keeper's ability Lo dress his wife and children | Omabia after prohibition prevails and it gets aker, Adamite or other heretic.? Tig, 4a she saya. $34-$10 por. mouth for for | mation. 1his pontiomin talked so much ubous | PO suggosted 1s thut u simllar endowment | yistonary st Salmas, Wostern Persi, in silks and satins, while yours are clovhed 1 | fit for a gentleman o live in [Applause] and | *“If aiy person shall turn Quaker, he shall | the koeopers and $5 per mouth for the in- | emptying the jails and penitentiavies in | 5% "o ATEECR 0 B e wtive sehool te calico nnd go in rags, if you must make it pos- \ v hall Amerds with i dagger in I will be on such excellent terms with my | be banished and not suffered to return, on rly to PParis o irloin roast | fri years of ag ing thir mates, the aggregate would amount to 1,000 | prohibition states, They have Sihia soaliehon SERFE§ aghthals { mptied the s | paiu of death,” [Laughter,| if there w sible for u saloonkedper to hay d, Mr. Rosewater, that [ can get b rlan, killed he o only ceper oue | Juils of lowa and Kausas and of Maine, and if 3 B ) ! By o altant ae e e upon his dinner table every day, while you | endorsement at the bank for $100,000; T will Noldae il o oo Lo Habbath (day, or | et e R er B O [ O O A P eatim Das some. || Pars of the Amerioan. colooy Bavo expressed | herown houie, in vevengetor bis: achargg sueak up the back stairs on turday night | spond half of it in baying an elegant building k in his garden or clsewhero except roy- | But she says the reccipts wero 830,000, | As a mattor of fuct, I senta letter to every | theh desire to coutribute to such o fuud. e e b atarTan e, with a bit of Tiver under your arm—if you | lot rightin the heart'of Omaba and then I | erentiy to and from meeting.” which disproves the charge right on its fac sheriff in the state ' of Nebraska within the w————— tiful, well educated and accompl i} must d 2, Lsay to the deinking | will sccumulate a great quantity of building “No one shall travel, cook victuals, make | It is utterly untrue that any single liquor | last ten days and I have the The Death Roll, fathor was o toachor of anclentSyrin in_ un, man, n DA send — your | material aud some beautiful morning a gen- | beds, sweep house, cut hair or shave on the | dealing establishment in Omaha is permitted | answers from eighty-three counties, all but ceiNNAT, O, July 5.—Colonel L. A. | American colloge Pl A Y Y y money o the salooakecpor as | tleman with a blue coat and brass buttons | Subbath day.” by the police authorities to have any counee- | two, and there are fifty-one countics in i ey R e ‘W;“ i Mhoy ware in this coluns . / a douition and stay away from his place of | will wait upon me and he will say “No wonian shall kiss her children on the | tion or relation with disorderly houses. On | braska that have uot a prisoner in jail, [Ap- | Leoben !t EMYEEOTERG boare of minagors | AL AEe vear as & notive of Ohioy ’ business.” [Applause] . “8ir, are theso your premisest I toll him | Subbath day or fast day.” the contrary, the chief of police has fop years | plause.] A of national soldiers’ homos, died this morn- | ¥ B YERE IR Now if these propositions are true they but vave, **Is this y building material? " How would you like such laws ingrafted | rigidly excluded all that class of business Can anybody in Towa say as much? I will | ing from a chronic ailment, He served with e emphasize the deelarstion that the values in- | im it is. ““Now,” he says, ‘“will | upon our constitutiont into & part of the eity where saloons@re not | name the counties and 1 will name the num- | distinction during the war of the rebellion, is Wi NGE Teatine Dusineas volved in the drink trfie are whatthe your plans and specifications 4 | “Whoeverwears clothes trimmed with gold, | in proximi ber of prisoners in lowa presently. I have | an ex-mayorof Cincinnati, and was at one | o Sk AT economists call fictitions values aud not real | Iirefuse. He pirsistsand [yiold. Helooks them | silver or bone lace above two shillings per ud whal is more, every complalnt to the | already ot returns from fifty-one counties in | time colléctor of lutorual revenuo in this dis. | CwicAGo, July B.-It was deflultely tne values, Lf you wero to destroy ry drop of | over. “Now, sir 3 1 see you intend | yard, shall be presented by the grand jurors | board of police commissioners—and the board | Towa and I will have the others before tome trict | nounced at the Park National bauk today * intoxivating avink contained withii the lim- | to build a fourstory frame house.' 4 and the select men shall tax the offender on | is appointed by the governor of Nebraska and | row moruing. In Jowa in the fifty-one coun- CixcisNati, O, July Prof, Robert H. | that the directors have decided not to resuine its of Nebruska on this Saturday afternoon, | 1 assute him hie' is corvect. ‘*Now, sir," | his estate.” has nothing to do with Omaha politics— | ties already returned they have more prison- | Bishop, for many years connected with | business. No receiver hws yer boon upe baaish it all, burn it off, cousumeit m the | Le alds, “it is my oficial duty to serveupon |~ “No one shall read the common prayer | every one of these complaints is followed by | ers in jail thun we have in the whole state Mi niversity, die Oaford, V., todu wointed and no further order tecelved fron Lawaws und wheu the flames had licked up the Tiumi university, died av Oaford, O., today | pointed a 1 wrihier orde « a YOu @ notice that you canuot build & tmmnx book, keep Christmas or set days or play on | the revocation of the license, The facts prroliee. | and there are still forty-eight counties in ‘l from paralysis. | Lhe e